Orbiting Astronauts Film Moon, Near ome SPACK C3SNTER, HouBton (AP) -Only hour* bef(^re starling the long trip home, Apollo , lii’s (irblilng moon voyagers today snapped | hundreds of pictures of future astronaut landing sites in the rugged lunar highlands. The photographic targets included the shallow crater Fra Mauro, nestled among mountain peaks, which will be the target for Apollo 13 in March, Charles (Pete) Conrad Jr„ Richard F. Gordon Jr. and Alan L. Bean awoke shortly after midnight EST to conduct several hours of lunar surface photography from the Yankee Clipper command ship. At 3:49 p.m. today they planned to trigger Clipper’s big bell-shaped engine \to blast th^selves out of moon' orbit to ktart the thiree-day quarter-miUion-mile journey bqck to their Home planht. 'they splash down in the Pacific at 3:57 p.m. Monday, ending man’s second expedition to the lunar surface. Impression of the moon’s back side, which cannot be seen from earth, "The back side is a lot more worn and \i|ihooth,’’ he said. Related Stories, Pages A-5, B-8 LITTLE CONVERSATION There was little conversation with the ground as the astronauts kept busy operating six cameras and orienting the spaceship to get the proper angle and lighting conditions. Bean took a few moments to give his “The front aide’s got a lot more contrast and a lot more sharp features to look at. I personally like to look at the front side. On the back side it seems there's no flat area at all, just big craters and little craters, no real sharp contrasts between flat and high mountains.’’ The Weather U.S. Wuthtr BurMu Siir«»l Warmer (Dilalli Pag* t) THE Home Edition PONTIAC PRESS PONTIAC, MICHIGAN. FRIDAY, 5SOVKMBER 21, 19H9 VOL. 127 NO. 217 ★ ★ ★ Judge Haynsworth Rejected by Senate WASHINGTON (AP) - The Senate rejected today the nomination of Judge Clement F. Haynsworth Jr., to be an associate justice of the Supreme Court. The vote was 55 to 45. The Senate’s refusal to confirm the 57-year-old South Carolinian was the sharpest rebuff the Democratic-con-trolled Congress has dealt President Nixon. But it took a split in Republican ranks to defeat the nomination. At the White House, there was no Immediate comment and reporters were told there would be none until mid-afternoon at the earliest. The President laid his prestige on the line by standing steadfast behind Haynsworth in the face of strong opposition mounted by labor leaders and civil rights forces. APPELLATE JUDGE Haynsworth, now chief judge of the 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, was the first Supreme Court nominee to be rejected by the Senate since 1930 when Judge John J. Parker was defeated by two votes. The Senate Republican leader, Sen. Hugh Scott of Pennsylvania, said before the vote that confirmation by a narrow margin could raise later difficulties with public opinion. The vote was more one-sided than expected, with all of the lately uncommitted senators voting against confirmation except for Sen. J. W. Fulbright, D-Ark. Sen. Hiomas J. Dodd, DConn., who had voted to approve the nomination in the Judiciary Committe and had been listed among the supporters, cast his vote against confirmation. “The closer the vote the greater the difficulty would be with public opinion in the event future decisions of the court ‘ABOMINAL’ PAUF Drive Short of Goal by 5.4 Pet. The Pontiac Area United Fund is 5.4 per cent short of reaching its general campaign goal of $1.24 million. The drive now stands at $1,173,386 and will continue through Tuesday. Mrs. Vincent Bronsing, chairman of the community division, told approximately 25 volunteers at yesterday’s report luncheon that contributions totaled 94.6 per cent of the goal or $1,173,386. The current figure represents the largest sum raised in the history of the PAUF, Mrs. Bronsing said. Last year’s final campaign figure was $1,088,116.51. Mrs. Bronsing acted as' chairman of the luncheon held at the Elks Lodge, 114 Orchard Lake, in the absence of general campaign Chairman Warren H. Eierman, who is ill. Mrs. Bronsing — whose division has raised the highest ratio of its goal at 116.1 per cent — admonished her audience: “You gentlemen with your prestige in the community, go out and pound the pavement yourselves if you have to. I have!” "Parish Schools in Fund Crisis' DETROIT (AP) — Catholic schools In at least 132 of the 350 parishes in the Archdiocese of Detroit are financially endangered, John Cardinal Dearden reported today. Eight .schools are listed in the Pontiac area including the year-old Pontiac Catholic High School. ★ ★ ★ Cardinal Dearden ordered !‘an Immediate study in depth to establish priorities for possible curtailments, consolidations and closings.” Affected would be about 65,000 pupils. Schools on the endangered list either collected less than they spent last year or showed an income too small to meet anticipated increases in the cost of operations. The study is to enf| Dec. 15, with recommendations to be submitted to the archdiocesan hffice by Jah./3l. Any changes would' be for the next year. The proWem at Pontiac Catholic High fa related to problems at surrounding elethentary schools, diocesan sources said. Elementary schools in on the troubled list are St. Michael, in Pontiac \ *nd St! Benedict and Our Lady of Ukes V In Wateflord Townshlp.\ Other troubled area dchools are: Pon- A breakdown of the five campaign divisions showed collection status as: manufacturing, $38,670 or 80.9 per cent of the goal; commercial, $149,326 or 79.8 per cent; community, $19,214 w 116.1 per cent; GM Division, $^7,597 or 100 per cent; and advance gifts, $112,348 or 84.1 per cent. The final meeting is slated for Tuesday at the Sheraton Motor Inn, 1001 Woodward. “Let’s all work for a victory luncheon,” Mrs. Bronsing urged. TEAMS TOP 100 PCT. Several teams of the five major divisions have topped 100 per cent of their goals: Community Division: Waterford Township, $7,159 .or 138.4 per cent; Independence Township, $3,273 or 119 per cent; and Orion Township, $3,261 or 117.4 per cent. Commercial Division: Chapter Plan V of big business, $30,179 or 102.5 per cent; and small business Team Five, $873 or 105.8 per cent. Education: Oakland University, $8,029 or 180.2 per cent; Avondale School District, $1,512.or 100.1 per cent; Oxford School District, $569 or 118.5 per cent; and professional Team II, $15,433 or 107.7 per cent. Utica, St. Lawrence Elementary. •FEW FIRMS NOT CONTACTED* “Due to a shortage of volunteers in some areas of the campaign structure, a few firms have not been contacted,” Mrs. Bronsing said. “To make sure these compahles are not missed,, we are reassigning other volunteerslahd forming a clean-up committee in hofW of reaching all firtns\and employes," she said. . Contributions may be mailed to the PAUF .office at l32 Franklin BlVd., P.0, Box 688, Pontiac 48056. At 2:23 a m., they fired (heir engine to change course slightly to bring the spaceship in line for better photographic angles./ . , / I ^ ^ Conrad asked If “that hot engine of ours didn’t by any chance buy us enough gas to come home a,day^ear|y, did it?” If enough extra fuel remained, Yankee Clippen could shorten its trip home bV boosting its speed f'*How a path that would be several hours shorter. “Okay, we weren't sweating it,” (.'onrad said. “We just knew that if we had a better engine or something there might,he a chanCe.” ; i “It’s one less day in the I.RI,," quipped Bean, referring to the Lunar Receiving Laboratory in Houston where they will be quarantined to make certain they have brought back no moon germs. The 21-day quarantine started yesterday when Conrad and Bean finished their .second excursion on the moon’s surface. Ocean of Storms. Geologists and scientists are anxious to compare them with the rocks collected on the Sea of Tran-quillify by/the pioneering Apollo 11 crew/ In July. ^ I Mi.s.sion Control calculated the fuel reserves and said there was not enough margin for a fast trip home Conrad and Bean arc bringing home t)elween 80 and 90 pounds of rocks collected during their 31'/a hours on the Geologists, meanwhile, continued to study what they considered i;<^markable vibrations created when Intrepid smashed into the moon 45 miles from what hours before had been its base in the Ocean of Storms. The 5,000-pound ship struck the moon at 3,700 miles an hour, carving out an elliptical crater estimated at 20 by 40 feet, but only about 20 inches deep. : FIRST MOON WALK ^ r| SECOND MOON WALK « J .. instruments d, • f • \\ 1 i ^ ' I turned out 5 to 4,” Scott said at the start of the showdown Senate Scott also said he hopes Haynsworth would not quit his current post as a circuit court judge if reject^ for the high court. Democratic Leader Mike Mansfield of Montana said “It seems awfully close. Asked about reports of pressures being exerted on some senators, Mansfield said, “I think it’s abominable. “SenatOTs are sent here to exercise their own best judgment,” he added. Mansfield said his mail has been running “against Haynsworth—not too much” but said “I read the mail but I have to make up my own mind.” When the Senatq. met, two hours in advance of the vote, the public galleries were only about half filled. WHERE ASTRONAUT^ WALKED — This map charts the wirtphoto routes of the two moon walks of the Apollo 12 astronauts, in- to the Surveyor satellite. The routes are shown on a relief map eluding the location of the lunar module Intrepid in relation provided by the Army for NASA. Some Bases to Stay Weather to Turn U.S. to Return Okinawa WASHINGTON (AP) - The United States formally agreed today to turn back Okinawa to Japan’s rule during 1972. The United States will retain such military bases as. it requires for the security of both countries. The announcement was made in a joint communique issued at the end of three days of negotiations between President Nixon and Japan’s Prime Minister Eisaku Sato. The announcement said that Nixon assured the prime minister that the reversion of Okinawa would be carried out in a manner consistent with the Japanese government’s policy of opposing the use of all nuclear weapons. In somewhat vague language, the communique said that this would be without prejudice to the prior consultation system under the mutual security treaty between the two countries. In effect this means the United States will remove nuclear weapons before turning Okinawa back to Japan but reserve the right to use such weapons it an emergency arises in the area. The security of South Korea and the maintenance of peace in the Taiwan Straits area were declared essential to Japan’s own security. Sato said that Japan is “exploring what role she could play in bringing about stability in the Indo-China area,” which includes Vietnam, Laos and Cambodia. Here’s good neWs. Warmer weather is on the way. The U.S. Weather Bureau forecasts the following day-by-day conditions for the Pontiac area. TODAY — Increasing cloudiness late this afternoon, high in the upper 20s. Tonight mostly cloudy with chance of snow flurries, low 20 to 25. Winds west to southwest at eight to 12 miles per hour becoming southerly at five to 10 miles tonight, and south to southwest at eight to 12 miles tomorrow. TOMORROW - Partly cloudy and warmer, the high in the upper 30s. SUNDAY — Mostly cloudy and turning colder late in the day or at night. Fourteen degrees, a new low for the season, was recorded. at 6 a.m. in downtown Pontiac. The mercury stood near 33 at 2 p.m. Waterford School Balloting Tuesday What 'Yes' Vote Means (EDITOR’S NOTE-This is the second of three stories examining Waterford Township School District’s financial troubles and the proposed tax increase election Tuesday.) By DICK ROBINSON Waterford Township voters are being asked to pass a one-year, 9-mill property tax increase Tuesday, to provide nearly $1.9-million to assure full-day classes for the school district’s 18,502 students. Acting Supt. Dr. John Pagen says the tax increase will provide for full days from January to June and all of the next school year. Before this fall, elementary, pupils received five hours and 20 minutes of school a day. This school year they are scheduled for an average of four hours per day. Under the present plan, there is only time to emphasize reading and language arts. The time devoted to social studies, math and science has been reduced. year, but students and parents, will be getting the full-day benefits for IVi years,” Pagfen said. (Continued bn Page A-2, Col. 1) 2ND YBAIl IN ROW If the millage is voted down, full-day class schedules will not be restored this school year, according to Pagen. ^ “If the millage projTO.sal fails, the pro- All jpnior and senior high school students are getting five hours of school for the second year in a row. Two years ago they were receiving six hours per day. The 9-mill increase will produce $1,905,330.30 in income, Pagen said. It would be used to* hire additional teachers, purchase supplies and restore custodial services. A pro-millage parade Is scheduled to start at the Pontiac Mall, Telegraph and Elizabeth Ijike, at 4 p.m, today and a bonfire rally at Mott High School, Pontiac l,ahe and Scott Lake, at 7 p.m. gram cutbacks will continue because there will be no funds, no borrowing power and ho handouts from Lansing or Washington,”, Pagen qsserts. NcedtTd are 74 more elementary and 53 secondary teachers—a total of 127—to restore full days, I’agen explains. The teaching staff would then total about 785. Of the new revenue, $655,330.30 would pc' used for the second half pf this school year, Pagen said. The remainder, $1.25-million, would be left for 1970-71. NOT FOR A YEAR PRESENT SYSTEM Pupils In grades 1 through 3 ahe now on half-day schedules. They are scheduled to return to full days in |lanuary for the rest bf the school year. Pupils in grades 4 through 6, now on full-day schedulMi, are to go on half days in Janpary forathe rest' of the School year.' ' i If the millage passes, taxpayers won’t be billed for the increase until December 1970, Pagen said. The school district wouldn’t4)e getting the money until early 1971. Uijilil it gets the additionaLmoney, the schoiil district will be able to borrow monpy on/ its anticipated income to operate full days. / \ “TpWr......................... ,9 mills will be levied for only one In Today's 1 Press Avon Pastor He fights to narrow the gen- | el ation gap — PAGE A-3. | Auto Gamble I Sporty cars aren’t selling — 1 PAGE D-2. I Freedom Ends t Escapee returns to prison after 46 years on the outside — .< PAGE A-9. I Area News. ,......... A-3 Astrology ............... C-8 Bridge / C-8 . Crossword^ puzzle D-11 Comics C-8 ^ Editorials ...............A-6 Farm and Garden...... C-9 High Sohml B-1, B-2 ” Markets '............... D-2 p Obituaries .... . . B-IO f Sports .............. C-1—C-5 Theaters C-10, C-11 4 TV and Radio Programs D-ll Vietnam War News C-6 ^ Wilson, Earl C-12 I W” men's Pages , B-3—B-7 1 t.< A—2 THE PONTIAC FRESS. FRIDAY. NOVEMBEIi 21. Vice President Turns Guns on Newspapers MONTGOMERY, Ala. Of) - Vice Pre^dent Spiro T. Agnew, saying he does “not seek to intimidate the press,”' has extended his criticism of the nation's news media to some daily newspapers. Finding particular fault with the New York Times and the Washington Post, Agnew told the Alabama Chamber of Commerce last night there is a “growing monopolization of the voices of public opinion on which we all depend — for our knowledge knd for the basis of our views.” “1 am opposed to cen,sorshlp of television or the press in any form.” tions just said. we must defend ours,” he •FREE TO CRITICIZE' . Relafed Storms, Pago A- 7 0 However,' Agnew said, this does not mean the news media should be free of criticism. < In answer to critics who asserted he was attempting to muzzle newsmen, the vice president told his audience: "When they go beyond fair comment and criticism they will be called upon to defend their statements and their posi- Agnew said “. , . the American people should be made aware of the trend toward the monopolization of the great public information vehicles and the concentration of more and more power over public opinion in fewer and fewer hands.” PGH Proposes Record Budget A proposed 1970 budget for Pontiac General Hospital is more than $15 million, according to Dr. Roger B. Nelson, hospital ..administrator. The tentative figures, largest ever, were revealed to the hospital board of trustees at last night’s meeting. The budget “definitely" will call for an increase in room rates, Dr. Nelson DR. NELSON Last year's budget was $12,362,098. This is Dr. Nelson’s first budget submission. He replaced Harold Euler as administrator in June after Euler was fired by the board. Dr. Nelson said exact figures on the budget and room rates would not be released until after the hospital trustees have time to study the budget. The board received the document yesterday. * w ★ The Pontiac City Commission has to make final approval and hold a public hearing on the budget. At last night’s meeting the board also ap^ved a fund of $250,000 for purchase of equipment in 1970. Four Sentenced to Prison; Plea for Help Nixed NEWSMEN TOLD OF ‘MA^ACRE’ - U.S. newsmen visiting this refugee center at Son My report that four of the refugees told of hiding under corpses to escape what they said was a massacre by American troops in the hamlets of Tu Cung and My Lai in March 1968. These reports have prompted Sen. Charles Goodell, R-N.Y., to call for a Senate investigation. Pilot Safe After 18 Days in Arctic Wilds INUVIK, N.W.T. (AP) - A 47-year-old pilot walked out of the Arctic barrens on frostbitten feet yesterday, ending an 18-day ordeal after his light plane was forced down on the Mackenzie River delta in the Northwest Territories. Doctors said John B. Woslying of Inuvik, a pilot for the Northern Canada Power Commission, was in remarkabIy^-v,northwest to Inuvik, on the Arctic coast, good shape although he had been $ub^ He stumbled into an oil exploration camp jected to temperature of 40 below zero just a few hours after an extensive air once. A preliny^nary examination in- search was called 6ffi dicated he probably would not have to Fred Wittlinger, superintendent of have his feet amputated. Northern Canada Power Commission, Woslying was reported missing Nov. 2 said Woslying may have walked as much on "a 200-mile flight from Fort Good Hope as 40 miles through eight inches of snow. Waterford Tax OK Promises Relief (Continued From Page One) "But this proposal is only going to return us to below the level we were at before the first secondary school cuts went into effect years ago," he com- mented. “If the 9 mills would do for one year, we would get back to the level before the secondary cuts were made.” Passage of the millage will assure that Waterford Township and Kettering The Weather High Schools will keep their accreditation, Pagen says. Those two schools have received two warnings from the North Central Association of Secondary Schools and Colleges, the accrediting agency, and may lose their accreditation after students graduate in June, he believes.' Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Fair this morning and increasing cloudiness this afternoon. High in the upper 20s. Tonight mostiy cloudy and not so cold with chance Of snow flurries, low 20 to 25. Saturday pmtiy cloudy and warmer. High in the upper 80s. Sunday outlook: mostly cloudy and turning colder late in the day or at night. Winds west to southwest 8 to 12 miles per hour today becoming southerly 5 to 10 miles tonight and south to southwest 8 to 12 miles Saturday. Probabilities of precipitation are 20 per cent today, tonight and Saturday. The new Mott High School never has been accredited and won’t apply for accreditation until it can submit a six-class-hour day program for appraisal, Pagen notes. “Students without solid records who graduate frqm nonaccredited high schools will have more difficulty getting into competitive colleges,” he adds. ELECTIVES DENIED “And students who aren’t going to By State Reps, Youth Unit A state senator and representative and a youth assistance committe have come out in favor of the proposed school tax increase in Waterford Township. Voters will go to the polls Tuesday to ’ decide on a one-year, 9-mill ($9 per $1,000 of property state equalized valuation) proposal. Waterford Township’s Republican representatives in the legislature. Sen. L. Harvey Lodge and Rep. Loren D. Waterford Schools Get HUD Grant NATIONAL WEATHER-Rain is expected tonight in Montana, Idaho and Wyoming, while snow flurries are expected from north Minnesota into Canada. Milder weather is expected in the Southwest and Southeast with colder weather in store for the rest of fbe nation. > The Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) yesterday approved a $42,000 planning grant to the Waterford School District, it was announced by Rep. Jack McDonald R-19th District. Assistant Supt. Roy Alexander explained that the money — a 100 per cent federally financed program — would be used to employ architects to draw plans for additions to, several elementary schools and the construction of a fourth junior high school. “When we need to build, weMl have the plans," Alexander explained. t I 'll" He then pointed to the Washington Host Co. “a single company, in the nation’s capital, that holds control of the lai^geM newspaper in Washington, D.C., and one of the four major television stations, and an all-news radio station, and one Of the three major national news magazines — all grinding out the same editorial line ...” ‘AUTONOMOUS OPERATIONS’ Katherine Graham, president of the gathering, Agnew then turned from the Post to the New York Times. It was “a great, great political tragedy for the people of New York," he said, When four daily newspapers died in that city in the last decade. ‘COMPETITION LACKING’ ■•The New York Times wa.s a better newspaper when they were alive than it is now that they are gone." Washington Post Co., issued a statement, which read in part; “The Washington Post, Newsweek, WTOP-TV and WTOP radio decidedly to do not ‘grind out the same editorial line.’ . . . Each branch is operated autonomously.” New York is not alone, Agnew said. “Many, many strong independent voices have been stilled in this country in recent years. Lacking the vigor of competition, some of those that have survived have, let us face it, grown fat and irresponsible.” With mixed emotions, Oakland County Circuit Judge Arthur E. Moore has imprisoned four of five drug offenders after his efforts to get them medical help failed. In sentencing four of the defendants yesterday. Judge Moore said he had no other choice since the county lacked facilities to rehabilitate drug users. Following his theme that there is a trend toward monopolization in news Arthur Ochs Sulzberger, president and publisher of the New York Times, charged that “some of Mr. Agnew's statements are inaccurate.” Birmingham Area GOP Fills Finance Post He urged the public to undertake a letter-writing campaign to influence the County Board of Supervisors to establish such institutions. He had delayed sentencing two weeks ago because of what he said was a “lack of any de.sirable alternatives” to sending them to prison. BLOOMFIELD HILLS - The Republican State Central Committee has announced the appointment of Jack Slater Jr. of Bloomfield Hills as its state finance director. Slater formerly served as executive director of the southeastern Michigan United Republican Fund. He succeeds Joseph Junting, resigned. EMERGENCY STEPS Moore then asked the supervisors to take emergency steps to establish two halfway houses for drug offenders, double the number of probation officers and provide medical and psychiatric care for addicts. Board chairman Charles Edwards replied’ ^at a newly established drug abuse ‘committee would reconunend a prograb at a later date. Judge Moore said he could no longer delay the sentences. ★ * * Sentbeed yesterday were James Meyerii, 25, and his wife Mary Ellen, 23, formerly of Lake Orion and now of Ann Arbor, each 3 to 4 years for attempting to obtain a narcotic drug with a false prescription; Edward E. Goetz Sr., 55, of 28609 Grand River, Famdngton, one year for unlawful use of narcotics; and Carol Lynn Specketer, 18, of Royal Oak, three years probation for selling narcotics. Charles Labe, 19, of Detroit, was sentenced this morning to 3 to 4 years for possession of narcotics. Boy, 10, Killed in 2-Gar Crash 4 lO-year-oId boy was killed and his parents and 'brother serloukly injured last night in a two-car collision on M-24 three miles north of Lapeer. Michael W. June of 39% Poit, Lapeer, was dead on arrival at Lapeer County General Hospital at 8:30 p.m. BIRMINGHAM - Edward C. Conley, 1001 Willow, has been appointed vice president - finance of Cadillac Plastic and Chemical Co. Conley joined Cadillac, a manufacturer , of consumer and industrial plastic products, in 1967 as company treasurer. He holds a master’s degree in business administration from Columbia University. Prior to joining Cadillac Plastic, Conley was vice president of Shelter Manufacturing Corp. He held various financial positions with the Ford Motor Co. before joining Sheller. His father, Hilbert W. June, and his mother, Susan, were in serious condition today at the same hospital, according to sheriff’s deputies. A younger brother, Eli, 5, was transferred from Lapeer to Hurley Hospital in Flint, where be is |n satisfactory condition. Conley has written major articles on sales and finance for Management Accounting Magazine. He is a member of the National Association of Accountants (NAA) and has served on its speakers bureau. 'The June car, southbound on M-24, hit a stretch of ice on the road, police said. It skidded sideways across the center line, crashing broadside into a car driven by Mrs. Fred Henne, 55, of 7385 McTaggert, North Branch, police said. Mrs. Henne and her 60 - year - old husband, a passenger in the car, also are in serious condition at Lapeer County General. He is a member of the National Historical Society, Birmingham Historical Society and the Civil War Round Table of Michigan and has served on the budget committee for the United Funds of Michigan. Glen Paulsen, president of the Cran-brook Academy of Art, will talk on “Detroit: Dynamic or Anemic?” before the Birmingham Rotary Club Monday at noon in the Community House. college are being denied elective sub-jectives because of the shortened day,” adds Assistant Supt. for Business Joseph Giddis. “They can’t take typing, for example.” School officials point out that Gov. William Milliken’s proposed state school-aid formula revision wouldn’t benefit Waterford for at least two years. Lapeer County Sheriff’s deputies said Michael’s death brings the total to 32 people killed on county roads this year. There'were 29 in all of 1968. Paulsen is expected to present an analysis of Detroit problems as they affect the entire metropolitan area. He will suggest that solutions can come through collaboration with professional talent in the suburbs. OPEN SUNDAY 12 - 5 P.M. That’s because the plan, which would give more aid to poorer districts, couldn’t go into effect until after the state resident? possibly vote on it next year. Indeed, the mUlage increase won’t solve all Waterford school problems. A fourth junior high school is desperately needed now, school officials contend. (Next: What will It cost?) School Issue Is Supported Anderson, and the Waterford Township Youth Assistance Committee urge passage of the measure. In other related millage developmepts; • Absentee electim ballots mi^ be cast until 4 p.m. tomorrow at the school offices. Airport and Pontiac Lake roads. The office opens 8:30 a.m. tomorrow. • It was reported to the school board last night that the school district is having a hard time finding elementary and science teachers in a teacher-recriiiting effort to put students back on full days. CONSEQUENCE CITED / “I( citizens of Waterford are noli mindful of their obligation in the election, then they must bear the consequences of their act,” said Lodge. “The htdeousness of that I hate to face, because Waterford is a depressed and practically bankrupt district and would have to suffer the consequences of the other school districts which have lost their independence and are attached to other districts.” He cited attachment to the Pontiac School District as a possibility. Anderson pointed out that the proposed state educational reform package, if passed, would lipt help ease the school district’s financial crisis for sit least two years, inoludasi Dresser, Framed Mirror, Chest, Bed, Mattroil,, ^ and Box Spring, Sofd ^ ' and Chair, 2 Step Tables, Coffee Table, 2 Lamps, 5-Pc. Dinette Ho MontliH to Pay Cl nne 2135 Dixie Hwy. UI»vDli> eHU4^9U at Telegraph Rd. Supervisors Stoll on Resolving Oakland-Orion Airport Issue By JKAN SAILK An effort to resolve the issue of the Oakland-Orion Airport, the county-owned sod airfield in Orion Township, failed yesterday as the Oakland County Board of Supervisors met. , A $250,000 appropriation to start development of ri general aviation field In accordance with master plans being reviewed by the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) is stalled in the board’s finance committee. Four resolutions offered by Niles Olson, D-Orion Township, admitted foe of any major facility there, were referred to committee without action. O.son’s resolutions followed presentations of both majority and minority reports from the aviation and transportation committee regarding airport development in the county. WHAT HE SOUGHT Police Chief Apologizes to 'End' Row IN BEST INTERESTS Lewis said, “All parties agreed that Springer was in the car with Chief McGuire during the allegedly improper run. The run — to test mobility — took place about 3 p.m. Oct. 22 on a three-mile stretch of road between Loon Lake and West roads at 80 miles an hour. Springer later filed a written complaint against the chief. Dissatisfied with the official reprimand given to McGuire by Mayor Wesley McAtee last week. Springer demanded a council investigation. He claimed that he was being ridiculed as a result of false statements and rumors arisjpg from the incident. City Water Near in Walled Lake WALLED LAKE - Work has started on the pumping station, the last part of a $2.2-million city water system. The $360,000 building will be located on a 2'/2-acre site between Pontiac Trail and Anjo. City Manager Royce Downey told city council this week the building should be ready by early February. He also reported that water samples for the north end of the city were approved by the state while samples from the central city area showed signs of bacteria. Pipes in that area are being chlorinated again for another test. Once this water is approved, residents can begin tying their lines into the mains which are all installed. /In other business, the council authorized architect Pati'tek Cdrcoran to finalize plans for the new courthoifsc addition to city hall, Downey said. The 3,300-square-foot addition will go on the west side of the building. Cost is $65,000 for the bpilding and another $35,000 for furnishings. purchase the 132 acres on which ^.he airport proper is located. The county , owns 650 acres In the area. * * a . The majority report, presented by Wallace Gabler, R-Royal Oak, chairman of the avlatibn and transportation com, mittee, pointed out the n6ed for airport, facilities In additibn to those offered at the Oakland-Pontiac Airport, Waterford Township. Gabler said the site Is now handling more operations — take-offs and landings than it was designed for. Once improvements now under way arc com-plete, he added, itgshould approach 300,Ufl() operation! ’ annually within the next two years. pansion and facilities. improvement of a i r NOT FOR BIG PLANKS Gabler’s report indicated the Oakland-Orion site is not designed for big aircraft, thht it to be developed in stages according to need, and thaf the initial development is to be modest. / His report paid tribute to “the formidable opposition put up by homeowners in the area.” “There apparently Is no one best plan, but there is a growing demand that has to he met if we are going to shoulder up to the responsibility of providing for a continued health growth and development of Oakland County,'" the report said. It also noted, however, that each expert the county has consulted over the last 10 years has recommended the ex- FILM STRIPS OF AREA 'Hie minority report, presented by Olson, also a member of the aviation and transportation committee, consisted of film stips of the airport area. He pointed out several subdivisions, a trailer court, a nursing home, three schools, cburches and commercial development which would b^ affected should the airport expand., Olson claimed $5.7 million worth of new commercial development in the area of the Oakland-Orion master plan, all since 1962. The figure included $3 million for a Detroit Edison substation, hut did not include the cost for the construction of high voltage overhead lines which cross the nearby area, nor the cost of the land. runway feasible and pointed to the number of air accidents in general, aviation. I * *1 , rtlson arrived at the flgtire of $944,OSi as the county’s total Investment In the area. He said the figure Included the $21)0,000 now before the finance committee/^ He decried the high cost of earth removal in order to make a north-.south Some attempt was made yesterday to assure Olson that the $250,000 would not be acted upon before the board was able to consider both reports. The matter is not expected to arise again until the .January .session of the board. Olson sought: • Back payment of $31,750 which Olson claimed Orion Township would have derived from the property over the pa.st seven years. The land has been removed from township property tax rolls. • Sale of 47 acres fronting on M24, purchased by the county in 1967. The land was acquired according to master plan specifications as providing tor approach zones, • The immediate withdrawal of the Oakland-Orion master plan from FAA con.sideration “because it is in excess of what is now deemed necessary.” • The investigation of two offers to THE PRESS Am/l/ms PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, FRIDAV, NOVFMBFR 21, imio A—3 WIXOM — ^n apology by the police chief to one of his patrolmen has apparently ended the controversy resulting from a test-run in a patrol car. Receiving Chief Thomas McGuire’s apology is 27-year-old Patrolman Walter Springer, who went to the City Council with a complaint that public statements by the chief concerning the test-run had ridiculed him. 3’he decision to have the dhief apologize was reached at a special council meeting last night attended by Springer and his attorney, Eugene Lewis. The council agreed the chief’s letter of apology would have to be approved by Lewis. He Fights Generation Gap By TIM McNULTY AVON TOWNSHIP — Labeled “conservative" by many students and “radical” by many older churchgoers, the Rev. David Church finds himself in a unique position to speak from both sides of the fence. The Rev. Mr. Church, pastor of St. Luke’s Methodist Church and director of the Wesley Foundation Center at Oakland University, is 37 years old. Chronologically, he’s on the right-hand side of the generation gap. But as a student center director, he must find what is appealing and meaningful to those he has been appointed to serve. • With discussions, movhsj, updated church services and general availability, he is reaching out to the students. ALWAYS OPEN The Wesley Center is always open to the students — individually for those seeking answers to their particular questions, or for groups needing a place to meet. “We’re trying to make the facility available to the entire student population," said the Rev. Mr. Church. “We want to give students the chance not to write religion off. If we don’t, the church never gets the opportunity later. They thought a “message” would spice up the board., The idea worked and comments, favorable and not so favorable, have poured in. Some of the messages recently on the board were: ABM — Another Bad Mistake; Caution - - Breathing may be hazardous; l.et’s Race to the Moon and Make It Uninhabitable Too; Pray for Peace — Back It with Action; 100 Years of Racism — A Cause to Celebrate? DURING CENTENNIAL ^ The last message appeared during the City of Rochester's Centennial Celebration in September. “The way the students express It isn’t always my way,” said the pastor, “but what they say is responsible. We feel the messages should be within Uie range of the Christian conscience and a law - abiding citizen.” “We want to express the sensitivity of the church to their needs,” he said. “It’s true that the role of the church in society is kind of conservative — in the sense it seeks to conserve values. But the church has both elements in it. It must also be a catalyst and a critique to the society it operates in.” The center has been involved in some minor controversy recently because of its billboard on the front lawn. AVENUE OF EXPRESSION The Rev. David Church During the summer the students noted the sign was falling down. They decided to rebuild it and possibly, use it “as an avenue of expression.” The Rev. Mr. Church, his wife, Winona, and their four children live at 135 E. MaryknoU. Originally from Wyandotte, he is a graduate of the University of Michigan, Boston University and the University of Geneva, Switzerland. After ordination, he work^ in Jackson for four years and Houghton for six years before coming to Avon Township in 1968. He just learned the center must leave the building by the first of the new year. "We’re in a state of limbo,” said Rev. Church. “We just found out to bring the building up to shape would take an exorbitant amount of money.” Though unsure if there will be a new location or if the center will become “roving,” with meetings throughout the campus, he has hopes that his ministry to the students can continue on the same basis as before. “Theologically, socially and politically, I have to admit I feel more associated with what I call elements,” he said. this way will be in the best interests of the Wixom Police Department and the city." “Well, we went at it,” said Springer. “The chief agreed to the letter of apology for some of the statements he -ui jno a9i|od aqt sosop jeqt os apeiu cident.” Fire Dept.'s Handling of Blaze Is Questioned The Tri-City Fire Department’s handling of a fire was questioned at a West Bloomfield Township Board meeting this week. An explanation was sought concerning the department’s reason for requesting aid from the Commerce Township department while fighting a house fire rather than calling on a closer department — West Bloomfield. The Tri-City Fire Department covers the cities of Sylvan Lake, Orchard Lake and Keego Harbor. The question arose after t h e department’s volunteer firemen put out a house fire at 5595 Birdview earlier this week. Damage was estimated at $28,000. what we need. It’s really easy to sit back the next day and make a decision. At that time this was what we decided to do. We needed the water in order to continue fighting the fire until we could get to the lake. We’d do the same thing over again.” Both fire departments (West Bloomfield and Tri-City) express willingness to aid the other. should call it, and if our chief refused to call the department because of any personal feelings, I would ask for his discharge immediately. The fire chief has no right to interfere with life and the safeguarding of any property.” Morgan was head of the West Bloom-fiejd Fire Department In the early 60s. He resigned in 1965. SUPERVISOR COMMENTS West Bloomfield Township Supervisor John Doherty explained, “If Tri-City is the most available department to us we CA.LL FOR TAIHKER The department had its two 1,000 -gallon pumpers on the scene but also called fof^u 2,000-gallon tanker from CommerccHipile water from the tanker was being used, men were laying hose to a lake about 1,500 feet away. Fire Chief Herbert Morgan claimed that because of the Commerce tanker there was no lack of water during the time needed to lay hose. Morgan explained yesterday that West Bloomfield only had a 750-gallon tanker and that more water was needed. Morgan said, “We’ve got to call for Higbie Manufacturing to Acquire Colorado Stainless Tube Firm ROCHESTER — Higbie Manufacturing Co., East 4th Street, has announced its purchase of all outstanding stock of Sterling Stainless Tube Corp. of Englewood, Colo. Higbie Is a producer of small-diameter, low-carbon tubing for the automotive and home-appliance industries. West Bloomfield Fire Chief Boris Nicoloff commented, “I stand ready and able to respond to the Tri-City department’s call any time.” The Tri-City fire board last night authorized the fire,chief to investigate buying a used l,0 Y t * f I ' ' 1 *^239* General Electrie built-in dishwasher is a dependable model with features you want: push-button operation, rinse and hold, handle-up cutlery basket, automatic detergent and rinse agent dispensers, 3-level washing action, soft food disposer. Comes in white or color front. Save now at Hudson’s. *285’ Kitehen Aid'^ built-in diskwdsher has seven push button cycles, action indicator lights, exclusive 9-position upper rack adjustment, porcelain enamel tub, and pre-heated rinse water to 180* for extra sanitary dishes. White front panel. Vr/’fw pl$n imtulUmn Hudson’s Home Improvement Oncer, Pontiac. 2nd; all branchet;or call 682'32S2,czt.S4a KC XJ r> s o 1ST ’ s vBfl THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAV. NON'EMHER 21. Iimf) A—5 Astronaut Acclimation^ Landing EyesSky-Jpmp SPACE CF^TER, Houston A(F) — Apollo 12 has taught tutui mart he can be almost at home|abli to spend leks time training (rt(F) It means that astronauts onJApollo 13 ^111 be made in "a| Ope of Apollo 12’s tasks wasi Fra Mauro—a shallow crater has taught; future'lunar expeditions will be on the moon, the Apollo pro- in the mechanics of getting ' around^ the moon and exeft ‘This was one of ourt two more effort toward getting the main technical achievements.” most scientific good out of the Dr. Rocco A. Petrone observed time available, Petrone said, today. "The other was achiev- * * * Ing our prime objective of a pinpoint landing.' Apollo 12’s success in achieving a bull's-eye landing 20 feet The ease with which astro-‘c® «/rater in nauts Charles Conrad Jr. and ® moans we now understand the and Alan L. Bean worked during a. . , ,,, one-mile, four-hour geological 1 hike on the moon's Ocean of ‘hmgs that happen Storms "almost showed man in spacecraft like venting his natural environment,” the program director said in an interview. couple we^ks,” Petrone predict-1 to take cloee-up pictures of| surrounded by mountainous ter-i ppypoSKEY (APj - Watch ed, “after Apollo 12 returns andj three candidate highland sitesjrain 75 miles southeast of Apolloj the sky kiddies, Santa Claus we get a chance to look at the!-Fra Mauro, pescartes and l2's landing slte-is the expect-i"'ay ‘'"me crashing out of the| pictures.' Lalande. ied target for Apollo 13.^ ^ 4 ♦ **** Adopted Koreans Now Yanks “This was the thing that impressed me most,” he said, "the acclimation of the astronauts working on the lunar surface. The men reported no fatigue, and we extended their time outside 30 minutes." PORTLAND, Or^. (AP) - All 10 adopted Korean children of Mr. and Mrs. T.H. Johnstone Petrone said. |ace now U.S. citizens. This, in turn, means officials The couple's last two children blue Saturday. Then, again, he may not. The Petoskey Reglonlal Chamber of Commerce is making its second effort to have the man in red zoom out of an airplane and float into town on a parachute. Here's the plan: A low-flying airplane swoops over Petoskey High School and red-suited sport parachutist high now can consider aiming future Apollos toward more rugged regions, where fewer safe landing sites exist but where scientists say the most knowledge can be gained. A decision on what to do on Resistance 'Scotched' Women Invade' Bar CHICAGO (AP) - Seve*! women have ended a 71-year-old tradition at one of Chicago's last domains of male supremacy— an all-male standup bar. nie females held their beachhead Thursday night in Bergh-off's bar—a small rectangular section of a German restaurant in the Loop—gladly sparring with males who would venture a verbal sally and return sullenly to their drinks. "I was the first to walk in,” Winifred Gandy said between sips of a house specialty, a prized 14-year-old bourbon. The bartender said I couldn't be served and then we all stood at the bar and took uj> space.” The manager ordered them served. ‘WOULD HAVE SUED’ Miss Gandy and the six other Nena urged her parents to "The girls want to do things take several children home and, for their dad all the time,” she .. to make three trips to Korea forjgaid ..p„„r mother, the chil-jumps out more c ren. expect her to fall in line He lands behind the * * * I and wait on dad, too.” .school and goes inside, j Nend''is now 22 and the B^cpt-|c|jppQ|^.ji KOREA Then a professional Santa led children range in age from 61 , , icomes hohohoing out the front “It has taken us six trios to'^o H. They include two seU of',.^'jf,,door and hands out 3,000 candy couS«S’.?.’' •;» ‘f «. ^ made citizens, Mrs. Johnstone > would like to go to Seoul andl will it work? said. I * * * I work with the other children,”! Last year the sky diver land- They started adopting them 111 "It requires a lot of cooking said Mrs. Johnstone. jed a mile off target. Kristy 8, and Thomas 9, naturalized Thursday. years ago when their natural and the grocery bill is high,”| Johnston is the owner of daughter, Nena, saw the young, said Mrs. Johnstone. “But the firm that specializes in cleaning sters at the Harry Holt home for I children are self-sufficient and exhaust systems and air condi-Korean children in Creswell,itake care of their own personal tioning units for hotels and res-Ore. needs. . taurants. “The children didn’t notice,” shrugged Merle Lutz, chamber of commerce manager, “and besides, maybe it will work this year.” Here Are Sl^S furICLY Vilniiars If your noma ii littad balow, coma into Simmt advartis* ing dapt. on tha tacond floor for your Turkey certifi-cota. Plaata bring propar idantification. WINNERS NAMES ORi^WN BY: , JIM HOOVER 5475 Sherwood, Oxford HATSUKE WASHINGTON 42 Stout, Pontiac lERRY MARTIN 488 Second St., Pontiac P. T. MAYER 452 Arthur, Pontiac ANNIE RODGERS 107 Elm, Pontiac LESTER FOX 840 Hinford, Lake Orion MARIAN MARTIN 109 Pinogrova, Pontiac GLORIA STIEL 195 Drapar, Pontiac CLARA E. ZIEGLER 4133 Forbuah, Walled Laka NORM SCHRAM 896 Bay St., Pontiac WILBUR POWELL 221 E. Pika, Pontiac These Are the Last Turkey Winners at Simms. . . Simms, 98 N. Saginaw St. women are members of the Chicago chapter of the National Organization of Women. Mary Jean Collins-Robson, chapter president, said the women would have stayed if not served and then “we would have brought suit.” One member of the group, Alice Weber, was armed with copies of Illinois and Chicago statutes stating there can be no discrimination in bars. “It’s terrible. Last of man’s personal domains,” said Ronald J. Rosenblat of Chicago. ! NO COFFEE KLATCH j “They should get their drink] and drink. We don’t want a I coffee klatch. It’s the last vestiges of men,” said Bob Ossen-| kop of Rochelle Park, N.J., whoj said he goes to the bar when in town. Kibblers’ and Smokers’ Delights at SIMMS Low Prices Prices Good Friday and Saturday Main Floor Tobacco Dept, 2-Lbs. Derans Chocolates You Pay Only w Fresh and delicious Derans assorted chocolates with ossorted creamy centers and rich chocolate outside. Buy a box for home and one for ybur hostess. 12-Oz. Fancy Mixed Nuts 12-02. bog of Lady Graham mixed nuts including walnuts, brazil nuts, almonds, pecans and filberts. Stock op for the holiday. 12-Oz. Broadway Baby Walnuts. 47^ Regulars — King Size ~ Filters I. - Popular Cigarettes $6.00 Value plus sales tax lYour favorite brand of regular, king size or filter cigarettes at this low price. New 100mm or 101mm •Ize not included. Limit 2 cartons. Vf’ 50 King Edward Cigars $3.50 Value 2*9 Sales Tax Incl. ,, America's largest seller, King Edward Imperial cigars, regular 7c sellers. Limit 2 boxes. Christmas shopping can be twice as easy at your house this year. With Community^ two great Christmas cards. ■ ' , 1 A merrier Christmas is in the cards this year for customers of Community National Bank, because we have two great cards that can make your Christmas shopping easier than it’s ever been. First, there's Master Charge. The international all-purpose charge card that’s honored at over half-a-million places. More important at this time of year, Master Charge is . accepted by thousands of merchants in the greater Detroit area. So you can probably do all your Christmas shopping without carrying a dollar in cash. And without carrying umpteen different credit cards. Community National originated Master Charge in southeastern Michigan—long before other Detroit area banks got on the bandwagon. And we can still offer you the best service. So why not apply for your own Master Charge card today at one of our 21 convenient offices? While you’re there, put $500 or more in an exclusive CommuniBank 500 time deposit savings account. Opening a CommuniBank 500 account automatically entitles you to our other great Christmas card—the Community National Check Guarantee Card. this pnique card has vour color photo on it. And it tells merchants that Community National Bankstands behind every check you write up to $100. When you put a minimum of $500 in a CommuniBank 500 account, you also get three other great benefits. Your money earns 5% annual interest—-Xhe most any bank can pay—compounded daily provided it’s on deposit 90 days. You get a free personal checking account with no minimum balance requirement. And you get an automatic personal line of credit that lets you write yourself a loan. All you do to activate your preapproved loan account is write a check for an amount greater than your then current balance. Thus your Community Check Guarantee Card makes Christmas shopping easier two ways. It assures you that your checks will be accepted by merchants. And it lets you borrow a reasonable sum for special Christmas shopping needs—without red tape and inconvenience. / All in all, they’re an unbeatable pair for cashless Christmas shopping. ' Master Charge and CommuniBank 500. An exclusive combination from Community National Bank—your mer-fier Christrrtas headquarters. \ V National Bank Vv'\ V ,v> ( v; ' I, *1' i THE PONTIAC PRESS ^ 48 West Huron Street Pontiaf, Michigan 48056 /o FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 1969 I Hi mi6»AlD O. MARSHALL JORDAN Local Advartiting Monog RICHARD M. SAUNDERS Dr. Harry Arnkoff An untimely death deprived the community of an outstanding member of the medical fraternity and a president of the Oakland County Medical Society. highly - respected citizen. Dr. Harry ARNKorr died at 56 after a professional career in Pontiac that spanned three decades. Born in Detroit and a graduate of the University of Michigan School of Medicine, Dr. Arn-Korr won area recognition as a practitioner in the related fields of medicine and psychiatry. He was a past ★ ★ ★ Dr. Arnkoff was active in civic and ecclesiastic affairs and a ready volunteer in behalf of any worthy cause. ★ ★ ★ Dedication to his profession left DR. ARNKOFF little time for personal pursuits, although an occasional round of golf and a deep interest in his collection of antique banks afforded relaxation from the demandls of his profession. Dr. Arnkoff will be profoundly missed by his many friends and patients. oice of the People: Traffic, Parking Ease Important to Site Choice I applaud The Pontiac Pre.ss for its forthright editorial citing Oakland County as the best possible site for a new stadium for {ill the citizens of Michigan. This liast weekend a crisis developed^ with parking at the river front because of two major events—a circus at Cobo Arena and the Auto Show at Cobo Exhibit Hall. Douglas Dalgleish, chairman of the Auto Show, said, “Parking was just unbelievable. There was a monumental traffic tie-up.” ★ ★ ★ How then could the river front stadium site accommodate the additionai crowd of some fifty thousand attendees at Tigers or Lions games? ★ ★ ★ If state money is to be involved in a new stadium, I hope it will be located in Oakland County where all the people of Michigan can use it for Detroit athletic events without being discouraged by the prospect of such traffic jams. GEORGE W. KUHN STATE SENATOR, 14th DISTRICT Waterford Residents Discuss School Prohleiu 'Please, No Changes! Some people believe that approval of the nine-mill Waterford school tax increase Is desperately needed to provide school funds in early 1970. This is not true, for monies from this increase. If approved, would not actually be available until early 1971. Will Oil Grab Backfire? Ralph de Toledano Gulf Oil Corp. officials have gone to La Paz to hold exploratory talks with Bolivian leaders on that country’s seizure of the Bolivia Gulf Oil Co. Otherwise, American aid to Bolivia might have to be cut off early next year as required by the so-called Hickenlooper Amendment to the Foreign Assistance Act of 1962. Numerous commentators have pointed to the economic folly of Bolivia’s action. The country can consume only around 10 per cent of Bolivia Gulf Oil’s daily production of 32,000 barrels. And it has no way of seUing the remaining 90 per cent. Gulf Oil’s storage facilities at Arica, Chile, are full, and the company has suspended movement of its tanker ships to the port. were'dimmed when a Socialist deputy accused him of accepting $600,000 in campaign contributions from Gulf Oil in exchange for concessions after the election. Seizure of the company’s properties on Oct. 17 invalidated the accusation. Gallup Poll on Viet Fraudulent But the Increase Jn 1969 state equalized valuation will result In approximately $1.17 million Increase in 1969-70 school funds collected from taxpayers when monies from 1969 taxes become available in early 1970. WASHINGTON-Dr. Gallup has done it again. His public opinion polls are supposed to reflect the Gulf Oil was a handy target because of its prominence. It was the only major oil company operating in Bolivia. Tin mining, Bolivia’s only other major extractive industry, had been nationalized in 1952. ★ ★ ★ Peru has offered Bolivia the use of ships to transport its oil, but the gesture is expected to do more for morale than for revenue. But nationalization made sense politicaUy. President Alfredo Ovando Candia, who came to power in a military coup last Sept. 26, had planned to run for president in elections scheduled for 1970. However, his prospects Argentina presumably is less enthusiastic about the BoUvian seizure than is Peru. Nationalization has held up construction of a $46 miUion pipeline, to be financed in part by the World Bank, that was designed to deliver gas from Bolivia Gulf Oil fields to Buenos Aires. thinking of Americans. But shade the question right — or left — and the results always end up telling a different story. The latest Gallup Poll on Vietnam is a case in point. Let me quote the lead of his report to subscribing newspapers; “The extent to which the public’s views on the Vietnam war have changed over the last two years is dramatically seen In the shift from the ‘hawk’ to the ‘dove’ position since 1967.” Gallup survey, conducted In early November, almost the exact reverse is true: doves outnumbered hawks 55 per cent to 31 per cent, with 14 per cent uncommitted.” If true, this would be big news. And it makes for nice headlines supporting last month’s Moratorium and last week’s New Mobilization. But as everyone knows, any sampling is directly conditioned by the questions fictitious definition of a hawk and an equally fictitious definition of a dove. The nine-mill increase would provide approximately two million dollars additional in Waterford school taxes, or a 15.7 per cent increase over presently available funds. Taxes are high enough. Vote no increase in school millage. THOROUGHLY DISGUSTED Let’s face reality on the Waterford school millage vote. To depend on state aid financial assLstance would mean loss of voting power for tax control. How do we know we would receive our proportionate share, particularly where other areas’ needs are greater? De TOLEDANO Most Americans, hawk or dove, would like to see a reduction of our military effort in Vietnam. RESULTS FALSE By setting up his straw man and putting both the doves and the hawks in the same category. Dr. Gallup falsified the results even before his pollsters went out to ask his ------ “question.” There are still Waterford residents who do not know that ______________________________ Had Dr. Gallup asked; “Do the media center carpeting has been an on-going project of The answer is a resounding tevor a carefully phased the students at Waterford Mott High School for the past two withdrawal of American years. They are selling magazine subscriptions again this RESOUNDING NO Did George Gallup really try to determine the national sentiment, hawk versus dove? We’re going to be taxed one way or another, so let’s go the sensible route and vote “yes” in order to keep our tax dollars in our local school system. CHET STADER 763 JOYCEIL DRIVE Hurricane ‘Sleuths’ Honored For, adds the eminent pollster, “hawks outnumbered doves in a December 1967 survey 52 per cent to 35 per cent, with 13 per cent uncommitted. In the latest “People are called hawks If they want to step up our military efforts in Vietnam,” the Gallup pollsters said to those they spoke to. “They are called doves if they want to reduce our military effort in Vietn^. How would you call yourself — as a hawk or a dove?” forces as the South Vietnamese troops take over, or a precipitate withdrawal leaving the field to the Communists?” he would have obtained an honest appraisal of the public’s sentiment. month. This is, of course, pretty cute. Dr. Gallup invents a Normally, citations accompanying the Distinguished Flying Cross and the Air Medal refer to outstanding performance of duty under fire or during aerial combat with a hostile enemy. Today, these medals are being worn by 16 Air Force hurricane hunters. Presenting two DFCs and 14 Air Medals to two crews from the 53rd Weather Reconnaissance Squadron, Gen. Jack J. Catton, commander of the Military Airlift Command, said: ing business requiring great expertise under hazardous conditions.” Arthur Hoppe This gets me to the basic point. With public opinion polls being used by both sides in every controversy, the validity of the question asked becomes of paramount importance. DEEP SHADOW The “Have you stopped The Waterford Mott Parents Advisory Council undertook the athletic field project and have spent many hours In planning, selling advertising space and in selling the football program to earn the money to pay for sod and sprinkling system, ihe parents, school staff and football team took on the task of installing the sprinkling system and laying the sod. MRS. PHILLIP MEACHAM SECRETARY, WATERFORD MO'TT PARENTS ADVISORY COUNCIL (Editor’s Note: All letters to the Voice of the People must be signed and an address given. In some instances a pen name may be used in the paper.) ★ ★ ★ By repeatedly flying a WC-130 Hercules aircraft into the eye of Hurricane Camille, these men obtained data that made possible advance warning of the storm’s path and intensity, thereby saving an unknown number of lives. Rocky Discovers a Way BERRY’S WORLD-By Jim Berry to Trigger Latin Boom “I am convinced that hurricane hunting also is a highly demand- ★ ★ ★ Camille certainly qualifies as one of the most “hostile enemies” ever to strike at the United States. The medals are well-deserved. Ray Cromley Campus Meetings on War Noteworthy WASHINGTON (NEA) What happened on the college campuses here Nov. 13, 14 and 15 was more sigriifi-cant than the massive, heavily publicized antiwar ^ marches. Students from all over the nation, i n Washing- ____________ ton for the CRCMLEY demonstrations, met with fellow students In Vietnam sessions which sometimes la.sted through the night. ★ , The Moratorium-Mobiliza- Tlw AiMcMacI Snu CtwiNM 0 i> $24.00 • mr. .lu-•tim I* McMgaii «4 •II .H.., pla„, !■ 0» UnH«d Stat.1 $30.00 a yaw. AN mall avbicriptlwn payakl. in po- tion establishment directors had their own speakers exhorting against U.S. actions in Vietnam ^and defending Ho Chi Minh’s med. Curiously, these representatives were often ill-prepared. ALLOWED TO SPEAK But the organizers also allowed anti-Communist students and administration speakers to argue for what is being done in Southeast Asia and to argue against over-quick Withdrawal. At meetings this reporter is familiaf with, the student audiences insisted the pro-I^ixon speakers h® treated fairly. ■They s h o u t h d dowr^ hecklers. They seemed Sager to hSar this “other side.” They put serious questions. By contrast with these meetings, consider the Mobilization march of 250,000 down Pennsylvania Avenue, ending with a mass meeting at the Washington Monument. NOT HIPPIES Contrary to reports, these were not, by and large, youngsters ; with “dirty ankles.” Though their uniforms were unconventional (beards, long hair, blue jeans. Army jackets and similar wear), most young people this reporter saw were clean. Their clothes were freshly washed.. Beneath the costumes you could see glimpses of good jewelry, costly cameras, quality shirts. Gov. Rockefeller has finally gotten around to submitting a report on his good will tour of Latin America which had such Impressive results — 14 riots, 10 dead, two general strikes and several hundred injured. He understandably says things are terrible down there In his 137-page report to Mr. Nixon, Rockefeller says things are getting so bad down there that the poor, undernourished people are about to rise up and overthrow their military dictators. So, to improve the quality of life, he says, we should Send them guns. GUNS FOR DICTATORS We should send guns, that Is, to the military dictators. Particularly, he says, we should send jet fighters and bombers to the military dictators so they won’t feel like “second-class citizens.” this faction or that. But ali they do is cast a deep shadow on the entire polling process. Dr. Gallup and his principal competitor raised eyebrows on the eve of the 1968 presiden-. tial election when they tossed out what the reading public considered objective though contradictory surveys, and came up with almost identical figures — minus benefit of statistical underpinning. Numbers wore shoes of very good leather. Some had expensive fur co^ts. What brought them together was what |s calle;^ togetherness—at the sin^ng at the Mounment and at the Cathedral session of niouming or' the / candlelight procession or the all-night march with names of the dead. The problem of military dictators feeling like second-class citizens is one that has long been overlooked. Take the case of Gen. Cosa (The Ogre) Nostra, beloved El-Presldente-for-Life of the Republic of Cosa Nostra. Every time Gen. Nostra goes to a U.N. cocktail party he knows that some delegate is going to sidle up to him over the hors d’oeuvres and snidely say, “Well, general, how many jet fighters you got?” SENSE OF SECURITY Is it any wonder the general has developed a nervous tic and an inferiority complex? He’s just compensating for his feelings of inadequacy. ~ But' ah, give a man like that several squadrons of jet fighters, a score or two of Sherman tanks and a couple of used battleships and watch the change/come over him. There is nothing, absolutely nothing, that gives a milltarir dictator • sense of security like a squadron of jet fighters ^ " The Gallup Poll on Vietnam will do little to restore public confidence in opinion taking. The First Amendment prevents any legislative interference in what t h e pollsters report. But the pollsters, in the games they play, might well a s k themselves: What would a poll of public confidence In what we announce show? I leave it to you to find the answer. ,,,qfc;ga6j. C)IN*lrNEA,lK' “Please, dear-don’t call me ‘President Lindsay’ unless we’re alone!’' Questions and Answers (Q) How long have electric lights been used on Christmas trees, and when did cities start having lighted outdoor trees? IN THE SPIRIT Philippines before we granted that country independence in 1946. Verbal Orchids Mrs. Hope Cai^nter of Like Orion; 84th birthday. Mrs. Clara M. Liddy of 143 Waterly: 85th birthday. Mrs. Cora Austin of Union Lake; 84th birthday. “The peons are revolting!” cries an aide. “I always found them so,” says Gen. Nostra complacently; now the very picture of a strong, stable, secure leader. “Drop a lew thousand bombs on their heads in the name of economic progress.” You can imagine the gratitude we’ll reap. “I can’t thank you enough,” says the general, turning to our American ambassador, “for improving the quality of life around here.” , “We’re delighted to help you achieve a stable government,” says our ambassaddr politely. “Now whhn ^^11 you begin wiping out poverty?” \ The general listens a moment to the bombs and rockets exploding in the distance. “We’ve already begun,” ha says happily. . ^ (A) Colored dlectric lights for / Christmas trees wdre first usetf, in 1907, and Pasaderm, Calif., waJs the first tity to start the custom of a ligffted community tree in 1909. Cleveland and New York followed in 1912., j (Q) My father wants me to put my cat out every night, but now It’s getting too cold. At^ what temperature Is It unsafe for a cat to he out all night? I ' ' ' • , ANN (Q) I found a coin which, one\ilde, has “United States of America, 1945D” and on the other “Ten Centavos Flllpinqi.” What kind of coin |s It? 1 NOT A COLLECTOR (A) It is a ten centavos piece minted in the U.S. for use in the (A) That depends on ix great number of Variables—age of cat, whether it’s long- of short-haired, condition of fur, whether it’s la dry, Vr wet cold, whether there’s sheu available. Kittens \should not, be left out, but one veterinarian suggested that the average mature cOft in good health, could probably safely stay outside all night in temperatures above 15-20 degrees if^there is some shelter available, sw)h as a garage, outbuOding, etc. f-P THE PONTIAC PBESS. FRIDAY, NOVESIRER 21, 19fl9 A—T ■•I 7 ' ^ im \ Pontiac PrHi Photo Driver Ray Parept And Airport Service Line President Cynthia Green New Transit Service for Area By ED BLUNDEN A new transportation service for the Pontiac area wili begin operation Monday morning. The new service wili be provided by the Airport Service Lines Inc., for the downtovm area of Pontiac, the Telegraph area and the communities of Keego Harbor, Sylvan Lake, Orchard Lake and Waterford Township. Running every two hours from about 8 a.m. to 11 p.m. wiil be 11-passenger limousines. A fee of 50 cents for adults and 25 cents for children will be charged. The service Is aimed especially at supplying public transportation from the suburban areas to Pontiac's hospitals, shopping centers and government offices. STOPS AT HOSPITALS Stops include Pontiac’s three hospitals, the Oakland County Service Center, and the Miracle Mile, Tel-Huron and Pontiac Mall shopping centers. there. Now we will find out if they’ll use the service." Linteau’s firm has extensive experience in the limousine and minibus field. President of the firm is Cynthia Green. Linteau’s routes to Detroit Metropolitan area airports corners outside the Pontiac city limits, Linteau said. Suspect's Triali Set in Assault l on Detecfives Lr-i'i w • A Pontiac man was ordered yesterday to stand trial in Oakland County Circuit Court on a charge of attempted murder of two Pontiac polici^ detectiyc^s. In addition to the two counts of assault with intent to mur-deV, Elton ,1. Rainey, 22, of 260 W. Wilson, will be tried at the same time for stealing the officers’ police car. Rainey is charged with attempting to murder Lt. John DePauw and Sgt. John Williams when they tried to arrest George McCormick* 28, on an armed robbery charge Aug. 20, DePauw, 53, suffered head and arm wounds during the incident. Both McCormick and Rainey allegedly fled the scene in the detectives’ unmarked ARRESTED NEXT DAY OPPOSITE DIRECTION Opposite direction trips will start at Pontiac Osteopathic Hospital at 9 a.m. and every second hour aRerward. Last trip from Waterford Township through 63 cities and h e “'e employs 58 drivers. j ■'ospital at 9 p.m. _______________ Starting from the Cass Lake COULD INCREASE RUNS jRoad starUng point, the route Though starting with runs---------------------------------- every two hours, Linteau said if the demand exists, the number of runs could be quickly in- Child Named for o VW will proceed as follows and reverse itself starting at the hospital with stops about three minutes apart; South on Cass Lake Road to Orchard Lake Road. South and I southwest on Orchard Lake Road to Commerce Lake Road, Southwest on Commerce Lake Road to Orchard Lake Post Office at Erie Drive. Northeast on Commerce Lake Road t o Orchard Lake Road. North and northeast on Orchard Lake Road to Telegraph Road. STOCKTON, Calif. (AP) creased to give hourly or half-hourly service. He said this was the way his service to Metropolitan Airport evolved. Service to and fromL- c t . . t, Rochester is also a possibilty,P« ^an Joaquin Ccwnty R^ u -jj corder was somewhat startled . Thursday when Mr. and Mrs. Kyle Rayfield came in to regis-His Pontiac area sery ce wllli^r the birth of their new son: have 17 basic stops starting at 8 Franklin VW Rayfield. Cass L»ke and Rayfield explained the origin Lake Roads InLfv^. a.m. at Elizabeth Waterford Louis Linteau, owner o f Airports Service Line, said, "We are convinced the need is I .u Ricky was born in the back minibus will leave from that Lgat of a Volkswagen and when point every two hours and a he made it to the hospital, complete trip will take about an [nurses immediately nicknamed him "VW.” Rayfield liked the The drivers will pick up nickname and decided to make passengers who hail them at [it permanent. Rainey was arrested the fol- lowing day. McCormick was found in New Orleans, where he has since been convicted of two other crimes, and sen jtenced to two fivcryear terms, according to police. Police said that proceedings have already started to return McCormick from Louisiana so he can stand trial In Oakland County. The same charges have been filed against McCormick as Rainey. Southeast on Telegraph Road to Miracle Mile Shopping Center. North and northeast on Telegraph Road to Courthouse. South on Telegraph Road to Mall. East on Elizabeth Lake Road to Johnson. South on Johnson to Orchard Lake Road Northeast on Orchard Lake Road to Wide Track Drive south on Wide Track o i Saginaw to St. Joseph Hospital. North on Saginaw or Wide Track Drive to Mount Clemens West on Mount Clemens to Mill Street. South on Mill t o Osteopathic Hospital. South on Mill Street to Pike Street, west on Pike Street to Wide Track and return via the same route. Rainey was returned to the Oakland County Jail in lieu of $50,000 bond following his arraignment yesterday before Circuit Judge James S. Thor-burn. No date was set for his trial. Teachers Settle HAMTRAMCK (AP)-Teach ers in the Hamtramck school ll-ff Ae Wlrtphol* OCCUPY ALCATRAZ—Three members two weeks. The Indians say they want the of a band of American Indians look over the Island for a new Indian center. They are main cellblock of Alcatraz yesterday after demanding the federal government give occupying the island for the second time in it to them under provisions of an 1868 treaty. Demand Island From U. S. 78 Indians Invade Alcatraz SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — 26, claimed that an 1868 treatyimained behind to spend a sec-Seventy-eight Indians from with the Sioux provides that any ond night in pitched tents, about 30 tribes have invaded Al- unused federal land reverts au-| Fourteen of the Indians land-catraz Island in San Fraijcisco tomatically to Indians. led Nov. 9, but left peacefully Bay, demanding the federal The federal government aban-; after being threatened with mis-government turn it over to them doned its prison on the 21-acre demeanor charges of trespassk under provisions of an 1868 trea- island in 1963 and the property ing. ty. has been declared surplus. The The invaders now have re- The tribesmen crept ashore ^®neral Services Administra-worded a shoreline sign to read: from boats Wednesday night tion is in charge of disposal. "Warning: Keep off—Indian and vowed Thursday that most BEGIN TALKS property.” Below they have In- would remain until the federal (.gA Regional Administrator block letteri: government rules formally on Thomas Hannon visited Alca- “Red Power.” their demands. ij^az Thursday and began ----------------------------- * * * I “peaceable” talks with the In- Indian leader Richard Oakes, ^dians. -------—---------------------j “They certainly have posses-! sion,” he acknowledged. "But I Quake Recorded explained to them the difficul-ties they would encounter even in Indian Ocean “ State Fingerprint Expert, 68, Dies LANSING (AP) - Laurence They are not financially p. Stackable, 68, a fingerprint equipped to make any use of the expert with 41 years of service NEW DELHI (AP) — The In-island.” ^ with state police, died Thursday district voted overwhelming ap-jdian government reported a ma-| Oakes s^id the invaders want at his Lansing home, proval yesterday to a new two-|jor earthquake early^ today in to set up a museum, a school year contract. The new contract'the Indian Ocean off* the west and an Indian center, calls for an ultimate salary coast of Sumatra. | Oakes and six other leaders Government seismologists!accompanied Hannon to the said that quake intensity was 7.5'mainland Thursday night for on the Richter scale. | continued talks. The rest re- range of from $7,500 to $13,500 a year, up from a current $7,-000-$12,000. Stackable, a native of Whitmore Lake, was graduated from Pinckney high school and attended Ypsilantl State College and the University of Michigan. How quality conscious are you when it comes towhiskey? Here's the check list. 1. My brand never varies. I know that each bottle will taste just as smooth and pleasing as the last one. yes □ no □ 2. It mixes well. Btit It also tastes fine straight. Or on the rocks. yes □ no □ 3. 'My friends enjoy it. It's the kind of whiskey I can serve with pride, yes □ no □ If you've answered an unqualified yes to ail these questions,you'reaquality-consciouf buyer. And probably another person who has made Seagram's 7 Crown the most-bought brand of whiskey in the whole wide world- Say Seagram's and Be Sure. $4.68 >2.96 $10.85 W 0*Hm 1(3 c*a« N*. tmt •na oiiMHi Avallabli at Moat ackaea Llauar Oaalart ' ialai Taaat lacluSwl Seagram Disllllcrs Companyl, New York City. Blended Whiskey. 66 Proof. 6596 Crain Neutral Spirits^ 'n Afell A—8 Church Rings Alarm' op Italian Divorce ROME (AP) — Rome’s cardl-| "In such a difficult and deli-nal vlear ordered a day of pray- cate time for the destiny of the ers and Italy’s bishops Ajsoj family in Itialy," TTie cardinal sounded the alarm, but theirj said, "one cannot do without the fight against legalization of di- humble tind trusting prayer of vorce in Italy looked hopeless j the people of God, which rests today. I its confidence rather in the After two months of filibuster-[guide of God than in the lone hu-ing, the ChrisUan Democrats in [man capacity." the Chamber of Deputies gavel The Italian episcopal confer-In and agreed Friday night to a|ence,of Roman Catholic bishops vote Nov. 29 on the divorce bill.!released a document describing! * ★ * the Church’s ban on divorce asi The 265 deputies from the » "I’l'oice of civilization.” : Catholic party have the support * * * [ of the 24 Fascist deputies. But, After agreeing to the vote on all other parties are pledged to Nov. 29. the Christian Demo-; vote for the bill, and they have cratic deputies met to discuss! a total of 351 members in the strategy. Eight deputies called! lower house of Parliament. on the all-Christian Democrat j Angelo Cardinal dell’Acqua government of Premier Mari-1 ordered Rome’s 400 churches to j ano Rumor to resign rather | have special sermons and than allow the bill to pass, prayers Sunday against thej If approved in the Chamber of| “plague of divorce.’ [Deputies, the bill goes to the ■' Senate for debate and vote. The Christian Democrats and the j Fascists are in the minority [there also. 4 YEARS OLD The divorce bill is four years [old. Delaying tactics by opponents have kept its progress in the legislative mill at a snail’s Archdiocese Denies divorce Arcnaiocese uemes ^ Church-School Closing Seen Impending shutdown lO^-y^ar-old Italian Parliament. I The bill would allow divorce WYANDOTTE (AP) — Our 1 for several causes, including Lady of Mt. Carmel High School!five years of separation. But the In Wyandotte will probably close In June, the Rev. Venanty Szy-manskl announced Thursday. There was disagreement at the Detroit Archdiocese. Father Szymanski, pastor of Mt. Carmel parish, said a teacher shortage is a contributing factor in the expected closing He said the Felician Sisters who assist in teaching at the school, have transferred four of the school’s teachers “That would leave us with only four nuns,” the priest said “and tiiat’s just not enough. I’m afraid it will take a miracle to save the school.” There are now 284 pupils en rolled In the 36-year-old school with eight Felician Sisters and eight lay teachers. •NOT CLOSING’ The Most Rev. Thomas Gumbleton, vicar general of the archdiocese, said, “Mt. Carmel isn’t closing. In fact that isn’t even the issue. I believe Father Szymanski is reacting to Wednesday night’s meeting of Wyandotte parishioners, some of whom would like to turn Mt. Carmel into an expanded grammar school. “Under the plan,” Bishop Gumbleton said, “Mt. Carmel students would move to Gabriel Richard High School in River-view where there is plenty of room for them.” “We’ve never considered closing Mt. Carmei,” the Bish(^ added. “I’m afraid that Father Szymanski’s statement is a little premature.” Christian Democrats hope to get through Parliament next year a bill sanctioning popular referen-dums to repeal laws. The Christian Democrats and the Roman Catholic hierarchy have vowed to call such a referendum immediately in the hope that the Church still has sufficient hold on the Italian masses to get the divorce law repealed. Office Opened LANSING (AP) - A new, branch license plate office has; been opened by the secretary of| state in South Lansing. Joseph Billingsley of Lmsing, a former field r^resentative for the Democratic State Central Committee, has. been named office manager. AUTEN FURNITURE 6605 Dixie Hwy. Clarkston FURNITURE CARPET DRAPERY’ Tbinking of Biqlng a Piano or Organ Gallagher’s is the place to shop! LOWREY ORGANS Priced from 495 New Spinet and Console Pianos Priced from 539 Immediate Delivery * Free Lessons CHRISTMAS LAYAWAY PLAN BANK TERMS Open Sunday 1 to 5 1710 S. TELEGRAPH V* Mile South of Orchid Lake Ave. iLots of Freje Parking FE 4-0566 ■ rete r Emiidacs ’019 PJM. Satarday ’tU 5i30 P.M. Ih): .11 THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAV, NOVEMBER 21. I»«» Famous name toys! GamesI Hobby SuppliesI Everyday savings pricesi Suzy Homemaker beauty voafty Elegant gold rubbed French provincial styling with adjustable glass mirror and two-tone matching hassock. Every little girl wants one in her roomi 1293 'Matchbox’ Motorway track $ot Pot action into your 'Matchbox’ car collection! Set comes complete with ■ M AA under and over track, power pock and I # V two Matchbox models! Savings priced! FREE BIRTHDAY Children up to 12 years of aael Enroll today, tomorrow... any day bl at Toy Town! Register your birth* day with, us and weTI hove o gift for you on your next birthday. You'll also hove o chance at our big Birthday Sweepstakes Drawing, with a chance to win a bike or a big Toy Shopping Spree with lots and lots of toys absolutely FREE! Don't forget to register soon! Paaauts Mattel-O-Pkoies 'Rock ’a Roll” table teiais set Delex five-foot pool table sot Happiness is a friendly phone coll from One of your favorite Peanuts characters. 'The Great Pumpkin'; Beethoven's Birthday and many others, 40 ih all! Buy nowl 593 Sturdy table with ’playback' feature . . . ideal for practice! Compfete with net and brackets, balls arid four rubber faced paddles. Table folds to storel 3996 Includes balls, rack and 2 cues ... everything you need for houre and hours of fun for the entire family. Hurry In today, while savings are greatesti 39« SAVE EVERYDAY! Complete 'Big Beot' drums Set features realistic styling . . . complete with g Noturol wood rocker Sturdy, hardwood rocker cymbals. Hurry in. Save! in comfortable child size! Ideal for playroom! Save! THOUSANDS OF TOYS, GAMES & GIFT IDEAS ALL BY FAMOUS MAKERS Shuffles gome by Aurora Thetobletopshuffleboard __ gome duplicates all oc- JuQ3 tion of real shufflebooirdl GIANT TRIM-A-TREE SELECTION TREESI ORNAMENTS! LiGHTSi GLinER GALORE AT SAVINGSI Motfel's talking 'Drowsy' Sleepy-eyed favorites says m tmf 11 different phrases! Rooted hair, painted eyes. Wooden rocker or crib Rocker-wood frame with padded seat, back. Crib- 099 walnut finish, drop tide. 40-Inch pool table set This working miniature _ ^ jaaa table hot real billiard 1093 cloth cover, ball return. V 'MiteV ' ' Telegraph at Square Lake Rd. OPEN Daily til 9 p.m. sui^day ii^bil^roTp!fi^ \lfEGIONAL CEidTER Gratlef el IS Mile Rd. ! i vr l!.t ;.i , lilu I TUK I’OX’i'IAC I'UKSS, MUDAV. NOVK.M HKJI Jl, litO!* .\—9 Escapee Returns to Prison He Fled in 1923 CARSON CITY, Nev, (AP) ~ The old man looked at the hlRh granite walls of Nevada State Prison and shook his head. Then he glanced briefly westward as the sun disappeared over the Sierra Nevada mountain range. “1 iluoss it was just about time I came back. I guos I al- ways knew I'd be back here,,’ V7-ycar-old Leonard T. KH said Thursday. Fristoe cscapecj from the prison 46 years ago after serving 2 Vi years of a life sentence for slaying two members of a sheriff’s posse. He was being pursued for the theft of a model T Ford, two rifles, 15 boxes of car tridges and some salt pork. In that 46 years, usirtg the name Claude, Willis, he had married, had a son, and found both financial success and failure In travels that took him from coast to coast and into Mexico and Canada. ‘AWFUL IX)T OF MAN’ “An awful lot of man—that old man,’’ Claude R. Willis Jr. 38, said of his father. “He came on strong all his life.” F^istoe’s Identity came to light Saturday when he impulsively blurted out his story to a Compton, Calif., police officer who had responded to adisturb-ing the peace call. stroke and found life in the trail-• confining. Willis, a heavy-equipment op* erator for a railroad, said his father had made a fortune in Maine during World War II. “He had 22 buses hauling workers to the South Portland {Shipyard, owned a 85-room summer hotel at Old Orchard Beach and farmed 600 acres with 163 head of cattle and 16 acres in potatoes,’’ he said. carry a sentence of 1 to injsaid these hud be«’n abandoned i years. |years agp. i Fristoe said he ijnight have Tto warden assigned ■ s Old surrendered years ago, but was worried that he might be placed in “the hole’’—an Isolation cell carved Into the ground. Hockcr his Old number, 2101, and .said he would be permitted to continue waring his cherished cowboy boots. Joseph Kennedy Buried Fristoe, a widower who was receiving Social Security and had suffered a stroke 18 months ago was living with his son, daughter-in-law Christine and 2-year-old granddaughter Teresa in a house trailer. Police said Fristoe had quarreled with his daughter-in-law. Willis said his father had been “difficult to handle’’ after the “Later we went Into partnership and lea.sed 4,000 acres in South Dakota. We made it good . . . always drove Packards. Then we bought about 4,000 acres in Wyoming and ran cattle. But in 1952 we went $44,000 In debt when the prices broke on herefords.’’ He said the family since has reduced that debt to $2,097.50 and continues to pay on it. TO SLEEP IN HOSPITAL Warden Carl Hocker said Fristoe would sleep in the prison hospital. “I’m not going to put him in a cell,’’ he said. “It’s not necessary." He said Fristoe normally would have to spend seven years in prison before being eligible for parole. He added that it will be up to the district attorney whether Fristoe is prosecuted for escape. Conviction would HYANNIS PORT, Mass. tAP)l|hcrn.e was one of spiritual joyi — It was cold and windy today|of resurrection, rather than| at the Kennedy compound by i mourning. j the sea and the slightly desolate I look of the colonial clapboard houses was appropriate. The patriarch of the Kennedy clan had been laid to rest. Kennedy's old friend, Richard Cardinal Cu.shing of Boston, of-; fered the Mass. Later, after the Joseph P. Kennedy, a million- .‘•''P, aire who sired a 'family lhat|;-hurch m llyannis where the scaled the political heights-alKennedys had wor.shlped for president and two senators-and,yea>’.'i, the c^ardinal officiated at had felt the personal tragedy of .he graveside .service in Brrxik-two assassinations and two oth-P*"*' er violent deaths, was gone. | The committal prayers took Kennedy, who died Tuesdayjonly about five minutes, at 81, was buried Thursday with! Sen. Edward M, Kennedy, D-simple rites at Holyhood Ceme-;Mass., the only surviving son, tery in Brookline, the Boston sprinkled a handful of earth on suburb where President John F. his father’s casket. And the sim-Kennedy was born. i pie rites were over. Earlier, there had been a pri-i Rose Kennedy, the widow, lin-vate funeral Mass at St. Francis gered for a time beside the Xavier church in Hyannis. Itj grave. was a white Mass, with the cler-j Then she took her son’s arm gy wearing white ve.stments in- and walked slowly back to her stead of black or purple. The car. PROTECT YOUR HOME AGAINST THE INVADERS... DUST, DIRT AND POLLEN! install an ELECTRO-AIR electronic air cleaner Remove* up to 90% of the dirt particle* that pa** through your forced air heating or cooling *y*tem. For more information: KAST Heating and Cooling ^ 580 Telegraph Rd. ot Orchord Loke 338-9255 BUY! SELL! TRADE! USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! FREEDOM ENDS - Leonard W. Fristoe, 77, is transferred from the main prison entrance of Nevada State Prison at Carson City to another building by a gi*ard. Warden Carl Hocker had returned Fristoe to the prison from Los Angeles to resume a life sentence for a double murder that was interrupted by his escape in December 1923. Partially paralyzed, Fristoe requires his cane and a helping hand to negotiate the prison steps. In Animal 'World' Will Stirs a Clamor REDWOOD CITY, Calif. (AP) — George Whittell left $40 million to animals and a millionaire-size headache to San Mateo County Superior Court. Some 20 animal protection groups are clamoring for pieces Hanoi Denies Rogers' Claim of Whittell's fortune, left in a! vaguely written will that he( penned before his death April 17. ■ I estimated at $50 million to $100; million—to be divided among j “Defenders of Wildlife, the So-] ciety for Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, local or national,! and the National Audubon Socie-1 ty, or any affiliated chapter or’ branch, etc.” Whittell apparently was unaware that no national SPCA exists. TOKYO (AP) - North Vietnam denied today that there had been recent diplomatic contact between the United States and North Vietnam. Hanoi’s official Vietnam News Agency said the North Vietnamese Foreign Ministry’s spokesman “issued a statement refuting the U.S. State Department’s claim on Nov. 19 that there has been recent ‘diplomatic contact’ between the U.S. and the Democratic Republic of Vietnam ‘through other countries.’ ’’ ★ ★ Secretary of Slate William P. Rogers said Tuesday that “numerous diplomatic contacts” with North Vietnam, including some since the death of Ho Chi Minh, had failed to produce any sign of progress toward settling the Vietnam war. Hanoi said this was “another Scheme of the Nixon administration to fool public opinion and elude the pressing demand of the people in the U.S. and the world that the U.S. withdraw speedily, totally and unconditionally its troops from South Vietnam.” CLAIMS MADE Thirty-four lawyers appeared this week to make claims on be-j halt of various animal groups across the nation. Judge James j O’Keefe scheduled a hearing] Jan. 5. ' Whittell’s widow Elia said she doesn’t understand the claims' by so many groups, although she is not opposed to their receiving part of the money. “I think he made it clear in his will. He hadn’t discussed it with me, exactly,” she said. I “I’m not against the money] being left to them. I may leave some myself. I haven’t decided yet.” ■ I In the early 1920s, Whittell ac-j quired thousands of acres along 18 miles of Lake Tahoe shoreline and preserved it in its natural state—filled with wildlife. KEPT ANIMALS His widow said they kept cheetahs, lions and other African game at their foothills tate in nearby Woodside. Mrs. Whittell was left an esti. mated $10 million. They had been married 51 years. NOTICE The City of Pontiac is offering for sole the following three (S) garbage packers; Yr. 1964 CMC model VH-501 1, engine 401, tires 9:00x20, single rear axle. Leoch packer P-17. City equipment #817. Yr. 1964 model VH-5011, engine 401, tires 8:25x20, single rear axle. Gorwood packer LP-618. City equipment #818. Yr..l964 GMC model VH-501 1, engine 401, tires 9:00x20, single rear axle. Leoch packer P-17.. City equipment #820. These vehicles are being sold in the "os is condition to the highest bidder. Sealed bids will bb received unfil 2:00 P.M. Monday, December 1, 1969 ot the Purchasing Department, City Hall, 450 Wide Track Drive. Envelope should be marked "Sealed Bid #458.” Vehicles may be inspected ot the’ D.P.W. & S. Yard, 55 Wessen St. during regular working hours. Successful bidders will hove until December 10 to remove vehicle from yard. The City reserves the right to accept hr reject any orall.^bidS. V Floyd D. imlHi Purchasing Aflont RCA iiii Gu Ool^ comparison/ Perma-Chrome HI-LITE 70 Solid State* Trans Vista hesa ha,, Independent Research Proves: RCA has the brightest big-screen color TV picture you can buy! ii'' The WHITBY 1 ,«2.’629»* FM-513WXC ;:i23’dias 29Smi in.pleiui* iiiiiiiii CONSOU with <1)1^ ^ Advanced Design ' Better Performajice Component Reliability n —Hr ...,-..^.1...^$..,. .... ^■>028* . SOUND! ,P coiwat, f, ’60 peek vyen c^iu T '’•'W. Detg*, . ’’*'^*«»OVndky,|,h,. Ste/(0 ^ * speed chenj^ w® conceit hall" ^46500* =ssEr»- MUVAWCEO STYLING f j'^heSTANDISHVlTa* * '■•"W S,e,«, c-rte^rr' '26388* BUY ^ wah - J" % I, ...., first monthly installmW due February 12,1970. *Loccl diettibutot'e edverllied piice, i end fvelleble et pettielpeti^g deei A—10 THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 21. 1069 NY Times Publisher Rebuts Points in Spiros Speech lions Now Proierii COST LESSi no cards or raglitratien naodad NEW YORK (APt ]- Arthur I publisher of the New York ^ statement Thursday night.in resiAgnew’s statements are Inaccu-Ochs Sukberger, president and Times, issued the following'ply to Vice President Aguew’siratb. I speech at Montgomery, Ala.: j ♦ * ★ •The vice president has ac FCC Upholds TV on Viet-Talk Review “Vice President Agnew is en-i fused us of avoiding the issue of titled to express his point of monopoly journalism. Quite the view, but he is in error when he opposite. In fact, in an editorial implies that the New York on March 13, 1969, headed 'fimes ever sought or enjoyed‘Competition Not Monopoly,’the immunity from comment or Times stated: ‘The constitution-criticism. Indeed, all American al guarantee of freedom of the institutions from the press to press provides the press with no the presidency should be the warrant for seeking exemption WASHINGTON (AP) — Theistantial amounts of time forisubjefts of free and open de-from the laws prohibiting ,mo-1reached Washington but was Federal Communications Com-|c'ontrasting viewpoints,” Burchibate. |nopoly. If anything, the sanctity;carried in a later edition of the mission has told a Texas woman said. j * * * ^attached to press freedom by;Times. Moreover, the Times has that television commentalors . * * * . * “It would be wise, however,'the First Amendment makes itlgiven considerable attention to did not violate its fairiH'ss doc- He said the commission can-those involving themselves the special obligation of the that story as it developed. In the trine in reviewing President not investigate whether an ac-in such a discussiim to be cer-press to fight for the broadest;paper of Nov. 6, there was a sto-Nixon’s Nov. 3 Vietnam speech, count or analysis is “biased" or tain of their facts. Some of Mr. extension of th Mrs. J. R. Paul of Houston "true. (“Tlds Is a sentiment that the Ne ew York 'limes has expressed repeatedly and still holds. “Mr. Agnew is again mlstak en when he says that the Times did not ‘carry a word’ on the story about the congressmen and senators signing a letter eti-dorsing the President’s policy in Vietnam. The New York Times printed the story. Unfortunately it failed to make the edition that Nov. 7, there was a frontage isIotY about the Pope appeared story that the House Foreign Af- on page 11, while a less impor-falrs Committee had approved a tant story was printed on page resolution endorsing President 3, the vice president unforliH' Nixon’s ‘efforts to negotiate a nately does not understand just peace in Vietnam.’ in the;some of the complicated prob-paper of Nov. 13, there was the lepis of making up a newspaper. ■ Many Important stories have to DELL'S PRESCRIPTION CENTER 2t9 Mdwlni FE 4-2620 appear on pages other than page one and a story that ap- story to which the vice presi dent referred. In the paper of Nov. 14, President Nixon’s visit to the House and the Senate to convey his appreciation to those who supported his Vietnam policy was the lead story. That story again reported the fact that ----------- more than 300 congressmen and I'rimes that news and editorial 59 senators had signed the reso-1 opinion are kept separate and lution. that opinion should appear only; * ★ * on the editorial page. We shall As to the assertion that the! continue to follow that credo.” i pears on page 3 or page 6 Is not necessarily considered more important than a story that ap-; pears on page 11 or 13. | It is the basic credo of the; Clock Repair /4nliiiU0 Clark Spacialiitt • Sales & Service ©Iff SttttEi&IfOtl ISIS. Balei, Birniinfflu) 646-7377 had written Ihe FCC Nov. 10 j Burch personally telephoned saying that “the newsmen were the heads of the three networks very one-sided in their posttalk Nov. 5 requesting transcripts of analysis of the speech.” TV commentaries. He said at * ★ * that time he was investigating FCC Chairman Dean Burch, icorhplaints from congressmen In a letter endorsed by the en-:and others, tire commission, replied Thurs-'u^j-juj; piyjICS day that no action was warrant-: ed and that the cornernnmry •’ ’’a m . tho dent Spiro T. Agnew criticized •nie FCC letter said th^ TV commentators in a First Amendment certaml.^ ^ ^ permits the analysis of any one ^ spokesman to be one-sided. OPPORTUNITY out having a President’s words “What Is required, under the and thoughts characterized fairness doctrine, is not that he through the prejudices of hostile be censored, but that the other:critics before they can even be side be given the opportunity to'digested." present its viewpoint. j 'The FCC letter did not men- “'The issue which was here In-ition Agnew’s remarks although volved—Vietnam—is one to j many of the issues covered in which the networks have devot-|its reply paralleled those raised ed, and continue'to devote, sub-i by the vice president. A Look at TV Syndication Saves Series By CYNTHIA LOWRY jgy Ca.ss and Bill Cullen give AP Television-Radio Writer i‘‘To Tell the 'Truth" a quality of NEW YORK-They have dis- gaiety. If you liked the old appeared from the networksgame, you will probably find the but many of the dear departed!new one amusing. A program MISS LOWRY 'Thursday had as contestants a lady private eye and a man who has spent five years studying big toes. Neither panel show seemed substantial enough to hold an evening audience, but were perhaps a bit brighter than many of the daytime shows currently; filling network hours. I are living on local television ■tatims. The fate of aeries discarded by the networks Is syndication and old favorites pop up in reruns «all over the nation at all sorts of times-- ■ f,ag confirmed rumors “Ben Casey that it will completely revamp and “Batman” of recent mem- Survivors” when the ser-ory as well as some that go bacK Cloves to a new time period to TV’s salad days, hke My .j^ January. George Hamilton Little Margie.” ^will be the only star to remain Some shows bounced by the j with the series. Lana Turner networks continue making new | and Kevin McCarthy will depart programs. One is “Truth or|_how they are removed from' Consequences,” with host Bob the story has not yet been deter-Barker still persuading contest-joined. For Ralph Bellamy’s deants to do all sorts of silly parture, it already has been things for prizes. suggested in the show that the Some old programs have been character' he plays does "not revived for syndication. This have long to live, started with “What’s My Line?” -a couple of seasons back and it sold so well to independent sta tions that its producers gave some others a new life. Now there is “Beat the Clock,” another of those stunt shows that went on for years with the late Bud Collyer ar host, and “To Tell the Truth,”; another of Collyer’s shows. Jack Narz is now the “Beat the Clock” host. A celebrity has been added, but the basic show is still there. Seen Thursday night on some local stations, the studio contestants were still winning washers and dryers for trapping balloons in a box or; tossing china cups through a hole in a wall. ; Host Garry Moore and some veteran panelists including Peg- WATERFORD PARENTS: PLEASE NOTICE 1. Much has been said. 2. Now you can act by voti for the millage proposal on November 1969 3. Give your children a fair 4. A good education is a £iulimeiL{>^ THE WATERFORD SGNOOLSV NON-TEACHING PERSONNEL AFL-CIO Local 1295 PloctA by Itaroid Banner, Secretnry CAR WASH UJltU Exterior Car Wash 14 gals. Free 12 gals. 25*= 9 gals. 50' 6 gals. 75' KUHN Auto Wash 149 W. Huron St. THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAV, NOVEMRKR 21. I» The U.,S, Suprenie Court’sr®®*® lh®l the districts could be one-man, one-vote decision!more equal. The last remap. ame in 19B4, based on a Geor-ca.se. It called for “equal fully filed suits forcing the Mis-1 representation for equal num-souri Legislature to remap stateibers of people ’’ congressional districts to make them more equal in population done this year, has a difference of ab(wt 1,300 between the larg-ad I est and smallest districts. Preis-ler is satisfied. Despite his claim that "no one gets hurt by my lawsfuits,’’ Preisler has been something of a problem to politicians, especially when hts suits concern elections. One newspaper dubbed him "a Don Quixote with muscle who tilts at establishment windmills and wins.' Although he has stored away some two dozen scientific papers and no longer teaches at the Washington* University Medical School, Prelsler says ho Is still a scientist. "I set up a lawsuit the same way 1 set up an experiment,” he said. He lo^ks for “the most ideal| Prelsler has run for office 10 situation in whieh to frame thejtimes, usually as a "nonparti-l issue.” , |san straight” for the school ★ * * I board. He lost every time. “1 don't write my cases likej But he feels his lawsuits have most lawyers, with that ‘comes added to “some general pronow the plaintiff language,” he gre.ss in our society.” said. “These are public l.ssues "You may not be able to and^ 1 put them in public make laws but you can undo a terms.” lot. And it only takes one man.” G a. M & nils sine* 1941 CEMINT WORK • PATIOS GARAGES • ADDITIONS COMPLITI SUILDINO SaRVICR TERMS PE 2.1211 Now he has turned his attack to the state’s two^thirds majority requirement for passage of bond issues. A decision in those cases is pendthg. “It doesn’t makf sense when one no vote is equal to two yes votes,” he says. SNOWBALL’ Missouri is one of about 20 gtates that has either state or local laws requiring more than a simple majority for passage of propositions such as bond issues or tax levies. In recent months. Judges in West Virginia, laho and California have declared invalid a requirement of more than 50 per cent. The legal attask is also being waged in Iowa and Minnesota and “it’s going to snowball,” Preisler said. Preisler is an unassuming biochemist-turned-lawyer who files “citizen suits,” usually at his own expense, to protect “our democratic principles.” The tall bachelor organized a teachers union in St. Louis in 1930 only to find the school board forbade teachers from joining. His court suit to get the restriction lifted was successful ESTABUSHES RIGHT His other suits, over the years, have established the right of school board members to be elected on a nonpartisan basis, the right of minority parties to have poll watchers and the right of a nonpartisan candi date to run for Congress. Just before receiving a law degree in 1954 he successfully argued before the Missouri Su preme Court against a state senatorial redistficting In St Louis. The districts were changed but, Preisler muses, he received “only a B” In the laws-chool course for which he filed the suit as a class project. In 1961 he first challenged M i s s 0 u r 1 's newly drawn congressional districts as being "grossly unequal,” with a popu Pitching Machine Hailed in Tests on Vinyl Siding AVON LAKE, Ohio (AP) - A converted baseball pitching machine here is prolonging its career by throwing “hailstones” Instead of horse-hides. Engineers are using t h e machine, operated on air pressure^ to fire simulated hailstones at vinyl siding, shut ters and window components to test their ability to, withstand the real thing. The hailstones — up to one and a half inches in diameter are made of polypropylene and polyehliylene to “most accurately duplicate the hardness and density of real hailstones “ By observing the effects of hailstones hurled at speeds approximating 80 miles per hour — the same terminal velocity that, one-inch hailstones have attained when whipped by 60 mile - per - hour crosswinds — the B. F. Goodrich scientists can determine the aoount of Itppact needed to pit or crack a sample of vinyl siding. Visit by Swedes LANSING (AP)-Three delegates „from the Royal Swedish Academy of Engineering are; visiting the> department of state this week to study its computerized licensing and automobile registration system. Members of, the Swedish delegation, are Stisl Swansteln, Hans Rallfors and Aune Olsson. AUTEN FURNITURE 6605 Dixie Hwy. Clark stun 1 URNITURL CARPI I drapiry apply for a . r - CREDIT CARD FRANK'S NURSERY SALES -. always GREATER VALUE AT FRANK’S SHOP FRANK'S FOR BUYS L TRASH CAN LINERS DISPENSER OF 50 Hudwood chairs for extra when you need them. Easy to fold for storage. Big, 20-lb. bag of crushed clay litter. Soaltt up moisture, absorbs odors. Handle trash the clean wif. Cans last longer, too. kS. 5919 HIGHLAND ROAD (M59) at AIRPORT ROAD 31590 Grand River, Farmingtoni • 6575 Telegraph at Maple Rd. • 14 Mile Rd. at Crooks Rd« ' r ' 'I' . : ' ^ 1 1 ' ' THE PONTIAC PRESS, FHIUAV, NOVEMBER 21, 1069 WHO BUT HUDSON'S COULD BRING YOU thousands & thousands of new this-season Never, never before a Sale like this. So many styles of wool sweaters, skirts, pants, suits, dressed, scooters, Bermudas, blazers, plus the current Villager shirts and tops. Every ticket shows the regular price—36,000 great things in all—all 50% off. Starts tomorrow, Saturday. Get with when the doors open. Hudson's Country Corner—Pontiac 1; Downtown, Northland, Eastland, Westland, Oakland. Sorry no phone orders. , V '1 hi'' .',C A'.:..... ' , A : v.?"vV'; A'l . /. yufr.1'.„/.•■ ' a.'A''.Ai=v ■■i,-: A.-ttiii'id''.,,; ‘ THE PONTIAC PRESS, FlU IMY, NOVEM HKII 21,1909 Mott Exchange Student Enjoys Life in U. S. By GEORGIA ROSEWALL ‘‘One Ihlni^ I still can’t get used to Is the emphasis upon aiid the cxcltment of school life," commented Jan Baiting, Waterford Mott’s first foreign exchange student. Jan, a senior, comes from Copenhagen, Denmark. between America and Denmark he said "Here school plays a big part In the students’ lives where at home H’s very minor.” NO FOOTBALL GAMES Staying With Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Rodgers, he says, “It’s really an experience to live with my American family because now 1 have four younger sisters where back home I only have an older brother. It's different, but I like It.” Commenting on the differences “We don’t have football games or any spectator sports that help to create school spirit and we also don’t have any fund-raising drives like Mott’s magazine sale to pay for the carpet in the Media Center or the food drive for needy families.” he said. “'There really Is no need for It back home, since school doesn’t play ^n important role in our life. If we want a dance or something a few kids get together and organize it.” "What I like best about WMH is that you get an opportunity to meet a lot of people,” he said. together all through school. AJso, the kids stay in the same classrooms and the tiiachers come to them. ' was qpitle surprised with my luck,” he said. “In Denmark, it’s hard to obtain a hunting license and we don’t have marty wooded areas.” STAY TOGETHER In Danish schools, the students slay “'The Idea of several different cotir.ses Is great. In our school, the whole schedule is required,” he added. Jan recently went deer hunting and shot a six-point buck. ‘Tve never been hunting before and Student government is vital t o American high schools yet there is none in Danish schools. Busy Weeks Are Ahead for Groves High Students By MIKE WILSON For Groves students, the next few weeks will be busy ones. Seniors are taking advantage of an extra-long homeroom period (due to sophomore testing) to measure for caps and gowns, Ordering the senior announcements has already taken place. At a general class meeting, senior class President Jeff Despard discussed Students Plan Cleanup Drive at Brandon High plans for Senior Skip Day, the annual senior dinner and baccalaureate. Seniors voted fellow classman Michelle Heist as the recipient of the annual Daughters of the American Revolution award. STATE COMPE'n’nON By LINDA DIXON Before the big day of turkey, dressing, sweet potatoes and pumpkin pie, the Brandon High Student Council plans an over-all school cleanup campaign as an effort to promote school spirit. Posters and signs with slogans have been put up throughout the halls of Brandon High School. Teachers were asked to list projects they would like accomplished in their room. Work such as washing walls, desks, and cleaning windows and lavatories will be done. Michelle will go on to Lansing to compete in the state finals as Miss DAR of Michigan, Principal Richard Lyden consented to let the junior class hold its J-hop (the junior formal) outside of the school for the first time. DA TING DIFFERENT He plans to have the head mounted to take back as a remembrance of his hunting experience. Dating customs in America are different than those of Jan’s native land. "We never go to a girl’s house to lake her to a movie, we just go to parlies and find a girl there,” he .said. Jan also added, “Everyone pays their own way and sometimes we walk the girls home.” Skiing Is oiie thlng\that Jan Is looking forward to since) In Denrtiark Ihc^ don’t get to do much of it. Every year his family u.sually goes to Austria, France, Norway, or Switzerland to ski. Jan’s other hobbles include drawing, painting, playing the guitar, piano, organ and almost anything that deals with art Jan is beginning to gel involved In Mott’s school government and various clubs like philo.sophy, foreign exchange, and ski club, and hopes to learn more about America and its people. WLC Cage Season Opener Senior-Faculty Tilt Is Set By JOANNE SANDERSON Tonight Walled Lake Central students will play the faculty in the annual game which officially open the basketball season at WLC. This year, .seniors Dave VanderVelde and Robin Ward are in charge of the student team. The game always pits .seniors against the faculty members. Student cheerleaders are seniors who are not regular cheerleaders, chosen by the varsity cheerleaders. Sue Wills, vice president of Student Couneil, noted that Brandon’s students are displaying more school spirit this year. “But we’d like to get more hf them interested in the epndition of the^alls, and appearance of the classrooms,’' she said. HELP NEEDED “We’ll need a lot of kids to help make this cleanup a success.” A dress-up day is to be held Wednesday to launch the Thanksgiving vacation. It has been past practice to hold the formal in the gym. Lyden commented on his change of mind: “Most students tell me that J-hop is the most important social event they experience during their high school years. I’m sure it is~not because of the place it is held, but because of the friends with whom they share the evening,” he said. The Junior Class Candy Sale will begin Monday through Dec. 5. Juniors will sell mixed chocolates, mints and tortes. Participating juniors will get 20 per cent of their earnings, to supplement expenses in their senior year. “We want to net at least $3,000 which will add to the $600 balance we have in the present treasury,” says class raSi-dent Ken Wlderstedt. Pontiac Press Photo LIKES AMERICA — Foreign exchange student Jan Balling enjoys working on the computer terminals at Waterford Mott High School. “School life here Is a lot different than in my homeland of Denmark,” Jan said. 'The cheerleaders for the students are: Jenny Morris, Cheryl Barget, Carol Williams, Sue Barasch, Sue Brunson, Connie Walton, Mary Ellen George, Toni Piskorski, Renata Reibitz and Marlene Worhach. A dance will be held after the game, sponsored by Student Council. The students attending must present an I.D. card or a visitor’s pass, which may be obtained from the office. PNH Picking Ugliest Athlete' By GARY SHERWOOD Who’s the ugliest athlete at Pontiac Northern? The student body will vote on it through next Wednesday morning in the annual'’Ugly athlete’t contest. The method of voting is by pennies. Each penny is worth one vote. The pthlete with the most pennies is “Mr. ilgly Athlete.” The Home and Family Living class went on a tour of Lapeer State Hospital, conducted by the community relations director. The class, along with M a r i 1 e e Hildinger, home economics teacher, visited the nursery and three other cottages. GREATER APPRECIATION “I feel that the trip was a valuable experience for all of the persons who went. My students came back with a greater appreciation of life,” said Miss Hildinger. They also learned how these people can be helped to become useful. Students were told of the many jobs available at the hospital. Dec. 6, a hayride at Upland Hills Farm will be held for the sophomore class. 'The cost for It is $2.50, which will go towards the sophomore treasury. President Les Siegal commented that “When the seniors had their annual hayride, more than 60 kids came to it. We hope that we’ll have more than that, since we have more carts to carry the kids.” The hayride is just one of many activities planned by the sophomore class and its adviser counselor Joseph Bazzy. The Sophomore Bowling Day, held last Nov. 2, was a huge success—more than 80 kids showed up. Another one is planned in the near future. Other sophomore activities planned for December and the latter part of November are: An open sophomore house, with parents of the 10th graders meeting with faculty members. During Christmas vacation, an ice-skating party will be held. Since Wednesday, students have been carrying around jars in support of their candidate. A candidate can have as many students out collecting for him as long as they have their jars approved by the Varsity Club. IN THE RUNNING Athletes in the running are Bruce Bennett, Mario Costello, Harry Flanagan, Dave Guy, Tom Holt and George Pickering. The ugliest athlete will be announced at the senior-faculty basketball game Wednesday. Members plan to raise the rest through a sweater sale and basketball concessions. Earlier this year, the Varsity Club donated $50 to the PTA scholarship fund. t Another fund-raising drive is planned in the spring to raise enough for scholarships given to» feembers of the club, based on club performance. Wednesday’s senior-faculty game will be played in the gym. The faculty holds a slight edge in the series, but the seniors this year show promise. Any seniors interested in being in the set-up, or as cheerleaders, contact Mel Reeves. PEP CLUB OFFICERS Officers for this year’s Pep Club are Diana Sample, president; Robin Gibson, vice presideqt; Lynn Duncan, secretary; and Roberta LaZelle, treasurer. The club is sponsored by Walt Kawalczyk who also sponsors the Alumni Club. Activity night will be next Tuesday from 7 to 9:30. Tickets are 50 cents. The Varsity Club is buying two more trophy cases this year. The cases have already been ordered at a total cost of $1,430. 'On WHh the Show' “It was a sad experience, but after being with the children and holding them, I think I would enjoy working with them. It really opens your eyes and makes you count your blessings,” commented Linda Chastain. With the help of Mrs. Harold Cloutier, librarian, a new Library Club has been formed for both middle and high school students. They will sell paperback books before and after school. Faculty at LOH Hosts Firebirds It bought two last year at the same price to accommodate all the trophies that the Huskies have acquired through the school’s 12 years of existence. FUND RAISERS So far a little over half the money has been raised through concessions at the football games and through proceeds from a dance sponsored by the club. Is Cry at Our Lady By MICKEY SEETERLIN Our Lady of the Lakes’ “actors” and “actresses” are preparing for the first Thanksgiving talent show Wednesday. A poll taken recently by Student Council members showed that most Lakers want a chance to show off their talents. FACEUFT FUNDS Funds will be used to beautify the high school library. The library aides are in the process of buying drapes for the windows. A Christmas dance will be sponsored by the club the second week in December. By KATHY HAUXWELL Lake Orion High School’s faculty tonight hosts the Pontiac Firebirds football team in a basketball game in the gym. Tickets for the 7:30 game will be on sale at the door. Teachers displaying their skills tonight include Robert Schadel, Jeff Brown, Doug Baker, Nick Neira, Denqy Davis, Donn Hoganson, Gary Kenyon, Art Swagler and George Eoias. Christian Names Homeroom Reps Leon Baker, Ray Rogers and Harry McCaughna, parents of LOHS students, also will play tonight. Doug Holcomb, Lake Orion football coach and quarterback of the Firebirds, will have to decide whether to play / against his teammates or his fellow faculty members. By LAURA KIRKPATRICK Homeroom ' representatives to the Oakland Christian High School Student Council are senior Laura Kirkpatrick, junior. Dave Gabert and sophomore Vickie Martin. Since the basis of the school Is spiritual, it is common for prayer to be y heard. But it took on a new aspect this Veek 6s special sessions were held by the students. ' FOR SCOREBOARDS This game is sponsore<| by the Di'agons’ Booster Club. Profits will be used to purchase new basketball scoreboards. • Last Friday night the Buttons service club held its annual Initiation of members at the home of Mary Brown. All initiates were invited to stay.for a pajama party afterwards. Students met Tuesday In separate groups of about 30 in the homerooms of Mlchcal Fwrand and Louis Goszelth to hold prayer sessions. Discussed was the course of the school next year. Additional School Nows Found on Pago^ B-2 The council is sponsoring t h e show which is open to any DLL student who would like to participate. Council President Barb May worm said, “If we get enough response, we may make this an annual affair. It would give all the classes a chance to unify and show their spirit.” OTHER OFFICERS Other Student Council officers are Marty Webster, vice president; Denise LaForge, secretary; and Julie McDonnell, treasurer. Ann Sarul and William Peters are faculty advisers. DLL debaters, coached by William Peters, are preparing for their first tournament of the sea.son. It will be held at Guardian Angels High School in Clawson Tuesday. An open toufnament at Michigan State University is'.set for Dec, 6 and 7. Debate club members are Thehesa Getz, Steve Gingras, There-s^ Grix, Denise LaForge, Dave LaPorte, Ruth Moultrup, Gregg Ross, Tom St, Dennis and Dave Tail. eontUc PM» Photo HAMMING IT UP — Practicing a skit for a talent show at Our Lady of the Lakes are (front, from left) Debbie Cadilac, Sheryl Zielinski, l^ise U Forge, (back, from left) Sharon La Barge, Barb May worm and Lonnie Shulze. God’s Mod Squad is sponsoring a “Grub Day” Tue.sday to collect food and money to prepare Thank.sgiving baskets for the needy. \ >\' A ‘ '■ 'I’he fee for wearing grubby clothes to school is either two cans of food or 35 cents. A Thanksgiving program will be pre.sented Wedne.sday by the music and drama departments. Faculty members responsible for the program are Kathy Walker, drama, and Roger Longrie and A. A. Stubbs, music instructors. The program'Wit feature the concert choir, girls’s glee club, male chorus, concert band and orchestra. A choral reading will also be presented by Miss Walker’s beginning acting class. ’The reading was written by Donna Sills, a senior at WLC. STUDENT PROGRAM 'The monthly meeting of the Parent-Teacher-Student Association (PTSA) was held last night in the cafeteria. This meeting was unique in that it was completely planned by the students. Jorma Sarto, president of the PTSA, agreed to let the students organize the meeting. Planners included seniors Jerry " O’Brien, Cheryl Rose, Cheryl Barget and Joanne Sanderson. Topic of the meeting was a student coffeehouse. These .students feel this is an Important project because they have no place to go after school-sponsored activities. Money from this activity will be used to defray the Cost of getting buses to away games. This is being sponsored by the Pep Club. ’The Pep Club will sell pennants with the inscription, “Pontiac Northern Huskies,” and th^ Huskie embl^ Also being planned is the annual ChHstmas Dance which will be Dec. 20. Seniors have chosen the Bahamas for their senior trip May 8-11. They are currently making weekly payments- to make the $179 date in April. It Was the group feeling that In order for the project to succeed it must be community sponsored. Therefore members of various service organizations were asked to attend the meeting. WTH Holding Sadie Hawkins Dance Tonight Seniors, for the first time, will not graduate away from Wisner Stadium. It has been approved to hold graduation at the Meadow Brook Pavilion. As a means for raising money for the prom and trip, it’s been arranged for the Meadow Brook Players to present “As You Like It” at the school. Also, the donkey basketball game will be played. Both appear in March. By CAROL WHXIAMS Girls grab your fellas and bring ’em on down to the annual Sadie Hawkins Dance, tonight from 8 to 11 in the Waterford Township High School gym. The junior class is sponsoring the dance which will feature “The World.” Highlighting the event will be the crowning of queen “Daisy Mae” and king “L’il Abner.” Dave Lemanski will act as “Marryin’ Sam.” ' The gym will be decorated to the theme of “Dogpatch USA.” Girls will have a chance to ‘’bid” for their favorite guy, as the boys are auctioned from the stage. The dance will also feature the judging of the “best corsage.” DANCE CHAIRMAN Doug Lind.say is chairman of the dance with Marsha Fenlon acting as cochairman. Students heading up the various committees are Pat Stott, Cheri McDonald, Pete Huntoon, Joanne Greenman, Kim McClarty, Shelia Galardl, Claudia McAllister, Joy Johnson, Melody Mason, Dave Lemanski, Lana Strom, Mai*y Ann Sirmyer and Cheryl Bray. Booths will be u.sed for picture-taking’ sponge-throwing and balloon and dart throwing. Cost of the dance is 75 cents stag and $1.50 drag. ’Tickets may be purchased at the door. HEAD FOR CONFERENCE Five co-op students headed for St. Mary’s Lake in Battle CYeek today, to attend the. Michigan Office Educational Association conference. During the conference, W'TH student Keith Vautherqt will be actively campaigning for president of the asWlatlon. Under the direction of Tom Nickmah, business teacher. Sue Konopka, Jo Ann Heid, Pat Searle and Sally Rodgers^ will aid Keith in his campaign. Thirty-four Michigan high schools will be represented during the conference. Stuejents are scheduled tp return Saturday afternoon. Newly elected Thespian officers are Sherry Pilet, president; Suzl Neff, vice president; Debby Grpen, secretary. The WTH Marching B^nd is attending ;tb# "Band-a-Rama” at University m Alichigan today and tomorrow, and will not march In the “We Llk6\Waterford’* rally tonight. An fii, ' I PI V THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 1969 WORTH A CHEER - Displaying awards their efforts won are Pontiac Catholic varsity cheerleaders (from left) Jean hie Campbell, and Cathy Wroblewski. The girls attended Camp Fraser, Debbie Daugherty, Judy Walter, Denise Dcuman, Deb- All-American last summer. Students at W. Bloomfield Hear Speech Against War By RUTH SOMERS West Bloomfield’s Student Council Invited Dr. George Parsons of Wayne State University to speak to the students last Friday about the Vietnam war. The cafeteria was jammed, with standing only for the hour-and-a-half speech against the war. In the future, Student Council plans another speaker, who will oppose Dr. Parson’s antiwar views. the area. All donations may be dropped off in the counseling office Tuesday. EXCHANGE CANDIDATES Anne Richards, National Society (NHS) president, announced that the work weekend held last week totaled |95 in profits. The money will be used for an outeide bulletin board. The current NHS project is collecting food and clothing for a needy family in Candidates for the summer American Field Service exchange program are Marty Stevens and Marilyn Knak. The girls were chosen from seven semifinalists. They will live in foreign countries in the homes of average citizens fof six to eight weeks. Marilyn and Marty were chosen because of their friendliness, ability to adjust, health record and grades. Marty has been active in AFS, ski teams, GAA and has maintained a high grade point average. Marilyn has participated in Student Council, AFS and is a pom-pon girl. Also on the AFS calendar is the International Dinner which will be held tomorrow. Tickets are $1 for students and $2 for adults. Dishes from foreign countries comprise the menu. FACULTY-STUDENT GAME “We’re going to womp’em,’’ said student Larry Brower, who was discussing the student-faculty game Dec. 6. Faculty practices are being coached by Walt Poe as the teachers get in shape for the game. Although the students lost a close decision last year they predict a landslide victory for the annual event. Leading the students to victory are coaches Wally Alix, Casey Hamill and Randy Bevier. ^ —a SCHOOL NEWS ROUNDUP ^ Adams ByPATVOLL When will Rochester Adams High School be open? Will it be crowded? These are questions that Adam’s students, parents and faculty have been aslqng. voters approved an addition to the not-yet-completed school in balloting Oct. 25. ★ ★ ★ Because the trend now is to use as little glass as possible, the building will have comparatively few windows. The main entrance will be off Tienken Road in Avon Township, and the offices and counseling rooms will be to the left as one enters. other pen on the American market,’’ said Garth Crider, president of the sophomore class and head of the sophomwe pen sale under way at Holly High School. ’Tuesday, OHS’s Girls Athletic Association played a volleyball match against Lake Orion. The varsity team LOH, 15-6. These red-and-white ball-point pens sport a picture of HHS’s mascot bronco and Holly High School. The pens can be piu'chased from any sophomore for 50 cents until the middle of next week. The junior varsity was defeated by Lake Orion. The junior class, which is sponsored by Mrs. Ronald Wernette, is selling candy through Dec. 1. All proceeds will go toward the juniors’ senior trip. 'The home economics girls are' packing Christmas gift boxes for GIs who will be overseas during the holiday season. Avondale WILL MEET DEADUNE 'There will be a cafeteria on the second floor, overlooking a courtyard. The contractors and Principal Ralph Hawes are confident that the building will open by the February deadline. Donations for these boxes can be sent to Mrs. A. A. Hartz, a home economics teacher at HHS. Suitable for these boxes are: canned meats, cheeses, snacks, razor blades, paperback books, toothpaste and toiletry articles. By PATTI ANDRUS The Avondale High School Student Council has been at Camp Kett ih Cadillac since Wednesday. Avondale is state cochairman this year along with Flint Northwestern. Seven other schools are attending. 'The theme is “Cominunication: Understanding aiwl Actions.’’ The library at Adams will be carpeted to cut down noise. It will have up to 10,000 books. The girls will also bake cookies to be sent. Any type of tin or aluminum containers can also be Used, especially coffee and instant potato cans with plastic lids. Stevenson By ROXANNE BURKE A dance sponsored by Stevenson’s co-qp classes will be held tonight from 8: Soil :30 in the school gym. Entertainment will be provided by “Little Leon and the Caravan.” Admission is $1. Stevenson’s annual donkey basketball game was the center of attraction last Friday. Three games featured the Sterling Junior High faculty versus Davis Junior High faculty members, the women faculty of Stevenson challenged the men and the SHS juniors played seniors. A donkey basketball was held last night between the senior high school and junior high school faculties. Dominican Participating in the later contest were w. By CYNDI WYZGOSKI Voting was held at Dominican Academy this week for freshman class officers. Elected were Pauline Ellert, president; Jan Harris, vice president; Gloria Rzadkowalski, secretary; and Cindy Sabatini, treasurer. 'They were installed at the Student Council n:\eeting Tuesday. Principal Sister Rose Valerie, gave the girls their pins and administered their oaths of office. seniors George Davis, Debbie Carter, Corky Preihs, Connie Campbell, Mark Keitz, Kathy Kowalski, Cal Stewart, Dornia Miller and Tim Boyd. Representing the class of '71 were C3iuck Samuel, Viki Critchett, Rich Winn, Diane Boyd, Dale Gillespie, Ann Schoenherr, Paula Montville, Debbie Mouillesaux and Joe Senapole. The 1969-70 football team and cheerleaders were honored at a banquet Monday. The student body heard A. A. Campbell, community relations director at The Lapecir State Home, 'Thursday. Today was the last day for returns on the items sold to raise money for the new bus D. A. is hoping to purchase. The goal was $1,000 and the girls reached it. Representating Avondale are Chuck Lovelace, Randy Cornell, Craig Medlen, Jean Mills and Debbie l^wis. They wdll discuss problems between students, parents and teachers. ■k * k 'The sales classes have donated a 4-by-7-foot felt banner that has the name of the school on it. It will be seen at all basketball and wrestling events. MAKING SIGNS Also the Spirit Risers are making signs for the winter sports. They will be made of felt so they can be us^ repeatedly. 'The varsity and junior varsity cheerleaders attended a clinic a t Madison Lamphere High School with other area schools. Each school was evaluated on a cheer from its school. ★ * ★ Each squad was graded on its personality projection, arm motions, jumps, voicb control, appearance and how well the/squad performs as a unit. Both squads received a superior rating in each category. 'The clinic was sponsored by the IhtOrnational Cheerleading Foundation. , Oxford Troy Holly W By MARCIA CLARK "This pen will write 10 per cent more light answers to test questions than any ByLUCY.SHICK The Class of 1970 has chosen Kate Smiley to represent Oxford High School as its\ Daughters of the American Revolution good citizen. In selecting the .girl, qualities such as dependability, service, leadership and patriotism are considered, Kate is the daughter of the Jerry Smileysi of Oxford}. By MQNA CLARKSON The Outstanding AmerlcankV Foundation has announced that Denise Lambert, Steve Larson, and Gary Atkins from Troy High School have been selected as Outstanding Teenagers of America for 1970. These seniors nominated for this honor by the school, will compete for state and national awards in the Outstanding Teenagers of America program. :'4;. PC Cheerleaders Shift Gear ^y CflYSTAL BOOMER With the sedsonal ^hanpe in sports at Northwood Institute in Midland for statewide team and individual competition. Rhonda Knott, Denise Fleming and Nancy Treapor. Pontiac Catholic High the varsity cheer-ieadei^s have chosen new uniforms for the basketball season. The girls will appear in green jumper and long-sleev^ white blouse. The uniform was approved by cheerleading coach Cynthia Moloney. Competing with 1,000 girls, Judy Walter was named cheerleader queen. She received a $500 scholarship eligible for Northwood. GIRLS ARE Listed Last summer, the varsity squad boarded at the United States Cheerleading Association, Michigan branch school in Hartland. Faced with minute-to-minute competition, the girls came through with first, second ,and third place ribbogs. Senior Judy Walter won second place individual honors based on spirit, leadership, fitness and cooperation. The Titan cheerleaders are Debbie Campbell, captain; Judy Walter, secretary-treasurer; Denise Deuman, Debbie Daugherty, Cathy Wroblewski, Jean Fraser and Crystal Boomer. 'The PC cheerleading squfds wlH host their second annual invitational cheer-leading clinic Nov. 29 from ID a.m. to 3 p.m. Thirty schools are invited in the team competition category. 'Trophies and ribbons will be awarded to squads displaying good peformances in cheers and mounts. On the JV squad are Jo Anne Walter, captain; Pat Harworth, Barb Martin, Sandy Shomberger, Nora Quintana and Mary Johnston. In a four-day stay at Camp All-American, the girls learned new cheers, chants and mounts. Tbe group then travelled to Freshman cheerleaders are Marsha Larson, Mary Jo Larson, Vickie Forton, Ten coal-mining families will receive food, clothing, medicine and toys donated by the students at PC. Three adults and six students will begin their Journey to Kentucky Wednesday and return Nov. 30. General Motors will provide two trucks to carry the goods while a car from Glenmory Brothers will carry the travelers. This is one guarantee that hoids water. It's the guarantee that goes along with every approved electric watej heater. And it says you'll get all the hot water you need or you get back the purchase price plus installation costs. You have a full year to make up your mind about it, too. And should you need it, Edison gives you NO“Charge Repair Service. No charge for electrical operating parts and labor. Call Edison, yourplumber or appliance dealer, and start enjoying constant hot water vyith a new electric water heater. W^'re sure you'll never have any cause to use its vyatertight guarantee. Unless you use*, it for a paper cup. \X,'\ V . , V iai jitf ' A i> • A' Over 60 years of age separate Mrs. John Mosser, 89, and Mrs. Marvil Smith, 28, both of Oxford. But they find a common bond in the Crawford extension study group which celebrated its 40th anniversary Thursday in the Oxford home of Mrs. Early Reading Theories Conflict By PATRICIA McCORMACK . NEW YORK (UPI) - All the trains of thought about teaching reading come crashing together in the nightmares of parents of preschool children. On one track a trainload of experts proclaims that a child will be educationally handicapped and shortchanged if not taught to read by age of three. Super enthusiastic types on this track suggest that a child start hitting the alphabet before he can walk. On a collision course on the same track are experts who are less hurried. They say a child probably will get along Fruit, Cheese Good Mixers at Wine Gala if you put off teaching reading until the age of five. Another train is filied with those advocating serving a child best by delaying reading until the second grade. The dilemma is described in a report in the PTA Magazine. Barbara Bowman and Dorothy Anker, of the Erick.son Institute for Early Education, Chicago, in their report, caution parents against fretting over the conflicting theories. “Education is not merely a matter of pushing academic skills further and further into early childhood,” they said. Rather than worrying about reading as an end in itself, they suggested worrying about the purpose of education and the long-range hopes for what your child will learn. “If he wants to read, that’s fine,” they said. “But if he prefers other pursuits, like tinkering with his toy tools or collecting marbles, that’s fine, too. “As long as you are giving him the back^ound of knowledge on which learning depends ... you don’t have to BY ELIZABETH POST Of the Emily Post Institute Dear Mrs. Post: We have some very fine wine-or-water glasses. I use them as water goblets with my best china. Would it be proper to use cheap wine glasses — the kind you buy at discount or dime stores—with them? My husband insists these are fine enough tor wine. I agree for our informal meals, but could I use them for the good china? Also, we have several friends who enjoy fine wines. I’d like to have a very Informal get-together, having some wine. What would be a simple menu — cheeses, bread, crackers — what else? Could I make It sort of like a cocktail party? — M. Howard Annual Art ShowNeeds New Ideas Plans are now being formed for a new and better exhibition for the Oakland County Art Show held annually at The Pontiac Mall during the the first two weeks of February. The show this year will be the introduction to a year of events featuring Oakland County during i t s Ses-quecentennial. A special meeting for all art clubs and of Oakland County interested in participating in the Rlh Annual Oakland County Art Show will be held in the Community Room of The Pontiac Mall at 7:30 p.m., Dec. 3. Stop Measuring yirfues by Yardstick,'Says Abby .n By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: I do have a problem, and right now It’s getting tl^e best of I am about six inches taller than my husband. Bcrnie and I have been married for nearly 10 years and have two beautiful children. A woman couldn’t ask for a better husband, father, or provider, and I’m really ashamed of myself for feeling this way, but, Abby, I can’t help it. I seem to have developed an attraction to men who are taller than I am. When I dance with a taller man 1 feel so feminine and secure, and then when I dance with Bernie again, I feel “cheated.” My husband doesn’t know how 1 feel, and I wouldn’t hurt him for the world, but this bothers me. I know it’s wrong, and I’ve talked to myself until I’m blue in the face, but it doesn’t help me. I can’t send a stamped, self - addressed envelope, as Bernie sometimes gets the mail before I do, but if you Womenf THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY. NOVEMRER 21. 19H1) B—a Commission Pontiac Prou Photo by Ron Untornohror William McTavish. In observance of Thanksgiving, all members came in pilgrim costume. The youngest member helps the oldest member get ready for picture taking. Wants Change in Abortion Law worry that your youngster may turn out to be a non-reader.”" You give him the recommended background by reading aloud to him; taking him places to see things of interest, including the library; answering his questions patiently and with respect; helping him to organize his thoughts and make them clear. “More important than knowing the score about reading is knowing the score about your own child,” the two educators said. And in case you’re still not convinced that you should refrain from pushing your preschooler into reading at a very early age, the two added: “Chances are that Socrates couldn’t read at three or four. “And we know that Winston Churchill didn’t astonish his first'grade teacher with his erudition — “Both of them managed to carve out a niche in the world without irreparable damage though they might not have been taught to read in toeir most formative years.” Representatives from Oakland County art groups are urgently requested to attend. Individual exhibitors who are not members of art groups are also invited to attend. It was before the Senate earlier this year, but returned to committee after the upper chamber defeated a more limited abortion reform measure sponsored by Sen. Gilbert Bursley, R-Ann Arbor. The 15 - member Women’s Commission was appointed to “study and review the status of women, stren^hen home life by directing attention to critical problems ciHifronting women as homemakers and workers, recommended methods o f overcoming discrimination against women in employment and secure appropriate recognition of women’s accomplishments and contributions to the state. Dear Mrs. Howard: You may use your fine glasses for goblets if they are large enough, but you should not combine them with cheap wine glasses. It is not necessary to serve wine and water. Use your glasses for one or the other with your “good china,” and get some Inexpensive glasses for use with your everyday china. , If you don’t want to serve a full dinner for your friends, how.about a dessert /party? Serve fruit (chille4 pears are ex-' peclally good with 'wine), two or three cheeses‘(Brie, Bonb^l or other mild, light cheeses are excellent), crackers and coffee, along with chilled white wine. Nothing could provide a pleasanter after-dinner hour oh tvifo! Clarksfon Unit to Meet CLARKSTON - The Clarkston Gardens Improvenient Association will nwet Monday at \ 7:30 p:tn. in the Methodist Church fellowship hall. On the agenda is a dlscussiqn of the proposed condominiums ht Waldon Road-Almont Lane. : Hair styles for the holiday have a soft look. At the left, frankly fake braids in a contrasting color add a special tbhetiio this cate fully curled chigtibn with its ^ispy, cheek-kissing tendrils. Created by the open b Julius Caruso of New York, At the right is a soft flow coiffure designed by the official hair fashion committee ^oI the National Hairdressers and Cosme-iplogists A^^diati^. Note the Off-center parting, the loose and airy curls, could squeeze this into your column, with some advice. I’d certainly appreciate it. TROUBLED dear TROUBLED: No man has everything. Some short men are long on brains, charm and integrity, and some tall men.are short at the bank. So count your blessings, lady, and quit counting inches. fool to wear something that is unbecoming to her -- even Jf It IS in style. Those of us who cae sew, have an alternative whe\i it comes to dress styles, but we can’t make our own shoes. At least give us a choice! A HOLDOUT IN RENTON, WASH. DEAR ABBY: Please, please print this desperate plea to the shoe manufacturers: Help! I am almost barefoot, but I am determined not to wear those ugly, clumpy, cloddy shoes! They don’t flatter women’s feet of legs, and a woman is a DEAR HOLDOUT: The shoe Industry has heard plenty from me over the years. I wore out my typewriter protesting the pointed-toed, spiked-heeled cripplers. NOW we have “clumpy, cloddy” shoes, which look like marine combat boots or orthopedic footwear. The old cripplers were better looking, but they ruined our feet. The new ones offer comfort, but they are ugly! We can’t LANSING -(AP)- The Michigan Women’s Commission, named earlier this year by Gov. William Milliken, has endorsed a sweeping abortion reform measure awaiting action in the state senate. The group adopted a r e s o 1 u t i o n saying: “Convinced that the right of a woman to determine her own reproductive life is a basic human right, the Women’s Commission of the State of Michigan recommends that the laws penalizing abortion by a licensed physician should be repealed.” Mrs. John Finegan of Birmingham, commission chairman, said the women’s group would support a bill removing criminal penalties against licensed doctors performing abortions. BASIC RIGHT Commission members will work toward passage of the bill, Mrs. Finegan reported, because they believe “firmly that a woman has the right to persMial privacy and that whether or not she has an abortion should be a matter between her and her doctor.” t * * The bill, sponsored by Sen. John McCauley, D-Wyanddtte, now is in a Senate committee, pending possible action in the 1970 legislative session. Three-year-old Prince Aya of Japan, accompanied by his mother. Crown Princess Michiko, leaves the Togu Palace in Tokyo Nov. 12 to take the entrance examination for the Gakushuin Kindergarten. Prince Aya, the second son of the Crown Prince Akihito of Japan, received an aptitude test and physical checkup with 140 other applicants, 50 of whom will be accepted. Junior Symphony Women Set Annual Holiday Event By SHmLEY GRAY The Junior Women’s Association for the Detroit Symphony Orchestra has done it again. Somehow they have persuaded the owners of seven elegant homes on this side of town, and seven more in Grosse Polnte, to throw open their doors to busloads of women in boots and plastic rain hats come Dec. 12 in Birmingham-Bioomfield and a week earlier in Grosse Pointe. The Junior Women have even added a couple of novel touches for this year’s -version of their annual holiday season event. For the price of a ticket on the Christmas Walk Express Bus, which makes the rounds of the seven homes, a box lunch and coffee are included. Not only that, but at one of the homes on each of the tours, the JWA’s new glee club, the “Chorallers,” will make background music. The “Chorallers,” two dozen JW members strong, are directed by Mrs. Verne G. Istock. One of the 24 is Mrs. David Lott of Bloomfield Hills, association president. • ’The home of builder William J. Pulte in Bloomfield Village, California Mission style. It has a tiled foof, black iron bars on the windows and, indoors, a squash court. • Another Bloomfield Village stop is the rambling French farmhouse-style home of the R. Jamison Williamses. The decor is English traditional, with hand-hewn beams^ver the fireplace is a massive 17th century weather vane. • Last and littlest, but by no means least, is the Oliver Weidokal and Robert Goebel home, a clapboard cottage, on Baldwin Lane in Birmingham. Besides having wide pine flooring, beamed ceilings and paneled walls, the house is a treasure trove of antiques, one of them a 300-year-oid English pewter cabinet. TO BE VIEWED Here are the homes on the December 12 tour: • The Leonard T. Lewis home, a con-temporapy brick designed by architect Gunnar Bjrkerts, overlooking Lower Long Lake. i < • ’The William Davidson home on Vhay Lak6, a creation of Edward Dur-rell Stone, with a two-story high window on the lake side. Birmingham - Bloomfield chairmen are MrS. Christopher Mazure and Mrs. Joseph Hammond. Mrs. Dome Dibble is in charge of bus reservations. Doing hostess duty in the homes visited will be Mesdames: Peter McKee, Charles Dalgleish Jr., Arthur Moran Jr., Edward Doucet Jr., Gordon Howe, Robert Doran and Lawrence Rail. OU Student Theatre Presents Muskale • The dream home of Mrs. J. Rudolph Oliver — and Mr. Oliver too — which she describes as Mediterranean French and Eni;Iish Eclectile, on Wayfind Lane in Bloomfield Hills. • The Bloomfield Village residence of Mr. and Mrs. Williaht G. Lerchen Jr., early American witli wrougM iron touches. “Little Mary Sunshine,” a musicale by Rick Besoyan, is in its second week at Oakland University. The Student Enterprise Theatre will present performances tonight and Saturday at 8:30 p.m. in the Barn Theatre. The play is a nostalgic look back to ”a time When the world was much hipre simple than ours is today. For instance, good meant good, bad meant bad, virtue was all and justice, well, justice ajways trium|)l^d; at least we like to think It was that, way.” Tickets are available at the door. It M,. t THE PONTIAC PRESS, FUIDAV, NOVEMBER 21. 1909 Visitors to Laser Show Will Participate in Exhibit ,A completely new esthetic,concurrently with the hologram | Because ^ previous exhibitions experience will happen t o <>xhibilion. ^ My* encountered *Hh ■ the la.^ers, the of ibwera I n .isMrs of Cranbrook Academy I of Tf*"'"**"* ^ ^ of Art Galleries original show.L „ „ , . .. i Galleries’ show will be one of ••Lasers: Visual Applications,”,'^**. «'ef«;‘bcs theL^e first to open to the public. on exhibition through Jan. 18. *'"« '"*’*'^'he explains. ' ... , . I spontaneous and Innovative ex- Visitors will not "t* r e 1 y ^s parti * ★ * observe the exhibition, they W‘>Uf an entire movement that has Another exhibition, "Towers,” actually participate in it. By g^eat potential, holograms are is open in the downstairs moving within the room they' „ f^e forward fringes of art.” Igallery through Dec. 7. will change lights. When the________________,_________!___________________1-------!___________________ Serving as a double-duty room is an attic area converted into a charming bed-sittiiig room. It is ideal for a youngster home for the holidays or a quiet retreat for any member of the family. Plymwood's Sugar Hill Pine furniture is enhanced by a vibrant red and blue color scheme. Loiver bed rolls out on casters and can be an extra bed or storage bin for blankets and linens. Cabinet units include both drawer and cabijiet space, as well as open area for books, television set or accessories display. The sfiow will M ^ survey\if! many types over 350 towers by ^architects, [Chicago, ejnhinjfers, artl.sts and fan-' Drawings are done by such tasists. It will be illustrated by | artists as Jean Dubuffet, Claes architectural photographs, films Oldenburg, and John P’urnlval. glides. Assembled by Chicago’s Museum of Contemporary Art curator David H. Katzlve, the exhibit was inspired' by the The Galleries are open from noon td 5 p.m. weekdays, and from 1 to S p.m. cept for major holidaya. lights are changed, sounds will vary. The show will constantly change because the same visitor will not do the same thing in the same place twice. ITie exhibition has two components. Lasers and holograms in the center gallery comprise an experimental show that illustrates significant changes technology is producing in art today. Study, Care and Rearing of Parents An environmental exhibition will take place in the main gallery, which will be converted into an inflated plastic form, believed to be the largest ever made in an art gallery. The visitor becomes a part of the ! art by being within it. Objects for the show’s holograms will include j sculptures and a ceramic poj by communication is worth every i when they behave in an unac-| Richard E. DeVore, head ofjthe effort on a child’s part. ceptable manner. Remember, Academy’s ceramics di Let them know YOU havelyou disapprove of the ACT, not ment. DeVore’s one-n certain standards. For example, the PERSON. For example, in the Galleries will take\place speak in your language and do when father refuses to give up siderable lack of material on not attempt to move into their|the car keys, make it explicit, how to be a better child. Hope-j circle as this only makes you an that you think he is a lovable: fully, the following Guidelines I object of ridicule. If mother! old man who ACTS crazy. ; SH'OWS AntlOUQS for Offspring, resulting from a! wants to know how you like her! Parents need discipline, not ^ By BETTY CANARY NEA Writer No shortage of information exists on how to be a better parent but there is a con- roundtable discussion among interested children, will want to deal with parents in this changing world. Parents are perplexing new dress, do not say, “It is|punishment. A show of force is' A local resident is among the most becoming.” Say, "Coo-coo, sometimes necessary, but a exhibitors at the current bnby!” ;quiet, consistent attitude is your Dealers Christmas Antique * * * best bet in conditioning them to;Show. Dorothy Anthony of Parents have f e e 1 i n g s .lyour having your way.! Airport Road is at the Light Perhaps their idea of dress is i Consistently asking, for ex-Guard Armory, East Eight Mile creatures and dealing with!different than yours but they:ample. Soon they will learniRoad, at the show which opened them effectively is a challeng-jhave the right to dress in ac- what you want. Ask, ask, ask, Thur^ay, and runs through Ing task. Do not make theicordance to the rules set down ask, ask. Sunday. Hours are 1 - 11 p.m. common mistake of seeing by their p«rs. If father really | Parents must learn to become each day. likes wearing a stiffly starched independent. Be reasonable j ______ shirt and a bow tie, allow him'about letting them make somej qi. it ■ , j to express himself in this way. I of their decisions byi oKin Up LOST Do not greet him 'with, “How | themselves. For example, once i long do you have to wear the|in awhile let them go to parties! When you out chicken under; neck brace?” |or to the shopping center!^* broiler, arrange it skinside! Parents need the approval oflwithout your throwing a temper down in the pan, then turn as their offspring. Even adults|tantrum. Someday you will be necessary. Have the chicken, must be dealt with individually. I need the assurance that they gone and they will be on their skinside up for tfie last period ‘ Keeping open the avenue of'are appreciated and loved even'own. lof broiling. 1 parents as merely grown-up children. They are adults with their own problems and fears, The main requirement of a parent is the knowledge that you love him, no matter what. Parents are individuals and EorChristmas givehera HappyNewl^ a Kitdien Carpet Gift Certificate INSTALL IT NOW, BEFORE THE HOLIDAYS, FOR THE HOLIDAYS. OR PRESENT HER WITH OUR GIFT-BOXED, GIFT CERTIFICATE. It's the one with a ten year weor guarantee , . . ten beau- ' tiful yeaVs of comfort and joy . v. of quiet, carefree living ... no more scrubbirtg and waxing. Completely stain resistant. The greasiest, gooiest spills sponge right off. Viking has a high density nylon pile with a built-on undercushion of sponge rubber that cuts breakage, backaches, foot-aches, heod*^ches, noise. It'll bounce her right off her feetl Ciuar AllX©n ^ Fiking Kitchen Carpet it fuaran teed jor 10 years of normal wear when properly installed and maintained. Or i«« wiU replace it prO’ A, beautiful present In ItMlf—a let of tlx Viking carpet coasters so she can choose her color, ond sea for herself how Viking Hands vp. With on exquIsHa card pointed like on oncl^ lllumh noted manuscript... oil golds and reds on parchment. I 'I : ' rated for the unused portion oj the marahtee. Guaranteed Chrisimd$ In$lallation Open Mon., Fri., ’lit 9, J?al. *U1 5 P.M. ■ I ,1 iiM nf-'' ' f ifl FROM THE WORKSHOP OF PEARCE'S THANKSGIVING CANDELABRA Stort with a wrought iron cone shaped compote base, odd the richness of gold mums, and bronze, minipture cattails, colorful wheat and greens. All together it makes on elegant arrangement for your Thonksgivln'g table or buffet. *10 $1250 $15 » -f •/ 1 r-’ THANKSGIVING CENTERPIECE A pair of toll topers grace the wrought iron holder. Add to this autumn gold mums, deep rust pomps, miniature berries, stalks of colorful wheat and green (oiloga , , , voilol You hove the perfect Thanksgiving Centerpiece. $7$o HOSTESS ARRANGEMENT A delightful bowl of ggy flowers to brighten a corner or set d holiday mood. Colorful wheat, berries, outumn leoves enhance the gold mums and deep, rich pompi $600 FLORAL COMPANY I doily to Detroit, Birmingham, Bloomfield and Intermediate Points Opan Doily 8 AM. to 5>30 P.M. 559 Orchard Lak* Avanue Closed Sunday Phone FE 2-0127 Concert Is Free Event A varied program ranging from a Grecian folk dance to the waltzes of Brahms and a chorus by Copland, will be offered Saturday in a concert by the Oakland Uijlvcrsily Singers under the direction of John Dovaras. The public is invitei( to the free concert to be given from 8:30 p.m. in Oakland’s Dodge Hall auditorium. Highlight of the concert, according to Dovaras, will be the famed “Liebeslleder Waltzes, Opus 52,” by Brahms. The 18 waltzes were written b y Brahms in a single year, 1869, as he became enchanted with Vienna during his first year ofi residence there. Other selections to be offered' by the 32-volce organization include: “0 Vos Omnes,” a Lenten motet by Victoria,! greatest of the Spanish 16th Century composers; three chansons, ”Au joly Jeu du pousse avant,” ‘‘Mon cour se| recommande a vous,” and ‘‘II est bel et bon.” Others are “Haralambl,” a; Grecian folk dance arranged by I Joseph Byrd: “Americana,” a sequence of five transcripts byj Thompson; “Stomp Your Foot,”| a popular chorus from Copland's opera, “The Tender! Land.” THE PONT! AC PHKSS, FUIDAV, NOVEM HKR ‘Jl, 1909 Thinks Football Is 'Groovy' B—5 Mary Moore of Dallas, Tex., is a heroine and no one is prouder than her mother, Mrs. Nellie Jean Moore. Mary received the 1969 Junior Fire Marshal Gold Medal, including a $2,500 life insurance policy and q special citation from the Federal Fire Council on behalf of President Nixon, at the 96th annual conference of the International Association of Fire Chiefs in Chicago recently. She is credited with saving the lives of five brothers and sisters and two cousins in a house fire. New York — Joey Heatherton says she almost Jumps out of l^er skin from excitement when hubby Lance Rentzel feaches for a pass and she confesses she thinks Joe Namalh is “groovy.” But guards and tackles completely confuse her. , ' * ★ * ' “They just knock each other down and get up and do it again,” added the spicy little star of television and screen. “P’ellows like John Wilbur, Ralph Neely and Lee Roy Jordan. They’re so violent. It can’t be fun.” ' ★ ★ * the curvacious actress, at-' tired in black mini-skirt andi form- - fitting black jersey,' rested her blonde head on^ Rentzel’s shoulder in the couple’s plush Central Park! I West apartment and talked I about her first year as wife of a big time pro football player. | ★ * ★ I “1 love it,” she said. “It’s just' like the movies.” j TOTALLY INVOLVED “I’ve seen most of Lance’s!^, games,” Joey added. “At first, I got so excited that I squealed and screamed. It affected myi voice. Now I jump up and down and limit myself to applauding.” I Miss Heatherton, whose 37-20- 34 figure and sensuous beautyj "I think the prettiest play in have had critics compare her!football is the pass. When Lance with the late Marilyn Monroe,IcaU'hes one, it's a show slop-,shid she rhet flentzel while per.” ' filming the AfjCTV movie in Jm-y said she had met the Hollywood Jets’ Namath and had found * * *> him fascinating, “This was last yethe son of Mr. and Mrs. wedding date. Roger E. Sizer of Brookfield, He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. wis. Raymon Skrocki of Amherst, * * ★ , . The prospective bridegroom is Ihe^prospeclive bridegroom Is presently staUoned at Grand a student at Northern Michigan g University, where his financee The’ bride-elect attends has previously attended, Whitewater (Wis.) State University, her fiance’s alma mater. Ball-Sizer Former Pontiac re.sidents, Dr, Jan. 31 wedding vows are and Mrs. Harry B. Schlosser of planned. Parents of the prospective bridegroom are Mrs, Joseph Smith of Tucson, Ariz. and the late Edward Stults. He was graduated from Indiana Institute of Technology. Polly's Pointers Sweater's in Freezer POLL'Y’S PROBLEM iding. After washing mine I put kA-ii CL L- DEAR POLLY—My Pointer is'it in the freezer overnight and Miller-Skrocki Mrs, A. S. who has troubletrouble with shed- Dec. 27 Is the date chosen by trying to keep her daughter’s Deborah Jeanne Miller and cashmere sweater from shed- Manufacturers Want Controls I Five apparel giants call for 'wAge price controls "in gll In-diistriel, not just apparel," according to one of the group which will include Jonathan I.ogan, Kayser-|loth, Genesco, Botany and Phillips-VanHeusen. Women’s Wear Dally quotes: the anonymous spokesman: "Other methods used to control inflation have been ineffective. Inflation is still with us, undermining wages of employes who eventually are customers for our products.” Enjoy ihe luxury of SHAGCARPETIl throughout your house *C95' tjP pet- yard Only TM CARPET 4495 Dixie Hwy., Drayton Plains 674-3159 674-3150 To Stuff Celery Cream cheese mixed with chopped anchovies (drained of their oil) and minced red onion makes a flavorful stuffing for celery. FL/^GS OUTDOOR • INDOOR ALL TYPES CHRISTIAN LITERATURE SALES 65 Oakland Ave. FE 4-9591 ' I ' 1 -M-j; IHA 1'" / 'l ' V' ' Three Ingredients for Salad Dressing iFnilt Sqiad, Trozcii (»r , ranned Is al\ya>^s welconied For added appeal, . top with F'luffy Frost, a sweet dressing sparked with prepared yellow mustard. Fluffy Frost 4 cup marshmallow fluff cup mayonnaise 2 tablespoons prepared yellow mustard Combine marshmallow fluff, mayonnaise, and mu.stard; stir until blended. Serve as dressing for fruit salads. Makes % cup dressing. Crisp Crackers Make sure those crackers you ■re serving with a spread are crisp! Heat them in a hot oven for a few minutes; the’ll cool and re-crisp while you are arranging them on a serving dish. THBV FH IDA^^ NOVFM HER 21, 1009 Jt± R&M DEPT. STORE UNION LAKE VILLAGE WEEK-END SPECIALS FRI., SAT,, SUN. ONLY Open Sun. 9:30-5 Daily 9:30-9 CAR COATS Rag. to $50.00 19“ » 24“ HOSE HANES, BERKSHIRE Reg. to 1.75 Stnicb, Ponly, R«g. 99« pr. ''CHARGE IT" USE YOUR AAASTER, BANKARD AND SECURITY CHARGE SPECIAL GROUP Men’s PANTS 4’7 to 5’7 Men’s BAN-LONS Reg. to $10 4’^oach GIRLS, BOYS JACKETS Reg. $11.$20 VISIT OUR COAAPLETE CARD & GIFT DEPT. R&M DEPT. L(ktR4. STORE Patients at Green Lake Rest Horne are treated to 30-minute concerts twice a day. Mrs. Ray Mattson of Wixom, a nurse’s aide and professionally - trained musician, brought her own organ to the home when she started working there over a year ago. Nursing as a career won over playing in a nightclub. Sometimes she plays on organ and piano at the same time. When Dr. Irving Friedman, Waterford dentist, makes his weekly call at the home, he sings while Mrs. Mattson plays. Big Needles Speedy Way fo Knit Afghan Quintuplets Born in Barcelona; Only One Girl By .fUDY about the cor^eiit app^ration nf{ BAftCEl.ONA (AP) - Isabel NBA Service |ihe cross stitch pattern. Here’s Hcrnbndez Neiia, 38, gave birth If you’ve always wanted to how it goes; .today to qulntuplgts—four boys knit an afghan but never had * * * and a girl—at a maternity hos- the time, here’s the perfect u,, „ pital in Tarrasa, 15 miles north- .n.«r . knit on. jif, in./rySoT»' IX*" in .hn i mothcr to a clinic in Barcelona All it takes Is yarn that's in the dirrections and count thei. auperbulky and a pair of[uDrlKV‘bVr7Tou’7 fi7d"\ha'f wooden jack pin needles. Jack|,i;._„ ’ u i i ” . ^ vdopcd respiratory trouble, pins are easy to hold, yet just! V / v small ‘‘"‘'URh to let your fingers ^ ® \ Dr Angel Rubio said one of fly- , * * 4. ' critical condi- , tion and the other In only fair! In fact, you actually can knit from left to right artd; condition. He said the girl and to a gauge of two stitches to an 1"'" f"*- ™lor on the wrong side the two other boys were in satis-Inch, which should give you hole. Work across'/actory condition, some Idea of how fast you’ll'ipriRht bar to the up-! as* reach the finish line. P^r hole. Then bring the needle; The girl, weighing 414 pounds, * * * through the lower hole directlyj was born first. Then came the The afghan pattern I ’ m *’®’”"'- ; four boys, the first weighing 4% featuring today has an Irish . * * * ' pounds and the others just over design that appears to be in-1 on the number of two pounds each, tricale but actually is quick to *’®fng us- * * * compIet€, thanks to the weight work from right toi The mother and her husband, of the yam and the size of the '®*^* f” f*f® you Pedro Castro Bayo, 41, a metal needles P“" f*’® y®*"" ®''®"'y worker, have three other chll- * * * not too tightly. , dren, aged 12,10 and 7. thB ^ Q th hi^lei^stiir^ open # now that the rest of the golf course has closed for the season. Stop in for Luncheon, cocktails, and fun. Even on Sunday. We'll guarantee a ball. Lokt Qolf Course 2602 W. Walton Blvd. 113-1611 If you want to be true to Irish. tradition, knit the afghan in the T cream, off-white color that’s Joggers Advised Not to Aim for the 'Roadside Blight' Title prized so much in Ireland. Instructions for knitting the .54 by 62-lnch Irish afghan are available in a leaflet, along with directions for a second checkerboard afghan in easycare yarn. For a copy of the leaflet, send 50 cents to Stitchin’ Time, P.0, It u.sed to be only racing fans lapse is not the aim. Neither thought about the trotters. Now physical collapse of the jogger, it’s trot, trot, trot, for everyone. | nor of the appearance. The purpose of all this jogging' * * * is health and beauty. j Do wear culottes or brief Challenge of the jogs is to skirts, gored or pleated. And achieve that nice b a 1 a between comfort and appearance. There’s no point in joggers vying with billboards and auto wrecks for the ! roadside blight title. So, the j National Association of Hosiery I Manufacturers has come up with them, if you are young in heart and firm of knee, wear knee highs in strong contrasting patterns or strong textures. Most of these latter are also made of soft yarns, and are absorbent. The patterns, moreover, are finer and looser, j with its own rules for roadside! and the textures more open '''ggers. I than last year, so the leg can ♦ * * breathe. Rule number one ~ Ix)ok like: * * * layers. As weather cools down, the problems of the jogger will be to be warm while going and coming from her track, a^, at the start and finish. Comfort on the track is ★ * Thin turtle neck cotton shirts under heavier turtle necks are fashion right. So are opaque panty hose worn with knee socks or over-the-knee textured hose. means look sensible and smart. What to wear changes from climate to climate and season to season. * ★ * Those brief little cotton track shorts and X shirts effected by male athletes will have limited appeal for women, we hope. And the companion sweat socks rolled to the bony ankle, with bulging calves above, are de rigueur only in their absence. The need is for fashion-right hoisery ... to help those feet doing all the work. ‘ GEK COMFORT Most joggers prefer sneakers or soft-soled, firm little shoes. What they should prefer is the neatly turned hose with emphasis on a shaped heel, or the panty hose or knee high which is absorbent and fits the shoe. Definitely out are cordy tex- tures which run under the sole'^®, ® „ or over the toes. Sheers are too. AID MUSCLES Rule number four — Aim for support. Unless you’re slim as a reed and are jogging for sheer animal spirits, control is important. Hoisery manufacturers have answered this with lightly controlling briefs, and their own detachable hose. The foundation may be garterless, the hose held thight high with a special, rubber. Rule number two — Choose clothing that breaths. For jogging the fashion choice is v because this iii^the seasqn when solid comfort is really news. The sole proviso is comfort plus style. Do not wear the oldest I in the closet. Total col- CLOSE-OUT SALE OVER ISO I'ArrERNS 50% DISCOUNT 16.Pc.Sct............... 4S-i*cSet...;............ »12” INCLUDES FINE CHINA AND EARTHENWARE ALL SALES FINAL NfTREFUNDS - EXCHAN(;ES - OR l,AY-A WAY DIXIE POTTERY 5281 Dixie Hwy. ■ \:.^_______L_1 623.09 II devotees of pahty hose: you can wear the foundation briefs over a regular panty hose, and keep ankles and knees neat. Another hosiery innovation especially good for girls who jog in trousers, are the thigh-high hose with their own stretch tops or wide band elastic. The last thing you want to wear with trousers are ankle socks or golf socks. Better are knee highs with a touch of elastic, or the long smooth line of a thigh-high. Box 503, Radio City Station, New York City, N.Y. 10019. Ask for leaflet No. S180 and include your name, address and zip code. KNIT KNACKS Irish knits form their own rich pattern, but some afghan enthusiasts work their coverlets in an afghan stitch and then apply a design in cross stitch. A number of readers have asked Knit a cozy afghan in an Irish pattern that’s uncommonly quick to finish. Directions for making the big-needle design, plus a second afghan style, are available—for gift-knit time. UNDE STARS AND DIAMONDS convenient credit terms. 3 diamonds plua a . glorious linds star Open ah Enggaes Instant Credit Account MIOHIQAN BANKARD AND MASTER CHARQE its NORTH SAQINAW STREET Phona IS2-2501 ODBU linn.. Thun.. Brl. in A D.M. V- Brighten Your Active World with Contact Lenses from Vision Center If you need glassoB, but you'vs longed for the fresdom that millions of Contact Lbm wearers enjoy ... do something about it... See your Vision itbct lens specii I glasses can bring^ you clear, KINDY VISION CENTER Center contact lens specialist. Find out how these marvelous clear, comfortable vision, let you be as active as you went;.. at work, at play, night or day. Only you will know you're wearing them, but you'll probably want to tell your whole new active world. XJ Contact Lens Spidilists • Ttioreugh Eye Eximlnatlpat DoctorT Priierlptioni Flllid In Pontiac 43 N. Saginaw 338-7173 l! DOCTOR OF OPTOMETRY: H. M. MARKOWITZ , V \ Kj \,' li, ,)l •: I' '■ THE PONTIAC PRESS,. FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 21, 1009 Might Have Fixed TV Camera With Screwdriver^ Says Firirt SPACE \ 'CENtE% Houston (UPI) If the^Apoilo 12 astronauts had carried a screwdriver to the moon they probably would have been able to repair their $78,000 color television camera. camera ht the\ space center i believed tney' could n a and radioed repair instructions if Charles ‘Pete’ Conrad and Alan L. Bean had the “proper tools” to do the job. n«^eded wps a screwdriver.’ The camera cartie on briefly Westinghouse officials, who made the camera, said today they worked with another “The problem was, they carry virtually no handtools,” the spokesman said. “TTiey had a pair of bolt cutters, but what we but failed shortly after the first moonwalk began Wednesday. Bean tapped the camera with a hammer, turned it upside down, adjusted controls and turned it off for a rest. But the picture remained lost. the tube,” the spokesman said. "There wa^ damage because of high intensity light.” It is believed the Image of the sun “buned” the picture tube so it was unusable. n coUjdp’t do that with the tools said. they had,” the spokesnian sail will be placed Ih quatantipe and , th^.p,,tal ,, taken to thq plant whert^ it, WM manufactured in Baltimore, Md., for teS^ts, |V 'The problem, we believe, is “We took a look at what could be done to get a picture, but it would have necessitated getting Inside the camera. They "Of course, our solution to the problem is based on our idea of what happened,” he said. “We are fairly confident that we know what happened.” CAP Week Set The camera, which is being brought back from the moon. LANSING (AP)-Gov. William Milliken has proclaimed the week of Dec. 1 as Civil Air Patrol Week in Michigan, marking the 28th anniversary of the founding of the patrol. Picture quality might have suffered somewhat after the repairs but it would have been usable, the spokesman said. Per capita consumption of beer in the U.S. is about 17.2 gallons annually. 30 FREE TURKEYS WIN A IREE TURKEY COUPON NAME . Address. City .... STATE.. .........IIP.... HAIF HOUR DRAWINGS WILI BE HELD ON { NOVEMBER 20 THURSDAY NOVEMBER 21 FRIDAY NOVEMBER 22 SATURDAY tmoneif • hark qua ran lev! ppps Winners Will Be Announced Every Half Hour and Notified If Net Present. WK leMKRVK THB RIOMT TO LIMIT QUANTlTIBa You must be 18 Years or Older to Win. Tepps Employees and imme* diate families not eligible. SPECIAL APPLIANCE SAVINGS! Model PAM7000 Model PHC20 e WESTINGHOUSe ® WESIMCHOUSI AUTOMATK PHONO HAUt CURIB SET ® WESTINGHOUSE 4-SUa TOASTER d-$peed hi-fidelity cart-rid^ & dual sapphire styl< Ing. Solid state instant Includes 18 rollers, pins, foam pads. Free hair styling book. Cord reel on 15” Family size. Toasts bread, ^muffins, waffles, and mere., Select the shade «f least you want. IftW GENERAL ELEQRIC AUTOMATIC CAN OPENER & KNIFE SHARPENER Opens any can at a touch. Magnetic lid. Sharpens any knife. Handy cord storage. Attractive styling, decorator white or avocado. 0 WESTINGHOUSE FM/AM TABLE RADIO SPICE RACK & SPICES ROASTING PAN C88 M# Rog. Reg. 8.97. 99< at 1.98 12 filled spice bottles. 2-tier maple finish rack. Perfect way to give a new lift to holiday cooking. Family size of seamless alu» minum. Holds 20-lb. turkey or 22 lb. ham. Heats evenly. No rust aluminum. CARVING BOARD ENAMELED ROASTER 199 ■ cempo I compare at 3.98 Well & tree board with roast and fowl holder. Hardwood, 18x12". Gift-boxed. 199 ■ rag. 3. rag. 3.97 Holds 14-lb. turkey or fowl. Self basting. Seamless. Easy to dean. Model RTF-3100 Separate FM/AM and AFC switches. On/Off volume control. Automatic volume controL Wide range front mounted speaker. WILLOW CORNUCOPU GENERAL ELEaRIC VACUUM ELEQRIC STEREO PHONO Portablel Solid state for instant sound. 4-speed automatic drop down changer. 3 Audio controls-left to right, volume, boss, treble. Tone ELEQRIC FM/AM DIGITAL CLOCK RADIO Woke up to music or music and alarm. Lighted clock face and alarm setting. All controls mic! up front, 4" dynamic speaker. Solid state design. FM frequency control. Model SV-T «4>C.fir CMi|Mreata,8l-3.lf 1/, BLOOMPIELD MIRACLE MTLE — TELEGRAPH AT SQUARE LAKE ROAD Christinas Hours: Mondoy Tl^rough Soturday 9:30-1^; Sundays 11-8 ' r":// I" ‘ »nii r / I'.i'M, i. A / ' \V ^ji •/ • 1,1'j ! * 'lA '■ 1 THE PONTIAG PRESS. EHiDAV, NOVEMBER 21. lOfiO Mayflower s Leaking Sister Ship Never Made the Ocean Trip By National (>cographlc Society ^ WASHINGTON ~ If the good 1 ahip Ifii^eedweU yadn't\leaked In 1620, it would bo aa revered today as the Mayflower. And Plymouth Rock might have been named Delfshaven Rock. History has been unkind to the Speedwell and Its home port, Delfshaven, a town that now survives as a mere creek, in booming Rotterdam. For a dozen years Pilgrims found sanctuary In Holland In their quest for religious freedom. Their journey to the New World began not from Plymouth but from Delfshaven, not aboard the Mayflower but the Speedwell. The Pilgrim adventure started Ip 1606, when 3.5 members of an i|t] n g^ 1 s h Congregational church In Nottinghamshire crossed the North Sea to Holland. They settled flr.st in Amsterdam, then In I.«tden, center of the handicraft trades In the Province of South Holland. In 1620 they laid plans to find a new home In America, They bought and fitted out'the I>utch-buUt Speedwell, and arranged to join a larger group bound from England aboard t h e Mayflower. Mayflower waited at anchor. The Voyage to America began two weeks later with d20 trUelers distributed between the'two ships. On July. 22 the Speedwell set sail for Southampton, where the After eight days of travel the Speedwell began leaking. The ships reached the nearest haven, Dartmouth. Repairs were made, and the voyage resumed on Aug. 23. ' , ^ w * .Soon the leakage grjcw worse. The ships turned back again, to Plymouth , where The Speedwell’s trip ended. Most of her passengers boarded the Mayflower: a few sailed for London on the disabled ship. Finally, on Sept, fl, the Mayflower sailed alone fbr the New World. Meanwhile, the Speedwell limped ;into London waters and out of history books. The Seashore Trolley Museum maintains a half mile of trick and has another half-mile under construction near Kennebpnk-port, Maine. 30 FREE TURKEYS WIH A FREE TURKEY COUPOM HALF HOUR DRAWIHGS WUBE HELD ON NOVEMBER 20 THURSDAY NOVEMBBt 21 FRIDAY NOVEMBER 22 SATURDAY tmonei/ • bark if a a ran hr! ppps SAVE 60% comporaat4.95 PARTY PERC 10«ip eervir. Flpme-^ ojon coWpii malm vHth deiion. Ofoollielid^BMt rJi L, i BLOOMFIELD MIRACLE MILE - TELEGRAPH AT SQUARE LAKE ROAD Christmas Hours: lUon^ay Through Saturday 9:30-11; Sundays 11-8 \ At, '• 'Jr V, •'1'" i; r'*- ' , 'i , ...... B—10 THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY ioN'EMHER -'I. Swimming Pool Won't Sit Idle NATIONAL tlTY, Calif, (AP) — The $500,000-municipal swimming pool is going to be stocked with trout for the winter. And instead of just lying there empty, it will be providing $1 fees flrom fishermen. School Board Urges Lifting Bond Ceiling Art Maley, city recreation director, won approval of his plan from the City Council-after noting: “Ordinarily, the pool would sit idle from the date of the closing until the start of the spring program" Waterford Township’s Board of Education went on record Hast night in support of a state bill which would make it easier to sell school and municipal construction bonds. He adds: "Part of the $500 It will cost us to stock the pool will be covered by the $1 fees we’ll charge.” Surplus Ducks to Be Dinners Waterford school officials are concerned with the bill because they may be trying lo sell bonds for a new junior high school in the near future, they indicated. Voter approval would be needed for such a bond sale. INDIANAPOLIS. Ind. (AP) -Between 20 and 30 ducks at the| Indianapolis Zoo have been de-| dared surplus. The bill would remove the state’s 6 per cent Interest rate ceiling on tax-exempt bonds for an 18-month period. It fell six votes short of passage in the state House of Representatives last week and is scheduled for reconsideration about Dec. 2, according to school trustee Louis H. Schim-mel Jr. BONDING EXPERT | Area Deaths Jeffrey R. Bowen Service foV Jeffrey R. Bowen. Nellies./^ Kelly OXFORdu-Service fdr Nellie Brandeis Head Urges Firmness Against Militants month - old son of Mr. andi^- 82, of 31 West Bur- City Man Is Found Guilty of Manslaughter in Death After four days of delibera'-|Only sy»cond degree or the lesser LOS ANGPILES (AP) The Mrs. Donald E. Bowen of an Oakland Co u n t y|i nc 1 uded « e ' Alpena will be 11 a.m. lomor-i|jy,.jgj j„ Oxford Cemeterv I mlnistrators should deal more Circuit Court jury yesterdayi manslaughter rodtl he con-row in Voorhees - Siple Funeral, „ ,, .. . . firmly with campus militants found a Pontiac man guilty of sidered in additidh to an ac- „ ! Miss Kelly died yesterday. ... . . .. ------- Home with burial in Perry 5|,g bookkeeper for C. E. Mount Park Cemetery. jWilson, a school teacher for 25 Morris Abram said that if a years and a member of the demonstration occurred today like last January’s 10-day takeover of the Brandeis switch- Sports Award Sponsor Dies The baby died yesterday. „ . . ^ , First Baptist Church of Oxford. Surviving besides the parents are a brother, Keith E. at' , ^ j » home; grandparenUs, Mrs. Mrs. Harry H. Stearns bofd he would act more force- Lucille Bovia of Southfield, i „ i r m u u ^ Donald 0. Bowen of Cheboygan, i, Mrs. Mary Starr of Pontiac, » >J,tea^^^ and William Douglas of Union Lake; and great - grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Mungerj*’*’’ of Wolverine, Mrs. g 1 a d y s Cemetery, Troy. Was Benefactress for Event at St. Michael Dorthey of Detroit, Mr. and I Mrs. Stearns died yesterday. Mrs. Perry Latham of Pontiac,' Surviving are a daughter, and James E. Douglas of Mrs. Francis J. Mansfield of Cameron, Okla.; and great - Waterford Township: and two great - grandparents, Mr. and grandchildren. Mrs. Ervin Rives of Lewisburg, ------------------------- Ky. Quarters Stolen a id assume more of a leader-manslaughter in the k n i f e quittal verdict, ship role. ! slaying of a bar patron last | ppumEm-rATlON j, . Zieni said that he dropped The verdict was reUirnedl first-degree charge since against James Maybee, 32, of 291 ^een S. Paddock. He faces up to 15 years in prison when he is P ’ ^ ^ ^ "•'"'•V was arrested about Frederick C.Ziem. ^ On Monday, Ziem will an- Maybee was taken into custody nounce his decision on Richard L. Henry, 24, of 4345 Livernols, Troy, a codefendant with May^e in the March 15 death of Larry Belce, 52. ___________________ Both men were tried at the| ni-ll A A’ A lAtl's®"’'® but Henry waived| otill Active at IuIMs right to a jury, leaving' Abram .said he felt that "the great majority of students would speak up to curb the militants." “I do not believe we are any longer in a stage In which uni- versity rights can be violated without penalties being attached,” he added. two days later. Lake Orion Man Held Up in City The longtime benefactress of NINETY-SIX, S.C. (AP) Zlem to decide the facts Thomas C. Anderson Sr., whol‘" was 101 years old Thursday, is PROSECUTION WITNESS still active as a land surveyor., During the six-day trial A Lake Orion man was held up early today on a city street, according to police. A bonding expert, he is direc-ijhe annual Athletic Awards tor of the Municipal Advisory banquet at St. Michael High Mrs. Willard L. Morse _ _______ ___________^ Service for Mrs Willard I FrOm Loundramat^'^ ""'y concession is clients He'ii^y'Tooklhe”‘wit"ness‘sta"ndI Richard Meintrye 26, of 121 service tor Mrs. wiiiaro i^. fw.,, ____1nienmnrih Lake Orion, told Members of a civic club will help zoo director Roy Shea round them up Friday for Thanksgiving and Christmas dinners at the General Protestant Orphans Home. Her Big Day Is Tomorrow Waterford Township’s Junior Miss will be crowned tomorrow at a pageant starting at 8 p m at Mason Junior High School, 3535 W. Walton ^ Twenty-two senior high school girls have been narrowed down to a field of 14 semifinalists. The contest is sponsored by the Waterfrod Jaycettes. Council of Michigan, a nation wide statistical service on bonds sold in Michigan. ‘Tf we don’t lift the 6 per cent ceiling, it means no bonds or very few will be sold,” he'Lansing commented School, Rose I. Griffin died yesterday. She was 71. Requiem Mass will be 10 a.m. Monday at St. Michael’s Catholic Church, with burial in (Harriet E.) Morse, 62, of 85 Doremus, Waterford Township, nqw have to come to take him to a„d testified that it was Maybee Glenworth, their propertv. that Hid iHp stahhine I police that a man approached Six-hundred quarters were:------------------------------He saS it was L knife but! him «n the .strain S. Shiriey about 2:15 a.m. The will be 9:15 a.m. tomorrow at stolen from coin washing: r*. ■ p •/ I/'"/f-.-J ■»V «» u the C. J. Godhardt. Funeral|machine boxes last night at the! State Sailor Killed that he had given it to Maybee. For the Waterford School District, it means that if bonds can’t be sold to meet con- ^ u • j struction bids, each month con- The body may be viewed Rosary will be said at 7 p.m. Sunday at Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home. Home, Keego Harbor, followed U-Wash-It coin laundry, 294 E.! WASHINGTON (AP) — Navy, - by a 10 a.m. funeral nmss at | pike, city police reported. lEngineman Fireman Robert E.! Belce was stabbed five times * ★ !Kushmaul Jr., son of Mr. and with a hunting knife in the The $150 cash and the coin I Mrs. Robert E. Kushmaul Sr. men’s room of Bob-Ken’s Bar, 9 boxes woHth $300 were stolen by of Chelsea, was among 16 N. Saginaw, a half-dozen youths, according!U.S. servicemen killed in action| 'Though Maybee was charged to a witness who talked with!in Vietnam, the Defense Depart-with first-degree murder. Judge police. Iment reported Thursday. Ziem instructed the jury that St. Michael’s Catholic Church; and burial in Roseland Park Cemetery, Berkley. Rosary will be 7:30 tonight at the funeral home. Mrs. Morse died yesterday. man demanded Meintrye’s wallet and threatened to shoot him. McIntyre handed over his wallet but noticed no gun, he told police. He said he did notice what appeared to b« a knife. struction is delayed building I ^ P-"'-costs go up $100,000, according'RESTAURANT to Schimmel. - | Miss Griffin of 26 Lincoln was State Rep. Loren D.jcofounder of a downtown Pon-Anderson, R - W a t e r f o r d| tiac restaurant. Griff’s Grill, 49 Township, yoted against the n. Saginaw. She was a member bill. I of St. Michael’s Church and the --------------- ! Daughters of Isabella. Miss Griffin was honored in r’nncii/o Mowc t™e of the y^apsuie I'yewa anniversary of her of state School’s Shamrock athletic award banquet. By lilt Aisaclaltil Prtu ------------------lOR LAST 3 DAYS TO SEE THEM ALL AT COSO HALL IN DETROIT’S 54TH AUTO SHOW! They’re here now—300 cars from all over the world! The 708, hot off the production line. ‘‘Muscle’’ cars that turn conservatives into car buffs. Intriguing foreign imports. The newest in camper vehicles. And for your special entertainment, there are two star-studded shows daily. DETROIT’S OWN SINGING PRIMO FAMILY Each member of this young family singing group. Including seven-year-old Angelo, has appeared professionally in Broadway musicali and even the Metropolitan Opera. THE' SWINGING TER-CELS This versatile musical group shares the spotlight with make things really Jump In Hall D Doing everything from Dixie to the latejt in rock, these four men and a girl are a whole show in themselves! It’S ALL YOURS FOR THE PRICE OF A TICKET TO THE 54i^ DETROIT. AUTO SHOW! A0ULTt-$1.76 • f^lLDIlkN UNDima-SP^ . SHOW HOURS-N6M TQl 11 KM. DAILY AT BILL PETRUSHA & SONS WiEta Celebrating the 20^1 anniversary of KrrCHENAlD Dishwashers Now is die time to btiy! KitchenAid didiwashers were introduced back in 1949. And to the delight of many of those early buyers, many of the original units are still operating. With few service calls in between. That’s the kind of dependable performance that has earned KitchenAid its reputation for being the best. Our newest KitchenAid dishwashers maintain this tradition. They’re built with good old-fashioned quality — in addition to providing the latest innovations in automatic dishwashing. Come in soon. There’s a KitchenAid dishwasher for every kitchen, every budget. And there’s never been a better time to buy! KITCHENAID CONVERTIBLES The portable with a built-in future* Use it right now as a portable. Build it in whenever you’re ready. Front-loading convenience. Counter-thick hard maple top on most models. IMMEDIATE DELIVERY OR LAYAWAY FOR CHRISTMAS! KitchenAid Food Waste Disposers Built better to grind finer, faster, quieter, and last longer. Put one in when you’re instaUiilg your dishwasher and save on installation cost. KITCHENAID BUILT-IN DISHWASHERS Front-loading convenience. Outstanding convenience, performance and beauty. Easy to load; easy to use. Just push a button and dishwashing’s done. The Superba model has special cycles for heavy soil and light soil, and Sani-Cycle for extra family health protection. 20 years of good old-fashioned quality OPEN EVERY NIONTTIL 9 P.M« With Approvsd Credit No Doom DaymOnt-36 Monthf to Puy TEL-HURON S^tOPPING CENTER - FE 3-7879 1550 Union Loko Road, Union Loko, 363-6286 PLENn t OF FREE PARKIMG ^ ^4^ I 7 1} ■)' *1|! J * j, ^ \}' ] X' THE PONTIAC I>RESS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 21. 19«9 /[HubbordJabs j^Sen. Griffin on Hoynsworth DEARBORN (UPl) - Mayor Orville L. Hubbard, whose political domain includes the high school once attended by Sen. Robert P. Griffin, R-MIch sent a pointed note to the Senate minority whip yesterday asking him to stay loyal to the party and vote to confirm Judge Clement Haynsworth to the Supreme Court. * A’ ★ Hubbard, the colorful mayor of this Detroit suburb, said he was elected mayor in 1941 the same year Michigan junior senator graduated from P^arbom’s Pordson High School “As a Republican U. S senator, you should be loyal to our party and to the President on his choice to the Supreme court,’’ Hubbard said. “The people who want you to vote against the President are the very people who would like your political scalp — the wild-eyed bushy haired liberals and left l.sts slobs who oppose Mr. Nix on’s choice could care less what happens to your political hide “There isn’t one vote in the whole damn left-wing gang,’’ the letter said. PRECINCT DELEGATE Hubbard has served as a Republican precinct delegate since 1932. Griffin, who led the fight against confirmation of Abe Fortas as chief justice, has announced his opposition Haynsworth and planned to vote against him today. Shooting Trial Starts in Detroit DETROIT (AP) - Testimony In the first trial to arise from the fatal shooting of one liceman and the wounding of a second at a Detroit church last March began Thursday in Detroit. ’The first day of the trial of Alfred Hibitt, 38, was taken up with technical testimony about the architectural structure of the New Bethel Baptist Church. Hibbitt is charged with assault with intent to conunit murder in the shooting of Patrol-Inian Richard Worobec outside ;tliat church March 29. A 21-year - old New York man, Ra fael Viera, is awaiting a second-Zflegree murder trial in the fatal “Shooting of Patrolman Michael Czapski. Clarence Fuller, 25, has also been charged in the shooting of Worobec and will be tried separately. The opening of the Recorder’s Court trial before visiting Judge Stewart Newblatt of Genesee County Circuit Court was proceeded by eight days of jury selection. ______J Bum 100 Proof Kentucky^ Strii|ht Bourbon WhUkoy OijtllW ind Boltlod by tho Jimw B. Bum DtitUlini Co.. CIsrmont, Boom, Ky. THE PRESENT our young junior botiquery for the *now^ generation— a place at HBS to buy presents* that say youWe *with it* zodiac peotar A. Wild 'n bright - makes any room the savviest ‘happening place in town. Know your friend's sign! Get yours now, only ^ | zodiac pillow B. 'It's the dawning’ of everyone's age! Soft ’n fun I Blow-up pillow makes your own room so very /very personal 1 a# Z^iac phenp book C Choose his or her tun sign! It's the latest in mod mod zodiac decorl So very colorful! Come to HBS. lifo savor bank D. Like the real thing — but big and a bank. Save your mad money fo^ lots of great buys at HBS! So giveablfl \ dynamito stationory E. Dynamite stick mailing tubes. 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Come in white. 3 different sizes. JL Lovablo* bra-slip O. lyhite nylon tricot with nylon lace. Mini short! Sizes 30 to 34 AA. 30 to 36 AA. No hooks * - to fuss with Only ^ geld-tona nock ring P. Fashion's latest jewelry look with the look of- real gold. Thefre such fun to buy and give! Such a. groovy fun! Only I solid slinky scarf R. Acetate in whife and other solid^. Fringed and fun. It’a the flapper Icmk tbat'a back for 1969 fathionl Get yours now, only, *Th« rrawnt Ploct' (or yovng case. Pow cold SHOP LATE Friday Night at t Stove l' u I, \ i t v>. m B—12 OWE COLOR THE rONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAV. NOVEMBER 21, 1069 Child-Abuse Cases Spawn Legal, Emotional Snarls the custody’ of her struct a balance between two of abusing her ohiUl ^las all ibasic riglils-the right of the iorts of problems -and taking his horne but also tend to give out rather lenlemt sentences to the parents; ^ “We don't even' act unless it’s clearly a case of child/abuse,” he said. In very (EDITOR'S No\'E - One o/igirl in the big obstacles itiVthe houd/inp parents. ..... ...... .......„................... r- -.....- ... / 0/ child obi4se cn.s’es by legal * * 'community to intervene in a the child awj^y from her Isn’t authorities is the fnugled iveb ojl This is just one example ofichild's beh^ilf and the right of always the best thin^ for either lauw u>hich haoc been passed jhp conflict of opinions thatithe family to conduct its affairs the mother or the child.” applying to them. VPI takes a ,.ps<,its when state agencies get a^ it sees fit. i * * * look at the legal picture m (he „p j„ „ne of the state’sj “The problem is inherent In Actual cases of child abuse orco in the /ollotcmg duspalch, pp,.pipxing problems - the relation with people,” says'show that the state's courts shy (he sccot«io/olu>^^rl .senes. Mrs. Maxine Virtue, as.si.stant injaway from going as far as 1 Axicmr ,iT»n A s charge of social services of the'cemoving a child from his h 'lV t antt emotional .snarls attornev general’s office. “The parent's custody. ? *»«‘ai'se they occur within the new law is definitely an im- rathER LENIENT Wl«.n )«, re. held and the judge found the f: ^ working with a family rela-Q^unty prosecuting attorney’s .. . . parents guilty of a felony and '■ ‘ tionship it is t« office, which gets an average ofj Samuel Manzo of the put them on probation. B.M..4NCE OF RICHTS determine ju.st what is the right p^e serious child abuse case|Michigan Department of Social A juvenile court considered Under Michigan’s child abuse, '"8 •<* “o. month, said the Services said the state agency the same case at the same time law in effect since early 1967, * * w pro.secutors not only try to avoids taking any extreme and decided to leave the little the state has attempted to con- “A young mother found guilty avoid removing the child from measures until they have first determined "jf there \ls any munity to the.se .^persons againsti "It is my opinion that the law h'ope in the fanylly.’’ [damage suits hy the parents. | is not working «it the way it DEPENDS ON HOPE The new law is definitely aniWa.s hoped it would, Mrs. “A child can be removeda ’’legal Virtue said, from his parents’ home tem-l“sity, says Mrs. Virtue, porarily if thbre is some hopej * * * the family can be helped, or “The particular snag before ‘ permanently if there .seems to I the law was passed had been' He said atypical” case recently, a be no hope at all,” Manzo said, jthat social workers, teachers father was sentenced to onej if the child is permanently [and physicians did not feel free year in jail. More likely, the removed from his parent’s to report cliild abuse cases for parents will either be placed on home, all parental rights are fgar of damage suits,” she says probation or required to un- completely severed and the “Doctors were prohibited by dergo psychiatric treatment. child goes up for adoption, Fascinating Blend of East, West why? “Because people are still afraid to report these cases because they feel ethically restrained and also, several of those who have reported have stated they will never do It again because the court’s decision often leaves the situa- WWW and professional ethes^ .TV. u. r disclosing information, l^hjid abuse cases, even though The problem of child abuse, she said the state realized immunity by the law, then is tangled up in com- that It was time to “make morei^jj,, ^aye a basis for fear, plicated and highly personal aggressive laws on child; ^ ^ shades of gray. * abuse—it was a legal necessl-! The new law says It Is the ty.” duty of a doctor, teacher, seeialj jngQj^y VS PRACTICE But as with all cases of put- Hong Kong Bonanza for Sightseers I worker or law enforcement of- I fleer “having reasonable cause”,,. .. .. child .bus, b, report 1. 1. Ihe .ulhormeo, j”* 5.Tw»Tend” IMMUNITY GUARANTEED to work and what actually hap-The law also guarantees im-lpens. For Instance, a ca.se is now pending in which a doctor was sued for damages when he reported a child abuse case. It is still possible the court could rule against him. It appears that the problem lies not in the law Itself, but In basic human nature. By MURRAY J. BROWN UPI Travel Editor HONG KONG - There’s no doubt shopping is a major attraction for American visitors in Hong Kong. But there arej others equally rewarding in thisj British Crown Colony in the! shadow of Communist China, j There is swimming a t, beautiful Repulse Bay or: unspoiled islets in the South! China Sea as well as various! other water and land sports. j ★ ★ * TTiere are fine restaurants! featuring the exotic cuisines of' old China and the foods of otherj Eastern and Western nations. And there are supper clubs,! cabarets and other swinging spots for exciting afterdark entertainment. | But certainly Americans —| still barred hrom Red China —! driving tours through this| western outpost which has dingy old tenements with laundry fluttering from windows and squatter slums of old tin and wood shanties. ★ * * There are broad tree-lined |shouId find time for walking or where men, women and to Kowloon’s 3% square miles become a sanctuary for millions children work, live and play. and another million on the 29-of refugees from Communism. I riqkshAW PULIJ5RS i SQuare-mile island. I FASCINATING BLEND | Rickshaw pullers in shorts^ ... **,* They’ll find it a fascinating I and undershirts and men and sampans at blend of East and West and of women in flapping black pa- . IheoWabdnew. lamas carrying bna.y burden. Mirfem ntfcn, hnW and|00 yoke, nr pole, on lhelr,„,„|,„* , 'g apartment buildings on Hong shoulders vie for road space,„ w.™ -r._ Kong island and m a i n 1 a n d with taxicabs, powerful trucks ,., ?! Rrifain hnWe Kowl«,n .„,er oyer .no,aye, o. olbef yebicK. 1*“”. t^arTal’’e clinrto°the trSdi«ona/g?rb blitl^^*'"® expiring in 1997. younger ones dress in TOURS COLONY miniskirts and other western j I toured the colony with other styles. The only girls I saw {American and foreign newsmen wearing the provocative slit-j as guests of Trans World boulevards with multistoried|skirt cheongsam were the'Airlines on the Inauguration of department stores and shops'waitresses in the Hilton Hong; its round-the-world and trans-with the finest silks, perfumes Kong nightclub. The Den. [Pacific services. TWA now flies and other merchandise from ★ ★ * between Hong Kong and Los around the world. 1 Almost three-quarters of Hong {Angeles via Taiwan, Okinawa, * * * I Kong’s nearly 4 million popula- Guam and Honolulu. I And there are narrow alleys,Ition — 98 per cent are Chinese! ★ * * | noisy and strange-smelling j— live on the island and[ Americans should find the Chinese street markets andjKowloon. There are an,New Territories particularly! bazaars and open-side shops estimated 2 million jammed in-'interesting for a look at a way' ■of life that has changed little lover the ages. I It is mainly agricultural, dot-jted with tel-races cut like step-[ping stones in the hillsides, [shimmering rice paddies and carefully-tended truck gardens. Peasants wearing conical hats and black pajamas till their crops and raise pigs, fish and fowl much as their ancestors did. Placid water buffalos still pull plows and carts and men and women trot back and forth along the furrows with water sprinkling cans slung from yokes. LOOK INTO PAST And it is like turning back the clock to step inside the old walled village of Kam Tin, built centuries ago by the Tang Clan. Their descendants still live inside the weatherbeaten, stone walls in rows of attached brick houses, separated by narrow passageways. ATTENTION Northern Oakland County Christmas Clearing House Those feeling the need of Christmas Assistance MUST MAKE PERSONAL APPLICATION AT 29 W. Lawrence St. Pontiac, Michigan Application will be taken from Dec. 1 st thru Dec. 1 5th Mon. thru Fri. from 9:30 to 4:00 P.M. NO CARDS WILL BE SENT OUT THIS YEAR CHRISTAAAS COAAMITTEE Lo wer Level Another Service of the United Fund COLEMAN'S FURNITURE MART . . . FIRST IN FURNITURE . . . CARPETING ... APPLIANCES LAST CHANCE BEFORE CHRISTMAS! BRAND Nm j,^^^spanish Style^ SdfaSii/tey DELIVERY GUARANTEED SAVE noo - THIS WEEK ONLY Roses Are Red, Violets Blue...... Michigan or Purdue? Biggest Stakes in Big W Hinge on Saturday Battle Roses Are Red, Violets Are Blue, Is Michigan Going ... or Purdue? ANN ARBOR (ill—Oddsmakers pick Ohio State by 15 points in Saturday’s critical football game against Michigan, but IJ-M coach Bo Schembechler expects his Wolverines to give the Buckeyes their biggest battle of the year. And why not? A national championship, Rose Bowl representative, and Big Ten title are all at stake. ’Tt’s going to be an interesting game,” Schembechler said in the understatement of the year. “I think we're going to play them man-to-man, nose-to-nose.” "We’re going to go into this game like we can win it,” he said. "... it’s for all the marbles.” The biggest “marble" is the national championship, which No. 1 rated Ohio State is certain to lose if it loses or ties U-M. A victory by Michigan would assure the Wolverines of a trip to the Rose Bowl. But a loss, coupled with a win by Purdue over Indiana, would place both U-M and the Boilermakers in second place in the Big Ten with 5-2 records. “I don’t want to talk about the Rose Bowl,” Schembechler said. “Depending on what happens Saturday, then I’ll talk about it.” Ohio State has won 22 consecutive games and owns a 9-0 season record, 6-0 in the Big Ten. Michigan is 7-2 over-all and ranked 14th nationally. In Press Derby New Big Buck' The lead in Tife Pontiac Press deer derby has changed because of a ruling. Wednesday’s Press listed Ray Freebury as the current leader. However, the deer was disqualified because the certification of the 233 pound!- was the field weight and not dressed-out weight. Frdebury said the dressed-out weight was 166 pounds. Thus the new lead for the big deer prize of bond is held by Ted Harwood of 640 Pinegrove, Pontiac whose buck dressed out at lOO'.-i pounds. NKAR MUNISING Harwood bagged the 12-point buck near Munising on Monday with two shots. The big buck went 75 yards before going down. It was Ted’s first hunting expedition. Leading Big Buck Derby Like most hunters, Harwood was out on opening day and his aim wasn’t as good as a large buck went by 100 yards away at 6:.30 a m. To enter th Press big buck contest, hunters must have a certified weight slip signed by the weighing person and witness and the weight must be the dres.sed-out weight. strong In view of the no-repeat rule, OSU Is lneligi))Ie for the Rose Bowl and conference athletic directors would have to vote to choose a representative. That decision would probably come a couple hours after Saturday’s play. Schembechler said he expects defensive game from both teams. “Both are defensive minded. Both teams base their defense on quickness and pursuit,” he said. “We’re not an awesome looking team when we line up—physically, and neither is Ohio State. They’re just quick.” Knuff, Brown on First Team SOLD OUT Local Gridders on Class A All-State Conference Heads Deny M' Is '\n All 101,001 seats in Michigan Stadium have been sold and the game is being televised regionally. Nearly 25,000 fans from Ohio State are expected to be on hand. “We’ll have 75,000 from Michigan and . I hope they yell loud,” Schembechler smiled. OSU is second in the nation in rushing offmse with 2,556 yards, while Michigan ia^^e^nth with 2,510. Sam Esman, the huge Utica tackle who led the Chieftains to the Oakland-A championship; Pat Knuff, Brother Rice twin-guard who last week was picked as Oakland County’s outstanding player along with Tom BWwn of Royal Oak Kimball were the top area gridders on the first All-State team chosen by the Associated Press. Esman, a M and 260 pound senior. DETROIT un — A Detroit sportscaster ■aid Thursday night that Michigan already has been selected to represent the Big Ten in the Rose Bowl. His report was immediately denied by the first Big Ten athletic directors contacted. Bob Reynolds, sports director of radio station WJR, said the action was “taken the first of the week.” ’Die sportscaster said “It would take a debacle of gigantic proportions Saturday to make any change at this late date.” He also said his Information would be vigorously denied by the league office. THE PONTIAC PRESS f/W/f FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 1969 C—1 OSU DENIAL Contacted at Columbus, Ohio State University athletic director Richard C. Larkins said of Reynolds’ report, “It’s not true. It’s impossible.” He said the Rose Bowl representative will be decided at a meeting of Big Ten athletic directors at 9 p m. Saturday in the league office in Chicago. J. W. (Bill) Orwig, athletic director at Indiana University, said Reynolds’ report was “completely untrue.” He said the athletic directors met in Chicago Wednesday, but that no Rose Bowl candidate was discussed. Michigan State University Athletic Director Biggie Munn said “It’s news to Aching MSU After Salve From 'Wildcat' Will Perry, sports information director at Michigan, said Reynolds’ statement could be a “safe guess.” He said probably only a very lop-sided loss to Ohio State could upset Michigan’s Rose Bowl hopes. Purdue athletic director Guy J. Mackey said Reynold’s report was “silly.” In Chicago, Big Ten commissioner William Reed said athletic directors have been meeting with him once a month since August mainly f o r discussion of financial problems and not even a pulse-taking on the Rose Bowl game came up in Wednesday’s meeting. EAST LANSING ® - Michigan State, doomed to a losing football season, will be shooting for its 11th win in a row over Northwestern at Evanston Saturday as a little salve for the ache of four consecutive Big Ten defeats. The Spartans have enjoyed a hoodoo over the Wildcats' since the modern series started in 1959, winning ten straight. The teams have identical 3-6^ won and lost records. Northwestern has^eSn> “I have no idea of retiring Colts to the NFL title, earning ^^at he wants lo I Ser saiS I and for going to another team,” himself the league’s most valu- ^h^thejants to. nj^ sa^d Unitas said in Baltimore late able player award. ‘ P ^ ■nmr*l.y. with Udha.- towing .™ “ ” »“ "tf, When informed of the situa-i t, Unitas was benched in the f second half of last Sunday’s 2ft- . 17 loss to the San Francisco ^ 49ers, and Baltimore coach Don Shula has tabbed Earl Morrall as his starting quarterback this |; Sunday against the Bears in Chicago. UNHAPPY The Louisville article quoted Unitas as being unhappy with the benching and with Shula’s announced plans to operate his quarterbacks in tandem the rest of this NFL season. “I won’t play under the circumstances,” Unitas was quoted in the story. “This is the last year of my playing contract. I might consider playing for another club.” “It was terrible sitting on the bench and watching your club------- go on without you,” the veteran was quoted in the story. “I just won’t ever wait to be put in that position again. In Baltimore, Unitas denied making the statements about retiring or going to anotha* club and said he was not "bitter” about not starting this Sunday. Shula added: ”1 didn’t kisiuid OMVIVM. a vsiufik| I i expect him to be happy about w’^ inot starting, but I felt that we ^ * should use both quarterbacks the rest of the way. i "John worked as hard in !practice this week as he ever! I has and has been taking films' home as always,” the coach said. ' MISLABELED PRODUCT - It’s obvious that leggy lovely Linda Frants of Toledo is not a man. But the manufacturers of the hunting jacket she sports decided there was no better way to show it off. Moscow to Make Bid for 76 World Olympics jWOSCOW (AP) - The Olympic Committee of the Soviet Union announced today the city of Moscow will bid to stage the 1976 Summer Olympics. The brief announcement car- ried by the official news agency Tass said the city "has ad- vanced its Candidacy for the Summer Olympics of 1976.” This is the first time the Soviet Union has made an offer to stage an Olympics. It has been an Olympic competitor since 1952. PRESS conference The brief announcement carried no details on Moscow’s bid for the Games. A press conference was scheduled for later today at which additional information on Moscow’s Olympic plans are expected to be disclosed. 1st Team Named for NAIA Playoff 'The Soviet Union has been host to various European and woCld championships^ In the past but has never undertaken an event appi’oaching the complexity and size of the Olymp^ Games. The International Olympic Committee is to decide next year on the site of the 1976 Games. The 1972 Sum Olympics are scheduled to be held in Munich, West Germany, The Soviet Union was the top medal winner in 1956 and 1960 Summer Olympics held in Melbourne and Rome. It ranked second to the United States in the 1964 and 1968 Games at Tokyo and Mexico City. Goyette Slower Eyes Still Have It! Gold Cup Set for San Diego By the Associated Press The legs don’t move with quite the zip they once did but Phil Goyette still can find the net. Neither, obviously, are Blues. Frank St. Marseille scored two goals for the Blues while CJaude Larose hit for Minnesota. Ernie Wakely made just 20 i saves in the St. Louis nets as KANSAS CITY (AP) - New Mexico Highlands, first-ranked iteam in the National Associa-jtion of Intercollegiate Athletics | small college football poll, has [been selected for the NAIA I Championship Bowl semifinals.! Three other teams, including i Highlands’ opponent, and the| [sites of the games will be an-| ' nounced later this week. i the the Blues kept constant pres- - -------------------------------- sure on Cesare Maniago. j For the Best Rupp Snowmobiles and Aecessories SEE M-G SALES 4667 Dixie Hwy., Drayton Piaint 613-6458 M-G Collision 103 E. Montcalm, Pontiac 333-1915 McCULlOCH INTRODUCES CUSHIONED POWERI* < It' bar and attain Start at MoCULLOUQH S11A65 CHAINSAWS ’||9” AIwy* Ifl** O" a»nuln» McCulloch chein, bar. aprockott for top parformanco_________ KING BROS. Pontiac Road at Opdyko Pontiac, Michigan 373-0734 <"•" RENT, SELl, trade . . . USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADSl CONSTIPATEDO IMir TA I AAir Ar kaaa ■ Detroit Bid Firm Entry Pledge Goyette, 36, to<* over the National Hockey League scoring i lead Thursday night, scoring hisj |JM| C*an/lmnc c_„_Li|ioth goal of the season and help-r IlML JlQMUIliyj ® [ ing the St. l.,ouis Blues to a 3-1 decision over the Minnesota North Stars. i Jimmy Johnson broke a third-period tie with his first goal of the season and Philadelphia trimmed Los Angeles. T an. cr 6A 4 3 25 no 47 3 4 24 <9 43 IJohnson Billy Sutherland and Larry Hillman had scored early goals for the Flyers with Ross Lons-berry and Eddie Shack counter-;ing for the Kings. Then came winner. CHICAGO (UPI) - San Diego, Calif., will host the 1970 Gold Cup race for unlimited eame- Philadelphia shaded Los In Thursday’s only other NHL ‘TELESRAPH ROAD |wi north at SiMnUkt Road 338-4531 hydroplanes, because its $47,500 bid for the race carried fewer conditions than a similar bid by Detroit, the American Power Boat Association has nounced. Angeles 3-2. Goyette upped his point total to 31 in 16 games—two more than Bobby Orr of Boston. It’s a remarkable comeback, consid-I ering that the shifty center was Phlladclphli For SKI-DOO It’S CRUISE OUT 63 LWatton-Pontiac FE 8-4402 Both cities bid the same | considering retirement, amount of money but Jack Love, head of the Spirit of Detroit Association, insisted on the appearance of 10 boats. San Diego’s flat offer made no mention of entries. San Diego held the 1968 races on Mission Bay. Seattle, traditional rival of Detroit for the Gold Cup, was outbid at $40,750. Madison, Ind., which holds the annual Indiana Governor’s Chip race on the Ohio River, bid $40,000 as the fourth and lowest bidder. Bullets Sign Up Guard I BAL'HMORE -(AP)- The Baltimore Biillets signed guard Brian Heaney yesterday to replace injured starter Kevin Loughery. Vv1’ Save Up to WO Goyette, reduced to part-time work with New York last season because of injuries, managed just 45 points in 65 games for the Rangers. When New York sent him to the Blues In exchange for St. Louis’ No. 1 amateur draft pick, Goyette contemplated retirement. Los Angeles 3 111 7 Thvniley'f Retulls Philadelphia % Lm Angtiet 2 St. Louis 3e Minnesota 1 Today's Games Boston at Chicago Satuntay's Games Oakland at Montreal Detroit at Toronto New York at St. Louis PH Philadelphia at Pittsburgh Los Angeles at Minnesota Sunday's Games Montreal at Boston Toronto at Philadelphia "And I think I would have retired, too,” he said, “except that everybody I talked to told me how good it was to play for St. Louis. The management treats you very well. I’m not sorry I decided to play.” 5 8 3 13 43 54 5 9 3 5 « 12 29 42 The victory was the first since, Nov. 2 for the Flyers, whoj moved into a tie for third place in the West Division. St. Louis leads the West by six points over Minnesota. York Pittsburgh at Chicago Laagva iMtlaii gjrtngtlald Montreal 11, Springflatd •^aWi Baltimora at Clavaland Buffalo af Baltimore Sunday's Oa at Provldenca at Quebec I at Kochai 69 MEVROLH During MIKB.SAVO|E'S dreamt Sale Demos, Executive's Cars -All Models, All Prices Only 29 Left '^OMEIN ;$EE and $AVE NOW\ 1«00 W. AAaplAr In Tba Troy Motor Mali 644-2738 LARE80 RAIN TIRES SPECIAL - 4 - 9(00x15 4-Ply omiTIWAUS WintorPrtrol Studded Retread White Snow Tires T.T5x14FaE.Ta43c 8.25X14F.E.T.450 2 »»35 KING TIM IIW.MONTOALAMimAO liW N. mSY ST. FE 3-7088 o*L~(in£, UNBEATABLES from Bill Fox . . . naturally BHIiFOX 755 S. 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'^ 25* RADIATORS ">25* AUIMINUM 8* Pricat Sublad le Changa Pontiac Scrap Co. 135 Branch Entranoa on Heti St. 332-0200 THE I’ONTIAf; PIIES^ F NOVEMBER 21. 1069 Cardinals, Indians Deal Inter-League Gets Started w INSTALL By the ^Aatociatad Prewa Vada Pinson was traded to the Cleveland Indians by the St. Louis Cardinals for Jose Carde-nal today in the first deal of the major league inter-league trading season. 'The sound of the dock striking midnight had barely faded away than Bing Devine, general manager of the Cardinals, announced the trade of the two outfielders. Devine said the 2«-year-old Cardenal, who hit .257 for Cleveland, will play center field for the Cards. The 31-year-old Pinson, who had traded to St. Louis by Cincinnati after the 1968 season, hit .255 for the Cards, who slumped badly the past season after winning the National League flag two consecutive years. The midnight hour meant the start of 3^4 weeks of activity for the major league club executives, a span of time when they hoped they might acquire that player needed to transform a contender into a winner for 1970. From now until Midnight Dec. IS, the clubs can make trades with teat^ts in the other league without the usual requirement of obtaining swalvers. \ ITiere are a couple W reasons why this is so important to baseball. For one, most teams prefer to deal with counterparts in the other league because they are then assured that the castoff won’t comeback to haunt them during the regular season. In addition, some of the interleague deals in the past have paid off spectacularly. Baltimore’s American League champs, for example, obtained Mike Cuellar from Houston for Curt Blefary last year. Cuellar was a vital cog in the Orioles’ pennant drive, winning 23 games, and was a con-winner of the AK’s Cy Young Award. Most of the trading is expected to take place at the major and minor league meetings in Florida during the first week of December, but there may be be a flurry of activity before then. Pinson, the ex-6ncinnati outfielder, was hampered with a hairline fracture of the strtalt bone in his right foot last sea- son. Cardenal gives the Car(j.s i • ' liv.................... Rose Bowl at Stake in UCLA-USC Clash LOS ANGELES (AP)-UCLA and Southern California’s Trojans, both unbeaten but ti^ once apiece, renew their annual gridiron quarrel tomorrow with the prestigious Rose Bowl honor at stake. A capacity crowd of 90,000 is expected to Memorial Coli seum. The game will be a national television attraction ABC—with the kickoff set for 3 P.M. PST. Faculty at Duke [ Urges Pulling Out of Atlantic Loop DURHAM, N.C. (AP)- Duke University’s Academic Council will consider Dec, 18 a report which recommends that the school withdraw from the Atlantic Coast Conference. A five-member faculty com-mittee also recommended yesterday that if the withdrawal is carried out Duke stop giving athletic scholarships where there is no financial need. The recommendations were contained in a 50-page report released by the Committee on Duke Athletics ot the Academic Council. The committee said, “The academic standards and programs of Duke University differ significantly from those of a majority of conference members.” The UCLA Bruins, coached by Tommy Prothro, are favored by a slender margin while Coach John McKay’s Trojans are shooting for an unprecedented fourth straight trip to Pasadena’s big bowl New Year’s Day. Southern Cal, with a perfect 5-8-0 record in the Pacitic-8 Conference, can earn the bowl chore even if the game in a tie. The ’Trojan’s tie game was with Notre Dame, 14-14. STANFORD "nE UCLA , is 5-0-1 in the confer ence, thanks to a 20-20 tie with Stanford. Over-all, both teams are 8-0-1 (lefensive^ boost. He’s more than an adequate center fielder — something the Cards need In spacious Busch Stadium. The Indians also arc reportedly interested in trading Tony Horton to clear the way for Ken Harrelson to handle first base. The Cards already have sent relief pitcher Joe Hoerner, catcher Tim McCarver and outfielder Curt Flood to Philadelphia for Richie Allen, infielder Cookie Rojas and pitcher Jerry Johnson. They traded catcher Dave Ricketts and pitcher Dave Giusl to Pittsburgh for outfielder Carl Taylor and sent pitcher Ray Washburn to the Reds for pitcher George Culver. The Cards are said to consider third baseman Mike Shannon and shortstop Dal Maxvill among other players who could go- The New York Mets are expected to stick pretty much with the amazing crew that gave them the world championship, although they consider second and third base as trouble spots. One of the Mets’ glaring weaknesses is third base, where they’ve tried 41 different play-in eight years. The Mets reportedly would like either Shannon or Joe Foy of Kansas City to fill that gap. The New York Yankees, who are putting the accent on youth, reportedly are interested in shedding Joe Pepitone, although his marketability has dropped with his decreased homo run production. Pitcher A1 Downing and catcher Jake Gibbs also may go. Now that Houston has rookie John Mayberry as a top candidate at first base, the Astros could put Blefary back on the trading block. Atlanta’s top trading bait probably includes pitcher Milt Pappas, who has made no secret that he’s not happy with the Braves, and outfielder Felipe Alou. Washington is said to be interested in trading third baseman Ken McMullen, relief pitcher Darold Knowles and first base-man Mike Epstein, while Boston reportedly would be receptive to a deal involving pitcher Jim Lonborg, the hero of the 1967 pennant team. Because Manny .Sangulllen has taken over\as Pittsburgh’s No. 1 catcher, Jerry May is reportedly available. 'The Pirates have expressed Interest, In Oakland infielder Ted Kubiak. 'The I^s Angeles Angeles reportedly are working on a trade with Cincinnati Involving Angel Pilchers Jim McGlothlin Vern Geishert and Pedro Borbon for outfielder Alex Johnson, Pitcher Mel Queen and infielder Chico Ruiz. MIdat Mufftora aw Inslallad fraal And faatl And your MIdaa Mufflar la _ guarantaad aa long as you own your U.%-maka auto. Raplacad, If nao-attaiy, at any MIdaa Shop for a aarvloa oharga only. 435 S. Saginow M iiN Dally iiM la liN Sat. 332-1010 WANT TO .SELI. LAWNMOWERS, POWER MOWERS, ROLLER SKATES, WAGONS, BICYa.ES? USE A LOW COST PONTIAC PRESS CI.ASSIFIED AD. TO PLACE YOURS, CALL 332-8181. The winner will meet the Ten representative, presumably either Michigan or Purdue. 'The midwest visiting team will be selected and announced late Saturday. 2 Tigers Picked by Sporting News ST. LOUIS (UPI) - Two Detroit Tigers, catcher Bill Freehan and outfielder Mickey Stanley, were on the All-Star fielding team announced Thursday by the Sporting News. 'The selection marks the fifth straight year Freehan has been awarded a Golden Glove at his position while Stanley’s was the second in a row. Most observers predict this one will be close although UCLA, with a first-year varsity junior Dennis Dummit at quarterback, has rolled up 317 points in nine games. EXemNG ATTACK The Bruins’ triple-option at tack has been exciting and ex plosive. Sout'nern Cal, with a fast maturing sophomore at quarterback, Jimmy Jones, has played far more conservatively, grind tng out yardage on the rushes by tailback Clarence Davis Davis, the successor to the Trojans’ celebrated O.J. Simpson, is the nation’s leading big college rusher with 270 carries for 1,238 yards. BENSON LUMBER CO. 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But this is the defensive' The Packers lost to Minnesota: division. There we are. all four last week, 9-7. dropping them,*^^'’^* top five of the three games off the pace, and, defense.” for all practical purposes out of Minnesota is first and t hicago the race. SNO-CAPS 4 FUU-PIV 2.0*19 FAST MOUNTING Oho Ooily M. to. I third. TWO SHUTOUTS Landry Gets QB's Support UNITED TIRE INC. tool Baldwin Ava. •Un. tnm Downtoom Soirtioc Naor Flther Boity , “The other side of it is of-Detroit racked up its second •• sp^midt said. "Green shutout of the season, defeating league, Chica-' St. Louis 20-0 as its defense ‘,5,1, ^nd Detroit 16th. That's claimed half of the league s happens when vou have to shutouts. Green Bay and Minne- ,3^ defenses IN WAITING - Bill Mun- sota both have blanked Chicago. ggei, -• jj. back on the active list J * * * “To me it's real simple,” but this time he will be back- 1 The Lions’ defense ranks sec- Packer Coach Phil Bengtson ing Greg Landry as No. 1 ond in the league, yielding 2,150 said after looking at ti^e statis-i quarterback of the Lions. [yards, helping boost the injury tics and pondering the Packers’ Schmidt has said that Landry ^ ^ ______________ riddled Lions to their 6-3 record, last two losses — to Baltimore has earned the starting job for jjjg second for two games behind Minnesota. then Minnesota. the game with Green Bay injury i The Packers, 5-4, have the "They have a better defense Sunday ‘ • " than we have an offense. There__________ DETROIT (AP) - Detroit Los Angeles Rams in 1964 and Lions quarterback Bill Munson, 1965 until he injured a knee and who was reactivated Wednes- Roman Gabriel took over. Mun- j day after recovering from a son never got his job back and 1 broken hand, says he isn’t sur-' was traded to the Lions before 1 prised that coach Joe Schmidt the start of the 1968 season, has decided to use Greg Lan- * ★ * j dry as quarterback in Sunday’s “I’m happy I'm starting,”; game at Green Bay. Landry said. ‘‘I’m not going out * * * there thinking I can blow tlie ■‘I wasn’t surprised the way whole deal. I’ve got the oppor-things have been going,” Mun- tunity to be No. 1 in Detroit and ! son said Thursday. “Greg’s been I’m going to do my best to stay doing a fine job. It would be No. 1. I don’t want to be No. 2 tough to take him out.” again.” Since Landry replaced Mun- * * * ^ son five games ago, the sec- Landry said that Schmidt told 1 ond-year graduate of Massachu- him he would not take him out setts has led the Lions to four of the Green Bay game if Lan- i victories and just one loss. dry did poorly at the start. | SOIJD BACKING ! "The boy has won four of five “Nobodv likes to sit,” Munson S***”^®’ Schmidt said ‘What said. But he added: ‘Tm going to back Greg up 100 per cent. I hope he wins them all.” The slide back to second-string else can I go on?’ He was the starter for the Snowmobile Cup Set for Munising TWO CAN SKI AS CHEAPLY AS ONE SKI SPREE is no theory to it. It’s just the facts of competition,” he said. But Schmidt wasn’t buying! the story of a weakened offense, the Packers’ or anyone else’s. | A romantic way to spend the winter L "Look, when we played St. iLouis, we were scared to death! iof their offense,” he said. "But| jwe ended up shutting them out,’ Even When He Wins, Horseman Can Lose I EAGLE RIVER, Wis, (UPI) — The North American I Snowmobile championship race : will be staged Feb. 27 - March 1 I at Munising, Mich., the United States Snowmobile Association announced yesterday. TORONTO (AP) Even which may eliminate the geld-' Other races in the 50-race ’Midwest Snow State Circuit in- he added. “It could go the other when Jim Day of Canada wins,;ing from the final three events a ,way this time. We’re meeting a he loses. Shortly after_ re-|of 44,^ competition. competition. team that to^'^beemablejo tumlng^m O.H brighter aide, the win',7^"ZlrS S's'i Send for your free folder ■ explaining SKI SPREE, the unique club that gives you twice the Michigan skiing fun for half the price. ^score, and itey might luatex-xo ^^^^^ M.tfat Ddniape second-,wdrld's chamhl.n.hip iplodeonus. place finish gave Canada 106 Snowmobile Derbv at Eaele i Green Bay has only one touch-|Pic goW medal m 968, he wasT^j^j narrowing the U.S. team'SrS 23^ ^ ® idown in its last two games, honored at a reception ^ ............ And that was an 85-yard pass|. However the festivities wereL,,;,^ 32*^ i2%head of interception against the Vikings interrupted by police who fined I ’ 1 by Doug Hart. [him for failing to pay a parking; ’ * * * * * ★ ticket incurred before he left for „ ,. ^ ,, ,. ; The Packers beat Detroit 28-17 Mexico. | ■ J"" ml'f ’"t' earlier this sea^n, sidehmng, ★ 1* * * , the 6%-foot level. He cleared the; quarterback Bill Munson with a Thursday-almost a year to rocking the flanking gate. { Day said the injury did not: broken passing hand, ready, but won’t start. Address. City____ MHLER TRAILER SALES, k. He is the day later—fate again tainted !the heady wine of victory, ! He had just ridden Canadian Club over a seven-foot-high sim-'ulated stone wall to win the puissance event at the Royal Winter Fair, when he discov-|ered the victory had been a ; costly one. I BLOODY WOUND I During the event, Canadian i Club suffered a bloody wound to the inside of his right hind leg, appear serious as he walked his mount in the hitching ring while waiting for the third jump-off. "He was moving freely,” he said, ‘‘so it was obvious it was not a major injury.” JOHNSON SNOWMOBILE •SALES •SERVICE SUN & SKI MARINA, INC. 3981 CASS-ELIZABET11RD, (82-4100 Open I Days m COMIIMIO XT TO PLUSF.E.T. LEE Bros. Equipment 923 University Dr. Ph. 338-3553 Sellout Likely for First Time in Liberty Bowl THE EXPLORER Motor hem«> 2123', 25' Models See this California built-in unit which is Number 2 in motor home sales. Prices start at 0|99O up. 3771 HIGHLAND RD. (M-.39) TELEPHONE 682-9440 SAVE MONEY ON USER . . . We're Now Buying Scrap COPPER-BRASS-ALUMINUM (We Also Pick Up Junk Cars) FE 2-0200 BACKSWING? ! i Ticket sales for the Dec. 13 Lib-Sometimes I tell bowling bqwI football game students that they can do quite reached the $150,000 level well without any backswing. yggterday and officials said it I’m exaggerating, of course, for appeared a sellout is in prospect it is impossible to deliver a fgr the first time in the Bowl’s bowling ball without letting it|H.year history, swing alongside your body. The! Alabama, the host team, has lidea, however, is to get ten-i taken 10,000 tickets and bowl of-! pinners to reduce the size of!finals said the Crimson Tide their swing and t h e r e b y 1 j,as indicated more are needed. ! eliminate many of the problems; Alabama’s opponent will be caused by a looping motion the winner of the Colorado-behind the body. ! Kansas State game at Boulder, ■----------- Colo., Saturday and 5,000 tickets will go to that team. The game will be played in the 50,000-seat Memphis Memorial Stadium. Hillsdale Fourth KAN^ CITY, Mo. (UPI) - Hillsdale, which will find out; .—.------------- this weekend ir it will be; Belgian Racks Up Win participating in the NAIA post- " season playoffs, wound up| LINZ, Austria (AP) — Ray fourth in the final rankings by lmond Ceulemans of Belgium the National Association of | took the lead In the World Bil-Intercollegiate Athletics football; liards Championships which poll. 1 opened Thursday. Dynamic Tire Sales North SNOW TIRB SALE Low, low pricos on Dunlop's top of the lino, CW 44 "Si-lont Traction'' SNOW TIRE. Full 4 ply nylon for oxtro strength and safety and more go in the ice and snow. DYNAMIC TIRE SALES 223 Main Straat, Aoehastari SIZE BW WW no. 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WE MUST CLEAR OUT 54 BRAND NEW 1969 FORDS and 29 - 1969 DEAAOS TO MAKE ROOM FOR OUR 1970s! *5** value for only ^2/ plus tax NOW AT ... John McAuliffe Ford 1845 S. Telegraph Pentiac FE 5-4101 Open Salurdsys From liSB A.M. to S P.M. JOHN MCAULIFFE FORD ii THE I’ONTIAjC: I’llKSS, lI'RlDAV, NOVKMHKH 21, c-a LANIt .... - MHttri Hloli 0*rrt«» ;V Pil Tracy, J47, Elmar D Kon, . M*ryl Taulbia, j4a; Bill M'Bl! i ■ w«ryi Taulb«», 711/ Bill Dladrlcn. 704; Elmer DI«on, 7M; Pal Tracy, 479, Team Hloh Geml and Serlu - Daniel's MIg., 1117-1701. FIril Placi Team — Camelor Inn. lAVOV LANES Scribal Scribblari Barry Erlksen, 797; Paul Woman Kegler Wins Warmup Dick P^rlllOy 2)2; John Koonig, 206; Erv Vallerd, 20$. Women's High Series -Ramone Rice, 530; \Nelme Hoult, S06. Split Conversions Hazel Cummings, 7-9* )0; Magle tisac, 3-7. Thursday Morning Man High Series - Bll Steed. 249-710; Ed Bates, 26 -687 Bill Roaere, 256-672; Tom Keeley, 244-607. First Place Team — Tie, Haupt Pontiac, S.A.W. Trucking, and Sports Center Trophf— “•“TiTir Pros Starting to Roll in Rochester Tourney ROCHESTER, N.Y. (AP') -The 150,000 Bellows-ValValr Open Professional Bowling Tournament was under way today after a woman kegler from Rochester won the pro-am warm up last night. Mrs. Gert McCarthy pocketed the $1,000 first prize after she rolled a three-game total of 59(1 and was given 45 additional handicap pins. Her professional partners in each of the three games, Les Zikes of Chicago. Don Glover of Bakersfield, Calif., and Don Johnson of Kokomo, Ind., shot a total of 708. The winners’ pinfall of 1,347 was 38 more than Ron Ring of Rochester, who took the $500 second prize. The professional portion that began today attracted 128 entrants who will bowl for the $6,000 first prize. The tournament ends Sunday night. Dutch Opponent Trounces Poncho but He Won't Quit Wayn« Plsh«r, 719; DE'l’^tOIT 141 -- The American League champion Baltimore Orioles, as would be expected, drew the largest crowds at Tiger Stadium the past season, according to final official attendance figures. eiRTBIND LANES 734; Paddy, 713; Arlana nlar, 734; TcAm Game and Serlei Corp. 958-2726. FIrsf Place — Hunloon'i and Wlndirmer Pint Nightar'i High Gama Actual — Lila Craycraft, 206. High Series Actual - Gloria Ingersoll, 572. High Gamve pver Average Pint • Act Series Actual ~ Gloria High Gamve over Avi MaCauley, 196. High Series Average - Rita Bonell, 550. Spilt Conversions - Betty Hendrickson. 5-8-10; Mabel Wilson, 3-7-10; Marlon Figa, 4-7-10. LAKEWOOD LANIS Stars and qtrlpee Mixed Women's High Gem# Actual — Dorothy Allison 181. Women's High. Series Actual — Betty Roknetto, 470. Men's High Game Actual — Les Jansen, 217. Men's High Series Actual - Russ Bowker, 560. Split ConverstlQ ------------ " Smith, 5-7. Harold Ott and Claude Schmitt, 214 DeFrayne, 201; Mot I Series Shirley Turner, 192-506. Men's High Series -- Dave Kelly 521. Team High Game and Series — Team No. 1, 728-18A. Airway Ball and Chain Men's High Games — Karl Smith,236; Bll Myers, 217; Max Jarrett, 203. Men's High Series ~ Karl Smith, 606; Max Jarrett, 587; Bill Myers, 550. Ladles High Games and Series — Bertha Jarrett, 193-505; Wanda Howell, 162-466,- Hazel Qu Tigers Get Top Crowds in OHole Tilts Pontiac Open Tourney Ready Squad Times For Qualifying Listed Squad times have been .set by the nine sites which will participate in rjualifying for the' North Hill I.ancs 13th annual Pontiac Openj 9:15 p.m. Bowling Championship whichi Bowlers should call the starts Sunday. qualifying house to get squad This is the first of three Sun-[times arranged and submit day qualifying dates butitheir entires to the site where bowlers competing this weekend they bowl, will have a chance to add an All bowlers are also reminded “early bird" special prize that they can participate in the should they be among the top additional Mix »’n’ Match if team7 betroir faced"'wd^ Doubles and Mix ’n Match 17,WO a game : ^ho competes Team at no added fees. Sunday hits the target score of ^he rules and regulations for “600” and .subsequently »s ai| added featuer prize.s can be among the top 10 finalists, can at the qualifying sites, earn himself a portable -television set along with his' prize. Howes Lanes—Noon, 2:(H), ] There are trophies and cash top scores in the semifinals. 4:09 p.m. priziis for the top qualifiers All those who advance into - Noon, j,a,i will the linals of the tournament are' be cash prizes as well for the assured of a prize. MOTOROYOLE REDUCED WINTER RATES Firk-up & Itetivery All Work OuaranlEtd ANDERSON SALES & SERVICE 1645 S. Tdltgraph 333-1102 For nine dates the Birds drew 216,390 fans—or an average of 24,033 a game. Expansion Kansas City was a surprising fifth with average attendance of 21,804, while one time kingpin New York finished 10th of the California was second, Oakland third, Cleveland fourth, Boston sixth, Washington seventh, Minnesota eighth, Chicago ninth, and Seattle 11th. The Tigers played before 22 crowds of more than 25,000 in a season total of 1,577,481—seventh highest in Detroit history. Place Team Series — Charles Ross, 549; tngier, 543; Curly Vleau, 534; J Martinson, 525; Herb Allen, 533. High Games and Series -- Lyi 246- 83; Bob Brown, 209-537; J|ii . . 538; Earl Athey, 516; Joe Grean 511; Don McManan, 201. Split conversions John iWomen's tha J Marilyn Wood, 211-522; Haney, 5-7-9; Earl Thompson, 5-10. Six O'clock Outlaws ‘ ------ Paul Sewell, 214; ............T Margaret Looney, 200. P.W.P. Inc. High Series - Sto Hart, 577; Tny Ollseck, 531. First Place Team — Uptight's. 300 BOWL Lake Oakland Men's High Series — Bob Breading, 570; Roy Brown, 562; Joe Hearns, 544. Split Conversion ---- ' Merlin Doran, 5-10. ______ Night Mix-Ups Women's Hl^gh Gama Actual — Janice Actual Phyllis Hembree, Series Series — Donna Pomfret. 214; 591 Ouyi and doiis — vew luoe ._.i's High Games and Series Actual -Jack Richards, 253-613; Reuben McDonald .......il; John Purgaric, ‘‘411 _____ J High Gama I McCarick, 203-556; Alick Mdnally, 175; Aice Mclnally WEMBLEY, England Ann Oelmer, 443 —(AP)— Pancho Gonzales, 41 -year - old tennis veteran, was NMU Quarterback Gets MVP HonorV MARQUETTE (AP) - Quarterback Rich McCarthy, who rewrote Northern Michigan’s football records bookj has been named the team’s most valuable player. The 5-foot-ll ,180-pound senior set a total offense record of 1,417 yards - one of 10 game, -season and career records he set. In all, NMU broke or tied 21 records with the 210 points by halfback Lonnie Holton highlighting the group. played, off the court by Tom Okker of The Netherlands last night, but insisted he is not retiring after all. Okker won 6-1, 6-2 to reach the semifinal of the British Open covered courts championships. Gonzales, from Los Angeles, Calif., announced his retirement two months ago but yielded to pressure and agreed to play in the tournament, which carries a first prize of $7,200. I School Employoei ----- — ruger, 147. High Series Actual s1'r'!S,°'' Games Actual — Ron Howe ruger. 167. High * ' Ron Howe, 496; 466. Te_... _ Funsters, 629. Team High Seri nanna Splits, 1769 Pontiac Bc_ _ -_____ High Gaines — Fred Lovse, 712; Jlrh u»i.nn, 210) Joe Hodge, J10; Burt Apple, Andrew Terry and Norm Townsend, High Series Actual — Helen Conklin, 547; Shirl Grunsick, 5 7. High Game Actual - Bill Parker, 220; Helen Conklin, 219. Split Conversions 7-4-9-10. The Wildcats, meanwhile, announced that Tom Watson, a junior offensive lineman from Newberry, will captain the 1970 team. NMU finished the 1969 seasdn with a 5-5 mark. As example, should a bowler qualify this weekend and ultimately win the $1,000 top prize of the tournament, he will get the TV as an added prize. The TV will go to the highest position among the top 10 bowlers in the finals if he will have had qualified this Sunday. The purpose of the “early bird’’ special award is to encourage early entries and alleviate the big jam which always takes place on the final qualifying weekend. Qualifying Sunday along with squad times are as listed: West Side Lanes — 3:00 p.m. squad. Firebird Lanes (Huron Bowl) - 9:30, 12:15, 1:30, 3:00,4:30,8:30. ■ Airway Lanes — 1:00, 9-'to 4-00 300 Bowl - 11:00, 1:30, 3:00. Cooley Lanes — 1:30, 4:00. Billy G. Lanes (Maple Lanes) - 12:00, 1:30, 3:00, 6:00,7:30. Collier Lanes — 8:30 p.m. Horse Race Results Orlick Is Named to 2nd Term as PGA Secretary Windsor Entries Joe Don looney Dropped by Saints SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. -(API-Incumbent officials of the Smashettp Chuckle Boy Mike Astra TONIGHT judge Adlot DolW Hawk Ohio Gene Mauds Boy Jackie Johnston Model Henry T Dee Dee I Nancy Princess The Jetson 1 Mile; I Duke llo) Rudy Duke inh-$1,7M; Claiming Pace; Wallys Queen were reelected yesterday at the!Queens Ransom PGA’S annual meeting being lel^ty'Lw'Barrett renawee^Sonq NEW ORLEANS (AP) - Joe Don Looney, whose progress with the New Orleans Saints was stymied by injuries, has been cut, the National Football I.cague club announced Thursday. 'Die much-traveled 27-year-old running back injured his right knee in the Saints’ first scrimmage against the San Diego Chargers in the preseason. The knee healed slowly but Looney reinjured it last month against the Los Angeles Rams. After the game he was placed on the “injured waived” list. [held here. Re-elected were Leo Frasier, Northfield, N . J ., President: Warren Orlick, Orchard Lake, Mich., secretary; and R. William Clarke, Phoenix, Md., treasurer. Orlick is pro at the Tam O’ Shanter Country Club. Indians Name Scout CLEVELAND (AP) - Ray The three officials had served one term prior to Thursday’s election. Officials said it is tradition that officers serve three terms. The PGA also announced that next year’s meeting of officers and officials will be held in Palm Beach, Fla. 5II>-»3,700; Arlle Frost Good One Mighty McKlyo Tafers Queen 6th->$4EQ00; Trot; Grade Adios Rudy Duke Smoothie Grattan a Pace; 1 Mile: Horace Johnston Date L Miracle Zola Lenawee Sonq I Pace; 1 Mill Home Place Larry Howie Johnston Mighty Painte Swift Kniqht Mile: Laurentide Nova Star Eda Dream 3.50 3.10 Toms uTItlon Windsor Results WINDSOR RACEWAY Ist--$1100; Conditioned Pact; 1 Mile: Bernie Johnston 23.40 10.70 3.70 Collingwood Boy 5.00 3.30 Darn Proud 2.90 2nd-^1100; Conditioned Pace; 1 Mile: Miracle Dei 9.60 4.30 Frosty Freight Easy Sara 3rd-S2S00; Claiming Trot; Dean's Tide 6.40 4.30 3. Duces Wild 4th-^1500; Claiming Pace; i Mile: Cool Customer 3.20 2.70 Marlin Si' The Crui; ■ ; Claiming Pace; 1 K Federalist 6.60 4.50 2. 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Pontiac 673-6236 7th—$MM) Pact; 1 [Marlin Sola :ialmlng Paca; Mr. Whiskers Gladstone's A 4th-$14a0; Canditioneci Pace; T rotwood N Roger Song Miss Peuqet Conditionad Pace; Cherrv I Speedy Tara IHI-SI.4M; Pi Nancy Royal Scott Quad Ty Chief ttb-«,IM; Paca; Scotty Aqain Mada Van Timely Mortgage Argyel Chester Mile: Tension BUI of Rights Megaton Mauds Champ Johnny Misner Mr. Vincent I Doc Goln IlSiMOO;’ Preferi Guy Yates /Little Dominion ■ V Bob Mile: 6.70 3 3.50 2.40 22.70 6.70 3.20 Massey-Ferguson Snowmobiles Trot; 1 Mile: Lawn and Sport Worthy Lets 2 Seek Sailing Crown BUENOS AIRES (AP) — Louis Pocharski and Tom Allen, Swallo of Pocatello, Idaho Thursday was named scouting supervisor for the Cleveland Indians in Southern California and Arizona. the champion and runner-up last year, again are among the U.S, entrants in the World Lightning Class Sailing Championships that starts here Sunday. 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The famous "417" dress shirt now with dual-button cuff, new Brooke collar with narrower thrust. 65% Dacron polyester, 35% cotton broadcloth. $750 The Assurance of Quality and of Top Menswear Fashion Bidomfield Miracle Mile Shopping Center Telegraph at Square Lake Open Mon. thru Sot. 9:30 to 9:00 > J . .--J C—6 TUK rONTlAr rUKS.S, FHIDAV. NOVF.MHKH 21. 1»»«0 Deputy Defense Head Views War, Says Nixon Plan Working SAIGON (AP) — Deputy De-i within Immediate reach on tense Secretary David Packard!some certain, predictable, pre- •aid today that President Nik-jplanned schedule." on’s plan for peace in Vietnam |, "There has never been any is working and is not being jcop-: progress in Paris, and a deter-ardfzed at this point by increas-1 mined enemy still faces us Ing enemy activity. here," he told an airport news Winding up a six-day assess-;conference before\ flying on to ment of the war situation—and other points in Southeast Asia, his first visit to Vietnam—Pack- ••There are going to be ups ard said he does not claim thatlg^d downs in the situation.” he "peace and tranquillity stand continued. "We’ve anticipated •-------------- -------------that there would be some in- I creased enemy activity at this I time, and I see this as no haz-'ard at ail to the President’s [plan." I CONFIDENT OF SAUJON I sis now is shifting from quantity] Packard added that he would I to quality. United States forces tell the President, Defense Sec-!will be\ engaging in 'stepped-up retary ^Ivin R. L((d>’d and Sec-advi.swy work, particularly in ri^tary of State William P. Rog-support of training. Combined ers 'that xm the basis of what I operations will continue to be have seen here 1 believe Prejii-emphasized.” dent Nixon’s plan for peace is' "There clearlv is much yet to practical, feasible, and most im-be done, but those 1 have talked portant, is working” with this week advise me the* On the battlefields, action progre.ss, particularly during flared anew Thursday and today the past six months, is impres-j around the Bu Prang and Due sive." Lap Special Forces camps, a 25-mile corridor in the southern part of the central highlands whbre Niiion’s plans to turn the waK (Wer to the Squth Vict-naipcs^^ are being tested by heavy' enemy pressure. Fighting also was reported farther north in the highlands above Pleiku. South Vietnamese headquarters reported that government forces and supporting U.S. planes and artillery killed 73 North Vietnamese soldiers, including five men disguised as South Vietnamese soldiers who got into a government base camp. North Vietnamese artillerymen, possibly firing from^lnside Cambodia, made at least half a dozen shelling attacks on Bu Prang, Due Lap and the Dak Pek Special Forces camps. Five South Vietnamese were reported killed in the fighting and shelling, and 13 were wounded. One American adviser was woundkl. U.fS. LOSSES , I ; ^ , American Infantrymen, divi bombers, helicopter \ gunshlps and artillery killed another 87 enemy soldiers in several clashes ranging from the Mekong Delta to the coastal plain south of Da Nang, the U.S. Command said. U.S. losses were put at seven men killed and 17 wound- ed; another two Americans were killed and 12 wounded in enemy rocket and mortar attacks. Vietcong terrorists blew up eight houses in the central highlands resort city of Dalat early today; killing five children and wbundlng 15 other civilians, the national police reported. They said one of the'homes belonged to an officer of the national police. Police Posing 05 Students But the secretary .said as the: A X ft • K. I\X government’s forces Arrest O in NY “InexoraWy .stronger, it will be pos.sible for President; Nixon to maintain the momen-i NEW YORK (AP) — Police-y g troop replacements, men posing as students arrestedibaj-gj „„ his three determining: eight students at George Wash-;criteria of progress in Paris, the: Ington High School Thursday;level of enemy activity and, and charged them with selling|growing South Vietnamese! heroin to classmates. armed forces strength. ] The eight ranged in age from, -Because growing Viet-,; 15 to 18. namese armed forces strength! Police recovered 41 bags of is the most promising of the heroin from air vents, toilet three criteria and the one most bowls and radiators in the four-jsubject to allied control, it has; story high school in upper Man-, been a major part of my pur-j hattan. Tbe bags retail for up to: pose here to assess this! $5 each. I strength. I have not the slightest | The students often used their,doubt that the South Vietnamese: girlfriemls as couriers to trans-1 will be able to handle the job: port the heroin," one policeman with a much lower level of U.S.; •aid. combat strength and other sup-: The arresting officers alLP«>-‘within« reasonable time. | had been posing as students for three weeks without telling school officials. Police said the Investigation would continue. Seven of the students were charged with selling heroin. The sole 15-year-old was charged with juvenile delinquency. "The weapon and equipment Improvement and modernization program for the Republic of Vietnam armed forces now is virtually complete, except for some long-term needs—particularly air forces. And the empha- People in the News By The Associated Press Elizabeth Taylor will make her dramatic debut on tele-vlsim in a one-hour, original dramatic special to be broadcast by NBC during the 1970-71 season. Mort Werner, NBC vice president for programs and talent, said yesterday In New York the teleplay is being developed and will be produced in England by the Harlech Television and Independent Associated Television companies in association with NBC. The producers said Miss Taylor’s fee-reputed to be $240,000, the highest ever offered for a single television performance — will go to the Combined Theartical Charities toward the rebuilding of Denville Hall, a home for retired actors and actresses in England. Miss Taylor’s only previous apearances on television have been in her movies and in nondramatic programs. MISS TAYLOR Singer Nancy Wilson Granted Divorce Singer Nancy Wilson was granted a di-. vorce after testifying that her husband, Kenneth C. Dennis, “seemed bent on tearing down my ego just before I gave a perform- Miss Wilson, 32, also told Superior Court yesterday in Los Angeles that Dennis, 39, a music publisher, approved of nothing she did and “wanted to tear apart every fiber of Miss Wilson was granted $100 a month for support of a son, Kenneth Jr., 0. The couple married in Compton Dec. 21, Probe of Sukarno, Wife Demanded in Indonesia Twenty-four members of Indonesia’s Parliament have demanded the government investigate charges that ousted President Sukarno and his Japanese-born wife, Ratna Sari Dewi, embezzled more than ^2.25 million, the (rfficial Antara News Agency said today In Jakarta. It said a draft resolution charged that Dewi, Sukarno’s third wife and a former dance hostess in Japan, was a "mastermind for the malpractices." President Suharto, who ousted Sukarno in 1967, is empowered by the Peoples Congress to investigate, but sources said it is unlikely he will do so. Sukarno, ailing and under guard, Uves in the mansion he built for Dewi on the outskirts of Jakarta. She lives in Europe where she moves with the Jet set. SUKARNO Hayakawa Flattered by Political Poll S. I. Hayakawa, president of San Francisco State College, says he is flattered by a poll showing him as the strongest Democratic contender in a race next year against ■ Sen. George Murphy. But he adds: “At present, I am far more concerned with the adminisiration of San Prancisco State College than with politics." Ihe latest California Poll of 834 persons Indicated that Hayakawa, known for his stand against militants who closed the college last year, would fare best against Republican Morphy, a former actor expected to seek a second tei^, losing by a maifin of BAYjlKAWA 48 to 48 per cent. La Schools Superintendent , Resigns Post Dr. Jack P. Crowther has resigned as superintendent of the Los Angeles School District, second in size only to New York’s. Crowther, 60, gave no reason in his letter of resignation aubfflitted last night to the board of education, but a board spokesman said he has not been in the best health and had recently expressed a desire to retire. The redignation is effective Jan. 9, buKCrowther Mid he would stay until AprU* 8 if needed. Crowther, supm-intendent since Jan. 1,1962, went to work ta the district 35 years ago as a night teacher. i iS -I-' (I annow tAIAV/C CmCT m lAI ITV * ALWAYS FIRST QUALITY HURRY... TOMORROW LAST dAy REDUCED! MEN’S AND WOMEN’S JACKETS ON SALE! SAVE 15% ALL MEN^S TOWNCRAFT JACKETS! A. SHIRT JACKET of r«pro7 OO OO $23, NOW lOeOO $28, NOW XJLeOO of'mod-aciylic pilo. REG. 20.95, NOW 17.81 D. SUEDP LEATHER. Cotton boekod pilo linir REG. 54.95, NOW 46.71 New when you need themi VVInlalr worm |Ucketi that tok* the chill out of the teasen, but net the fothianl All yeur favorite ttylings ere here — single end deubU breasted designs, 'pea' coats, military looks, just to mention o few. In fobrics like cotton derdurey, acrylic pilo with the look of fur, nylon (quilted or smooth), wool, and mere. All In popular winter colors, solids and plaids, many pile lined. Hurry in for best selection. At savings like these, they'll go fasti SHOP TILL 9 P.M. . . . MON. THRU SAT. . . . MIIUCLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER, TELEGRAPH 5 SO. QKE RD.... Clmn H or Put It on Uyaway i ' f: THK PONTIAC PRKSS, FRIDAV. NOVFMHFR 21, MmJ) She Learns to Cook Without a Whine By JOY STIU.EY NEW YORK (AP) - When we Rent our daughter off to eollege to be educated we got a bonus. For the 8ai|ie money, Gay Is learning to cook. Always thoroughly undomestl-cated, she donned her chef’s hat out d necessity. Her culinary career started last year when ■he was going to school In Paris and had a small budget and a large appetite. At this time her entire equipment consisted of a coffeepot, In which she and her enterprising roommate prepared all sorts of semigourmet items like soup, hot dogs and hard-boiled eggs. One of their more memorable dishes was beef stew a la coffeepot, a concoction that still hasn’t found its way Into any French cookbooks. The two bought a piece of meat, carrots and green beans, all of which they cut up with the scalpel from the roommate’s dissecting kit. For the final touch they added a bouillon cube and threw it ^all in the coffee pot to simmer. SHE HAS NICETIES This year Gay is . back to American cuisine, and she has at her disposal such niceties as a stove and small refrigerator in the campus apartment she shares with two friends. One of them is talented in the homemaking department and Gay is hoping some of the expertise will rub off on her. Meanwhile she is engaged largely in such fringe activities as washing apples and opening cans. ★ ★ ★ One recent weekend GerrI, the nutritionist, was away and Gay and Miriam decided they were tired of wholesome, balanced meals so they bought a couple of TV dinners. ★ ★ ★ Then Gay invited a friend to Join them and went out to purchase a third ’TV dinner. * * * “On the way back I had an Impulse to buy a bottle of wine,” she related. "The man who waited on me was very guaVe and elegant. When he asked me what 1 had in mind I said just some inexpensive wine.” VIRTUES HAILED The dedicated shopkeeper then set about extolling the virtues of various vintages, holding each bottle tenderly and conducting wbat he thought was a connoisseur - to • connoisseur talk. "I said I really didn't know what to get,” Gay continued. "Then he asked, ’May I Inquire what you are serving?’ The absurdity of the whole thing hit me and I burst out laughing an muttered something incoherent. I just didn’t think the poor man could take it if I told him the wine he spoke of so lovingly was to accompany fro7.cn beans and franks.” OEO Aid Okayed LANSING (AP)-Gov. William Milllken has announced approval of a federal anlipoverty grant of $286,695 for the Wayne County Office of Economic Opportunity. The grant includes $2.1,002 for 16 community planning con.sultants, $170,722 for neighborhood services programs $22,625 for community organizations and $31,102 for job development programs. Manufacturers of liquid bleach are feeling the Impact of the new enzyme detergents and presoak products, as sales may drop from $163 million last year to $145 million this year. The Carstairs Crowd, They know how to mix it up. FIFTH $3.98 Cod* #!$• PINT $2.52 codo «ifl Va GAL $9.23 Cod# #ft)l Carstairs ^Vhiskey 1 [\ join the Carstain Crowd. Porno Is Big I at SF Theaters I Police 'Handcuffed'! by Court Procedures SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) - In the past two years, one third of San Francisco’s movie theaters have switched to the hardest core pornography — the kind that makes “I Am Curious Yellow” look like kindergarten fare. The films have no plot — just explicit pictures from all angles. In color and 10 feet high. Police have made numerous obscenity arrests, but have not seen a case go to trial since January 1968. They are unable, or unwilling, to operate within procedures acceptable to the courts. MUST HAVE CHANCE But U.S. District Court Judge Alfonso J. Zirpoll Issues an Injunction against prosecutions on this basis, holding a local judge must give defendants a chance to present their side at “an adversary hearing” before Issuance of the wartant. Zirpoll also told police not to repeat two instances in which they arrested the audience as well as the operators. While his ruling is appealed to the U.S. Court of Appeals, San Francisco police have elected not to proceed agaiast theater operators in a manner acceptable to Zirpoll. They say it is impractical. Meanwhile, theater programs consist of seven 10-mlnute filins accompanied by recorded music and depicting nude couples in varieties of sexual Intercourse. Some Include encounters between members of a i’EW IN ATTENDANCE Audiences rarely number nore than a couple (rf dozen, nostly mlddle^:lass men aged 15 to 60. , But the small number doesn t nean business is bad for heaters open 15 hours, seven lays a week, at an average idmlsslon cost of $4. As a result, it’s not difficult to urn a weekly profit of $lj^ :'onventional cinemas, which nay pay 90 per cent of receipts o a distributor, don’t often earn IS much from much larger au-liences. 21 Americans Die Fighting in Viet War WASHINGTON (AP)-Twen-y-one servicemen killed' in ac-ion In the Vietnam war have >een named by the Defense De-lartment. The list Includes five men rom the Midwest. Killed in ac- Mm.. mm cInamon rolls' 33° pizza PILL$8URV Ml".. BOODLUCK CRESCENT ROLLS itr 35° MARGARINE LUCKY WHIP ilAr imperial TOPPING 49° MARGARINE 63° "IS,’"' 23® 16.oz.Wt. M^C Soft “ " 47 COFFEE RICH 27® 53* RICH’S CHOCOLATE ECLAIRS 57* .....CHICKEN POT PIE 2/41® ^....CHICKEN DINNER 43® ...Ko... PERCH FILLETS 11-oz.wt. 53^ .ns...... FISH STICKS 59c r*-" SHRIMP EiiLi 2M0Ct. $929 14-ez. Pkg. S"BEEF ’N GRAVY 4-oi^.wt. 29^ S CRANBERRIES «»»..• 10-oz^ Wt. 30® ..... SPOON ’N SERVE 11-oz.wt. 49^ GERBERS RICE 16-01. wt. kO Box FAMILY SCQTT BATHROOM iis$uT'35* DISIWASin ML Fluffy Detorgent Handy Andy Liquid ALL y CLEANER . 89° [H >..',f.?...49° W/Towel 1 [ H.D. Liquid Dotergont SILVER DUST U WISK 38-oz. OOC Box Ow Mm ISFId.Oz. Btl. 1 1 c-^ TIIK PON'I’IAC PRESS, yiUDAY. NO\KMBKH 21. 1009 CAMPUS CLATTER By Larry Lewii Bridge Tricks From JcKiobys As our last hand in this se-He kii6w that Helen did not | East and West hold the aee-kiiig Baok to dummy with the king ries about the late Helen Sobel Smith, we show one that she played in Budapest In the 1937 World’s Championship. Charley Vogelhoffer, her partner, let her play at one spade. pass anything that looked like jof trumps and two side aces of hearts in order to discard! an opening bid and decided | but look what Helen did to i her king of diamonds on the| that his collection of queens I them! Of course, East and West | queen of clubs and Helen had would not be enough for game I helped her along to the best ’ sent a second ace to that bourne' opposite this passed partner, iof their ability — as helpers, jof space and time from where He was correct in principle.'not bridge players. there is no return. [ Junior Editors Quiz on- GLIDERS , The nine of clubs was opened She still wasn’t through. Back [and lost to Helen's king after to her own hand by ruffing the jEast ducked. Ace No. 1 had seven of diamonds to lead a gone to the never-never land. |low spade to'dummy’s queen.[ j Now Helen began to operate West hadn’t done enough for! i on her own. She led the nine Helen. He went up with his of diamonds. West ducked and king of spades, only to lose it dummy's queen won that trick, to his partner’s ace. The de-Next came the five of clubs fense wound up with just one from dummy. East pulled out trick and, as Charley said la-his ace, pushed it back and i ter, even Helen could not shut finally played it, only to see lout the ace of trumps. Helen ruff It. Newspaper Enterprise Assn. EAST AA ¥875 ♦ 86542 AA1063 QUESTION: WTio was first to fly a glider? * ★ ★ ANSWER: When air passes fast enough across the curved upper wing of an airplane or glider, it lessens the air pressure there, so pressure below can hold the wing up. An aircraft’s engine provides the fra-ward push which allows the wing to work in this way. But since a glider has no engine, how can it fly? Gliders are built to be extremely li^t. If one is launched from the top of a cliff, say by means of an elastic rope, it will shoot into the air, which will create a lifting force on the wing. The little ship will begin to fall, but slowly; the lifting force will cause it to come down in a long slant. It will land far from the cUff. This is gliding, or flying from above down. But by utilizing places where wind currents blow upward, such as close to thunderstorm clouds ot the edges of cliffs under the right wind conditions (both of which we illustrate) gliders can rise, slant down, like again, keeping this up a long time. Otto Lilienthal, beginning in 1891, made the first successful glider flights, steering by changing the position of his legs. In 1911, Orville Wright made the first flight in a glider, soaring up as well as coming down. (You can win flO cash plus AP’s handsome World Yearbook if your question, mailed on a postcard to Junior Editors in core of this newspaper, is selected for a prize.) , NORTH ’ AQ72 ¥AK643 ♦ Q7 4>Q54 WEST AKIO ¥Q10 ♦ AJ103 AJ9872 SOUTH (D) AJ986543 V J92 ♦ K9 ♦ K Neither vulnerable West North East South Pass Pass 1 ¥ Pass 1A Pass Pass Pass Opening lead—A 9 Q—The bidding has been: West North East-, South Pass 1¥ Pass Pass 3A Pass 4N.T. Pass 5¥ Pass 5N.T. Pass 6¥ Pass ? You, South, hold: TIffi BORN LOSER By Art Sansom IDW DID I HAMae THH SITUATiaJ, OAD^? I M5RBH 6AV5 TOB LAP A 6000 PAPOLIM^^ AUP SEMI HIM TD BEP WITHOUT SUppERl DRASTIC BEHAVIOR DRASTIC PUMITIVIB MEASURES, MV PEAR, AMP I CAM ASSURE VOU WAT FROM HERB OhJ AAK876 ¥A2 A3 AAK754 What do you do now? A—Bid six spades only. If your partner holds the qucc spades in addition to his and two kings, he can still go to seven. Especially don’t try six IF SATURDAY (* ' you wert probably ■KK Mi k^rologiccd I 1^ &toreca^ ■y SYDNEY OMAER Far SatvrSay TEEN DATING HINTS: Many lend to bt in argumentative mood Applies especially to TAURUS and AQUARIUS. Wsi course for all is to finds romance, while SCORPIO considers aosaibillty of ■ permanent "* PISCES is active, receiving antarfalnlng. GEMINI may go data, while CANCER makes new ARIES (March it - April 1»): Donjt^get fonight, _ espaclaily those are It but TAURUS (April K ■ May »): delay important decisions, actions. Stress diplomacy, harmony. Not wise to '----------- Issues. Steer clear of argument AQUARIUS Individual. GEMINI (May 31 happens behind the scenes may financial status of one close to you. plans could be subject to revision. Avoid eelMecoptlon. Key Is to bo CANCER (June 21 - July : planted In past bear fruit. Yoi to move with knowledge that authorities, superiors favor efforts. Friend confides problem. Be sympathetic without getting too Involved. LEO (July 23 - Aug. 22): There ere 1 obstacles. But try to regard these as> healthy challenges. Finish rathe begin projects. No day to hurry details. Ba thorough. IRGO (Aug. 23 - SepL 22); Stress! Do so willingly. No envy or LIBRA (Sept. 23 - Oct. 22): Trust hunch. Your ideas may appear advanced — but they ere workable. Know this and proceed accordingly. Money matter Is not humor becomes great ally. Your smila Social encounter profitable endeavor. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 - Money area of chart is act!'_______ . __ can add to possessions. Shrewd shopping results in genuine bargain vestigativa. Give full play to corioslly. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 ■ Fab. U): SIriv to be reasonable, especially when dealing with TAURUS Individual................. d In upcoming months. Copyright mf lerol Features Corp. Only One Detour LANSING (AP) - The State Highway Department reports there will be only one detour on the more than 9,000 miles of ■tate highways this winter. It Will he on U.S. 25 between P i Huron City in the b area, *a detour qf 10 THE PONTIAC PRESS, F,RIDAV. N(>VKM HKH , I\m With Garden-Fresh Flavor Hydroponically-Grown Tomatoes on Mart By JODY HEADLEK Pontiac PresR Garden Editor Taste-tempting tomatoes rule the scene at Hydrogardens Inc. of Rochester, 1075 Rochester, Oakland Township. And demand-|]i g monarchs they are, with every move of the corpora-tion’s two work-i n g partners, Kenneth B. Covert, 34; and John Schulz, 22, of George Stevens was growing them commercially. They were so delicious, we thought there would be a market in our area.” EXPERT ADVICE Covert contacted Stevens, customary tomatoes marked vine-rip?ncd or hothouse because it is actually ripened on the vine and delivered to the retailer in a matter of hours after it has been picked. From seed to mature piantioptimum growth and flavor,” plant vyithput having washed his demands much tender, loving said Covert. care. TOUCHED DAILY “Each plant “Tomatoes picked green have fruit Is presently available In little or no vitamin C and they the Rochester and Birmingham ______ _____ we c r e a t e.do not develop It once they have areas. It can be recognized by And the nutrition formulaconditions and a’been picked from the vine.” the IIG .sticker on each tomato .u. .Juh th.ir „f controlled environment for the * * * FORMULA VARIES I hands first. ‘This way the I varies with their stage of . , , , , , greenhouse,” said Schulz, "is growth,” he continued. plants, eliminating many plant' The hydropomcally g r o w n cents a pound Thin-skinned, the tomato is tpyched at least once every!. As the plants grow, they mu.st viru.ses and the nd sells for approximately 75 research chemist and biologist single day.” be trained to a single .stem with a green thumb. Stevens ,1 'I'he .seedlings are planted in'pruning out all .suckers tomatoes are at this season of ® ^ growing trays. (It takes! “This must be done by hpnd,” Automatically controlled, Ihe 'development of a tomato that 10 weeks from sowing of said Schulz. “As is the pollina-temperature in the greenhouse been working could be grown Mroponically fhTTfn s®®** until the young plants are tion.” is held to 72-75 degrees during (the growing of plants in a to transplant). The.sel A small electric vibrator is the day and 65-70 degrees at nutrient solution without the u.se ' ' - trays are filled with gravel to held briefly on the main stem, night with a relative humidity of soil) for five years and had 4,500 PLANTS anchor the roots of the tomato the resulting tremor shakes the <»f 50-60 per cent. Sixteen ____________ been commercially growing the' At the present time, the four vines. ipollen ioose from the ripe natural gas heaters provide the {Ringing on the Mrs. Headlee produce for two years. bays of the greenhouse house * * ★ blossoms so that it may fall on necessary amount of heat, welfare of the ! obtained a franchise 4,500 producing tomato plants A nutrient soiution is pumped|the ovary and develop into a "Each heater could heat two eye-catching beauties. and started con-1 (approximately one-half acre), mto the trays from the large tonintn- Each plant is vibrated standard-size homes,” said ★ ★ * sl*'ncUon on our greenhouses in The corporation owns 20 acres storage vats housed in the floor.I three times a week. Covert, “.so you can imagine “We got the idea of growing Jnne,” said Covert. ‘ ‘ W e;and hopes to increase its plant A float valve system keeps the' A staff of four women work- how the gas company likes us.” tomatoes hydroponically,” said our first seedlings in facilities as the customer de-isolution from running over. ling part-time helps with this^^p pjpg. Covert, “when mv narents and are just mand grows. | "This solution is custom-operation, the harvesting and ‘when my parents ^ce just mand grows. I "This solution is custom-operation, ..... ............... —xhe fruit ipmains on iho vlnp brought some to us from our first crop now.” j "We’re planning 9,000 plants created so that the plants will grading. until it is rod not picked green Wisconsin. | * ★ ★ j for our spring crop, using the have exactly the proper amount no SMOKING or just pinking. “A fellow there by the name; The fruit is superior to the,existing space,” said Schulz. |of chemicals and minerals fon careful of our' “It is during this last week of plants,” said Covert, stubbing a ripening,” said Covert, “that cigarette. “No one is allowed to the tomato develops t b e smoke in the greenhouse and no'vitamin C which gives it its one is allowed to touch a single garden flavor. Kenneth Covert (Left) And John Schulz Check Tomato Harvest In Hydrogarden Greenhouse -______ , .'JW ■_ ..y • ... - . - News Rugged Bulbs Will Survive Winter Cold and Bring You First Proof of Spring This is the time of year to dig up tender summer bulbs and plant rugged ones that survive the winter cold and bring first proof of spring. Before the first deep frost, take from the ground the dahlias, gladiolus, begonias anemones, oxalis and ran-nunculus. Store them in a cool dry place. “Copland’s Rival;” the May-,should be planted about 6 inches make gardens of their own. flowering Triumphs “Blizzard,” deep and 6 inches apart. [Give them a plot of land to “Paris,” “Golden Eddy” and| * * * Imatchtheirphysical the iacy-petaled Parrot “Karel' The best way to discourage capabilities. Don’t shunt them Doorman.” Ichlldren from spoiling your bulb|off to a rough, shaded spot that Tulip and daffodil b u 1 b s'garden is to encourage them to would discourage even hardy, --------------------!---------—---------------------[veteran gardeners. Then put Into the ground the daffodils, hyacinths, tulips,| crocus and r cilla. Arrange them| sb that when you cut some next; spring to decorate indoor areas | you won’t leave gaping spacesj Pieces of burlap and chicken in the ganden. wire will protect precious plants You m|iS^ want to rearrange|from winter weather and the old bulbs that provided animals, beauty last spring, and add new! As shrubs grow larger they colors, varieties and shapes. become more difficult t o DWARF VAMETIES It your garden is small you 111 * * * be Interested in some of the ^ g„gp jf dwarf varieties. Newer in-' Winter Can Be Hard on Shrubs and Trees tulips, J « J • damage. In winter there will be daffodils and jonquils water, starving that will flourish in ordinary, „p ^ark and soil but which prefer sandy branches, loam. Cyclamineus do very well .gi^jg ^.g^ sunburned in peaty soil. Experts advise „ggr surface may avoiding use of manure with.^ ^y g^j bulbs. with exposure. Tell them how to prepare the soil, how to plant and explain that the spring-blooming bulbs require little or no fertilizer because they have built-in fond supplies to last the months before they bloom. AS A STARTER I As a starter, let them study much sun may cause the sap to the catalogs with you and start rising. [choose their own colors. Let A cold snap that night will;them help select some small! cause the sap to expand and i bulbs such as crocus, muscari; burst the plant cells. and snowdrop. Crocus needs to ★ ★ ★ [be planted only three inches For this reason, a canopy of deep, burlap’ fastened to stakes needed for protection. It also will protect small plants from drifting snow. Wrap burlap around t h e slender trunks of newly planted trees, both as a protection against sunburn and rodents. EXTRA AID Smail trees and shrubs in extremely expos»aweas-should Bulbs help naturalize lavvns.j shrubs and trees plenty rough .P-ass. woodlands,! f (a„ ^ight orchards and rock BardensJ j^gg^es. They will do well between lighti *" shrubbery and under trees that,COLD WEATHER , . , .... are not too dense: in window When cold weather comes,jand place burlap around this boxes, tubs and planters, on mulch with leaves, straw, peat frame. . terraces and between paving'moss and similar materials. j ★ * ★ Stones. I Rodents can damage and A few lattice sticks and some Garden Center Sets Workshop Date “Deck the Halls with Boughs; of Holly” and all the other trims of (he Holiday Season [ Bee. 2-4 from O0‘ a.m73T30t get extra protection. Stake them p „, g, ,j,g Ogt^git oarden to prevent them from being Center presents its annual broken or bent by the wind. ■ Put stakes around the plant .small distance from the trunk even destroy small trees and burlap will provide a makeshift Plant varieties that do not all,shrubs. Make a barrier of [shelter over 1 o w - g r owl n g bloom sliqultanebusly. For April I hardware doth. Shape it in ^ flowering there are single andieylipder and tyrap It around the double earlies. For May there tree' a few inches away from are Mendel and Triumph tulips, and for early June Darwins, Darwin Hybrids, Lily-flowered, Parrots arid Double Lates. Trumpet daffodils are eX' cellent selections for cutting the trunk. ' How high to go should be determined by how much snow you get in your area. Remember ’ that In winter ‘King Alfred” has sturdy stemslsmall animals can sit on top of and “Rembrandt” and “Golden the snow to do their nibbling. Harvest’* are bright. 'SUNBURN MID4SEASON I Sunburn is an ailment Others Include the mid-season'peculiar io the winter. On the Darwins “Paul Richter" andiprotected side of the house, too evergreens to pi'otect them from heavy accuiriulations of snow. If you don't put up a shelter of some sort, be sure to get out after , eveny heavy snowfall and dislodge the heavy load of snow before it does any damage. BROKEN LIMBS Broken limbs should be tended to. Prune the stubs close to the trunk. Then paint the wound with a bit of roof coating or tar or aome of the special preparations made for the purpose. greens workshop Located at 133 E. Grand River, Detroit; the workshop will cost $2. Price includes a bundle of greens. Instructors will be on hand to assist and make suggestions. Mbmbers should bring work tools ajid a sandwich, tea or coffee will be served. Potential meinbers may join at the workshop. Dues Ore $2 per year. Reservations may be made by calling the Center. Auburn Oaks, Inc., 3820 W. Auburn Rd., Auburn Hfights, Mich. 852-231( Schulz Determines Germination Success Pontile PriM Pholoi Covert Approves Texture, Color, Yield 25% _______fo discoOnt ON LAWN PRODUCTS Including GREENFIELD and AGRICO FEED FOR WILD BIRDS Regal - our finest mix 25-lb. ...... 2.39 20% Munflotver, kaffir, Milo Maize, Millet, Wheat, Buckwheat Milo, Wheat, cx. Com, 25 lbs. >1"> Cracked Yellow Com ... 25 lbs. *1*' Sunflower Seed, per lb.18° We Deliver — Phone OR 3-2441 REGAL Feed and Lawn Supply Co. 4266 Dixie Highway - Drayton Plains, Mich. 3 Miles North of Pontiac Teamwork In Grading And Weighing FINAL CLEARANCE SALE! V2 OFF ON NURSERY STOCK » Shade • Ornameirtal Trees • EVERGREENS Quantitias Limited FINAL CLOSE-OUT POHED ROSES • All Varieties $100 • Some Patented ■ gggj, TOVIfN & COUNTRY O ARDEN CENTER 5812 Highland Rd., (Mr59) OR 3-T14T C»»t I OPEN SUNDAY There’s a “Salt Mine” at Ritter’s Salt for Thawing Salt for Softening Morton Pellets too lb. Bag 2.65 50 lb. Ba. 1.45 Select Crystal Clear so i... 2.20 Granulated Salt 100 ib.. 2.20 Block ..F.... 50lbs.plain 1.20 Pellets Rust Removal . . 40 lbs. 1.89 Seasoned Fireplace Hardwood RITTER’S FARM MARKET 6676 Dixie Hwy. Clarkston 625-4740 3225 W. Huron FE 8-3991 .■), . i,:i> .... 'n,. - Cr-10 THK. rON'l'lAC rttKSS. KHIDAV. NOX’KMBKH 21, 19^9 THE NEW OXBOW PAVILION DANCING SATURDAY NITE 9 A.M. in our'Spacious ballroom Music by THE COUNTRY IMAGES with Bette Dee 9451 EliiabetK Loke Rd. Alice Doesn't Miss Restaurant Union Lake 363-9253 —- 1 HAPPINESS IS CHARLIE BROWN'S Come early Charlie Brawn for DINNERy TRIC DrinkSy • CHET RACINE - Banjo • CHUCK RUTH - Piano Singalong • FRED KRAUSE - Tuba “IT^orsl Ribs in Town** M .Ih. 'fi.. . » .J. . uumoi 613 W. Ktnnett, luiiu suu}onHig ‘.SX: 332-7111 (EDITOR'S NOTE -- JVr/ififW not sinc0 darling CU’hicnttne. has a lady become o legend through o folk song-tinlil Mice. Since Arlo Guthrie's song. "Alice’s Restauraijt Mas-sacree," Alice Brock, the leal-life huspiration, has been in a kind of toonderlond. .And nou), after the movie. . .) By M.ARY EU.KN MVUKNK Ass«idated Press Writer NEW YORK Ciill It bud timing or simply the Uidy's prerogotive. But just iH'lore people found out about Aliee’s Re.staurant, Alice sold it. “That whole iicene is over anyway," t li e o r i /. e s the celebrated hippie chef, propped next to a suitcase still unpacked from a trip to the Caribbean. “It could never happen again.” friendly affair that packed the church and supplied (luthrle with nliaterial for Alice’s salvation song , . . The Maskacree. CiUthrie and a friend, offering to clear away garbage after the, dinner, \iumped the refuse down a small canyon after finding the regular city dump closed for the! holidays. She isn’t complaining. Flmerging from ofhen unhap- Alice Brook—Modern Legend Peanut Ceilar 1 no., UNION LAKE IHMIUt North o( Union laUVillos* 3(3-9191 Catering for banquets and Parties LIQUOR, BEER • WINF PFAMUTS NEW YEAR'S EVE PARTY $15.00 straw hZts Entertainment, Buffet, Party Favors SONG SHEETS BEV (Big Mama) HILL AL MAYWORM on Piano I Organ JACK MARSHALL years acted out agin." Both were arrested for “lit-| terbuggin’ ” by the now famous Stockbridue police officer William J. Obanheitii, a soft-spoken man who stiir speaks of the incident with grinning embarrassment. The charges eventually were dropped. DIVORCED IN ’68 Alice and Ray were divorced in October of 1968. Ironically, it was the same month Penn began filming his movie in the Alice left the college two the more people you have, the with Alice acting py obscurity to a lucrative reign yg^j s later and returned to New harder it is,” she says of her ^ consultant, as one of the most publicized York, where .she met and mar- two years in the church. * * * ladies of folk legend, Brooklyn-i^^y Brock, a young "i tried to run a household for “j was very involved in the born Alice Brock -8, has what They moved to a while, but that was im-movie,” said Alice, “and I she modestly/ calls a tlash in gtockbride to take jobs at a possible. Soon privacy became relived as much of it as I could, the pan going for hei. t got p,.pp school, Ray as a a very precious thing. For me, it was psychodrama on Its beginning n 1967, whm carpentry teacher and Alice as .p*RpviT FIGURES’ « very grand scale. It was the Woody Guthrie’s mop-headed ^ librarian. PARENT FIGURES ^ minstrel son Arlo cranked out a * * * “I guess to the kids, Ray and P \o have the emo- song called “Alice’s Restaurant ^he jobs lasted only a year - I were pArent figures, she Massacree,” and 18-m i n u t e ypry straight work” — said, “but I always thought of “ g P blues talk tale partly about but it was long enough for the them as friends, not children. Alice’s frustrating attempts to grocks to attract a large “It was really lack of corn-keep house in a church full of following of young friends, munication. They didn’t unhippies while running her Leaving the school for summer derstand my need to be alone, beanery in Stockbridge, Mass, ^ork at a youth hostel on to work something out for FASHIONED INTO FILM i Martha’s Vineyard, they invited myself. It’s the same thing they While Alice was finding the some of their students to follow don’t understand about their situation mostly miserable, and drew a shaggy-haired batch own parents, more than 400,000 other people of 18 boys, including Guthrie.^ * * * were delighted enough to buy BOUGHT CHURCH Money was another P™blem, Guthrie’s record. , t. then that evervone Then Alice’s storv was^ - solve. Again drawing on her l^en Alices story w as jecied to stay in Stockbridge mnther’s reserves she bought a fashioned into film by director a_j „ith the heln of AUce’s ® ^ Arthur Penn who nersuaded .u ismall restaurant set unob- u, relive .he leg«Kl in ..pro. “1 TeU^S ‘ Restaurant ^ ^ ground floor to their friends and antiquated Although Alice, a pretty, ESes. ^ * ® ■■ kitchen, the restaurant main- bronze-skinned brunette, turned jhat was in the spring of ® down a starrins role in the ^ u u, u® - 7?- outside “straights” as well as aown a siairing roie m me ig0g probably the happiest time movie - “'hat s one ego trip I ag the lossely knit family ® don’t want to take” -— she jjf ygyaHy ^ ^Q^en or more teen-SOLD OUX IN’67 hasn’t exactly been sitting on ggg^g tj,eir dream She finally sold the restaurant her apron strings. 'disintegrated is the. theme of in 1967 after owning it less than Drawing on-the advice of New ube story that made Alice a year. York financiers who know howj famous. There were, of course, bright to put mileage on success, she, * ★ ★ !moments. And one of the most already has publised a cookbook i.jf.g g strain when you live memorable was the Brock’s and Is completing plans for aj^jtb other human beings — and Thanksgiving Day feast, chain of franchised restaurants CHANGE OF HABIT Mm.lknru. III. mi Iwn. liiH FLU9i"J0URNirT0TNI MR tlDIOFTNItUN” M0N.MirvFNI.9iM(NLy m Jflcii Plciiira of ,4u’«»rrw< Moke Us Your One - Stop Food and Entertoinment Center . Excellent Cuisine SUNDAY SPECIAL ROAST BEEF DINNER Mash potatoes and gravy, rolls, butter, vegetable. $1.75 PONTIAC LAKE INN 7880 Highland Road 673-9988 HURRYI LAST 5 DAYS “VANESSA REDGRAVE IS SIMPLY GREAT IN ‘THE L0VF.S OF ISAl)0RA*!“-L//’f Magar//.. "A WONDERFUL MOVIE... A TOUGHING AND DELIGHTFUL W0RK!'-i/« Afiji/Mi aROBfRIaniimMONDMpioduclion VANESSA REDGRAVE “THE T/WES OF ISADORA” unujfi alilmbyKARELREISZ — JAMES FOX WED. SAT.-SUN. t;00-4;00 1:U-9:tI IVANTCHENKO “'^JASONROBARDS FRIDAY MON.-TUES. Tin iOitl _ MAURICE JARRE ■ >r ME WN BRAGG m CUVE EXTOII ■<«(». v MEIVYH BRRGO Directed by KAREL REISZ ■ Produced by ROBERT and RAYMOND HAKIM HURON FREE SOUVENIR PROGRAMS FRIDAY NITE ONLY Detu Inti Corner Elizabeth Lake And Cass Lake Roads 1 BLOCK WEST OF HURON in New York, Los Angeles Chicago. NEW INDEPENDENCE But probably the best fringe benefit, by Alice’s own 3ure, is the new independence that has accompanied her good fortune and fame. Divorced and now a homeowner in Stockbridge, she seems largely unimpressed with everything else. “With all this publicity, I guess people can have opinions about me without ever knowing . . and that’s a little strange,” she says. “But as far as I’m concerned, things really haven’t changed, that much. I’m just fooling! around now, doing what I want.! i know I’m moving. I don’t knpw where.” ; With unusual frequency,! Alice’s presence often has led to the unpredictable. ‘DIFHCULT CHILD’ Raised in Brooklyn, she was by her own admission a “difficult” child whose early bent toward nonconformity 1 e d eventually to a stint in reform school. I Upon completing high school,! In the Airway Lounge THE ROAD SHOW for reservations phone 674-0426 4825 W. Huron (M-59) SPECIAL CHILDREN'S MATINEE SATURDAY and SUNDAY SNOW WHITE AND THE 3 STOOGES PLUS FOR THE LOVE OF MIKE STU ERWIN - (COLOR) FRI., SAT., SUN. NITES' ”OHEOFTHEyE/lR’STEI»BEST!»» REXHARRISON RICHARD BURTON TAIRCASE” ADULTS, $1.15 I ,4... '...1 I THK PONTIAC: PHK.SS, FRIDAY, NOVKMHKR 2J, 1909 C±:ll Marriage to Barbra Asunder/ Actor Is ] on Way to Stardom EDITOR'S NOTE— It got tolYou’d think after our years In the point where he was colled analysis, I could control “Mr. Streisand." But, Elliott something like that. I’ve got to Gould, now separated jrom «u-figure out why it .happened. It perstar Barbara Streisand, is on'had to be psychosomatic." to movie stardom on his TUMBi v out oum. Starting with "Bob & Carol OUT & Ted and Alice,"’ Gould has Gould talks like that. So far In 1969, Gwld has been engaged in four major films: "Bob & Carol & Ted & Alice,” ‘‘M-A-S-H,’’ "Getting Straight" and “Move." In the latter two he plays tour de force roles in which he appears in almost l^r mflm. 1 i H.w could ho .chic, .ucl, •-V l "" IS S'" ."f '1' ~ - By BOB THOMAS |At age 31, after almost a P“bUc? The secret lies in ..'Wetme In the entertainment intratrade ta^k. HOLLYWOOD (AP) — Elliott world he is still struggling to * winner can sweep the Gould leaned back on the find out who he is. before a foot of film has dressing room couch and talked in a rapid manner about his perplexity: “ITiere was this scene this morning where I got in bed with tills beautiful girl. She So is Hollywood. Until recently, he very conveniently fit the niche as consort to superstar Barbra Streisand. Last spring, their j marriage went asunder, but been released. And the word on "Bob & Carol, etc." was that it would make Elliott Gould a star. I Enjoy The Relaxing Atmosphere of an Early American Inn Good t'ood - Good Spirits Good Fellowship THE CLUB ROCHESTER 306 Main St., Rochester 651-6351 Your Host. . . Ben Hazelton Elliott Gould, Candice Bergen In Scene From 'Get Straight' Producer - director Richard i kind of product. When the au-j examining his own motivations. “Thats a part of my life that dience became accustomed to “I hate to talk about myself — it’s painful to talk about,” he an unglamorous kind of star,'hate to hear the word T so said. “I was a kid actor, but I I K.. . .. ------■>“ ---- --------- — um.k i.«|then there was a chance for much,” he says, yet h e never acted. I‘performed,’with naked, but cmI about it — not Gould remained In the shadow Bush was convinced, and bej^^ ,, responds frankly and at length all that the word implies. It is a brash, not shy, just calm and 0 f the a 1 r eady-legendary^°uld as a hip articulate talking with a about his youth, his uneven very unnatural existence for a protestanal about the scene wei Barbra. T the fS div of career, his relationship with child, and it led me to be had to do. | Now the film prowd is faced shooting on “Getting Straight’’Pai bra, etc. frustrated and to pull back from ..r ..... K--with the necessity of chang^^^ which he costars with Cam Brooklyn-born, Elliott Gould Hfe. R took me years and years Its ^reotype of Elliott Gould. Lfr3e imag^^^^ "Pe"t part of his childhood to rid myself of the results of H. h.T.; *» P.™ .hom.U„g,he™„d^,otNewVork«P.ri.d publicity man 'leading a, ” reporter to the set of Gould’s* Gould doesn’t look like a new film. Part of the remark!movie star. He is 6-feet-3 and can be laid to the normal ex-1 rangy, but his features, cess of zeal in the publicity'partially hidden by bushy hair shorts, wihch I took off — I had a flesh-colored bikini underneath. So we started this wild scene and I — I got the hives! I was so embarrassed! Supposing they would show! Supposing I ruined the scene! “Good God, the hives! It never happened to me before. have gone through casting offices. The experience Gould .finished high school psychoanalysis, Gould is forever left him with still-visible scars, and attended one week of trade. But not all. OAKUND COMMUNITY COLLEGE presents Josef Raieff Russian Born Conceit Pianist Pontiac Northern High School Friday, November 21, 8:00 P.M. All O.CC Campus and Extension Students and the Public Are Invited NO ADMISSION CHARGE and a droopy mustache, lack the finely chiseled look of traditional film heroes. He could easily become lost in a sea of hirsute faces on any college campus. Which may suit him to become the prototype of the 1970s film star. COULDN’T IDENTIFY “During my adolescence I used to watch the stars of the 1950s and I simply couldn’t identify with them," he remarked. “I knew I could never look like Tab Hunter or Jeffrey Hunter, and so I never thought about being a movie star. “They were the Hollywood prototypes, and to me Hollywood was a distant Shangri-la that produced products that were stamped with the imprint of Warner Brothers or 20th Century-Fox. “How could I ever make the grade? “But then, I didn’t know that the audience could change its People had been con- Columbia University — “getting educated was less important to me than being accept^ ; once I knew I had been accepted, I lost interest,” He began his grownup career as a chorus boy, first on the Ernie Kovacs television show, then in Broadway musicals. STROH'S OLD FASHIONED lea Cream t Candy Store “Pumpkin Pie Ice Cream” Spreiah Cream Puff Desert 45c Tower Shopping Center (Carn«r M-S9 and Airport Rd.) WATERFORD 614-2421 Try a little tenderness tonight Try a big, thick, juicy, tender T-Bone. A crisp, cool, green salad with your choice of dressings. A steaming-hot buttery ^ baked potato. A big chunk of Texas toast The tab? $279 We think thafs enough said. SPECIAL- Every Thursday and Saturday ONLY *2** SSILOIHFRl KMART GLENWOOD PLAZA North Ptrry, Comtr Carry-Out Avoilablo OptnlDiytoWook Sunday thru Thundiy 1 t-SiSO P.M. Friday and Saturday 'HI I P.M. BUY! SELL! TRADE! USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! SWEET’S QUASAR HEADQUARTERS 'Unglamorous Type': Elliott Gould ditioned to the Betty Grable' NAMEBRAJVDS - FIRST qUAUTY CARPET - b:V -AdulO^ / '^OAuRcA./-AAWiblOU^ ^e(^uota. / t-OMColte/u / "lAe*uL ECONOMICAL LUXURY FOR EVERY ROOM IN YOUR HOME Living Room Carpet-‘501’ Nylon Price Includes: • Sponge Rubber Pad • Tackiest Installation Complotoly Installod 12'x15' Root only *149 BEDROOM CARPET 100% Nylon Textured 6 Colors to Choose From $395 YARD KITCHEN CARPET 100% Continuous Filamont Nylon Lovol Loo SpacdFDyod Twood — Flat 40% Spongo Rubber Bock $495 yard Carpot NYLON-SHAG Super Heavyweight Luxury Tweeds and solid Colon. 9 Colors to Pick From. Ref.|o.w ’O yard . Ruler of Swat Has Lost Clout By NA-nONAL GEOGRAPHIC I SOCIETY ! WASHINGTON - ’The wall of| Swat finally has bowed to the' 20th century. i He no longer Is the absolute, | but benevolent, ruler of the tiny Himalayan state in West Pakistan. Gone are the days when thej wali conducted official business! over the telephone, personally exiled troublemakers and waged a stern campaign against! jaywalkers. I Pakistan has handled Swat’s foreign relations, defense, and communications. When a newi president replaced Mohammed Ayub Khan, who had close ties with Swat, Pakistan took over Swat’s internal affairs, too. So the wali has time on his hands. Maj. Gen. Miangul Abdul Haq Jahan Zeb, the wall of Swat, was a progressive ruler. Nearly every village has electricity, and , the wall telephoned village chiefs every morning. He built free schools, a college, half a dozen hospitals and a modern road network. Swat encompasses 1,800 square miles of hills, mountains, and fertile valleys. Most of Swat’s 600,000 people are farmers. Tile Goiinnet Adventures of \Jo^40ill rooft baaf it contidarad that last word in fina food, unlott thoro it a tir-loin tlaok or porhopt a booutiful thick filot mignon. Whichovar wa anjoy, tha maot it tha thing. Roott pofotoat and gravy it all onyono would otk for. But tho Franch hava diffarant idaot. Whan thay lova a thing, thay plant a flowor gardan around it. And how thoy loyo Boouf on Golao. Thit it o tondorloin of roundod by a colorful array of vogotOblot proporod in uniform tint, and thon tho wholo gland with otpic which hot boon modo from broth out of morning and Fronch man or woman would droom of making it moro briofi Wo lovo to proporo moot tho ivo dinnor toon at JAYSON'S, 4195 Dixio Highway at Hatchory Rd., Drayton Plaint, 673-7900, "Whora Dining Plooturo and Hotpitolity Go Hand in Hand" . . . Our now Infra-Rad Broilar mokat par-fact Stookt and Chopt... Evary night Mon. thru Sot. you con litton and done# to racording artittt, tha J. C. Haord Trio. Helpful Hints — Rip# olivot The biggest value in cx)lor... Ohiasar'ColorTV with the works in a drawer H You Don’t Buy From Us, We Both Lose Money! TRUCKLOAD PRICES FOR ALL! 1 075 W Huron St Phono FAMILY STYLE DINNERS 6 ’til 9 P.M. MON. CHICKEN . • • 2.95 TUlSd OOlLtT BEEF . 2.95 Sat. SMOROASBORD 4.25 SPECIAL PRICES FOR CHILDREN CATERING TO AIX TYPES OF PARTIES Specializing in Italian Dhhes f lundpy for lanqu.jla Only WIDE TRACK DRIVE AT WEST HURDN ST. FE2-11T0 Tho werka ara 10 tubalaaa mlnl-eireultt for aolid-atata raliability and fast M-homa aarviea if It Is avsr nasdsd. This is the years-ahead color TV you've been hearing about. Just look at these outstanding features available on Quasar: a All solid-state components that, unlike tubes, are designed to work without burning themselves out. a lO.solid-state mini-circuits (or works) in tho drawer that a serviceman can replace in the home, if one should over fail, a Automatic fine tuning and alactronio picture lock. Push lock button and picture stays fine tuned, even whan you change channels. a Lighted VHF and UHF channel indicators lot you see which channel you'ra tuned to, from across tha room, sn FIctury Tub* *nd AM P*rt* Motorola't orlginil own«r r*|l.t*r*d | •ntt* mutt be rtglsle a0" D—a THE rONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAV, NOVEMBER 21. 1009 i The following are top prices covering sales of locally grown produce by growers and sold by them in wholesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets Wednesday. Stock Mart Continues Cong: Nixon Responsible, Not Lodge Sporty Cars Aren't Selling Produce VIOBTAB1.H |Mtt. Topped, bu............. Cabege. Oirly. bu........ Cabbagt. Rad. bu. Cabbage. Standard aVriety, bu. Carrots. Cello PaK. 2-dt. Carrots. Topped, bu. Calery. Root. .......... Permel. dz. ........ HoraerMlih. pk. bskt......... kapks. dz. bchT ..... Cmions. Orvr 50-ib. bag The New York Stock Exchange NEW YORK (AP) • New York Stock| 2.25' Exchange selected 2.50 Sales 2.25 (bds.) High Lew A 2.50 ^ 2.50 AbbtLab 1.10 20 74Va 74M NetiGraceCo 1.50 234 28^ t Chg. Goodyear .85 127 28^4 28 28’y - ^IRohr Cp .80 GranlleC StI 24 13% 13’^ 13H + VS RoyCCola .54 x23 46H 48% 48% 2 25 AirRed l.lSg 40 18’i Swiss Chard, bu. 2 75 AetnaLif 1.40 AirRed 1." TIcanAlu Alleg Cp .10a AllegLud 2.40 . V41 Grantw 1.40 ViiGt Nor Ry 3 iGt West FinI f ss GtWnUnit .90 , _ Vsl GreenGnt .96 .f ss I Greyhound 1 , + i.iGrummnCp 1 Gulf Oil ‘ iGulfStaU ^GulfWln 127 28% 28 24 13% 13 2 28% 28% 28% 95 5S'4 53% 55 + 17 43% 43% 43 - % I RyderSys I414 „ i/iiGulfStaUt .96 63 23 Poultry and Eggs DITROIT POULTRY DETROIT (AP)-(USDA)-Prices tsdav for No. 1 lavy type 21-22; roasters 7; broilers and ryei ^^35; turkeys 25-». poultry: He DETROIT RODS DETROIT (AP)-tySDA)-Ego prices Mid per dozen, Thursday, by first ranivers (Including U.S.); Grada ‘ jumbo «|,«4; axira large delivered to Chicago «3-e4; medium 22.75-23.51)1 >3, Livestock DETROIT LIVESTOCK DETROIT (AP) — (USDA)—I Close Wednesday. ^gjs 100, Mrrows_and 22.75-' 22.75. Cattle 200, slaughter loads end lots choice 1000-1125 .. .. 9725-29.00; other grades not tested; utility cows. 19.00-20.00. Veelers 50. high choice 42.0IM4.O0; choice. 38.00-42.00 91.00; standard. 30.00-34.00. CHICAGO LIVeSTOCK CHICAGO (AP) - (USDA) - Hogs ceipts Thursday were 3.500; butet steady to 25 higher; fairly active; ol grades and weights steady to 50 lo with the decline mainly on weights o 230 lbs; moderately adive; shippers took 2.700; 1-2 sorted 200-220 lb butchers 27.2S-27.75; around 75 head at 27.75 and 80 head sorted mostly Is around 205 tbs 28.00; 1-3 200-240 lbs 26.50-27.00; 2-3 230-250 25.50-26.50; ^4 250-270 lbs 24.50-25.50 270300 lbs 23.50-24.50; sows steady lowar; moderately active; 1-3 35(M0I 22.00- 22.75; 1-3 40-500 lbs 21.00-23.00^ 500-550 lbs 30.50-21.25; 2-3 550-600 lbs 20.00- 20.50. ' Cattle 400; calves none; supply mostly slaughter cows steady to strong; few ' bulls steady; utility and commercial cows 184)0-19.75; few high dressing utility 19.75-20.25; canners and cutters 16.'" 18.75; low yielding canners 15.0-16. utility and commerdal bulls 24.00-26.50. Sheep 200; slaughter ambs and ewes steady; package prime 110 lb wooled ataughtar lambs 29.50; several lots good and choice 100-115 lbs 26.00-28.0; deck good and choice 78 lb shorn sleugghter CeroPLt CarrierCp .60 CarterW .40e Caw Jl CastleCke .60 5.0-7.0 28.00; cull to I American Stocks (hdf.) High Low Laif Chg. 50a 5 15Va 15% 15»/a — % 14 9Vi 9% 9% , .85g 14 33V4 33% 33V4 • tt 37 5Vb 5 5 1 20 20 20 ■ 19 30Va 30 30% - 64 20% 20% 20V4 • 28 3 2% 3 • 5 18Va 18% 18% — % 31 14% 14 60 15% 15 32 11V4 in. 30 13% 13V4 13*/4 — - % ArkLGas 1 Asamera C AtlasCorp < Barnes En DIxiiyn Corp Dynaiectm Equitep .05a 11% 11% 13V4 13*/4 35 11% 11 11 % X26 28% 27V4 28 24 12% 12% 12% 13Va 13% 33% 23% — % 15 9% 4% 5 17 5% 5% I — % Giant Yel .40 109 15-16 9% 9 13-16-H-16 Goldfield 31 5% 5% 5% Gt Besn Pet 26 6% 6% 6% Husky on .30 13 12% 12% 12% + % Hycon Mfg 4 7% 7% 7% - 3 10% 10% lOVa -5 15% 15% 15% .. 16 6 6 26 18% 18*/a 18% — ’ 19 9 9 ... 6% 6% ... McCrory wt Mich Suo .10 MidwFinT .20 Mohwk Data 3 11 11 11 67 78% 77% 77% - 1 13 35% 35% 35 47 54% 53% 54 00 26% 26% 26^ 33 26% 25% 26% 32 14% — % ConEdls 1.80 100 26% 26% 26% Cent Can 2.20 Cont Cp ‘ ContMot Cont Oil 1.50 Cont Tel .72 Control Data Cooperin 1.40 CorGW 2.50a Cowles .20 CPC Inti 1.70 CrouseHind 1 CrowCol 1.07f Curtiss Wrt 1 DanRiv 1.15a Oartind .30b DaytnPL 1.60 Deere Co 2 DelMnte 1.10 OeltaAIr .40 DenRGr 1.10 41 32Va 32 21 14% 14' _________ .... 14 74% 74% 74% Cont Cp 2 50 4% 43% 44% - * ^ 10 19% 19% 19% 168 27% 27 27V4 + 219 23 22% 22% — 126 111% 110% 111% + 4 286 28 27% 27% - 5 259 259 259 +1 1 11% 11% 11% — V 42 35% 35% 35Vb + I 7 25% 25 25 - V 16 31 V» 30% 30% -1 91 17 16% 17 5 36% 36% 36% + % 4 13 13 13 • 4 25% 25% 25% .08 44 43 43% 19 29 333- --17% 17% 17% - V. 8 33316 33% 33% — 17% 17% • 22% 22% DowChi Dressir duPont 5.25g DuqLt 1.66 Dyna Am .40 ______ ____ 18 116 115 115% Dlverslnd .36 33 18% 17% 17% -- % r>nm*Mtn «o 28 50% 50 * 50% +1 25 70% W% 69% - ’ 46 27 26% 26% 7 32% 32% 32% 49 113% 112^/a 112Va — % 25 24% EIPasoNG 1 Eltra^ 1.20 Tmer ^ec t EndJohn .12p Etsexlnt 1.20 Ethyl Cp .72 EvansP 60b Eversharp 63 76 75% 75% - % 18Va 18% 18% - ’ 2B%- 29 58% S8< 22% 22% 22% 34 34 ■ 25% 25' 34 - ’ 2 58% 3 22- 2 34 - --1A 43Va 43% 15 26% 26% 26% + % ^F— V 84 85 83Vi 83% -1% " 6 14% 14Va 14% Finsteel inc 20 Vf/t 13% 13%-% Fairch , FedOaptStr i Flltrol 2 39% FMC Cp .85 FoodFalr .90 FordMot 2.40 ForMcKs .80 j Corp .40 Gam Ska 1.30 GanDynam i GenElac 2.M Gan Fd$ 3.S0 .......I G Tel El 1.53 Gen Tire lb Genesco 1.60 Ga Pec .00b GerbOr 1.10 GattyOII .3t»i Glllefte 1.40^ J Glen Aldan i.l Global Marin .llOoodrlcb 1.32 3 33'/i 33% 334*- ’A tl S4W S4.4 20% 20% + % SanFeint —H— 40 56 55 55 - 16 77 7644 7644 - PARIS (API - The Vietcong must change its policy, not Us man at the Paris peace talks, it wants a peace agreement. NKW YORK (AP) — The pressure on the market. 1286.7, with industrials off 1.8, ‘^''( SU't'k market continued its slide “Except for the tax sellingl rails off 1,2, and utilities off .8. early this afternoon, but the which by its nature b a tempo-j *' * ★ Nixon administration trading pace slowed from rary phenomenon, mere does Again the loss was broad,' Thursday’s rate. not seem to be any really new with declines topping advances i Analysts said the market fundamentalfactors af-|by a margin of 2 to 1 among in- agaln was feeling investom’ de- ^®^Ung the market, an analyst j dividual issues traded on the *4.50 jection over Nixon administra- |New York Stock Exchange. IIJ lion’s indications that the tight- At noon the Dow Jones aver-j * * * money policy would remain in age of 30 industrials had fallenj The decline covered steels, XTS force longer than had been ex-,3.43 do 827.75 after having been rubber issues, farm imple-pected and over fading hopes off 4.56 half an hour earlier. jments, aircrafts, electronics, M.sD for progress in Vietnam peace! The Associated Press 60-stockinonferrous metals, chemicals, 3.M talks. Tax selling also exerted average at noon had lost 1.5 to rails and airlines. 38 J4 38'I 3 3U'. 31 30 18'4 18 16 384* 38'l 226 304. 30V 45 3. 141 I 10144 101V* 101 A 30Vz -1 Nat Bisc 2.20 1* 52V. 52 52V- Nat Can .80 3 ” ” NatCash 1.20 120 1 138'A 13»'/j -2'. Nat Fuel 1.M Newberry 1 NEnoEl 1.*8 Nawmnt 1.04 Nlag MP 1.10 NorlolkWit 6 28 45 44V* 44*4 - J 5 30Vi 30V. 30Vj 32 17 V. 17 17'A 18 844 29** -|- 1* 54 27** 27'A 27'4 — V* 126 22*4 2'A 22** 138 1x8*4 117 118V. +2 154 29'* 28V. 28V. — * 22 12** 12** 12** — ' 4 42'A 42 42'A + 'A 12 30'A 30'4 30'4 5 38'4 38 38 - ** 173 30 29** 29V. - ** American Motors had stocks annual conference on the of 1970 Javelin and AMX mo-1 nomic Outlook, said his reliable dels which will last more than i survey on consumer sentiment The resignations were an-i loo days, the trade publication I showed a softening spirit to buy nounced by the White House I Automotive News reported this among the American consumers Thursday, and White House and | week. Chevrolet Camaro and j A month earlier Katona said State Department sources Washington indicated President Nixon has not decided on a successor. Meanwhile, the delegation will be headed by Philip C. Habib, 49-year-old career diplomat who has beat the delegation’s No. 3 man under both I«dge and his predecessor, W. Averell Harriman. PERSONAL REASONS Lodge, who is 67, said in his letter of resignation to the President that he wanted to leave for personal reasons. But friends had been saying for weeks that he was fed up with the lack of progress in the talks and would step out by the end of the year. Pontiac Firebird - actually un- new car sales might escape the changed from 1969 - each stood pessimism that was beginning to at more than 100 days along!grip buyers “I believe the time has come for a reversal of the government’s tight - money policy -first of all because it is doubtful whether tight money helps greatly against inflaticm,” Katona said. He said the pessimistic view about the near future is contrasted with an optimistic long-range view. ’The current issue of Ward’s Automotive Reports said the automakers have scheduliid production of about 2.2 million cars for the fourth quarter compared to about 2.S million a year earlier. The publication, however, pointed out that the 1970 model year began earlier this fall and that the adjustment could he misleading. ProducUon and sales of the 1970 models began generally a week earlier this fall compared to 1968. Latest industry sales flgures are expected Monday. ’Through Nov. 10 the domestic makers trailed 1968 sales by about 35,- 000 units with sales from Jan. 1 of 7,334,187 cars. Chrysler Corp. said its layoffs next week would be on several car lines, rather than just specialty cars. Indonesia Cbmeback Top Economic Story Stocks of Local Interest — % I5g 31 33% 33Va 32% 1 4 40 40 40 ,50p 165 19% )B% 18% —u— 1 85 32% 32% 32V; 17V. _ % j 71 48% 23 43% 159 20V4 20*% 20*/4 — % 106 43% 431/4 431/4 71 53 52% 52Va UnOiiCat 1.60 UfiPac Cp 2 UnkmPacif 2 Uniroyal .70 UnitAIre 1.80 Un Fruit 1.40 unit MM 1.30 14 29% 29% 29% + USGypsm 3a 30 65% 64% 65 — ' By JOHN CUNNIFF island republic was 635 per AP Easiness Analyst cent, meaning that a product NEW YORK-Thecomeback‘hat ^Mt a dirne i" Januiu^ of Indonesia from the chaos into ™«ht have cost 65 cents by De-which it had been dumped by ^ ^ ^ President Sukarno in 1965 musti b e considered one of the ma-| jor economic stories of the ’60s. The fight ^ a g a i n s t inflation, for exam-^■^jple, is almost ziiJju n matched. In aio 1960 the rate in ’i 2 that Pacific —and in ail probability it is a strictly dollar and cents one— the Indonesian market is becoming an attractive one. UnIvO Pd .80 66 23'/i 23'4 23'4 - ' Uplohn 1.40 109 S2'4 51'A 51W —II —V— Vorian Asto 239 31'A 31'4 31'A — Vando Co .60 10 17'A 16V« 16'A — '4 VaEIPw 1.12 174 23'A 22'A 22H ' _w—X—Y— 43 70 Was Wat 1.28 WnAIr L .SOp Wn Banc 1.30 WnUTal 1.40 WestgEI 1.80 Wayerhsr .80 61 2 21% 21 21*% + 32 23 22 23% + 37 43*/4 43 43 44 48% 47*% 47*% —1 28 61 60% 60'^i - % Woolwth 1.20 Xerox Cp .60 ZaleCorp .64 ZenithR 420 20 19 19'4 — ' 6 33'4 33 33 - 49 40'A 39*4 40 - 214 103'A 102’A 102'4 + 190 47 44'A 46V* — ' 99 37V. 37** 37Vi Copyriohted by The Asociated Press 1969 Sales figures are unoficlal. unless otherwise noted, rales naiad as raguli lollowing footnol a~Also extra i plus slock dividend, c—Liquidating dend. d—Declared or paid in 1969 nil stock dividend. »-Pald last year, f—Pai able In slock during 1969, asllmated cash value on ex^llvldend or ex^liif-"— date. ^Declared or paid so f year, h—Declared or paid aftei dividend or split up. k—Declared this year, dividends . _ Paid this year, dividend omitted. or no action taken at last f-- Ing. r—Declared or paid .............t-Pald In In arrMrs. n—New action taken at last dividend stock . . .. _____ Juring cash valut on ex-dividand n date. - ______ ... .Jl. cld—Called, x—Ex dividend, y—Ex d .........................Ex dlstrl v|—In bankruptcy or --------------- - being reorganized under the Bankruptcy Act, or securities assumed by such companies. In—Foreign Issue sub|i teresl equallzellon tax. . DOW-JONES AVERAGES 66 23** 23 , I STOCKS X|30 Industrials ■'20 Rails 15 Utilities - Slocks 193.36—1 113.31—0... 276.67-1.42 25'A - ** 23 25% 25’....... , . _______________ . - - 2 63V4 63 63% — % 10 Second grade rails P10 Public utilities . . i 10 Industrials ....... 46 33% 33% 33’% - *%'----------------------------— - 25% 25*% 25% ->%' 69.92—0.01 55.30+0.08 69.16-0.05 77.48+04)3 77.86-0.10 37 261/4 PaePwL PacT«.T 1.20 PanASul .77g Pan Am .20p Panh EP 1.60 19% 20 XIOO 34 33*4 33*4 -I- ____________ 52 34V. 34** 34*4 - '. PennCen 2.40 116 32** 31'A 31**- PannDix .60 ”'‘- P*Pw!!t ■*L6o' PtnnzUn .80 PepsiCo 1 Perfect Film PfIzarC ■ lO 2.1 Xl9 17% 17'/4 17% ........... 481/4 481/4 . 29 53Va 52% 52% — % 11 14% 14'/4 14% • 138 101% 99% 100 • El U4 X76 23% 23% 22% ............................ 2t r ?6?t r + 'Ai-TmSi 10 38'A 38'A 38'A ' ' 232 74'A 73V. 74 - '/4|Ooe*lor 72 23V. 23'/. 23** - '/. I 118 33** 32*4 33 "30 19** 191A 19'/. • 10 29'A 29'/. 29'/. 22 50 49** 49*4 - 13 37'A 367A 37 41 S3’A 53 53 • 37 47 46'A < 47 • 130 I'A .1*4 12* 27 22*4 22** 22'A 229 1 33'A 32*4 13 - PoiOroM ^ 8 PPG Ind MO H PrOctOi IM PubSCol 1.0S PSveEG 1.64 Pueb Sup .21 PugSPL 1.76 1S4 2SV* 25VA 2S'A - Raytheon .60 Ru^im CO RepubStI '2^ Yellowed Letter Dates tp Civil War EMPORIA, Va. (AP) - A yel/ lowed letter turned up amid some other obscure documents recently in the Greensville County clerk’s office turned out to be of more than Average historical significance. Mrs. E. E. Eanes, wBo discovered the letter in a Cataloging operation, said it was from ^the headquarters of the Army Northern Virginia and sought to requisition “12 able-bodied male M t tree Negroes...to work on the 41 36’/j 36'A 34'1 -**. fortifications of this depart- 162 31*4 3S'A 3S'/. ' 10.15 14V. i4'A >v\i*|ment. 20 3^ 34M Dated March 13, 1863, it was 42 35 34'A 34*4 7 '‘Isigncd: Gen. Robert E. Lee. 137 139% 136% -I’/i 35% 34% 34% - % 52 108% 108............. _ „ „ 20’^ x52 26% 26% 26% • 7 20 19% 19% 2 29 29 29 17 45 44% 44% • —Q— "24 22'A 22 22 t—R— Mutual Stock Quotations INVESTING COMPANIES NEW YOR K(AP) —The following quo-tatlonsa supplied by the National Assocl- could have been Fid Cap 11.8312.93 Fid Fond 17,......... Fid Trnd 26.18 28.61 Financial Prog: Dynm 6J3 7.37 Indust 4.23 4.64 Incom 6.47 7.09 vent 8.54 9.35 ■ iflK 12.27 All; 7.46 8.15 7.60 8.22 10.61 10.61 .91 .99 Fd 12.22 13.37 6.12 6.69 3.25 3.52 Fid Fund 17.46 19.08 Nat Secur Str: -• - • ........... Balan 10.6211.61 Bond 5.53 6.04 Divid 4.44 4.81 Grwth 9.4810.36 Pf Stk 6.87 Incom 5.^ 6.00 Stock 8.61 9.19 Nat West 7.01 7.66 Nal Grth 10.0110.88 Neuwth 2130 25.30 New WId 13.7615.04 NY Vent 19.32 21.15 Newton 16.5 18.10 Noreast 15.4215.42 8.27 9.04 1.32 8.44 14.46 15.80 FstF Va Amcap 6.12 6.69 Am Bu: ‘ " Am Dvin 10.7411.74 AEx spl 10.32 Am Grth .15 6.68 Am Inv 8.02 8.02 Am Mut 9.3410.21 AmN Gth 3.10 3.39 Am Pac 7.71 8.43 110.39 sts;; %tron 6.38 6.97 kxe Houghton: Fund A 6.59 7.16 Fund B 8.23 8.95 Stock 6.43 7.03 Scl Cp 5.23 5.68 Fdn 11.84 12.94 Fst Siera 46.09 50.54 Flat Cap 7.99 Flat Fnd 677 Fla Gth 7.29 7.96 Fnd Gth 5.78 6.31 Foundrs 8.39 9.17 Foursq 11.6012.68 Franklin Group: Com St 6.79 7.44 ONTC 10.5211.53 Util .39 7.00 Incom 2.17 2.38 Freedm 8.54 9.33 Fd frMut 10.31 10.31 Fond Am «.9010.82 Gen Sec 11.4411.44 Glbraltr 13.6613.66 Group Sec: *— - 8.65 9.46 12.65 13.U _ - 1.69 9.50 Grth Ind 21.99 Gryphn 16.2517.76 Guardn Hamilton; 100 101 Fd Dne WmS 7.97 8.71 Pilgrim Pilot Com St 12.6513 9.02 9.02 15.26 17.72 9.9010.82 7.86 8.59 10.93 10.93 Pion Ent 8.26 9.03 Plon Fnd 13.3214.56 Plan ---------------- Price 8.26 9.03 13.3214.56 Inv 11.92 13.03 26.0 26.06 Era 24.95 24.95 4.78 5.23 0.48 10.36 1.39 1.51 9.89 9.89 N nor 29.09 29.09 Pro Fund 10.6810.68 Provdnt 4.73 5.17 Puritan 10.0011.02 Capit Inv Capit Shr Com St 1.79 1.96 Grwth 6.49 7.09 Incom 8.00 8.74 9.38 10.14 19.19 20.06 8.43 9.24 4.54 4.93 7.40 8.11 11.92 12.03 -unds: 11.9713.(1 1.79 1.9 6.49 7.09 8.00 8.74 2J5 3.11 HartwII 15.371^80 H&C Lav 12.0513.03 Hedb Gor 9.23 9.23 Hedpa 12.5213.72 Heritge .2.97 3.25 Hub*mn ill 1S.01 16.57 7.01 7.66 5.55 .07 Impact P *.2510.11 Imp Cap *.61 10.50 Imp Gth 7.6* 0.36 Inc FdK 7.15 7.M Indapnd 10.3011.34 nd^Tmd 13.3314.56 11.60 12.60 Incom 0.12 0.86 lnv*«l 7.75 1.47 yista 10.5211.50 8.42 *.2‘ Ravara 13.2614'.4* »d »r Fu'^i,^:"■” Int Inv 16.1016.43 SpcI 34.95 34.95 Bal 15.5815J^ Com St I1JI3 11J Fund Frnt Shrhd 11.72 12.81 opeci 9.6310.52 Chemcl 19.47 21.28 Colonial: Equty 4.8 5.31 Fund 11.1012.13 Grwth 6.67 7.32 Vont 7.10 7.76 Col Grth 119313.93 Comme 9.9910.92 Corns Bd 5.22 5.67 Commonwifh Fd$: Cap Fd 10.1211.06 9.7610.64 9.8010.71 9.17 10.02 6B 1.47 1.59 Cwith CO 1.73 1.87 Comp As 15.37 16.84 Stock Cwith 17.47 14.47 15J1 l(.35 11.35 14.3415.17 Not only is there the attrac-Govemment spending had tion of selling goods to a market produced the incredible situa- of 100 million people who, if gov-tion. Military costs for a conflict lernment programs succeed, will with Malaysia were partially re-|be on a steady road to great affluence; there is the potential for capitalizing on the area’s wealth. At a recently completed Indonesian seminar held by the American Management Association, businessmen were urged to invest in the nation, or more mundanely, take advantage of the opportunities it offered. One speaker, George Moore, chairman of the First National City Bank, told businessmen; “In conclusion, let me say that we believe that Indonesia offers a kaleidoscope of investment possibilities to the serious-minded and bonafide potential investor. “Indonesia’s need for foreign investment is great, and the opportunities are excellent for those who act promptly.” but wasteful expend! tures on domestic projects meant to impress foreigners contributed also. The economy was in chaos when Sukarno was ousted in 1965. Despite Sukarno’s boasts despite his dreams of joining I with Communist China to rule the area, the hard reality was that plants were producing at 20 per cent of capacity. HEADED LOWER By 1967, however, the new government of President Suharto had reduced the inflation 120 per cent a year and then to 85 per cent last year. This year the rate is down to 20 per cent and headed lower. The budget is now balanced, and a five-year economic expan-si(Hi program is under way. By 1973 rice production is expected to increase 40 per cent, factory output 90 per cent and fertilizer production many times over ★ Over-all, the country is pected to grow at a rate of 4.7 per cent a year through 1973, a rate that almost any industrialized nation would happy to achieve. Indonesia, of course, is far less developed than some other nations in Asia, Europe and the Americas. But its potential, based on vast mineral riches, is greater than that of many already prosperous nations. CpURUNG capital The catalyst needed for this development is capital, and Inis carefully courting foreign investments. A bit wary at first, American and Japanese businessmen in increasing number are investing in the nation. Although businessmen don always think first of such things as the balance of power, that factor is an important one in rebuilding of Indonesia. ★ When the nation began its campaign to attract foreign investments several years ago, the minister of foreign affairs, Adam Malik, reminded busi-nessipen that their investments would bring not only a financial return but a poiiUcal one also. ‘Tha stability ot the whole re-gibn may very well depend UptuL the giwkh and stability <4 Indonesia,” he said. “A steble and prosperous Southeast Asie could well pteaerve the balance of powtf in Bast Aate in a Way condudve to a stdile peaoe in that part of tha world." IMPORTANT WORDS Such words, have more than passing importance for American businessmen who find their nation involved in seeking a ao-' “ 1, military or otherwise, to ems that affect other Southeast Asian areas. Regardless of the motlvatloji News in Brief Irma Stovall of 449 Howard McNeill arrived home from work early today to find that her home had been burglarized. Missing were two portable television sets worth $100 each. Police theorized that glass cutters had been used to enter the front window. Bazaar Bake Sale: Cooley School, Sat. 1 to 5"p.m. Sponsored by Drayton Woods Women’s Club. ' —Adv. Christmas Bazaar, North Hill Farms, Senior Citizens, Cherry Hill Rd. off W. Kennett, NOv. 22, 10^. -Adv. Rummage Sale every Fri. and Sat., New Hope Baptist Church, 392 Bloomfield, 9 a.m. until ? -Adv. Rummage Sale. Our Lady of the Lakes. Dixie Hwy. Sat., Nov. 22, 9 a.m. till 12 noon. —Adv. Satellite Will Link Outposts CAPE KENNEDY, Fla. Ex-Fireman k Dismissed like in the $15.8-million school for 3,000 students. Douglas Drive, Bloomfield Hills; age 91; beloved husband of Mrs. Olga Heberlein; dear father of Mrs. Lee Tanner; also Survived by one brother in Germany and four grandchildren. Funeral service will be held Saturday, November 22, at 11 a.m. at the Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home. Cremation at White Chapel Cemetery. Mr. Heberlein will lie in state at the funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 and 7 to 9.) fo/mer Pontiac fireman yester-™ students also were concerned day after the c o m p 11 n i n g, _ designers have about the monotony of a school witness said he was unable to As a result, oesigners nave sueeested variations in iriake a positive identification. eliminated study halls in the ^ thelKELLY, NELLIE M.; Judge Alice L. Gilbert of the conceptual Pjans >n favor ^ j ^grei November 20, 1969 ; 31 West 48th District Court dismissed student lounge areas. “ested in doing things to! Burdick St., Oxford; age 82. the complainant, David Gilbert RESEARCH IDEA ^ gg gugh as paint- Funeral service will be Iield 33, on the recommendation of j^inda Heiserman, an j„g ^j,em and putting up posters. Oakland Cwnty A s s i s t a n t representative Who The students also suggested Prosecutor Edward ^sntek. 'talked to the students, said she larger mirrors in the ■_ came up with the “student-con-bathrooms, larger and more '^ben doinggecure lockers and private oMS^NSway S than large SIm ToSr toor ule stZ: anct educational practices. ^ ^d^halls^^_______________________________ at the start of Tibbetts she said^the students seemed. jhi'^atv°^i'’pom'ac' preliminary court examination ^ ^ ------ ------------- By LAURA WHEELER Enchant everyone with fairytale trees. Superb gifts! Fabulous INSTANT TREES—19” Sculpture Tree has crystal drops, bells or ball trim, 22” Elegant Tree of brocade has lights. Pattern 641: pattern pieces, graph. Saturday, November 22, at 2 p.m. at the Bossardet Funeral Home, Oxford. Interment in| Oxford Cemetery. Mrs. Kelly! will lie in state at the funeral! home. I Fifty cents in coins for each pattern — add 15 cents for each pattern for 1st-class mailing and special handling. Send to Laura Wheeler, The Pontiac Press, 124 Needlecraft Dept., Box 161, Old Chelsea Station, New York, N.Y. 10011. Print Pattern Number, Name, Address, Zip. New dramatic 1970 Needlecraft Catalog-inspiration on every page! Over 200 designs, 3 free patterns! Dresses, jackets, accessories to knit, crochet . . . quilts, toys, afghans, embroidery, sewing, weaving. Only 50 cents. the following three (3) garbage GMC model VH-5011, engine 9:00x20, single rear Leach packer P-17. City equipment . 1964 GMC model VH-5011, e , tires «;25x20, single rear irwood packer LP-618. City « Leach packer P-17. City equipment Thes?°vehlcle5 ere being sold ^ Tibbetts of 19 N. Tasminia: standpoint of athletic com-was arrested Nov. 13 when he petition. ^ ^ ^ appeared at a civil service com- , u -i., oinv mission hearing in Pontiac to There enough - appea his dismissal from the “eiween lun u„ sealed bids win be tl?e department, [High Sehenls nnw^ It W»M te g * * * (too much if there were IWOj^,^^ Envelope,should be He was fired Oct. 30 by Chief teams in the same building, TvSes*”'*? be Vn^^ Charles Marion for “conduct said,one of the Central stu ents p.p^.w. i^s^.^vard^^^^^ *su«essiui bw- unbecoming an officer,” after i who toured the architectural Uers^wiii^M^^^ being charged with possessing! firm’s offices yesterday. Uerves the ngh, to accept or reiect .ny marijuana. Tibbetts had been a I The decision on the two-i • floyd p. smith fireman 12 years. I schools in-one-building concept The marijuana charge is still | rests however on the district s pending against him in Pontiac District Court. Nov. 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, Car Hits Pupil Departing Bus A 12-year-old girl, hit by a car after stepping off her school bus yesterday morning, is in fair Junior Miss Contest Near INVITATION FOR BIDS ^ ^ Sealed Proposals will be received by I the Board of Education, Rochester Community Schools, Rochester, Michigan until 2:00 P.M., E.S.T. December 1, 1969 lor the Sewage Retention Tanks and related work lor Rochester-Adams High School, Rochester, Michigan, in accord lance nr«. pared ' the Office of the Archi O'Dell, Hewlett 8, Luckenbach, Architects, Engir and Planners. North Hunter Boulevard, Bltihingham, Twelve area senior high: bidder for particular $40.00 lor the two school girls will compete for the Proposals shall be submitted forms provided by the Archi-‘ >ed in sealed envelopes the name of the enclosed with the ______ . . 1 of the work, and shall fo the Offices of the F Education. Administrative Office MORSE, HARRIET E.; November 20, 1969; 8 5 Doremus, Waterford Twp.; age 62; dear mother of Mrs. Colby (Joyce M.) Little, Mrs. Leo (Phyllis E.) Vaillancourt, Mrs. Douglas (Shirley A.) Lintz, Mrs. Herbert (Martha J.) Gay, Claude J. and Willard 0. Morse; dear sister of Mrs. Margaret Warner; also survived by 20 grandchildren and nine great-grandchildren. Recitation of the Rosary will be tonight, at 7:30 at the C. J. Godhardt Funeral Home, Keego Harbor. Funeral service will be held Saturday, November 22, at 9:15 a.m. from the funeral home to St. Michael’s Catholic Church at I 10 a.m. Interment in Roseland Park Cemetery, Berkley. Mrs. Morse will lie in state at the funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 and 7 to 9.) 50 INSTANT Gifts-Fashions, accessories, toys. Send 50 cents. Book of 16 Jiffy Rugs to knit, crochet, sew, weave, hook. 50 cents. Book of 12 Prize Afghans. 50 cents. Book No. 1 — 16 Superb Quilts. 50 cents. Book No. 2 — Museum Quilts—12 rare, outstanding quilts. 50 cents. Book No. 3—Quilts for Today’s Living. 15 unique quilts. 50 cents. PRINTED PATTERN condition today at Pontiac title of Pontiac 1970 Junior Miss mari Creneral Hospital, suffering a at 8 p.m. tomorrow at Pontiac fractured pelvis and leg. Northern High School. w?icox, Rochester Paulette Ashbaugh, 12, of 9283' The pageant is sponsored byi^.J^';*,„Bo|rd^,qf^^educaji Steep Hollow, White L a k e the Pontiac Jaycees. Judging is a®'^"’; Township, was struck at M.59 based on scholastic ability, irregular and Sunny Beach, White Lake poise and appearance, physical a" mam Township, by a car county fitness and creative a n d scho^DL,.... of education sheriff’s deputies said was performing arts. R oc he?ter _C om mo n i t y _ Schoo t s bids, fo award than the low all alternates, d or informali-aeneral to make the award in led by It, in its sole dis-the best interest of the SCOTT, HARRY C.; November 19, 1969; 1516 Hummer Lake Rd., Ortonville; age 75; dear brother of Mrs. Martha Dixon, Charles and Bradley Scott. Funeral service will be held Saturday, November 22, at 1 p.m. at the C. F. Sherman Funeral Home, 135 South St., Ortonville, with Rev. Horace Murray officiating. Interment in White Chapel Cemetery, Troy. Mr. Scott will lie in state at the funeral home. of 65 Pinewood, Pontiac. No, The winner of the contest will charges were deputies said charges were made in the case, receive approximately $250 in ............ scholarships and be eligible to Ueatn iNOTlCeS CORRECTION The Ad for KITCHENS LIFE and BATH CENTERS 110 PONTIAC MALL OFFICE BUILDING publistred in T(ie Pontiac Press Ihurs., Nov. 20t(i, sliould have listed the hours as follows , . . OPEN Thur., Fri. 'til 9:00 P.M. THIS SUNDAY 12 NOON TO 6 P.M. The Pontiac PresH participate in the Michigan Junior Miss regional competition in Holly, Dec, 12 and 13. The first runner-up w i 11 receive $100 in scholarships. Tickets will be available at the door. Tools Stolen From Auto STEARNS, RUBY D.; November 20, 1969 ; 517 E. Pike St.; age 74; dear mother of Mrs. Francis J. Mansfield; also survived by two g r a n d c h i Idren. Funeral service will be held Monday, November 24, at 11 a m. at the Donelson-Johns Funeral; Home. Interment in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery. I Mrs. Stearns will lie in state' at the funeral home after 7; o’clock tonight. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 and 7 to] BOWEN, JEFFREY RAY November 20, 1969>—SklO Alpena; beloved Inf^t son of! Donald E. and Margaret Bowen; beloved infant grandson of Mrs. Lucille, Bovia, Donald 0. Bowen, Mrs. Mary Starr and William] Douglas; beloved infant great-i grandson of Mr. and Mrs.j (Charles Monger, Mr. and Mrs. Perry Latham, James] S. Douglas and Mrs. Gladys, Dorthey; beloved infant great-, THOMPSON. RAYMOND D.! SIZES 2-10 A $200 set of tools was stolen ; from a car left temporarily on the shoulder of M24 near 1-75 in Pontiac Township early today, 1 aceWing/ to Oakland County | ^Sheriff’s deputies. / , John Samson of 8451 Bobinwood, Pontjac Township, told deputies that he was | traveling to Pontiac Generali Hospital to pick up a friend], when his car broke down. great-grandson of Mr. and Mrs. Ervin Rives; dear brother of Keith E. Bowen. F'uneral service will be held Saturday, November 22, at 11 a m. at the Voorhees-Siple Funeral Home with Rev. Bruce Benson officiating. Interment in Perry Mount Park Cemetery. Jeffrey will lie in state at the funeral home. (Suggested v i s,i t i n g hours 3 to 5 and 7 to 9. ) C0NSTIPATED7 ■ jDUC TO UCK OF FOOD ' ■ULtUNyOURDIET I Samson left' the ear, called I another friend to pick up the |ho.spital patient and returned to (his own car, only to find that someone had ransacked the car 2rl|I.RPiN* and stolen the tool kit, ac-irnuiinnil I wording to deputies. CHADEK, JOSEPHINE MARY; November 19, 1969; 280 0 Airport Rd., Drayton Plams; age 67; beloved wife \ of Ahrens T. ' Chadek; dear mother of Mrs; David (Betty) Fulkerson, Mrs. William (Donna) Ford, Mrs. Virgil (Audrey) Allen, Mrs. Marvini (BUD); November 19, 3097 Lincolnview, Auburn] Heights; age 44; beloved; husband of Genevieve Thompson; beloved son of Lucille ,Thompson; dear father of Mrs. itaren Tioraij, Mark, penise and Shari; dear brother of Mrs. Betty Janfe Tripp. Funeral service will be held Saturday, November 22, at 1:30 p.m. at the Auburn Heights United Presbyterian Church, Interment in Aaron Webster Cemetery, Auburn Heights. Mr. Thompson will fie in state at the Harold R. Davis Funeral Home, Aubutn Heights. (Suggeste^d visitiijp* hours 3 to 5 and 7\to 9.) The family suggests memorial contributions to the Auburn Heights Bey’s Chib. By ANNE ADAMS Little girls have all the fun and fashion in thjs brisk, shirt-iook skimmer! Lots of pretty details — collar, tab front, teeny pocket to sew in same or contrast fabric. ★ . -til Printed pattern 4913: NEW Children’s Sizbs 2, 4, 6, 8, 10. Size ,6 takes 1% yards 4 5 - i n c h . Sixty-five cents in coins for each paL tern — add 15 cents for each pattern for first-class mailing and special handling, ^nd to itane Adams, care ibf The oPntlac Press, 137\ f attem Dek, 243 West mh k. New Y^k N.Y. lOol .’ -Print NAME, ADDRES3 with ZIP, SIZE and STYLE NUMBER. ■j i/' .1, At 10 a.m. twiay thara wara rapliai at Tlia Frail Oilics in tha following baxail# C-3, C.«, C-9. C-10, (%27, C-32, C-S3, C-34, C-35, (’-40. "AVON CAU.INO". For «trvlci In your twmo, FE 4-04)». ARLEN STRONO NOW~ working at Albort'i Suburban Hair Faahlon>, 6744477. DELICIOUS homemade plai and cakat, to ralta monoy lor church. Phono In qrdori. 674-1446. FREE WIO, In llmo'for ChrUlmai, teok your porly now. Top gualliy, loVMit pricn. M3-36S1. ^ LOSE'WEIGHT safely'with Drx-AOIol Tibloti. Only 98 cenli SImm'i Bros^ Drugi. STUOENts 'to attond" Harvest Hop. Wallod Lika Control High School, foaturing Frigid Pink and Hawk. WIGS' AND HAIRPIECES' dona In my homa, vary reai^ 673-SB69. Funaral birktors 4 C. J. GODHARDT FUNERAL HOME Katgo Harbor, PH. 683-o:0(l. COATS FUNERAL HOME DRAYTON PLAINS 674j446l DONELSON-JOHNS FUNERAL HOME 155 W. (Huron Ponllac_ 334-4511 Huntoon FUNERAL HOME Ay^ PK SPARKS-GRIFFIN FUNERAL HOME '■Theughttul Sorvlce" FE 8-9JII VoorheesSiple Cematary Lott 3 CEMETERY LOTS, Whllo Chapal, religion l)h^l«._33^38, S1J FOR GIVING Park Lana Jewelry Parly. Earn S50 or more. For dclalli call Mrs. Woody. 33B-0991. DEBT CONSULTANTS 338-0333 A True fact about the Mlllogo thit column Saturday. Pros Wotorlord, Drayton area. 673-7311 FULLER BRUSH ■ itarlord, T J74-11oi._ FOR PE ACE 'OF^ your family biblo. 334- 1094. FREE WIG, WIG PARTIES, WIgland, 33S-706B or 674.4423. HEALTH SPA MEMBERSHIP, taka over paynnonti. FE 4.3063._ Mr. and Mrs. Homeowner you can get a tst or 2nd gaga on you- " 1 at 334-3267. mortgaga on your homa. Call ON AND AFTER THIS 1969, I will not PERMANENT M E Holiday Haaltr discount, taka Lost and Found kUBURN E. Blvd. area. A black and white short haired male cat. Gold chain collar and flea collA. 335-3413. ___________________________ WMa Track, P.O. Box FOUND BROWN MALE dog, approximately 6 mo. old on Airport Rd. Has collar. 674-2914. __ FOUND: YOUNG gray shaggy female dog. In Union Lako area. Rd. Call altar 5 p.m. 682- FOUND: PUPPY, RUST color, Orchard Subdivision. LOST: fox 1 back head. Tatto In old, lost'on Adams Rd, bet. Bir-mtngham and Oxford. EL 7-2C38. LO'ST"DbG, BRITTANY, brown arid white, lost In the vicinity of SashabaW and Walton, last Sunday. Reward. 673-5137._________________ taken, male beagle, M-24 .............I Sub. Please LOST Reward. 3»1-167t. LOST, STRAYED, OR atolan, black mart pony, 4 white foot, Shetland, little girls r ' -------- — LOST: Small black of Northern High please call FE 5-3719. .OST: FEMALE GEI shepherd, black and tan, of Middle Stralti Lake, LOST: German or 673-1033. NEED SOME EXTRA CHRISTMAS MONEY? 5 chtidren are willing to give up their Chrlstmet savings lor Information which will get them their dog back. Please call It you know of lomaona who recently hat added a sllvar^ray-black Norwegian femalt Elkhound to their yard. Dog want astray with chain dragging In vicinity or Orlon- Adams-Clarkston roads. leather collar, curled up toil. In- formation will SETTER FEMALE, Recreation area, white and ticked, one tide of head 2, A-t ROUGH Corpenlors : familiar with layout of hip roof. Apply In person at |ob sight. >050 Bridge Lake Rd., Clarkston, Mich, aOtomotiVe parts assistant Buick G,M. Price, parts BUICK • OPEL, GRIMALDI ALERTa AMBTTIOUI PERSON to train In pertonnal intervitwlng. Thl» \i AUTO DEALER IN WATE^ORD has opening lor portor In now cor daporlmont, must ho depandabit. ply In parsoni Milan Garich, DIxjaJI accountant, capable / parcanlagt of work dona,/Your In- ' aio'S, Press, Box M5,_______' _ aTgoressive young company desires axparloncad shippini receiving man, Opporiunlt advancement and bans'"' * larvlaw, 'call 634-4011), unl^ AHENTION LES ALL SALESMEN It you havt tha ability and desire for. Buying, Sailing or Trading real astala. wa will glltr you the op-porlunlly to make above average . earnings, call Mr. Badora ar Mr. iOeoc(|a, 674-4KU. , Pontiac Press ' Want Ads For Action ASSISTANT TO Ifl. die&s nbnt nnd ■vnllAblff work ImmediAtnly. CALL K itniy. Vbnehus. 335-61U btforc 4 thru FrI. APPLIANCE SALESMAN, top cor mUilon, paid vacailon. holiday aicK pay, Groiip Ufa and madic iiurance. Employaa plicouni Excellani chanca vancamantis ihould satai axpari Grant*, 7100 Coolay Lika Rd. Activb Builderll FHA approval coat houaas. Excallant op- MR. ARTHUR 1-399-5550 Body Man rienced, Must Hava tools, ask Oakland Ava. (Apply In Parson Bartender Experiancad show man for ant, serving quality Bloomfield cllanit of Birmingham Full r person shift, apply }r call Machus Rad Fo: Ttlagraph Rd., 626-4',{00 BOY WITH CAR Must have talent toward sales and future - management position. A personality a must for customer contact work. Work altar school winters or full time summers. 12.So For Interview call 4-S p.m. daily, 335-S907. BA'RtENDER." FRIDAY " Saturday night, 707 Lounga^ 352 E. BOYS-MEN 18 OR OVER INTERVIEW WORK Increase after 4 weeks. The :o„ Inc. For app't. call from 9 a.m.-l p.m.. 335-SI 70 DETROIT 1-962-434S Richard's Co., Mr. Baili PONTIAC COLLECTOR FOR MORTGAGE department of Land company, SS50 month, plus. Phone 623-1333. Mrs. on Highland Rd. for lease. Palu training and exc. opportunity tor further advancement. For more information Call Jerry EddS, UJ-7222, aft. 5, 271-3524. CREDIT Large national wholesaler looking 1 divisional credit manager. preferred. Send complete resume salary requirements , Box C-17. • _ wnfldence CHEF'S HELPER, young terested In food service profession, earn while you learn. Bloomfield Canopy^ 626-J587._ _ _ COOK- B R 01 L E R , part time, weekends, experienced, apply in person, or call Machus Red Fox, J5 MllejlM'«'®fl^lP!‘J?«' i?.6-4200. CREDIT MAN charge credit dept. lor salary, new oper Shaw's Jewelry.______ COMMERCIAL INOUSTRTaL "tire Company, 3994 M-15, Clarkston. Wanted tire salesman for county area. Very good opportunity. Lift truck tires, and off road tires. Commission, and expenses. Phone_625-5950. _ DELIVERY AAAN: M9rnlngs,“RAon.-Fri, Chauffeur's license. Perry Pharmacy, 1245 Baldwin. bRiVERS, WIPERS, part’ time,'full and lathe operators. 2242 S. Telegraph, Pontiac. EXPERIENCED A C E t Y L E N E TORCH MAN, part tima or full. Call FE 5-8141. ELECTRICIAN UTILITY CITY OF PONTIAC machine operators. C r a s GENERAL SHOP HELP variety unskilled factory - house work available, previous experience required. PAYDAY EVERY DAY AT END OF SHIFT FREE TRANSPORTATION IN C WORK WAGON TO AND FROM PONTIAC Call 585-1990 for WORK WAGON schedul* and route Or report ready for work EMPLOYERS Temporory Service, Inc. FERNDAL6 2330 Hilton Rd. REDFORO 25165 Grand River CLAWSON 45 S. Main CENTER LINE " ■ " ...... 1561 E. 10 Mila NOT AN EMPLOYMENT AGENCY ALL JOBS ARE FREE H 'lp Wanted Male 6 For Wont Adt Dial 334-4961 Help Wanted Male FIBEROIASS Bi assembtv opera work, BFlllth'At'ifvf i*.ge>t < ■ ^ M Corp. 1669 Hamlin Rd., Rocheste* FULL TIME MAINTENANCE man, for verled work. ept. complexes, cell 338 1606 or 338-2555. GAS ' STATIOI^ Attendant, .ex-perienced, mechanically Incllrtad, local refarancei. full or part Mine, Gulf. Telegraph and Meple, OAS STATION -.. EXPERIENCIO ' lubrication man, . r haur. Also, ‘ and wrack.br driver, tl75 I t3.S0 to 92.75 per i Shell Service, Meple i lahier, Birmingham. GRINDERS, tor production work," Fernlaa, Mich. Outside. Woui^ prerar xpericnea. Full time, U S. Olasi Inc., 588 S. Woodward, Birmingham. 544-4181. GRINNELL'S HAS < ply at Grinnell's, Pontiac Mall.^^ HELP 'wanted for I I uTl manuleclurlng llrm. A^^y ^Birm- ingham Hydraullca, 167S E, Maple. IMMEDIATE OPENINGS tn.200 Minimum It quelllled RETAIL STORE MANAGERS MANAGER TRAINEES MANUFACTURING REP. SALESMEN Nallonwide appliance company, with challenging, and rewarding positions, opening in this area, needs aggressive neat appearing, sell-starting Individual, to earn lop salary and bonusei. Along with many other company fringe bene-Ills. Strong sales background necessary. For conlldentlal Interview, call 729 4612. ____ JANITOR Pert time afternoons > experience necessary JANET DAVIS CLEANERS management teem" Burger King "HOME OF THE WHOPPER” This dynamic rapidly growing cereiy motivated persons. perlenced or Inexperienced food service field. "Assistant Store Management career opportunity. Southfield. Mich. 48075^ Job Opportunity An ell reliable Insurance Co. Wanli ambitious salesmen, age 21 through 55. Starting salary, 1150 per wk. Cell_681-J0)ff^_____________ LATHE OPERATOR, experienced onjy, small shop, good pay. 426- Orchard Lake Rd., Keego Har^r_________________ MEN WANTED alrcralt, apply Aero-Oynemlcs Pontiac Airport. See Bill Yilei. Must be 18 «r over.____________ MECHANICS To assemble machinery, electrical wiring 8, panel experience desirable, all benefits. THORESON-MCCOSH INC. 682-4SI0 A6ARRIED MAN, vyondcrful business opporluntly lor on the lob training an insurance salesman. We will train and assist you In every way, salary S150 per weak first month, SI60 per week second month, Sl7g per week third month. Income unlimited alter third month. Cell Mr. Cootm, 674-2358.________ MACHINE OPERATORS, some experience on Lathes, Turret lathes, and mills, will train. Apply el 3f1 E. Wilson, Pontiac. 334-0919. man' wanted for BIjiLDiNO materials warehouse, good opportunity for advancement, apply Saginaw, Pontiac. ■ MILL OPERATOR Second shift only. Top rit$ fringes, steady non s • ■ s ayment. Apply In persi PYLES INDUSTRIES Wixom, Mich. Equal opportunity employer Men Minimum National Corporation Is hiring men to till vacancies, cregled by promotions, In its promotional advertising program, only those who can start immedletely may apply. ■ QUALIFICATIONS 1. High School Graduate Athletically or politically dined. 3. Able to converse I Salary $162.50 per wk. FOR PERSONAL INTERVIEW CALL MR. TOTH. 332-3639 derground' vegetablt Proeduct Draftsman, Machine Detail-Layout Development Projects Top Salary, Plus Overtime Excellent Fringe Benefits Contact Mr. Horry Egleston, Chief Engineer at 961-5774 or 624-4581 American Paper Bottle Co. 850 LADD RD„ WALLED LAKE Subsidiary rxLo! Equal Opportunity Employar Help Wanted Male IMMEDIATE OPEN/INGS For Welders and welder'^s helpers, experience in itrue- ’ turol steel fabrication. Top wages ond fringe benefifi. Contact H. F. Buckley or Robert Ruggles at: RAPIST AN, Inc. 22223 Telegraph ) 'Southfield, Mich. I 353-0950 For Wont Ads Diol 334-4981 TIIK rONTIAC I’UMSS. FIUDAV, NOV'EMHKH 2J. Hxin I)~« Hilp Wantiil Mdl* MACHINE AND AUTOMATION 6 Hilp Wanltd Mala WANTED ASSEMBtER* TRUCK MECHANICS vtriiMi Mlli'Dtiaii sptciaiiii Gos or jdissel. Liberal pay,, loiid. insurance furnished, retire- anga program ot grWjh and now >^6nt and full benefits. See bSi\nd*‘'oprn'i.ia.'WJd* ^r. Coe, 8 a^m. ta 4:30 p.m. Sr' An*^'!,., "o^PoMCnlt? GMG Female 7 Help Wonted M. er F. 8 Employment Agenciot 9 Wonted Real Estate 36 Wonted Real Estate fxc«M#nt opportunifiti f»il_moy|ng company of gra anlla opporlunlllai tor vancamanl. Good pay and larllma, An aqual opportunity - ?uYpE CORPORATION Subildary ol Chicago Pneumatic Tool 1100 W. Mania Rd.i Troy aaO SSOo NEW AND USED CAR SALESMEN, EXPERIENCED Apply: Keego Sales Service 3000 ORCHARD LAKE RD. _ KEEGO HARBOR NEED A GOOD MECHANIC to work dayt, mu»t ba able to road Bcopa, alio driveway lalasman, malura, call Mr. SIroup, 682- _P_raia,_Jo»j CASHIER TELE-TRAY OPWATOR CURB GIRLS ! KITCHEN HELP lima, mala and lamala. duilrlal building, Rochaslar, area, good pay and working condlilnna, paid hoapllalliallon. Call 1-121-9280,' ditloning larvica fralneea. electrical axperlance requli Na^ Co., M-34, Oxtord. Truck Center Oakland at Cass I FE 5-9485 An equal oppoMunlty employer I WANTED: ‘ USED CAR porter tor I Ford dealer. Prater older man with axparlenca. Pal Jarvit, 651-I 2506. McKenila Ford, Rochealar. .WELDERS-STAINLESS slael, ax-1 I perlanced dealred, a x c a 11 a n t I alartlng aalary and fringaa, Walmll 1 Co., 1025 E. Maple, Troy. _ WOOL PRESSER" FOR quallly part lime, good ■ ■ ! I COMPANION, light houaakaaping MAIDS WANTED lor motel work iCUSTODIANS ALL SHIFTS, lull and and cooking lor our aldarlyi 324 2592 , part lima, mala and lamala, Ih mpfh«r, to Tlv« with hor In htr AiiAiLiAr»CD wk. WritA PontlAC fVlANAGcR - - - for large alteration dept. , Must hove extensive back-=SSn^ TO?,'m&, ground in sewing ond fit- ( ilHQ. 50m6 monaQifiriOl 6X* ma/iAOBr of apArtmRnt compitx In perience preferred. Ja^'linci In^^irimlnl m»Ma‘n»nc. For evening ahlll. All banallla. CHUDIKS OF BIRMINGHAM ,T''a«c'‘e”ltlnl »lSrv oru? aoLu Good wage., A^Pfij^at: | Ml 7-1300, Mrs. Zetye i 'f n«*M^ _ Drx'i?H“w°y"2'.!iitr“?kn^d :«rv^^,;>Tfx*;'o“^,orrai v COSMETICIAN I t^rbelf”'"" '^|'^^%^"11"?Jmlno«'*‘-N'ur.ln^ Experlenc.do^w^ha|o--»>.^orr^, \uRSES AIDES INDUSTRIAL SALES' FEE PAID TO 50 f nI E "perlanced ahitia, mual have own tranaporta lion. Union Lake area, EM 3-4121 P E N N VR icH I NT E R N AT I ON I NC. Hava opanlnga tor dlatrlbutora li tell the fabulous Pennyrich brat Small invettment, high aarningi _474-05». R ECE PT ION 1ST N E E0ED O R I leading aircraft dealer working conditions. MA 6 7207, 6570 B R b'E rX Y~N E F n F r» - F n D' ......... Iranaporling pallonta to and Irom '^OUNG MAN with aomb painting phyalcal tbarapy department at w"h contractor. 673- Ponllac Ganeral Hoapital. Fulli.-"": -timo or V5 da^i, 338-4711, axl. 361. PARTS clerk and alao porter NEEDED, car daalarahip ... perlonca prelarrad. APPLY PON- - . TiAc KEEGO SALES I. SERVICE, Helo Wanted Female KEEGO HARBOR. ""'I* rgnaaiiw Salarv "'m 62o”i1i'oh’'nlua llbarali P‘C«»>»TV-*'^Ayp'ly*Xn"°person?*3^ h Bowl, 100 S, daaa Lako Rd, _ EXCLUSIVE LADY'S BOUTI- lourneyman plumbers license. Apply Personnel Office, 450 Wide Track Pr. E._____ _ PRODUCTION welders' Commercial Industrial TIra Co., corner of Oakhlll Rd. and Orton- ____^Rd. Part time mornings, many am-ployea benefits. Apply In person 9;30 to 9:30. ROBERT HALL CLOTHES 37to Ro^ester Rd. Troy, Mich. REAL ESTATE SALESMEN ' A COLOSSAL OPPORTUNITY! Commercial, Investment, business opportunities and tend. Over two hundred million dollars In listings. The only non-resldential multiple listing and selling service of its kind In the U.S. publishers of the QUE NEEDS MATURE MANAGER Apogee Internationol Inc. Savoy Lanes and Lounge, 130 S. Telegraph Rd.________________ A WAITRESS, FULL or part tirne', 18 or over, apply in person, Joe's Drayton Plains area. Ref, Thrifty Drug, Mr. Ounsky, 141 Saginaw. CLERK TYPIST GknbrtI ottict Work, Include! tiling, end working with llgures Good typing ipeed required. Hre. 8:30-, - 5:30, 5 dey wk. Paid hoipllelliellon FE 2-5B46._ and vacation. Phone J38-9681 tor RESPONSIBLE OIRL^to baby appointmant. ------- JPONTIAC SERVICE BUREAU INC. CASHViTr for part time only." Kuhn Aulo Waih—149 W. Huron CLEANING woman I^OR 'ajoarlmeni complex In Rocheiter, 5 days, calli Ing, will train. Detroit Piper Salei between 12 end 6 PM, 65I-4200. I and Service, 674-2203. Cell tor f-ACUiCD Interview appointment. _ rcMPpiV noFirF REAL ESTATE OFFICE eecretbry". t I, ®BNERAL office AAust know ihorthand, typing. Full time permonont position tor bookkeeping, and general ottice woman experienced In meeting ----.- --..T'---...“j _ ---------- public. Some light typing and bookkeeping. Benetits Include: paid Blue Cross, llte Insurance, and 31 ii protIt sharing. Phone 332 0141 or ^ g “'"’'sHIFFREN WILLENS 1 perleSce^ in"'^ MIRACLE MILE orthopedic ottice details. North CURB-blRLsn^BR- Jeynb" night ...'^??^'¥?''?_«':ee,.no Set, shift, apply In person Blue Starr SHORT ORDER COOK, Drive-ln, corner ol Opdyke 8,, nights. Apply after II iV^d in call, generous liberal personal LABORATORY TECHNOLOGIST, progressive 60 I hospital. Some starting salary, policies. Ceil J. Lrery, Administrator. Hubbard Hospital, " ' *MAKE MONEY IN YOUR SPARE TIME If you have 2 hrs. a day to spare from your home, we train, 674-_j4259. SHORT ORDER COOKS botenlol IS SMklno exp saresm.n HOMES, LOTS, ACR mlr 'n to PARCELS, FARMS, Bl _ _ wLsrv U KnlmT r.l?' PROPERTIES, AND LAND CON-llonar Personnel 68!-n 1M0 v! i TRACTS, URGENTLY NEEDED Hume ’ FOR IMMEDIATE SALEI MEDICAL RECtPTIONfST will train pleasant person to make Pontiac Dally 'III appointment, greal clients. ___ MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE BUYER WITH CASH wanls 3 2 or bedroom Pontiac arti WOobi' Dave^ .^ Snelling 8. Snetling. MANAGEMENT $450 - $800 immediate openings for man, exp. and Inexparienced. E; positions leading to tIS.OOO Call International Personn, . ...... ......... 1100, toBO'W Huron. Wa Sold Your Neighbor's Home PEOPLE GREETERS w.okd.y," mm*,‘'su^.y lo IN OAKLAND COUNTY CALL AGENT, 674-1698 or 338-6993. I W'ii Buy Your House 361 Wanted Real iitate 36 thI Thinking of Selling? ME, , CALL KELLER Representing SELLER 681-1B33 CASH NOW ‘otn or -acreage io support our am argmg^ bulldlny^ It** *^**^3342' 7*1^ MOVE LATER Casn^ Investment Co. COUPLE WITH 85,000 down desires 3'bedroom home' lo Waterford area. Agent OR 4-1649. 338-6991 CASH ^ FOR YOUR HOME Inexperienced. Executive PROMPT, COURTEOUS SERVICE leading to 815,000 a year. RRIAN RFAITY International Personnel. 601 DKIMN KtALIT Muitipra Listing Sar 333-7824 8. Son Realtors.'674-03M. ' WANTED; A house with qiil , Possession, can pay cih. MARK 332-01W LOTS WANTED IN PONTIAC - WANTED, 2 OR 1 bedroom Immediate closing. REAL VALUE, contract. Lai REALTY* 642-4220. ! 673,2168. NEEDED INCOME Of NEED A HOME WITH anywhen Fun lob $70 UP ,5280 Dixie Hwy. J'(\702 PAY CASH AND Avoid foreclosure,1 I call agent 674-1445. Top wages, good working con-1 charm dttions, Tiospllallzatlon, _apply _lnl busy spot with top company. Call International Personnel, 6BM100, 1080 W. Huron. RECEPTIONIST.'Take charge ...— . ‘ lent! Sparkling Call Sherri Br for YOUR EQUITY talenti Sparkling gall parson only. Steak & Eggs, 5395 334-2471, Snelling & Snelling. .Aw? Hwy,, w.teriord, SECRETARY-BOOKKEEPERS Ward E. or Garyi Idge Real Estate, Huron St./ Pontiac, 681-1 7-2640. School Crossing Guards $450 - Must have International UP FEE PAID good skills. Call Personnel, 68MI00, 674-0319 ^ Lauinger 673 2)68; ELDERLY COUPLE NEEDS home near^Mall. Cash. Agent, 338-6993, FREE APPRAISALS COMPLIMENTS OF LAUINGER -0319 6/4 0880, INVESTOR ' WANTS HOME' --‘ anyj condition, any location, top dollar,! LG ST R 0/« Apartmants, Furnlihtd 37 I EFFICIENCY APARTMENT, 16Jt Playsfed, off Cooley Lake Rd., call ' _682-4333 for apiwlntmenf. BEDROOM ‘ apartment, up Stairs, share bath, 1 child welcome, $25 per wk., deposit required. in Ponflac. 332-8866. BIG 3 ROOM and bath, utllNlea Included, all private. $40 wk. plus deposit. 602 4244. I BEDROOM ON PONTIAC Lakir, carpel, air, laundry, $130, couple. Pontiac Rd. ($3.00 PER HOUR) M. 363-1 Al various locations and ichools In I tha City of Birmingham. Ap proximately ten hours per week elderly lady. weekends arranged, more tor nome, some wages, 332-8747. _ Attention Young Women 10-25 Local national firm now hiring young women lor pleasant, person Interview work. We train at our expenst. Must have pleasing narsonallty and be able to start immediate employment. Excellent earning lor those who qualify. No typing required. For Interview call jyir, Pelws belore 2 p.m. 335-6115. ALTERATIDN LADY experrenced In apparel, Long Lake Rd. Hon after 6 p.m. call DR 4-0358. , __ CDDK. Ekperlancad, nights, ax«ll«m I wages and working conditions,jSEfRETARY STENO, lor short order, apply In parson or call (I'?' consists ol diet, 363-9469. Duffy's, Union Lake. IVPlnS' talaphone answering HTRKsfoTXaopi------------------- n'Hce routine. 3 day : A TELEPHONE’lfRL I ?'.'[eTrSSh' nSS^'Tong ’’*1iti‘?t* 4 6”t,ouri* ™r‘’'d«''‘’“r»'l‘! 'Of »PP'- BaVbara?*:3no lS?5o iZ., 6;" AUTOMATION & ,the'^bS''^^r^L‘"''- ba over 20, preferably experienced,!-----'T”E AENDIX_CORP.1 good money, for right person, must, SALES DEMO to show the top brand transportation. Union' of small appliances, part time. In - -* retail stores, 2 to 4 days per Nov. & Dec. Top pay. Call Personnel Depart- jrn^. ______ _ WATERFORD TOWNSHIP Schools had immediate openings for relief and part time bus drivers. Apply 1020 Pontiac Lk. Rd. firm. Woweel $400. Call Ann Carter. 334-2471, Snelling 8. Snell-[ng. SERVICE TECHNICIAN Electrical and or mechanical background In school or military qualifies you for numerous openings in suburban area. Call international Personnel, 681-1100, J080 W. Huron. SALES REPRESENTATIVE $600 - UP FEE PAID Excellent opportunity with fast immediate cash For homes In Oakland County, points, no commission, stay up l( months, cash in 24i hours. NINCS FE 4 7005. WE! WILL! BUY! Your eqully cash direct to you as soon as title work is ordered and deal is closed. No gimmicks' Call now and anyone of our courteous appraisers will Remember, may make you a better purchase WHEN YOU SEEK OUR SERVICE 2 OR 3 ROOM, DEPOSIT required. 15 minutes, today welcome, 264 JOIN THE MARCH TO TIMES" YDT^V ' Times Realty X V..X-L LJL^^ 5890 dixie HIGHWAY n, 673-9031. ROOM furnished apartment, $20 near Fisher Body, 79 CALL AGENT Headquarters for i gentlemi 332-0126 INDEPENDENT INVESTORS INC. I garage. per month, part time dur- benefit Ing training Period For per- Personnel,''6Bl-l’lbbi 16so W. Huro“n!l sonal Interview call 65’ ' - TYPIST. Got ambition? Great Soles Help Male-Female 8-A machin*. Call Mrs. RItmastar at year. Sat your own limit on this ladder to dynamic success. All inquiries strictly conlidenllai. Ask lor Gary or Ward E. Partridge, 1050 W. Huron St., Phone 661-2111. ______________ IeRVICE STAflON ATTENbANT, alert AMBITIOUS needed, no experience necessary to in personnel IhlervI work 1st shift. Apply In person, career position with unusual Square Lk. 8, .Telegraph, Standard ing potential I Adams <■ Adams itbek BOY AND porter. Apply In parson, WKC, 108 N. Saginaw. IeRVICE sfATION, gas pumpers, days, full time, caljJAl 2JI700^__ ifOCK BOY and delivery ior fool shop. 4520 Fernlee, Royal Oak, _Mlch._____________________________ SERVICE MANAGER TO room bunsinesr " -Must be able to do mechanical work and have tools. Excellent pay, fringe beneHls, call^l 7-ONX). Yr'UCK driver Wanted. John R, conditions. Apply BIrmIr Bloomfield Bank, 1025 E. ATTENDENT COMPANION FOR Sat.-Sun. 7\rs. Hop-1-5 p.m. waek- HOME, 5 days, per. 651-4114 Lumber Co., 7940 Cooley Lake Rd Yaking applications for]b, service men at _Locaj^ Vending Co., j home. Troy area, 079-9356. l&IMOjIler 4. BABY SITTER WANtID: In your own transportation praferred. Call >ENTAL ASSISTANT CHAIRSIDE, axparlenca pr^rred._67«tk4151.^___ DENTAL ASSISTANT Experienced for large dental practice, lo a.m. til 7 p.m. 5 days including Saturday. Excellent Salary. W-6164. ____ DIETITiAN itlon. ” ^------ ..._repeL.._ ---------- several hospitals in North Central Ohio. Salary open. Liberal tMnefIts. Transportation provided. Submit complete resume to P.O. Box 974, Toledo, Ohio 43601. Replies con- fldenflal.____________________ DO YOU ENJOY CHILDREN? NOW YOU CAN KEEP HOUSE AND EARN MONEY TOO! Drive a Bloomfield Hills school bus. Guaranteed 5'/? hrs. a day, 5 days a wk. Excellent pay and fringe benefits, Phone 332-0289, 9 a.m.-2 p.m., Bloomfield Hills School _ District._________________ DIETARY HELP, 6 1-7544 for details _ aHor 6 p _ SECRETARY," SMALL sales office, Orchard Lake Rd., at Northwestern Hwy. 626-1U7. TYPING AND CLERfCAL, Monday thru Friday, 9 a m, to 5:30 p.m. Apply al 49045 Pontiac Trail, Wlx-om City Hall. LUSTY LIFE Our training and her determination will take her from the hum drum everyday existence. For the tiger between 18 and 25 with amibitlon to be financially Independent belore age 40. We. otter .an op- _____ _ . el Paint It golden tor yourselH Pontiac area. LImItedi Go! $5200. Call Norm Case, 334-Air Mell. B.' 2471, Snelllnq BSoelllng. TYPIST $70 - $100 Type 50-60 words 0. Dickerson, Pres. Southwestern Petroleum C^rp., Ft. Worth, Tex. EMPLOYMENT COUNSELOR; ' If you have the ability and desire to ThIm oV nubiir Shorthand or speedwriting helpful.] Jii L Call International Personnel, 681- *"• will train you. Exceptionally Huron. * ....... n KAMPSEN REALTY, INC. REAL ESTATE SALESPEOPLE; Our business is BOOMING Our Building Program Is Terrli., — Our Homa Trade Program Is producing a record volume of business — Our financing connections are top^otch—we have the most difficult deals, are hardworking and Interested In making A-l CARPENTER WORK, rough non smoker, FE 5-5944/ BUSINESS SERVICE DIRECTORvi SERVICi - SUPPLIES - EQUIPMENT j Aluminum Bldg. Hemi Dressmaking, Toiloring SIDING ALUM. VINYL AND ASBESTOS AWNING-PATIOS SCREEN-IN OR GLASS ENCLOSED , EAVESTROUGHING — I Continued seamless eavestroughlng. BONNIE 'ing factory to VICE-QU/- • _______________ _______ TERMS “light MAINTENANCE work, i CALL NOW-DAY OR NIGHT FE 2-6600 __ _ 681-25M 1-A ALTERATIONS, SUITS, COATS. CONDRA PLUMBING & HEATING. dresses. 335-4207, Mrs. Sebaske. , _Sewer. water Jines — Fe 8-0643. A-1 ALTERAT’ions B“pressmaklng." G 8. L PLUMBING"i~Heatlngr'L5t man seeks position with local trucking company. Reply to Box C- 624- fast SERVICE-QUALITY WORK "S WOMENS altera-i tions. 674-4475. Driver's Training SNOWPLOWING Free' f JSual oppor^^^ implove?: FE 3-1 *'7®' ^A.M^a A.M^______________334^427 1071 iWAITRESS Wanted: Day and af-'______ ternoon shift. Enners Coffee Shop, | J38-0345. __ _ ! „8 Mlle-Woodward. 644-9914.____| ^ " ^ ” RECEPTIONrST EX- remodeling, )iationt cor slwe^n 9 8. 12, 338-0627. Restauranti BIG BOY DRtVE-tN Dixie at Silver. Lake — Telegraph at Huron. 334-9427 SERVICE STATION Attends GUARANTEED wage, 50-55-60 per cent commission. Blue Cross benefits, Phlllp> Beauty Salon, 332- T T T TT—IT—I ‘BABYiSlTTER, IN YOUR LUSTY LIFE TAME — IT'S NOT III The modern rugged Individualist can becoma a legand on his own time. Our training and hli determination will taka him Irom tha hum drum everyday existence. For the virile tiger — between 18 end 25 with ambition to be financially independent before age 40. We offer an opportunity limited only by his Imagination. No experience needed In managing our staff of young ladles. CALL MR. HAMILTON BABYSITTER, MON. THROUGH FrI., from 3:30 to 11:30 p.m. Older woman preferred. Holldayt off with pay. 674-3491. ____ board, must llve-ln, OR 3-1112 bet. BABY SITTER Baldwin and I 334-2943. 75, call after 7 p.r _ __ part time. With light mechanical experience. Call BABYSITTER WANTED Bill, 338-7983. _ _ [ home. 652-3464 attar 5. USED CAR ;BEAUTICIAN WANTED, PORTER perience preferred. OAKLAND CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 724 Oakland Ave._____FE 5-9436 TV TECHNICIAN. EXPERIENCED. SWEETS 422 ' 334-5477 Chez Coiffure of Orchard Lake, 626-1033 or 64M 744._________ BEELINE FASHION NEEDS Christmas help. Full or part time. Call 1 I or 335-9071. BEAUTY OPERATOR TV REPAIRMAN , iced In color, top pay for tno right man, FE 5;;M2.__ WANTED MANAGERS, for Kentucky Help Wanted Mole COOK, 25-50, LINE IN OR OUT, fop salary for right person, 822-1002, Ask for Tony Yaates. CLEANING LADIES, al ECUTIVE; Mature parsonallly siblllty for progressiva dental practice. Must office, prr — ■■ excellent I______ complete information Pont EXPERIENCED BEAUTICIAN wanted with soma clientelle, to work into management. Cell after EXPERIENCED DRAPERY AND bedspread saleswoman. High salary. Irving Kay's Draparlas, 337 North Woodward, Birmingham, Mich. 644-5280.______ EXPERIENCED W A 1 T R,E S S , Thursday, Friday, Saturday only, night only. Good tips. Apply In parson only. Town S, Country Restaurant, 1727 So. Telegraph, transportation, $40. Exciting New Bautique Needs full and part time sales help. Apogee International Inc. FULL TIME CASHIERS wanted, women over 2\, State Drug Center, 1192 W. Maple/ Walled Lake, Mich, GRILL COOK. Afternoons, 12-8 p.r and waitress mornings, call person. Union Lake Village. M J'Sr 1571 Union Lake Rd GENERAL OFFICE WORK, must be accurrate typist, good at figures and want to work at a permanent job. Salary $80-8110 per wk. Depending on experience and ability. See us any morning, Regiscope of Michigan, 187 S. Woodward, Rm. 211, I PLANNING FOR A FUTURE Includ* your family In your plans. The protection ol your farhily Is Important. Join our team and have this protection. Company paid benefits Includa: Employee and Family Dental Insurance, Blue Cross Medical and Hospital coverage. Employee Life, plus cost of living increase OPENINGS FOR: EXPERIENCED • TOOLMAKERS • no AND FIXTURE BUILDERS • BORING MILL • VERT.-HOR. MILLS • LATHE • BENCH HANDS • WELDERS AND FITTERS 58 Hour Week Lang Range Program Presently Working 65Vi Hours Weekly M6ke-*AiDpIications at QUr Employment Office /' 8 to 5:30 Mon.-Fri. - Sat. 8 to 12 Noon INTERVIEWS TUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY EVENINGS BV APPOINTMENT ONLYI USI-Artco, Inc. MACHINE AND TOOL DIV. SUBSIoiAR^Y OF U.S. INDUSTRIES, INC. . 302G INDIANWOOD RD. LAKEQRION. PHONE |693-83B8 )kh aqual Op^tunlty GENERAL STORE, mature re woman, full time, days or Ings, cash and sales axparlenca preferred, would consider training, Union Lake Drug, 8050 Cooley Lk. Rd„ Union Lake, 353-4134.__________ GIRLS-WOMEN 18 OR OLDER INTERVIEW WORK NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY -will train, $625 salary per mo. to start — Increase after * PONTIAC DETROIT Frank's Restaurant, Need 4 aggressive sales people oi our staff. Licensed salespeople preferred, but wilt train. Classes A-starting every Saturday Call Mr. Bogar or " ‘ appointment. Work Wonted Femoie IRONING. 1 DAY service. Asphalt Roving IVAN W. SCHRAM, Realtor WOMAN TO CARE FOR motharlass chlldran, llva In, i WAITRESS, DAYS, FULL or part tima. Exparlancad. Good pay. Blua ------- Apply Ricky's. 8 19i WAITRESS EVENINGS, no ax-parlanct nacassary, ovar 18. Full or part time. Rocco's, 5171 Dixie Hwy. Apply 5 to 8.____________________ WANTED keeping to train and assume responsibility of complete set of double ----------- Real Estate DO YOU HAVE A LICENSE? DO YOU GET ADVERTISING? IS YOUR OFFICE OVERCROWDED? I WILL HIRE 2 SALESMEN IT WILL PAY YOU TO CALL: MR. KINCANNON GMC Real Estate ________681^370 REAL ESfAtE SALESPEOPLE ____________Eve^82-613^ HOUSE CLEANING, transportation. OR 3-8516.___ Bookkeepping & Toxet 16 BOOKKEEPING SERVICE. ' 681-1294. NEED A New roof? Call GHI - I'm DRYWALL our price will ba your bast NEW or Repair homes. FE 4-6682. , ‘>o7',?^^:3530. Ask Iqr JIm Scott. ASPHALT SEAL Coating, 3 cents \o poNTIAC DRY WALL SERVICE, Roofing, siding, and guttVrs7 and and remodeling, guaranteed, "*P*ir work. Free Est.Call attar f 39 qr^ 332-8013. ’ “ ' I ASPHALT ui3couNT,_^j>avingj_ re- Eoveitroughing sq. ft. Top grade of Convale(cent-Nursing 21 VACANCY FOR ELDERLY lady or gentleman, private home. 363-4576. Painting and Decorating 23 628*3875. _____ A 24 Hrs. Hot tar, shingles, repalri! We Will Not Be Undersold FE 8-1728 i R. DUTTON FOR REASONABLE PRICES, time, free classes, J'Xa'TVn’g* ’.’nd"”'’horpll'ili^a7!2i,’ ^MILLER BROS. REALTY available. Connelly's Jewelers, 65 I QQQ71CA N. Saginaw, Pontiac. No phone'____________________ -----------------------1 URGENTLY NEEDED quality painting, work women wanted, full or part guaranteed, reasonable. 6*2-8528, " -- "tit atl.J^_____________ CUSTOM PAINTING and wall I covering, reasonable rales, — satisfaction guaranteed. FE 5-2003. -'ladies desire interior paint-1' j Ing near Waterford area. Jfree ’ a M & S GUTTER CO. LICENSED-BONDED ___ __ Complete eavestroughlng service ___^ end paint work, go to Dib- Free Estimates_ 673-6866, 673-5662 w:24?‘’ab5i't r worts‘"n'!'oi In Electrical Services •stimaies. VladjKt^3n-0011._ ____ RvSek Rlnrk IL Class* ASTRO ELECTRICAL Service, In-■rlCK VIOCK & MOne commercial, i-AJANp GRAVEL, BRICK y E N E R-,I_^NG_.^ fireplaces, KoLON ELECfRIC^COrCommercial and industrial, contr wnrk"'"frr«' delivery. $82-7527. _ _ SAND, GRAVEL, fiH dlri end top 8. H ROOFING. Free Hot tar and shingles. NO JOB TOO SMALL. 625-5674. . WOMACK ROOFING CO. ___________FE 8-4545 Sflnd.6ravel-Dirt 338-1201 I_________________ GRAVEL, ell kinds, flTf sai reasonable prices. state wide service. 363-6879 call Building Modernization WOMEN FOR GENERAL laundry work, apply to Pontiac Laundry, 540 S. Telegraph.___________________ WOMEN TO DO LIGHT housework and to be companion to a women, Salesman interesting In starting; ^ isiness. Must furnish own tram. Call 674-4259 3 P.M. estimates. OR 3-8304 or OR 3-2956. Deer Processing 27 Employment Agencies ASSISTANT. Sharp ■ ' ofth Recreation estimates. Phone 864-6200 or 334-3704 evenings 334-3704. McKORMlCK ELECTRIC Residential Wiring-Service ^ Baldwin FE f919i Milford Electric Co. kitchens, bathrooms. State Residential, commercial, industrial, ine^^oqlree esi. ______________________________________ Excavating dormers, porches, rooms, kitchens, licensed, Reas. Call after 5 soli, 693-1055 after Snow Plowing SNOW PLOWING, 24 houi trvice, FE 5-69«^ Jer^y Miracle. CLARKSfON ROOFING CO. I A-1 DEER PROCESSING, cut and; peoplel Some office skills, Greatl Go nowl $300. Call Mary Bridges, 334-2471, Snelling 5, Snelling._________ V. T. GRANC Company nee time experienced stock room' manager, attractive salary, plus paid holiday and vacation, sick pay, group Lite Insurance, Employee Discount, Generous retirement program. Apply at 7100 Cooley Laka Rd., Union Lake. WAITRESSES Experienced day and night shift, liquor experience, apply In person, or call Machus Red Fox, IS Mile at Telegraph, Birmingham, 626-4200. . See Mrs. Martin. WOMEN MACHINE OPERATORS-Immediate openings, apply bat. t a.m. and 4 p.m. Imperial Moldee Products, 3331 Oakley Park Rd-west ot Haggerty Rd. ______ "mooernTzation a-1 bulldozing, finish gredina ' Remodeling kitchens, bath, recrea-1 basements. 674-2639, FE .... rnhi cv fir on *oo mil i Ho" and family rooms, rough and* _>:1201.._________________________________ or finish. Custom cabinets, vanity, bull DOZING, TRUCKING, tree .nMi..v-rn e-n.i.irr COMPLETE DEER PROCESSING,! formica tops. 673-0716. estimates, also weekends, OR 3- ADJUSTER TRAINEE | as E. Princelon. 334-3134 or JJ»5.„ .______________ Positions open tor aggressive _'5«:-----------------------------------i ments, attics, kitchens, all cabinets, R. G. EISENHARDT Excavating I. In an exciting career, DEER PROCESSED, SKINNED and[ remodeling. Journeyman. ' " *.............. ^ ^ ..^-- Company! custom cut the way you want it guarantee. 651-0274^_________ for freezer. $12. 206 (vioderniZATIONS * n I 7 . m 11 nm DITIONS freezer wrapped. NESTOR'S MARKET FE 241892.________ Stereo Installation JERRY'S HOUSE OF SOUND representative. Company! car for business and pleasure. Plus unpareled benefits. Call International^ Personnel, 681-1100, 1080 W.j852-5305 __7 a.m.-ll p.m. Wanted Househoid Goods 29 Contractor, land clearing. 727-7030 Rich- ACCOUNTANT. Figure the this neaf Qualityl 625;5515^_ Carpentry types. Cement Floor Sanding FLOOR SANDING AND laying 334-2471, Snelling 6, Snelling. C*'' r nr 1A carpentry and rooting, tree WOMAN FOR COUNTER and Inspection, Collins Cleaners, 650 Woodward St., Rochester, 651-7525, WANT TEMPORARY WORK? 335.8,70 Call Manpower__________________3^-8386 96M3«; WAITRESS Experienced, part time, GENERAL CLERICAL WORK good' no Sundays or holidays, Mapla and with figures, pricing experience, helpful. Prefer bookkeeping machine ekperlence. Call 624-4010,' ACCURACY PERSONNEL furniture and appliances. Or what r& B AUCTION xle Hwy.__________OR 3-2717 30 5089 Dl; estimales. 334-2879. Additions, kitchens, quality at reas. prices. 363-2731. ___ , ; interior finish; kitchens,' year experience. FE ___084 Servlea _4 6. 8 track stereo tape pleyors Tree Trimming Service CAVANAUGH'S TREE safvlcf, ed free. If we take . Free estimate, fully 627-3775 DON JIDAS TREE removal. Trlm- _ _______' ming, insured, free estimates. MY - 816. floors rellnished, 33W975. Glass Work 602-7747 or 682-6765. glass replacements M235. Carpeting Telegraph j . 642-5836. Trucking I in»ui OIU.C wvvilv. 332-6915. _ A-1 LIGHT HAULING and odd |oba. a:,....LTG^^^A-u-rrHTr. Wepf?:i'.''r7?066i: A.r reasonable. FE 4-1353. LIGHT TRUCKING Ol any kind. HOUSEKEEPER TO LIVE more for home Homemakers COLLEGE STUDENTS Turn your spare time Into extra money by applying for Christmas Emplayment Contingent (on calll schedule Women Minimum QUALIFtCATIDNS 1. High School Grat 2. Able to converse iduate la Intel I avall^ic dayt i Apply In person 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Employment Dtflce Hudson's Pontiac Mall HOUSEFEiPER; EXPESlENCipi working conditions, t vacation, apply In parson Beverly Manor Conyalasce Canter. 532 Orchard Laka._________ KEYPUNCH 0,P E R iTf 6 R S , perlanced only, now teklng ap-pllcatlont for dav end night shift. ' Grotk, vacation. Apply Salary $162.50 PerWk. FOR PERSONAL INTERVIEW CALL MR. TOTH, 332-3639 13.50 par hour for nursing homa, must have own frantporfatlon. Union Laka area. EM 3>4I31. uW“N‘'BAll^tlTrThTrrTrr home than wsoai. Light hgusawork. 6I1-0I64. lIght ASSEMBLY ooaratqrii Tn sfareo tape plant, day -shift, apply at 4413 Farnliw. Royal Oak. LUNCHROOlik HELP. 1 night~a weak. 693-1121. _ MaTurI“ W01IAN ' FOR' tuli flnit an hour plus ell fringe banafits. Apply In person, Ellas Bros. Big Boy Restaurant, Telegraph and Huroiv___ _ _ YOUITg woman to do light housework, 1 day week, good pay, call 335-6013.__ ^ Help Wantad MI or f. 8 BLOOD DONORS URGENTLY NEEDED All RH -Positive All RH Neg. COMPANY REPRESENTATIVE SALARY, BONUS, EXPENSES Leading national corporation with a top product line needs a good EX-SERVICE MEN use your service skills to fill your civilian • “ pointmer Personnel, 68M10O, 1080 W. Huron. GENERAL OFFrCE $300 — S425 varied Interesting doll., for high Shorn Living Quarters school grad who can type 40.591' words per minute with a fasti CHRISTIAN WOMAN will sha corp. Call International 1 country home ..... — TALBOTT LUMBER Glass service, wood or aluminum. Building and Hardware supplies. ------- • FE 4-4595 iny I Odd lobs. FE 4-2347 hauling' AND RUBBISH. specialists. PIANO TUNING - REPA positive fac- MICHIGAN COMMUNITY BLOOD CENTER dntlac FE 4 1342 Wida Track D/*., W. Tues., Wed., Thurs. 10-5 CHRISTMASHELP PMPle before CAREfAK6R“c6u>Ii7 FULL“llma lor large apartment pro|ecl at 957 N. Parry, wilt to citan, husband chlldran, fran^rtatlon.. Must drive. LIbtral anowitwr Rtterancas raqulrad. MAUifer'^ chlldran vHilla pi In. Call birr^ 6 JO woman to cara vmlla paranfs wort with landscaping, shovtl walks ' etc. Prte aoarimanf plus goof .wages ....... Pontiac Press Want Ads For Actiorr the suburban area. Our employers pay the tee and are always looking_____________ Inluance exVcutive" PAID'for 'all used;coPE'S CARPET SERVICE, Com^in tod.y'Tnd put ySur a^| «■ Rnoresentlnq . plications In for (A belter posi-- Mom Floor Covering ■ 1500 N Woodward WANTED: RAW FURS utic. BETWEEN ~6*MILE _ J23-0756 . Samole. m I WANTED; FISH SHANTY SLEIGH ^ ArlO Onen 627-2847. -CARPET CLINIC WAREHOUSE. Big 642-3050 'vuaMTcn~rARArF heated or I savings on carpet. 623-1096. oo„o,„« . ^unhefted ?n Walled Lake, com-(CARPETS, TILES AND linoleums, 1025 .pahlani merce or Union Lake area. 624- expertly Installed. Free esI. FE 4 .... - Moving, Storage Wonted to Rent 32- ri____t___ target tieanmg smith moving co. Your APARTMENT UNFURNISHED ORp rent house, can be In Pontiac area, CARPETS AND UPHOLSTERY need room tor six 625-3255.___ cleaned. For low rales dial 335- SHOP FOR CON TT R u‘C T I 0 N | _1206. _ Scenery needed. Minimum 18 footi ‘■''’'3;ctH?w!iln^'ho’r.'nd'’?old^ Work jOSCAR SCHMip-f IHeat, lavatory, r' ‘ ' Pointing and Decorating CEMENT work. RELIABLE PAINTING, Interlor. Vq .... .........-........ exterior. Free esi. 334-6594. **’*|ALL BRICK REPAIRS* chimney, ^9 paiwtim(~ .^ uunoi^ riiAOAw h.r '':Sl.V'‘’,S!;kr.To^ol,‘’d'‘ teed. FreT.,tlme°^^^^ couple, or reasonable. 335-3433._ o'' and wal .^rsonnal.jot-noo; 1080 W. Huron;I two single ladles Shara axpm«5,|cEvENT, BLOCK, BRICK and Reasonable wintqr rafes LIKE HORSES? ! 5-9M9, _ _ I CEMENT^^VVORK DRIVES patios SCHMIDT, PAINTING Unusual Opportunity. Will fraln.]WILL sBarE MY 3badroom home j ,Vc 'Ikensed^^^^ CuS v?all paMr'otVMar ° GEORGE FRERICKS COMMERCIAL, INDUSTRIAL AND- Painting, plaster repair, Free Eit. i-l -:.T- rL „iri, residential brick and cement work. Work guaranteed. Reasonable Ouollly fabrics end work, pick ... prices leave I I GUINN'S CONST. CO. CALL ANYTIME ae2-.S743'‘*'"''*'2:,.‘”^'28. ------ la- A RETIRED COUPLE needs homel ....3’'-252'........... L8.W PAINTING’ and remodeling, .. „ 'T' *"l floors, driveways, patios,' tree estimates. 693-8778 or 693-4872. - Wall Cleaneri Launinger. 673-216^ , etc. T. W. Elwood, 682-3373. PAINTING, WALLPAPERING; com- POURED BASEMENTS AND'fOUN- * residential. Call 682- b^oo,vie|eld WALL CLEANERS dalions, will give -------- - ' .................. LADY'S Do these days ol hig you short ol funds? tent skills. Call Ihlernatlonal Personnel, 681-1100, 1080 W. Huron. M. or F. I with young couplt ____693-8756. iWantsd Rsol Estota 361 garages cleaned. 674-1242. LIGHT TRUCKING, reasonable rates, 338-3392 or 332-2151. LIGHT AND HEAVY TRUCKING rubbish, fill dirt, grading and moving gravel and front-end loading. FB 2-0603. ___ __________ Truck Rental eTsV Trucks to Rent 13-Ton Pickups l*/i-Ton Stake TRUCK5-TRACTORS ? AND EQUIPMENT Semi Trailers Pontiac Farm and Industrial Tractar Co. 82S S. WOODWARD FE 4 0461 FE 4-1442 Open Dally Including Sunday_ Upholitering CUSTOM SLIP COVERS made, sOle and chairs, 624.4657, UPHOLSTERING...by Richard — Wonted M. or F. service, 338-6991 or 1-634-8064. Printeid Circuit Board , Ekperience Needed , A leading PCB manufacturer has purchased OAKLAND GRAPHICS ARTS Company ond is seeking experienced personnel to assume the various responsibilities in one of the most modern and /best equipped plants in the country. ilery cnmmeniurate with eblllty end experience, ease conieci MR. BILL WELLS ' '338-7186 V' .;\ For Interv.liw An equal enportunltV ampinvar Construction Equipment DOZERS. BACKHOE, LOADERS. Sales & Rentals Used Bobcat Loaders Burton Equipment Co. 776 E. Auburn Rd. / | 852-353 DAN'S CERAMIC TILE, Slate lloers.j marble sills, Install in homes — SPRAY PAINTING Ken 852-2940 '32 YEARS experience, painting, Free^est.? Orvel Gldc.umb, 673-0496 QUALITY WORK assur^."Painting, papering, wall washing. 673-2872, Plastering Service lA PLASTERING: patching, free est A-1 PLASTERING Walls cleaned. Rees. Satisfaction 674-4341. 625-J PATCH PLASTE Meyers, OR 3- FOR FAST AOTIOH LIST TOUR BUSIRESS wSEimeMKRE .... • ;mE I'UAj lAC , MIS KAlltEl^ 21. lMHt» M Wuni AOS Uiul J04-4Vt)l Airartmtirti, Furnlihtd 37 I LAROI ROOMS. rMB166M’tiKW'TOSSrrORR, •KCtIWnI condlllon, utllltin turn., MC. dup. raa. chlldrtn wclcomt. MI.SO wk., Ff Apaiim*nts, Unhirniihfd 38 Rtnt Houms, Unfurnishtd 40|Sah Houiti Canterbury Aportmenti OpOflSit* St. JOMph HMpItAt And thf Ntw y——- — Cdrptt, hnt, hoi In ront, «lr con 0 chlldrtn or pttt, tbb^ sS-M *'J” ' S$5oM. PSTi/AtE hith »nd tn-Jr»nc«j^coMpl« only. 33J S494. I roorfii prival*. In Pontiac. aSMI74. attar 4 p.tn._ I'rOOMS N. »AGINAW, Pontiac, chlldran walcoma. Prlvata bath M3- watar. Includad dlMon^^^orrVa r DOLLY MADISON APARTMENTS From $145 SEE MODEL AT N^W 3 BEDROOM HOME nttr OkH 1 SAM WARWICK HAS brick BEDROOM. Ptrtiil baitmo In-af^SS?.' din I no roo locattd on Orton St. In SvIvtn'rBEDROOM, flti hMt. PontItCa 2 car oartatt I CALL MARK 332-0)31 4IM714 “■ O'NEIL WHY NOT TRADE? 49 Salt Houmi BACKUS SEMINOLE HILLS 4 bedroom all briU rolontRl feaiurino huqa llvlno room t(lth firaplaca, formal cilninp room, largo kitchen IMMACULATE S bMtroom aluminum ranch Rloomtlald Townahip. ipONTiAC, . Ibadrnom, hardwood llvlno doubla cloMti, baiamant. carpatinp, much, much mora. \ Aikinp M3,ao0. P-!3. CALL RAY 1 TODAY. a?4-4l01. JOSEPH SINGLETON REALTOR 4W Orchard Uk. tieora. S4S0 cloilno cotta. Total tl4.»0O. CALL MARK M:«lJ4; RANCH WITH PULU bitamar ■■ M ‘ your lot, SU,* Rent With M5-im Option to Buy l~SOOSrs, PRIVATE ENTRANCE. condition chlldrtn wtici dry. $37.50 wk., sac. dep., 331-4634. S ROOMS .and” bath, _ , 442-3M5 or 642-3713. “S-ROOM APARTMENT ON LAKE. OR 3 M4S. I Mom, CARPETED HALLtNAYS, parking. prlvata bath, ^ " a w turnllura. Ullllllaa turn,, children walcomr, washing tacllllies. From SJ7.»,_aec. dep. req. 335-^134. I ROOM FURNISHED APARTMENT, prlvata antranca, ......... t4 MILE AT 1-75 PHONE 585-1125 EMBASSY WEST Specious and 3-badroom. t155 children. Cell privileges, $400 mo «i^3aM SMALL HOUSE'IN WATERFORD. ,, $74-1331. UNION LAKE AREA I badroom houaa, with larga 2VY car paraga. This homa hat Laka ,OTr*VoS?hrd-oWh'^^^^^^^^ ......................................I KENNETH 0. HEMPSTEAD I frV'Ufir'arl'a , £11. OPEN SATURDAY BACKUS REALTY ' real estateTproperty m^.aV/aV 5890 PLEASANT 2-5 P.M. manZIeVInt'^^^^^^L LAKE FRONT. Enjoy Christmas this BRIAN laka front home on rws lovely ranch 3 bedrooms, >m with fireplace. terms. Cell $83-1900 or $83 t000r EMPLOYED YOUNG reference. 42 185 ELIZABTH LK. RO. FE 4-6284; RANCH, 3 BEDROOMS, vary REALTY Schulli, 674-0S68. 1 10 • p.r ATTRACTIVE ROOM ON watt , lor girl orjady. 3S^537t. 'bachelor SLEEPING baths, family "*vr'?,'.?nr‘i ";r.?h.rucimi«ra«...42 I M-S9 t Your I iroorf Rd.i Multiple Listing Service lys 'tit 9 Sunday 10-4 xle Hwy. _ $23-0702 LAKE ORION r'loht BY OWNER. City of Sylvan Lake. CtAfUa Cba<*^ fAmllu rfsnm. .1 LEACH carpeting, 2 Waterford. $11,900. FHA terms. CALL $I1 0370. Williams Lk. Rd. SISS^GA 1 KIT CHEN“' 'Plus'’‘llv1no ' atlon, distance (o Fisher body bat t utilities furnished, private LOVELY LARGE ROOM. NEAR General Hospital, middle-aged ladies prelerred^^FE 2-5007. ; I BIG ROOMS,^ bath, Ural lloor. Child welcomed, Ja perj^.^t $-1432. I ROOMS, ‘CLEAN, Lake, prefer per rnonm. FE 5-2237. iEW" APARTMENT complex ' Clerkston has 1 vacancy. bedroom unit. Carpeted. Range, Oakland University, refrigerator, dishwasher, heat, air, 1,,^ workina oirl o conditioning and laundry facilities' $51-2222 furnished. No children or pets. Security deposit required. Call 623- OR ION, 0600 tor further Information. PRESIDENT MADISON aluminum I ranch home with 20'«t4‘ lamlly] on Pleeunl I »W'»» room, room, a ’KM Is: IVO. p.irh aai lisa Sr. overlooking Pina Lk, Country Club. healed Md , •"R • ing privileges, Color JV.. walking " j OPEd SATURDAY I To'i', “[^kr- p^aZ'^'; orru coTl --------------- on. FE 3 7111, 4791 MOHAWK 2-5 P.M.I "accC"'’ LARGE ROOM, TV, k 11 c h a n NEW HOME, JUST L I S T E D.' gy'ovVNER, 3-BEDR06m ranch, privlleiias, 338-2M2. __ _ _ ^ oll’mafn <^'«rkslon area, 4141 Ascension, 2- LAKE FRONT OAKLAND LAKE GMC RENt BEATER $100 bedrooms, private utilities, $35 week master bedroom, range with e?*gani . vsea,...-.-, .. ____ ^ithjlQvftly avocado room cottage, e l fixtures. Full walkout basement th«t garage, family room, leaving „ Beautiful plush carpeting < Built-In O'— ---------------- cabinets. sell. $24,900. Cash mortgage. much head room as any ranch, wall to APARTMENTS LIGHT HOUSEKEEPING room Land contract balance that can be assumed so yo save the mortgage costs, home has 3 t>edrooms, full ment, family room with fireplace, IVi car garage, possession. The ful $21,900. Call O'Neil Real Pontiac, for Information < From $145 Sagit 6993. LARGE ROOM Tom Stihosl. 3$3-85$7. welcome, $37.50 guire at 273 Baldwin Ave. Call 338- MADISON HEIGHTS SEE MODEL AT General Hospital area, 338-4943. ■ modern ROOM, ncE ROorN’^R^N^^^^^^^^^^^^ 31950 WHITCOMB EAST op I smgle girl, II IOj5, caM $82-7484. fHA TERMS r“ROOMS west tide, carpeted, JOHN R BETWEEN 13 8$ 14 MILE private ROOM and bath, near, This 3 bedroom ranch with full garagt. Adulta only. FE 2-1523. pHQNE 588-6300 E S your cS'lPin «n ?omp i ROOMS and bath, no drinkers, ------1 ROOM WITH COOKING Privileges. Township. Your chiwrw can er petta 55 WIIHamt St, FE_J:^3. j ScemC HlllvieW Village nrep^ "theS^an? ^ ROOMS, IN PONTIAC, lor quiet New ! and 2-bedroom apartments Ypsljantl, Fej25740. ............ .. passing by. This country home couple, small baby welcome. $25 from $169, Includes hot water end ROOMS FOR RENT, furnished, « large 2'/^ car garage, gas week. $25 Dep. Call 625-597S after $ appliances. Available Dec. 15. i cooking privilege, 21$ Hughes, for neat, 1’^ baths, carpeting, d---- p.m. __ _ _ Williams Lake Rd. at Elizabeth! further information call FE 5-3531 stove and refrigerator ' TrOOMS"^ PONTIAC ' Lake Rd. See office, Apt. 144. 3$3-! anytime CLARKSTON ROAD AREA. Brick and alum., ranch, \'/i baths, 3 bedrooms. 1'9 car garage, CALL . MARK 332-0124. ___ _ I CARROLL LAKE I HEIGHTS - 3 bedroom ranch, I jpaclous, deluxo panoling and I carpeting. $19,500. FHA termt. Call MORTGAGE ASSUMPTION old 3 you Into a 2 ____ .. . .rnllac. toi ’ This Ray Todayl 674-4101 ____ RO'CHEStER AREA, by oyynar, S5.000 lo aatuma 676. S125 with taios. 3 badroom ranch. 152-5727. ROBERT BRUCE SUB T bedroom asbestos ranch with 22' living room, large V35- lit, fuU $140' PEI? MONTH* 3 Largs Bedrooms Laka Prlvllogoa, Walled L Schoolt, deluxe carpellng, ttoi ipaclout kitchen, Immediate Possessions ADJUSTBD MONTHLY PAYMENTS Direction; Taka Commarco Rd, yu..t Id Carroll Laka Rd., head on Carroll Lk. Rd., past Comfort Homes, Inc. Don't delay call 1-399-550 DOHERTY ESTATES Sale Hauiei MILLER AARON BAUGHEY REALTOR tl.500 DOWN WIST SUeURBAN homo. S roama and bath an 1 flonr. Full boamf], all htal, tapeod yard plua Iota ntora. 114,950 with taty BRICK RANCH on clly. S larga badr bullt-lna In kitchen. t«nced yard. Juat doting L.*rgt DOWN, ACRt OF GROUND Watt at city. Aluminum carpatad living room rtplaca, family atyla kitchan and dining area, diahwathtr, S larga badroamt, 1W balha, lull btmt. walk-aut i lovely terraced yard. FIraplaca In basmt., 2W car garagt. Lovaly beach privilegat plua Iota mora. See thit clean, tharp, home todayl ACRE LOT plua a 5 room hr breaitway to gara nity walar i Full baamt., communll Now carpatlng. MODEL OPEN Complata home -eana, larga lea S16,000. I RAY ttorma and' jM»«s d( 674-4101 2123. dep. FE 1-7149, or FE 1-2467 after 5 PJ]T;_______________ rROOM, Ca"RPETED, near Ponliac ____2_man._FE 2-4376. ' ” ADULTS ONLY ! FE 8-2964 _ ApAfffMTNf”7r'FOSTER DOWN STAIRS.__________ _________ Apartments for rent, n»m OPEN EVERY DAY CALL: 651-4200 516,990. ART DANIELS REALTY.^ ..rvi.re I 674-4128, Dexter, 426-4494, Garden CALL RAY TODAYI COMFORI HUWbi ] city, 421 7880. ________|--------CvruAM lAirc” J-399-5550___________ NrCE~3 ”BEbROOMS, basement, _ WILE Cosh for Your Equity | rlrnl'!r«.'6'.1!a"-T7rF^!f'*RE°"AL\T Forelaanger A Futr.llj JYLVAN UKE FRONT NEW”3”BtbR666TRANCHE-^ ........ Iverine Lk. FHA mortgage apeS fir g«d ollir _____I trad# for good income property. . '^^''^PLETON,-Realtor bedroom' BRiir'K, 'BuTL't-jNs', " %!-5HACKETTI •nd board, or sleeping rooms. 335- 1679. WALTON SQUARE Apartments 1675 Perry Rd. North 373-1400 or 338-1606 I nicest - . _______ Yoon site, 3 large bedrooms, 2 334-3830~53'/a W. Huron St amic tile baths, fully —----------------------—---------- c-p.t.f‘«K alcoves, ^ , QR , gentlemen, garage and utllltlaa fumlshad, $45 trie heat ng are special features, lunches packed, go: per week, sec. dep. and references We're still building but occupancy 3255. raquired. FE 4-3060. available Immediately, or at ClWE f0~D0WNT0WNr2 and~3 'i™ or local.on at your choosing, roama, prlvata antranca, bath, From >165 _ --- parking, new lurniture, all «tjlUI«S| SORRY, NO CHILDREN OR PETS K'dVp'ilr^ryr APPLIANCES BY ;^«J,rg!od' southern cocking IFFICIENCY....UNIT IN_I • r,g » FRIGIDAIRE ......... ■ ' ROOM FOR RENT male or female. Now, 674-2222. wo. ix-iu ^^ —■ - - new J Bcurtuum wv_nc^ j ,xira Iota on slreaf behind, us, 0, house. Phone 33,-,m dter 363:6^3 ...... SLEEPING ROOM, quiet person, no Like new 3 bedroom brick ranch In CLARKSTON M-15. $165 MONTHLY NO MONEY DOWN drlnj^rs^ 331^391$.......... _ the area everyone wants. Nice PHA NEW LAKE F^RONT. 3 br^^^D NEW — 3-bedrm. ranch 2339 ORCHARD LAKE RD. SEVILLE MOTEL, AIR conditioned, carpeting In ‘‘vlng room and 3 BEDROOM BRICK, “Jj LJ 'NS. Kitchen, fully In- ---REALTY........ " carpeted, TV, telephone, maid bedrooms, wuntry kitchen with bu It- REA^ rm., oak floors, REALTY z,”......... ramTrSSMf bS l"nd’^*2 Y'Vniiwr^ii t" homk SAGAMORE EC. onT'Zi'fcrN'o': Clarkston School Area \i^rM«n. b.K. l*« S-'weSri”"*''' ‘ NEW 2^^ SQ. jF^^brjcJc ^ trl-lavel p„„,,r vqyng, Bldr SLEEPING ROOMS for rent, clean, ddaND-NIFW 3-REDROOM •'<" ceramic tile baths, quiet, reasonable, 45 West Huron, DKAINU-INtVV 0 DCURLfUIVt ! carpeted, lake privilege 338-7656. brick and alum, rancher all finished waiter's Lake. Reduced fwiN”BEbs.^“carpeted, ”priv.l, gSim.m'"" Mmilv H 11 SFTkl?Y . .in, a-H 43 IS om, basement, family room with WE ARE THANKFUL i ;';^S!*'Zi.r''7o*okrn7''!.k.*"‘'£?5J^ HOUSEKEEPER TO CARE lor 2 to otter this alum, tidrt ranch w land children, light housekeeping. More Elsinore St. Sylvan Shores Sub.: liUerMt_mortgage._447^74A tor room and board than wages. Having 2 bedrooms, larnily room, dqnELSON PARK - ' garage, and a speclaMy nice wooded ■ ■ - ----- PRIVATE”RbOMS"ln“iov-ely-hoSre «' '«™»' .'-»nd With good Southern cooking, near ^oniracf Tel-Huron (for man). FE 8-182B. 1 ^ v«.rpating and d '^West Bloomfield Schools. $37, POOL AND PATIO FE 2-0262 large lot, __ HOWARD T. KEATING 3-bedroom trMevel on nice sized fenced lot, separate dining room, family room, kitchen has buitt-lns, carpeting and drapes, 16x32 ft. pool with nice patio and all patio furniture, paved drive * " tached garage. $34,900. 2-car MAX BROOCK AH you need Is a good credit rating, a steady lob, and you can this modern 2-family dwall- located on East side of vely room. tiac. Rent from upstairs apart- payment.' Includes 2 bedrooms Ft. For information call—JAMES torlc^anch, _$28,?50._682-2759^ DRAYTON PLAINS Conventional mortgage. trade. No. 9-30 Beautiful 3 bedroom, modern brick ranch, 2-car attached garage NICE STARTER HOME room house and garage on FHA approved TUCKER REALTY 903 Pontiac State Bank Bldg. ____ 334-154^ ________ TFIANkSGIVING "Tact is the art of telling someone where to ^44890 go and having HAYDEN I;: 4139 Orchard Lake Road At Pontiac Trail MA 64000 NEW HOMES . If -Kyr Sum^n"d"?;5cn'Zc"a'r-^^^^^^^^^^^ JOUmey. - MY oak floors, fully decorated. , y->, , BEDROOM RANCH.!oecretary. brick, 2 car garaqe, I oak floors, fully Horses 'N' Houses 2,9 acres west of Davlsburg. New barn. 4 box stalls. 10 0, x 12 It. brick, I'/i baths, lulli 3 badroom Colonial, 1'/i Cake ORION, Housekeeping cot-! - ...... - ; Place. FE taget, all utilities, tec. dep. Adults (.bedroom HOME with garage, V. i;. c__„ prelerred. 693-2912.___________________: deposit, ref., no children, pay all Pent Uiltcu >paCB uillltles, " ........ LOVELY PLACE uiiiities, fe 5-3077.______________ TO live end call homa. Clean, j^oTs'-sls utilltiM furnished. Professional or 3 BEDROOMS WITH lull basemant. retired persons preferred. Laundry Northern High area. 332-9602 after and parking*facilities. Sorry, no 5 p.m. Sec. dep. end ref. req. 5175 children or pets. Dep, and rat, re- per mo._________________________________ quired.'Phone FE 2-7007.______ 5 ROOMS, BALDWIN nr. 1-75, 5200 Row AVAILABLE, 3 AND 4 roorns, dep. 55q_wk. 391-1959—793;2597._ private bath and entrance, utilities daRLING LITTLE H 0 U S " • furnished, f* •• ' ;____ RoRTHSIDE. 2 ROOMS, private!_UL 2-1657. bath, parking, go ' washing facilities, 533.50 wk 5340 HIGHLAND RD. 3 family well constructed brick In a very good rental area North side 47 location. Showing a good return with - - Land Contract terms available. Be Hrsl on this one, cell today. No. tt-10 Washer, dryer electric stove Included In price. Call today for appointment. available for approximately 8350 closing costs. LAUINGER things, immediele occupancy. A 121,400 _ 3 BEDROOM BRICK TRI truly precious 3 bedrooms, I'/i LEVEL. 1'^! baths, 2 car garage baths, family rbom with Includes oak floors and decorating, antf door wall, a 21 foot kitchen, and dining area, plus full base- 121,400 - 3 BEDROOM COLONIAL.I flT on asphalt road, ment and attached 2 car garage.| A|u„|pum - ■ ■ - —' Sealed glass windows end marble: basement, sills, cell O'Neil Realty. 674-2222. j decorated. UNION LAKE AREA — 3-bedroom ■ - - conventional ^Mortgage land ’ contract! All new homa prices are plus well terms. and septic. HAYDEN REALTY very neat, and only 3 yra.| money. Unusual amount of altlc ttorage. - ■ ' laca. Hot a 1 r Gas at the doer. Fireplace Good oil furnace. and fixtures. Extra good carpeting. Plumbing, septic end water supply adequate lor tamUy of 7. 68 ft. NEAR HOLLY — 3-yr.-old YORK Ideal for office available Dec. WE BUY 1, for coupler furniture, FURNISHED I a wk. Inquire at 735 WE TRADE kitchen lo 674-0363 ___________ 338-7176 east lawn and CLARKSTON, 2-.TnniS, bedcoom ronch, large lot. 5650 shopping, priced ** onlVi closing costs, very close to schools. No 939 CALL- — ELIZABETH LAKE ESTATES Lovely 2-bedroom (could be 3) WE BUY Cape Cod style home with lake . ------ .... ------- -'-Inb, 3005. Must lo appreciate. M4- nearly NEW 2 BEDROOM apart- _________—-------------—.....— ment, carpeting, drapes, stove 8. ReAT AND CLEAN, 3 rooms end relrlg., electric - ‘ - ........ turn, except lights, large yard, lake privileges, adults only, no! drinkers, ref. 8, dep. 625- UNION LAKE RD. — active area. Available 420 sq. ft. and 590 sq. ft., fully maintained. Plenty of parking. M-3208^ ____ . —.’k-ln closets. North Squirrel near Walton. Ret ' required, 373-1573.__________j pels IpaCIOu’s 3 Bedroom deluxe apt. | ^ 2664 . «T.Sdrc2?S28'n'g*'.i;d*'’draZery' Rent Houses. Unfumished 40 tor**Bess except Fridays._____2 BEJDR^OOMS. ON lake, call 353-7823 gguf BusInCSS Property 47-M VERY NICE ^ rBEDROOM^HOUSE FOR rent In- ..............aa-xxo' CALL 2'ft rooms and bath, warm and ^ulra 8J6jy\onticello. | '4743997 S?uTd.*p«». D& vI“uerFE™4:»,eeDR„R^^^^^^ Orion smF BUILDING^FOR-sTorerol'. 5531 _______F'».'.'«8-/323.------ ----- . . (Ice, parking w. Huron. FE 3-7968. *^?il^«5"d.p°'‘ZbS'52l a'r ^MV”Vx?.,f.n1 2-BEDROOM DUPLEX, Carroll location, paved parking. ------------------ ----------------------------- HAYDEN REALTY _________ 363-6604______________ AND 2 bedroom apartments,: ‘ Body, 5150 a mo., with 1st and lasf OIXIE and Holly Rds. 30' x 70' end balcony, pool, carpel, heat, hot. nso. in advance. No drinkers. Ref.l 20' x 40' commercial bldgs. 625-water, Included In rent, air con-' pE 5-1466. .... Sorry, — - --------------------------- I, garage and large ools and shopping, -,500 with minimum building, 481-0313.^1'_ ° PONTIAC AREA 1969 MODEL CLOSE OUT OFFICES AVAILABLE MANY TO CHOOSE FROM « sq. ft. and up, free lanitorlal REALTOR '"1 >^AY O'NEIL REALTY MILLER BROS., REALTY 3520 pontiac lake road oqo 71 Ci OR 4-2222____ MLS ______363-1 i '"'T I'SolSiYal'M s'ul? 3434 W,Huron. Pontl.c SO, then call Wurthmore ____ _______________Fircp^ace?^cVramic bath,"lulH-lns, OTTER LAKE AREA HAYDEN REALTY All 363-6604 10735 Highland Rd. (M-59) this for only 816,900 on land ' i Milo West of Oxbow Lake confract terms. VACANT - NEWLY DECOR-ATED, full basement, gas heat, 2 car garage, 2 lots, 2 bedrooms, suburban, FHA appraised, zero down. 515,900, quick posaastion. CALL 481-0370. 343-6604 10735 Highland Rd. (M 591 grivel. Hardwood 'h Mile West of Oxbow Lake Good pump. 200 ft septic field drainage tile, I Iwood floors d ____ Good besom: childrens playroom. Lots of board kitchen. Price YORK 674-C3$3 aluminum sldin concrete drive, I privileges, full basem 2-car garage, fenced rear lawn, beautiful land-1 scaping, top condition. A good buy I at $23,900 with terms. WARDEN REALTY 682-3920 3$3-8$60 OPEN GMC and find 332-6392. family. Recreation room paneled 573.3800 tile floor. Aluminum own-------- Glass enclosed front and SUN. 2-5 P.M., WATERFORD ^VACANT CAPE COD Rainbow Lake Sub., behind "Lady NEWLY decorated, full ba of the Lakes School." NoW 3: gas heal, formal dining room bedroom ronch, carpeted, family fha approved. Agent for owner room with fireplace, formica! 330-4993 kitchen, bullt-ln range end " ° ‘ ----- dishwasher. 537,500 Incl. lot. AL PAULY eves. $73-9272 NEAR ROCHESTER 3 BEDROOM RANCH, LOW DO.. ....... ..... PAYMENT, EASY Farmhouse on 80 Acres TO QUALIFY, FHA OR LAND CONTRACT. CURKSTON 1 ACRE, CLOSE TO SPRAWLING BRI Ranch, fha. WATKINS LAKE AREA NAME OWN TERMS BEAUTIFUL PRESTIGE 2 BEDROOM BRICK RANCH. OTTAWA DR. Fogelsanger & F i deposit, references, S160. 681-0329. FbEDROOM duplex, Carroll --- , ■ i. J ooi l-»lt Iktlshed tor showing at 129 N. on beautiful Hammond Lake. Brick, vfMikK- DllT UAkACC Merrlmac. off Baldwin. Big 6 rooms ranch on nicely landscaped and] TUUNVj-dILI HUMcD and file bath, spacious kitchan and Really Means Batter Blit dining room, birch cupboards. I. Bldr. Formica counter, shining oak floors, gas haaf, high and dry full basement. Plenty of recreation robm space. Full price completely finished. If you've dreamed of living In a Including large lot, only $11,650, SOSO plcturasquo area In a custom down plus costs, home, this 3 bedroom, 1700 sq. ft. ranch will please you. Tha kitchen Is a delight In golden avocado with range, dishwasher and pantry. The master bedroom has a full ceramic hath, there Is also a main bathroom plus extra lavatory near garage and family room, basement too, and lots of extras. Move right In. 142,500 land contract. Waterford ■ ------ “ ca ll 673-6121 OPEN DF WDODWARD BRICK RANCH. 4 lot. Attached gara Earl' I consider lend contrAct, 835,500. BUSINESS FRONTAGt! on busy highway. Less than $150 per ft. YDU CAN TRADE FOR ANY ' HOME WE HAVE FOR SALE Val-U-Way Reolty and Building Co. FE 4-3531 ”R lV; 673-12734 I ' 345 Oakland Ave. Sale Houses 49 Sole Houses Call for more information. REALTOR 2167 ORCHARD LAKE RD. 593 334-3594 TOM REAGAN REAL ESTATE 2251 N. Opdyka__ /__373-0156 760' WELL SHADED LOT Sulrounds this asbestos ranch Walled Lake, features carpeted !'S HIITER led kitchen, covered patio' car garage, locate CLARKSTON AREA - 3 bedroom RAY CALL RAY TODAY $109 PER MONTH WALTON PARK MANOR U N ? « E.C_B N_E. N T E_D. • 0 t TUNITY-FOR --- “SS THAN 2, AND 3 BEI Tit LESS THAN 'MI DETROIT, Oli'EN ci/Kt. 1, 2, AND 2 BED* t8wN^K6u5ES ADJACENT ILY AND SUNDAY 12 TO 'M, EXCEPT THURS. F 01 SpRU ---------- "■ X. INFORMATION CALL 135- HORSES AND PETS Are welcomed on this 4VT termetle near Milford. For |usl <23,450 you can an|oy a 4 badroom ..home, 2 car garage, a S iiox stall horse barn, a storage barn hay,,and mahy other features. CARTER & ASSOCIATES 674;3t97_:_ ;_ _ ;__ 674-319I ALUMINUM SIDED, 60UBLEriof."2 Mott school. New 2730 Mott 81. 113.950, S1250 then^call wner. OR 3-247^__________ BEAUflFUL HOME’ON 3 lots, bTg oaraga, basarnant, 2 baths, patio Canter, call aft. 10 a.t Basemant. Gas GINGELVILLE — 7 rooms and I $19,700, farms. Call B. C. HIITER, REALTOR, 3792 Ellz. Laka Rd. 612-1010, aft. I p.m. M2-6427. HALLMARK lino rc atlon. WEST SIDE 'n, spacious llv om, m baths, : 674-4122 4121 Hl«hl (M59) Nakf to AJrway L V IT'S A BEAUTY 2 slory-3 mant, patio, 119,91 larga Iroortts, ixcattanf d edntr I A fe tract farms. FIATTIEY REALTY land. Sun, 13 to I; LISTING - SELLING-LOVELY SETTING APPRAISING - BUILDING Wounding this spacious ranch styled home, full basement, 2 larga LOVELY BRICK RANCH letrt^, 2 ImmaqIaN FRUSHOUR REALTY REALTORS - MlS 674-2245 5730 Williams Lake Rd. 674-2245 OXFORD OFFICF 100 YEARS AGO Was fha approximate time this homa niticani 12-room colonial landmark era. Excellent • ■■■ ........ atartad. Today this am Tor rnis perioo or noma, unusually larga . J --------eonner lot, for a four Info TRADE^* •" aPPOltthnanf today. 219-E. WE LAKE ORION LAKE FRONT Year-'round sports as near as your backyard. 3 basement, andoaed porch. FHA terms or land coi Only <22,900. Coma and sea II. it3i5-E. Left trade. Let's trada. «3I0-B. BUILDlRS-JVIODEL AVAILABLE TO CUSTOMER'S SPECIFICATIONS. 825 S. Lapeer Rd., Oxford 628-2573-628-2548 GOODRICH OFFICE OXFORD Stev«..and ---- room ranch win kept and clean, larirts, 0-131-B. lor ratlraes or young coupit |u fo dupileaft for fha asking prict. hollV model wef, (wsf riascrlbos this 2-btdroom ronpi, loeoMd of this fine north Oakland County Vlliogo. Huoo Oil FA lurnica, plua 1t,k Goodrich 636-2211 NEW PONTIAC^ PHONE NUMBER 338-4114 For Wont Ads Dial 3344981 THE PONTIAC PRESS. KHIDAV, NOVEMBER 21, I960 D—T SYLVAN LAKE lAM WARWICK h«l 4 btOronm brIrK and llDM tr-laval, iiss ------- *"i bithi, 2 * - lakt prlviltai^ «lr eondTilon S427S0. Will Mil on land contra maka ollar. Oaan tun. i-i p. lAISSSS: WILL LEAS! localad In alllliHI r: ■ tU,SO0 on land contract WOLVERINE LAKE LARGE 4 BEDROOM LEVEL, located In axcalli Avallabla on easy terms, assuming a naw P H A mortoage. Full price |}4,t00. CLARKSTON 4 BEDROOM BRICK RANCH oil Mayboe Rd,,... modern conveniences, over I “ull price. plus lull basement, space lor Sih bedroom, carpeting and many other costly Items, Included In this line lamlly North Pontiac. remodeled. Carpeting, llreplace, country ■yie kitchen, 4 —- --------- ttyle . _ silting on choice IS acres with 2 barns, land contract CROSS Really and Investment Co., 674-3105 HADLEY ~ 4 bedroom, older home, on 5*/!i acres, large kitchen, llvinb room, dining room, glassed'ln porch. This home Is architectural sound, but needs redecorating. Horse barn, an excellent buy, 121,900. CALL 6 4 4 - 8 5 60, EVES. 654-6117. DRYDEN 20 Beautiful site, V? acre pond, stocked with fish. Also Ideal for swimming and picnicking. rv?Es.' $25,600. CALL 664-8560 797-4742 OR 664-6117. IMLAY CITY 69635, Lovely ____ »ath features, family bedroom home, , fi . lireptace, lots of closet space, finished inside, estate size lot 100 X 234', 1 block from schools. Ideal home for the growing Gracious m living — V to appreciate EVES. 724-1613. IMLAY CITY 69665, ranch type home, on double corner lot, very good location and kitchen, new 9'xl2' store building, and s k I p p I r .... . distance to schooi. A&G BIRMINGHAM ,$2,950 DOWN Excelllnt himgalc ol Michigan's moil prestige eiir#s. rooms, ceremic tile. nestled featuring 3 l carpeting, draperies, f I n I located 6n sevvtfr ” CHANCE 6f a lifetime AT 123,950 ANDERSON & GILFORD Building and Realty 3881 Highland Rd. (M-59) _ 6I2-9C LOVELAND Dodge $11,000. 3 BEDROOMS access . d 8cho 6 per cent lend Perk, Waterford Schools, Leona Loveland, Realtor 2100 Cass Lake Rd. 682-1255 ^ Brown BEDROOM COLONIAL. Deluxe features Include 18x20 family room with a natural: fifeplace, 13 x 22 living room w[ Hagstrom Holidays Ahiiod 11 By acling now - you can ba Mblad In a homt it your owo bafora Chrlilmaa. Tbia Paarly naw 3 badroflm (alum. tldM ranch la walling tor you to movt right In. I3M aq. tt., nawly dacoratad .living araa, family kitchan, wilk-ouT baaamint, gaa haat. on acra alia n a a r l^avlaburg. 233,4M on land con- SCHRAM OPEN TWO MODELS atnic Colony Halghla, ‘ it luxurloua horn no pavad winding oinng Iota, caniral atraala, apacloua rol watar, atorm Mwara ana rnmaa nrlcad from 131,DM Including lot. TWO MODELS FINISHED AND FOR SALE, QUICK POSSESSION! ASSUME LOWER INTEREST MORTGAGE. MODELS OPEN 3-5 SAT. A SUN. Taka Elliabalh Lk. Rd. W mlla Waat from Wllllama Lk. Rd. to Colony Halghla. Wa alao build on your lot, axcallant financing avallabla. HAYDEN REALTY 343-4404 1073S Highland Rd. (M-S9) .... ..... 1? C Vi Mlla Waat o7 Oxbow I nalghborhood. Cloaa to tchoola o'nd shopping. Haa hardwood lloora and ploslorad walla, llks now wall lo wall carpeting In living rooin and dining area, largt cloaata and also a lull baaamant. Includea all lurnitura and appllancaa In rrol good condition. Raaaonabla puce GAYLORD OFFERS easy terms OPEN SUNDAY 1 "fil 4 _ natural llreplace. . . ....... ..... ,,,, ceramic, carpeting In lha 'amlly realTOR room, living room, dining loom' and halla. Two badrooma pr.ralad lor tha boya, cloaat apaca galora. BaaemanI and an extra lot on Maceday Lake goaa with thia home priced at only S33.000.00 with IVAN W. SCHRAM LIST WITH SCHRAM AND CALL THE VAH Joselyn FE 5-9471 GAYLORD BRICK RANCH HOME 3 badrooma, 3'/k batba, all larga apacloua rooma. kitchan and dining room. Soil Houiei 49 Salt Houhi JOHNSON 4 badroon!\tr|.|aval homo, LAKE FRONT GILES 49 Incomi Proptrty 3FAMILY INCOME full On Ihia whh^prlv JloT 4~FRONTAOE Boat Oltica. 23S-3004. . - IlHta on wolvarlna Lakt.jii/, icraa, with Ho- '•"t btaudlul 7 room, brick, ll•Va’^.tl'^..^c*.'^l•«s Ki;.,^;-r;„;s-j;r.‘r -- F-r'i,.;.. , *«lb carMM larg. v.allbula, SSi^Tp'irlSIa’nt lurnla'hid. MOVE RIGHT IN '-ii iorro".&dr,‘'M;L44o'^HiSSirn’d^ 473.1344 ?rJ^!^.lTo,S;"w«^^r^^^^^^^^ L '^'^ULLOUGH REALTY attachad S'/a-car garagt. In Waal MR. CLEAN ..... Bloomtiald Twp. Lovaly lot 10x135. wm no out ol a Thia homo mual ba aaan to ba ap- m>ouiaia a.hadmnm praclattd. May wa tuggaa......macuiaia aetaroom for full perticuieri? Full pr 'north SIDE INCOME lots-Acr«ogt CLARKSTON 5 choice acraa with 300 It. ol I laga, 3.7 mllta north ol Acroaa lha alraal from »*50 A Full pria 27,3- Sislock \& Kant, Inc. , ^^,^.3.yFon.,aC Slat. Bank Bld^.^^ HIoHlANO ACRES Homaallaa, 2, 5, lo acraa, claarad A rolling, 4 ml. North ol Mlllord, ----- S4W5, tarma. DOWNVoWN PONTIAC \ Jatd as park- KELLER r price' only $42,750, Sal, on land contract. Aftar 6 call Jack Joll, 612-0282 JOHNSON IJO4 S. Telegraph oaraga, dining $25,000—low down I Corner parcel of land With 38.1 I Hardwood and aluminum storms and payment on Lend Contract. Von-Hall FE 4.3533 OOZING OUT ouldalad, outgrown house, plenty of ”f,‘','ho^‘;SS FORMER FURNITURE STORE IIOO sq. ft. of building i A steel at $35,000. lele ZONED MULTIPLE frontage. the working man can afford. Only PRIME LOCATION IM on Waal HbjM ----- ..r Raatrictad Offlca “ Inciudas & ASSOCIATES, INC. | KICK-OFF SPECIAL - Immediate. spotless 4 bedroom home with large 9k10 dining room, yard Is complataly fenced, so little ones can't wander nut in the street, oes heat, for only $14,500. lerga exacutiva acreage evaMeble for Claude McGruder 3 badroom Colonial. You will an|oy , . „ , . .... the warm fireplace In the family Elizabeth Lk, Rd room, 1'/I baths, full basement, ^Aultlple l Isting Service Open 9 9 attached 2'/i car garage plus large lot. Your neighbors In Ihit fine subdivision ere congenial people, owning homes In the $30,000 Need e house In a hurry? BATEMAN INVESTMENT & COMMERCIAL jVal-U-Way: 377 2 Tolograph Rd. 338-9641 Aftor 5 P.M. and Sunday 21.000 down. 240.00 par month. LaRut Kallar' 3097 W. Huron^St. 401-1233 or 4mW2 must'Tell. oveAlSoking baar Laka, In Clarkaton. Larga woodad alght. Pavad atraala. laka privllagoa, axctllani pare. 211,500 land contraci, aasumaabkh M^S9 PRESTIGE’"' IN HIGH HILL VILLAGE, near Meadow Brook end Oakland Uni Call for Brochun CALL 673-5857 HERE, Only $35,900 Cali. FORD TWP, 2 Flint GAYLORD INC. NO POSSESSION PROBLEM — brand new 3 bedroom alum.l ranch. Call today for an ap-a a- homel with door-wall to! Ilea counter tops' kitchen, marble sills. Many Near the Mall Spacloua 3b«droom homa In A-1 location. Larga living room and dining room. Country alzad kitchen. Warm, clean gaa heat. Slorma and acraana. City lawar and water. Priced at 219,950, FHA terma. Vacant. Immediate poaaaaalonl OJ'ON 5 BEDROOMS FB 8-9693 in thia 68MI44 Since 1939 681-1 large lot, paved street. $26,500. WEST BLOOMFIELD SCHOOLS, 3 bedrooms, full basement, with fireplace, I'/i acTe Jol! 239,900. COSWAY enclosed front porch S IRWIN there Is room | this 2-story Colonial with: baths, fireplace in living i g6s furnace, full basemeni,! Near Oakland University Attractive 2-bedroom rancher. Spacious kitchen. Carpeted living 118,900 t quick sale West GL terms. LET'S TRADE 7150 Dixie Hwy. Open daily 9-9 Aluminum storms screens. Nicely FHA $16,950. FHA terms. 675-4116 .EASTHAM^ Am BUSINESS, room and dining room. Firnploca,| A location for bom full basement, gaa heal, priced lo business. Nearly 3 acres on i ■ ' ■ “2,900. Tarma. i Pontiac Rd. between Opdyka and , .i/ciSDniiT unaac Perry. 4 rooma, l<. ACRE PARCEL, adlaceni '—1 end Stele horse trail Deer wintering yard. 20'| toched garage, 234,000. camper both for i $500 down. Terms. State I self-contained C. PANGUS INC., REALTOR 944-30)0 ____________________ HUNTER'S PA^ADISEl South Prudenville, Gladwin County. iSole Business Property S7 price ulldlng 3Cx80. Business and Raal Estate being offered lO! No. 14.4573-GB. 135,000.00 Ask for fared for S13.SOO Cash and wlk return your Invastmant the first year. Buslnass could be built up K double its present Gross. Call fat appointment to see No. 14-451S-R. ASK FOR FREE CATAL09 partridge real estate 1050 West Huron St. 421-31)1 1,500. 499 Joycell. Pontiac, RESTAURANT — PIZZA, Spagtii Fish, etc. Over 27,000 a mo. yr. Any reesonaMe otter. W Pontiac Prase, Box C-7._ contains a total of 10 rooms • baths. One bedroom baths. To Include draper SPEND YOUR WEEKENDS And vacation In this enzy ------ ----- prlvilaoai c CLARKSTON AREA 2-A ( re Hjngi Mow with full basement, gas 2 car garage. Nearly 2 acres . jorders on good fishing lake rear. Ideal for small family or retirees. Better i LOTUS LAKE AREA Newer 3 bedroom ranch interior charm, has gleaming oak kitchen with rich cabinets. BUILT BY WEINBERGER Lakefront rancher with private OOZ-ZZI I dock. This beautiful home In a MARGARET McCULLOUGH, Realty lovely setting has everything! 3143 Cass-Ellzabeth Rd. Drapes throughout and carpeting Open 9-9 MLS Closed Sun, in living room and hail.' Fireplace In living room and family room. Outside sprinkling system, family room and walkout basement, has air conditioning. Golf course, ski resort, riding Stahl, wlthlo 4 miles. |p0NT|AC KNOLLS ”°''f5il®CROOK5®RD*^^'* i Thr.a badroom ranch, hardwood OL 1 0939 ^ 1*19514 P*™'*" Completely decoraJ and out. Gas heat, Vacant. FE 5-8183 49 mw OPEN SATURDAY 2-5 P.M. OPEN 2745 VOORHEIS RD. MID-LEVEL EXTRAORDINARY! Prica Inciudas all thasa extras: brick and aluminum siding, aluminum windows, vanity In main “ ■ " " ■ room, carpeting and at- tached 2-car garage. A reasonably priced 4-badroom Huron north on Voorhels Rd. Your host — Dick OPEN 2711 VOORHEIS RD. COLONIAL LIVING 19701 Price Includes a large carpttod lamlly room, natural flraplaca and doorwall to oatlo. Deluxe kitchen with drop-ln range end oven, finished cabinets, vent hood with Ian, ceramic bath plus extra '/k bath on main level. Formal dln-cerpctlng, drapes, basemeni, and 3','i-car garage. Im-■ ■■ ■ Bis Rd. Your mediate possession. West Huron at corner ol host — Dick DeRousse. OPEN 2487 HILLER RD. Pull ol llvingl Over 1700 iq. tt. et living . uilt trl-level. Priced lo Saltl Includes a klng-_ lamlly room, 2 extra Vi baths, tamlly-styla kitchen bullt-lns, end en irffactiad Z^car garage. BIG earner land-id lot. You can MOVE RIGHT INI Elizabeth Lake Rd. to Cooley Lake Rd. to left ho Hiller Rd. to corner of Keylon Drive. Your hoslass ~ Verna Schodowskl PRIVILEGES: History ell-brlck home. Convanlent suburban location with city water end sewar. 3 larga rocraatlon room and garage. Immodli Land Contraci. 224,900. CALL TODAY NEARLY NEW GLISTENING CLEAN splltrock rancher with all the fealurei of a Walnbargdr Model., 3 bij ^badrooma with dOubI first-floor laundry, iltp-sevlng kitchan, family roc attached garage. $37,500. HURRY, CALL NOWI FIX 'IT I, A GOOD COAT OF PAINT wilt do wondtrs for this slucturally iound bungalow. Pull basamool, Zeer garage, gas hsal, storms and lefaens. Price—2II.4U Includes all the fumllure and oppll-ancti. You can be In betora Christmas by CALLING TODAYl NEW MODEL OPEN SAT. & SUN. 2-S P.M. or by Appointment AVON RANCHER': Avon Rd. lust test of Crooks Rd. Deluxe REALTOR' ^ ’ T PONTIAC .CLARKSTON ROCHESTER UNION LAKE 338-7)61 625-2441 651-8518 363-4171 SOUTH EAST SIDE Two story older home with DOWN PAYMENT. VACANT. EAST SIDE Two story older home with full basement end gas heal. FHA approved. NO DOWN PAYMENT. VA- LAND CONTRACT Two bedroom bungalow with ment, gas heat. New root, f some work on Inside. VACANT. Eves. Call Mr. Castell PE 3-7273 Nicholie-Harger Co. FE 5-8183 Will consider * present Multiple "PHOTO" Listing Service JOHN KINZLER, Realtor 5219 Dixie Hwy.____ _______423-0335 IRWIN BUBBLE Over with enthusiasm like we did when we first saw this one. 1700 sq. ft. of lust about everything a family would want In a custom planned home. Intarcom. IVk baths that sparkit, garage doors on both ends at attached 2Vk car garaga, big, beautiful, professionally siding. See thisi Tra(ding 674-2236 basement, _____ Other homes, acreage, and lots ------ Harry ‘ 644-4588. JOSLYN AREA- Altrectlve 4 room snd bath THE RESPONSIBILITY OF S.'Jil VcHS, i^a^r^VseiNG THE BEST Thar. way. to.d.'’^^h’idl^iYa:d,c.Dta*'’^*«‘• lhl,'’*‘4lb«*dr«m“mJNI-li°v'il loads of Shade A landscaping. included ere 3 full baths, SMILEI YOU'VE IptiJir 'X' JeT lots. n.er Oakland FOUND IT- |t''a*sV.“’’*E&''’fo'^^^^^^ Just Ideal for tha larger family | immediate possession, . . -X — a.— ts responsibility. 'HOUSE AND 35 ACRES, HAYDEN REALTY 363-6604 ,-24'’''Ha'?rv'*'j" Hill'’*B^r'X*/l®'® RAPIDS, MICH. Brick buslnass 74.. Harry j. Hill, Broker, building with 2 stores, three Lapeer. 444-4508._ RANCH HOME LAFEER irU. *“■*----- family room bedrooms, fireplace, 1 and' 2-3 baths, garage, Lots—Acreage and located just east off Adams Rd. this 7 room and bath, 2 !l‘’.7mSSr.n5“''!i;’rel NORTH SIDE INCOME 208 lot. 2 apartments wi mortgage. Don't be late on this gas forced sir onel Call todayl patio, lake privileges and Univ., . .... 422-1124 aft. 5:30. S ACRES, CLARKSTON erta, neat $4500 cash or terms. Sheldon r?o*: possible third In N. of Present income, $540 poi Rapids, Mich. 49307 or call 796'4)3I3 area code 616._________________________ CORNER LOT OF V/i acres with good building, sporting goods store. good reliant businau corners just North of this .......Hir ----------- In Grand Blanc township. Lucfle near Warwick In Grar ‘ “ Knight I Mils Country Club ‘ownship. LucMe . 694-7842 or 235- $16,500, land contract apartment furnished. $19,500 conventional. ELIZABETH LAKE ESTATES UNIVERSITY AREA - Brick and aluminum constructed _ . » 2 lamlly unit zoned commercial You cant afford to miss this at-on paved road close to Oakland tractive 3-bedroom, aluminum sided University A Community College, family home, on a nicely shaded Fast growing area end contains: double lot with lake privileges, 2- room and bath units with full fireplace, bullt-ins, full base— basement. Ideal Investment. , car garage, carpeting, dra. GI-'75 ACRES ' frontage, 78 ACRES Only Rochester, good location and Office in Rochester . 651-8141 TIMES - 3 stove, all at tha prica of $23,500. EAST SIDE full basement, dining location, $11,750, FHA full 0. Vicinity of ACRE LOT. partially Baldwin 391-2953, ACRE ON CASS LK. RD. NORTH OF M-59. 1-75. Ttmis available. r"" I FLATTLEY REALTY I WHIPPLE LAKE AREA 420 commerce rd.__________34S:498t 3-bedroom ranch with 11 n I s h # d » ACRES. Nice area, by 1-75, 2300 Here's style, location,’quality all MILFORD AREA ; walkout basemeni, 2'/k »uitding, 128' oned busintti i «24._____________ Partridge MS THE BIRD TD SEE" COMMERCIAL PROPERTY 474' Zoned M-1. Working space 4.242 Sq. Ft. modern office. Plui 940 Sq. Ft. lor storage. Main location. Ask lor appointment to Has large living kiteten with dining space room. Priced at 21S.3S0. GEORGE IRWIN, REALTOR MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE 2 West Walton FE 1-TII3 Sole Houses MT'S TRADING TIME" CDMMERCIAL PROPERTY 40 It. Of frontage on Dixie Hwy. suitable for office space or imai parking. Priced to sell. Call for ai STORE & HOME PRICE REDUCTION M-15. This cute ' the store help make smell business hare. _ . LAND CONTRACT TERMS. LAKE FRONT BRICK RANCH It's a oloasur* lo show this Imn__ Lake. Two llroplacai STORE IS VACANT. May be purchased on iropiaces, recreation reom,,.gas grill, dock wd float ef the water. LOW INTEREST RATE can be LAKE OAKLAND WATERFRONT Aiiuma a SVkOli mortgage on this beeulltul Welnbargsr Brick homa with *0 tt. of canal liwi on Lake Oakland. Pour Veero oW, loe- lurts largt carpelod living room, three bodrooms. ----- kitchen with dinind area, m ceramic baths, ulilltv i floor. Fully Iliad lowtr livel with walkout to patio. ' " ...1 sprinkling lyitem. Ser ITAST POSSESSION I ’ roim 0. NIctI Contraci tarma. PAST POSS SUBURBAN LIVING ciin be most pleasai aria. ThrM-bodroom Irl-Itvtl with ttmllv room. IW car atta$Iwd garaga. Why not coma out at Iteched garaga. .. . OlhOr deilraibla iHlurts mam today. lar. Olata Howard Dick 1071 W. Huron St. Union Lake* baths. Iwo-low voo the an appoint- ASK FOR ANY OP OUR qWliIeD SALES ----- ------- . imerV'lut- I3.va' Bi Bryan, lleln* Sntit NILS ' 681-1000 BRICK RANCH Close to Our Lady of the Lakes featuring: 3 bedrooms, dining room, llreplace, paneled family j Immedieta possession. . plasttrod _____ gas beet, attached 2 car garaga, - street and large shady lot. - -■ ■ Y5U Offered tt S30,9S0 assume the presi ________________ Shown by appointment only. So ROMEO 4 bedroom ranch on 10 acres, largt room with tlreplact, 1W bams )m 2 car garagt. a live inning thru property, easy access III today ily room 2 car Detroit and Pontiac. Cell WATERFORD RANCH with prlvllages on 2 lakes — sharp clean home ---- dining el, llrapraca, n car garage and Available with On lend contract terms. Call today tor an appolntmant. now carpais, euecr and large fenced ' WHEN YOU SEEK OUR SERVICE YOU ’-JOm THE IWAPCHTO“rtMBS* Times Realty IGHWAY Opan^9;9 dally 49SalBHousas TWIN UKES MODEL OPEN SAT. 2 TO 6 This contemporary rancher offer: walkout basamant. firaplacSy 1'/> baths, attached 2*'^ car Jiarafle, family room, excellent beach acillttas. Priced at $40,808. DIREC-M59. approximataty 14 ACRES — Milford area, rolllngi land. $15,508. HAYDEN REALTY | 343-4404 10735 Highland Rd. (M-59)1 ___’-T Mile West ot Oxbow Lake j 20 ACRES, CLARKSTON area, nearj 1-75, Pine Knob, rolling, horses OK. new home area. Sheldon 423- No. 14-4S23-CP. ASK FOR FREE CATALOG PARTRIDGE REAL ESTATE 1050 West Huron St., Pontiac 411-2111 WO 5-0759 weeknltes til 9 MULTIPLE 3 acres at Pontiac end Cass Lake Rds. $30,500. Cash. Zoned Cass I.... ..........— -- . per cent Interest, terms. Sheldon 100x150' LOT WATKINS LAKE PRIVILEGES. Only on* ItfL axcallant astablishtd araa ef nice homes. Price $4,000. 4-H REAL ESTATE, 623-1400, OR 3-0455, OR 3-2391. ZONED C-2 - 3> ACRES Opdyke Rd. near 1-75, and M-59, Past growing area, $42,500, terms. DIXIE HIGHWAY S miles past Pontiac Airport turn BUILDER NEEDS ZONED C-2 fronlage, hei story home with ample [new bldg. 245.(1(10, terms. Salt HoutBB . . ___ _ . ^ ________ ________ . A’CA NT l««,POp.T - Sunny Beach (Twin Laka lots — HIghland-Commerce-Milford- Uixia Sub) and than right on Steep .Hollow, area. Past closing - Cell Mr. to Models. ! George aiJJWJSSO. "Mcrultmrdli lljrolTvr^ —j-aA'RKSWhL-SCHOOL ’MlATleaNTiA 541S h^OhS?d^'d." cTolcV^uSldrnq-------------JAcros. straat, rf»rj 1 674-2236 624-2400' evallable, priced MS. S ACRES good 24.995. I ACRES, 900' ot road frontage Ideal ■ hill lop home end horses 28.500. ACRES, tor country dwellers, ipa< meadows, fun living ton a healthy growing family, SILSOOl fRl'CE REDUCED To Correspond to I locattd near Sylvan Lake, DANDY BRICK C. PAtlGUS INC., Realtor OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 427-2215 CALUi COLLECT CLARKSTON towering oaks In Sylvan Vlllagt, 5, i 3 ACRE ESTATES plus other features, walk ts schools BLEMISH ' shopping. FHA terms. lot. 220.450. FHA. You may have a horsa on these 3 acre estates. Located In the Clerksidn School district end close to I 75 with 200 tl. ot road Imn- " Priced ot $6,950 12 now I Price reduced and o trade. 3 bedroom elumlhum ^echtd gacegt. ClarkitonI area. 224,500.' DORRIS & SON REALTOR 2536 Dixii Hwy. MLS lake your sxLstlng home Bob White n OR 4-0324 REAL -ESTATE , 5»i4 S, Mein \ \ 425^5M1 AlTArsiS. HIGHLAND, HOLLtT 20_e. Huron^St.__^_____ Business Opportunifiai 59 WIG SHOP OWNER distributor. Free training, smell Invastmant, large returns. 335-7042. Rusty BOAf Marina 120 slips, retell and aarvtca < •ADE-EXCHAI oft Lake Fanton. Tqtel 1,3m sq ft. of building area and gtossai approximately 2250,001) SELL-TR4‘“ “ Contact Bob 674-2236 McCullough Realty, Inc. 3460 Highland “ ‘ Open 9-9 ' Reaiiy n\\.o 1COWALESC6NfTi(5ME ~ Highland, Mich. Near Woodruff 674-2236 13 bods. Room for 30 more bids. Annual income nOw over 255.0M. Only 212.000 down buys .......'.......................... m Iterad, 1^ J iho^godd loce* Sola Lond Contracts 1 TO 50 LAND CONTRACTS Urgently naadad. Sea u$ bafor Open Eves, 'tit 8 p.m. Wu^ed ContructB-lllltB. Se-I 1 TO 50 LAND CONTRACTS Warren Stout, Realtor 1450 N. Opdyke Rd. 373-1111 _ Open Evas. ‘Ill 2 p.m, CASH FOR LA^^O ^ONTRAtfi 4540 DIx'leHwy.-^R S-1355 LARGE OR SM quick closing. Earl Garrals, MA EM 3-4004. MILLION contracts, mortgegta or buy your alting equity, your call at 674-2236 McCullough realty 440 Highland Rd. LM.S91 MLS Money to loon Tf LOANS $25 to 11,089 Insured Payment Plan Monriugu Loont 62 FOR THE PAST 4S YEARS VOSS & BUCKNER, INC. 1402 Ponllac State Bonk Bldg. Have been loaning tlOOO to SMM to- rating blll’2. ate' *ntd*''ona monThly payment. Botert you borrow gn your home oo* or phone ui at: ,, 334-3267 ■igagti 1 iolldatlni 17' ALUMINUM CANOE, , lor campar, PE 5-2425. '2; CHEVY EN(SINr transmlsllbn, 4 cylinder, ml'swei Inijuira Jinyttma 1 i J»‘»> _ Llrag. *I»W4, BuyBrs - Si7lm MiMt thru iPrass Want Ads. ..a it. . If D—8 THE PONTIAC PRESS, FjllDAY. NOVE^AfnER 21, 1909 For 334-4981' ANTIQUi CAP A BALL gun. iroutKl 100 yri, old, ‘ riflo or ■ or whol havo you. «M- Rpofing For ca>h or anyth Wg ( ______M4.n» {^i> ifso ChaW. dual qua pick up, atock car, or tt M1J440. _ IlLVESTRi 1M BASS accordu Sal* HoutohoM 6««di 65 50) GIVEAWAY TIM,I at Avon^Troy »a. yd. Hurry • aOifatima offar \ is Avallablel 1650 (AA59) Rochester iDequInr liaroest r«h(^uses. Salt HouitheM Ooodt 65 Hi-Fi, TV and Rodloi Ml Zonim OUR STREETS TORN UP 0. Drap.., WE'RE STUCK' WITH 400 BIG NAME COLOR TV'S Selling-Cost Plus Freight EASY TERMS AND f lNE SERVICE HURRY/ THESE WON'T LAST Joe's Appllanct WarehousV 567 E. Walton at Joslyn, 373-5560 By Kate ()sann Auburn Rd.l 1301617 \ H R<:ih2,rVGE PUSH .55, ' - [ , .q, yd.. In .lock, 055.2444 , KIRBY SWEEPER j 1,000 YARDS OP CARPET - Must, EXCELLENT CONDITION~$63 selll Kitchen, commercial IW's,' r pyu. GUARANTEE ' Kodol ^ylohj^ and cjjrP*« ^o. ' AND 674 2234 electric stove under Trade for dininfl room tab or_mojo chaljT, FE MOOT. WILL TRADE EdultV clear tor boat or nv 'X* credit, tro'j ol remenl. from I2.9S, 2617 DIXIE HWY 1 ol Rochester', large.t carpel GIVING ROOMS, BRAND warehouse., Avon-Trov Carpel,; i, ultlle Joe'., 14 U50_^ _E. ^Ayburn^ '1“'! FE 2.iJ« ........ ’'‘ like NEW OE MO, 673-MOl. LEAVING CITV7' Dining room «el, largt soli, lamp., .mall tables, » universal ^ ---Mi , Tnternellonel Champion Wllclllte Boogie, Great hunter. Will trade for M or 16 gauge double barrel Salt aoHiIng A 1969 USED StNGER TOUCH AND SEW features, hems, buttonsholes. d»-siai^s. etc. Lessons and cabinat Included. $44.27 CASH Terms available. Call Midwest Appliance 334-3312. A BEAUTIFUL LIVING room chair, cocktail table, night stands, sih /ng pieces 851-0162. lies dresses AMAZING tie Joe's Bargain Furniture Baldwin at^alton. 332-6842 PRE CHRISTMAS SALE .... STEREO > 2 OFF accurr^ sweeper, CABINET^MODE^LS.COA^^^ I ALL 1970 MODELS 2615 OIxia Hwy g, electric Vdasher. etc. 334-1 5771.___ LARGE SIMMONS' hida-a-bed. excellent condition. 673-9465. LUXURIOUS” BEDROOM SET. light walnut, 73" dresser 8. mirror, bed, chest & night stand. Ilka new. $180. 363-3328. _ _ LINOLEUM rugs'. MOST SIZES, $349 up. Pearson's Furniture. 640 Auburn Ave. FE 4-7881. j miscellaneous' FE 4C living 1M4. men's 38-40. toys. 682-9038. 6rAY PERSIAN LAMB'Coa Lady's 14. cost $895. Like ni ■ offer. 162 E. Iroouols.; AND: A-1 WIGS. LIKE NEW. Brown, beige platlmim. frosted gray. 335-3726. Cashmere coat, ladies, si» le. chlldron‘6 clolhos, l yr,-20 yrj., ! GOLDEN TOUCH AND SEW 1«69 USED SINGER ' MODEL 640 SINGERS FINEST INCLUDES CABIN"-LESSONS FE 5-6326,_______________ $147.88 HOME SEWN BARBIE doll and Midwest Ap- baby doll clothes, 338-4330, ; ........ MATERNITY CLOTHES. SIZE "lO-n: ALL-PURPOSE CARPET t x dfi D», kAwwik Q Mn. cheap, FE ^27lo aft, 4,_ _ j sp^.gny (,mny rooms $5.90 Per Month tor 9 Mos, Er.r,nVuM\'yr'.s"'irw! OR $53 CASH BALANCE .W3L--------------------------j ?‘or*1re. "horn'." «tl™u SEWING CENTER Sole Household Goods —p,5hes7“end tables,I living room furniture. ......... * rabies, f1s"5 $Tm. j irnlture for sale. Reasonable. OR 5279. ' i MUST SACRIFICE. ' LIVING room I sel. stereo. 8. coppertone ' refrigerator. 68^7808. ” NECCHI DELUXE AUTOMATIC ZIg Zag sewing machine. Cabinet model. Embroider, blind " — buttonholes. 1968 model. Take 4-0905 Vi WHAT YOU'D EXPECT TO PAY ) 3 ROOMS |a”sewing machine IN cabinet GOOD Dally 10:158 Tues.. Sat. 10:15-4 SI L.VE RTONE' SOUND RECdRDER stereo play back, $90._623-136S._ TV.'stereo. RADIO combinatron _ reasonable. 335-6470 after 3 p m. USED COLOR TV'SETS $125.. SWEETS RADIO AND APPLIANCES INC. 422 VV. HURON Iftfater Softeners 66-A WATER SOFTENER. Discount sales Co. Save up to $150, sales, service and automatic rentals. 673-3792 or 363-3845._______________ For Sale Miscellaneous 67 INCH COPPER water pipe. 28 cents a ft. and %k inch copper used. Thurs., Fri., to 6 p.m. Sun Highland Rd., “Herbie says his parents doh't understand him — I wonder what makes him think THAT’S so unusual!” studio, 43 Oliver, oak and Porcalana ' CARTON IMPORTED Porti — /refrigerator, good CON-j 5r"e%25’foJ^CBr*on“682/717o'’“'''“' I DITION, large. $50, FE 4-3255. | DINING, $297 1461 Baldwin at Walton FE 2-6842 AcraJ ol Free Parking Eves, 'til »i Sat. 'Ill 6. E-Z Terms r SINGER PORTABLE andTraadls; boy's bikai dresser. 335-4251.___ I PIECE SOFA, new, $89.95. you taka, box springs and mattress. S4*.»5 sat, you lake. At Sloney's, 1969 SINGER ZIG-ZAG Sewing machine, slightly used. Blind hem stitches, sew makes buttonholes. stitches, 5 but^on^ ____ overcasts, fancy stitches. No monograms. Cash, terms, I a ) 4-PC. BEDROOM, NEW $97 Bupkbed's. save plenty. Gas space heaters. $24.50 Gas ranges. $97. Freezer Refrigerators, $149. Dinette set close-out, $47. Electric dryers. $117 ADMIRAL, PHILCO REFRIGERATORS, AND TRADE IN FURNITURE AT BARGAIN PRICES. DAMAGED MATTRESSES AND 1461 Baldwin at Watton Phone FE 2-6842 Phone 373-5560 i PIECE CHROME table and chairs, 1 combination radlo-hl-tl, 1 bathroom sink with towel bars, like new. 1 set bar-bells, FE 4-3027._____________________________ 9x12 Linoleum Rugs $495 Solid Vinyl Tile ............7c ea. Vinyl Asbattos Tile.........7c ea. Inlaid Tile, M ..............7c aa. Floor Shop-2255 Elizabeth Lake "Across From the Mall" 1795 AN ACRE. 240 acre country gentleman's farm. Stately 5 -bedroom plus 2-bedroom tenant tachments 5-YEAR PARTS AND LABOR GUARANTEE $56.20 TAX INCL. or pay deferred balance, with down and to interest r r e payments of $5.00 each with noi carry charge. For free home' demonstration, call Capitol Sewing credit manager, until 9 p.m. If long distance, call collect. PH. 729-4610 WE ACCEPT MASTERCHARGE MICHIGAN BANKARO SECURITY CHARGE BANK AMERiCARO _________________J»io obligation, FROSTED HUMAN HAIR wig. _sh^ort, worn once. 674-W47._ |l SET OF BARBELLS, Viti.fi. elec- For Sale Miscellaneoui 67 CHIPPED BATHROOM fixtures for sale, G. A. Thompson li Son, 7005 softener, all for $125. 1'A i $10. 4-2590. ranges, crate , atched models. Fully guaranteed. Terrific savings. DEEP FREEZE, CHEST TYPE, 14 cubic ft. holds 500 lbs. 9$ioo. Vibrator, belt exerciser $35 626- thread pipe! DOG HOUSES MOST sizes. trie motor. 5 gallon milk and Ottoman to match $25 Ken-^ manual typewriter, vibrating SiSr® T.ve®n^orL“5M.' AM JoS. condition, call OR 4-2969 from 7-10 'UeP. wl?hjorch._rd Lak.>v.. REFRIGERATbR 2-DbbR7 dogblaj r.'tSst*rtit!)%"'M7-806e'’ '""■i ___I inclosura, alu-mlnum tram., with REFRTGERXTmsT-bistfWsHERvy^^^^^ '"i rn'h*rpsor7S«5''5i'n.*^" Elizabeth Lake Rd. Dick Valuel. For Sals MisCBlIaneous 67 SPECIAL Two 105,000 BTU Crane furnaces In crates. S139 ce. Will Install. A A H Sales. 625-1501 or 674^1.___ SEARS BAND SAW 12" throa'i mounted and motor. Dado Head hole 16 chippars. 14" Venew Saw., 14" Rip Saw, START YOUR CHILD IN MUSIC -Yamah iludlo organ sale — priced at 1179,50. SMIlIy BROS. MUSIC FE 4.4721. _ UPR IOHt>IANa USED UL 2-3061 ____ UPRIOH'r'PIANb. MOrTf. R. Smith Moving^0., 10 S._Jasila. “ USED PIANO BARGAINS Cabit-Nelton, 8345. Cabla-Nalson Ebony 8345. Wurlllzar mahooanv $395, Sohmer console Sporting Goods 74 Join the Winner's Circle With D Red Hot "Rupp" SNOWMOBILE Pre-Seoson Special AUo inomoblle suits, helmets, bool^, gloves, trailers and ac- Pets-Huntlng Dogs 79 MG SALES BEAUTIFUL PEDIOBEB^ colli, with-panari. mahogany and white. 16 mo axcallant wlln children, tnow.. quallly, 850, muil lall. 625-2114,, ........’CHINESE"PUGS,. i ' 334-7769 atlar 3, COLLIE PUPS, AKC, trade, laata, or toll, 1-887-9497. _ „ COLLIE PUPPIES MIXED, ifo, MY 3 2979. CHIHUAHUA, TOY FOX TarrIari, 1545. Uzad organi) Conn, Caprice, 4667 DIXIE HWY Aprlcol Poodle pupi, walnut $795, Conn minuet French „ DRAYTON PLAJNS - . lp„v-.Tju" cc-ttcd bijpPIES. The provincial, white A gold, 1895. MEN'S SKI boot! and bo'**' Jl** chrUlmai g yo " ■ 0,C to to? call 624.3854 or 624-2490. hand Mk. a hu& POOL TABLE man" fee 11 ragli B 2-1 T995. Conn Rhapiody walnut. Kl^flc- c’omp.nj,'’ Birnlngham. Opposite Ingham Theatre. Used Organ Specials BALDWIN SOP, parcuislon, $525. BALDWIN 40P, with 9«t., Laslle ipaaker, $795. MAAS VIBRA CHIMES (u>ad) 8250 BALDWIN TONE CABINET, tkC., for church with Baldwin organ that REMMINOTON GAME imp, 270 caliber, 760, ! -- Scarpian Snawmabiles Prices start at $695 ee the Hottest One of All" SCORPION STINGER 744 CC McClellan travel TRAILER 4820 Highland Rd. 674-3163 SNOWMOBILE HEADQUARTERS pupplei art loaai lor uoiii. mn hunt na«l tall- RagHlerad. 646- 8250. _ _ ........ FREE KITTENS, oranoe labblat Slameit, colors, black black, and tlgtr, call 373-6572. FREE KITTENS TO GOOD HOMi’ ■ FREEPUPPIES _ 373-6192 rPEfc 'TO GOOD home, cula ilttla 682-1911. FREE TO GOOD HOME, black i Slarcrafl's- FREE KITTENS guaranteed and terms. SMILEY BROS. FE 44721 ' USED OI^ANS Chooia from Hammond* and other well-known brands. Prices as low as 1289. GRINNELL'S DOWNTOWN STORE ki*uu xtjirrraft's—Low as S6V5 'I'lTs”.. xa<> ocit ...........f.tJ-^'‘Vohn«n"lkM Hor«, 25*h,V *995 ^ Music Lsstont ' 71-A ,,,, «po'YKE’"-'^f 6""'^^S!-0224 °'pu^'Sl«,_m'l«d" ' ' !______ (1,75 at Unly^ Exit).... Sales ' Pl»ho tuning. | oIn W"J ti 1 THE SNOWMOBILE THE RIGHT TIME THE RIGHT PRICE THE RIGHT PLACE Combine the best machine* wllh the bast strvice, 4 men to Insure your winter pleasure. Evan's Trailer Sales 6507 DIXIE HWY. 625-1711 72 ACCORDION, GUITAR, LESSONS Ssles - service. Also Puleneckl, OR 3-5596. Office Equipment NCR ELECTRIC CASH register. Call 335-8141.___________________ STANbARb TYPEWRITER, latest leatores, - posting sacrillc GERMAN SHEPHERD PUPPIES, 4 weeks, AKC with shoM. ekcelleni - 31(FM2- machlna, never sacrillee, 447-8064. Store Equipment 74 THE ALL NEW 1970 SKI-DOOS STOCK -SHOP EARL AKC, 9 weeks, sacrillct, 825. 879-6467. GOLDEN RETRIEVER PUPS, AKC, excellent pels, good lineage, show I and Held, now evallabTe, eve. I phone 363-7961.__________________ 'GERMAN' SHOR’THAIR POINTE/R j pups, 9 weeks, throughbred, hurtling slock, $50. 473-0()44._ _ I GERMAN SHEPHERD Puppies, out j sashawbaw to Pelton Rd. then to • 5038 Drayton Rd. _ ____________ ^ IRISH setter' PUPPIES, AKC, $60, will hold until Christmas, 585- 6781. (double dresser, chest, mattress, springs, lamps); 6 • • ■ ■ - 5 piece •• 2,750.000 BTU. Ser. CURT'S APPLIANCE 6404 WILLIAMS LAKE RD. 674-1101 thermostats, SALE STARTING NOV. 10, on special purchase ol Dupont 501 Nylon carpel, 5 colors In a tip shear pattern, $4.99 a yard, Installation a v a 11 a b le. Free estimates. Call Ron at 334-5697. sb’FA BED, CHATR, 2 end’’table’s and 2 lamps. $100. 373-0608. SiNGER DIAL-A-MATIC Zig-Zag sewing machine. I n modern walnut cabinet. Makes A HOUSEHOLD BARGAIN I pc. living rm. group (sofa, chairs, 3 beautiful tables, 2 lamps); 8 pc. repossessed. Pay off Any Item Sold Separately $54 CASH 56 PER MO. PAYMENT^ KAY MJKNIlUKt guaranteed Next to Kmart In Glenwood Center IIMIVEDCAI CFIAIIKIR rCMTCD B'R’bSzE“b’R’nDTRbME"T3lNETt^^ sale, BRAND NEW. Large andr4’-^-V-'JL'^-”v^'------------- small size (round, drop-leaf, rec- SEARS WRINGER WASHER ■ - ■ 7-bc trundle beds, complete, single beds, complete. Call 373-1276;_ SINGER SEWING machina head. Call 3734)187, 44 p.m. PEARSON'S FURNITURE 2-2249. COBO HALL BUILDER SHOW UNCRATED APPLIANCES Color TV's, refrigerator, dishwashers, ■ —*■ dryers, low dishwashers, auto, washers, and SEASON SPECIAL SEWING MACHINE 1969 ZIG-ZAG IN CABINET NEW, In beautiful cabinet, does all the great zig-zag stitches. No af-fachments needed to make bot-" " ‘ overcast. Vi acres with well-kept 4-bedroom farm boust, large horse barn and nice outbuildings, iprlng-fad flshl°»”" Mton.-Frl. till ----------------- --------------- ., fancy stitches, blind-____ _______ etc. Guaranteed for 5 years, parts and labor. FULL PRICE $44.80 TAX INCLUDED ')73.55Anl O'* P®y M down and 9 Interest free Easy te?ms^ ----------- ----------------------- ipace heaters, with -75,000 BTU, burns _ga^ 363-0754.____________________________ 2 HOT WATER OR steam boilers, American Radiator Corp., Radiator ir. No. i; mediate Possession. Call FUR BUYER, MARKET prices | lor lurs and GARAGE SALE—furniture, toys 4. misc. Open 10-5 dally except Sunday. 3226 Donely, west ol Crooks SCHWINN BICYCLES, tIng-Ray 363-0S06. GARAGE DOOR OPENERS Discontinued models, r $84.50 Sting-Ray, 1 girl's Hollywood. Call 4—4-DRAWER FILING CABINETS. Sale will be by sealed bids. Bids may be made for individual cabinets and must be received at the Oakland County Agricultural Both exc. condition, call before 3, t.P. SEARS TRACTOR mower. also boys 20" spider WHEEL HORSE garden tractor. Elec, start, blade, mower chains. OR 3-0030. payments of : blacktop tract tar TO Acres, -------- ------- stream north of Rochester, $13,000, farms. Absolutely , Nowhere Such Drastic Price Reductions I Vi Off LARGEST DECORATOR FURNITURE SHOWROOM CLOSES THE DOORS OF ITS CONTRACT DEPT. FOREVER FINAL WEEK 8100,000.00 WORTH OF DEC ORATOR FURNITURE MUST BE SOLD AT COST, BELOW COST OR SLIGHTLY ABOVE COST. All Furniture Is BRAND NEW AND FULLY GUARANTEED! Onca-ln-a-llfetlme sale of sa _ Entire Inventory of Contract 'Dept. are welcome, but must brit • elk numbers. CRL FURNITURE — CLAWSON Is the closing their contract d e | Famous factories such as America of Martinsville, Kroehler, Seely, Brody. Lane, Broyhi ‘ ' Craft, Bat . - , . Coleman, Stanley, Craft, Bassett, Grand Rapids, La-Z-Boy, Berkllne. Cal Blyle, are all represented In this 9 PIECE LIVING ROOM GROUPS $188-$308-S508 HIDEABEDS, QUEEN SIZE lEALY SETS OF BEDDING ALL SIZES - *49 t PIECE DINING GROUPS DECOR SOFA *68-S138-*258 Odd headboards, beds, chest, desks. Italian Provincial, CROWN FURNITURE 1176 14 MM« Rd. V^i BLOCK EAST OF CROOKS RD.4 CLAWSON 2 MILES WEST OF 1-75 EXPRESSWAY, LCKATED OPPOSITE CLAWSON SHOPPIN<^ CENTER JU 8-0707 OPEN DAILY 9-9, SUNDAY 12-6 i PIECE bedroom SUTtE, US'’! intUr refrigerator, exc. conditio Mr. end Mrs. Chairs, 330-0946. 30" TAPPAM GAS RANGETSSS, _________343-3404 after 6.____ ~94 Vos. USED jej^~«irpeflng.~ 1969 TOUCH-A-MATIC Nw sewing machine, does fancy elltchlng, makes buttonholes, etc. ■ ■.II24.S0, balance only *29.50 ' . Call day or Ju< iWZIGZAGS CHRISTMAS SPECIAL New.'^macblnts ‘ with 20 Vr. guerOnkie, built In zlg zeo for buttonhole I, blind hem, monogrems, etc. No eflechments neeM, fbll ilie heevy duty i ' Choice of 15 styles, trundle beds, triple trundle beds and bunk beds’iiir srrcDT complete, *49.50 and up. Pearson's. Wt ALLtrl Furniture. 640 Auburn, FE 4-7081. MASTERCHARGE CHROME DINETTE yourself, save; 4 cnairs, rsDie, *69.96 value, *29.95, also 6 chair SECJJR TY CHARGE sets. New 1970 designs, fprmka| Call 9 A.M. tD 9 P.M. USE VWR~7:REDrT"~^’^BUY’~3 HDUSEHDLD SPECIALS . Michigan Fluorescent, Orchard Lk.. FE 4-0462._________ 602-2838. DAMAGED MATTRESSES AND box Reasonable. Call 625-3271. backing made lor heavy traffic areas, lust the thing for family rooms, kitchen, etc. For Free DINING ROOM SUITE, dryer, $35; REFRIGERATOR $25; 21" T.V., *35; bunkbeds; eparl ment stove, $35; MIsc., G. Harris FURNITURE — outfit wllh 2-pc. ROOMS Consists 8-pieca llv Living room suite, 2 step tables, 1 cocktail table, 2 table lamps and (1) 9'x12' rug Included. 7-plece bedroom suite with double dresser, chest, full-size bed with Innersprlng mattress and matching box spring and 2 vanity lamps. chairs and table. All for *399. Your credit is good at Wyman's. WYMAN FURNITURE CO. 7 E. HURON FE 5-1501 WALNUT T^ OM AS BOOKCASE headboard 8* frame Conlon Ironer, ‘ matching WAREHOUSE SALE OPEN to Public, entire inventory of new refrigerators, washers, ranges etc. must be sold. Every Item discounted, sale Sat. 10-9. Hilf Appliance 24123 W; 10 Mile near DISCOUNT FURNITURE FRI.-SAT.-SUN. ONLY Walnut bedrbom suite, doublel French Provincial, <150. 338-0676. YOUNG MISS, drawer chest, framed Antinnae full size paneled bed. MUTiqUBB $149 value now only $85. Lovely modern sola with flora Mr. & Mrs. chairs, zippered reversible cushions. Regular *279 value, now only *175. Maple bedroom suite, double dresser, mirror, 4 drawer chest, full size paneled bed. Regular *169 value, now only *95. headboard. Regular *99 value, only *66. Colonial sofa and matching chair, self decked, zippered reversible cushions, Scotchgard fabric. Regular *279 now only 1185. Spanish bedroom suite, double radio, diamond chair, self decked sible cushions , Tiow only *169 Spanish bedroom suite, double dresser, mirror, 4 drawer chest 8, full size paneled bed. Regular $219 value now only *159. long Danish modern console V-Knot Antiques, Davisburg, ditlon, $150. 627-3361, afternoons, CUSTOM ANTIQUES Hm, TV ond Radios 66 2 COMPONENT SPEAKER ZENITH TV, black and white, 2 eeks old, best offer. Call bet. 6 I condition. 852-2086. 110 THOUSAND BTU Dalco Gas conversion unit, 1 year old $40, Kelvinator Refrigerator $20. Tap- pan gas range, $20. 682-6557._________ 235 GALLON OIL TANK, like new, make offer, 673-5723. With sW, Springfield tractor with tawn mow-j r Can tol ^967 SNOWMOBILE Sewing credit Dept:’.. Cnrlnofl.W tr.rtnr v CALL 729-4610 toll/ call collect No obligation. BERRY DOOR SALES Ml_4-J035____dr______FE GARAGE SALE: BOOKS, JOKES, NOVELTIES, Lay-a-ways. Liberal Bill's Outpost, 3265 Dixie Hwy. OR Christian Memorial Estates. ance panel—8 circuits 110 Si 220. 7x8 Barber Colmen Overhead door all hardware. Aluminum slider 39 x 41 double SPECIAL 23 H.P. SNO-JET combination saw I FREE LESSON WITH BOW SALE Inch hole and SImonds. 5 GENE'S ARCHERY 714 W. Huron electric 220 Electric healing f pair HEAD 360 s’klls, huckia Chrlstl'an Memorial Estates.''Alter I $J60,*'uMd**1 sea5on,'*8t20.'''oR'*3- ' " USED SNOW'mOBILE TOO Hammer entrance panel—8 clrculls| ,145^_____________ CRUISE OUT, INC. 3'“REMING'f(3N M’o'DECo^^^ 63 E. Walton ' FE 0 4402 ______________807-5726 DallyJ-6; Sat;^9-5; Closed Sun. 4x8' SLA’-TE pool table,’ new "In SNO-JET, a’kO W h e e I h o r s e kittens. Black i.p. continental V'l" Block and ly duly rope. Ai Home Sewing machine, yrs. old. Horse collar an Set mounted Ready for cooled carton, $285 t ■ new POOL ^---------- New! 5406. equipment. STRIBUTOR adapter 10 leet ol 8 inch Galvenized pipe Rusty but no cracks will clean up Ilka new. E. Geyer 2007 Richwood, Pontiac Twp„ near Pontiac Rd. Evenings USED OFFICE DESKS, $20 up, swivel chairs *3 up. Forbes Printing 8, Office Supplies, 4500 DIkle, Drayton Plains, OR 3-3182 and OR 3-9767. Open week days 111 9 PM, THE SALVATION ARMY, RED SHIELD STORE no W. LAWRENCE ST. Everything to meet your ■ Clothing, Furniture, Applli tabby, Irsa, also Siamese, $10 aacm 626-05IJ. _ MINIATURE SCHNAUZER, 7 waak'o old, AKC papers, iJ5 . 605-l95*._ MIXED PUPPl'ESr*3. 052-2430 MIXED PUPPIES WANTED, we buy complete litters, good homes pro- vlded. 851-0072. ........ MYNAH BIRD, "(Srealer Hill India." . I yr. old. Talks. Includes large brass cage *50. MO-VOM, lpjlll.5. Terra Cat, the only year »7»und'singlE’sNOWAAOBILE trailer, llki MIXED PUPPIES, HA^^^ trail bike, land snow, swamp and „ew Hound, half Samoyad. *25. fe Ice. SEE IT TODAY. 334-1754. 6*1-0177 - ____________________■ ■s’an’d' PUPPY. Free I I960 SKI-000, 18 h.p., sup4 pic twin, model 370, O'yt"- SKIIS AND BOOTS, i969~~DELREY SELF-CONTAINED camper, call 693-8118._______ 1969 RUPP 370 ELECTRIC Mart, 1969 SKIDOO TNT 669, Ilka r than 3 hrs., never raced, c 851-3751. 1969 SKI-DOO alecirle *775. ExcallenI condition. 628-1327. Call after 4 1970 EVINRUDE SKEETER - • 1 9 70 Yamal Hickory Ridge Rd. to Oemonda -: id lollow signs to DAWSON'S SALES, T I P S I C O RINGTON'S SPORT CRAFT, ____33y4M POODLES FOR SALE, years 1 finest service and I "49. _ JIM HAR I POODLE top carrier, used 3 times. $50. 651-3879.___________________ isicl DOO, SCRAMBLER pups 9 wks. old, 623- 1-21. Open' Huron St. FE 2-5007. Sundays. 664-9412.________ __ ' POODLE PUPPIES, blaci THIS IS SKI-DOO COUNTRY I ( e^Vh. fTIwovT*"'"' Coma and Sbb tha Bsautiful pOpFies mixed, _ NbW 1970'S 1 w«ks, collie markings, 120 ( SKI-DOO'S IpekiNGESETakc, 2 years, COME IN and pick OUT THE 373-5292.___________________^---- MODEL YOU DESIRE WHILE SIAMESE KITTENS $10 THE SELECTION IS GOOD. ...... PRICES START AT ONLY *695. "with stand, used once. *125. FE 8- ART 1C CAT & MOTO-SKI now _______682-0297 ■ SANTA'S ST. BERNARD ALSO WE HAVE A GOOD STOCK OF RECONDITIONED USED SKI-DOOS, ALL PRICED TO SELL KING BROS. Ray, shots, ------ stock, terms and reas. 682-3194^ Tabby aAale krfTEN. GARAGE SALE: Houtahe furniture, misc. Items. 1 7 Hamilton Dr., on Square Lake. FEI /li'ON’EL TRAIN; RACE set; Elec- HEATING UNIT, new Sears IT TAKES A SPECIAL skill to sharpen chain i erly. We that skill at Mur-Tool Rental. Open Sun., 7110 Highland Rd.. 887-5752._______________ KEEP CARPET CI Tiger 10 oz. plastic glasses, s cents from Charles H a n n I c k STROMBECKER HO road race set, Hand Tools-MachinBry 68 OUTDOORSMEN SPORT CENTER „ . , 6487 Highland Rd. (M-59 ) 673-3600, A«'’H',CAT,.6 WHE|L^DRIVE^.I, __nvas e , $1250. 626-»394. “ARCTIC CAT & YAMAHA Over 50 machine* In stock, ready lor dallverv or Lay-A-Way. Gat the model you want, buy early and **''Accessorlas, Parts, Service CLAYTS CYCLE CENTER Mite E. of Lapeer on M*2l» 664-9261 BOA SKI SNOWMOBILES i SALES & SERVICE i 338-3943 ..... cart. Sears char-broil 673-0811________ EVINRUDE HP. prte«. from «2.50. G. Bob cat, K skaater ............. 5-2161. Hwy., Drayton Plains, 673-"95. Tron cooker for"outslde719x33, baby LAWN SPRINKLING PUMPT buggy and clothes, 626-3781. 1 to 2 HP, priced from *92.50, I960 '7 HORSE Sears tractor, lawn ^ mower, 32" snow blower, *350. LAWN SPRINKLING SYSTEMS, Commercial air compressor, *250., Inch plastic pipe, *3.65 per ICO. ------- UL 2-4912 plastic pipe, *5.61 per 100, IV. NO. 4 CINCINNATI horizontal mm, i ADbTNG"~MXcS'NES,"“* 2 9Tro , .^^e*'*10 bV oe"r"lOo‘'G 'aI T" P"*" "P'O portable typewriters, *29.50 desks, PiP|; soS 7005 M-59 W ' *24.50. IBM'S, *49.50, calculators! - _ *99.50, check writers, *19.50, cash LADIES registers, $39.00, safes $99.50, flies. *7.99, ANCHOR FENCES iO MONEY DOWN___________FE 5-7471 iRGUS SUPER 6 mm. camera/ has pistol gripy zoom lens. 673-0234. KITCHEN CablnetSy 50 ff, remodi Rochester. BRIDES BUY YOUR WEDDING announcements at discount from, Forbes, 4500 Dixie. Drayton, OR ~ 9797. Weekdays til 9 PM, Sat. BASEMENT SALE. 3 famlll Eiira Rd. off Pontiac La Toys, clothes, furniture, Thurs., Fri., Sat., 9 to 6. ,E - NOV. J21-22-23, ling, toys arid misc. ns. 682 Robblnann M-59 to N. Cass 22, 9-6, clothing all sizes, jewelry dishes, toys, holiday trim Items, misc. 5674 Argyll Or., bet. Dundee Tear Airport. _OR J-3541^_____________ BOLENS SNOW BLOWER, self-propelled with "easy spin" starting Briggs & Stratton engine. All parts are available if ever needed. Can be seen Sunday after 1 p.m. near Pontiac Airport. 673-0922. $125. Phileo refrlg, length mutton coat, size 20; formals size 10; Ilka new clothing; olt furnaces; a lit" " everything. 682-1284, Frl-Wed. BASEMENT SALE — 57' Ardmore, drapery, cfothlng, dishes, electrical tools, furniture, misc. items. Sat. 22, 9-8 P.M. BABY CRIB, cViESt, high chair, bet. 6 i boys clothes, Ironrite, TV & r _____i 1954 Chrysler. 682-8588.____ stand, I BASEMENT SALE. Nov. 20, 21 and stereo, solid HOUSEHOLD APPLIANCE Saturday 10-9 p.r Sunday 11-5 p.m. ________ DUNCAN PHYFE piNING room sat, 4 chairs ^and buffet. Ml 6-0427. ELECTRIC STOVE, $25; GAS stove, $35; Refrigerator with top freezef^, $49; Wringer washer. $40. G. Harris, FE 5-2766. ____________ ELECTRIC STOVE AND oven, built ' In model. Oak buffet, portable TV, Floor Models 1 Frlgidalre portable dishwasher FrigldalKla electric clean ranga 30 1 8/000 %TU air conditioner 1 15 cubic foot chest freezer Crump Electric 3465 lAuburn Rd. ^________ 334-3573 FINE ENGLISH BONE chlnrOuMn Mary LabeL Aubumn Glory by . Paragon. 12 completa settings, model solid maple 5 drawer chest, Toycraft leather matter chair and foot stOQi,. braidad rouhd rug$, oblong modern rugs, pr. 3 Brass Candalabra. FE 3-OS74. 21" USED TV -TV -SE-TS^ *$35 - Johnson's TV FE 8-4569 45 E. Walton near Baldwin AKAI X-360D TAPE DECK, must sell. 334-7565._ _ ADMIRAL 23" fELEVTslON, goo«| condition. M!>6277. color'd I SCOu n f s aLE ho....................... stock Authorized sale, <*.. rv......vv.. color TV's, Zenith, RCA, Admiral, PhIleo, Motorola, etc. From $199 terms ABC APPLIANCE , 1825 Van Dyke / S. 22 Mill 4M25 I Bik. 8561 E. 10 Mile Dally 10-9 739-1010 Tu^. 'til ^_______________9^.090 ELECT fTo-voice FOUR" speakers. Fantastic, $125 ea. Pontiac Music & Sound 3|0I W, Huron_________ FRENCH FROVlifCIAL Magnsvox TV, <73-5321. FOR SALE MORSE STEREO, *150 673-9261 JULIETE AC-DC <1 PORTABLE, band radio, complete with batte add gets police calls. Lika new t! 681^06^;_______,_________ MAPLE TV, stereo, radio, 21" black and white, 682-2461 after S._ MOTOROLA stE'REO, MAPLE, speed, 673.-7383. _________ _ Pontiac Press^ 'Want Ads For Action Twin cues! of drawers. Com Frames. Ice skates. Radio, proioctor. Dishes, misc. Soma old, 5975 Cobb Creek, Roch- esler. BOWLENS 12 HP TRACTOR, blade, mower, SI 175 complete. 644-3^5. BASEMENT SAlC Thursday, Friday, 0-5 p.m. and Sat. till only. Clothing, boys, mens, 38-54, Women's, B-13’/,. Odds no antiques, 1200 C Bloomfield Hills, 4 blocks W. Club Dr. Telegraph,_corner of Franklin Rd. BASEMENT SALE: Friday ' Saturday, 9-5, 1003 Carlisle, corner _qf_W;^ Beverly 8, Carlisle. BASEMENT SALE,'sat. Nov. 22, 9-. 5, Electric dryer, 9 x 12 rug, polisher, Christmas tree, clothes, books, toys, 8. misc. 565 S. Csss sinks. Hydraulic chair, sink, dryer. Hatchery Rd Orchid ________ 6005 Airport. FE ^ price, assortment of Forbei Printing and Office Sup- pllet, 4500 Dixie, OR 3-9767. .. days til 9 P^, Sat., til » PM. CALcInATOR INCINERAtOR used very little, reel gof" —— *65.00, Ironrite Ironer styled, looks like a fa In use. Good appeari wo/klng cqnditjw, *7 CVPRlisr" PftlV^CY fornltur ipp0aranc9 ano good 1^, $75. M2-t928. \ mY-nwetry I 6' height, *7.50 pA' sections, ctlon. Electric- bullt-ln rpnga tops, alnlais steel, U5 ee. TALBOTT LUMBER 1025 Oakiknd PC 4-4595 buckle ski boot by Hanky, *750. 505-3600 or 542-1602. j NORTHWEST 6, 70' of boom drag I line. Caterpillar 08 and D6, also 21 ICO, I"i Scrapper. Cell.............. reverse, 624-4527. reindeers and Santa Claus. 682- left-handed golf clubs. BOX POSTS INSTALLED MOVING, SELLING ALL furniture. stove, $175, automatic washer, $75. portable d I s h w e s h e r, *50, refrigerator, bass guitar and emp., some designer clothes, desk chairs, utlllly trailer, etc., etc. etc Sat., Nov. 22, 9-4. 2130 Hamlllr Court, In Rochester. 651-3026.______ MOVING, SELLING CORNER China cabinet, *90, antique comb, wr desk, and glees door bookcase top mirror, *70, Duncan Phyfe drop leaf table 0. 6 chairs, p— condition, $85, also misc. rummage. 6330 R( ------------- South Blvd. and phone, TR 9-0092.___________ NICE ANTIQUES. Beautiful paintings, like new, 3165 HIxon Rd., 651-0921 or 752-9740. Rochester. Call ture, couch roller skates, and case FE 4-8700, 21 Monterey. Plains. 673-1195. _______ stalls with trim, *39.»5i bowl sink, $2.95; lavs. $2.95; tubs, *20 and up. Pipe cut and threaded. SAVE PLUMBING CO. 04) Baldwin. FE 4-1516. *5.00. FE 4-5217. priced at *175. Call 682-5*93 alter RAYNOR OVERHEAD DOORS (Temcralt Overhead DooH’Co.) Electric garage door operalort, *109, InstaTlatlon available. 6295 HIGHLAND RD. (M-59) 225-3350 673-2311 RUMMAGE SALE: Furniture, humidifier, tools, misc. Thurs., Fri. and Sat. 2-7 p.m. *6 S. Tasmania. RUMMAGE-OIL FUR'NACE unit, Maytag washer, clothes, etc,, 6012 Gordon at Airport Rd., Nov. 21 O, ROLL FAST 20" BIKE *5. Westinghouse 13.1 cu. ft. refrigerator, white S90, wood snack bar stoolh walnut finish, SMortad hand toots, barbacut with electric spit, good condiflon, 33S9I31, .05, Face plus .05. Face plus .10; New Issue F.O.C. taiVIca (Ganeraj Foreign Approval atampa. .02 each), f E 5-14W attar STALL SHOWERS COMPLETE with fsucati and curtslna 169.50 vslua, S34.50. Cavaforlat camplafg with faucets *14.95. Toilets *21.9 5. Michigan F|iJofascent, 393 Orchard ALE OF USED SK| clothlhg and equipment Including Head, Rossignol, and Knslisl, Bopnar * ■.........................I. Nov. 22, 'ires; ■wwt’awat), a Tie _________atao a elarlriat, 4|l-f472, , SUBMERSIBLE AND uprlptiumb .»PE"*5i42."'*'"''' less than I hours. First *175 takes . 673-8648. TILTING ARBOR 10" CIRCLE saw, 34" X 44" table, stand, 1 hrs. motor; 6" loiner; Band saw 12" wheel, power senders, 60" bench: prinder, vice. Can be seen Sat. Nov. 21, 10-4, 57 N. Ardmore, Pon. accessories. FROM $795. TURF & SURF 10743 Highland Rd. (M-59) _________363-8366________ Fun Quip Inc. Announces Winter Sports Sale Get Into the Snow of Thitigs! Cameras - Service 70; reverse, electric starter, 5 seater. 47 MPH, 26 HP, all terrene vehicle, 0 MM MOVIE CAMERA, Bell-Howall' projector. Editor, *80. 674-2534.__ | LEVcA FOCOMAT enlarger 50 mlllmater, F35, Laltz varob tense, i takes 35mm and IH by 1*k. Good 30 MPH, *95. 6*2-0920. $1795 POLAROID LAND CAMERA, ex- Musical Goads 5 STRING BANJO FOR sale AMPEG AMPLIFIER, like i speaker, built In reverb, wl and cover, $150. 673-3263. BALDWIN Orgasonic Spinet organ, and Leslie speaker, both w ' $795. FE 2-4056 evenings. CONSOLE ORGAN, excellent condition, 673-1475. ELECTRIC CHORD ORGAN, like new condition, blond finish, wllh bench. 62^3045■________________ FENDER AMPLIFIER, S50, Deluxe. FENDER JAGUAR GUITAR Witt case, *235 8, Fender twin revert amp., $325 or both for *500. Firm exc. condition, call attar 7 p.m, 624-5059, ask for Mika,_________________ GRAND PIANOS Choose from Famoua Makes such at MASON-HAMLIN CHICKERING FISCHER KAWAI PRICED FROM $1795 Bank Terms—immediate delivery. Use our Christmas Lay-A-Way Plan. GALLAGHER'S 1710 TELEGRAPH FE 4-056< Open Mon. through Fri. 'til 9 p.m. Sat. 9:30 'til 5:30 p.m. Open Sun., 1-5 PM IF YOUR CHILD can say her ABC' then It's time tha learned her De Rem MI'a, piano rentals. 332-0567. MORRIS MUSIC 34 S. Tele^aph Rd., across from IDEAL FOR CHRISTMAS^ Farflia Galaxy' organ, Wa contola modal. *450. 425-5474 i KIMBALL THEATRE ^rgah and *— '— 4 p.m. — KAY STRING BASS, i Oeod condltlfe, 363~ LOWREY ORGA'N, Spinat, Artity flute, pood ca Call attar 2 p.m., *71^3. LOWREY ORGANS 'ratanlf tha naw' 1970 Eacapa Machina. Saa thia before you buy. It will pay you to ehop ui-Ing: Our Christmas Lay-A-Way Plan GALLAOHERfS 1710 TELEGRAPH FE 44566 Open Mon. Through Fri. 'til 9 AMNiSikE^ Band Financing avallabla. Salesmans demos available Open weekdays noon to 9: Saturdays and Sundays t us at Pontiac FISHERMAN AND HUNTERS look, Karosena room space heater, 1100( 682-8920. B.T.U. *10.0*. O R E T S C B ALTO SAXOPHONE, GUITAR CLASSIS, never case, sacrifice, 447-OOM. GAME HEAD MOUNTING our specialty. Deer heeds $25. 67550 Van Dyke, Romeo,__M2-25 Guns, ammunitions, buy trade OPOYKE HARDWARE FE 8-6686 JOHNSON'S SNOWMOBILES At Tony's Marine 682>3660 EVINRUDE SKEETERS BOBCATS '70s HERE NOW LAKE I. SEA MARINE GUNS-GUNS-GUNS One of the largest lelcctlons Ir Oakland County. B r o w n I n g , Wlncheater, Rsminglon Smith-Wasson pistols. SKI-DOO'S 12 to 45 H.P. 15", 18", and 30" tracks 30 Machines In slock noWI Wa have a complata line of ac-casiorles. Spacdo. tach, tiadt, suits, boots, helmets, g I e v a t, custom colored trailers, single and double I STOP OUT THIS WEEKENOI Cliff Dreyer's Gun onef Sports Center 15210 Holly Rd, Holly, ME 44771 OpB) Dally SKIS, /BOOTS, poles, and ira, axcallant eandlllon, 474- H|AD STyPA^S, gisjiantimatar. JOHNSON SKI HORSE MOTO SKI SNOWMOBILES Complata ling., of inowmoblla clothea and boon, YOUNG'S MARINA Open dally 9 'til 6 I Dixie Hwy. en Lom Ukf L,ONO gunT POURIS MASSEY-PJEROUSON Perry Lawn & Sporti Equip. Highland Rd. M-59 *73421* 373-0734 JPONTIAC^. AT OPDYKE YAMAHA ^ SNO-MOBILES 3 NEW MODELS IN STOCK PRICES From $895 K&W CYCLE Utica 731-0290 MICHIGAN'S OLDEST EXCLUSIVE YAMAHA DEALER YOUR LOCAL AUTHORIZED SKI-DOO DEALER BILL GOLLING SPORT CENTER 1821 Maplelawn Just off Maple Rd. (15 Mile) Between Crooks and Cooiidge Rd. Troy Motor Mail_____Ml 2-6900 Sand-bravel-Din 76 ALL SAND AND gravel products, top soil and till delivered. 623-1338. A SER’iES OP EXCAVATIONS throughout White Lake, Independence, Waterford Twp., of fill dirt, clay, gravel. If you are In need of such, wa shall deliver this to you lor the cost of hauling. OR _J:893^6 a.m.-llp.m.. Sun. IncT._ EXCELLENT TOP SOIL, black dirt, e-2059. 1865 Hummer _____ mittens, we do need a naw home, wa have long hair, are Uttar trained, and very cute end playful. FREEI 851-4253._____________________ WHITE TOY MALE, and allver gray female, both 2 yri. old, and AKC registered. Will give away to good Pe^u^Ki^Sei^_______7^ 1-A GROOMING Mr. Edwards' High Fashion Poodle Salon, all breads. 7 day weak. Bloomfield Pontlec 335-5259_______ AKC TOY POODLE Stud Servlc#^ FE 8-3631 A-1 POODLE GROOMING Pickup B> delivery, wrvlce, Monday thru Friday, 8 a.m. to 3 p.nn„ Anytime Sat. 8* Sun., Clarkston 625-4415._______________________ A-l PO’ODLE GROOMING, SS up, 3354329 or 332-5639. _______ EXPERT IN POODLE GROOMING, Stone, 852-3920 A TO Z AUCTIONEERING AND BUY ALL USED FURNITURE AND MISCELLANEOUS 373-0382 S.A.W. S/tND AND GRAVEL soil black dirt. Phone 394-0042. All areas delivered. Wood-CqalCoRBruel A-1 SLAB WOOD, also stove dallvared, 391-5 FIREPLACE WOOD delivered.,852-3697 or I 627-3993 or 625-4809 Pets-Hunting Dog* REDBONE COON PUP, 11 months ^d, call 052-5262, attar 4:30 p.m. FEMALE 8, i MALE, small registered Poodle, 865 each. 673-9239 after 5 P.M. I MALE APRICOT, 1 femela black AKC registered Poodles, guaranteed veterlanary approved, l-A HEALTHY, lfl$kie~Dechahunds, AKC. ESTELHEIM'S 391-1889 l-A AKC MINIATURE 1-A AKC CHOICE 2 TAME MONKEYS and cage, call 6 WK. OLD PURE i AKC BLACK PEGINESE AKC MINIATURE POODLE pupplea, * -----male, 474424S. Puppies, Tropica II Lina Pet SuppI _ and Grooming . MANOR. MARILYN MATHERS OPEN DAILY tO-8 PM CLOSED WED., SAT., 10 TO 5:30 PM SUN., 14 PM Uncle Charlie's Pet Shop W6 W.J;IUR^N______ _____332-8515 ALL PEt SHOP, is wTuiarnsrpE 4-6433, parakeati and Garblls. AKC MINIATURE sGhNAUZER, malaa, will hold till Chrtitmai. 363- AKC GERMAN Shephard pupi ready for Christmas. 373-0540. -------- AKC, 3 BEAGLES, I year oil champion and lira, 3»-0477. AKC DACHSHUNDS AKC-ST. BERflARir>U>T“Rtady B & B AUCTION SAT. NIGHT, NOV. 22 7 P.M., SHARP Truck loads of merchandise, tuch as, color TV's, staraos, bunk badi, auto, washers and dryers, daap freeze, late modal rafrlgaratori, all sizes in electric end gee ranges, electric sewing machine, dinette sets, toys and fools, some antiques, recllners, platform rockers, dishes, childrens rockers, new bedroom and living room suites, and many, many gifts for Christmas. CASH MONEY FOR DOOR PRIZE 5089 Dixie Hwy. B“& B AUaibN every FRIDAY .........7:00 P.M. EVERY SATURDAY .......7:00 P.M. Every Sunday..........2:00 P.M. WE BUY — SELL - TRADE Retail 7 Days weekly CONSIGNMENTS WELCOME CASH PRIZE EVERY AUCTION 5009 Dixie Hwy. B & B AUCTTON FRI. NIGHT, NOV. 21 7 P.M. SHARP A-Z AUCTION SALE , 5 rooms of repossessed furniture, matching pair, auto, washer and dryer, lata modal rafrigarator, bedrooms suite, and living room •ulta. Lott ol misc.., plus naw Christmas toys and tools, and other Christmas gifts of all kinds. DOOR PRIZE EACH AUCTION 5009 Dixie Hwy._______MJ-3717 OXFORD COMMUNITY AUCTION, postponed til, Nov. 29, 1470-2523. _ Perkins Sate Service Auctioneer PH: Swartz Creak 435-9400 SATUR'DAY 7 PM - Truck toad of naw furniture this weak only. Swivel rockers, rKlInart, Early American living room outtlft, dln- 1i;:,ti’5'«i.'35?;nX:!^"''- Orion. Call 493-1171. SUNDAY, ’!’ PM’. 'L/fkSf'" tala, plus naw furnllura an naw misc. Items. Hall's _____ 705 W. Clarkilon Rd., Lake Orion. Call 493-1871. PlantB-TrBBi'ShrufaM taka 81-A CHRISTMAS TREES, t wholeiaie. Delivered I $250, 238-6966. . 4* fo r PUN . AND PHOPIT, for entire llVy I Ml erv 994 Ceil Ptx>nd < Union 81.7 Horton* Mich, AK<: PBKiNoese puppibi* 7 we^l oid* PEJI-94S0. CUTE P'tfP'Pi’ri AKC.".Tiny Poodlsi. _FE_4^44._____ ' _ BEAUTIFUL KITTNES," LITTER TRAINED, frsa to good horns. 673-7573._________ _ Ba¥b’'ETTE. needs" new home, mile r«a track, Wa< due to death ol owner. She li an: Ihoreuankrad, Fine Knob SiabM adult black lamala poodle. 412-5206.1 42* 4117. Ulim, 294«lfT. BEA(»LE ENOLTsh~' .Sstter ’ mixed: FONY AHO HR^AOOlf170 |jk(2fiVS/Glt6(tt¥V'............ ~li 9-yRAR-OLD GUAR'tM'teN min, jmik, good 4 H proipacl. 2*3- A, . wripptd. Wd cun ind imoko mull. Cill 37]-<155. todo'BEEP, BY HiH or^holi, J4 cinll 1 tb. Ilvt . • ■ - 1 lb. butchind. TravBl Tralltri CAMPBB ITOBAGt~M por monl7 Parry town 8, Sports Equip 7405 HlghlutO Rd. M-.W 473-llJ HAUrVOUR^ Snowmobile or Trail Bika ' I Inside the NEW 1970 16 FT. GEM Jill-Conlilnid Triuil Trillir COME OUT AND SEE IT. Only $2395. •4 ELLSWORTH hay, straw, corn ond oots, 0074 Big Llko Rd., Clirkiton, 6J5-1544, hAY. JO CENTS per bell, delivery evilllibli, Halit; 414-0054. RAY'i STRAW BY THE bell, J5 i .50 lb. Wild bird leed. polling loli, >lelgh bells. Trailer Sales 4577 Dixie Hwy. 415-4400 McClellan TRAVEL TRAiLERTr POLYESTER CORD snow tires, size 14x1.35, mounted on wheels, slightly used. 150. IM-OM. __ 4-700 X 14 TIRE'S, 5,' 14" Jeep 4, 14" Jeep deluxe hub I lor 1125. 1 set wern lock-150. 5070 Dixie Hwy. Tree puppies. Bill's Feed Store. 3621 Gregory Rd., 301 1400. May. JOc be^je' erbem. Mulch hey HAY, ALFALFA BROME, Poultry FRESH TURKEYS Form Produce 86 , APPLES-PEARS Meny verlelles, highest quellty, sweet cider, Oeklend Orchards, 2305 E. Commerce Rd. belw., Duck Lake end Burns, Milford. 0:30-4 PM dolly._ ___ ■^'DONUTS-CIDER-APPLES' Salesroom open 0 to 4 dally. DIEHLS ORCHARD & CIDER MILL 1470 Renehy Rd.-6 ml. Sooth o( Bonanza, Wood Lake, West Wind A Wheel Camper NOW ON DISPLAY I Frankllni-Crees Scampers—Pleeiure Matas Camp 4 Truck Campers Lir Hobo Truck Campers HAVE YOU SEEN THE NEW OMEGA MOTOR HOME Both Models on Display Holly Travel Coach Inc. 15210 Holly Rd., Holly ME 4-4771 PHOENIX 1»' SELF contelned', 52M5,J27-2I32. ___ _________ ROLITE TRAILER, loTdlng solid walls, sleeps 4 plus, selt-contelned, UL 2-3172 alter 4 p.m. ____^ S4AALL HOUSE TRAILER; 338-4451 SLEE«R steel Irame pickup coven and tops. Cab to camper __ SPORTCRAFT MFG. CO. 4140 Foley 423-0450 Watarlord 0-125CC ......... 124-200CC ........ ■■ 340C^ ........ 501I750CC . . t3o.oo IM5 TRIUMPH BONNEVilXfejO.' _________3y;^5I____________ 19M, 350 KAWASAki, excellent con- 51 a ball. OjTonvMle^MIch., phone 6y-2486. pO. rSNOW A.pI'LES', 99c a peck, many other No. 1 varieties, 5I.89 bushel and up. Fresh Grade A large egoe* 2 dozen SI.19. No. 1 polaloetk 50 lbs. 11.49 Wondar bread. 4 loaves. 95c. Homogenized millc, 96c gallon carton, cabbage and squash, 5c lb. Onions 3 25c. Boros Country Market, Di> 623.0650 _ Truck Caps $199 and up Weir's-Goodell ...... - mlla north of Telegraph, Open dally_l0 ajn.j;9 p.m. FoTAfOES. 335' W. Sllverbell Rd, Bring contelnere. OH Perry. ARIBNS AND TORO snowblowers on ?;.‘Rl"Jir..S%“'Srch.r7*L'eke"r.! FE_5-2424;__________________ Rew idea pull type one-row corn picker In atock. Davis Machinery Co., Ortbnvllle NA 7-3292, your "Homellte Chain Sew end Snowmobile Dealer." John Deere parte galore. _ _ _ _____ TiNOW irCOMING COME IN AND SEE THE NEW AREINS SNOWBLOWERS FROM 4 H.P. TO 7 H P. PRICED AS LOW AS; $249.95 WITH FREE TIRE CHAINS - NEW TORO SNOW PUPS ONLY $109.95 ALSO WE HAVE GOOD SELEC '‘frON OF USED SNOWBLOWERS. KING BROS. 373-0734 Pontiac Rd. at Opdyke frowel fralleri 88 ARVI'S TRAILER STORAGE teaiuring the Swinger Home and Giobestar trailer. PIONEER CAMPER SALES _________611-0720 __ WOLVERINE TRUCK carnpers and sleepers. Factory outlet, repair and parts, new and used rentals. Jacks, intercoms, telescoping jumpers, spare tire carriers, aux-Tl^ar|T gasoline tanks, stabllzing ‘lOWRY camper SALES 1325 S. Hospital Rd. Union L. _________EM 3-3681 WILL BUY USED TRAILERS Pontiac Mobile Park 754-1194 Winnebago Motor Homes—Trailers Camper Coaches Reese and Drew-TIta. Hitches sold and Installed F. E. HOWLAND SERVICE 3255 Dixie Hwy. OR 3-1454 WINNEBAGO I Motor Homes. Prices start at $6655.00 . - 27' trailei Reese 8, Draw-tite Hitches Sold & Installed F. E. HOWLAND SALES 3255 Dixie Hwy. OR 3-1454 AIRSTREAM SALES 3098 yy. Huron____ Mobile Homes Fenced, lighted, storage lor your trailer, boat or other storage problems, $5 mo. Clarkslon and Rhodes Rd., Lake OMon. 4?y444. Yovj'' ELDORADO' CAMPER __________ ton Chevrolet truck, loads ol ektras. Call end see, 474-3775. 52550. _ ______ H' TRAVEL fRAILE'R, tully aejl- eontalned, sleeps 4, Coll alt 52500. 343-4733, 1945 SAGE. Self contained, sleeps 4, make otter, 473-1132, APACHE CAMP tralier - Del Ray, Tour-a-Home and Fleelwlng pickup compere end covers. For the finest service and the best deal. l0''TRArLER, DOUBLE dinette 52495 WEIR'S-GOODELL ____3200 Rocjwsler^ Rd^ ____ •AMERIGO <■ SCH'OONER Truck Campers SILVER EAGLE AND NIMROD All at close-out prices TREANOR'S trailers 412-8945 _Pil'T_?-Z__SvFj?:* CENTURY YELLOWSTONE TRAVEL TRAILERS QUALITY AT ANY BUDGET STACHLER TRAILER SALES, INC. y771 Highland (M-59)_W'9440 Check Our Deal on— SWISS COLONY LUXURY TRAILERS FROLIC TRAILERS AND TRUCK CAMPERS SKAMPER FOLD-DOWN CAMPERS 13 to 21 It. on display et- Jacobson Troiler Soles 1490 WIIMems Lake Rd. OR 3-5911 CLOSE-OUt ■ STARCRAFT 1969 TRAVEL TRAILERS 1969 CAMPERS 5EE THE ALL NEW 1970 ALJO'S AND STARCRAFTS ' CRUISE OUT, INC. IS E. Welton , PE S-4402 Dally 9-4; Set. 9-5; Closed Sum_ exRWr MOTOR HOME 21'. 23', 25', MODELS See this Celifornle bullt-ln unit which le No. 2 In motor home sales. Prices start at 59,995, up. 'l AND ALL HAVE MODERN DECOR Early American-Mediterranean CAMBRIDGE liberty MONARCH RAMBRANDT Available Immediately—park space Colonial Mobile Homes FE 2-1457 474-4444 25 Opdyke Rd. 2733 Dixie Hwy. Auburn Haights___________Pentlec 10x44 PACE AAAKER, 2 bedroom, carpeted, let up._ln perk, no illdren. 52500. 481 STACHLER TRAILER $ALES, INC. |7y_Hlghlejld (M:;59) _ 682-9440 FLORIDA BOUND? TAKE ALONG A - SPORT TRAILER, OEM > OR CORSAIR . TRAVEL TRAILER Coriair end Gem pickup campers. Ellsworth Trailer Sales >877 Dixie HI-LO P0NTI4C FRIENDS 8E YOUR LOCAL DEALER 5M»o'5'l'i'*n^' YUKON D^LTA LAGE TRAILER SALES .li*l!sER»-«« HUNTERS SPECIAL (GBORGIE BOYS) ARE HERE 4 iizee Ion .pickup, IntulaM Pickup Top. >/2 USUAL DOWN PMTS.I only Va of the STOP SHOPPING Giobmaster Choica Lots available CLARKSTON MOBILE HOME SALES. INC. 4S51 Clintonvilla Rd. 674-00 1 ONLY SALE 12'x40', 1-bedroom, 54995 12'x40' 2-bedroom, $4895 Perk, Oxford, Perkwood Danish King. Free Delivery within __ miles. Will trade for most anything of value. Open 9-9 p.m. MIDLAND TRAILER SALES 2257 Dixie Hwy. 338-0772 12'X60', 1948 AMHURST, on ioL on- turn.. 482-9298.___________________ 24' DOUBLE WIDES, from 88,450 sef up I Trades accepted I Countryside Living, 1084 Oakland, _334-1509 3l"FT. X 8 ft. Chief Pontiac, 52300. 50 It X 10 ft. New Moon, $3200. ;St-up on lot, retirees.^ Walking distance to shopping center. 20 N. Tllden, Office No. 45.________ ^ X 12, 1M9 LIherty Mobile home, M'otle‘*^Es?:.e.'."‘'En'(5? 54P0, included in py|c..,M«. sell furnisneo or 55400. __ iesrANbERSdN, excellent condition. 756 ANUCKSON, excel 8'X45', 51350, 373-1344. ____ 1944 TITAN 12x55, furnished, exc 966 IIIAN iw...—-- - -- 5ruroV"LVk;'"o?..ro)5"«. ^DETROltER AMERICAN SUNRISE PARK KROPF Double Wldes, Expendo'i Custom built to your order AT BOB HUTCHINSON MOBILE HOME SALES 4301 .DIXIE HWY. 673-1202 DRAYTON PLAINS Open Den^ Sunday 'til 5 li, ti,ioo I over peymenti. Must tell heellh, k .............. E 8-9828 iMnioLLV pArR, )2'x 467Tklrred Central Hr conditioning. 33S-7m ■f2 X 86 AAOTlARCHrnke new 1969 MONARCH 12 x 40 Expendo, 3 bedroom, skirting, outside building IxIO. Not furnlihedMyiOO I. 343-4404 HAYDEN CAMPER SALES Taka M-19, Vk mile W. el Oxbc ______do Living, M4-180I R(iYAl-0R-REGAL ACTIVE Hftuittrolltri ^ 89 Wanted Cart-Trucki PLBETWOOD 10X87 porch, ihed, iklrting, furnished, we pay hell '*■' cell 882-1380. LikE fireWT”I9'4i,“2 bedfoom;~bejh and^ heme, furnlihad,_332-1487. Rent Trailer Spoee 90 tor CARNIVAL By Dick Turnei TOP DOLLARS FOR SHARP, LOW MILAGE AUTOMOBILES. H, J. VAN WELT j OR 3 1355 TOP' |'">0R~CLEAN' CARS OR truck!. Economy Cere. 2318 Dixie. TOP $ PAID PRIVATE TRAILER SPACE, 4274 ^11 ^Hectra TlrEi>Auto-Truck STUDDED SNOW TIRES, lOr ...uu ____ pickup. Excellent condition. Alter onyihinfl Sharp With oir con- i22Ss, Olds 98s, Pontiacs ond '8.55x14 ditioning. WILSON CRISSMAN CADILLAC I l2'/t / i. Maot-Amarican ET. Cragar, Junk Cari-Trucki 101-A Lhsen, Trade eld megs for new. ear Polyglese tires Cheeler g.ig junk CARS, trucks, free low. . Merkel Tire CO. 2435 Orchard 1 rr n oxt/ Rd., Keego. j Ft 2-^666 O'SI CARS,'Iree tow. yJ I _ FE W795. _ ■ ■' JUNK CARS, we'lovv. peT lor Auto Service — Repair METAL FLAKE SPECIAL 5395 (most csrti H Collision OR 3-5200, 47.1 Ir* lire, 5 - 7.3ixl4 tires end 1,18x15 wheels, 5 - 15" Chey 1940 RUPP MINI-BIKE, Motorcycles A-1 Motorcycle Insurance FARMERS INSURANCE Agency ( Pontiac across from Anderson Honda. Phone 334-4597. Bodily li Jury, property damage for ;on- 1-2-3-JUNK CABS- CompleteTlroe~foW I , away any tlnhe. 334-1478._ ! ALWAYS BUVINo'tfUN'k CARS arid yj I scrap, we tow. 373-4440, 1 COPPER-BRASS. RA'bTAfORS -starters and generators, C. DIxson, ^R 3-5 _ ___ __ JUNK CARS, FREE^'TDw' ______________FE 3-4904 811 oo| *“*»-Truck Parts slim ' •'CAR END, 1 wheels. OR 3-1143.___ '427 FORD, NEW perU; be cam-aolldii ir tirat, li Bllvar matal-flaktp $3/995 63-$d534. _ 1944'"CHEvROlET 'iUPER‘SP6Rf, Vinyl roofj powar and automatic tl3$$. Call Mr. Parka at Ml 4-7500 TURNER FORD 24(10 M4pie R^, Troy 1966 CORVEtTE Converlihle 4-tpaed, redol, heeler, blue llJilih. Spedial - $2495 New and Uitd Can 106 CHEVROLET 1949, B I S C A Y N E , sedan, power steering end brakes, best nfler. 489-4454, or 388-0797. 1969 CAMARO. VINYrRbOFrVadio, 5148. 4300 I privata owner. 673- Bill Fox Chevy 755 S. Rochettar ^d. _ 651-7000 1966'CHEVR6LeT> iMpALA HardtQp: . X—x._ power $f—— whifewatli. If • Llncoln-Marcury, HlllRlda Oakland. 333-7863. _ ____ _ l966'"CHCVRbLEfp CAPprCE, 9 pastengtr wagon/ VI/ auto./ power brakei.jind itaarinp. 626-0055. CAMARO 1967 iRALLV SPORT, I !• coniolr, tires, 1969 CHEVY MALIBU HARDTOP LIKE NEW $1895 GRIMALDI CAR CO-900 Oakland Ave. FE 5-9421 1949 CHEVY NOVA SS,.... _ CALI, 173-1274. ' 1949 CHEVY IMPALA, lectory elr, power sleering end brakes, tut chains, vinyl top. 625-4289. New and Used Can 106 tional. Auta. 674-3394. CbRVBfti black iop >9/ yellow (ntarlof/ - 13/000 mllai/ muif I ' JOHNIVlcAUilmi FOW [9»9 CHEVY II Nova Hardtop, With automatic, radio, bieter, V8, engine, beeulltui royal plus with mJlchlng Interior. Year end clearance tpeclel only 82181 full price. P.S. Wb've Mbved Vi mile N, ol Miracle Mile -'845 8. Telegraph Rd. PE 3-4101 1966 CHRYSLER Newport 4-Door Hardtop lectory elr conditioning, only ■ $1095. Tom Rademacher Chevy-Olds On us 10 at M-15 Clorkston________MA 5-5071 IterCHEVELLE. Very celen. 1925. ‘I agree that he grows on a per.son ... unless they padlock the refrigerator!” radio, haatar, whitawallt. good 11295. Sheehan's 7863. _ ^_________Wq^332-0794. 1968 TRIUMPH 500, Scrambler, $700'. 624-0061. 1969/ 650. TRIUMPH Bonneville, mint condition. $1100. OR 3-6076. " 197o’HO'NDA SCRAMBLER 3S0 * 627-3142 1970'S. ARE HERE Hondos-T riumphs-BSA's MINI BIKES HUGE SAVINGS FALL Clearance 120CC SUZUKI Trail Bike, 6 Speed REGULAR $485 Sale $375 12,000 ml or 12 mo. warranty MG SUZUKI SALES 4667 Dixie Hwy. 673-64SI DRAYTON PLAINS Motorcycle REPAIRS Reduced Winter Rates Free pickup and delivery ALL WORK GUARANTEED ANDERSON SALES & SERVICE 1445 S. Telegraph___FE 3-7102 SUZUKI CYCLES, SOCC oawson;s sales,_ t i p s i c o YAMAHA Prices from 5895 K & W CYCLE Utica 731-0290 MICHIGAN'S OLDEST EXCLUSIVE YAMAHA DEALER Bicycles 96 RECONDITIONED BIKE, soma like For Christmas. MA 6-7430. Boots-Accessorict BOAT STORAGE, INSIDE. Privata GLASSPAR, STEURY, MIcro-craft mman and Do DAWSON'S TIP^ICO boats, LAKE, FINAL CLOSE OUT SALE PINTER'S Prices flashed on new AAR'S BOATS 8i MOTORS ____________693-1600 _____ RESERVE YOUR BOAT and m I fpaci I with I WINTER Outside Beat Storage Inside Motor Storage SAVE m ON_NEW_ OTOR BOATS-MOtORS-TRAILERS Harrington Boot Works 899 S. Telegraph______3324033 Y^R-END CLEARANCE On All 1949 Stock I New 1970 boete and snowmobllssll BIRMINGHAM BOAT CENTER ___1M5 S. Woodward at Adams WINTER STORAGE CLEARANCE 1969 Boats, Motors, Trailers COHO SPECIALS Got some lust right for Coho 4' Glestron 1949 GT 148 S^rt 4' new alum, boat .........8340 6' Owens, 40 h trailer ......... Cruise Out, Inc. Wanttd Can-Trucks 101 EXTRA Dollars Paid FOR THAT EXTRA Sharp Car Especially Chevellei. . Cemeroi, Corvettes, GTO's, Firebirds 442's. 'Check 1 Averill's Dixie_____FE 4-4094 Mansfield AUTO SALES 300 Share Cldlllacs, Ponlltc, Olds ihd RuICKS ter out-et-slate mArkel. Top JOHNSON'S TRAILER SUPPLIES , ‘dSSB‘°p"d'r'i* T80TW00D WAG-N-A/IASTERS I it Jpliyn pa 4-8I53 MANSFIELD Agio SALES TOWN 4 COUNTRY ' MOBILE HOMES, INC. Telegraph at Dixie Hwy. 334-6694 Dally 'til I Set. a lun. 'til 8 'E 3-5900 PB 1-1825 ^'TdP, DOLLAR,PAID" GLENN'S ' Fortign Curt Tempest bucket 1957 CHEVY WAGON body, Chevy parts. Including 327 engine. 423-92St. 105 New and Used Con LATE MODEL CADIU 1968 OPEL Wogon Radio, heater, whitewall lire: mileage. Full price. $1395 FISCHER BUICK 515 S. Woodward ll9BO_yvide TrjKk Dr. lrmlnghem_^__________ ^5400blACK COR'YETTe; 1968 OPEL RALLY SPORT, new engine, 4_speod,_FE 2-1115. 51,100. radial plys, em-tm, Im-slereo, | 1957 CHEVY MrBufLT 5400. OR 3-9084 HAND AT ALL TI*^ES lEROME CADILLAC CO. FE 3-7021 11947 CHEVELLE. SEDAN. POWER 1A4:' warranty. 27,000 ml. Very clean IQO sim 1-741^352.__________ 11947 CHEVELLE'MaMbu, V-i; 'pow^^ 3N VsMMS.' JOHN McAULIFFE FORD 1949 CAMERO Hardtop, with Automaiic, radio, heater, power sleering, VI, beautiful metelilc tiirquoite finish, with black vinyl top. year end r.ieerence apeciei K'Moved i BIRMINGHAM •» mile N. of Miracle Mile 1845 S. Telegraph Rd.J^K V41QI 1969 CHEVY Impala $porl coupe, with air conditioning. | Chrysler-Plymouth 2100 Mepio Rd. Troy 642-7000 Only brikes, vinyl $2900 Bill Fox Chevy 755 S, Rochester Rd. 1969 CHEVY brakes, tinted windshield, heater, v finish, Only radio, heater, whittwelli/ 1967 CHRYSLER 300 2-Door Hardtop With medium metallic blue light blue Interior, black vinyl i V-8, automatic, radio, hai powar itatrtng, brakes. Only $1595 BIRMINGHAM $2495 sulometic, radio. 51200. 1967 CHEVY PONTIAC 2 0664 hardlop, body. 525. 1948 Munice 4 speed A; linkage, ball housing, clutch It fly I ctwvy. 01^ 4-3537, 1 1968 VOLKSWAGEN, (SREEN Wlin ,957 rHEVY'-FoTO.TtIhl.— whl'.* .Jn'«r.'0F. Sood condition. | call after 4, 332-4709. 1957 CHEVY NOA4AD, factory elr7 4- Impala Convertible New and Used Cars h V8, power ateering, radio, _________ ___ ____________ ter, whitewalls, red 1 Chrysler-Plymouth 2100 Maple Rd. Troy 642-7000________ Over 7‘5 MAIHEWS-HARGREAVtS I THE BIG EOT 1 1431 Oeklend Ave. FE 4-4547 210 Orchard Lk. • FI 2-9141 106New and UudYart 106 1944 TEMPEST FOR parts end motor, 550. _____________^424-5G2_________ 45 T-BIrt engine, 39(T .$14S 44 Chevy engine, 283 8150 1964 Ford engine, 352 5100 1962 Studs., V8 engine (Hawk) 5 95 1947 Grand Prix, Chrome Rally Ford I 5100 chromes 5 Pontiac t Also Sundays, 444-941 WANTED, HOME FOR 1947 VW.I Isstback, maintained by original It, owner, very clean. $1300. 482-2982 trens., body parts, etc. OR 3-5200 AUTO PARTS 102 1943-1944 Chevy Powerglide. FE 8-0789, 117 E, Rutgers 1964 396 COMPLETB CAM arid ■ " " 8325, 3334te57. TRANSMISSION FOR 1965 Pontiac, 8^2430_____ TRIUMPH TR-3 hardtop, white, exc ............... i-909t alter 3. condition, $60. New ond Used Trucks 103 1959 FORD 84-TON Pickup, 4-speed 1942 FORD F350 wrecker, full equipment, dolly wheels, sling ---------- boom. 481-2958. 1942 JEEP blade, also 391-3436. 1943 JEEP , _ ItofTRIUMPlnfri, OPDYKE HARDWARE LUCKY AUTO.wg^ 1940 W. Wide Track 4-1006_______^_______« 3-785^ 1967 Buick Electro 225' stick, 363-3097._________________ 1965 CHEVROLET IMPALA automatic, powar steering, cor throughout. Call after 5 628-3179, Oxford. $2295 Suburban Olds 1967 ELECTRA 225, 4-door hardtop, air conditioning, power steering and brakes, sharp car, $2200. 673- 860 S. Woadward Birminghom Ml 7-5111 tenor, time price Is right, time to buy a convertible, the "call credit manager Mr. Bell for Lew Payments GET A "STAN" THE MAN DEAL STAN ELLIS OLDS 558 Oeklend Ave._____FS.7±L01 1948 LeSABRE CONVE'RTIBLE. Bonus Buyl Chrome ■ namon Bronze Turner Priced at $1995. Call Mr. Parks at Ml 4-7S00. TURNER FORD 2408 Maple Rd. _____Il°y 2-door, hardtop, power steering, burgundy finish. $995 Suburban Olds 1965 CHEVY SUPER SPORT, 2-door hardtop, 394-325, 4 speed, red-black extra clean, call FE 5- 4470, after 5:30 p.m. 1945 CHEVY, VO, wagon, power steering, power brakes, wife's car, top running condition. Must sell at once. S450. Firm. 473-0175. 194S CHEFY WAGON, v'-O automatic, real nice, 401-2204,__________________ 1945 CHEVELLE, 4 speed stick shift. excellent condition, $895. 330-8295. 19 44 CHEVY BISCAYNE, automatic, 4-cyllnder, 40,000 ml. 1944 CHEVY WAGON power, automatic, radio end boater, whitewalls. Turner price at $994. Cell Mr. Perks at Ml 4-7500. TURNER FORD 2600 Maple Rd. Troy $2095 PONTIAC RETAIL STORE 45 University Drive 333-7954 1968 CORVETTE 427 lOlne, power steering, brekes, ith perelll whitewalls, two tops. Birmingham Doctor. Like n» condition, balance ot new c warranty. CALL CREDIT MANAGER Mr. Bell tor Low Payments GET A "STAN" THE MAN DEAL STAN ELLIS OLDS 550 Oakland Ave. FE 2-0101 TOHN McAULIFFE FORD 1948 CORVETTE Convertible, red P.S. We've Moved Vi Mile N. ot Miracle MMe 1145 5.'Telw'raph'Rd. ' FES-4101 1968 CHEVELLE Hardtop Malibu, 2-door, yellow wl aulomatic, power sleerino. $1750 Bill Fox Ghevy 5. Rochester Rd. speed, power steering and brekes, Lemons blue, white Interior. $2158. Call 332-8323. W«I- S'"’---------------- Save $$$ at Mike Savoie Chevy 1900 W. Maple Ml 4-2735 1969 Z-28 Camsro, LeMans New and Used Cart 106New and Used Cart 106 1968 BUICK Riviera $2895 BOB BORST Lincoln-Mercury Sales 1950 W. MepIO Rd., Troy Ml 4-2200 1968 ELECTRA 225 Convertible, full power, reedy 51$ S. Woodwi BUi^ 447-5400 1943 CADILLAC SEDAN DeVllle, air conditioning, full power, cruise control, tilt wheel end other ex- pf5S 1943 CADILLAC EL DORADO verllble, everything and eli owner. Cell 079-9333._______ 1945 CADILLAC COUPE, full po 2 core miles, 01,050. Cell 42S-2S74. AM-pM. l'945 CADILLAC CONVERTIBLE, ladles car. Ilka new, loaded 20,000 miles, 424-4514. 'OFFER. BEST medlotely, 1947 Cadillac Fleetwood Brougham, tuMly equipped^ 442 1422. 1967 Cadillac Convertible, full Powe_r, lectory elr. AM-FM radio, at 02995 Suburban Olds 860 S. Woodward Birminghi^ Ml 7-5111 ‘l947'1:AOILLAC''cbupe de Vl'lie. 'Sky rudio, Whitt vlnyl-Iop. Ont color with Whitt Jfi S349S. Sheehan's Hillside Llncoln-Mercuryi 2 50 Oakland. MS-WG;_____________ / 1961 ELDORAbO' WITH AI»,~13,eoo __ "I" ' 1969 CADILLAC Coupe DeVille 1968 TRIUMPH: $^995 ^ Suburban Olds GT 4-Speed with radio, wire wheel covers, tire engine red ' Th,' $1995 MATTHEWS-HARGREAVES THE BIG LOT 421 Oeklend Ave. FE 4-4547 860 S. Woodward Birmingham Ml 7-5111 ......... OLffT'iioo'r,—J-iToSS ' ' srigtnsi, ns»er sd. Mplor ex-Tlret new. 11,500 firm. 2*3- A-1 SPECIALS 1968 Ford Country Squire 10-pessenger, 2 to choose from, 390 V-l, power steering, brikes. ot them. From - $2695 1969 Bronco 4-whael drive, brand blew, reedy to go to ' $3195 1968 Camaro 2-Door Hardtop With 6-cyt. ttick, rtdin, htattr, dark biut with black vinyl top. $1895 1967 T-Birci extra therel Only -- $2595 1968 Torino “GT" Fastback $2095 1966 Scout International $ave 1968 Chevy Camper Special liton Pickup, with V-8, tfick, custom ctb. radio, htatar. Only $1995 . 1967 Ford $1395 FLANNERtFORD OnJJ.S. 10 (Dixie Hwy.) 1 623-0900^ ■\ W: 1969 Ford Torino 3-doer hardtop, Fastback, V-l, autometic, power ateering, power brakes, redlo. ShsrpI $2495 1968 Pontiac GTD $2395 1^69 Rambler American 6-cvlindtr, automatic trant' mission, eadio. $1495 1967 Lincoln Continental 2-Door hardtop, faclorv air cond. FM radio, vinyl $2895 1968 Dodge Charger automatic, eei .. power brakes, i lory air, vinyl too. seats, console. SherpI $2495 1969 Dodge Charger 9, consoli fl too. $2895 FREE 20 LB. TURKEY ' car dalivary now until Open Mon. and Thurs. 'til 9:00 P.M. Open Tues., Wed. and Sat. 'til 6:00 666 S. Woodward, Birmingham Ml 6-3900 New and Used Cars 106New and Used Can 106 "Easy" Bob Reynolds Must be selling cars CHEAPI Because he was the top salesman Last Month Get His Price on a New 1969 or 1970 Nowl GIVE US A TRY ' BEFORE YOU BUY OAKLAND Chrysler-Plymouth Thanksgiving Sale cars le make 1969 Plymouth Fury III fully equipped end full teclory warranty. This week only. $2395 1967 Buick GS 400, hardtop. This $1595 1968 Plymouth Fury III Look, a 4-door, hardtop, vinyl roof., powar stoarlng. powar brakfs, and what a prica. $1795 1968 Chrysler Newport 9>diBor, hardtop, biua vinyi roof, and a iharp car. power brakes, $1995 1968 DODGE Catalina "SOO" 2-door, hardtop. 1966 PONTIAC CeleMni 2-door, hardtop, green. $995 1967 Chrysler Newport Custom 4-door, sedan, green, redlo, automatic, this cer Is $1895 1967 Dodge Coronet SOO 4-door, side $1295 1968 Plymouth Fury III whita 4-door, sadan clean car thla li family car. $1695 1965 Olds dfiuxa station wagoi want -to haul things, m $695 1967 Dodge $1195 1968 Charger v-d, autometic, p«w»r etier-Ing, vinyl top, and i sharp $2395 , TODAY'5 SPECIAl. , 1968 Road Runner .......................... .$1995 2-door, coupe with the "HemI Engine" autometic, trihsmlsslon, only 4.0^ miles, a bargain. CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH ^ 724 Oakland Ave. FE 5-9436 u D—10 THE PONTIAC PRESS, Ntw iwd Uitd Cot 106 1M9 CHRYSLER. Imptrial ^ ~ — ^.aory w.r mlln, llki $48^5 TOWN & COUNTRY \ ROCHESTER 1969 Chrysler t door hirdtop, •utotnitlc, win doubla Mvnr, vinyl top with uddli ■•■Ihor intprlor, • rail ttotl it only $2885 Oakland CHRYSIER-PLYMOUTH N«w and Uud Con 106 1M« DODsn CORONIT 100, hordtop, vInyT t^ M3, poll, tion, oIm '<1 Contot, ditlon, DM! pllora, 177^ lioBoDoe c¥fAR6¥6, 4“it>Md, TURNER FORD ' Troy 1968 DODGE Supar Daa 2-Door Hardtop Whit* finish, black vinyl roof, matchlno Intarlor, V-l. automatic, radio, naatar, (^0. naatar, powar staaring. Ti795 BIRMINGHAM Chrysler-Plymouth _EJ?..?l’t?*ll*6* OODGB DART,'*, J door UAPCi, o, j, ac 11900. FE 5*0539. MILOSCH CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH $200 UNDER FAQORY COST! 1969 CHRYSLERS 1969 PLYMOUTHS ALL NEW! 1 with air. Ntw «nd Uitd Cart MARMADllKK •«5 MUST>NQ CONVERTIBIE Exc. condition, a cyl. 3 on tho fiMr. East ottar. m ku. _ ►is MU$TaTo7*'CYLIND1I9, atlck thin, low mllaaoa, UL ^2I79. ' 1965 Mustang ' V-8 ENGINE, AUTOMATIC $795 GRIMALDI CAR CO. 900 Oakland Ava. FE 5-9421 FORD 1**5 ■ STATION WAodN* Ry Anderson and Leemins T? s. aSI-3952. $700. HANDY'MAN'S'SPECIALI .905 Frod Station Wagon, powtr. automatic transmission, $299. Call Mr. Parks at Ml 4*7500. TURNER FORD J*0p_Mppl» Rd.___________ Troy i**S FORD >0 Ptuolngor'country >odon, itallon w*gon. V ■ •, sutomatic, powtr tttoring, radio, haator, wmtewalla. Itos. Shaohan's HIHsIda Uncoln-Mtrcury, |]So OaKlMd. 33»a*3. ■ 1965 MUSTANG 2 door hardtop. High performanca ang. Quads. Maka ottar.^ Car Track. 1:30 Goodyaar, U70 '1940 FORD, OPERA COUPE. 1965 FORD 4 DOOR . . $475 1963 Pontiac Catalina transmission, $350. tirts, ciaan, ttOO. OPDYKE HARDWARE 1966 GALAXIE FORD . . $995 Shihey. OPDYKE HARDWARE 1966_ FORD, custom station wa^n, 677 M44, Lako Orion, 693*0341 1969 CHRYSLER 300 2-Door Hardtop lactery air conditioning. Only- $2995 BIRMINGHAM Chrysler-Plymouth im Mapla Rd. 642-7000 ____condition, »I95. Morvtl Molora, 751 OaltJon^FX«JO”_ IMS FORD GALAXIE m 1 door convortibla, 39*4)133. I9*S FORD, GALAXIE 500, 1 door. Vd automallc, radio, turqu^sa paJnL axctllant_conclltloiL *5l:l*Wi. 19*3 FORD FAIRLA'nE, j'door. FE 2-937*. 19*3 COUNTRY Sedan, Jtatl 19*4 CHEVELLE, FORDS AND ALL 'ears and modal! Inancing to all, call Mr, Tad, 443- 390 V-a engine. transmission, power brakes and ROSE RAMBLER-JEEP, automatic, radio Call Mr. Parks at Ml 4-7S00. TURNER FORD 2600________________________ 1966 FORD GALAXIE 500 ha $900. 331*6033 6:30. 1966 FALCON FUTURA Sedan, Parks at Ml 4*7500. TURNER FORD $00 Maple Rd. 1966 MUSTANG. Red, 2 door, radio ' 1964 FO'RD'GALAXIE 500 I__________ 332-3474 __ 11965 MUSTANG.*' VV STICK.^ ..... .6 cyl., Stick shift, ax- _- callent condition, $995. 36^7649^ 1966 FORD COUNTRY SQUIRE, ifr-conditioning, powar, automatic transmission, $994. Call Mr. Parks at Ml 4-7500. TURNER FORD 2*00 Maple Rd. Troy 1966 FORD GALAXIE, EXCEPTIONALLY CLEAN, NICE. 19** DODGE * DOOR With Va, autoffli... and euti Only- LUCKY AUTO I GRIMALDI car CO. 19*5 MUSTANG * CYLINDER, slan-(”?' f.ORR. GAl-AXI.e dard transmission S*25. Call before 19*a OLDS 4 DOOR wmi powtr, air conditioning, low mllaagt. McKENZIE^ FORD 651-2506 MUSTANGS! Hocbatlgr bODO'E'POLAkA. Mr. Parks at i harmop, *1400^33*-M*0._ NEW FINANCE PLAN WoVkIng? Need a car? We arrange lor almost anybody with good, bad or no credit. 75 Cars to choose from. . Call Credit Mgr. Mr. Irv - D^ar^FE 4-100* or FE 3-7*54._ "HOME OF THE DEPENDABLE USED CARS" Waterford • Fll I DAY, N 0M B K R 21, 1 DfiO New and Used Can 106 For Want Ads( Dial 334-4981 ‘it’s uncanny the way he always knows when I've reached the comics section!” New and Used Can 106 i New and Used Care JOHN McAULIFFE FORD | 1967 Delta Custom 19*9 FORD Falrlan* 500 Fastback, f dwr, hardtop, factory po* with automallc, radio, healer, laclory air, vinyl lop. Ilka new. power steering, V$, four to choose '^"'"c.v;rrA*““-Suburban Olds P.S. We've Moved 1 860 S. Woodward mii. N.ofcMir,ci._Miia . Birmingham Ml 7-5111 19*3 PONTIAC CATALINA, *ido(ir, hardio, “ '' sloarlng, powtr, londitlon, 13 7 5 Marvel Motors, 251 Oakland, Fi I 7*3 PONTIAC, 4-door hordh hydramoflc, pdwor brakes a stearin^,' good shape, no rusi New and Uied Can 108 19*7 BONNEVILLE, BRbUGHAM. condr miles, Zebari Rust Proofing, FE 5-2*57, IM7 TEMPEST SPORTS coubai top, powar itaarlng and p 1964'PONTIAC BON N El convertible, double power.' DOOR.' p< B, auto. brakes and itaarlng, warranty, loaded with extras, will tak^ old car In trada. 65ln<^l. I947>ONTIAC“‘cATALINA; 4 doer ladan, all powar. air. IISM, 331- 1967 PONTIAC Bonneville '2 door hardtop, power ataarlng. $1295 BOB BORST Lincoln-Mercury Sales 1950 W. Mapla Rd. Troy Ml *-2200 19*7 FiREBfR'D, sSPElC), lak* over paymonta, 332-Ml*. 19*4 BONNEVILLE CONVERTIBLE, all power, excellent tirei, rebuilt engine. $70$. UL 2-3187. l964>ONTrAC WAGON With power, automatic, looking for good traniportatlon and raaionabla prict? This Is It. SHELTON Pontioc-Buick 855 S. Rochester Rd. _ 651*S50o 1964 "BONNEVILLE Ka'rdtop, real iharpl Powtr and automatic transmission, $695. Call Mr. Parks at Ml 4-750P. TURNER FORD ______ ... ■’'’■‘’vj payments pliis'VlOO c«'h.'3»07ML' 1944 TEMPEST WAGON, Sharp,!,,,, LeMANS“verdefa green, auto., power steering and power brakes. *1750. FE 5-95*9. 1968 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE passenger. Wagon, factory air, cruisa control, electric 'power windows, rack on top. TEMPEST SPORTS COUPE, I automatic, radio, whitewalls, axe! Can 106lN«w and Ui#d Can 1 aMANS. 108 ■ and brakis. Ilka naw, liras. U.OOO miles., 373 0575j, a lo 5. _... I***-PONTIAC ■ Calallna, * door sadan. power Hearing and power disc brakes, aulo. bxcalltnl condition, 11,300. Afitr 5 , 391-0*79. i, , , .| 19*9'>0NTIAC CATALINA * ■ . coupt, air, vinyl top, loaded, taka older car In trade. O' *74 2712^ • 19*9 Grand Prix ............. 196* Olds, 4 door 19** Catilln* SI*. Won. 196* Catalina 2 dr. hrdt. 19*a Vanlur* ,. 19ta Calallna......V. 19*7 Ambassador Won., 19** Bonnevlllt 4 dr. 19*4 Ford Sla. W^iv 19*3 Mercury 4 dr. 19** Oolaxit 19*3 Mercury 19*3 Olds 4 door 19*2 Moreury eonvorllbli 19*2 Ford convortibla .. _ . Keego Sales & Service KEEGO HARBOR New and Used Can I 4100 mllai, *73 7*50 or *23-0***., |H*9 CATALINA 2 DOOR hardtop, rkVof;;rrc"."ii*%‘i9,*"V“*'*' ryiVoi''ii."oa'.i;r 7o opproclalo. *U-H«0 1*»9'FTREB'ieg 400, Carousal red ! black'Inlarlor. Brand naw 1. *239,V. 625-451*. ___ Pontiac Standarci Auto ;;j;?.9*2 Oakland aXi*. .. 21795 19*3 RAMBLER '^i175^®?Ili *1295 stick, good condlllon, 1175. Call .21195 *""*!-S47 REBeU ,,.,g95| -•*'"! lali at $i.«9D. Kwac "I JEEP. Union Lal^, EM -961 rambler: TAkE^^p^vtr paymanti. 373-6954 afitr 7 PM. 106 2I99SI Stick, OMd condlllon, *175. R EBEu ’ siaiioh'mv>n7~in series with * cyllndar Rliirr"'whl'liLT'ur'aT PrIeSd '•<; *02-3400 106 New and Used Can brakeis 36.000 milas. clean. No rust. 673-934$ brakes. RoaI { 1965 PONTIAC GRAND PrIx, with automatic, power radio, neater, factory air conditioning, black vinyl top. gleaming green finish, in good condtHon. Sea this you buy any car, - . - ly Cl Sava Hundrads, $1099 full prica. CALL CREDIT MANAGER Mr. Bell for Low Payments GET A "STAN" THE MAN DEAL _ 184^5. Telegraph R^B i969'MACH~l — COBRA jet •nglna. powar, automatic, original factory lasted price $4667, our naw low suggai prica $2488. Call i 4-7500. TURNER FORD *00 Mapla Rd. 1969 FORD whitewalls, radio. Only - Standard Autoi $2295 Merry Olds STAN ELLIS OLDS 550 Oakland A«.__________FE 2 *101 1965 LeMANS, POWER STEERING A brakes, buckat seats. 626-20I3. I9M Pontiac Calallna Cpa.. *900 “ ■ 373-5*00 Dealer ECONOMY CARS, 2335 DIXIE naw, comlortrom air, cruisa control. Tilt and Tel wheal, recline joMs, many extra!^ *2*-M3^______ 1968 Olds Cutlass 4-door sadan, V-8, automatic, I shltf, power steering and brakes. One; $1088. tarlor and In exc. condition. OR 3- 2^^ ____________ ____________ 1966 BONNEVILLE CONVERTIBLE, beautiful , . ________ power brakes, factory standard $2795 Suburban Olds 860 S. Woodward Birmingham Ml 7-5111 I9*« HO-GTO, axcallant condlllon, automatic and extras. $2175, call 16.200 miles. 5 brand $1895 Suburban Olds 860 S. Woodward Birmingham Ml 7-5111 1968 0ld798 Luxury Sedan ditioning, 6 way i factory air con- KESSLER'S »"»• 3400 Elizabeth Lk. Rd. DODGE CARS AND TRUbKS Salts and Service *5*1^LCON ECONO-LINE BUS. I JOHN McAULIFFE FORD I Hunter's Sp^all^Naw tires, radio! 19*7 T-BIRD 4 door mint greenl heater. *7**. Call Mr. Parks 4-7500. TURNER FORD 1-14002*00 MAPLE RD. Troy interior, air black vinyl top, conditioning ....... condition, full price, fuilj Naw and Used Cars 106 New and Used Cars 106 THERE'S AN OPEN ROAD TO MIKE SAVOIE And That Road Leads To These Tremendous Used Car Values! 1969 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE ..........................$3195 4-Door herdteii, full power, factory factory warranty. 1969 CHEVROLET CAPRICE COUPE ....................$2695 Full powtr, automatic, burgundy-black vinyl top. 1969 PONTIAC VENTURA ................................$2795 ^Dopr hamtMk full power, factory air conditioning, *,000 miles. 1969 CORVETTE COUPE............................ .......$4695 Full powtr, factory air-conditioning, automatic. 1968 CHEVELLE .....................................$1995 Sport Coup*, full power, automatic. Sharp l Sharp I 1968 CHEVROLET IMPALA .....................$1895 Custom Coup*, full power, vinyl too. 1968 CAMARO ......................$1995 1968 PONTIAC LEMANS................... . . . .$1995 Cualom coup*, full po 1968 MUSTANG..............................$1595 Z-Ooor Coup*, SharpI 1968 CHEVROLET IMPALA..................$1895 1968 JAVELIN AMERICAN ........................$1895 Ett seats, vinyl top. Ilka newl 1967 CHEVROLET SEDAN...................$1695 1967 OLDS DELTA 88 .................................$1795 *-Deor hardtop, rod. Ilk* brand naw I 1967 FORD GAUXIE 500 .... .......................$1695 *-Door, full powtr, factory alr-eondmonlng. 1965 FORD SEDAN .............................. $795 2-Door, (utomatic, with power. 1965 DODGE STATIGN WAGON...................... $595 1965 CHEVROLET IMPALA ................ ......... $995 Sharpl 2 door hardtop. 1968 CHEVROLET PICKUP ........................$16^5 Extr« CItanI 1968 FORD CUSTOM .................... $995 .......$189$ 1968 CHEVROLET IMPALA sport Coupa, gutomatle, power, burgundy, wa HAVy 20 SHARP, ONE-OWNER CARS WITH AIR-CONDITION- INO. euicks-pontiacs-fords-chevrolets. 1900 Maple Rd„ Troy Ml < PhondMI 4-2735 fbr diraetloni to MIko Savol* Chavr, 0p« »:00 ••"li to *:fl0 p,m. Monday and Thursday Onh I;00 a.m$ to «:30\p.m. Tuei., < $2190 P.S. We've Moved Mile N. of Miracle Mile 1843 S. Telegraph Rd. __FE 5-4101 1967 FORD ANGLIA, 2-door', celient condition, only $688. NORTHWEST AUTO SALES 2023 DIxta Hwy._________P 1967 T-BIRD Landau 4 door with full power, air eon- $ave BOB BORST Lincoln-Mercury Sales 1*50 W. Maple Rd., Troy Ml *-2200 1**» TORINO GT Fast 1970 Continental NOW IN STOCK Immediate Delivery SHEEHAN'S HILLSIDE LINCOLN-MERCURY Dixie at Telegraph________m7**3 1**0 MERCURY 4 door, V-'* automatic, power steering, factory air, no rust, came from Tennessee, $395, 662-6351.___________ , 1960 MERCURY Parklane, 4 door. I $2795 Suburban Olds 860 S. Woodward Birminghom Ml 7-5111 1960113^98 4-door power and factory air con ditioning. 4 to choose from. $3395 Suburban Olds 860 5. Woodward Birmingham Ml 7-5111 automatic, power steering and brakes, - 7 p.m. 626-1452.________ 1960 COMET, $30, RUNS -BRAND NEW- 1970 OLDS loaded'^$3 LINCOLN CONTINENTAL, full witn options. 651-0966, after 6. ----- " '' “-------" 1968 Thunderbird Full power. Factory air condition. $2895 Suburban Olds 860 "S. Woodward Birmingham Ml 7-5111 **« X-L FASTBACK vinyl roof, power and automatic transmission, priced to sell today $1895. Call Mr. Parks at Ml 4-7500. TURNER FORD Troy IM* FORD TORINO, 2*,M0 miles, 2U50. Good shape, *74-2027. _ 1*** TORINO FASTBACK - GT aquipped, power and automatic, 21*4*. Call Mr. Parks at Ml 4-7500. TURNER FORD 2600 Maple Rd. Troy FORD TORINO GT, 1968, gold I exc. cond., 335-7986. JOHN McAULIFFE FORD 1969 FORD Galaxie 500 hardtop, with automatic, heater, ce brand new, year special only $2288 beautiful metallic matchlno Interior. P.S. We've Moved Mile N, of Miracle Mile 1845 S. Telegraph Rd. FE ^4101 _ 1969 MUSTANG, CONVERTIBLE, 390 4-speed $2400. 682-9338._ JOHN McAULIFFE FORD 1969 MUSTANG Fastback with automatic, radio, heater, cower steering, brakes, canary yellow witi black Interior, car warranty. Year end clearance special only i full price. P.S. We've Moved '/j mile N. of Mirada Mile 1*45 S. Telegraph Rd. FE 5-4101_ 1969 Mark III 4 to choos* from. All area trades. $AVE BOB BORST LUCKY AUTO! 1940 W. Wide Track FE 4-1006_________________________ 1964 comet, BLACK, 2 doorV V-S,] auto., power steering, clean, $375. 334^5481 after 19M MERCURY MONTE R sedan. Desert sam matching alt vinyl ’•8, aut( brakes. top. V-8, automatic, power steering and brakes, radio,; heater, whitewalls. $1295. Sheehan's! Lincoln-Mercury, 1250 Oakland, 333-i scor group, oniy — $3272 Merry Olds 7863. mission, $1788. CalU ,6aT ^ _______ 373-1445 1965 PLYMOUTH. MUST sell. Make transr Mr. Parks at Ml 4-7500. TURNER FORD 2600 Maple Rd. ______ _ Troyi offer. 625-3654. " JOHN McAULIFFT FORD 'w valiant.automatic, 7**7 MERCURY- Hardtop. heater, power steering, brakes, beautiful metallic green finish, matching Interior, stilt under warranty, year and clearance special only *l5*t full We've Moved V2 mile N. of Miracle Mile 1845 S. Telegraph Rd. FE 5-4101 1968 MERCURY MONTEREY two door hardtop. V-8, brakes, vinyl top, whitewalls. Radio, Sheehan's Hillside, MERCURY MONTEGO Two Door Hardtop NEW 1970 NOW $3238 HILLSIDE LINCOLN MERCURY *150^*^ ______ T962 OLDS^ F-85lVagon with double power, V-*, automatic. CROWN MOTORS 131 Baldwin_Ave. ____FE 4-5056 1963 OLDS HOLIDAY ... $245 1964 OLDS. F-85 wagon, runs good, $575. 62M^. 1965 442 CONVERTIBLE 4.11 gear, coi offer. 682-7413. competition plus, best ' tires, $450. 685-2529. 1966 PLYMOUTH FURY III. Vinyl top. Deluxe Interior. P o w e $1,800. 682-5175. 1968 PLYMOUTH VIP 4-Door Hardtop dark metatlic green black vinyl roof, white vinyl In terlor, V-8, automatic, radio heater, power steering, brakes $1995 BIRMINGHAM Chrysler-Plymouth 2100 Mapla Rd. Troy ______642-7000__________ f*«« PLYMOUTH FURY III, 2 df. hardtop, power steering, brakes. Exc. condition, $1600. FE 8-2989. 1969 ROADRUNNER, 383, 2 door hardtop, silver with black vinyl top, tinted glass, rattv wheels, V 3^37^ _ __________________ 1961 PONTIAC CATALINA Wagon, power steering and brakes, good tires, 40,000 actual miles, $235. FE 5-2632. 1962 PONffAC f E 'M'P E S T , condition, $175. 332-1779. condition, best offer takes. 651-3691 Cars 106 New and Used Cars 106 New and Used Cars 106 HAHN TODAY'S SPECIAL 1964 CHEVELLE Malibu Hardtop .. .Save 2 Door with V-8, automatic, full power, factory air-conditioning, 28,000 actual miles. Must see to appreciate'. ^^ ■ 1966 CHEVY II Hardtop .. ....$1195 , 2 door with automatic* aconomy 6 cyl.# radio, heafar, low miiaaga, ont ownar trada. 1964 VALIANT 2-door' $795 Automatic, radio, heater, axcallant condlllon, on* owner frada-ln. | 1969 PLYMOUTH Wagon . $2995 Custom Su^burban 9-p8isangar, fully aqulpp^* low mllaagtr full warranlv. 1967 JEEP a-5 ............. $895 with 4 wheal drive, good mechanleal condition, needs body work and top. 1968 JEEPSTER $2895 Convarfible, with consola, buckats* powar fop, low miiaaga. Hurry on this ona. 1968 PLYMOUTH GTX Hardtop . $2195 2 door with buckats, console, 440 angina, naw car warranty, ona ownar trada-lnl 1969 PLYMOUTH Roadrunner v .$2695 2-door hardtop, with automallc, low miiaaga,'full factory warranty, green finish, with matching 1963 FORD Vz Ton $395 With $ cyl,, stick ihlMr> and in top running con^- Chryslei:-PlyiTiouth-Ran\bler-Ieep Clarkston 6673 Dixie Hwy. iMA 5-2635 1*«* TEMPEST Custom atatlon 1969 Pontioc GTO V-B, automatic, power steering and brakes. Vinyl top, mag wheels. $2695 Suburban Olds 860 S. Woodward {Bi^rmingham Ml 7;^111 ^8, automatic, power coln-Mercory, 1250 Oakland, 333- 1966 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE, factory air, full power, vinyl top, ■ glass, plus extras. $1250. 6497, after 6:30. 1967 FIREBIRD 400, mint GO! HAUPT PONTIAC Dick Canaan's mmiiSEfff $1199 1966 Plymouth Fury III 9 passenger, wagon, $ cylinder, automatic, power steering. $1299 $1899 1968 Dodge Coronet 440, 2 door, hardtop, power slearinq. $1999 1967 Plymouth Belvedere 1968 Dodge Charger cylinder, automallc, povB $2299 j 1967 Dodge A-lOO ' Fan, side doors. $1399 1966 Dodge Coronet' automatic, 'power ataarlng. $1299 1966 Dodge ''""’$1199 1966 Plymouth Road Runner, iharpl $2499 Largest Mopar lnv|ptory in Pontiac Area Dodge 855 Oakland Ave. Cars 106 New and Used Cars 106New and Used Cars 106New 1969 PONTIAC ^ Wide-Tracks! - BRAND NEW - - BRAND NEW - 1969 PONTIAC ” 1969 FIREBIRD Catalina 2-Door Hardtop with turbo-hydramatic, wheel discs, power steering, brakes. 8.55x15 whitewalls. STOCK No. 485 Only - Hordtop Coupe with automatic, decor .group, power steering, power brakes, tinted glass, cordova top. Firebird 350 engine, pushbutton radio, custom trim, E70x14" whitewalls. We have more 1969 Firebirds to choose from — $2728 $2768 Special Deals on 1969, Executive Mileage Gars 1969 PONTIAC Catalina Wagon 1969 CATALINA 2 Door Hardtop with power steering, brakes, hydra-matic, tinted glass, factory air conditioning, whitewalls, radio. Only — $2695 9 passenger, hydramatic, power steering, brakes, radio, heater, whitewalls, decor group, tinted all windows, factory air conditioning. 4 to Choose From $3295 1969 BONNEVILLE 4 Door Hardtop, Hydramatic, power steering, power brokes, AM-FM radio, power windows, power seats, cordova top, stereo tope, tinted glass, factory air conditioning. 4 to choose from. $3395 1»S8 VW 2 Door .....................................*1295 With four >paad, radio, heater, whitewalls. 1967 PONTIAC Wagon ................ ..............$1695 Calallna with hydramatic, power ataarlng, brakes, radio, haator. 1965 PONTIAC Catalina ...................................$595 4 door sedan, with V*, automatic, Oakland County motet' pool carl 1965 TEMPEST 2-door................................$495 4 cyl. angina, automatic, Oakland County motor pool car. 1965 CORVAIR 2-door............... ....... ..........$495 with radio, heater, 4 speed, bucket!, whltawalls, rad tlnlsh. 1966 GRAND PRIX............ 2-door hardtop, with Hydromallc, .......$1495 brakes, buckats. console, radio, healer, whltawalls. 1969 PONTIAC Grand Prix ................................$3895 2 door hordtop, with hydramatic* Dowar ttaarina. hrAka* orv air conditioning, SJ option, tSrt?d gf«raii -— 1962 FALCON 2-Door with 4 cyl. angina, stick sh .$295 1965 DODGE 2-Door .......................$695 1967 GTO Hardtop .. 2 door with whit* finish, his .$1895 ' staarlng. We Will Meet or Beat,-Any Deal/ We Will Not Be Undersold Yes — ^ Pontiacs Left—-Tremendous Reductions! Open Rally \till 9 P.M. On M-24*-Lake Orion' PONTIAC-TEMPEST ' , ‘ Open Sat.Tiir 6 kM. MY 3-6266 ■kl- fV/' 't'-v -'1 iTi ■ ' k \\ % V ^ flii % Con 106 \;l THE PONTTAC PRESS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 1969 Railroading ACROSS Sttiir'" Mundar'[^ 38ArtltM 41 Upnwri eraatur* 45 Fit' 45 Collactlon o( 48 c& thad^ 5iRoix)U nShortpapa'l eapa 13 Help 14 Candlanut ofdaeds 63 Doubla curva 64Roaai SO L«w aand hill SlExploaiva DOWN (ab.) lRln«-Uilad 22 Piece out 24 Rajah's wl 27 Charivari (coll.) S2 Decree (contr.) 2 Bow (comb, form) 3 Native 34 Compass point Iranian Turk 35 Cut grass 4 School of 36 Consume food Greek 0 Headland 10 So be it! 11 Unusual 17 Elysium lOPoaaeasiva pronoun 23 Sharp 24 Reduction in sail area 25 Jewish month ^ Feminine appellation 28£Wntial being 28 Feminine friend (Fr.) 50 Affirm 52 Utilizes 53 Border on 54 Ancient Irish capital 55 Biblical name 57 Solemn wonder Exclusive Mew Zenith COLOR COMMANDER Simplified Celer Gentrel NOW! One control simultaneously adjusts contrast, color level and brightness in proper balance to provide the most pleasing picture for any light conditions in the roomi OIAQT M6 aq. In. pietura COLOR IV TITAN 80 HANDCRAFTED CHASSIS combines famous Zenith Handcrafted dependability with solid-state advances. CHROMATIC BRAIN Zenith’s unique Integrated circuit color demodulator (or the sharpest, clearest, truest colors. ■ GYRO-DRIVE Advanced Zenith UMF Channel Selector (or easy, precise selection of UHF channels. SUPER VIDEO RANGE TUNER SUNSHINE* COLOR TV PICTURE TUBE WORLD'* FINiST COLOR TV PERFORMANCE SALES and SERVICE • Color & B & W TV * StaraoS'Radios • Tap* Playars * TV Antonnas DISCOUNT PRICES 681-1515 EASY TERMS ItBl W. HURON 3 Blocks West of Tologroph Opon Friday Til 9 P.M. STOP IN TODAY for a domonstration of Zenith Color Commander! -Television Programs- P^grami furnliitd by stationg list*d in this column ar* subjoct to chang* without notlc*! lonnals. 2-WJBIt^TV. 4-WWJ-TVl 7-WXYZ-TV. 9i|CKLW-TVv SO-WKSD-TV, S6-VyTVS-TV, 62-iWXON-TV R — Rerun C — Color ' FRIDAY NIGHT 8:00 (2 (A) (7) C - News. Weather, Sports , (50) R C — Flintstones (56) R — Segovia Master Class (62) R — Ozzle and Harriet 6:30 (2) C - News -Cronklte (4) C - News - Huntley, Brinkley (9) R - Dick Van Dyke — Rob invites 44 fellow PTA members to his television show. (50) R — Muristers — Herman works his disappearing act too well at the school talent show. (56) Bask; Issues of Man — Can man find a way to make strong, permanent commitments in the face of constant change? (62) C — Robin Seymour — Mitch Ryder guests. 7:00 (2^ C - Truth or Consequences (4) C - News, Weather, Sports (7) C - News -Reynolds, Smith (9) R C —Movie: “Perils of Pauline” (1947) The Story of Pearl White, queen of the silent movies. Betty Hutton, John Lund (50) R — I Love Lucy (56) What’s New — Exciting adventure in a cave of the Swiss /)lps-7:30 (2) C - (3et Smart -Smart and 99 are mistaken for a doctor and his nurse by hoodlums who kidnap them to treat their wounded gang leader. (4) C — High Chaparral — Believed by the Apaches to have “magical” curative powers, Victoria is brought to their camp to save chief’s son. (7) C — Let’s Make a Deal (50) C — Beat the Clock (56) Growing Together (6!3) C — Of Lands and Seas — The Bahamas are toured... 8:00 (2) C — dood Guys — When Rufus and Bert leam that a j e t - s e t restaurant editor (Phyllis Diller’ lives nearby, they set out to win her endorsement of their diner. (7) C — Brady Bunch — Mike Brady installs a pay phone in the Brady house to solve the phone problem at home. (50) R - Hazel (56) Black Magazine — Causes behind the urban school crisis. 8:30 (2) C - Hogan’s Heroes — When an Allied plane carrying top-secret equipment is shot down near Stalag 13, Hogan and his men must prevent the enemy from discovering the secret device. (4) C - (Special) The File on Devlin — Suspense drama based on Catherine Gaskin’s novel of the Intrigue surrounding attempts to find a missing writer. Dame Judith Anderson, Elizabeth Ashley and David McCallum star. (7) C — Mr. Deeds Goes to Town — Deeds helps a man swindled by his late uncle to swindle the money back. Edward Andrews and Elinor Donahue guest-star. (50) C - To Tell the Truth (56) The President’s Men — Daniel Moynihan, Counselor to the President is interviewed. (62) R — The Nelsons 1:60 (2) C - Movie: “Fanny” (1961) Dramatic version of Marcel Pagnol’s trilogy involving a young girl left with child by adventure-seeking sailor. Leslie Caron, Maurice Chevalier (7) C — Here Come the Brider — A ,group of Greek immigrants claim that they own the Bolts’ Bridal Veil Mountain and have a deed to prove it. (9) C — What’s My Line? (50) R — Perry Mason (56) NET Festival ~ “Trio for the Living” is a documentary about the creative energy required to ready a play for performance, focusing on . the young American playwright George Houston Bass, who is shown during the period his drama “Trio for the Living” was in rehearsal for production at Yale University. (62) R — Movie: “You’re Only Young Twice” (British, 1954) — Duncan MacRae 9:30 (9) C - Our Great Outdoors — Fishing for trout, whitefish and arctic char. 16:00 (4) C - (Special) j Mirror, Mirror, Off the Wall — Comedy-fantasy by David Shaw starring George C. Scott, Maureen Stapleton, John McGiver, David Burns and Ziva Rodann. A writer’s pen-n a m e personality attempts to take command of his life, so his wife develops an alter ego. (7) C — Durante-Lennons — Kate Smith, Louis Nye and ex-pro football star Rosey Grier guest. (9) Windsor Raceway • . (50) C -- News, Weather, Sports (56) R — Forsyte Saga — Irene decides to run away with Bosinney. 10:36 (50) R - Ben Casey — A French chanteuse, under Dr. Casey’s care for a brain lesion, insists on fulfilling a concert commitment. (62) R — Sea Hunt 11:00 (4) (7) (9) C - News, Weather, Sports (62) R — Highway Patrol 11:30 (2) C—News, Weather, (4) C — Johnny Carson — Agnes Moorehead, Wayne Cochran, Red Buttons and Jimmy Breslin guest. (7) C — Joey Bishop — Henny Youngman and Cyril Richard guest. (9) R C — movie: Battle Cry” (1955) Servicemen in training, action and in love during World War II. Van Heflin, Tab Hunter (50) R—Alfred Hitchcock (62) R C — Movie: “Daggers of B1 o.o d ” (Italian, 1961) Cossacks revolts against the Poles. Jeanne Crain, John Drew Barrymore 12:00 (2) R - Movies: 1. “Lucy Gallant” ( 19 5 5 ) Man strikes oil, and his wife builds the biggest fashion business in Texas. Jane Wyman, Charlton Heston, Thelma Ritter; 2. “A Slight Case o f Larceny” (1953) A couple of ex-GIs find themselves in trouble over a get-rich-quick scheme. Mickey Rooney, Eddie Bracken (50) C - Merv Griffin -David and Julie Eisenhower Jackie Vernon, Dorothy Loudon and Mar-riman Smith guest. 1:00 (4) Beat the Champ (7) R - Movie: “The Seventh Cross" ( 1944 ) Spencer Tracey, Agnes Moorehead (9) Viewpoint 1:05 (9) C — Perry’s Probe 1:30(4) C News, Weather, Sports (50) C - Wrestling 3:15(7) C -Wonderful World of Sports 3:20 (7) C — Five Minutes to Uve By 4:00 (2) C - News, Weather TV Features Tonight THE FILE ON DEV-UN, 8:30 p.m. (4) MOVIE, 9 p.m. (2) NET FES-nVAL, 9 p.m. (56) MIRROR, MIRROR OFF TOE WALL, 10 p.m. (4) Tomorrow SANTA CLAUS PARADE, 10:30 p.m. (9) COLLEGE FOOTBALL, 1:15 p.m. (7) WIDE WORLD OF SPORTS, 4:30 p.m. (7) SATURDAY MORNING R - Rerun C - Color 5:50 (2) TV Chapel 5:55 (2) C-News 8:00 (2) C — Across the Fence 6:30 (2) C - Sunrise Semester 6:55 (4) C - News 7:00 (2) C —Jetsons (4) C — Country Living — “Winter Use of Michigan Recreation Areas” 7:15 (7) C — Rural Report “Feeding Cattle and Man” 7:30 (2) C - Woodrow the Woodsman (4) C-Oopsy (7) R — Bachelor Father 7:50 (9) News 8:00 (7) C - Casper (9) Ontario Schools 8:30 (2) C — Bugs Bunny-Roadrunner (7) C — Smokey the Bear 9:00 (4) C - Here Comes the Grump (7) C — Cattanooga Cats (50) R - Wells Fargo (56) R - Merlin the Magician 9:15 (56) R — Chimney Corner 9:30 (2) C — Dastardly and Muttley (4) C - Pink Panther (50) R —Laramie (56) R C — Sesame Street 10:00 (2) C — Perils of Penelope Pitstop (4) C - H. R. Pufnstuff (7) C - Hot Wheels 10:36 (2) C — Scooby-Doo (4) C — Banana Splits (7) C — Hardy Boys (9) C — (Special) Santa Claus Parade — Mr. Dressup and his puppet pals will help describe the 65th edition of Toronto’s Parade. (50) R - Movie: “The Wagons Roll at Night” (1941) Humphrey Bogant, Joan Leslie (56) R — Misterogers 11:00 (2) C —Archie Show (7) C -7- Sky Hawks (56) R C — Sesame Street 11:30 (4) C-Jambo (7) C - Gulliver (9) Swingaround (56) R — Once Upon a . Day SATURDAY AFTERNOON 12:00 (2) R C - Monkees (4) C—Pro Football Highlights (7) C—Fantastic Voyage (9) C - Hi Diddle Day (50) R — Movie: “Body and Soul” (1947) John Garfield, Ulli Palmer (56) R — The Toy That Grew Up—Jackie Coogan plays a pathetic orphaned waif who befriends an old sea dog in the 1921 silent film, “My Boy.” 12:36 (2) C — Wacky Races (7)C — American Bandstand (9) Country Calendar 1:00 (2) R —Movie: “Paris Playboys” (1954) Bowery (4) Beat the Champ (7) C - College Football Pregame — Radio Programs— WJR(760) WXYZd 370) CKIVWOOO) VVviu(950) WCAR(1130) WP6N(1 400) WJBKQ 500> WHFUFM(0*.ij ^A'NT TO SELL LAWNMClWE\RS,^l^ER MOWERS, ROLLER rCLE^? USE A LOW COST PONTIAC SKATES, WAGONS, BICY( PRESS CLASSIFIED AD. TO PLACE YOURS, CALL 332-8181. WJBX, WJBKt Tom Shannc WCAR« Ntwi, Ron WXYZ. Niwscapo WPON« Nttwt WHRI, ^ Alcorn «i15-WJR. Sports WJR. World Tonight 7i1S<^WJR, AusInMiz Sports 7tao-WXYZ, Davt Lockhart WJR, Raasoner R a d o r t, WFON, dttwMn tht LI In R» Oplnl Ir, Lowt Choral Cavalcarit 7iSS-WJR, Sport! Ii«»-WJR, Platona BoikOt- WJBK, Tom Dttn WWJ, Nawi. SoortiUnt WHFI, LH Alan li4S -WJR. Showcaia, Minor-WPON, Nawa, LarrV Dixon CKLW, Scott Raoan WJR, Nawi tSitS-WJR, Focua Encora WJR, Nawa IWJR, Soorta * nUM Music Till Dawn 1iit»-WJBK, Jim Hamptoh WXYZ, Nawa, Jim Davli CKLW. Todd Wiliact WCARjNawa, Wavna Phlllloa WHFI, Ira J. Cook CKLW, Jim Edwarda WPON, Nawa, Chwck Warran t'W-WWJ, Nawa, Morria »iOO-^iftjlli"Nawa tii>~WJR. Cavalcada l:SS~WJR, Nawa SilS-WJR, Sunnyalda, Caval- CKLW, H OM, Nawa, Gary WJEK. Mualc WHFI, Don Zaa SAIUROAY AFTERNOON il0~WJR, MSU Football StOd-WPok,' Mllham WJBK, Hank O'l (9) Lost Peace (56) R - Twin Circle Headline 1:15 (7) C - College Football: Ohio State vs, Michigan 1:36 (9) D’Iberville (56) R — Washington Week In Review 2:96 (2) C - Roller Derby; Bay Bombers vs. Southern Mustangs (4) C - Heckle and Jeckle ( 9 ) R - Movie : “Tarzan’s Fight for Life” (50) R — Movie: “Bullets or Ballots” (1936) (56) R — Advocates — Should the federal government Issue n o further leases for offshore oil drilling? 3:00 (2) R — Movie: “The Manster” (British, 1962) (4) C — Wild Kingdom (56) Action People — A discussion of a television experiment in community involvement and feedback. 3:36 (4) C — High School Bowl — Mount Clemens Clintondale vs. Richmond (9) C — Magic Shoppe (50) R C — Movie: “Voyage to the Planet of Prehistoric Women” (1966) Mamie Van Doren 4:66 (4) C - At the Zoo (9) C — Bozo (56) R—Bridge with Jean Cox (62) R - My Friend Flicka 4:30 (4) C - Gadabout Gaddis — Viewers are taken to northwest Wisconsin to fish for bass on the Yellow River. (7) C - Wide World of Sports — 1. Nino Benevuti vs. Luis Rodriguez in 15-round world middleweight championship live from Rome, Italy. (9) R — Movie: “Alice in Wonderland” (1933) (56) R — Joyce Chen Cooks — “Won Ton” (62) C — Gospel Music Time 5:60 (2) C - All-American College Show (4) C — George Pierrot — “Hong Kong Adventure” 5:30 (2) C - Porter Wagoner — Burris Younguns guest. (4) C — College Bowl TUNEABLE OPERATION Tunaa Fir*. Police and Commoricol froquonciat. MR10O . t0||| . wn & onnlrif Phono 674-3161 4664 W. Walton Blvd., Drayton Plains Open 9-9 Mon. & Fri., 9-6 Tool., Wad., Thurt., Sat. BILL PROBLEMS? Being protaod to M**t Bills on Limitod Funds? Ciil ui for hal*. Our butlnaaa is planning your financai to got you out of dabt witliout S Imu. DEDICATED TO TOP QUALITY TV SERVICE TESA Of OAKLAND COUNTY ■laks Radle i TV 114IW.Hursn,Pai«lao OonOen fladle-TV Peo-ITH 1M W. Huron, Ptniiio C5V7V FE2-»Sf Dalby Radio i TV FE 4-M92 141 LaMgb, Pasliao arocan*s Radis-TV II446I5 41MeiarktfsnRd.,6larktlan dial's Radio A TV IH-T418 TIN eaalay Lake Rd., Units Laka Johnson Radio-'W FE 645N MLWaHaHiPaalito Laiimar Radia-TV OR 8-2I52 ObalTV lNTBIuks1liU.Rd,Nirtiaa irdsnTV FI4*11Mr imittohMaat,NtagaHaibar Al Reoding TV FE Mill UN W. OitiktItB Rd, Uka Orlan Stafanakl Radio A TV N14I1I 1tnW.HuraB,PaaHae Swaat's Radio ATVFE441in All W. Hurts, FsaHas Ttch TV Sarviea U^2MI I41( Waal Auburn, Roehuttar Troy IV-Radis TR MM INlUvaraaiSt'Dav . till I.Wait MtylsRdaWaRadUiw WaHen Radio-TV FE MOT WKO, Ino,, Ssniea IT4-111R Mil DIria Hiqra Bnytan »Uh« Ws buy, sail and trade PISTOLS, MFLES and SHOTGUNS 2924 N. WOODWARD AVE. Botwaan 12W and 13-Mils Daily I, Sun. >til 8 LI I-S16I STEREO We Sell Components by FISHER • KENWOOD NIKKO Speakers by FISHER • A-R • BOZAX Chingers by GARRARD • DUAL Tape Recorders by SONY • REVOX TANDBERG FISHER CONSOLES CUSTOMADE PRODUCTS CO. 4540 W. Huron St. 673-9700 r CHECK OUR LOW, LOW PRICE! fora qiant-seneen 23"table model ^ niAR mn In Aunhirn QUALITY REPAIRS ON ALL MAKE HEARING AIDS Loanera Available DIAG. 29S iq. In. iHCture Tht AVALON • A4509W Vinyl clad metal cabinet in grained Kashmir Walnut color. Zenith VHF and UHF Concentric Tuning I channel numbara. i PONTIAC MALL OPTICAL ft HEARING AlO CENTER WHFI, Don Alcorn [ WXYZ, News, MIkt Sharmin i €iH~WJn, Football Flashti, lita^CKLW^ticoH Ragan WWJ, Ntwal Monitor I 682-1113 Jtsmf sp' .. HURINS *10 DSaiER ZENITH CHROMACOLOR outcolors...outbrightens...outdetails and outperforms every giant-screen color tv before Chnomoedor! SERVICE SPECIALISTS TV«RAlllO IJS! SERVICE FE 5-6112 Open Friday Evening* *iil 9 770 Orchord Loka, Pontiac ^ Vb Mila East of Talagraph D—12 THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAV, NOVEMBER 21, 1969 J "d) ii POR ‘THIlE MOIVIE: a LOOK FOR THE SPECIAL PRE-HOLIDAY SALE TAGS IN EVERY DEPARTMENT-THEY’RE YOUR TICKET TO SAVINGS! 100 LUXURY CHAIRS SPECIALLY PRICED FOR DELIVERY NOW! YOUR CHOICE... ni9 It's too late to custom order in tittle for Christmas, so we're releasing 100 of our most popular chairs from our sample stock. To top it off, each is tagged at savings of $30 and is ready for immediate delivery. Choose from 12 beautiful styles covered in exquisite fabrics and vinyls. Many are crafted with such quality features as self-decking, sumptuous Duo-Tex foam rubber cushions and protective arm covers. Some are in pairs. If you want a luxury chair to enjoy now ... if you want special savings, come in todayl Our decorators will assist you at no charge and you can shop tonight 'til 91 Also a large selection of reg. $170 chairs NOW $129 ea. Orbiting Astronauts Fi7m /Woon^^Wior Flight Home MAKE OVER PA® space; CE:NTER, Houston (AP) Only hours before startliig the long trip home, Apollo ,12’s orbiting moon voyagers today snapped hundreds of piteutres of future astronaut landing sites in the rugged iunar highlands. The photographic targets included the shallow crater E’ra Mauro, nestled among mountain peaks, which will be the target fur Apollo 13 in March. Charles (Pete) Conrad Jr., Richard E’’. Cordon Jr. and Alan L. Bean awoke shortly after midnight EST to conduct several hours of lunar surface photography froip the Yankee Clipper command ship. At ^:49 p.m. today they planned to trigger Clipper's big bell-shaped engine tp blast themselves out of moon orbit to start \he three-day quarter-million-mile Journey back to their home planet. They splash down in the Pacific at 3:57 p.m. Monday, ending man’s second expedition to the lunar surface. impression of' the moon’s back side, which cannot be seen from earthy '"The back side is a lot more worn and smooth,” he said. At'2:23 a m., they fired thel^i engine to\ change course slightly to bring the spaceship in line for better photographic angles. Related Stories, Pages A-5, B-8 UTTLE CONVERSATION There was little conversation with the ground as the astronauts kept busy operating six cameras and orienting the spaceship to gqt the proper angle and lighting conditions. Bean took a few moments to give his "The front side’s got a lot more contrast and a lot more sharp features to look at. I personally like to look at the front side. On the back side it seems there’s no flat area at all, just big craters and little craters, no real sharp contrasts between flat and high mountains.” Conrad a.sked if ‘That h(i|jt engine of ours didn’t by any chance buy us enough gas to come home a day early, did it''” If enough extra fuel remained, Yankee Clipper could shorten its trip home by boosting its speed to follow a path that would be several hours shorter. The Weather U.S. Wtfthtr Bureau Fortcait Warmer (Details Page 2) THE PONTIAC PRESS PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 1969 VOL. 127 - NO. 247 ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ -48 PAGES IQc Haynsworlh Vole Looms in Senate \VASHINGTON (AP) - President Nixon’s prestige was on the line as the Senate neared a vote today on the Supreme Court nomination of Judge Clement F. Haynsworth. The Republican President nominated the 57-year-old South Carolinian three months ago and stood steadfast despite a controversy that split the Senate and the ranks of his own party. ★ * w Both sides were jittery on the eve of the showdown with the outcome hanging on the decision of a dozen senators who refused to commit themselves publicly in advance. Haynsworth had a shaky 45-43 edge in committed votes going into the closing arguments today according to an Associated Press survey. ‘HARDEST VOTE’ ‘"This is the hardest vote I have ever had to cast,” said GOP Leader Hugh Scott of Pennsylvania, who kept his decision to himself even as the vote neared. Yesterday two Republican, John Sherman Cooper of Kentucky and Charles McC. Mathias of Maryland, said they would vote against confirmation. But a Democrat, Jennings Randolph of West Virginia, announced his support of the nomination. ★ * * But cbntroversy has marked Haynsworth’s nomination from the start, with labor and civil rights leaders accusing him of ruling against their causes. worth showed an insensitivity to judicial ethics, contending he participated in Opponents also charged that Hayns-cases in which he should have disqualified himself because of a direct or in- direct financial interest in one of the litigants. ‘TOO REMOTE’ PAUF Drive Short of Goal by 5.4 Pet. Goal 1,240 The Pontiac Area United Fund is 5.4 per cent short of reaching its general campaign goal of $1.24 million. ’The drive now stands at $1,173,386 and will continue through Tuesday. Mrs. Vincent Bronsing, chairman of the community division, told approximately 25 volunteers at yesterday’s report luncheon that contributions totaled 94.6 per cent of the goal or $1,173,386. The current figure represents the largest sum raised in the history of the PAUF, Mrs. Bronsing said. Last year’s final campaign figure was $1,088,116.51. . Mrs. Bronsing acted as chairman of the luncheon held at the Elks Lodge, 114 Orchard Lake, in the absence of general campaign Chairman Warren H. Eierman, who is ill. Mrs. Bronsing — whose division has raised the highest ratio of its goal at 116.1 per cent — admonished her audience: “You gentlemen with your prestige in the community, go out and pound the pavement yourselves if you have to. I have!” PGH Proposes Record Budget A breakdown of the five campaign divisions showed collection status as: manufacturing, $38,670 or 80.9 per cent of the goal; commercial, $149,326 or 79.8 per cent; community, $19,214 or 116.1 per cent; GM Division, $837,597 or 100 per cent; and advance gifts, $112,348 or 84.1 per cent. The final meeting is slated for Tuesday at the Sheraton Motor Inn, 1001 Woodward. “Let’s all work for a victory luncheon,” Mrs. Bronsing urged. A proposed 1970 budget for Pontiac General Hospital is more than $15 mil- B. Nelson, lion, according to Dr. hospital administra-1 tor. The tentative figures, largest ever, were revealed to the | hospital board of trustees at last night’s meeting. The budget “definitely” will call lor an increase in room rates. Dr. Nelson said. Last year’s budget DR. NELSON was $12,362,098. This is Dr. Nelson’s first budget submission. He replaced Harold Euler as administrator in June after Euler was fired by the board. Dr. Nelson said exact figures on the budget and room rates would not be released until after the hospital trustees have time to study the budget. *^0 boerd re;ceiVe(l the document yeste^ay. The Pontiac City Commisiilon has to make final approval and ho^ a public hearing on the budget. At last night^s meeting the b^ard also approved a fund of $280,000 for purdiase of equipment in 1970. TEAMS TOP 100 PCT. Several teams of the five major divisions have topped lOO per cent of their goals: Community Division: Waterford Township, $7,159 or 138.4 per cent; Independence Township, $3,273 or 119 per cent; and Orion Township, $3,261 or 117.4 percent. Comnnerciql Division: Chapter Plan V of big business, $30,179 or 102.5 per cent; and small business Team Five, $873 or 105!8 per cent. Education; Oakland University, $8,029 or 180.2 per cent; Avondale School District, $1,512 or 100.1 per cent; Oxford School District, $869 dr 118.8 per cent; and professional Team II, $15,433 or 107.7 per cent. ‘FEW FIRMS NOT CONTACTED’ “Due to a shortage of volunteers In some areas of the campaign structure, a few firms have ijot been contacted,” Mrs. Bronsing,said., \, “to make kire ^ese cbthpenils are not rhlssed, iwe at;e reassigning other volunteers and forming a clean-^ committee in hopes of reacMng all finpA nnd employes,” she said. i i Contributions may be mailed tol the PAUF office at 132 Franklin Blvd., P.O. Box 688, Pontiac 48086. 1,085,000 930,000 ' 775,000 620,000 500,000 400,000 300,000 /‘[Okay, w^ \^erep’t /sweating it,” Conrad said, “We just knew that if we had a belter engine or .something there might be a chance.” “It’.s one les.s day in the LKL,” qut[)ped Bean, referring to the Lunar Receiving Laboratory in Houston where they will be quarantined to make certain they have brought back no moon germ.s. The •21-day quarantine .started yesterday when Conrad and Bean finished their second excursion on the moon’s surface. Ocean of Storms. Geologists and scien^ lists are anxious to comparp tijem with the rocks collected on the Sea of Tranquillity by the pioneering Apollo 11 crew in July. Mission Control calculated' the fuel rc'sCrves and said there was not enough margin for a fast trip home. Conrad and Bean are bringing home between 80 and 90 pounds of r(x;ks collected during their 31>/* hours on the (i(!ologists, meanwhile, continued to study what they considered remarkable vibrations created when Intrepid smashed into the moon 45 miles from what hours before hud been its base in the Ocean of Storms. The 5,000-pound ship struck the moon at 3,700 miles an hour, carving out an elliptical crater estimated at 20 by 40 feet, but only about 20 inches deep. Haynsworth’s supporters said his interest in these cases was too remote or too minute for him to disqualify himself. Cooper in deciding to vote against Haynsworth, said he had concluded the nominee’s financial interests required his disqualification in some court cases in which he participated. Mathias said he had concluded “there is doubt about the propriety of certain of the nominee’s actions.” Haynsworth’s confirmation, he said, “would lower all judicial standards at a time when the public is anxious tq see them raised.” But Randolph told the Senate he was convinced Haynsworth would serve the Court well. it A. WHERE ASTRONAUTS WALKED - This map charts the routes of the two moon walks of the Apollo 12 astronauts, in- to the Surveyor satellite. The routes are shown on a relief map eluding the location of the lunar module Intrepid in relation provided by the Army for NASA. Other Pesticide Curbs Eyed 71 Deadline Set on DDT Weather to Turn Warmer—Briefly Here’s good news. Warmer weather is on the way. WASHINGTON (AP) - Agriculture Secretary Clifford M. Hardin, after moving to eliminate all but emergency uses of DDT by the end of 1970, is planning steps to restrict the widespread application of other persistent pesticides. In accelerating efforts to halt the use of DDT, Hardin said yesterday he intends to: criteria and procedures being applied to DDT.” Hardin’s decision for a general ban against DDT by the end of 1970 cuts in half the timetable proposed by Robert H. Finch, secretary of health, education and welfare, who urged DDT be phased out for all but emergency uses in two years. • Cancel in 30 days the registration of DDT for use against pests in homes, gardens, shade trees, tobacco fields and aquatic areas. • Outlaw by Dec. 30, 1970, all uses of DDT except for emergency control of diseases and massive crop pest infestations. BEGIN IN MARCH The secretary said he would begin taking action in March against other persistent pesticides “using the same Finch made his statement about two weeks ago. At the same time, he warned that action curtailing the use of DDT could result in greater application of other members of the family of hard pesticides. These include dieldrin, aldrin, endrin, heptachlor, chlordane and Lindane. Hardin’s plan to review uses of other hard pesticides apparently is an effort to encourage the use of substitute chemicals or alternative methods of treatment for DDT instead of relying on one of its long-lived cousins. The U.S. Weather Bureau forecasts the following day-by-day conditions for the Pontiac area. TODAY — Increasing cloudiness latw this afternoon, high in the upper 20s. Tonight mostly cloudy with chance of snow flurries, low 20 to 25. Winds west to •southwest at eight to 12 miles per hour becoming southerly at five to 10 miles tonight, and south to southwest at eight to 12 miles tomorrow. TOMORROW — Partly cloudy and warmer, the high in the upper 30s. SUNDAY — Mostly cloudy and turning colder late in the day or at night. ★ * * Probabilities of precipitation are 20 per cent today, tonight and tomorrow. Fourteen degrees, a new low for the season, was recorded at 6 a.m. in downtown Pontiac. The mercury stood near 28 at 12:30 p.m. What a 'Yes' Vote Means (EDITOR’S NOTE—This is the second of three stories examining Waterford Township School District’s financial troubles and the proposed tax increase election Tuesday.) By DICK ROBINSON Waterford Township voters are being asked to pass a one-year, 9-mill property tax increase Tuesday, to provide nearly $1.9-million to assure full-day classes for the school district’s 18,502 students. Acting Supt. Dr. John Pagen says the tax increase will provide for full days from January to June and all of the next school year. Before this fall, elementary pupils received five hours and 20 minutes of school a day. This school year they are scheduled for an average of four hours per day. Under the present plan, there is only time to emphasize reading and language arts. The time devoted to social studies, math and science has been reduced. year, but students and parents will be getting the full-day benefits for 114 years,” Pagen said. (Continued on Page A-2, Col. 1) 2ND YEAR IN ROW All junior and senior high school kV If the millage is voted down, full-day class schedules will not be restored this school year, according to Pagen. “If the millage proposal fails, the pro- students are getting five hours of school for the second year in a row. Two years ago they were receiving six hours per day. The 9-mill increase will produce $1,905,330.30 in income, Pagen said. It would be used to hire ” additional teachers, purchase supplies and restore custodial services. A premillage parade is scheduled to start at the Pontiac Mall, Telegraph and Elizabeth Lake, at 4 p.m. today and a bonfire rally at Mott High School, Pontiac Lake and Scott Lake, at 7 p.m. gram cutbacks will continue becau.se there will be no funds, no borrowing power and no handouts from Lansing or Washington,” Pagen asserts. Needed are 74 more elementary and 53 secondary teachers—a total of 127—io restore full days, Pagen explains. The teaching staff would then total about, 785. Of the new revenue, $655,330.30 would be used for the second half of this school year, Pagen said., The remainder, $1).25-million, would be left for 1970-71. ' y NOT FOR A YEAR PRESENT SYSTEM i \ Pupils in grades 1 through ^ gre now on half-day schedules. They a r e scheduled to return jo full days In January for the rest of the school ygar. Pupils in grades 4 through 6, now on full-daiy schedules, are to go on half days in January for the rest of the.schotjl year. If the millage passes, taxpayers won’t be billec'l for the increase until December 1970, Paghn said, The .^'hool qiStrict ig the money until early wouldn’t be getting i 1971. ' : ' ' Until it gets the additional money, the school district will be able to borrow money on its anticipated income to opefajte full days. “The » mills wiH be levied for only nj^e In Today's Press Avon Pastor He fights to narrow the gen- ? eration gap — PAGE A-3. Auto Gamble Sporty cars aren’t selling — i PAGE D-2. I Freedom Ends i Escapee returns to prison J after 46 years on the outside — PAGE A-9. g Area News ...............A-3 Astrology ... ...........C-8 Bridge ................. C-8 Oossword Puzzle .../... ./D-11 Comics ...........i-...,..C4 Editorials '.......'....A-6 Farm and Garden..... ....C-9 i High School ... .V.. B-1, B-2 ,5 Markets D-2 L- Obituaries.............. B-W Sports ..\. .. . C-1—C-8 111 Theaters,...........C-10, Oil TV and Radio Programs . D-11 Vietnam War News ....... C-l Wilson. Earl . .(Ml Wiimcn> Bilges .....B-3—B-7 : J null THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 21. 1060 Vice President Turns Guns on Newspapers MONTGOMERY, Ala. Iff) - Vice President Spiro T. A^ew, saying does “not seek to intimidate the press,” has extended his criticism of the nation's news media to some daily newspapers. Finding particular fault with the New York Times and the Washington Post, Agnew told the Alabama Chamber of Commerce last night there is a “growing monopolization of the voices of public opinion on which we all depend — for our knowledge and for the basis of our "I am opposed to censorship ' of television or the press in any form.” ' tions Just as we must defend said. Related Stories, Rage A-10 ‘FREE TO CRITICIZE’. However, Agnew said, this docs not mean the news media should be free of criticism. In answer to critics who asserted he was attempting to muzzle newsmen, the vice president told his audience: “When they go beyond fair comnjent and criticism they will be called upon to defend their statements and their posi- Agnew said “. . . the American people should be made aware of the trend toward the monopolization of the great public information vehicles and the concentration of more and more power over public opinion in fewer and fewer hands.” 'Zodiac' Slain? Police Doubt If SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - A policeman early today shot and killed a man who claimed he was the killer Zodiac and was threatening to stab his own daughter to death. “The Zodiac, that’s me:” shouted David 0. Martin, 30, before he was shot, said Sgt. Eugene O. Knight. Police said they had no reason to believe'the man was Zodiac, who has written them letters bragging of five slayings in the San Francisco Bay Area. 4 “There’s just no tie to Zodiac,” said 1^. Victor Ma^^t the Ingleside sta- Martin’s wife, Geraldine, had fled the his daughter Kim, 11, and already had nicked her tiiroat when he was shot by patrolman Thomas Bums, officers said. Martin’s wife,Geraldine, had fled the house with her son, Fran, 9. She said her husband was under the influence of drugs when he began threatening their daughter. Police, responding to her alarm, were trying unsuccessfully to get the girl away from the father. Bums fired only because her life was in danger, Macia Four Sentenced to Prison; Plea for Help Nixed With mixed emotions, Oakland County Circuit Judge Arthur E. Moore has imprisoned four of five dmg offenders after his efforts to get them medical help failed. In sentencing four of the defendants yesterday. Judge Moore said he had no other choice since the county lacked facilities to rehabilitate drug users. He urged the public to undertake a letter-writing campaign to influence the County Board of Supervisors to establish such institutions. He had delayed sentencing two weeks ago because of what he said was a “lack of afty desirable alternatives” to sending them to prison. Bums’ shot strack the man in the shoulder and it coursed through his bo^. As he died, he said, “I’m through, officer, thank you.” Zodiac, stiU believed at large, has knifed three young women to death, police say, and has killed two men. NEWSMEN TOLD OF ‘MASSACRE’ — U.S. newsmen visiting this refugee center at Son My report that four of the refugees told of hiding under corpses to escape what they said was a massacre by American troops in the hamlets of Tu Cung and My Lai in March 1968. These reports have prompted Sen. Charles Goodell, R-N.Y., to call for a Senate investigation. EMERGENCY STEPS Moore thl>n asked the supervisors to take emergency steps to establish two halfway houses for drag offenders, double the number of probation officers and provide medical and psychiatric care for addicts. Board chairman Charles Edwards replied that a newly established dmg abuse committee would recommend a program at a later date. Judge Moore said he could no longer delay the sentences. Pilot Safe After 18 Days in Arctic Wilds INUVIK, N.W.T. (AP) - A 47-year-old pilot walked out of the Arctic barrens on frostbitten feet yesterday, ending an 18-day ordeal after his light plane was forced down on the Mackenzie River delta in the Northwest Territories. Doctors said John B. Woslying of Inuvik, a pilot for the Northern Canada Power Commission, was in remarkably good shape although he had been subjected to temperature of 49 below zero once. A preliminary examination indicated he probably would not have to have his feet amputated. Woslying was reported missing Nov. 2 on a 200-mile flight from Fort Good Hope northwest to Inuvik, on the Arctic coast. He stumbled into an oil exploration camp just a few hours after an extensive air search was called off. Fred Wittlinger, superintendent of Northern Canada Power Commission, said Woslying may have walked as much as 40 miles through eight inches of snow. ' Sentenced yesterday were James Meyers, 25, and his wife Mary Ellen, 23, formerly of Lake Orion and now of Ann Arbor, each 3 to 4 years for attempting to obtain a narcotic dmg with a false prescription; Edward E. Goetz Sr., 55, of 28609 Grand River, Farmington, one year for unlawful use of narcotics; and Carol Lynn Specketer, 18, of Royal Oak, three years probation for selling narcotics. Charles Labe, 19, of Detroit, was sentenced this morning to 3 to 4 years for possession of narcotics. Wax 'Yes Vote Promises Some Relief (Continued From Page One) ; “But this proposal is only going to ’‘return us to below the level we were at' Shefore the first secondary school cuts . went into effect 1% years ago,” he com- mented. “If the 9 mills would do for one year, we would get back to the level before the secondary cuts were made.” Passage of the millage will assure that Waterford Township and Kettering High Schools will keep their accreditation, Pagen says. Those two schools have received two warnings from the North Central Association of Secondary Schools and Colleges, the accrediting agency, and may lose their accreditati(Hi after students graduate in June, he believes. The Weather Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Fair this morning and Increasing cloudiness this :afteraoAi>y-” Shows Antiques j A local resident is among the; old man who ACTS crazy Parents need discipline, not punishment. A show of force is sometimes necessary, but a'exhibitors at the currentj quiet, consistent attitude is yourj Dealers Christmas Antique best bet in conditioning them toishow. Dorothy Anthony o f. * * *- i Parents have f e e I i n g s. your having your way. Airport Road is at the Light! Pamds are perplexing Porhai^ their idea of dress is^Consistently asking, for ex-|Guard Armory, East^ight Mile| •:r«a8s0?6t and dealing with different than yours but they ampfe. Soon they will learn; Road, at the show which opened ttami ^iecSirdy « a challeng-have the right to dress in ac-what you want. Ask, ask, ask, Thur^ay. and runs through img Saab. Dto set make the cordance to the rules set down ask. ask. Sunday. Hours are 1 - 11 p.m. cinnBiHt Mistake ol seeing by their p«rs. If father really Farents must learn to become each day. as Bienely grown-up likes wearing a stiffly starched independent. Be reasonable; ------ T&ey are adults with shirt and a bow tie, allow him;about letting them make some: r L* I I ~_i ! taffiTwmpBwWeiEs and fears, to express himself in this way.'of their decisions byl oK/n Up LOST * * * Do not greet, him with, “Howj themselves. For example, once! , u- i j ' Use imaio rcquiremmt (d a long do you have to wear the in awhile let them go to parties When you out chicken under parwd is the knowledge that^neckbrace?” or to the shopping center broiler, arrange it skinside, you hwe him, no matter what.' Parents need the approval ofjwithout your throwing a temperidown in the pan, then turn as Parents are individuals and their offspring. Even adults tantrum. Some^y you will be!necessary. Have the chicken must be dealt with individually’.ineed the assurance that they gone and they will be on their I skinside up for the last period| Keeping open the avenue of'are appreciated and loved even'own. lot' RirChristmas givehera Happy Newlfear inp''rTr"::.airri...a i_______ Ktchen Carpet Gift Certificate INSTALL IT NOW, BEFORE THE HOLIDAYS, FOR THE HOLIDAYS. OR PRESENT HER WITH OUR GIFT-BOXED, GIFT CERTIFICATE. W ... V It's the one with a ten year wear guarantee ... ten beautiful years of comfort and joy . . . of quiet, carefree living ... no more scrubbing and waxing. Completely ;stain resistant. The greasiest, gooiest spills sponge right off. Viking has a high density nylon pile with a builf-oh undercushion of sponge rubber that cuts breakage, backaches,- foot-, aches, headaches, noise. It'll bounce her right off her feet! *GuarailTeil ^ FikingKUchm Carpei is ' guarantted I or 10 years of normal wear whsnproptrly installed and maintained. Or we will replace it pro* A beautiful present in ilsell —o set of six Viking carpel coasters so she can choose her color, and see for herself how Viking stands up. With on exquisite cord pointed like on ancient Illuminated manuKripl oil golds and reds on parchment. ....- —■ rated for the unused portion of the guarantee. Guaranteed Chriitmas Installation Open Mon., Fri., ’lii 9, Sat. ’til 5 P.M. ^ 3511 Elkal>etii Lake Kd \FLP0R coverings \ 682-9581 I' , '(i f^lll '-f. li C i/J J i* 1^'-* t l\( t : ^ Iff jii II FROM THE WORKSHOP OF PEARCE'S THANKSGIVING CANDELABRA Sfort with a wrought iron cone shaped compote base, odd the richness of gold mums, and bronze, miniature cattails, colorful wheat and greens. All together it makes an elegant arrangement for your Thanksgiving table or buffet. *10 $1250 $15 -A THANKSGIVING CENTERPIECE A pair of tall tapers grace the wrought iron holder. Add to this autumn gold mums, deep rust pomps, miniature berries, stalks of colorful wheat and green foliage . . . voilal You have the perfect Thanksgiving Centerpiece.. ' $750 HOSTESS ARRANGEMENT A-delightful bowl of gay flowers to brighten a corner or set a holiday mood. Colorful wheat, berries, autumn leovei enhance the gold mums and deep, rich pomps. $600 / FLORAL COMPANY Open Dolly . _. \\ 559 Orchard Two dellveriet doily to Oi 8 A.M. to 5i30 P.U Orchard Ldlca AVei Detroit, Birminghom, Bloomfield ond letermediote Points nueX V Clesad Sunday Phone FE 2-0127 \ r ^ ______1 '.LA . I 'il ^ Jl U', 1 I : 1 I r wIm! J ilw, " 11 ' ! flJM ■7 THE rONTlAC PRESS, EHIDA^', NOVPiMHPH -21. lOrtO Lions vs. Packers GREEN BAY, Wis. (AP) -The Detroit Lions, riding a three-game winning streak, roar into Green Bay Sunday for what could be another one of SNO-CAPS 4 FUU-PIV nST MOUNTING •A'2.., *21* -luNmit WNHnwIli ij* Min NllriiU no. lull! T» .M <• liMy ««U( tiillikli Omi only O-l, ill. M those defenslye^slugfcsts on the torn-up grass of midfield. Detroit, which needs to win to stay alive in the National Football League’s Central Division race, has the same problem the Packers had last week. The Packers lost to Minnesota last week, 9-7, dropping them three games off the pace, and for all practical purposes out of the race. UNITED TIRE INC. 1007 Baldwin Ave. J Min. from Oawntown Poirtii Hoar Fiiher Body TWO SHUTOUTS Detroit racked up its second shutout of the season, defeating St. Louis 20-0 as its defense claimed half of the league’s shutouts. Green Bay and Minnesota both have blanked Chicago. The Lions’ defense ranks second in the league, yielding 2,150 yards, helping boost the injury riddled Lions to their 6-3 record, two games behind Minnesota. ’The Packers, 5-4, have the TWO CAN SKI AS CHEAPLY AS ONE SKI SPREE A romantic way to spend the winter 'The other side of It is offense,” Schmidt said. ‘‘Green Bay is 14th in the league, Chicago 15th and Detroit 16th. That’s what happens when you have to play those kind of defenses twice each.” To me it’s real simple,” Packer Coach Phil Bengtson said after looking at the statistics and pondering the Packers’ last two losses — to Baltimore then Minnesota. ‘‘They have a better defense than we have an offense. ’There is no theory to it. It’s just the facts of competition,” he said. But Schmidt wasn’t baying the story of a weakened offense, the Packers’ or anyone else’s. Send for your free folder ■ explaining SKI SPREE, the unique club that gives you twics the Michigan skiing fun for half the price. City. mmu TRAILER mes, lie. THE EXPLORER Motor homat 2123', 25' Modals See this California built-in unit which is Number 2 in hq* motor home sales. Prices start at up> 3771 HIGHLAND RD. (M-59) TELEPHONE 682-9440 No, 5 defense, yielding 2,435 yards. ‘‘That’s the mark of a great defense,” Lions’ Coach Joe Schmidt said about the shutouts. “We’ve played good defense. But this is the defensive division. There we are, all four teams in the top five of the league on defense.” Minnesota is first and Chicago third. ‘Look, when we played St. Louis, we were scared to death of their offense,” he said. “But we ended up shutting them out,” he added. “It could go the other way this time. We’re meeting a team that hasn’t been able to score, and they might just explode on us.” Green Bay has only one touch dowii in its last two games And that was an 85-yard pass interception against the Vikings by Doug Hart. ’The Packers beat Detroit 28-17 earlier this season, sidelining quarterback Bill Munson with a broken passing hand. He is ready, but won’t start. DON CARTER'S BOWLING BACKSWING? SAVE MONEY ON USED We're Now Buying Scrap COPPER-BRASS-ALUMINUM (W« Also Pick Up Junk Cart) FE 2-0200 135 Branch Sometimes I tell bowling students that they can do quite well without any backswing I’m exaggerating, of course, for it is impossible to deliver a bowling ball without letting it swing alongside your body. The idea, however, is to get ten-pinners to reduce the size of their swing and thereby eliminate many of the problems caused by a looping motion behind the body. Hillsdale Fourth KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI) -Hillsdale, which will find out this weekend if jt will be participating in the NAIA postseason playoffs, wound u p fourth in the final rankings by the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics football poll. Landry Gets QB s Sui^pdrt DETROIT (AP) - Detroit Lions quarterback Bill Munson, who was reactivated Wednesday after recovering from a broken hand, says he isn’t surprised that coach Joe Schmidt has decided to use Greg Landry as quarterback in Sunday’s game at Green Bay. IX)S Angeles until he i Rams in 1964 and injured a knee and Roman (Jabrlel toSf; MSryl Dltdrich, 267, High Strioi Toulbo*. 713; Bill Oledrich, 706) Elmer — Pel ^----------------- ■*— Dixon, 70,1; Pet Trecy, 67*. Teem Hloli Oemt end Serle* — Oenlel'i MIg., tlj7 3201. PIrJt Piece Teem SAVOY LANES 'See ScrlbblerL Serlex — Berry Erlkstn, S$2j PeuI Si ' (MONTCALM EOWLINti Pint Seclel Brethern Church High Gemes - Nollle Rouer, 211; ^le Mebry, 207. Split Converilont ■ R Berger, 4-tO. Dellile. 562; Bob Gellen High Gemes - Weyne Fisher. 235; Dick Perlllo, 212; John Koenig. 206; Erv Vellerd. 205. Women's High Series -Rentpne Rice. 530. Nelms Hoult, 500. Sjlll Conversions - Haiel Cummings. 7-»- AAegle Usee, 3 7. Woman Kegler Wins Warmup Pros Starting to Roll in Rochester Tourney ROCHESTER. N.Y. (AP) -The $50,000 Bellows-ValVair Open Professional Bowling Tournament was under way today after a woman kegler from Rochester won the pro-am warm up last night. Mrs. Gert McCarthy pocketed the $1,000 first prize after she rolled a three-game total of 59H and was given 45 additional had dicap pins. Her professional partners in each of the three games, Les Zikes of Chicago, Don Glover of Bakersfield, Calif., and Don Johnson of Kokomo, Ind., i;hot a total of 708. The winners’ pinfall of 1,347 was 38 more than Ron Ring of Rochester, who took the $500 second prize. Morning I Stood. 249-710; Ed Bates. 26 -607 BUI Rogers. 256-672; Tom ..............." It Place Team - Tie. Haupt Pontiac. S.A.W. Trucking, and High Series lies. 26 -687 Keeley. 244-607. First Haupt Pontiac. S.A Sports Center Trophies *‘RTBlRO Udios Clastic Tigers Get Top Crowds in Oriole Tiffs Pontiac Open Tourney Ready FIRTBIRO LANES L*dl» CIntIc High Games Lucille Myen DETROIT (41 - The Ameri can League champion Baltimore Orioles, as would be expected, drew the largest crowds at Tiger Stadium the past season according to final official attendance figures. High senes — Mary eosier, aiu; uuciiie Myers, 5*6; Shirley Pointer, 586. High Team Game and Series MIckelspn Corp. *58-2736. First Place Team WIndermer Apartments. First NIghler's High Game Actual - Lila Craycralt, 208. High Series Actual — Gloria Ingersoll, 572. High Gamve over Average - Lelan MaCauley. 1*6. High Series over Average — Rita Bonell Conversions — Bally Hendrickson, 5-8-tO; Mabel Wilson, 3-7-10; Marlon Flga, 4-7-10. LAKEWOOD LANES Stars and qtripes Mixed Woman's High Game Actual — Dorothy Allison 181. Women's High Series Actual — Betty Roknallo. 470. Men's High Game Actual — Lea Jansen, 217. Men's High Series Actual — Russ Bowker, 560. Split Converstibos — Harold Ott and Claude Smith, 5-7. I For nine dates the Birds drew 216.390 fans—or an average of 24.083 a game. Expansion Kansas City was a surprising fifth with average attendance of 21,804, while one time kingpin New York finished 10th of the II teams Eietroit faced with 17,070 a game. Schmitt, 214: Jim RIzrutIo, 203. Ban California was second, Oakland third, Cleveland fourth, Boston sixth, Washington seventh, Minnesota eighth, Chicago ninth, and Seattle 11th. Squad Times For Quali^ing Listed Squad times have been set by the nine sites which w 11 participate in qualifying for the 13th annual Pontiac Open Bowling Championship which starts Sunday. This is the first of three Sunday qualifying dates but bowlers competing this weekend wiU iiave a chance to add an ‘early bird” special prize should they be among the top finalists of the tournament. Any bowler who competes Sunday hits the target score of find subsequently i s among the top 10 finalists, can earn himself a portable television set along with his prize. 1:00, Howes Lanes — 2:00, 4:00 p.m. North Hill Lanes 2:30, 7:30. Bowlers should call the qualifying house to get squad times arranged and submit their entires to the site where they bowl. All bowlers are also reminded that they can participate in the additional Mix ’n’ Match Doubles and Mix ’n Match Team at no added fees. The rules and regulations for all added featuer prizes can be checked at the qualifying sites. There are trophies and cash; top scores in the semifinals, prizes for the top qualifiers! Ail those who advance into from each house and there will j the finals of the tournament are be cash prizes as well for the I assured of a prize. REDUCED WINTIR RATES Free Pick-up A Delivery Ml Work ■MrantBEd SALES D SERVICE 1646 S. Taitgraph 333-1102 The professional portion that began today attracted 128 entrants who will bowl for the $6,000 first prize. The tournament ends Sunday night. Dutch Opponent Trounces Poncho but He Won't Quiti Series — Anette Eaton, 508 Helen Floyd, 507. First Place Team -Sport Queens. Sunnyvala MIxtd Series — Shirley Turner,'1*2-506. Men's High Si - Dave Kelly 521. Team High Gama Series - Team No. t, 728-1844. Airway Ball and CMin Men's High Games — Karl Smlth,236; Bll Myers, 217: Max Jarrell. 203. The Scramblers Airway MIxtd Unblobs High Series — Charles Ross, 54*,-Engler, 543; Curly Vleau, 534 Martinson, 525; Herb Allen, 533. Columbia Avenue Baptist High Games and Series — Lyndy Wood, 6- 83; Bob Brown, 20*-537; Jim Bryant 8; Earl Athey, 516: Joe Green 511: Dor cManan, 201. Split Conversions — Johr Haney, 5-7-*; Earl Thompson, 5-10. Six O'clock Outlaws Men's High Games — Paul Sewell, 214; Tom Smallwood, 200. Woman's HIgt Games and Sedfis — Bertha Jarrell, 211-SS8; Marilyn Wood, 211-522; AAargaret Looney, 200. _ . P.W.P. Inc High Series - S' Ollseck, 531. First Uptight's. Slu Hart, 577; Tny 300 BOWL 570; Roy Brown, Series - Bob Breeding. n, 562; Joe Heams, M. — Merlin Doran, 5-10. »r.- ^.nl WEMBLEY, England —(AP)— Pancho Gonzales, 41 -year - old tennis veteran, was played off the court by Tom Okker of The Netherlands last night, but insisted he is not retiring after all. Okker won 6-1, 6-2 to reach the semifinal of the British Open covered courts championships. 303* Women's High Actual — Phyllis Hembfee. 50*. High Game and Series Actual — jonn -—'-Bt, 214; 5*1. Giws and Oolls - VFW 1008 s High Games and Series Actual -Jack Richards, 353-613; Rayben McDonald 333; 561; John PurgarTc, 311; 548. Wortwn's High Gama and Series — Donna McCarIck, %-556; Alick Mclnally, 175. The Tigers played before 22 crowds of more than 25,000 in a season total of 1,577,481—seventh highest in Detroit history. NMU Quarterback Gets MVP Honors MARQUETTE (AP) - Quarterback Rich McCarthy, who rewrote Northern Michigan’s football records book, has been named the team’s most valuable player. The 5-foot-ll ,186-pound senior set a total offense record of 1,417 yards - one of 10 game season and career records he In all, NMU broke or tied 21 records with the 210 points by halfback Lonnie Holton highlighting the group. The Wildcats, meanwhile, an-Huiced that Tom Watson, a juqior offensive lineman from Alee Mclnally, 4^4; captain the 1970 team. NMU finished the 1969 a 5-5 mark. Gonzales, from Los Angeles Calif., announced his retirement two months ago but yielded to pressure and agreed to play in the tournament, which carries a first prize of $7,200. Funsters, 62*. nanna High Games —“Fred Lbvie, 31 Nelson, 310). JM Hodge, 310; Burt J06; Andrew Terry and Norm To* 304; Karl Erickson, 202; John Smitt I serin Actuel — H _Shin Grunsk*, 5 7. . Actuel — Bill Parker, 230; Helen Conklin, 2t*. Split Conversions 7-4-*-ia As example, should a bowler qualify this weekend and ultimately win the $1,000 top prize of the tournament, he will get the TV as an added prize. The TV will go to the highest position among the top 10 bowlers in the finals if he will have had qualified this Sunday. The purpose of the “early bird” special award is to encourage early entries and alleviate the big jam which always takes place on the final qualifying weekend. Qualifying Sunday along with squad times are as listed: West Side Lanes — 3:00 p.m. squad. Firebird Lanes (Huron Bowl) - 9:30, 12:15, 1:30, 3:00, 4:30,8:30. Airway Lanes — 1:00, 2:30,4:00. 300 Bowl - 11:00, 1:30, 3:00. Cooley Lanes — 1:30, 4:00. Billy G. Lanes (Maple Lanes) - 12:00, 1:30, 3:00, 6:00, 7:30. collier Lanps — 8:30 p.m. Horse Race Results Orlick Is Named to 2nd Term as PGA Secretary Windsor Entries Trampfar Adlos itl-ilFioa; ClalmlnD Pacti 1 Ml Judge Adlot Dolly Hawk Ohio Gena Mike Astra Mauds Boy Joe Don looney Dropped by Saints NEW ORLEANS (AP) - Joe Don Looney, whose with the New Orleans was stymied by injuries, has been cut, the National Football League club announced Thursday. ■Ilie much-traveled 27-year-old running back injured his right knee in the Saints’ first scrimmage against the San Diegc Chargers in the preseason. The knee healed slowly but Looney reinjured it last month against the Los Angeles Rams. After the game he was placed on the “injured waived” list. Indians Name Scout CLEVELAND (AP)^ Ray erio, r Swallo of Pocatello, Idaho Thursday was natned scouting supervisor for the Cleveland Indians in Southern California and Arizona. SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. -(AP)-Incumbent officials of the Professional Golfers Association were reelected yesterday at the PGA’s annual meeting being held here. Re-elected were Leo Frasier. Northfield, N . J ., President; Warren Orlick, Orchard Lake Mich., secretary; and R William Clarke, Phoenix, Md. treastjffer. Orlick is pro at the Tam O’ Shanter Country Club. Kakalac Duke Knox Our Colt 3nl-$1,10g; Paca; Jackla Jolmston Model Henry T Dee Dee North Now Reporting 4tll-$3,7eo; Clain J J Lassie Queens Ransom Nancy Princess The ^etson Edgewood Duke Grade Adlos Rudy Duke Toms uTItlon Linda Y Bird Pistol Pointer i Tassel Windsor Results 23.40 10.70 3.70 Darn Proud 9.60 4.30 3.20 Dale L Miracle Lenawee S Sth.^3,700; Claiming Pact; I^Uei ■ Home Place Larry Artie Frost Good One Mighty McKlyo Claybrook Van Mlgntv Palnti Swift Knight Mile: Laurentide Nova Star Eda Dream Scotty Again I Van The three officials had served one term prior to Thursday’) election. Officials said it is tradition that officers serve three terms. The PGA also announced that next year’s meeting of officers and officials will be held in Palm Beach, Fla. SL53%. ^ Chester Tension Bill of Rights /Megaton Mauds Chamo Tony Supreme Buddy Brae Boy Ollier Terrytime 3.50 3.1 5.00 3.30 Conditioned 1 Frosty Freight iming Trot; Whirlwind Wick 3.60 2.60 Duces Wild 4th—$1500; Claiming Pace; 1 Cool Customer 3.2i Marlin Sota 3.30 3.00 1.30 3.0< palAKlS Designed for the advanced snowmobiler.Key powertrain components are "tuned” to one another for optimum performance. Speedometer, tachometer, free-air hood, extra-thick cushion, large fuel tank and double sprocket track are standard equipment on all TX models, if you want the ultimate in snowmobiling ...you wantaTX. Perry’s Lawn & SPORT CENTER 1605 Hiehland Rd. Pontiac 673-6236 The Assurance of Quality and of Top M^nswear Fashion LAKELAND presents the "On-the-Go" coot. This double wool tram coot has solid wool melton on on* side g^f-with window pane co-ordi-itated plaid on the other. Zip-fly front plus toggle closures. Easy zip-off hood. ^65 Whiskers 4.50 2.80 Gladstone's Adlos 22.70 6.70 3.20 Doc 3.50 2.4 $34.20 2.70 - _____ 2-4 paid •111^3400; Preferre Guy Yates 11.60 5.00 3.10 Little Dominion 4.00 2.90 Meadowview Bob 2.90 9ttH>l1lOO; Claiming Pace; 1 Mile: Lady Ko San 10.70 5.10 5.10 Sheila Elaine 4.80 6.10 Crowd: $76.60 Hsndlt $m,m 2 Seek Sailing Crown . BUENOS AIRES (AP) -Louis Pocharski and Tom Allen, the champion and runner-up last year, again are among thp U.S. entrants in- the World Lightning Class Sailing Championships that starts here Sunday. INJOY THE BEAUTY OR PANELING IN YOUR HOME This Week gPECIAL 4'x7' PREFINISHED PANELING GOOD QUALITY V (3 COLORS) OTHIR BAROAiNS - CEILINO tlLE, DOORS, PREFINISHED TRIM, ETC. PONTIAC PLYWOOD imiaidwin FE 2.2843 JAYMAR shows total good looks with the Sonsobelt Slack with the unique triple action elastic inner waistband. It offers support without binding. Choose from solids, checks or plaids in 55% Dacron polyester/45% worsted. From *23 VAN HEUSEN turns the clock ahead . to o great classic with contemporary flair. The famous "417" dress shirt now with dual-button cuff, new Brooke collar with narrower thrust. 65% Dacron polyester, 35% cotton broadcloth. $750 i' ■ I Bloomfield P Miracle A^lle ^ Shopping Center Telegraph at Square Lak* Open Mon. thru Sat 9:30 to 9:00 \ ^ .'4'' I THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, NOVEMHKR 21. UHil) With Garden-Fresh Flavor / I ' I Hydroponically-Grown Tomatoes on Mart By JODY HEADLEE Pontiac Press Garden Editor ,Taste-tempting tomatoes rule the scene at Hydrogardens Inc. of Rochester, 1075 Rochester, Oakland Town-ahlp. And demanding monarchs they are, with of George Stevens was growing customary tomatoes marked ^ery move of corporation’s two work-ih g partners, I^enneth B. Covert, 34, and _________________ John Schulz, 22, „ „ hinging on the “•'■•Headlee welfare of the eye-catching beauties. “We got the idea of growing tomatoes hydroponically,’’ said Covert, “when my parents brought some to us from Wisconsin. “A fellow there by the name them commercially. They were so delicious, we thought there would be a market in our area.” EXPERT ADVICE Covert contacted Stevens, a research chemist and biologist with a green thumb. Stevens had been working on the development of a topato that could be grown hydroponically (the growing of plants in a nutrient solution without the use of soil) for five years and had been commercially growing the produce for two years. “We obtained a franchise froni him and started construction bn our greenhouses in June,” said Covert. “We planted our first seedlings in the trays in August and are just harvesting our first crop now.” The fruit is superior to the vine-ripened on the vine and delivered to the retaiier in a matter of hours after it has been picked. Thin-skinned, the tomato is brimming with juice. Its flesh is not grainy as many of the tomates are at this season of the year. And its aroma will take you right back to summer and the fresh tomatbes that you picked from your own garden. 4.500 PLANTS At the present time, the four bays of the greenhouse house 4.500 producing tomato plants (approximately one-half acre). The corporation owns 20 acres and hopes to increase its plant facilities as the customer demand grows, “We’se planning 9,000 plants for our spring crop, using the existing space,” said Schulz. From seed to mature plant optimum growth and flavor,” plant without having washed his demands much tender, loving care. TOUCHED DAILY Each plant In the greenhouse,” said Schulz, “is touched at least once every single day.” The seedlings are planted in the growing trays. (It takes about 10 weeks from sowing of seed until the young plants are ready to transplant). These trays are filled with gravel to anchor the roots of the tomato vines. said Covert. FORMULA VARIES A nutrient solution is pumped into the trays from the large storage vats housed in the floor. A float valve system keeps the solution from running over. “This solution is custom created so that the plants will have exactly the proper amount of chemicals and minerals for hands first This way we create And the nutrition formulat'mdltions and a varies with their stage ofenvironment for the growth.” he continued. eliminating many plant As the plants grow, they “"‘I be train^ to a single stem,jl‘“-pruning out all suckers. j ★ * * “This must be done by hand,”! Automatically controlled, the said Schulz. “As is the pollina- temperature in the greenhouse tion.” is held to 72-75 degrees during A small electric vibrator is'the day and 65-70 degrees at held briefly on the main stem,|night with a relative humidity the resulting tremor shakes the of 50-60 per cent. Sixteen pollen loose from the ripe!natural gas heaters provide the blossoms so that it may fall on | necessary amount of heat, the ovary and develop into a| “Each heater could heat two tomato. Each plant is vibrated standard-size homes,” said three times a week. jCovert, “so you can imagine A staff of four women work-!how the gas company likes us.” Ing part-time helps with fhis| mpg operation, the harvesting and • eradine remains on the vine ® until it is red, not picked green NO SMOKING or just pinking. “We are very careful of our “It is during this last week of plants,” said Covert, stubbing a ripening,” said Covert, "that z cigarette. "No one is allowed to the tomato develops the smoke in the greenhouse and no vitaimin C which gives it its one is allowed to touch a single; garden flavor. "Tomatoes picked green have little or no vitamin C and they do not develop it once they have been picked from the vine.” fruit is presently available In the Rochester and Birmingham areas. It cart be recognized by the HG sticker on each tomato * * * and sells for approximately 70 The hydroponically grown cents a pound. Kenneth Covert (Left) And John Schulz Check Tomato Harvest In Hydrogarden Greenhouse Ruggetd Bulbs Will Survive Winter Col(d antd Bring You First Proof of Spring This is the time of year to dig up tender summer bulbs and plant rugged ones that survive the winter cold and bring first proof of spring. Before the first deep frost, take from the ground the dahlias, gladiolus, begonias, anemones, oxalis and ran-nunculus. Store them in a cool dry place. ‘Copland’s Rival;” the Mayflowering Triumphs “Blizzard,” Paris',” “Golden Eddy” and the lacy^petaled Parrot “Karel Doorman.” Tulip and daffodil bulbs Then put into the ground the daffodils, hyacinths, tulips, cfocus and scilla. Arrange them s0 that when you cut some next spring to decorate indoor you won’t leave gaping spaces ij the garden. "You may want to rearrange the; old bulbs that provided beauty last spring, and add new colors, varieties and shapes. DWARF VARIETIES If your garden is small you’ll be interested in some of the dwarf varieties. Newer introductions include small Dutch tulips, daffodils and jonquils that will flourish in ordinary soil but #ich prefer sandy loam. Cycliinini etween paving should be planted about 6 inches deep and 6 inches apart. The best way to discourage children from spoiling your bulb garden is to encourage them to Winter Can Be Hard on Shrubs and Trees Pieces of burlap and chicken wire will protect precious plants from winter weather and animals. As shrubs grow larger they become more difficult t o replace, more expensive and more vulnerable to high winds. w ★ Even a short cold snap, if severe, can do extensive damage. In winter there will be a lack of water, starving raiments will chew *up'bark and the tender ends of branches, plants can become sunburned and roots near the surface may be heaved by frost and killed with exposure. Give shrubs and trees plenty of water during the fall, right up uritil the weather freezes. COLD WEATHER , When cold weather comes, mulch with leaves, straw, peat mos9 and similar materials. R^ents cah damage and even destroy small trees and shrubs. Makq a l^arrier of hardware cloth. Shape it in a cylinder and wrap it around the tree a few inches away from the trunk, . much sun may cause the sap to start rising. A cold snap that night will cause the sap to expand and burst the plant cells. tieus do very well in peaty soil. Experts advise avoiding lise of manure with bulbs. Bulbs help naturalize lawns, rough grass, woodlands, orchards and rock gardens. They will do well between light shrubbery and under trees that are not too dense; in window boxes, tubs and planters, terraces and bel stones. I ★ ^ ★ Plant varieties that do not kll bloom simultaneously. For April flowering there are single and double earlies. For May there are Mendel and Triumph tulips, and for early June Darwins, Darwin Hybrids, Lily-flowered, Parrots and Double Lates. Trumpet daffodils are ex-!you get in your cellent selections for cutting, j Remember that in Iwinter “King Alfred" has sturdy s{tems small animals can sit onltop of and ;RembrandV’ and “Golden the snow to do their nibbling. Harvest” are bright. j SUNBURN MID*SEASON I Sunburn is an ailment Others include the mid-season peculiar to the winter. On the Darwins “Paul Richter" andiprotected side of the house, too How high to go should be determined by how much snow For this reason, a canopy of burlap fastened to stakes need^ for protection. It also will protect small plants from drifting snow. Wrap burlap around the slender trunks of newly planted trees, both as a protection against sunburn and rodents. EXTRA AID Small trees and shrubs in extremely exposed areas should get extra protection. Stake them to prevent them from being broken or bent by the wind. Put stakes around the p^ant a small distance frony the trunk and place burlap around this frame. Tell them how to prepare the soil, how to plant and explain that the spring-blooming bulbs require little or no fertilizer because they have built-in food supplies to last the months before they bloom. AS A STAR'fER As a starter, let them study the catalogs with you and choose their own colors. Let them help select some small bulbs such as crocus, muscari and snowdrop. Croeps needs to be planted only three inches deep. A few lattice sticks and some burlap will provide a makeshift shelter over low-growing evergreens to protect them from heavy accumulations of make gardens of their own. Give them a plot of land to match their physic al capabilities. Don’t shunt them off to a rough, shaded spot that would discourage even hardy, veteran gardeners. Garden Center Sets Workshop Date “Deck the Halls with Boughs of Holly” and all the other trims of the Holiday Season Dec. 2-4 from 9:30 a.m.-3:30 p.m. as the Detroit Garden Center presents its a n n u p 1 greens workshop. Located at 133 E. Grand River, Detroit; the workshop will cost $2. Price includes bundle of greens. If you don’t put up a shelter of some sort, be sure to get out after every heavy snowfall and dislodge the heavy load of snow before it does an;^ (jarnase-BROKEN UMBSi \ u A Broken limbs snoifid b^ tended to. Prune thA sttibs close to the trunk. Then punt^the wound with a bit of roof coating w tar or some of the special preparations made for the purpose. Instructors will be on hand to assist and make suggestions. Members should bring work tools and a sandwich, tea or coffee will be derved. Potential members may join at the workshop. Dues are $2 per year. ' * * * Reservations may be made by calling the Center. Auburn Oaks, 901..... 2.65 so lb. Bat 1.45 Select Crystal Clear >01.,. 2.2D Granulated Salt looib. 2.2D Block . .... SO lbs; plain 1.2D PBlIOtS^ Rust Removal . . 40 lbs. 1i89 Seasoned Fireplace Hardwood K\Hm FARM MARKET 6676 Dixie Hwy. 3226 W. Huron Clarkston FE 8-3991 625.474D ^ VI I";' f\ “ 41 D—^ THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAV. NOVEMBER 21. 1000 iS 1 The following are lop prices covering sales of locally grown produce by growers and sold by them in wholesale package lots SSI'S'"S UCUUH DU cau idinmg trend in moderately ac- tive trading early today. At 10:30 a m. the Dow Jones Produce average of 30 industrials had eaoiTi dropped 2.71 to 828.47. Wednesday. BMit. Tmptd, bu................ Cabtg*. Curly, bu. Cabbaga, Sad, bu............... Cabbaga, Standard aVrlaty, bu. Carroti, Callo Pak, J-di. ■ Carrolt, _Toppad, bu.......... Calary, “ nnal, riarMUh^^k. bikt. ^ ' Dry, 50-lb. bag Root, di. bch. . W bu. Callo Pak, di. Market Continues to Decline NKW YORK (API - Thei Opening blocks included 15.300 33'a; General Cable, off 'a to shares of Litton Indu.stries, off 21; Whittaker, up % to 20; Texas Gas Transmission, up % to 34; and Bethlehem Steel, up % to 29V4, The market took its worst loss in several weeks Thursday. Analysts said investors were disappointed by statements of Nixon Administration officials indicating that monetary restraints might have to be maintained longer than had been expected. jjSj Declines held a substantial 5 margin over advances among ^«l issues traded on the New York I Stock Exchange. ».» Changes of most key issues 3.00(Were fractional. % to 51 Vo; 20,00 shares of International Nickel, off Dk to 39'a; 13,500 shares of American Telephone, up ^ to 52’s: 6,500 shares of International Harvester, off fs to 26»», and 5,700 shares of Texaco, unchanged at 29'i!. * * * Early Big Board prices included Jim Walter, off Vo to The New York Stock Exchange .Mi NEW YORK (API - New York Slock selected morning prices; Seles ’ Nel Ihds.) High Low Lest Chg, -tA— 13 74»m 74\% 74V4 — H Poultry and Eggs OBTROIT POULTRY DETROIT (AP)-(USDAI-Prlces peld per pound Tueedey lor No. I live poultry; Hens heevy type JI-SI; roosters heevy type J5-27; broflers end OYeri, whites geese ^^J5; turkeys 2l-3i. DETROIT EOGS DETROIT . 'APl-^fUSDAI-Egi^ I “ ..)T’ Gref ‘PecelVMs'^ nncfudlng U.S.): Grede ei.44; extra _ “ smell 42. CHICAGO BUTTER CHICAGO (AP) — (USDA) _ Butter ------ ------ -rices un- AA MW; •Thursdey; wholesale change to 'A lower; tj sew *2 A 6744; M B 6544. Eggs; prices paid delivered 9 lower to 1 higher; tO pi better grade A whites 63-6 , while extras 58VJ-5»V^l,• standards 51-52. Livestock DETROIT LIVESTOCK DETROIT (AP) — (USDA)-LIveslock close Wednesday. Hogs 100, barrows and gilts U.S. 1 2OO.B0 pounds, 26JO-27.00; 2-3, 220-! pounds, 26.00;26.SO; 3-4, 240.270 pouMs 24.30.26.00; sows U.S. 1-9, 3C0-400 pounte 32.7S-29.50; »9. 400400 pounds, 21.00-. .22.75. cattle 300, slaughter steers a loacH and lots choice 1000.1)25 pi . 20.25.29.00; other grades not tested; cows. 19.00-20.00. Vealars 50, high choice and . 42.0044.00; choice, 30.00-42.00; good, 34.00--34.00. and prime 90-110 lambs, 27.50- AbbtLab 1.10 d l.lte AlcanAlu l.fo Alleg Cp .lOg AllledCh 1.20 Am Can 2.20 ' iCyan 1.25 iETpw 1.64 I Tnka 1 Homo t .40 AmTftT 2.60 “\K Cp .30 Inc .48 ip«x Corp acond 1.90 . corpNSv 1 ArchDip 1.60 ArmcoSt 1.60 ArmstCk .60 AshIdOil 1.20 AssdDG 1.20 Atl Richfid 2 Atlas Cham 1 Atlas Corp Avco Cp IJO Avon Pd 1.80 14 15Ui 15 35 6S'/i 84 249 76\k 16 14V^ 2 41 15 2D>^ 7V/t 2)V% ~ 37 29 28% 28^ ... 47 33Vii 334S 33H » V4 18 26H 26V^ 26V^ — % 30 71 71 71»/4 + VS 1 19»4 19’ ‘ 21 36% 36’ HaMiburt 1.05 16 56 Harris Int 1 *' ““ HeclaMng .70 Herein f.200 HewPack .20 Hoff Eiectrn • ‘Idyll lySu Househp 1.10 21 43H 43’/4 43% 1 19’4 19'r% 19I7S ........... 36'/4 36’/4 - % 33Vs 33% -- % . . 38»/» 38’/i + % 1 54'/S 54% - % 56 38% 38’ • 54’;% 54' 47% 47% 47’/% — 29 28% 29 67 29’4 28% 29’A 25 29 67 29' , , 20 30’/4 30% 30’4i - % 63 04% 64% 64% xlO 42% 42% 42% 14 21% 20% 20V% 52 11% 11% 11% 7 32% 32% 32% 78 13% 13% 13% • 15 52% 52% M% — J 16 27% 27’/4 27'4 . 8 34’4 341/4 34'/4 21 29’4 28% 29^% + % 2 43% 43% 43^8 + 32 97% 97% 97% — V4 17 22% 22% 22% + % 37 4% 4% 4% — »/| 10 24% 24% 24% HoustLP 1.12 Howmat .n tdaa) Basic ^ 'll Cant 1.14 mp CP Am NA Cp 1.40 IngarRand 2 Inland StI 2 IM 4 tHarv 1.80 I VS wa Baaf iQwaPSv 1.32 JawalCo 1.50 JohnMan 1.20 JohnJhn .80a BabekW 1.36 18 23'/) 23% 23’/3 rE 1.70 14 31’. 1 40'/i ' pound 26.50; 81st,”? 20" BolscSs *.25b Brunswfc .IOd BucyEr 1.20 Budd Co .80 Butova W .60 ......... 3 9’/4. CampRL .45a 11 19% 40’/» — '/S . 54 16 56 16 37: 62 52% 52% 52% V- % 13% 13 13' 29/S 30^^ "* • ■ 30 23 95 30% + % x71 2(71S 20% —H— 55% 55'/^ - % 16 77 76% 76% — % ~>5 28% 28V^ 28% — % 16 34 34 34 — ’/b 4 101’/4 lOI’/S 101'4 % 8 11’^ 11 im - '4 0 41% 4(P4 41 — '/4 9 21% 7V'i 21'a ,, 16 20% 43% 41% 41% 41% — % 5 29% 29% 29% —I— 3 31% 31% 317/. -f 1/4 17 12% 12% 12% - ’/• 12 32 32 32 — '/i 11 14 13% 13% — % 16 35% 35% 35% - % 11 41% 4l’/» 41% .. 180 28Vb 27% 27% - % 37 354’;^ 354 354 — % 70 26% 26% 26% — % 12 13% 13% 13% . 243 39% 39% 39% — % 68 39% 39% 39% -f % 74 56% 56% 56% ......... 2 29’/b 79^M 29% — % 5 20% 20’.^ 20% -F % 30 647/. 64’/4 64% — V4 .. . .. 17’/4 147’-k -1% 3 34% 34% 34% + V* -K— 21 36% 36'/a 36% + ’/a 15 39% 39% 39% 42 57’/» 57% 57’/a 4 33V4 33'/4 33’/4 31 81'' 46’/4 South Co 1.2o 153 31 30% 31 - ’ SouNGas 1.40 x22 46’ 2.80a SperryR .47g SquareD .80 St Brand 1.50 Sid Koltsman 37 26% 26 -- 46'/4 457i 35V-a 35 46% 46^11 25 22% 77^9 22% • - 43% 43% 22Vii 22’/» • 7 46% 25 22% 45 43'^ 43% 43% 30 22’% 22Vii ‘‘‘ 25 50’/a 50 12 54’8 54': 51 51’I SterlDrug .75 Stevensj 2.40 12 42 143 62% 62»% 28 103 .... 11 10% 18 36’% 43’/k 42'% 42% -42 41*' 28 43% 43 102'/4 102% - % lO’/a 10% + ’% 36’% 36<% 36’/k — % — 42'% 42% — 41% 42 - 43 -1' SurvyFd .70g Swift Co .60 Systron Donn 11 48% 48% 48% + % 5 7’/ TaxGSul .60 Texasinst .80 Textron .90 Thiokot .40 TlmesMIr .50 TimkRB 1.80 Wr a Transmr Job 19 29V7 29fk J95» — V. 13 5S'/k 28V. 28:14 ' “ —T— 10 2244 2244 2244 S 64H M'/i 44V4 128 25V* 24'/* 24'/* 55 37V. 36'/* 37V4 f }* 234 »44 29V. 294* -i- W 46 274* 27'/* 274* 59 224* 22'/* 224* 71 11 117 117 21 29 28V. 29 21 12H 124* 124» - '/* 4 38'A 38 38 .. 159 30 2944 2944 - 4* 93 24'/* 24'/. 244* - -24 TV. 74* 7'/i + 24 324* 32'* 32'/. - UnOltCal 1.40 Un Pac Cp 2 UnlonPacIf 2 Uniroyal .70 UnttAIre 1.80 LIgg My 2.50 Ling TV 1.33 Litton 1.(91 LockhOA 1.20 LoawtThe .13 LonpItLt 1.30 Lucky Sir .80 LVO Corp LykYng .30g MagnvOK 1.20 Marathn 1.40 Marcor Inc 1 Maytag la McDonnD .4 ■ Corp 4 33'/* 33'/> 33V* + V* 162 52 51V. 52 fyf.'/. U^^S'/a-h'/* 7 24 24% 24% 4- < 8 30% 30% 30% — ’ 6 9 8% 8% + ’ 8 15 15 15 + ’ 10 38% 38% 38% - % 6 50% 50'/4 S0V4 45 19% 19% 19% +. 22 25% 25 25 - 22 26’% 25% 26 + Merck 1.80a MGM .60P MIcrodot .40g MldSoUtll .88 MInnMM 1.60 Mobil 2.20a Mohasco 1.10 inRad .80 10 utility '“-‘ID 200; siaL„— ------ prime 110 lb _ 19.50; several l< and choice 100-115 lbs 26.00-28.0; lb shorn sii 5 ^8.00; cult canners 15.0-16.25; Colointst 1.60 12 40% 40% 40% bulls steady; utility i >18.00-19.75; few high dressing .75-20.25; canners and cutters 16.50-.75; low yielding canners 15.0-16.25; I iUty and commercial bulls 24.00*26.50. CBS 1-^ Sheep 200; slaughter ambs and ewes ColuGas steady; package prime 110 lb wooted ComISolv slaughter lamlH 29.50; several lots good ComwEd 2.20 *y*«**r .u. deck Comsat siaugghter Con Edis 1.80 ---------''conNatG ' '' ConsPwr Nat Can .80 NatCash 1.20 Nat Distil .90 Nat Fuel 1.6B Nat Gent .20 good and choice 78 lb slaughter ewes 5.0-7 Amerrcan Stocks NEW YDRK (AP) Exchange selected noon prices: Salas (hds.) High Low Last Aerolet .50a ,3 16% 16 Am Petr ,85g ContAlrL .50 + CrwnZell 1.6o 7 39 38% 38% — ’ 26 54 .53% 53% - 38 26% 2^/3 26% . . 14 25% 25^/4 25% .. 5 32’/3 32% 32% -I- NatGyps Natind .46t NatLead ,85q “iteel 2.50 Tea .80 74% 74% - + % 36 44% 43% 44 98 27'/4 27 27’ 162 23 22% 22% — ------- ------- 110’/3 - 27 V3 — 1 23 *35’/4 *35' 7 25’/4 25 5 31’/3 31 48 110% n0’/7 110’/3 - % ‘2 28 27’/a 27’ * 5 259 259 259 3 35’/4 35'- "• 7 25’/4 25 5 31’/3 31' 14 16% 16% 16% % 5 36^/8 36V* 36% J “ 2 13 20% 20% 20% . AttasCorp wt Sras^nLt la Brit Campbl Chi Cdn Javf-' Cinerama Creole P Data Cont 20 13 Dixllyn ^Corp 22 30% 30 30'/4 — I 165 20% 19% 20’/4 - ’ 38 3 3 3 .... 1 10% 18% 18% -- ’ 11 14% 14’/4 14’/4 .... 158 15% 15’/4 15% — = 143 21’/a 10% ll’/k — % 28 14 13'/a W/9 — “ 86 ll>/4 11 ll’/k— 71 29>/4 28% 28% — 12 -1 Fed Resrees Felmont OH Frontier Air McCrory wt Mich Suo .10 MIdwFInT .20 Mohwk Data 24% 23% 23% -9% 9’/4 9’/4 — •/ 5 4% 4% 5% 5% 5% ... 16’/a 16 16 - ’ 8'/6 8’/k .... 6% 6'/2 6'/2 — ^ t% 9 13-169 13-16-M 5% 5% 5% — ’/S 66 15% 15% 15%—% 80^ 19% Va8% 18% — % 3 8% 8% 8% ... 4 6'/i 6'/2 ’/2 ... 2 11 11 n .. 31 78 T7’/4 T7'/4 - 32 37% 35% 35% -1 7 14 14 14 48 3% 3% 3% .. 11 10% 10% 10%.-* 7 5 4% 4% - 7’/a 7'/3 - 88% 89 -1 74 23'/2 23'/k 23’/8 V 1.15a Dart Ind .30b DaytnPL 1.6 0 Deere Co 2 DelMntt 1.10 DomeMln .80 R 1C Inti Ind Saxon indust Scurry Rain Statham Inst Syntax Cp .40 Tachnico .40b C?pyrIghtecT by The Associattd Press 1969 32 89’/a 88% ■’4 23'/2 23'/k 3 39% 39 39 — 74'/i 73% 73% + 23% 23’/4 23'/4 — '/a 10% 10% 10% BOND AVERAGES Cempllad bv Tha Aisaclatad Prass M 10 10 10 1< Ralls Hid. Util. Fan. L.Yd. Nat diangt un >-.1 un +.1 Noon Thu. 58.7 82.5 76.5 90.4 prey. Day 58.7 82.6 76.5 90.3 15:1 XU^hIS? ■" M.( -\ Net < 04.3 17.0 79.3 92.2 .58.7 80.2 7 .4 89.1 .66.7 91.0 81.4 90.2 STOCK AVERAGES Camplttd by Tha Atsaciatad PrHS 30 15 15 6 Ind. Rails util. Sti ,_5.0 -1.6 ^1.7 -427.9 149.9 -^38.0 287.9 111:1 1S:J Z:l .........121“' 513.5 ........ 48 14 13% 13% - ’ 11 51 50»/4 51 - 3 25% 25% 25% - 18 44 43 43% +F 7 29 28% 29 4- 5 33% 33% 33% — ’ 7 22% 22% 22% — 1 13 13 13 .. 23 20% 20% 20'/a .. 3 116 116 116 - 12 18'/4 IB'/k 18’/8 -I- 10 50 50 SO + 36 27 26’/2 27 -f 9 70% 70'/^ 70’/i 6 32% 32’/i 32% + 24 113% 113 113% -F 18 24% 24% 24% + 12 11% 12 + 28 71'/a 7T/2 71’/a — ^ 24 107% 106% 106% — ' 3 31 31 31 5 25% 25% 25%--: 7 23 23 23 -F % 18 11% 113’/i 1l3’/a — % 17 49% 49% 49% .4 30 30 30 36% 36% 36% • 3 72’% 72 34 141 140’ 14 18’/4 17% 10’/4 + ’/4 13 23% 23% 23’/a • 13 20’/7 20% 20'/a — V4 88 25’/a 25% 25'/a 7 10% lO’/a 10% -F Vb 7V/B 28 45 45 — ’% 1 13% 13% 13% + '/4 =rSP, —u— 37 32'J 32'* 32'i xl 17'* 17'* 17',i 80 40'* 39'* 40 X25 18** 18 18'* I 24 41V. 41'* 41'* — 57 484* 48'* 48V* - '* 12 434* 43'* 43'* - '* 133 20'* 20'* 20'/. — '* 85 434* 43'* 43'* - '* 2 11 II 11 «) 53 52V. 52V. + '* 8 29V. 29Vi 29V. 20 65 64V. 65 — '* 17 25'* 25 V. 25'/. + '/> Cong: Nixon Responsible, Not Lodge PARIS (AP) - The Vietcong says the Nixon administration must change its policy, not its man at the Paris peace talks. If it wants a peace agreement. * ★ ★ Changing the negotiator is not enough—the Nixon administration must also change its policy,” Vietcong spokesman Duong Dinh Thao told a news conference after the announcement that Henry Cabot Lodge, the chief U.S. negotiator at the peace talks, and his chief deputy, New York attorney Lawrence E. Walsh, had resigned. Lodge “carries out the directives he receives from President Nixon,” Thao observed to questioner. “We have no opinion regarding Mr. Lodge personally.” * The resignations were announced by the White House Thursday, and White House and State Department sources in Washington indicated President Nixon has not decided on a successor. Meanwhile, the delegation will be headed by Philip C. Habib, 4^year-old career diplomat who has been the delegation’s No. 3 man under both Lodge and his predecessor, W. Averell Harriman. PERSONAL REASONS Lodge, who is 67, said in his letter of resignation to the President that he wanted to leave for personal reasons. But friends had been saying for weeks that he was fed up with the lack of progress in the talks and would ^Sporty Cars v Aren't Selling DETROIT (AP) - In an effort to snap out of its 1969 profit squeeze, the U. S. auto industry made a large investment in high-powered sporty cars for 1970. Now there are signs that the American consumer isn’t buying and the squeeze could turn into an economic bear hug. Inventories are higher this year than last throughout the industry and speciality cars top the list. An indication of the high inventories came ’Thursday when Chrysler Corp. said It would lay off 17,800 workers at plants for the four scheduled working days next week. It was the first cutback-which are taken normally to bring inventories into line - by an au tomobile manufacturer since the start of the 1970 model production. lOfr-DAY STOCK American Motors had stocks of 1970 Javelin and AMX models which will last more than 100 days, the trade publication Automotive News reported this week. Chevrolet Camaro and Pontiac Firebird - actually un changed froin 1969 - each stood at more than 100 days along with Plymouth’s Barracuda. Other speciality car inventories on a day basis listed by Automotive News were: Pontiac Grand Prlx, 48; Chevrolet Monte Carlo, 56; Ford Thun-derbird, 66; Ford Mustang, 66)^; Dodge Charger, 68; Dodge Challenger, 69; Mercury Cougar, 89. The industry as a whole was reptxled to have a speciality car inventory which would laM 75 days while the inventory of all cars was estimated at 45% days, which was «% days higher than a year earlier. A highly regarded University of Michigan economist, George Katona, said today he sees trouble ahead for the au try with indications of a 5 to 10 per cent drop in sales for 1970 cars. SOFTENOWG SPIRIT Katona, speaking at the 17th annual conference on the Economic Outlook, said his reliable survey on consumer sentiment showed a softening spirit to buy among the American consumers A month earlier Katona said new car sales might escape the pessimism that was beginning to grip buyers. I believe the time has come for a reversal of the govern-’s tight - money policy -first of all because It is doubtful whether tight money helps greatly against Inflation,”- Katona said. He said the pessimistic view about the near future is contrasted with an optimistic long-range view. ’The current Issue of Ward’s Automotive Reports said the automakers have scheduied pro-ductim of about 2.2 miilion cars for the fourth quarter compared to about 2.5 miliion a year earlier. The publication, however, pointed out that the 1970 model year began earlier this fall and that the adjustment could be misleading. Production and sales of the 1970 models began generally a week earlier this fall compared to 1968. Latest industry sales Rgures are expected Monday. Through Nov. 10 the domesUc makers trailed 1968 sales by about 35,- 000 units with sales from Jan. 1 of 7,334,187 cars. Chrysler Corp. said Its layoffs next week would be on several car lines, rather than Just specialty cars. However, it plans Indonesia Comeback Top Economic Story By JOHN CUNNIFF island republic was 635 per AP Business Anaiyst ^cent, meaning that a product irew YORK - -nje c.m.1^ Xt'S‘v."c<2™ ;|*p outbyU.ee^' pItK. year. cuaber. I (President Sukarno in 19^ must !be considered Stocks of Local Interest |one of the ma- er decimal points are *M OVER-THE-COUNTER STOCKS Quotations from 1h* NASD US Indust .45 USPIyCh .84 US Steel 2.40 js-- j; s,/ UnIvOPd .80 26 » /* M'* Si! " uplohn 1.60 74 ^2'* 5)44 51'* - Varlen Aso 227 31'* 31'* 31'* -Vendo Co .60 » I?-* ~ V.EIPW " WerLem 1,10 21 70 »'/' m. - 4 43 43 43 21 48’/4 47’/? 47’/7 —1 23 61 60% 60% — 23 39% 39% 39% - ’ 49 59% S9’/7 59% + 46 40'/% 39% 39% — . 2 45 1 133/ 15 61% 61 1 43% 43^ 3 30’/a 30'/. 1 43% 43% 43% - — • 30'/4 30'/2 22% 22% Xl4 29% 29’/4 29'/4 18 17’/4 5 84 3 183/4 183/4 183/4 6 52% 52’/4 523,% _ i 18 26% 263/4 26% — ’ 84 — ’ NoNGas 2.< Nor Pac 2 NoStaPw 1 NwsrAlrl ^5 117 31’/* 3T% 31% - % NwtBanc 1.20 Norton 1.50 NortSIm 1.22f DhloEdls 1.50 DklaNGs 1.12 OlinCorp .88 Omark Ind if Otis Elev 2 Outbd Mar 1 Owens! II 1.35 8 42% 42’/a 42'/3 19 24’/* 23% 23% 373/4 37V. 31’/; “■ 20 34 5 31'/2 31% 3i'/a ■ 3 45’/a 45’/i 45'/a —E— 753/4 75% 41’/I- 41 20 25% 25 25V* + % 21 18'/a 18'/4 18'/4 — 5 28% 28% 28% — % Essexint 1.20 10 413/4 41’/I- 41 V> -- — 25 25V* 18'/4 18'/4 — 2gr 2 22% 22: 34 34 25’/* 25'/4 25'/4 — V* 6 43'/* 43'/* 43Va—T‘ 10 26% 26'/* 26% + ’ 20 84% 84% 84% - ' 5 14'/* 14V* 14’/2 . 14 14’/* 13% 13% — ' FedDeptStr 1 Flltrol 2 Firestne 1.60 FstChrt 2.29f Fllnfkote 1 Fla PQW 1.60 FiaPowLt 2 FoodFair FordWtot ForMcKs 22 31% 31 51 39'/- -2 33'/* 3’/j 33’ 26 54^ 37 42 2.40 1969 Low ... jiO ir ^:- . 411.4 14IS ,. 531.1 217.4 . 435.6 165.6 f FruehCp 1.70 GAC Cp l.SO GAP Corp .40 GamSko 1.30 CenDynam i GenMifli .68 GenMot 4.3ta GPubUt 1.^ G Tel El 1.52 Gen Tire lb Ga Pec .80b Gerber 1.10 GettyOil .38g ^ Goodyear .85 GraceCo 1.50 GraniteC Sti Grantw 1.40 Of AGP 1.30 Gt Nor Rv 3 Gt Wilt FinI GtWnUnIt .90 GreenGnf .96 Grei^nd 1 54% 54% 54% 42 413/4 41% 26’/t 26’/a 26V* 7 47% 47% 47% x5 69% 69 69 7 22% , 22’/% 22’^ — % 43 43% 43’/% 43% ‘ ' 65 27% 27% 27% 44 22' ■ ■ 13 41 22'/* 22’/i 22% . 25 59’/* 59'/* 59'/* 30 16’/* 16% 16’/% 3 22% 22% 22% + % 8 26% 26>/% 26% — % 46 81% 81% 81% — H 17 tS’/i 85% 85% + “ 6 36’/li 38% 38%...... 100 74'/r 74V* 74% + % 49 23% 23'/* 23'/* - % 57 33% 33% 33V4 + V* 20 19% 19% 19% — % 13 $6 49% 49% % 5 36% 36% 36% -F ’/a 5 53%, 53’/* 53% - % 13 .4^^ 46% 46^ + % 122 i% 8% 8% — %r8aFeintf 1.60 9 23/4 22'/* 22’/jl SanFelnl 20 33'/* 32% 32^1(4 - ‘ ‘ 02 28’/* 20’/* 28’4 - % 33' 20% 28% 20% — % 7 13% 13’/* 13’/a 12 54 53% 54 - % 2 28% 28% 28% -F V* 10 43Vi 43'A 43V* — % i 8 24% 24 24'/4 — % l! » 38% 38% 38% — % 2 31'/4 31'A 31V4 . . ^ 18V4I.18 18V4 . ... ParkeDavIs 1 PennCen 2.4o PennDix .60 Penney JC 1 PaPwLt 1.60 PennzUn .60 PepsiCo 1 Perfect Film 158 25'/4 24% 25 — % 6 233/4 23’/* 233/4 + ’/4 3 19% 19'/a 19’/a ...... 54 23% 23’/* 23’/* + ’/i 3 20 193/4 193/4 — V* 12 25% 25% 25% - 1 63 63 63 —P— 11 33’/* 33’/* 33’/* • 15’/* 15'/* 15’/; 13’/4 133/t 333/4 333/4 -F 46 34% 34% 34% 73 32% 31% 313/4 x8 17% 17'/a 17% 36 483/4 403/4 483/4 8 25% 253A 25% . X78 36% 36'/4 3^ — % 21 SV/7 53’/* 53% 157 103’/* 102’/% 102’/4b+ \/t 174 47 463/4 46% — V; 45 37% 37%^ 37%-34 The Associated Press 1969 Unl.\s'ot“he'rwl«* no"ed!‘rLs of dlvl-_jnds In the foregoing table are annuel disbursements based on the or semi-annual declaraflot extra dividends or peyT’®"'?,, ™' nated as regular lollowing footnotes. r>«. A—aim extra or extras, b—Annual rate ..a,, dividend. e^P.ld^..f,,f«^^ ... exdtivldend or ex-dlstnbutlon date. g-Declared or paid »o j»r this year, h-Declared or paid dend or split up. Ki? ..... year, an aecumulaflyt Issue vfltb dividends in arrears. Paid this year, dividend OTltl^. oewred or no action taken at 'as* ‘".-^loSa^iu. Ing. r-Oeclared or paid stock dividend. t-Paid in slock during IMS, estimated cash value on ex-dIvIdend or ex-dlstribution date, z—Sales in lull. cld-Called. x-Ex dividend. V-dend and sales in full. x^li^E^ tion. xr—E)(,._right5. tributed. bankruptcy or being reorganized under the Act, or securities assumed bY .such companies. fn-ForeIgn Issue sublect equalization tax. DOW.JONES AVERAGES to Second grade 10 Public ulllitie lO Industrials Mutual Stock Quotations INVESTING COMPANIES NEW YDR K(AP) —The foMowinq quo-tationsr supplied by the National Association of Securities Fid Fund 17.46 19.0 F|d Cap Trnd 26.18 28.61 ^6% 7.37 Vent 8.54 9.35 Investing zyy FstF Va 11.23 12.27 Fst InGtti 10.12 11.09 Fst InStk 9.03 9.90 Fst Multi 9.78 9.93 Fst Nat 7.70 8.42 Afflllatd 7.60 8.22 Alpha Fd 12.2213.37 Am Dvin 10.7411.74 Flet Cap Flet Fnd Fla Gth 7.29 7.9 Fnd Gth 5.78 6.31 8.39 9.17 11.6012.68 Balan 10.62 11.61 Pf Stk 6.87 7.51 Incom 5.49 6.00 Stock 8.41 9.19 Nat West 7.01 7.46 Nel Grth 10.01 10.88 Neuwth 25.30 25.30 New WId 13.76 15.04 NY Vent 19.32 21.15 16.5 18.10 15.42 15.42 8.27 9.04 8.32 8.44 14.46 15.80 Am Grth 10.32 .15 6.60 8.02 8.02 9.34 10.21 AmN Gth 3.10 3.39 Am Mut AmN Gtl Am Pac Capit Grwtt Anchor Group; * 9.48 - - 13.15 14.41 Fd Inv 17 26% 26'/* 26% X3 23’/4 23’/% 23’/* 32 36’/i 36'/4 36’/% 113 38% 38’/% 38’/* , .. 10 15 14V* 14V. - % 5 14’/% 14’/% 14’/% 12 37 36% 37 News in Brief Irma Stovall of 449 Howard McNeill arrived home from work early today to find that her home had been burglarized. Missing were two portable television sets w(M:th $10d each. Police theorized that glass cutters had been used to enter the front window. Bazaar Bake Sale: Cooley School, Sat. 1 to 5 p.m. Sponi’ sored by Drayton Woods Women’s Clul). —Adv, Christman Bazaar,. North HHl Farms, Senior Citizens, CJierry Hill Rd. off W. Kennett, Nov. 22, 10-6. ’ ’ -Adv. .82 9.67 1.0911.06 AssocI* 1.32 1.« Astron 6.38 6.97 *’7unrA®"'?^ 7.16 Stock ® f:” SCI Cp 5.23 5.68 Babaon 9.07 9.07 B«rg Knt 10.0110.01 Blair Fd 12.0913.21 BondstK 6.75 7.38 Batton St 8.00 8.7 Best Fdn 11.6412.94 Bolton 6.37 9.15 Broad St 14.8316.03 Bullock 14.8716.28 CG Fd 9.38 10.14 Canadn 19.19 20.06 capamr 8.43 9.24 Capit Inv 4.54 4.93 Capit Shr 7.40 8.11 Cent Shr 11.92 12.03 Channing Funds: Balan 11.97 13.08 Com St 1.79 1.96 Grwth 6.49 7.09 DNTC 10.5211.53 Util » .39 7.00 Incom- 2.17 2.38 Freedm 8.54 9.33 Fd frMut 10.31 10.31 Fund Am 9.9010.82 Gen Sec 11.4411.44 13.6613.66 Aero Sc" 8.65 9.4i - 12.6513.8; 8.69 9.50 21.99 16.25 17.76 Noreast Oengph Dmega 100 Fd 101 Fd One Wms 16.66 16.66 O'Nell 15.1216.09 Oppenh 7.97 8.71 Pare Fnd 11.1 8.1 9.02 9.02 1.2617.72 1.90 10.82 ;.86 8.59 10.93 10.93 Pilgrim Group Sec: Aero Sc Com St 12.6513.83 Ful Ad 8.6---------- Grth Ind 21.« 16.2 24.95 24.95 1.78 5.23 7.48 10.36 1.39 1.51 Penn Sq 8.17 8.17 Pa Mut 15.2617.72 9.90 10.82 7.86 8.59 10.93 10.93 Plon Ent 8.26 9.03 13.3214.56 11.92 13.03 Gryphn Guardn Hamilton: Pine St Plon En Plon Fnd 13.3214.56 Plan Inv ll.f........ Price Funds: Grwth 26.0 26.06 N Era 9.89 9.89 N Hor 29.09 29.09 Pro Fund 10.68 10.68 Provdnt 4.73 5.17 Puritan 10.0811.02 Harbor H8.C Lev 12.0513.03 Hedb Gor 9.23 9.23 Hedge 12.5213.72 Herftge 2.97 3.25 H Wtanr -------------- Georg 14.53 U.88 Grth 11.6012.6T Incom 8.12 8.8t 15.91 16.57 ““ 7.66 Frnt Shrhd Sped Chemcl Colonial: Equty Fund )up: 11.7912.89 103.30107.89 11.72 12.81 ISl Gth 5.55 . ISI Inc 4.56 5.01 Impact F 9.2510.11 Imp Cap 9.61 10.50 Imp Gth 7.69 6.36 Inc FdB 7.15 7.14 Indepnd 10.3811.34 Ind Trnd 13.3314.56 Indsfry 6.X 6.97 InsBk Stk 7.33 8.01 Inw CoA 13.7315.01 Guid 9i29 9.29 12.33 12.3 12.30 13.i 10.51 11.49 14.53 U.88 11.6012.68 8.12 8.86 7.75 8.47 10.5211.50 8.42 9.20 5.09 5.56 13.26 14.^ 7.78 8.41 6.77 7.40 Schustr 16.3617.90 Inv Indie 12.33 12.33 . 11.1012.13 Grwth 6.67 7.32 Vent 7.10 7.76 C.P Fd ,..1J1(.« ‘ “3 10.71 34’/* 34'/* — 46% 46% ^ 5% - Vi J6’/a .. 15 - % liWiVo’ StRegIsP 1.60 IS Scott POMI SbCLInd i starl GO Sh*n*0(l'(.«l ShorwnWm t SlgnilCo 1.20 4 W/l 26'* 126'/. S15'* IS IS 44V. . 44W 44 V. 2 47'A 47'* 47'* 10 269* 26?* 26?* X9 \35'* 35 35 . , . 6 37’/. 37?* 37?* -- ?* 10*’ 25V. 25 25V\-' •• 29 -27 26?* 27 \ 35 33'/. 33'* 33 - V. 2 23 23 23 10 54?* 54'* 541* -t- »* 41 36'/. 241 26* — '/. X3 21V. 21P* 21*4 -f i'* 16 321* 3ir/» 32'* -F ,'* 35 37'* 37 37 - J* 4 3l?* / 3(** ,31?*— * -s I?'* Rummage Sale every Frl. and Sat., New Hope Baptist Chjirch, 392 Bloomfield, 9 a.m. until ? —Adv. Rummage Sale. Our Lady of the Lakes. Dixie Hwy. Sat,, Nov. 22, 9 a.m. till 12, noon, —Adv Paleolithic carvings in Spanish caves, indicate that Stone Age hunters used the bow and arrow at least 10,000 years Prog Stock Select Var Py Inv Reth 4.96 5.46 Istel 23.05 23.76 Ivest 15.4616.92 Ivy 8.87 6.87 jHncock 8.55 9.29 Johnatn Kevsf Cus ES 1?4 .. . Cus , K1 7.96 B.6f CUS K2 5.55 6.0; Cus SI 18.36 20.03 Cut S2 ............ Cus S3 9.01 9.6 22.6 22.66 Funds: B1 18.9619,80 B2 19.97 21.79 9.3 10.2 7.89 8.62 5.38 5.88 4.39 4.81 KniCKD 7.18 7.87 Knick, Gt U.91 13.04 Lex drth 9.851" 9 J016.71 15.9717.45 6J1 7.01 9J0 6.12 7.71 8.42 S.77 6.31 ”4"V41.17 11.9tli.9l *wr“*fS!ivii.y Sptcl TL3512.40 Stock 14.9516.M si'irli Equi am 18.57 20.32 I’oritl iJ ^4.47^5,^l Fed^’cHh ujJll” 110.;; ni.7i ___i5.9r Manhtn Mass Pd Mast Gth ............. Mats Tr 15*7917.25 AAates 6.04 6A6 AAathtrs 12J9 t2J9 McDon 9.1410.02 MIdA Mu .89 7.53 Moody Cp 15.0016.39 Moody's 13.98 15.28 . Morton Funds;, Grwth 9.9^10.93 Incom unavail «ir^d^ i,s4"*;s'3 MIF cm 5J7 6.35 Mu OmO 5.32 5.71 Mu Omit) 10.1010.96 Mut Sbri ilJ611.56 NEA Mut lOih 1?:i6 K:{ }?:«]}.•« Sslem Fd _______ Funds: Int Inv 16.1816.43 SpcI 34.95 34.95 Bar 15.5615.58 Com St 11.5311.53 Sec Div 11.0811.98 Sec Equit 3.78 4.13 Sec Inv 7.90 8. 3 Sttoc Am 10.3311.17 Sel Specs 16.4718.00 Sh Dean 21.26 21.26 Side 10.2511.23 Sigma 10J611.54 SIg Inv 11.9513.06 Sigma Tr 9.6110.50 Smith B 10.0410.04 Swn Inv 8.54 9.23 Swinv Gt 8.26 8.93 Sovtr Inv 14.3715.73 StFrm Gt 5.63 5.63 Steadman Funds: Stats St 51.75 52.75 Am Ind 11.5212.62 Scien 4.78 5.24 Fiduc 7.58 8.31 Stein Roe Fds: 20.81 20.81 15.7 15.57 14.74 14.74 Sup InGt 7.68 8.33 SupInSt 10.1411.11 Syncr Gt 11.5012.57 TMR Ap 20.96 22.91 . Teachrs 10.2910.72 TechncI / 6.52 7.13 Techvst / Tpchnol ■Temp G ____________ Towr MR 7.07 7.73 Tran Cap 7.15 1.53 Trav Ed 10.3011.26 Tudor Fd 17.0218.6D Twnc Gt 4.51 5.01 TwnC Inc 4*76 5.20 Unit Mut 10:5011.48 Unifd 9.8510.4 Scien 0.17 1.93 UFd Can unavaM Val Lin 7.91 1.75 ValUa Lina Pdi «t VneeS apt 1.46 9.25 Vandrbt 8.11 8.94 s:;s Viking 7.12 7.74 WL Morg 10.2311.11 WatlSt m 12*0511.17 Wash MU 12.56 U.n »ln 12.1113.28 Ind 7.83 8.56 WhIlahlJ 14,87 16.23 Wincp Fd 10.1511.09 WIndior 9 J910.17 Wintlald 5.93 6.41 »l!Sh« VJJIS Cap Op 15.715.57 Ot J4.70 26.99 Government spending had produced the incredible situation. Military costs for a conflict with Malaysia were partially responsible, but wasteful expenditures pn domestic projects meant to impress foreigners contributed also. The economy was in chaos when Sukarno was ousted in 1965. Despite Sukarno’s boasts, despite his dreams of joining with Communist China to rule the area, the hard reality was that plants were producing at 20 per cent of capacity HEADED LOWER By 1967, however, the new government of President Suharto had reduced the inflation to 120 per cent a year and then to 85 per cent last year. This year the rate is down to 20 per cent and headed lower. The budget is now balanced and a five-year economic expansion program is under way. By 1973 rice production is expected to increase 40 per cent, factory output 90 per cent and fertilizer production many times over. * * ★ Over-all, the country is expected to grow at a rate of 4.7 per cent a year through 1973, a rate that almost any industrialized nation would be happy to achieve. Indonesia, of course, is far ss developed than some other nations in Asia, Europe and the Americas. But its potential based on vast mineral riches, is greater than that of many already prosperous nations. COUR’TING CAPITAL The catalyst needed for this development is capital, and In-dcmesla is carefully courting foreign investments. A bit wary at first, American and Japanese businessmen in increasing number are investing in the natiem. Although businessmen don’l always think first of such things as the balance of power, that factor is an important one in the rd)uilding of Indonesia •*'*■*• When the nation began its campaign to attract foreign investments several years ago. the minister of foreign ^fairs, Adam Malik, reminded bus!' nessmen that their investments would bring not only a financial return but a political one also. The stability of the whole re- —and in all probability it is a strictly dollar and cents one— the Indonesian market is becoming an attractive one. *, * * Not only is there the attraction of selling goods to a market of 100 million people who, if government programs succeed, will be on a steady road to great affluence; there is the potential for capitalizing on the area’s wealth. At a recently completed Indonesian seminar held by the American Management Association, businessmen were urged to invest in the nation, or more mundanely, take advantage of the opportunities it offered. SPEAKER’S VIEW One speaker, George Moore, chairman of the First National City Bank, told businessmen: “In conclusion, let me say that we believe that Indonesia offers a kaleidoscope of investment possibilities to the serious-minded and bonafide potential Investor. “Indonesia’s need for foreign investment is great, and the opportunities are excellent for those who act promptly.” ' I # % % I tn Svxxmsfuf 1. f Iwmtim -:* By ROGER E. SPEAR Q. For years 1 have read in stocks are a good hedge against inflation. How do you explain the fact that stocks are moving lower as inflation takes over? 1 hold three stocks bought In the fall of 1967 all at higher prices id I am worried. — M. W. A. Common stocks When measured by the popular averages such as the Dow -Jones Industrial apparently have not kept pace with inflation. On the other hand, averages are misleading comprising as they do a broad list of issues, many of which may be retrograde. Although widely quoted and a convenient reference tool, the Dow is mathematically absurd with its constantly shrinking divisor (currently 1.894) which sharply distorts day - to - day changes. A more meaningful indication of comimm stocks as an infla-__ __ tton hedge can w seen in gtonnMFwBarwdldepe^ CTmpari^. A $2,000 Qie growth and stability of Indonesia,” he said. “A stable and prosparoui Southeast Asia could well preserve the balance of power in East Asia in a way conducive to a stable peace in thft part of the world.” l^RTANT WORDS ^Such words, have more than passing Importance for AmerU can businessmen ^ho flnd theJt nation Involved in seeking a solution, military or otherwise, to problems that affect other Southeast Aslan areas. Regardless oL the motivation investment in each of i^ve raij-domly selected growth recommendations fj-om my <;oluinn8 of September - OctobiMT* .1967, would have appreciated a total of 42 per cent. Only one, Textron, has moved lower. Avon, Consblidated Foods, Georgia -Pacific and Warner Libert moved ahead sufficienuy to out^ce inflation fourvijmes. Vralle two of your Aholdirtgs are well worth retention for long - term growth, I would sell Occidental because of ijs extensive Libyan prop^es! (CtwrlSM. 1H() I’HK PONIMAC PRESS. FRIDAV, NOVEMBER 21. U>0(» For Wont Ads Diol 334*4981 Students Discuss High School Plans With Architects Death Notices (Maryln) Fater and James Chaduk; also survived by five sisters, two brothers, 24 grandchildren arl^ one greatgrandchild. Recitation of the Parish Rosary will be tonight, at 8 o’clock at the Coats Funeral Home, Drayton Plains. Funeral service will be held Saturday, November 22, at 10 a.m. at the Our Lady of the Lakes Catholic Church. Interment in L a k e v 1 c w Cemetery, Clarkston. Mrs. Chadek will lie in state at the funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 and 7 to 9.) Students Get Voice in New PCH Plan By MARY I. SUNDSTROM E d u catlonal specifications modified by youthful “consultants” may mean the planned new Pontjac Central High School will be a school by the students for the students marijuana. Tibbfetts had been a fireman 12 years The marijuana charge is still pending against him in Pontiac District Court. random in the last month to contribute their ideas as to About 75 Central High School'what they would and wouldn’t students have been chosen at Charge Facing Ex-Fireman Is Dismissed A b r e a k\i ng-and-entering charge was dismissed against a former Pontiac fireman yester- like in the $15.8-milllon school for 3,000 students. One thing most students mentioned often to represen tatives of O’Dell, Hewlett and Luckenbach, Inc., of Birmingham, designers of the project, was that they didn’t like study halls. As a result, designers have eliminated study halts in the conceptual plans in favor of student lounge areas. day after the c o m p 1 i n i n g; RESEARCH IDEA witness said he was unable to make a positive identification. Judge Alice L. Gilbert of the 48th District Court dismissed the complainant, David Gilbert 33, on the recommendation of Oakland County Assistant Prosecutor Edward Sosnick. ★ * ♦ The charge was dropped when the complaintant, David Giibert of 7480 Northway, West Boom-field Township, took the stand at the start of Tibbetts’ preliminary court examination and said that he was no longer positive that Tibbetts was the man who stole sound equipment from his home. Tibbetts of 19 N. Tasminia was arrested Nov. 13 when he appeared at a civil service commission hearing in Pontiac to appeal his dismissal from the fire department. Linda Heiserman, an architect’s representative who talked to the students, said she came up with the “student-consultant” idea when doing research on new school designs and educational practices. He was fired Oct. 30 by Chief Charles Marion for “conduct unbecoming an officer,” after being charged with possessing Car Hits Pupil Departing Bus A 12-year-old girl, hit by a car after stepping off her school bus yesterday morning, is in fair condition today at Pontiac General Hospital, suffering fractured pelvis and leg. Paulette Ashbaugh, 12, of 9283 Steep Hollow, White Lake Township, was struck at M59 and Sunny Beach, White Lake Township, by a car county sheriff’s deputies said was driven by Connie Sue White, 20 of 65 Pinewood, Pontiac. No charges were made in the case, deputies said. administration and s c h o o board, not the architects. PLEASED AT COMMENTS Carl Luckenbach, head of the architectrual firm, said he was pleased with the student’s comments. “The people most concerned with the new school don’t have a channel to make their wishes known. We’re opening this channel for the students,” he said. “The students have something of value to tell us.” ★ * ★ Miss Heiserman said the students also were concerned about the monotony of a school and suggested variations color, size and shape of the rooms. She said they also were interested in doing things to their own spaces, such as paint ing them and putting up posters The students also suggested larger mirrors in the bathrooms, larger and more secure lockers and private study areas, rather than large study halls. GRIFFIN, ROSE I.; November 20, 1969 ; 26 Lincoln Ave.; age 71. Survived by several nieces and nephews. Recitation of the Rosary will be held Sunday, at 7 p.m. at the Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home. Funeral service will be held Monday, November 24, at 10 a.m. at the St. Michael’s Catholic Church. Interment in Lansing, Michigan. Miss Griffin will lie in state at the funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 and 7 to 9.) The family suggests memorial contributions may be made to Pontiac Catholic High School. HEBERLEIN, CONRAD; November 19, 1969 ; 261 Douglas Drive, Bloomfield Hills; age 91; beloved husband of Mrs. Olga Heberlein; dear father of Mrs. Lee Tanner; also survived by one brother in Germany and four grandchildren. Funeral service will be held Saturday, November 22, at 11 a.m. at the Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home. Cremation at White Chapel Cemetery. Mr. Heberlein will lie in state at the funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 and 7 to 9.) She said the students seemed to be most upset about the concept of two separate $1,500-student schools in the same building, particularly from a standpoint of athletic competition. following three (3) garbage m4 CMC model, VH-SOm engl^ 'There’s enough rivalry between Central and Northern High Schools now. It would be too much if there were two teams in the same building, said one of the Central students who toured the architectur,al firm’s offices yesterday. The decision on the two-schools in-one-building concept rests however on the district’s Junior Miss Contest Near ..CITY OF PONTIAC, .MICHIGAN The City of Porttlac It o«ermg for Leach packer Y?: 1% OMC model VH-5011, engine ioi. tires 8;25x20» single rear axe. Garwood packer LP-41». Clly equlp-Yr.''*1964'*’GMC'model VM-5011, engine 401, llret 9:00x20. single rear axle. Leach packer P-17. City equipment Is" condition to the hIghOst These vehicles • —lltlor. -- . - will br received ...........lal Purchasing should be marked'"Seaie'd Bid No. 458.'( Vehicles may be Inspected DpTw?*. S. Y^d, 55 Wessen St. during regular working hours. Successful bidders will hove unlil December 10 m remove vehicle from yard. The City reserves the right to accept or relect any or all bids. flOYD D. SMITH V. IB, 19, 20, 21, 22, the Board of Education, Rochester Com munity Schools, Rochester, Mich'—-til 2:00 P.M., E.S.T. December for the Sewage Retention Tanxs ana related work lor Rochester-Adams High , Rochester, Michigan, In accord with plans and specifications pre Twelve area senior high school girls will compete for the title of Pontiac 1970 Junior Miss at 8 p.m. tomorrow at Pontiac Northern High School. The pageant is sponsored by the Pontiac Jaycees. Judging is based on scholastic ability, poise and appearance, physical fitness and creative and performing arts. School, Rochester, Michigan, In accord ■ plans and specifications pre pared ov O'Dell, Hewlett 8. Luckenbach, Inc., Architects, Engineers and Planners Plans and specifications will be avad able at the Office of the Architect, 950 North Hunter Boulevard Michioan on or after Nov-..-^.. TWO satV of Bidding Documents for proposals will be allowed to a bidder for the work Included under his particular proposal. A deposit of 540.00 for cate, on forms provided tects, the Archl _____ endosed ' in sealed envelopes marked with the name of the bidder and the title of the be de iiveredV the'OHices of the Board ol Education! Administrative Office 4th anc ... —-tlchigan. icStlon reserves th< r all bids, to award ihe contracts to' other Wilcox, Rochester, The Board of Edui right to relect —' “ CORRECTION The Ad for LIFE KITCHENS and BATH CENTERS 110 PONTIAC MALL OFFICE BUILDING published in The Pontiac Press Thurs., Nov. 20th, should have listed tlj.e hours as follows . . . OPEN Thur., Fri. 'til 9:00 P.M. , THI$ SUNDAY / 12 no6n to 6 P.M. 'The Poliliac PTcss The winner of the contest will receive approximately $250. in scholarships and be eligible to participate in the Michigan Junior Miss regional competition in Holly, Dec. 12 and The first runner-up will receive $100 in scholarships. bidder, to accept any or ■ ■regularities an— general to make the award In —med by it, in Its sole dls-Ihe best Interest of the board of EDUCATION Rochester Community Schools Rochester, Michigan Mrs. Gail Kemler, Secretary Nov. 21, 28, 1969 manner, deemed by it, in cretlon to be School District, Tickets will be available the door. , Topk Stolen From Auto A ?200 set of tools was stolen from a car left temporarily on the shoulder of M24 near 1-75 in Pontiac Township early today, accorflhg to Oakland County Sheriff’s deputies. ' I '★ , t John S a rti s 0 n of 845 Bobinwood, Pontiac Township, told deputies that he was traveling to Pontiac General Hospital to pick up a friend when his car broke ^own. GONSTlPATEDO DUE TO UCK OF FOOD I ■ULK IN YOUR DIET ■ ^eft\he cai illed another friend to pick up the hospital patient and rrturned to his own car, only to fltid that someone had ransacked the car and stolen the tool kit, cording to depu|||^s. By LAURA WHEELER Enchant everyone with fairytale trees. Superb gifts! Fabulous INSTANT TREES-19” Sculpture Tree has crystal drops, bells or ball trim, 22” Elegant Tree of brocade has lights. Pattern 641; pattern pieces, graph. KELLY, NELLIE M. ; November 20, 1969; 31 West Burdick St., Oxford; age 82. Funeral service will be held Saturday, November 22, at 2 p.m. at the Bossardet Funeral Home, Oxford. Interment in Oxford Cemetery. Mrs. Kelly will lie in state at the funeral home. MORSE, HARRIET E.; November 20, 1969 ; 8 5 Doremus, Waterford Twp.; age 62; dear mother of Mrs. Colby (Joyce M.) Little, Mrs. Leo (Phyllis E.) Vaillancourt, Mrs. Douglas (Shirley A.) Lintz, Mrs. Herbert (Martha J.) Gay, Claude J. and Willard 0. Morse; dear sister of Mrs. Margaret Warner; also survived by 20 grandchildren and nine great-grandchildren. Recitation of the Rosary will be tonight, at 7:30 at the C. J. Godhardt Funeral Home, Keego Harbor. Funeral service will be held Saturday, November 22, at 9:15 a.m. from the funeral home to St. Michael’s Catholic Church at 10 a.m. Interment in Roseland Park Cemetery, Berkley. Mrs. Morse will lie in state at the funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 and 7 to 9.) SCOTT, HARRY C.; November 19, 1969; 1516 Hummer Lake R9., Ortonville; age 75; dear brother of Mrs. Martha Dixon, Charles and Bradley Scott. Funeral service will be held Saturday, November 22, at 1 p.m. at the C. F. Sherman Funeral Home, 135 South St., Ortonville, with Rev. Horace Murray officiating. Interment in White Chapel Cemetery, ’Troy. Mr. Scott will lie in state at the funeral home. Death Notices BOWEN, JEFFREY RAY; November 20, 1969; 510 Alpena; beloved infant son of Donald E. and Margaret Bowen; beloved infant grandson of Mrs. Lucille Bovia, Donald 0. Bowen, Mrs. Mary Starr and William Douglas; beloved infant great-grandson of Mr. and Mrs. C(iarles Munger, Mr. and Mrs. Perry Latham, James E. Douglas and Mrs. Gladys Dorthey; beloved infant great-great-grandson of Mr. and Mrs. /Ervin Rives; dear brother of Keith E. Bowen. Funeral service will be held Saturday, Noveiibber 22, at 11 a.m.' at the Voorhees-Siple Funeral Home with Rev. ^ruce, Benson officiating, interment in Perry Mount Park Cemetery. Jeffrey will lie in slate at the funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 and 7 to 9.) STEARNS, RUBY D.; November 20, 1969 ; 517 E, Pike St.; age 74; dear mother of Mrs. Francis J. Mansfield; also survived by two g r a n d c h i Idren. Funeral service will be held Monday November 24, at 11 a.m. at the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home. Interment in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery Mrs. Stearns will lie in state at the, funeral home after 71 o’clock tonight. (Suggested i visiting hours 3 to 5 and 7 to' CHADEK, JOSEPHINE MARY; November 19, , 2 8 0 0 Airport\ Rd„ Drayton Plains age <<7: beloved wife , of Ahrens T. Chadek; dear mother of Mrs. David (Petty) F'uUtersiHi, Mrs. William (Donna) Ford, Mrs. Virgil (Audrey) AHtSnt Mrs. Marvin Fifty cents in coins for each pattern — add 15 cents for each pattern for 1st-class mailing and special handling. Send to Laura Wheeler, The Pontiac Press, 124 Needlecraft Dept., Box 161, Old Chelsea Station, New York, N.Y. 10011. Print Pattern Number, Name, Address, Zip. New dramatic 1970, Needlecraft Catalog-inspiration on every page! Over 200 designs, 3 free patterns! Dresses, jackets, accessories to Knit, crochet . . . quilts, toys, afghans, embroidery, sewing, weaving. Only 50 cents. 50 INSTANT Gifts-Fashions, accessories, toys. Send 50 cents. Book of 16 Jiffy Rugs to knit, crochet, sew, weave, hook. 50 cents. Book of 12 Prize Afghans. 50 cents. Book No. 1 — 16 Superb Quilts. 50 cents. Book No. 2 — Museum Quilts—12 rare, outstanding quilts. 50 cents. Book No. 3—Quilts for Today’s Living. 15 unique quilts. 50 cents. PRBmED PATTERN SIZES 2-10 4913 THOMPSON, RAYMOND D. (BUD); November 19, 1969;i 3097 Lincoinview, Auburn Heights; age 44; beloved husband of Genevievp Thompson; beloved son of Lucille Thompson; dear father of Mrs. Karen Tioran, Mark, Denise and Shari; dear brother of Mrs. Betty Jane 'Tripp. Funeral service will be held Saturday. Novertiber 22. at-1:30 p.m. at the Auburn Heights United Presbyterian Church. Interment in Aaron Webster Cemetery, Auburn Heights. Mr. Thompson will lie in state at the Harold R Davis Funeral Home, Auburn Heights. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 and 7 to 9.) The family suggests memorial contributions to the Auburp Heights Boy’s Club. By ANNE ADAMS Little girls have all the fun and fashion in this brisk, shirt-look skimmer! Lots of pretty details — collar, tab front, tepny pocket to sew in same or contrast fabric. Printed Pattern 4 913: NEW Ghlldpen’s Sizes 2, 4, 6, 8, iO. Size 6 tikes 1% yards 4 5 -1 n c h . Sixty-five cents in coins for each pattern — add 15 cents for each pattern for ti(^st-class mailing and special liandling. Send to Anne Adams, care of The oPnUac Press, 137 Pattern Dept., 243 West 17th St.. New York,' N.Yi 10011. Print NAME. ADDRESS with ZIP. SIZE and STYIxE NUMBER. At 10 «.m. terfay there were repllet at The Frees Office in the fellowing boxes: C-3, C-8|, C*», C-10, iC-27, C-3Z„C-33, C-34, C-35, C-40. A55ISTANT TO ASSIST manager "AVON CALLING". For larvict In your homa. FE 4-0439. ARLEN'OTEONO now workliiu at Albarl't Suburban Hair FaeMone, 6744)477. DELICIOUS' homemade plei and cakat, to ralaa monay lor church. Fhona In ordari. 67f J446, FREE Widrin lima for_Chr(*tmai, LU a paid vacation, holiday*, nup Ilia and madical Employaa OUcount*. nbiy oMrai a Britlih'Amtricap . )669 Hamlin Rd.a RochAitot TIME MAINTENAN'CI' marty SAL ESMAN. aid vacatli (•pay. Group Ilia Employa Excallant vancamanti, ihould >tava talei axparlanca. Apply at Grant*. ?100 Coolay I aha Rd., AINTEN^ v,M .a^-.irvv vOia-MllJ. , GAS STATION ATlTniTahl, at. perlenced. mpcltanlcally Incllndd. local rafarancai, lull or part lima. Gull, TaMgraph a^ Mapla. GAS STATION ■- EXPSriENCBB Active Builderll aggreTiiva young i *•11 hi* FHA approvad *i ___ .__rlcat._......... $2.50 to S17S par hour^ Alto, tuna-I wrackar drlvar. $|7S f watk. Shall Sarvica. Mapta and gresAiva company Top quality, with axparianc LOSE WEiOHT SAFELY -Olat TaElata. Only Simm^ Brot.y Druga. STUOiNfS^lo*^ atfanitf Harvait Hop, Wailad Lika Canfrai High school, ' I Frigid Pink and Hawk. Bo(dy Man _nca. I.S. Glasi Inc., 5«S S. Woodward, Birmingham. $44*4(81. CRINNELL'S HAS AN opaning for a Uor"®.' Admliilon 11.75. Wlds"ANb HAIRPiecSi done my homa, vary raae. 673-3169, Only- Funeral Directors 4 C. J, OODHARDT FUNERAL HOME Keago Harbor, PH, 6I2 MOO, COATS funeral home DRAYTON PLAINS 67441461 " DONELSON-JOHNS FUNERAL home 155 W. Huron Pontlae_ 334-45U Huntoon funeral home Serving Pontiac for SO V«»r«„„ 79 Oakland Ava._ FE 3-0119 SPARKS-GRIFFIN FUNERAL home ........ "Thoughtful Sarvica" FE 1-9211 VoorheesSiple funeral home. 332-1371 PUNbKMI. Eetabllihad Ovar 45 Yean CsmetEry lets 4-A SITES, Chrlellan Rocheeier, raatonabit. 332-2130. Persennls 4-B 2 CEMETERY LOTS, While Chapel, rellglpus llbartlaa, 332-603S. $12 FOR GIVING Park Lana Jewelry Party. Earn SSg or more. For dataMi call Mra. Woody. 33S-0991. Pontiac Mall Barber SI A true net I Mlllaga thia coiui FULLER BRUSH 674-2106. FOR PEACE OF mind-for help In meeting problams-for aura, tound advice, dial your family blbla. 334- Mr. and Mrs. Homeowner Yes, you can ' mortgage on ye Voss at 334-3267. mortgage on your home. Call Mr. ON AND AFTER THIS data I 1969, I will not be raaponi any debt contracted by an than myself. Robert 9192 Hutchins lost and Found FOUND BROWN MALE dog FOUND: .VOUNG^^^grajr^^; female dog. Call 625-5061. Call after 5 p.r FOUND: PUPPY, RUST color, Bloomllar —■-—" -...-....t.i 334-0692. , Reward. 391-1670. please call FE 5-3729.____________ .6 ST: FEMALE GERM' shepherd, black Middle Straits LOST: German Shepherd, female, vicinity of WIIHams Lk. Rd. 8. Lotus Lk. Estates. "Candy." Call 635-5717 after 6 p.m. er 673-1033. or other G.l ptrlenca. Apph oarls M. Ek- Prlce, ALERT, AMBltl6US~bERSON to Adams S Adams AUT^ DEALER IN WATERFORD has opening lor portar In new car department, must be dependable. W# offer exctlltnf opportunity tor r.' -------------------------- p^^y In persoi Dixit Hwy. accountant Pontiac Press ' Want Ads For Action , Bartender Fxpariencad i>how man for luxury retfauTanf. t«rvlng quality cllantel of Birmingham-Bloomflald area. perion or*can'^MBChu» ii Mila at Telegraph Rd., 426 4200 BOY WITH CAR ..........television lalaiman. Apply at Grinnairty Pontiac Mall. HELP WANTED POR ' rC oTTf manufaefuring firm. Apply Birmingham Hydraullciy U7S E. Mapla, Troy, Mich, IMMEDIATE OPENINGS $11,200 apptarai latity a- pleasant winters or full timt summers. $2.50 t. For infarview call 4-5 pm. dail/. 335-5907, BARTENDER, FRIDAY AND Saturday night, 707 Lounge, 352 E RETAIL STORE MANAGERS MANAGER TRAINEES MANUFACTURING REP. SALESMEN Natlonv/li with challenging opening In this BOYS-MEN 18 OR OVER INTERVIEW WORK NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY, will train, $425. Salary per i appearing, -tany other company fringa bane-if*. Strong sates background na-essary. For confldtntlaf Intarvliw, Mr. Bailey from i PONTIAC DETROIT _ COLLECTOR FOR' 1.-I p.r departmenf of Land company, $550 JANITOR Part lima afternoons No exptrlenca nacassary JANET DAVIS CLEANERS 447*3009 ________ "Join our progressiva itora Phone 423-1333. management team" Burger King WIG PARTIES, LOST: Small black poodle, vicinity NEED SOME EXTRA CHRISTMAS MONEY? 5 children are willing lo give up their Christmas tavings lor Information which will get them their dog back. Plettt call If you know of someone who recently hes added e tllver-grey-bleck Norwegian female Elkhound to their yard. Dog went astray with chain dragging In vicinity of Orlon-Adams-Clarkston roads. Had red leather collar, curled up tall. Information will be kept confidential. PHONE 693-8822 Wide Track, P.O. Box Orchard Subdivision. 1. Tatto In ear, "Ray", 9 mo. lost on Adams Rd. bet. Blr-gham and Oxford, EL 7-2C38. Lost, strayed, or stolen, black m«re pony, 4 white feat, Shetland, girls pat, reward, 3944)171. SETTER FEMALE, Highland Recreation area, November 10, white and ticked, one side of head black, call collect 313-738-2900. Reward. H. S. Warrington. _________________ 2, A-1 ROUGH Carpenters wanted. 1 man must be familiar with layout of hip roof. Apply in person at lob sight. 8050 Bridge Lake Rd., Clarkslom_Mlch.____ AUTOMOTIVE 'PARTS ASSISfANT of handling _ s small ___ - Interesting and varied work, guaranteed salary against parcantaga of work dona. Your Income la controlled only by your ambition, tend resume to Pontiac Press, Box C-35. AGORlSSIVE YOOnO C0M»>A'NY •desires axparlancad shipping and receiving man. Opporflinltv for advancement and benalltd. For 'In-ttrvjaw. Call 624-4010. _ ........ATTENTION ........... ALL SALESMEN If VQu hava tha ability and dasira for. Buying, Selling or Trading real estate, we will offer you the op- xceilent iditlon*. person or «*‘ .3i3'»4d9, putty's, Union Lake. new sta,lon on Highland Rd. for Paiu training and exc. opportunity for further advancement. For more information Call Jerry Eflds, LI 8-7222, aft. ^71-35K_ CREDIT Large national wholesaler looking divisional credit i CHEF'S HELPER, young man.ln- taresled In food t '----- while you tionwide openings for ambitions and aln-ceraly motivated persons. Experienced or Inexperienced In the food service field. Past Supervisory exptrlenca lent starting salari career opportunity. If you think you can handle this opportunity call lor a personnel Interview. 352-7300 ask for Mr. Dyke. 24123 Graanfleld, Sulfa 300. Southfield, Mich. 40075. experienced, apply In person, or call Machus Red Fox, 15 Mile at Telegraph Rd. 626-4200. CREDIT MAN Full charge credit dept, and tral. for store manager. Top starting salary, new opening, Shaw's Jewelry. apply at once COMMERCIAL INDUSTRIAL Tire Company, 3994 M-15, Clarkston. and expenses. Phone 625-5950. DELIVERY. IMAN. Mornings, Mon.-FrI. Chauffeur's license. Parry Pharmacy, 1245 Baldwin. DAY PORTER, Night full time. 149 W. Huron.__ EXPERIENCED TOOL ROOM, mill and lathe operators, part time, 2242 S. Telegraph, Pontiac. EXPERIENCED ACETYLENE TORCH MAN, part time or full. Call FE 5-1141. ____________ ELECTRICIAN UTILITY CITY OF PONTIAC journeyman's alactriclans license EXPERIENCED MISCELLANEOUS machine operators. C r a s a n t Machine Co., 2501 Williams Drive, Pontiac, Mich. GENERAL SHOP HELP Wide variety unskilled factory and warehouse work available. No previous experience required. PAYDAY EVERY DAY AT END OF SHIFT FREE TRANSPORTATION IN OUR WORK WAGON TO AND FROM PONTIAC Call 585-1990 for WORK WAGON schedule and roula Or report ready fo^ work employers' Temporary Service, Inc. FERNDALE 2320 Hilton Rd. REDFORD 35165 Grand River CLAWSON " * CENTER LINE 8561 E. 10 Mile NOT AN EMPLOYMENT AGENCY ALL JOBS ARE FREE lob Opportunity An all rtliabla Insurance Co. Wantt ambitious salesmen, age 21 through 55. Starting lalary, tISO par wk. Call 681-1010. lathI OPERATOR, axparlancad omy, small shop, good pay. 634- MECHANiCSi HELPERS. APPLY Keego Sales and Sarvica, K^, 3080 Orchard Lake Rd., Keego Harbor.________ men wanted Mutt ba 18 or I MECHANICS To assembit machinery, wiring 6, panal ax pa desirable, all banalits. THORESON-MCCOSH INC. /married maM, opportunity for on tha lob training an insurance salesman. We will ■ Z ilio 'per unlimited alter third MACHINE OPERATORS, aoma experience on Lathes, Turret lathes, . ------ . ...-- MILL OPERATOR Top ratn. fringes, steady non laaeoni employment. Apply In aarion. PYLES INDUSTRIES WIxom, Mich. Equal opportunity Men Minimum National Corporation Is hiring man QUALIFICATIONS or politically In- 3. Able to converse Salary $162.50 perwk. Help Wanted Male