TheWeather Unrein Forte Cloudy and Colder (BeMlli Fin tt‘ THE PONTIAC VOL. 120 NO. 278 ★ + * ★ PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 2,9, 1962 —22 PAGES faff,!' " 6 ^f?•*’-’ ^ s-;—'7 *— - Tshombe Flees Palace ..COMBAT FLAG — President Kennedy receives the combat flag of the 2S0th Cuban invasion brigade in ceremonies held in Miami’s Orange Bowl today, where he met with leaders and fighters of last April’s abortive Bay of Pigs liberation invasion of Cuba. JFK Assures Freed Cuba MIAMI. Fla. (ff) — President Kennedy received the battle-stained colors of the ill-fated Bay of Pigs invasion “brigade ahcTlald. ^ cain assure you this flag will be returned to this brigade in a free Havana.” His remarks, translated into Spanish for a crowd of more than 20,000 at the Orange Bowl, drew repeated -cheers. Kennedy reviewed the survivors of the disas-~——: — 4trous 1961 invasion, shook ELMER R. JOHNSON Confirms Bid to Keep Post Waterford Supervisor Seeks Fourth Term Waterford Township Supervisor Elmer R. Johnson today confirmed his candidacy for a fourth two-year-term as supervisor. h ★ + Johnson, 59, will seek the Republican nomination for the office in the Feb. 18 primary. He had been elected supervisor three times as a Democratic candidate, but announced his change of party affiliations last January. In revealing his plans to file again, Johnson commented that it is important that voters give serious consideration to the qualifications and motivations of those seeking elective office. ★ ★ * “Those elected will be fronted with problems, hot new, complex, or even unique to Waterford Township; problems not to be resolved, by any. one Individual but only by combined ef-forts of sincere individuate cooperating in the best interests of the township and always responsive to the will of the citizens," He said. » A die maker for a tool and die firm before taking public office, 'Johnson is a former member of the Waterford Township Board of Education. James E. Seeterlin, township clerk the past slx years, nounced yesterday that he would be a candidate for supervisor on the Democratic ticket. Police Search for 'Love' After Drugstore Holdup DETROIT (APHtletrolt police were looking for "love" today. A gunman, with that/word tat-. toed on one hand, fled with $800 after a drug store holdup last night. ; hands with leaders of brigade elements and stopped to chat with some of them before making his brief remarks. Sr ★ ★ "By helping to free you,” he said, “the United States has been given the opportunity to show that all men who fight for free-dom are our brothers. ‘On behalf of my govern-nt,” the President said, “and my country, I welcome you to the United States. Although Castro and his fellow dictators rule your nation, they cannot rule people." Kennedy noted that the brigade came mom behind prison walls but he said "you’leave behind you more than six million of your fellow countrymen who in a. very real sense are in prison." ....★ 1 ir ★ Jose Perez San Roman, officially presenting'the battle colors, said the flag "symbolizes a free Cuba.” . Nine members of the brigade remained behind in Castro Jails, Perez San Roman said, and "it as a debt of honor to go back. He apparently referred to prisoners sentenced for alleged crimes not connected with the invasion. HALF AS BRAVE Mrs. Kennedy accompanied the President on his visit, and an ovation swept through the Orange Bowl when she told, the Cubans it was her “hope and prayer that John Jr., would be half as brave “as the men of the brigade.” Perhaps the longest round of Hints U Still Plans an Invasion 'Total Destruction Threat Unleas JOHANNESBURG, South Africa UR — President Moise Tshombe of Katanga today threatened "total destruction” in his secessionist province unless U.N. forces stop fighting within 24 hours. This report was relaved here.bv a pooled clis.pa.tcfi. from foreign correspondents in Tshombe’s capital, MOSCOW - The official Soviet news agency Tass suggested today the United States is still toying with the idea of invading Cuba. . *_______★ ★ _____________ The Tass article began by denouncing the American press for making a "great hue and cry" about the Bay of Pigs prisoners released by the Cuban government. Then Tass reported that Manuel Artime, an anti-Castro leader, told a news conference in Palm Beach, Fla., that the former prisoners would continue to fight for the overthrow of the Cuban gov-ernment. * * ★ The correspondents, asked Mr. (Lincoln) White, the State Department’s press secretary, to comment on such statements. White replied he could understand and appreciate the sentiments of these people, but he would not want to comment on them in any way. Elisabethville. Tshombe’s signed statement declared that if U.N. forces did not stop firing within 24 hours, 'we will immediately blow up the bridge over the Lufuria.” / ★ * * This is a large river between Elisabethville and Jadotville. Tshombe in a public proclamation said “Katangese people will defend themselves until the death and everywhere the United Nations and its troops will be fought asT our“^ traps, with poisoned arrows and spears. “We will resist by all means Including the total destruction of alt our economic potential." Tshombe made similar threats when fighting broke out with U.N. forces in Katanga late last year. "Why did White refuse comment? “Describing this meeting, the Washington Post correspondent reports the President showed much kindness toward his guests and told them he hoped some time to visit a ‘free’ Cuba. Naturally, after this Mr. White’s comments would have been superfluous.!' Earlier in the day Katanga Foreign Minister Evariste Kimba made mall-out war. appeal 4o Kantangans by radio the Katanga Economic Office in Brussels reported, ported. Kima said, “For the time, United Rations troops have launched a new criminal war against our people. I can assure you that this war will be the last. “This attack, this wave of crimes, is the final movement of the killer beast. With your aid, the government will lead o county to a crashing victory.' In London, Britain urged an immediate cease fire in the fighting between U.N. and Katangan forces. It warned against “the futility of trying to impose a political settlement on the Congo by Iforce." May Furnish Arms for U N. U.S. Expected to Aid Congo Fighting Force WASHINGTON .» - The United States is expected to announce shortly that it will supply more military equipment for the United Nations’ Congo operation. The announcement may be made within a week and the most urgently needed materiel will be flown immediately to the Congo, authoritative informants saidioday. The most important items the U.N. shopping lists are 10 fighter - planes. —They ere needed to give air protection to U. N. ground troops and to fend off hit-and-run attacks of the Katanga Air Force, estimated to consist of about 20 airplanes of various types and 'vlnatge. The list of requested materiel —a detailed document drafted by the Indian commanders of the U.N. air force—was given to L Gen. Louis W. Truman, head of a U.S. fact-finding mission which neturned from the Congo this week. Truman, informants said, approved the U.N. list after on-the-spot verification of the* requirements and he submitted it Friday evening to the Joint Chiefs of Staff. The final decision rests with President Kennedy, officials said, and added that knowing Ken- (Continued on Page 2, Col. 7) For Prisoner Trade May Lose $20 Mil Tax Kennedy and she smiled at her reception. She addressed the crowd in Spanish. Kennedy appealed for the Cubans, whose exile colony Is split Into many political organisations, to get together in the fight agahuft Castro. ★ it it He called on the refugees to subordinate “momentary differences for a united front and keep alive the spirit of the brigade that you will again have a free chance to make a free choice." WASHINGTON (AP) - Through tax loss, the U.S. government’s share of paying the Cbban prisoners ransom could reach $20 million. Mitchell Rogovin of the Internal Revenue Service, in an interview Friday, cited that —spread over three years— as the highest possible loss to Kennedy said the revolution promised the people of Cuba freedom, but gave them instead “a police state and elimination of the dignity of land ownership, free speech and a free press." Government Will Open Parolee Halfway Houie DETROIT (fl — The government will open a| rehabilitation center for young federal parolees here In mid-January. It will be known as a “Halfway House." - * ★ . * The youths, all Detroit are residents, will be admitted to the house from 80 to 90 days before their parole date. The time they spend under supervision will vary according to their progress. The guidance program will I parolees between 17 and 2 the U.S. Treasury from, the deal that sent millions of dollars of food, drugs, nnd other supplies to Fidel Castro’s Cuba in exchange for the 1,118 Bay of Pigs prisoners. But Rogovin said he thought the tax loss could be less than $20 million. He stressed that It could be considered a tax loss only In the sense that the U.S. govern- 22 From U.S. in Cuba Prisons NEW YORK (A — Twenty-two Americans, including two women, are believed to be held in Cuban prisons. ★ ★ ★ Some have been sentenced to long terms on charges ranging from spying to taking part in anti-Castro activities. Others have not been tried; In some cases charges against them have'not been disclosed. ★ ★ ★ Little is known about the background of most of them. Some probably went to Cuba in search of adventure. A State Department spokesman said this week that attorney James B. Donovan nnd tM Bed Cross are trying to have the Americans released as a sequel to the freeing of more than 1,111 Cubans who participated in the Bay df Pigs Invasion. *'* None of the Americans took part In the Invasion. DATA INCOMPLETE Although the number Imprisoned has been carried in news accounts as 22 or 23, the State Department said its Information is incomplete, A A W r Jesse Gordon, correspondent for the Nation magazine, ___jed Thursday a list of 22 names which he said he obtained (Tom the Swiss Embassy in Havana. The Swiss now represent for the United States in Cuba. (Continued on Page 2, Col. 1) • f\ ; 1 . v , always loses revenue thfbugh ■ income tax deductions after some drive for charity. Rogovin is counsel to the commissioner- of Internal Revenue. He was a member of Atty. Gen. Robert F. Kennedy’s four-man team that helped manage the government’s part in the deal that freed the prisoners. THE BREAKDOWN Here is how Rogovin figures the possible tax loss: Although the goods had a value in Havana of $53 million, Rogovin said, their actual wholesale value In the United 8tates, before packing and transportation costs, would be no more than $40 million. Companies may deduct th< wholesale value of the contributed goods as part of their allowed 5 per cent deduction for charity. If a company uses up its 5 per cent deduction this year, it can deduct its contributions as part of its 5 per cent dieduction In 1903 or 1964. it it it Therefore, the $40 million contribution to the ransom means the government has $40 million less Income to tax, provided: r. _ 1. You assume the companies will be able to Usl the contributions within their 5 per cent deductions for 1982, 1868, or 1814. l|he corporate income tax is 52 pen Cent. If the government has 840 million less income to tax, it loses about 820 million In tax revenue. TEDDY, BOBBY SKI - Sen. Edward Kennedy, D-Mass., (left) and Atty. Gen. Robert Kennedy, brothers of the President, prepare for a swoop down the slopes at Aspen, Colo., where the pair are vacationing. 2 of 5 Killings Linked Pair From Our Wire Service NEW YORK — Two “mad-dog killers,” arrested at a hotel here last night, were charged today with two of five gunshot slayings they are believed to have committed in the past week. Police quoted the two as admitting they went on a —— ------*———------♦murder spree that began in Woburn, Mass., Christ* Plane With 24 Falls in Corsica French Airliner Slams 3,500-Ft. Mountain From Our News Wires AJACCIO, Corsica — A four-engine French airliner with 24 per-aboard crashed today on 3,-500-foot high Mt. Vizanova in the rugged heart of Corsica. ★ * *........... cruising police helicopter spotted the wreckage but it was not known if there were any survivors. The big Stratoliner took off fromvBastia, on the northern tip of this Mediterranean island, for a flight (f about 60 miles to Aj&ccio. The plane was to have continued on to Nice, on the French Riviera. ,OST CONTACT Radio contact with the plane was lost at 12:20 p.m. and more than three hours later no trace of it had been found. Police at Venaco, about midway between Bustia and Ajaccio, said a farmer heard a loud explosion in snow • covered mountains nearby. The police helicopter was dispatched to the area. Police began a search near the village of Pledicorte after reports that the plane had last been seen in the area. * * ★ Passengers on the plane included members of the Bastia basketball club and team supporters, including two children, first reports said. Sr ★ ★ Weather conditions were bad cross the island.. A strong wind was blowing and dark clouds hanging low. mas Eve and ended here Friday with five slain and one critically wounded. In all cases, the victims were shot in the head. Acting on a tip, police arrested Emanuel Sam-peri, 27, and Henry * P. Sablon, 27, last night at the Belvedere Hotel on west 48th St. The men implicated themselves, police said, in the following slayings: Frank C. Ross, 59, found dead behind the counter in his Woburn antique shop. Henry J. Jassem, 54, was found shot to death last Wednesday the rear of his novelty shop in Manhattan. Police said Du Sablon got a diamond ring'worth $850 and $20 In cash. On Friday, four men were gunned down, three fatally, in these robberies: Martin Himmelstein, 47, Forest Hills, Queens, slain in his retail wine and liquor store in Manhattan. His employe,, Caesar Lago, 62, was critically wounded and still has not regained consciousnes About $80 was taken. Harry Schneider, 59, found dead in his army and navy surplus goods store in Jamaica, Queens. Air-Cushioned Rescue NEW YORK (A1—Idlewlld airport has ordered a rescue craft that will speed over land or water on a cushion of air. Walks Clear? Better Take Another Look Just cleaned off your sidewalk? Sorry, but a few snow flurries are expected again tonight and tomorrow. Clouds with colder temperatures are also predicted. it h it ■ The temperature forecast calls for a br-r-r-ing low of 10 tonight, and a high of 20 tomorrow. The outlook for New Year’s Eve Is partly cloudy and not quite so cold. Five-tenths of an Inch of snow fell in downtown': Pontiac during the night. The, lowest temperature today, prior to 8 a.m. was 22. By 2 p.m. the mercury had moved up to 39. Say Resistance Disintegrating, Mop-Up Begun Katanga Police Flee leaving Equipment, ‘ Armored Cars Behind ELISABETHVILLE, Katanga (#) — U. N. forces supported by aerial'bombardment seized almost complete control of this secessionist capital today and apparently started- a mopping lipToperation. A U.N. spokesman said Katanga resistence was cracking and that Tshombe’s heavily armed police were fleeing Into the bush, leaving behind weapons, equipment and armored cars. U.N. forces took the offensive after two days of Katangan police attacks on positions in Elisabethville. U.N. planes bombed strategic points in.’ Elisabethville and the mining town^f Kolwezi about 150 miles northwest of,the capital. WATER RESTORED A U.N. spokesman said- the city’s water supply; cut off in the outbreak of hostilities Thursday night, had been restored. He said tbe U.N. hoped to have, electric power restored within two days. President Moise Tshombe had fled when blue-helmeted troops — mostly Ethiopians and Indian Gurkhas — occupied his palace. The spokesman said the United Notions moved against roadblocks in the vicinity of a railway tunnel where bitter fighting took place a year ago. The spokesman said U.N. troops reported few Katangans had been taken prisoner and that Tshombe’s casualties were believed light. Reports reaching foreign embassies in Leopoldville, capital of the Congo central government 1,000 miles northwest of here, said U.N. troops were moving up the Jadotville Road into the heart of Katanga’s copper belt. The town of Jadotville is about 70 miles northwest of Elisabeth-vilie: The Belgian Embassy reported the Belgian-operated Union Min-iere-Copper Co. in Kipushi was evacuating Belgian civllans. Fighting continued in Elisabethville this morning but appeared to have almost died out later, U.N. forces lost one killed and five wounded in fighting Friday. Previous reports said seven (Continued on Page 2, Col. 5) 'll In Today's j Press Detroit Fair? Motor City eyes world ex- « position in 1972—PAGE 17. i Fidel Proud Castro shows off -ultra- $ modern apartment project ( l to western visitors—PAGE | *JT. Tough to Beat ’62 banner year for auto | firms . . . and ’63 . . . ?— ] PAGE 22. Astrology..............16 ; Bridge................10 j Church News ...........8-7 Comics .............. 16 | Editorials ........... 4 Home Section.......11-12 Obituaries ......... .17 Sports ........... 15-18 j Theaters ........ 13-14 | TV & Radio Programs . 21 Women’s Pages *....8-9 | THE PONTIAC P&ISSS. SATURDAY, DECEMBER 29, 1962 Birmingham Area News List Special Classes Set for Winfer Season missile would overshoot its target by 66 miles. As It turned opt, if the missile Travel films, BIRMINGHAM television funnymen and special classes for adults and children will be featured during the win- vanced), seamanship aod safe boat handling, sewing and tailoring, stlversmithtng and Spanish are some additional courses offered. Youth classes to be offered are ballet, dramatics, painting and drawing. ter season at the Birmingham (immunity House. Children’s television person* alities Captain Jolly and Bwsna Don will appear in Saturday TWO. Pentagon Blames for Sky bolt Flar WASHINGTON (UPI) over-enthusiastic information release was blamed today for new international furor over the Sky-bolt missile. The controversy flared op again over an Air Force test of the rocket - which the administration has ordered scrapped — id the Atlantic missile range Saturday.. The Air Force issued a statement at the time claiming a complete success. But informed sources said that although the test Was as successful as could he expected under the circumstances, the Air Force statement Was misleading. The Air Force said at Cape 'Canaveral Saturday that the Sky- bolt “impacted in the t area" and was a “fully £ test missile.” / ■/' ' ' *■ tb Pentagon sources said this w— misleading because : —Since themissile carried no protective nose cone, it was expected tq — and did — born up like a meteor ‘ in - the atmosphere. But they said the word “impacted” implied that the missile actually struck the target area. ★ * ★ . *: | —The Skybdlt carried Tull guidance equipment, but it had no thrust reversal, which shuts off the power when the missile is oh the proper course. For this reason, it had been expected that the On Kashmir Restraint India, Pakistan Agree than expected. The latest interpretation of t..« radio-telemetry data from the Skybolt indicates it flew on course for 957 miles after a B52 bomber fired it from- ah altitude of 46,000 feet. EMBARRASSED JFK The test was an obvious embarrassment-to-the-Kennedy-ad-ministration. It came only two days after President Kennedy agreed with British Prime Minister Harold' Macmillan to cancel the Skybolt program and furnish Britain with Polaris missiles instead. Britain had counted on Skybolt for Its prime nuclear deterrent. Macmillan came under heavy criticism at home for agreeing to the missile swap and the announcement of the successful test heightened the * RAWALPINDI, Pakistan MB-‘Negotiating teams of India and ^Pakistan agreed today restraint should be exercised in both ha-tions in discussing the Kashmir •22 Americans Held in Cuban Prisons • (Continued From Page One) ■ Two of those listed were later reported to have been freed. A Miami engineer, who has been a prisoner, added two names. The two women are; Geraldine Shamma, about 50, a native of Boston, and Martha O’Neal of Atlanta, Ga. Both were arrested in 1960 and jure said to be held In Carcel de Mujeres Prison on charges of engaging in counterrevolutionary activity. Mrs. Shamma was given 16 years and Mrs. O’Neal nine years. Other prisoners, as compiled from various-sources: Thomas L. Baker, 21, of Dothan, Ala.; James D. Beame, 21, of Cedar Fails, N.C.; George R. Beck, 24, of Norton, Mass.; Leonard 'Louis Schmidt, 21, of Chicago; Alfred E. Gibson, of 'BtMtth, N.C. and Donald J. Green, of Clover, S .C. The six now are serving 30-year terms in Isle of Pinks Prison. Cuban authorities said they landed in a boat in Havana Harbor on Jan. 7, 1961, and linked them to supporters of former Cu-bln dictator Fulgencio Batista. Further negotiations are due to open in New Delhi Tuesday. A joint-fommmihiue was. Issued at the windup of a ministerial conference which had been downgraded to informal talks between delegation leaders after a formal meeting Thursday. Pakistani newspapers said U. S. and British ambassadors saved the, negotiations on Kashmir, a bitterly disputed border state, from total failure. . * * * The Western nations influenced India and Pakistan to agree last month to talk over the Issue. The Indian - Pakistani communique appealed to leaders of public opinion, officials, the press and radio in both nations “to help in the creation of a friendly atmosphere for resolving outstanding differences on Kashmir and related matters.” ASKED TO REFRAIN It asked them also to “refrain from any statements, criticism or propaganda which might prejudice the success of the Kashmir negotiations or tend to create discord between the tr~~MMm tries.” ★ ww The two leaders, Z. A. Bhutto of Pakistan and Sardar Swaran _______ of India, had met again today and called in three officials each side. It was learned that the Air Force statement was released without prior clearance from the Defense Department. A Pentagon rule permits such releases except in cases that would attract “un- imnnl nwlla attwitlnn ”_____ Defense sources said the Skybolt statement obviously should have been cleared before reuse. The furor was reminiscent of that which surrounded "the 1949 admirals’ revolt against the B36 bomber. It seemed likely the Skybolt affair would wind up the same way, fob* — with a full-scale Congressional investigation of President Kenhedy’s decision to scrap the Skybolt program). The Weather Full UB. Weather Bureau Report. PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Cloudy with occasional rain or freexlng rah) early today. High 34. Turning colder tbjaafter-noon. Cloudy and colder with a few snow flurries tonipt and Sunday. Low tonight 16. High Sunday 20. Southerly winds 16 to 16 wl1** becoming northwesterly 26 to 25 miles this afternoon and d»mlnl»hliig somewhat late tonight and Sunday. At V t.m : wind velocity rectlon: Southwest Sun set* Saturday at 5:00 p Bun rises Sunday at 0:00 a.I Moon sets Saturday at 0:00 Moon rises Sunday at 10:47 Msrquett Periston01 •SSL ST™, im*EZS3 i NATIONAL WEATHER — inow is forecast for theNoHhAtBntrcTbasrand Westward upper Mississippi Valley as well as the north central and northern Rockies. RalnJs expected for southern parts of • ‘ the mid-Atlantic Coast through the southeast Coastal region and eastern Gulf, as well ad over the Pacific Northwest coastal area. It will be severally colder except for warmer weather on'the 4 Pacific Coast and In the southern Rockies. May Make Changes in New Bu PALM BEACH, F)d. MV-Presi-dent, Kennedy has/sent his new budget director back to Washing- ton.io„put.to^inishing.iouches_ on the bulky document after three HAROLD G. WARNER Cancer Drive Head Named Harold G. Warner of Bloomfield Township, a General Motors Corp. vice president, has been named 1963 crusade chairman for the Michigan Cancer Foundation, was announced today by Alfred H. Glancy Jr., chairman of the board of trustees. Warner lives with his wife and daughter at 5950 Snowshoe Circle. He is general manager of the GM Cadillac Motor Car Division. The foundation, a Torch Drive agency, conducts a year-round program of research, education and service to cancer patients In Wayne, Oakland, Monroe and Macomb counties. * ★ * * During the first week of April, o0,000 volunteers will conduct a house-to-house educational campaign and fact-finding survey de signed to further efforts to control the disease. NEW MAID OF COTTON - Shelby L------ (center) of Albuquerque, N.M., was picked at Memphis, Term., last night to reign as the Maid of Cotton for 1963. Her alternates are/ Bentley of Thorsby, Ala., (left) and ,„a Thomas of Memphis. Miss Smith will , her first public appearance at the Cotton Bowl game in Dallas Tuesday. From Our News Wires I A Birmingham man, charged! with murdering his mother - inlaw, yesterday was accused of deliberately staging an auto accident after her death so he could days of policy talks at the noli Kenriit Gordon, sworn in yesterday as chief overseer of~thr ■ >ral purse strings, flew back to Washington after dusk following a 90-minute conference with Kennedy. Before departure, Gordon said some changes might yet be made ta-. the,budget for the 1964 fiscal year that begins next July 1. It. was apparent, however, that most of the key question marks were disposed of In meetings this week on tax cut plans, military spending' and legislative proposals involving aid to education and medical care for the aged through Social Security. The Kennedy-Gordon sessior last night was focused on the administration’s 1968 legislative program and its effect on the forthcoming budget. CLEARS DECKS Sitting in on the talks were Elmer Staats, deputy budget director, and Lawrence F. O’Brien, key presidential adviser on congressional relations. • With this meeting, Kennedy cleared the decks of all announced appointments until after the New Year’s holiday. ★ - ★ ★ Some of the final questions about the record 699-billion budget due in mid-January were resolved at a session at which Secretary of Welfare Anthony J. Celebrex/,e and Kenhedy reviewed new education and medical care legislation they hope will “be more palatable” to opponents. ★ ★ ★ Following his meeting with Celebrezze and other Welfare Department officials, Kennedy took his family and a couple of guests on a sightseeing cruise in Lake Worth and the .Atlantic beachfront. : Crash k Labeled Cover-Up for Murder U.N. Controls Etisabefhvitte (Continued From Page One) U.N. soldiers and eight civilians were wounded. Despite the successes of U.N. troops, small arms and heavy mortar fire continued in several sectors of the town. The flatting went on after two raids this.morning by U.N. planes on tl:e capital and on the airfield at Kolwezi, the base of Tshombe’s rudimentary airforce. The raid on Elisabethville Was carried out. by a single aircraft at 4 a.m. The plane dropped about five bombs, but the targets and damage were not yet known. The raid on Kolwezi was carried out by Swedish-made Saab jet fighters. It is believed that three planes were destroyed on the ground by the Saabs. POST OFFICE OCCUPIED U.N. Tunisian troops ^occupied Elisabethville’s central post office and the U.N. claimed to have complete freedom for its forces, following the seizure of 20 Ka-tangan road-blocks. The U.N. military commander, Indian Brig. Reginald Norojiha, in a victorious mood, said the'light-ing for the roadblocks had been easy, with only one casualty — a wounded Indian, But he claimed the U.N. was still having to deal with mercenaries in the Katan-gan army. Asked how he knew that mercenaries were taking part in the battle, Noronha replied: “Who else could have ftred mortars?” Earlier U.N. reports said there appeared to have been no mercenary activity. Small arms and maehinegun fire was reported continuing today near a group of mining installations and a military camp. There was also some mortar fire. be hospitalized and avoid police questioning. The allegation was made by the prosecution on the second day of a Detroit Recorder’s Court examination of Robert M. Thorson, 31, of 2352 Buckingham Road. The examination is to determine whether there is reasonable cause to hold Thor-son on a first-degree murder charge,---- He is charged In the strangulation death of Mrs. Dorothy M. Thomas in her Detroit home on the night of Dec. 3. He has deled the charge. Mrs. William Breech of 1585 Lone Pine Road, Bloomfield Township, testified yesterday that she saw the auto accident in which Thorsen’s car wept off Quarton Road in Bloomfield Hills on Dpc. 4. Mrs. Breech is the daughter-in-law of former Ford Motor Co. board chairman Ernest Breech. UNACCOUNTABLE’ She said ThOrson’s car suddenly swerved wildly, plunged into a ditch and smashed into a guard rail. She called the accident “unaccountable.” There was no other traffic and apparently no reason for the crash, she added. 4 The accident occurred while Thorson was en route from his office to his mother-in-law’s home after police notified him of her death, police said. The last witness yesterday was Mrs. James K. Taube of 2552 Valley Spring Drive, Bloomfield Township, a fellow worker of Thorson’s at a Birmingham stock brokerage firm which employed him as a salesman. Sh^SU she saw scratches on Thorson’*face on Dec. 4 and said he told her they were made by a cat. The hearing was adjourned until Wednesday by Recorder’s Judge Arthur J.'Koscinski. Swainson Inks Last Bill OK'd by '62 Legislature LANSING (UPI) -Gov. John B. Swainson signet into law yesterday the last bill passed by the 1962 legislature. It was one of the final official acts-of his administration. ____ . the next t w o months. Captain Jolly’s visit is scheduled for 1f30 p.m. Jan. 5 and Don’s for the same time Febr-46;----- ,.★ : * ★ Registration for the winter class scheduUf will begin at 9 a.m. Wednesday for residents of the Birmingham-Bloomfield Hills area. At 8 p.m. next Friday and Saturday, another production in toe popular World Adventure Series will be shewn. Narrated by yachtsman Capf. Irving Johnson, .next weekend’s travelogue Is entitled “Yankee Sails Across Europe,” a filmed tour of the continent atfbard a 50-foot sailboat. SPECIAL DINNERS Special group dinners for those attending the film series Ore held at,6 p.m, preceding each show-tag. The menu each night fea-_ tures culstae ’ffOHT the country visited. Adult and youth classes for the winter term start during the week of Jan. 14. Adult classes include accounting - bookkeeping, art appreciation, bridge, creative pottery (ceramics), ballroom dancing, techniques of discussion, exercises for women, first aid, flower arrangement, French. Fur craft, gardening, h on e accessories workshop, interior decorating, millinery, painting, U.S. May Furnish More CongoArms (Continued From Page One) nedy’s concern about the deteriorating Congo situation they felt sure the United Nations will get* what it asks for. The United Nations also wants a prefabricated steel bridge, air transport planes and 24 ton trucks. High U. S. sources indicated that the United States made no committment to supply the fighter planes. •Some officials said that while the United States will certainly provide transport planes and trucks for troop transportation, the decision on the fighters depends on how many planes other nations turn over to the U.N. force. In other words,, the United States would fill In the gap If " Is found that the United Nations does not have enough fighters to match Katanga’s air force. be offered are PMMj painting and “Nine Lessons and Carols," an ancient service practiced ta English religious institutions between ’ the 12th and 15th centuries, jrili be featured at 9:15 and 11 am. services Sunday at St. James Episcopal Church. The junior and adult choirs will take part in the special Christmas service along with other members of the parish. Mrs. John Winfield • Service for Mrs. .John (Ethel) Winfield, 66, of 525 Watkins St., will be Monday at 1 p.m. at the Manley Bailey Funeral Home. Burial will be in White Chapel Cemetery. Mrs. Winfleld died suddenly Friday at Pompano Beach, Fla. She was a life member of the order of Eastern Star No. 220 Chapter of Birmingham; also a member of toe MOMS Club of Birmingham and a member of the First Baptist Church of Birmingham. survfvcdbya daughter, Mrs. Roy Richards of Harrisville; two sons, Jack R. of Pontiac and Arthur H. of Birmingham; a, sister, Mrs. Frank Christie of Sault Ste. Marie,‘and seven grandchildren. She was a resident of Birmingham foi* 33 years. Traffic Toll of 480 Seen for Holiday By The Associated Press Traffic ............ ........2 Fires ....................... Award U.S. Commander BERLIN (AP) - MaJ. Gen. Albert Watson II, departing U.S. Commandant ta Berlin, today received the Army’s highest peacetime award — the Distinguished Service Medal —for hid service during the Berlin crisis. Total .....X................27 Thousands of merrymakers and other, motorists enjoying 1962’s last holiday are expected to hit the nation’s highways ' today, bringing an estimate from the National Safety Council that between 420 and 480 persons may become victims of the nation’s No. 1 killer—traffic accidents. Die long four-day New Year’s holiday, which began at 6 p.m. (local time) Friday, ends at midnight New Year’s Day. The 104-hour holiday began quietly, with only a handful of fatal accidents reported. But most persons were expected to be on the highways today, Sunday and New Year’s Ev£ -In making its pre-holiday estimate of 420 to 480 traffic fatalities the Safety Council said studies of past turn-of-the-year holidays show driving too fast for conditions is a factor ta more than half the fatal accidents — compared with, an annual average of 37 per cent. TTie NSC also said that drinking drivers are Involved in 38 per cent of New Year’s Weekend accidents, compared with an annual average of 30 per cent. The council estimated that 18,-000 to 21,000 persons could suffer disabling injuries during the period. Halt Revolt by Peasantry SANTO DOlHINGO, Dominican Repnblic (UPI) — The Dominican government early today announced the suppression of a peasant revolt near' th<£ Haitian border reported, to have killed about 30 persons. Troops trained In guerrilla warfare were reported pursuing about 400 of the rebels In the The dead were reported to Include a government general who was beateh and hacked to be up A lone thick at a peated. He is just a Ion* pared ta the city, with f a frost-pinched boy on. sll -of 99 Oliver St., the icema e of the 20 rinks now being prepen. When his work is finished, t give a thought to Merle Brown 4 jfCENTER DISCOUNT DEPARTMENT STORE 178 N. Saginaw St. j THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, t)KCKMl3ER 29, JUNK CARS AND TRUCKS WANTED HIGHEST PRICES PAID ■ WE PICK FE 2-0200 ■■■■■■■■ PONTIAC SCRAP NOTICE? The Independence Township CLERK’S OFFICE and TREASURER’S OFFICE WILL BE OPEN MONDAY, DEC. 31 UNTIL 4 P.M. 90 N. Main Clarkston Howard Altman, Township Clerk By JOE McGOWAN JR. v MIAMI, Fla. (AP)-tA Workers’ paradise—a tall apartment development where rent is 10 per cent of a man’s salary—has been built east of the Cuban capital as a showcase ,of Fklel Castro’s revo; lutionary: government. Prime Minister. Castro is obviously proud of the multimlllidn-dollar, ultramodern development and says more will be built by his regime;—•"*' 7 7" He showed off the project, known simply as East Havatia, to four visiting Americans during a two hour auto tour of the city last Sunday. Guests of Castro on the tour Castro Shows Off Apartment were Capt. Alfred Boerum, master of the freighter African Pilot; Leonard Scheele* former surgeon general of the United States; E. Barrett Prettyman Jr;, Washington attorney; and this, syriter. ‘ Boerum’s ship had sailed into. Havana that day with approximately $11 million worth of food and drugs as down payment towhrd the release of Bay of Pigs invasion prisoners. Scheele and Prettyman assisted in plans for obtaining and transporting the supplies. ; As Castro’s chauffeur- driven, heavily armed automobile approached the development, the dictator pointed out thajt a street Police Skeptical Admits Killing 2 Girls LOS ANGELAS (AP)-A man who confessed the 1957 slaying of the Grimes sisters in Chicago gave excellent details 'At the cr|me, police say, but he may not have been the murderer. * ★ . ★......... 'We want to be sure he’s good suspect, not just another guy who wants a free ride back to Chicago,” a Los Angelas detective said Friday. There are some discrepancies in the man’s confession, officers said.________________— On Friday, sandy-haired Alfred Smith Lawless, about to end a jail sentence for drunkenness, told police; 'Six years ago today I killed Barbara and Patricia Grimes and I’ve been running ever since.” ACCOSTED AT THEATER Lawless said he picked up the girls at a Chicago theater, molested them, beat and choked them; bound them, and threw them from an auto. The nude bodies of Barbara Grimes, 15, and her sister, Pa- circled the area but no roads ran between the houses. “There is more security for young children this way,”' Castro said* ■ ' ' TOUR DEVELOPMENT Castro ordered his driver, a soldier, to park the car and he gotoutattd walked up a slight grade into a yard near Easj Havana’s elementary school. Within minutes the news of Castro’s presence had spread through .the development and a crowd-gathered, shouting the m ual “Viva Fidel, ViVa .Fidel. Castro leaned down iqnd patted, some children on . the head. He hands with some of the young Cubans. ' East Havana has' its own shopping center with a department store, barber shop, beauty par-| lor, pharmacy and a number of other stores. It also, has a secondary school and a large recreation and sports field. Each unit costs $ff,000 to build,' Castro said. He told the Americans there was great need for more such units in Cuba. He called at random on several in the group which had gathered and asked them to tell the Americans whether they liked the project. Unanimously, they said they did.' One of the tenants, Juan Garcia, said he thought the project was'“llke a’jdream come true.” He said he earned $168 per month ihoemaker and paid $16.80 j per month ,in rent, 10 per cent. Garcia particularly praised the: children’s day nursery. •Castro asked one youngster how' many students Attended his! school. He was told that nearly 1,000 students were enrolled; There are several of .toe apart-J ment buildings averaging 10 floors. Three of these were still under"construction.. -The project has a population of nearly 15,000, Castro.said. He added that applications for residences are so heavy that prefer-1 |ence has to be given to those with the largest families. Castro said, “We like large families.” . .j One of the surest routes to a successful business career ifjh* , broad avenue of Accounting. As a modem accountant you wlU be an executive in one of the best paid fields. You will enjoy interesting work, with security and opfvilunlty.-. PBI graduates in accounting are corporation officers, partner* and proprietors in every .field of, business, and in every typ* 01 profession.', . IRjjj Pontiqc Business Institute (*/ 18 W. Lawrence FE 3-7028 Training for Business Careers Since 1B96 Credit Union Holiday Hours! , We Will Close at 2:00 P. M. Monday, December 31st ’ and Reopen at 10:00 A. M. Thursday, January 3rd. /n _ Employees Federal Union The Power of POSITIVE THINKING •.. ! ALFRED S. LAWLESS jtricia, 13, were found in a ditch beside a country road southwest of Chicago on Jan. 22, 1957. j Chicago police—who have a permanent team assigned to - the case—have a list of 5,000 persons l who have been investigated as possible suspects. I Chicago detectives said Lawless, 34, gave an excelteht description of the girls, including ] knowledge of Patricia’s crooked toe and the clothing they wore at the time of their disappearance. However, an autopsy showed jthe girls froze to death .and had I not been sexually molested, beaten or strangled, as Lawless claims. U.S. Oufput of Cars, Trucks at 8.2 Million DETROIT W—Car and truck production in the United States for 1962 will total nearly 8.2 million units, second only to 1955, Ward’s Automotive News predicted yesterday. The statistical agency said the total will follow fourth quarter production of more than 2 million passenger cars and nearly 345,000 trucks. Ward’s estimated this week’s (jar production at 114,463, a decline becaus^ of the Christmas holiday from the 164,997 'of the previous week. Only 12 of the industry’s 47 passenger-car factories will work overtime tomorrow as compared to the preholiday season’s approximately 30 plants, Ward’s said. Operations during the first part of New Year’s week next week will be trimmed, Ward’s said. Of this week’s car production, General Motors was credited with 51.2 per cent, Ford 24.3 per cent, Chrysler 17.7 per cent, American Motors 5.7 per cent, and Stude-baker 1.1 per cent. I Only 16 members of Congress have been censured by their colleagues. BIBLE REBINDING CHRISTIAN LITERATURE SALES 39 Oakland Avt. If 4-9591 Standing, left to right: William Satterfield, Fred Gibson of Moote Electric. James Morrissey of Sylvan Plumbing. Harry Denyes, Architect. Seated: James Clarkson, Executive Vice President of First Federal Savings and Palmer Bundy of Bundy Construction Co. .. . Is Taking Us One Step Nearer To Our Goal! <;ro^RN L“ Today, we signed the papers on our enormous expansion program. Our plans are completed and the construction is now in progress. It is a big step, in the right direction. So, you see, we are taking our own advice ... we re enlarging our own home! We Iirvite You to Come . . . WATCH US GROW! Current Hale Compounded and Paid 4. Times Each Year. DOWNTOWN PONTIAC ; i , I; » v . • ’ ■: ■ Here it comes: a bright New Year, full of promise . . . we sincerely hope that it will bring good health, greater wealth, and greatest happiness to you, our friends. GREETINGS FROM THE STAFF AT ■ )t. m TfflE^ONTIAC PRESS 48 West Huron Street . Pontiac, Michigan \ SATURDAY, DECEMBER H, 1962 Harold a. Fitzgerald , '' 1 | The PC *WER „*■*«*»{ ,' Voice uf the People: Secretary sod Advertising Director \F»id Thomhom, Local Advertising T’ Hard Work and Ability, Can Get You Top Job . One thing we want to be sure gets through to the children: In order to get somewhere you have to work. Show them George. Romney. Point out John Kennedy or any ! other president or governor you * care to name/ It's 12,14,20 hours 1 elf the* pollution wasn't known, why wasn't it? Wasn’t the lake checked for purity before- the purchase?— e Why were Pontiac Township residents allowed to tie illegally into a county drain? a day for all of them, ★ ★ ★ But that’s just the political field. Take a .youngster around on a day’s tour of duty with Industrial or labor leaders. He’dlSrobably never finish the day, hut the leaders would be ready for more. So would the family store owner who has found his niche in the free enterprise system find it well worth the cost in. hours of personal labor. True, not everyone will reach the top of the ladder, no matter j" how -hard he worksT The goal must be a compromise with Ability. ■ ' '-jf ' jf jr ...1^- “A recording company says rock 'h' roll music is tin the way out.” — Trade note. GpocU As soon as it leaves" let’s fumigate the piece. The Man About Town It Makes Cents $s Don’t Grow on Trees but Flourish in Bank But the children should know that you get as far as your talent and. willingness to work will carry you. Talent alone will get them nowhere. ★ ★ ★ Of course, there is always rodm at the middle. This great area of the lukewarm should be filled with people who work hard hut have average talent. Instead, too often, it seems to be overflowing with the Talented But Lazy, the Give Up Earlys, the .Give Up Laters, the Easily Satisfied, the Business .Office Politicians and the World Is Against Mes. There are those who will tell the children, that the lack of opportunity fills the middle ground. In some parts of the world this might, be valid, but ' don’t let him try to teach R in the United States. ★ ★ ★ There is room at the top. But the middle and the bottom which is filled with the overflow from the middle are overcrowded. By HOWARD HELDENBRAND With year-end business reports coming int most of them on the sunny side, we were prepared for record-breaking""ititiSlnenrs H" from load financial institutions on the state of the local money. But we didn’t think that one would not "only crack a previous high but bid fair to crack the frame enclosing the graphical evidence of it. . . Could It be said that bnsinesa there was higher than it was cracked op. to be? (Never mind—I’ve made a New Year’s resolution to stop that sort of thing.) Well, what you see below is the chart in the office of the president of the Pontiac State Bank Milo J. Cross of 1975 Hammond Lake Drive, showing the progress line not only hitting the doliar-smashing limit at the top but sticking a bit above it, poised for a 1963 journey into outer space. Tells of Amazing Gains Made by Soviet Union Soviet success since the end of Wolrld War II has been spectacular. Then they had ISO million people and one power base. Now they hold more than a billion and have made tremendous inroads, through left-leaning neutrals like Sukarno, Souvanna Phouma and Nasser, into the next billion of the world’s three billion people. In military and economic areas their gains have been significant. And in our own back yard— Cuba — we continue to duck. , Pam Tress Has Helped' Savings Bond Plan* 4All Health Ideas New at One Time* As the year, 1962 comes to a close, we express a sincere word of Appreciation for your efforts in behalf of the Savings Bond 'Program. A large .percentage of yoiir readers are among the tons of millions of owners of more than $45 billion of future purchasing power. When somebody tells me that the addition of a little fluoride to the drinking water will reduce the incidence of cavities by about 65 per cent. I listen. The residents of Michigan, ,who have accounted for about • per cent of national purchases over the years, today own approximately $2.5 billion of die two series. Michigan will not quite achieve its 1962 goal of $277,100,000. Purchases of Series H and larger denomination E bonds .were off apprecTaH^SmaDer~denonBna-tion E bond buying has been improving throughout the year. Much of the success is attribut-; able to the fine support of T|ie When my physician (for the American Medical Association) and my dentist (for the American Dental Association) and my public health officer (for the U.S. Public Health Service), all tell me that fluoride in my drinking water will help my teeth without hurting my health than I’m all for it. These same scientific types told us years ago that a little chlorine would purity water, that vaccination would stave off smallpox, that pasteurization would safeguard milk, and more recently, that Salk Vaccine would help HgfiT'off polio. Everyone of these “new-fangled” ideas encountered opposition when first proposed, hid I’m thanhful that these ideas \have been adopted. W. D. Workman The old year is dead, long live the new year! Bells resound all over the world heralding the New Year, calling us to worship. It Is a time of thanksgiving; of recommitment of our faith; of resolving that the mistakes and errors of the past year shall be rectified in the year ahead. So let the bells ring out. Let us face the new year with the faith and determination that Alfred Lord Tennyson meant when he wrote, “Ring out old shapes of foul disease, Ring out the narrowing lust of gold; Ring out the thousand wars of old, Ring In a thousand years of peace. Ring In the valiant man and free, The‘larger heart, the kindlier hand; Ring .out the darkness of the land, Ring in the Christ that is to be.” The U. S. Treasury, the Michigan staff, and I extend sincere gopd wishes for a happy and prosperous New Year. Delmar V. Cote State Director Treasury Dept. U.S. Savings Bond Division Criticizes Coverage of Novi ‘Nightmare* The Country Parson V Days of All Faiths: Few Remember Saints of Dec. 31 By DR. HOWARD y. HARPER It must be lonely to be a saint on New Year’s Eve. Everyone is so busy getting ready for what usually turns out to be a very un-saintly evening. Thera are several Dec. 31 saints, and just for the record, they ought to be mentioned here. housekeeping. The Emperor gave the Pope a palace called the Lateran Palace and Silvester made of it the famous St. John’s Lateran, the mother church of all Christendom. Galloway Lake Poses Congratulations to the boss man and his fine staff on this year’s progress with the snggestlon that, with an eye to future growth, a new chart frame be engineered —one with a two-way stretch. Pollution Problems The Pontiac City Commission faces a difficult situation in the Pontiac Township pollution of Galloway Lake. ★ ★ ★ In November, the commission acquired a $50,000 option on 64 acres along this lake, which lies partly, within the elty and partly within Pontiac Township. ★ * ★ ★ The land is to be used for a park. Total price paid over a seven-year period will be $174,150. But now Pontiac Township comes to the city with inquiries about treatment of sewage, and the Oakland County Health Department says Galloway Lake is being polluted by Sewage from Pontiac Township homes. ★ ★ ★ -It Is possible for a park to be built on a polluted lake, If park users are content to stand back and admire the looks of the lake, forsaking water skiing, swimming or even wading. ★ ★ ★ It would appear that either the city agrees to extend its services to end the pollution, or the use of the park will be vastly diminished. ★ ★ ★ * Commissioners Charles H. Har- mon and William H. Taylor voted against the park plan, both mention^ ing the questionable purity of the water. They were outvoted, 8-2/ 4* ★ a ★ The whole situation raises these questions: . • Did (he city acquire an option on sj lake H knew was polluted? Comment overheard during a bridge game: “I wish you girls would pay attention to the game. We’re discussing Irene’s new fur coat, not Helen’s divorce.” CLASSIFIED CLASSICS From the Santa Barbara, Calif., News- “Male Basset would like to meet female Basset. Object—Bassinet,” Mrs. Fred Fnller of Cass Lake, had unannounced company of 50 a short time ago. A flock of migrating Canada geese looked In on her and like “The Man Who Came to Dinner” showed no signs of leaving — they were around several days . . . The birds seemed very hungry, as arc all the geese reported on this year. One of them, St. Silvester, was quite an important person. He was the first Pope after the era of persecutions ended. For 300 years the Roman Empire hounded the Christian Church, torturing and killing its ' members, and forcing its congregations to hold their meetings in secret. In the city of Rome, Christians literally went underground: they met in the Catacombs, the burial caves. In 314 the persecutions ended by decree of the Emperor Oonstantine, and the Church was free to come out in the open. It was Silvester who had to give leadership in this period of transition. Our watcher said that at least 40 of the flock were on shore scouring for food. PERSONAL AND CONFIDENTIAL The MAT’S lost a Christmas message . . . He’s moat meticulous in caring for such things (since it’s too late for that offstage “ho-ho-ho" to come from Santa, it must have been emitted by Mi’s. MAT), and this one had left a strong impression. It philosophized over the spiritual com-fort of sitting before an open fire and the introspective balm arising from an evening stroll under the stars. CHRISTIANITY’S FIRST CHURCH BUILDING One thing he did was to consecrate a church building. It'is hard to imagine now, but for the first three centuries there were no church buildings. We, who today are so proud of our imposing and expensive edifices, might think about the fact that the Church was at its strongest in the years whet) it had no lm-, pressive piles of brick and mortar, and so could devote its energy to its task instead of to its FIRST ECUMENICAL COUNCIL Silvester also called the first Ecumenical Council, the Council of Nicea, In 325. It was much like the Council now In session In Rome, but there were some differences. It was much smaller, with only 220 bishops In attendance. The Pope himself did not go, but sent two ‘legates to represent him. And perhaps the greatest difference was that It was trnly ecumenical In a sense that no Connell can be ecumenical today. The Christian Church was one. There were no divisions In It. The Council of Nicea represented the whole Church. OTHER YEAR-END SAINTS Other saints honored fat the calendar Dec. 31 are these: St. Columba, a Spanish lady who died a virgin and a martyr. Her date is not known. The familiar monogram, IHS, which is seen in so many church ornamente, is a representation of the najne of Jesus. People often giv^lvrong interpretations to it, ptich as “In His Service” or “In Hoc Signo” (in this sign). It is actually the ffrst three letters of Jesus: IES —the “H” being a Greek “eta." Does a person have the right to suffer in privacy? Should the grisly details of a, foul crime be ■printed?""”—’ I answer “yes” to the first question and “no" to the second. Because of these beliefs. I was sickened and disgusted by The Press’ crude and heartless photography and reporting of the recent multiple assault in Novi. Robert W. Bigelow. 7 Prall Smiles Butchers lose-time when customers drop In just to chew the fat % "*■ + + + (Copyright, 1902) “The. more. a. man’s, religion takes on the vomplexieu of his surromMHhgs, the less good it is toJMm.” Homework is what a lot of teen-agers discover they have to do jnst when it’s time to crawl into bed. A woman will spare no ex-pease to save at the holiday sales. Washington Notebook: How Cigar, Slippers Elude JFK St. .Melania, a patrician damsel of Rome who died a natural death in 439. Blessed (called “Saint” In some countries) Israel, an Au-gustinian monk whose holy life was not particularly eventful or spectacular, but at whose tomb' miracles occurred/ He died In 1014. By WASHINGTON STAFF WASHINGTON (NEA) —President- John F. Kennedy doesn’t always have an easy time of it when he wants to spend a quiet evening at the White House, First Lady Jacqueline w a s going to a performance of the theater with brother - in - law Bobby and ! friends. Husband [Jack decided he would stay at hoihe. During the first act Jackie sent a Secret Service man to phone the President that the ballet was So good he should cides he will beat her only 86, would you say that’s better?” . Associate Justice John M. Harlan of the Supreme Court, listening with his colleagues to an income tax case involving a dance studio, heard with astonishment that some people buy “lifetime courses" entitling them to 1,200 hours of instruction. “When they finish,” he said quietly from the bench, “they must be magnificent dancers.” Air Force Chief of Staff Gen. Curtis E. LeMay was 56 Nov. 15. His Navy counterpart, Chief of NaVal Operations Adm. George W. Anderson Jr., was 56 on Dec. 15. Give a thought Ao these nearly forgotten saints of the end of the But, with intention of making a column reference, when I reached, the message was not at hand. As the ladies say, I’ve hunted high and low, and worn myself out in a frenzied effort to detect-it. So-o-o, this SOS (Save Our Sanity) Is going out to the warm-hearted writer to phone in, mend our i able merited recognition. Verbal Orchids to- Mr. and Mrs. Dan Hastings of 4o E. Huron St.; 53rd wedding anniversary. Mrs. Daisy Daley of Oxbow Lake; 82nd birthday. n George Llnderman of in}V4 Tasmania; 91st birthday. (WWII'i'lfllf// FRAY WITH ME Each week a prominent American invites you to join in a favorite prayer. Today, join with: j CAPT. ROBERT J. STROH U. S. Navy Eternal Father, strong to save, Thou who are ever with us in the light of the day and in the night watches, guide us along the path of righteousness. Enable us, through Thy grace, to-follow the precepts of Christian morality. May we believe in Thee, in the Bible, and in men of good will,, so that in the final judgment it may be said of us, “This is the victory which overcometh the .world, even our faith.” In His nsftne. Soon afterward, the President" arrived at the theater, still in time to enjoy a goodly portion of the night’s performance. But White House security guards reportedly were less prepared for a night out than the President. They were all settled comfortably for the evening with their shoes off when Mrs.. Kennedy’s call came in. On NoV. IS ■ Anderson sent a gift to LeMay.t It was escorted by a bosun’s mate to pipe it aboard in the best Navy style. A Wave officer bearing a letter of transmittal, a Navy cam- a checkup at the Mayo Clinic. He went out for a thorough examination and was there for over a week. On Saturday night the staff doctors invited him to a weekend party which they hold to relax their own tensions. Part of the fun was a poker game. Black was invited to sit In and to his chagrin, he 16st more money to the doctors at poker than they charged him for his physical examination. It all turned out all right, however, for Black later was asked to become a financial adviser to the Mayo Foundation, which handles its multimillion dollar endowment that helps finance medical services for charity patients. Recent commotion over news censorship has caused revival in some newspaper circles of the old proverb ‘The truth shall make you free.” The rub Is, say the critics, ‘‘You're not always free to get it.” both aviators - followed the gift — a 4-foot model of die aircraft carrier Forres-tal — Into LeMay’s outer office, then Into his inner office, much to the amazement of the Air Force chief. .Mary Travers, Who completes the folk song trio of “Peter, Paul and Mary” at a Washington night spot, says she met the controversial James Meredith While making a concert appearance at Ole miss. . Mary asked Meredith if he thought that after all this time things were getting.any better. Meredith replied: "If a man beats his wife 89 times every week and then de« On Dec.14, thrfriday before Anderson’s birthday, LeMay, not to be outdone, sent a present. First came two kilted Air Force personnel, loudly playing bagpipes. Tliey were followed bp air police. Fimdly came the present, a model of the controversial long-range bomber RS-70. U. $. Information Agency workers in Bolivia have found a new use for old radio program tapes. Formerly the recordings were erased after being broadcast and the clean tapes used to record succeeding programs. Now the old tapes are distributed to missions in remote mountain areas of Bolivia. The priests broadcast the recordings on their public address systems. The USIA programs, particularly the anti-Communist ones, are broadcast outside the church: es and on the village squares, right along With the priests’ sermons and talks to their parishioners. At * recent party of International bankers te a Washington hotej, °ne of the waiters told the dignified money men, “You people drink more than anyone who comes here, except the machinists.” Eugene Black, who retires as president of the World Bank on Jan. 1, tells one on himself about »0. 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HURON ECON-O-DRY CLEANERS AN0 SHIRT LAUNDERS “Ovtr SO Yeoi* In the Cleaning Butintu" 944 W, Huron St.{ FE 2-0231 - H Block We«t of Telegraph Rood Just OmnIu Huron Thootor and A AP Start OPEN DAILY 7 A.M. to 6 PM r SAVE SKXBS U** *» W» mm * , with this coupon Mon.-Wod.-Thurt. ' 1 SHIRTS LAUNDEREDi JV. I o IndividuallyCefleptaiM S I Uv Packed with Drycleaning OH I _ M * RE IW B Order of $1.50 Wr Mw«. Deluxe Finish - ... _ .... ,. Cash end Cony---------------- RfO. 5 FOR l.lJ r i EACH j . aCoahandCiny------ ryic ».ia • COUPON!: ss Sj p^JopQN”' = = T F ifSsORUDIIS'suits . I oMwwppAtinrs II or flair boats I i *85? Rflc <1 tS? 90e’ y Mechins^Rnfshed VV | WW j ~ ~$ILECT-UR-SERYICE ~ “ OPEN professional drycleanino specials DAILY m PROFESSIONAL DRYCLEANINO SERVICES 7 AM. FOR EVERY BUB0ET AND TYPE DRY- 10 6 PM. IP OLEANINO DESIRED. SUNDAY ONLY BEEF ROAST • Tturr POT ROAST .... 29 Ib. • cr" CHUCK ROAST . .39,1 ROAST c. .a... 49 ib. • BOILING BEEF . 5 $10# BAZLEY MARKET 4948 Dixie Highway-Drayton Plains GO! GO! GO! IN (UAIil AND THE dRIlVV FORGET., THE TOW! ANY SIZE $1195 ife SUNDAY 10 AM. TO 7 PM. mart GLENWOOD PLAZA Paddock and N. Perry at Glenwood Record Riot 45 R.P.M TOP HIT h • n Sunday and Monday I Only w?: BUY NOW and SAVE Outstanding Values fbr Early-in-the-Week Shoppers! For Your Njsvr Year's Snack! HOFFMAN’S Tender “Biitelier Boy” STEAKS 59 Ib. HOFFMAN’S Original STEAKETTE PATTIES iC 39 lb. HOFFMAN’S PONTIAC FREEZER FOODS 526 N. Perry ■> FE 2-1100 EXECUTIVES Press Shirts Laundered The Way You Like Them . . I CUSTOM STARCH LEVELS AT YOUR REQUEST "At No Extra Charge" e No Starch # Very Lite Starch e Lite Starch -e Medium Starch • Heavy Starch ‘a Extra Heavy Starch Our Custom Service Takes 1 Day Longer Just 1 Trial Will Gonvinoe You I SMtte On Hemen A' Smell Additional Chergel FATHER & SON CLEANERS PICKUP A DELIVERY Open Dally 7 A.M. to 6 P.M. 941 jloolyn Ave. FE 2-6424 gmmm wxjpa ■ ■»»■■■ wm TELEGRAPH at ELIZABETH LAKE RD. FANCY FISH SANDWICH 2Qo FISH FILET.... FRANK ........ DRILLED CHEESE FRENCH FRIES.. SOFT DRINK! COFFEE, MIL HOT 0H0001 New DuPont Lucita Wall Faint Rag. 7.45 »22 Lovtly Color* > Un I ImU___— Complete Selactions I SLPKrM Super Kem-fone Rag. 6.59 $499 V ME 1467 Baldwin at Walton Open Friday G AM. ta • F.M. II Othar Weekdays G A.M. to G P,M. Sunday 10 A.M. to 3 P.M, FE 4-0242 a M IP Values Are Many Things .. ... a pair of ice skate*, two gallons of paint, a new wash basket, snow tires, featured grocery ' Items, parkas fbr the children . . . values are things people needemdwant: . . and look for in the advertising in The Pontiac Press . .. and they find plenty of them there! Values Are Always Advertised In The Pontiac Press Every Week This Special Shopper Stopper Page Will Have Outstanding Values for Pontiac Press Readers. k- THE PONTIAC PB&SS, ; feuRBAY' DECEMBER 29, 1963 TeenTiftr at Silvercrest Young PeopU/Offer Film on Chrptvnas The Senior IJigh Fellowship Will sponsor a Watcbnight Service at 11:30 p.m, Monday. Members trnd friends of the church are Invited to participate in this The world will celebrate the New Year with^a backdrop of uneasy peace but with courage and hope that 1963 will bring a CHRISTIAN SCIENCE SUBJECT for SUNDAY CHRISTIAN SCIENCE Sunday.Services and Wednesday Evening ' Services 8 P.M. Reading Room" 14 W. Huron Sj. Open Daily ' V • 11 A.M.to5.PAA Friday to 9 PM. i 1 First Church of * Christ, Scientist Lawrence and Williams Streets PONTIAC 9:45 A.M. SUNDAY RADIO STATION CKLW 800 KC ' The last Sunday evening of each month, is Jpaown as Teen Time at Silvercrest Baptist Churchr Dixie Highway at Rosemary. Two {young people conduct the service. —' | The film; "Teen-Agefa Christ-'mas,” will be shown as part of the program tomorrow night. Rhonda Conyers, senior* youth director, helps in planning, the monthly affairs. * * * .■ A missionary intern at Silver-crest, Miss Conyers is a candl-was placed at Silvercrest Church date with the Missionary Internship Program of Farmington. She to obtain the required experience in the training program. Miss Conyers comes to Pontiac from Wheaton, 111. whore she attended Wheaton College. She is a graduate of the Grand Rapids School of Bible and' Music. Presently her plans are to prepare for missionary work in Alaska. She is under appointment with the Slavic Gospel Association, Chicago. I Her ipinistry in Alaska will be village work for a period of fourt-i years. She will be in Pontiac [until the end of April when her term here is completed. PREVIEW OF FILM - Rhonda Conyers of 1816 Birchcrest, Waterford Township and Mile Loop of 5916 York, Clarkston, make sure the film, “Teen-ager’s Christmas,” is in. good condition before showing it tomorrow night at Silvercrest Baptist Church. A member of the youth group, Milo was assisted in planning the Sunday evening program by Mias Conyers, missionary intern at Silvercrest Church. BLOOMFIELD .BILLS BAPTIST CHURCH 3600 Telegraph Rd. North of West Long Lake Rd. Sunday School ... 10 a.m. Evening Worship.. 6:00 p. Morning Worship ..11 a.m. Prayer Meet., Wed. 7:30 p. ,REV. HAROLD" FIRST'UNITED MISSIONARY CHURCH 149 N. East Blvd. FE 4-1811 Pastor, WM. K. BURGESS SUNDAY SCHOOL , , . 10 A.M. New Year's Message by the Pastor WORSHIP . . . . . . . U A.M. Watch Night, Mon. 9 to 12 P.M. EVENING SERVICE ......^ 7:30 P:M. All Saints Episcopal Church Williams St. at W. Pike St. The REV. C, GEORGE WIDDIFIELD J . - Rector The REV. WM. E. LYLE Associate The REV. ALEXANDER T. STEWART Vicar . ■ - 8:00 A.M.—Holy Communion 9:30 and 11:15 AM,-Morning Prayer and Sermon by the Rector' Church SchooT 7:00 P.M.—Episcopal Young Churchmen 4i ■ • Rose Kneal Room Tuesday, Jap. 1 — Feast of the Circumcision 10 A.M. —Holy Communion Thurs., Jan. 3 —10 A.M. —Holy Communion CHURCH of the RESURRECTION will meet in Clarkston Elementary School, 6595 Waldron Rd. THTREV. ALEXANDER T. STEWART, Vleor 9:30 Holy Communion and Sermon FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH ' COR. OAKLAND AND SAGINAW STREETS Rev. Robert H. Shelton, Pastor 9:45 A.M. SUNDAY SCHOOL (Classes for All Ages) 10*45 A.M. MORNING WORSHIP SERVICE (Menage Broadcast Over CKLW at 11:00) 5,45 P.M. YOUTH FELLOWSHIP GROUPS 7:00 P.M, EVENING EVANGELISTIC SERVICE WEDNESDAY, 7:30 P.M. MID-WEEK PRAYER SERVICE Be Sure to Hear FRANK BOGGS New Year's Eve WATCH NIGHT MUSICALE 9 P.M. TRINITY BAPTIST The senior and adult choirs directed by Mrs. Anna Murray will present the music for the 11 a.m. and 7 p.m. worship services tomorrow in Trinity Baptist Church, Wessen at Maple Street. Dr. Joseph W. Moore will preach onr “The Lord Hath Done Great Things” at the < morning hour and “Go* Away Christ” at the evening service. Pastor Moore will preach on “Divine Guidance” at the Watchnight service beginning at 10 p.m. A service observing the 110th anniversary of The Emancipation [Proclamation will be held Trinity Church at 11 a.m. on New Year’s Day under the auspices of the Oakland County Ministerial Fellowship. FIRST PRESBYTERIAN “When We Worship” will be the theme of Rev. Galen E. Hershey’s sermon at 9:30 and 11 a.m. tomorrow in First Presbyterian Church. The chancel choir will sing “St. Joseph and the Angel” by Williams. Mrs. Michael Siano will present “No Candle ’ will be the pastor’s A quartet consisting of Mr. and Mrs. Clifton Handley and Mr. and Mrs. Richard Hoban will provide special music at the 7 o’clock vesper. Pastor Myron R. Everett will speak on “Joyful Hearts Are Merciful, Amiable and Spiritual.” Bible study and prayer will he at 7:15 p.m. Wednesday. Junior High Youth Fellowship business and social hour will be held at 7 p.m. Saturday at the church. ★ ★ Senior High Youth Fellowship is scheduled for 7 p.m. Saturday at the home of Larry Willhite, 9 Tacoma Court. FIRST METHODIST The First Methodist Church will observe Student Recognition Day tomorrow with Barbara Alton of Hillsdale College leading the responsive reading at the second morning worahip service. Janet Livingstone of Cleary [College in Ypsilanti will read the Was There, and No Fire” as an Scripture and Thomas Hubbell of 1 stewardship, offertory solo. Following worship Dr. and Mrs. Paul Thams and Mr. and Mrs. L. E. McDowell will serve as hosts at the coffee hour. First Presbyterian will be host [to the Pontiac1 Pastors’ Association at a breakfast meeting Friday. Baldwin Evangelical u.b. I. Officers and 1 teachers of the Baldwin Evangelical United | Brethren Church will be installed I at. 11 a.m. tomorrow. “The Gift Flint Junior College will offer prayer. Leon Mellen and Bryan Thompkins of Michigan State University Oakland will serve as ushers. Rev. Carl G. Admas will preach on “The High Cost of the Best." Glenn WiUiaips will Sing a solo at both worship hours. . ★ * ★ The Methodist Men will get together for a dinner at 6:30 Friday evening with Oliver Dunstan in charge. At 7:30 p.m. Wednesday families will meet for Bible study and prayer fellowship. ST. MARY’S IN THE HILLS Rev. Bertram T. White of the Diocesan staff of the Episcopal Church in Detroit, will be the preacher at both 9 and 11 a. in St. Mary’s in the Hills Episcopal Church tomorrow. Rev. Mr. White was rector of St. George Church in Milford before joining the Diocesan staff as director of stewardship and evangelism. With Rev. Carl-Sayers of St. Stephen’s Episcopal Church is co-auth6r of a book on Reorganized CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST of Latter Day Saints 11 A.M. — Elder Blake Lannon 7 P.M.-Special Service CHRIST LUTHERAN. CHURCH Airport and Williams Lake Rds. Sunday School .... 9:30 A.M. for All Ages WORSHIP SERVICE 11 A.M. NURSERY PROVIDED AT fl AM. Way nr K. Ptltrtnn, Pallor New Year's Musicale at First Baptist Church The third annual New Year’ Eve Musicale featuring Frank Boggs internationally known baritone, is scheduled from 9 until midnight in First Baptist Church. ★ ★. ★ The'program will also include the Flint Trumpet Trio, the First Baptist Choir and the string group of the church. The first section of the concert will be 9 to 10 p.m. with refreshments following. The' second hour will begin at 10:30 and conclude with a challenge by Pastor Robert H. Shelton. The congregation will observe a service of Holy Communion just before midnight. The public is welcome to the evening concert and service, Pastor Shelton said. Mr. Boggs was soloist at the service of prayer and dedication FAITH BAPTIST CHURCH' 34)1 AIRPORT 10 A:M.-SUNDAY SCHOOL Rev. Al Kasten, Adult Bible Class 11 AM. REV. ROBERT KASTEN, Preaching 7:30 fM. LIFE OF CHRIST FILMS "RETREAT & DECISION" peoplestuMf a promise of peace and progress. Celebrating the"flrst day of the New Year is an ancient custom. The Christian church has observed New Year’s pay, holy day since 487 A.D.' when it was declared the Feast of the Circumcision. ST. JAMES MISSIONARY The mission43©! St. James Missionary Baptist Chureh is sponsoring a program at 3:30 p.m. tomorrow with Mrs. Anne Daniel, mistress of ceremonies. Mrs. Otis Hinson will give the welcome. Guest speaker will be Rev. James H.-Jones of Detroit. Mrs. V. L. Lewis, pastor, said the public is invited. AUBURN HEIGHTS Rev. F. William Palmer will )eak on “Love Never Ends” at the 11 a.m. service tomorrow the United Presbyterian Chuurch in Auburn Heights. The New Year’s, Eve Watch-, night service will begin at 10:30. The Moody Sconce film, “Time and Eternitywill be featured There "Will also be hymn singing, recreation and refreshments for the whole family. ORCHARD LAKE Hje Choralers, singers in o:ades four, five, a,nd six directed by Kay Rossier, will sing ‘Bells of Christinas” by Whittlesey at the 9 a.m. worship serv-i of the Orchard Lake ComimF nitrGhurch.Presbyterian, tomor ow. The Chancel Choir will sing •Nunc Dlmittls” by Gretchenin-off at 11a.m. Mrs. Alice Smith, service of worship that welcomes the New Year, the pastor said. The Junor High Fellowship resumes meetings with supper on Thursday at 5:30 p.m. MARIMONT ‘Africa on the Bridge," a col-[ ored 1-hour film depicting Africa, in its transition filmed; during Billy Graham’s meetihgs in Africa will be shown at the watch night service at the Marimont Baptist Church 9 p.m. Monday. The service -will end at midnight. ★ *, * Rev. and Mrs. Philip W. Somers will hold open house 3:30 to 6:30 Sunday afternoon for friends and the congregation of the Marimont Church. Claudette Bexell’s junior high group will present “Baptist id a New Land” at 6:30 p.m. Janice Dunnam, .Craig Deaton and Larry Cuvette will portray Indians and Cheryl Clark, a White woman. Mary Matthews will play a flute solo. * The senior high group will spend New Year’s Day tobogganing, ice skating and bowling. Sponsors for January for the senihr high group are Mr. and Mrs. Leroy Clower Junior high sponsors-are Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Matthews. The Jac-A-Lena Missionary Circle will' meet at 7 p.m. Thursday at the church. Mrs. Daniel Dunnam and Mrs. Clare Tits* worth are cochairmen._________ BETHEL TABERNACLE —fir* Pentecost Church of Pontiac' Sun. School lOAMrAhfonhhHi AM. EVANGELISTIC SERVICE Sun., Tuee. and Thun.—7.30 PM. , Rov. and Mrs. E. Crouch 1348 Baldwin Av». EE 5-8236 CHRISTIAN PSYCHIC SCIENCE CHURCH 12 Warren St. Speaker 7:30 P-M-Horace John Drake Silvur Tea, Wednasdoy 7:30 PM. CHURCH OP CHRIST —BTtAfAYCTTr— (Between Cass and Oakland) Our Purpose It Obey God and Serve Only Hint, Come, Be With Vs WORSHIP LORD'S DAY 10:30 A.M. LORD'S DAY Evening 7i0b P.M. ‘ WEDNESDAY EVENING 7:00 P.M. church organist, is director. Rev. Edward D. Auchard, pastor, will preach on the subject, •No More Secrets.” The Orchard Lake Church will! provide music for the ..worship service at 11 p.m. tomorrow at the Oakland County Tuberculosis Sanitarium. Rev. Mr. Auchard will preach. Service Set Festival of Epiphany at Beautiful Saviour for Queen Elizabeth II on the eve of her coronation in Royal Albert Hall, London and has been guest soloist with the Dr. Billy Graham team. He has presented sacred recitals in London and leading colleges and churches in the United States and Canady- For four years he was soloist on the “Baptist Hour,” for over 400 radio stations. ★ * * Minister of music for four years at First Baptist Church in Tallahassee, Fla., Mr. Boggs developed seven graded choirs of over 400 people. He appeared on several television programs on Britist TV and served as soloist on weekly TV programs in Tallahassee. A feast of the lights service will commemorate the Festival * Epiphany at Beautiful Savior Lutheran Church on North Adams Road at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow. ★ Kr ★ The symbolism of light is traditional on this festival which celebrates the coming of the Magi following Bethlehem’s star.' The service includes many hymns of the season together with Scripture readings and brief meditations.- Dwelling at the outset with the dawn of the Christ Light, it follows this light historically down through the history of the Church with various candles lighted throughout the worship. The service concludes with the” entire congregation participating in the candlelighting. Rev. Donald G. Zill, pastor of the congregation, will officiate. Special music will be provided by the senior choir under ther direction of Ronald Sprunger. Visitors are invited to participate, the pastor said. 1ST GENERAL BAPTIST CHURCH of Drayton Plains 3010 Marlington Rd. (Off Hatches Rd.) Rev. R. L. Gregory SUNDAY .SCHbOL .. 10 a.m. WORSHIP ..... ,11 a.m. EVENING WORSHIP 7:30 p.m. FIRST MeVhODI$T CHURCH ^ SQIV CLEMENS STREET sundaV school 10 A.M. WORSHIP SERVICES 1 1 A.M. and 7:00 P.M. I LUTHERAN 1 I CHURCHES I Si MISSOURI SYNOD S f. Q6s$ dChmrjf :•:• Telegraph at Square lake Rd. gj $ Bloomfield Township *;Xt iv Her, Dvlayne it, Hauling Nstor $3 | St. Stephen $ iv Sashabaw at Kempf Guy B, Smith, Pastor Sunday School. .... 9:13 A.M. f|--------Church Services —« v 8:00 and I0>30 AM. $ | St. Trinity | :•:• Auburn at Joule >:■: # (East Side) ij: Ralph C. Claus, Pastor Sunday School......9:45 AM, First Servicu . ...8:30 A.M. *|v ;$ Second Service... 11:00 A.M. 1 St. Paul | Joslyn at Third j-lj - (North Side) ‘ ;-:j Rev. Maurice ShackeU iff Sunday School....... 9iOS A M ;’.-j ffi laTe service .......... 10:45 AM#, 1 Peace Church 1 Sunday School 9 A.M. Worship Service 10:30 A.M. Richard U. Feucht, Pastor Grace i Corner Genessee and Glendale if (West Side) :•:• • Richard C. Stuckmeyer, Pastor :•:• ; Church Service ....9:00 AM. ;j; i Sunday School...... 9.00 A M. >i | Church Service ..... V. 11:00 A.M, : Sunday School.....'. M1:00 AM. • WKMH 9 A.M. Every Sunday FIRST CHURCH of the BRETHREN 46 NORTH ROSELAWN SUNDAY SCHOOL 10 A.M. / MORNING WORSHIP II AM.-by the Pastor-Special Music by the Choir EVENING SERVICE—"New Things and Old"-7 PM. / SPECIAL MUSIC by QUARTET / THURS. 7:30 PM.-PRAYER MEETING and 8ISIE STUDY / EVANGELICAL UNITED BRETHREN CHURCH 212 Baldwin Ave. SUNDAY SCHOOL-9,45 A.M. FE 2-0728 WORSHIP-11 A.M.—SERMON ms Glh ol Servjrfg" Installation ol Officers ona\Teochers / YOUTH HOUR—Si4S PM. / VESPERS-7 P.M.-Special Music-M|«ed Quartet SERMON—"Joyful Hsoits Are Merellul, Amiable aM Splrliuol'' ' MMsur-H.lt, Mmna / Open New Year's Eve For those who may wish to have an opportunity for quiet meditation and prayer on New Year’s Eve, Christ Church Cran* brook will be open throughout the evening until 12:30 a;m. Gideons Conference at Michigan Slate EAST LANSING -The archeology of the Bible will be examined at a, Gideons Leadership Conference Jan. 19 at Michigan State University. Discussing recent archeological discoveries in the Middle East which tend to substantiate Biblical, history will be Dr, Francis M. Donahue of the MSU Departments of Humanities and Religion. APOSTOLIC CHURCHcOF CHRIST 1 REVIVAL! REVIVAL! 7:30 P.M. Nightly thru Jan, 3, 1963, With Billy McCool YOU WILL BE REWARDED TO ATTEND THESE SERVICES. SUNDAY SCHOOL AND WORSHIP , . 10.00 A.M. SUNDAY EVENING SERVICES.... 7.30 P.M. SPECIAL NEW YEAR'S EVE WATCH, SERVICE Church, Phone EE 5-8361 > Po»X>i,,» Hion* 8S2-2382 CHURCH of CHRIST 21()4tUOHESST. PE5-1I56 Roosevelt Watts, Evangelist Sunday SIM* Study for ail agoi. 9.45 a m. Sunddy Worzhip Porlody 11 a.m. and 7 p.m. ' Tueiday Wookly Blblo Study 8 p.m. MARIMONT BAPTIST CHURCH 68 W, Walton FE 2-7239 SUNDAY SCHOOL .................10 A.M. MORNING WORSHIP HOUR......... 11:00 A.M. A.M. "THE REVEALED REDEEMER" EVENING SERVICE ...............7:30 P.M. P.M. "SEE YOUR CALLING" Pallor Somori Speaking at both services' Public Cordially Invited COLUMBIA AVENUE BAPTIST CHURCH 64 W, Columbia Avt. ’i^. FE 5-9960 Sunday School......., 9,45 A.M. Morning Worship .....11100 A.M. Training Union . ...... 6:30 P.M. Evening Worship ....... 7:30,P.M. Midweek Service (Wed.). 7:45 P.M. ’ Be our Guest and You'll be Blest • End your search (or a friendly Church (Affiliated with Poitbr :• Southern Baptist Convention) CLARENCE Bj JACKSON, Minister of Education CARROLL HUBBS, Music Director A THE PONTIAC PRES& SATURDAY, DECEMBER 29, SEVEN .11 We know frotq, history Wm| *-------------si and dvillza- sllrhat happens when men Uonjs stray from the path of God; rhejr immediate endeaVdrs may be Successful but eventually they are doomed to decay. Communism contains . within itself the seeds of its own destruction. — J. Edgar Hoover. •' Williams Lake k ■ Church of ♦he Nazarene . 2840 Airport Road t Paul Colemaf Minister 10 A M. —SUNDAY SCHOOL It A.M.1 WORSHIP HOUR 7 PM--WORSHIP HOUR Episcopal Youth Hosts to Oakland Convocation The youth group of the Church o! the Resurrection in Clarkston will meet with young people of All Salitta Episcopal Church tomorrow evening to make find plans for the Oakland County Youth Convocation gathering at All Saints next week. All Saints youth and the 'Clarkston young people will be hosts troit, will lead a program on the theme, “Youth and the Law.” Mr. Edwards, an Episcopal layman, ;was a member of the Michigan Supreme Court until taking over Ml position last year. The program is the second in a series of four planned *by the convocation on the general A New Year's Prayer Dear Gofl, pur Father, the sweeping course of time brings us.to the threshold of ahdthetf year. We pause—ere we plunge into the new—end Students Participate at Central .Each new generation must be persuaded to keep America free lfoftiia. or America as we know It will perish. Armies and navies on the sea and in the air are powerlessi to preserve freedom if It is lost jfre hearts at home. - 7-- Student Recognition Sunday will look back upon the old. It holds much, we regret, g observed at Central Methodist BETHANY BAPTIST CHURCH W. Huron at Mafk « Worship Services—iB 40 and 11 «00 AM ..SERMON. By the College Students Student Recognition Sunday 9.45 AM Church School CIomm (or All Ago* 6.30 PM Evening Vesper* 7-8.00 PM Youth and Adult Group* Wednes., 7.30 PM Mid-Week Service on Jan. 6 from 5 to 9 p.m. to theme, “Youth Under Pressure.” Episcopa^ young, people froml The ewening wilI with Evensong in the church. mghout the county. Evensong in the church. This, More than 200 are expected will be followed by the regular' be present, Rev. Williapi E. program and supper. The eve- Lyle, associate rector, said. George Edwards, police coni* mteilsner for the City gf De- CHllRdH O^ THI: GOOD SAMARITAN 4700 Hillcrest Dr., Waterford 7 PM SERVICE Rev. Lena Bullock, „ of Dotroit for Information Coll Ft 2-9824 CHURCH OF SPIRITUAL FELLOWSHIP -MALTA TEMPLE-2024 PONTIAC ROAD (formerly St. Luka's Methodist Church) Sunday, Dec. 30-Rev. Tessa Eckert Jan. 6—Rev. Dorothy Beasley PONTIAC UNITY CHURCH 8 N. Genesee (Corner W. Huron) 335*2773 EVERETTE A. DELL, Minister . CLASSES Tubs., 8 P.M.-Unity Workshop 11 AM MORNING WORSHIP Thur*., 8 PM-"Tolk on truth* 9>30 A.M. SUNDAY SCHOOL NORTH EAST COMMUNITY CHURCH EVANGELICAL UNITED BRETHREN Mt. Clemons at Featherston# "9:45 AM. — Church School tliOO A.M. Worship Service ___ "By Th*i* Thlndl M«n Civ*''_ HOLY COMMUNION SERVICE l. s: SCHEIfttlf, Minuter ------------------ fE 8-1744 ning will close with recreational activities. Mission Seeks New Home Must Raise $7,500 for Payment on Union Hall For quite some time the Pontiac Rescue Mission has been faced with the problem of finding permanent quarters. The urban renewal program of the city removed the former rooms when the building in which it was housed on South Saginaw Street was torn down. ★ it ir “Presently there’s a chance of obtaining the Union Hall at 90 Mt. Clemens St., that is, if $7,500 for a down payment cap be raised in 60 days or less, said Charles Iner L. Basinger of Parkers-* burg, W.Va„ evangelistic singer and fomerTTewspapWeditoY.v^ir join Dr, John Gamble of Lynchburg, Va. for the 9-day evangelistic crusade at Emmanuel Baptist Church, 645 S. Telegraph Road beginning at 7 p.m. tomor- 3errand, director. “The total'cost the property -is $45,000 “he said.” Pontiac Rescue Mission is * First Presbyterian Church HURON AT WAYNE REV. GALEN E. HERSHEY, PASTOR REV. PA’UL D. CROSS, ASST. PASTOR ALBERT A. RIDDERING, Christian Education Director Worship Service . . . 9:30 and 11:00 A.M. Church School......9:30 and 11:00 A.M. not underwritten by any other {organization or group. It corporated in the State of Michigan as a non-profit organization. 'Gifts, therefore, are tax exempt. “The building consists of a full basement equipped with kitchen facilities including stove, refrigerator, steam table and other items. Two auditoriums are on the main floor. S 'missionary' ALLIANCE CHURCH SUNDAY SCHOOL 9.45 A M. YOUTH FELLOWSHIP 6 PM EVENING SERVICE 7 PM It Voln and ProfitUii to Strvt God' REV. G. J. BERSCHE, Pastor The second floor Is divided into smaller rooms which will serve as offices and dormitories. The SALVATION ARMY 29 W. LAWRENCE STREET ¥ Sunday School 9:45 a m.— Young People's Legion 6 p. Morning Worihip 11 a m — Evangelistic Mooting 7 00 p Wednesday Prayer end Praise Meeting 700 p m LIEUT, and MRS GARY 8 CROWELL Goad Music1- Sinpinp- True to the IT or,1 Prrarhinp God Meets With US-You, Too. Are Invited “Rest rooms are installed on the second floor as well as in the basement. The building is 41 by 60 feet and of solid brick construction. The property eludes a paved parking lot for 50 cars.” —opportunities lost, wrongs done, blind'gropings In the dark, forgive our frailties, and help us to do better. By Thy Spirit enter our lives, and rid Us of all of which Thou canst not approve; be born in us with all Thy quickening power, clpthe us with the garments of qerviqe and of love. Teach us this one lesson, thatjreal joy in life comes from peace in the soul, and peace'in the soul is the effect of Thy presence, and Thy Presence is main-' tained only when we forget ourselves and lose ourselves in service to others. May this be our watchward during the coming year. Help us, O -Godj^always-to-keep the^oalinsight, and. to live in its light. In the name of Jesus Christ we ask this of Thee. Amen. Church with' students participat- ing In both the 9:15 and 10:45 a.m. worship services tomorrow. II to1 worship will be giv-arbara McClure and Su- The call en by Bari sap Putnam and responsive read-ing byHichard-Wagner and-Rob» ert Kibble. The Scripture Reading will be by Donald Balmer and Thomas Murphy and prayer; jwill be offered by Marylyn Lake and James Bank. Students willj I also usher at both hours. ] S. Dilworth, state senator of Cal- lst SPIRITUALIST CHURCH 576 Orchard Lake Ave. Rev, Marshall, Pastor Service Sun, 7.30 PM WESLEYAN METHODIST 47 N. Lynn Si. - -SUNDAY SCHOOL _____10.00 AM- WORSHIP.......... I L.0Q AM W.UP.S..............6,45 P.M. EVENING SERVICE'... .... 7 30 PM* WED. PRAYER AND BIBLE .. 7:30 P.M. Rtti.J. Os K*ff —All Saints Bulletin f „■V - >»*■ -V, ■ Whmmm Evangelistic Meetings Begin at Emmanuel The guest singer and song lead-r will be assisted by his wife, Emily at the piano and as soprano soloist, as well as by the church staff of musicians and choir members. Mr. Basinger plans to lead a great combined choir each evening. The Basingers have conducted music for 96 crusades, many with Dr. Gamble. Experiences have taken them to 950 public school, assemblies, radio and television spots; churches and colleges. Five times they have served i extensive and intensive evangelism in Central and South America and the Caribbean Islands. A composer of hymns and musical arrangements, Mrs. Basinger is also In demand as a youth dramatist. People of Pontiac are invited to the meetings and sing with the Basingers, said Dr. Tom Malone, pastor of Emmanuel. On New Year's Eve from 8 p.iq. to midnight there will be a New Year’s party and Watch Night' service. The evening will begin with food, fug and fellowship for the entire family with a dessert luncheon. At 9:30 p.m. a color motion picture will be shown of ■the life of John Wesley. INER L. BASINGER Gospel Music Concert at Pike Street Church Hear 'The Golden Keys'' Quartet ■whem TOMORROW AT 10-11 and 2:30 P.M. with JIM HILL the Author of the Song “WHAT A DAY" THE GOLDEN KEYS QvARTET • ATTEND ANNUAL WATCHNITE MTG. ■ 8 till Midnight • SPEAKERS: Rev. Jas. limes, Rev. C. Ferris 9 SINGERS: DIsElples Quartet, Erickson Sister*, Little Aaron and others—WELCOME I Evangelical Missionary Church 2800 Watkins CakeRd. (1 min. N.W. of Mall) • RADIO-CKLW SUN. AT 7:30 A.M. Rev, A.J. Baughey, Pastor The Ken Apple Trio of Detroit wil) present a concert of Gospel music at the Pike Street Church of God at 7 p.m, tomorrow. Programs will continue each evening through Jan. 6. Ken Apple, leader of the trio and pianist for the group, formerly was affiliated with the Blackwood Brothers Quartet. Others in the group are Mrs. Apple and Linda Collins. Thefcthree have presented concerts in various parts of the country including radio and television appearances, and been featured in All Night Sings. . The trio has been acclaimed by many as one of the finest sing- ing groups in the field of sacred music in America today, Pastor Estel D. Moore said. The public is invited. CHURCH of GOD East Pike at Andersori ‘ Emmanuel Baptist Church jygjfr. 645 S. Telegraph Rd. 645 S. Telegraph Premlllennlal — IndependentFundamental DR. TOM MALONE SPEAKING AT ALL SERVICES 10'AM, 11 A,M., 7 P.M. (Baptism)- Radio Broadcast WPON 10:15 A.M. Each Sunday WED. , MIDWEEK SERVICE 7:30 P.M. Sundajl School Attendance Last Week 1224 Dr. Tom Malone, Pastor Sheriff Irons Is Breakfast Speaker Rev. Theodore R. Allebach announces (he breakfast for the Greater Pontiac Evangelical Ministers’ Fellowship will be at 8:15. The business session will start at 8:45 with the program set for 9:15. Sheriff Frank Irons will be guest speaker at the January meeting. Projects of the fellowship include regular weekly services at three convalescent homes, a chaplain training program for ministers. This is primarily for Pontiac Osteopathic Hospital and comparable to that at Pontiac General Hospital. The fellowship will be responsible for the equipment for the new chapel at Oakland County Tuberculosis Sanitorium, provide Christian booklets for prisoners at the Oakland County Jail and raise money for the relocation of Pontiac Rescue Mission. New Year's Service at 11 Ministerial Fellowship to Worship at Trinity The Oakland County Ministerial Fellowship will sponsor a New Year’s Day service at 11 a.m. In Trinity Baptist Church, Wessen at Maple Street. Following the processional of choir and, ministers, Rev. H. C. Shankle of the Southside Church of God will give the call to worship. Rev. J. E. Edwards will read the Scripture and Dr. Joseph W. Moore, host pastor, will offer prayer. ‘ Rev. L. R. Miner of Macedonia Baptist Church will announce the purpose of the gathering. Rev. Amos G. Johnson, president of the fellowship, will introduce Dr. .Alfred M. Robbs of Canaan Baptist Church in Flint, guest speaker. Rev. S. M. Edwards will give the Invocation. 'For the first service the Men’s Choir will sing “O Master Let Me Walk With Thee” by Smith. At the second service the Chancel: Choir will sing “Allelluia! Christ Is Born” as arranged by Kountz. The soloist, Robert Wisdom, will sing “I’ll Walk With God” by Brodszky. At 4 p.m. college and university students, service men and women, high school seniors and all older youth will meet in the church parlor for an open house. The evening will conclude at 11 p.m. with a candle lighting dedication service at which Robert Stoner will be soloist. Youth for Christ Film-New Year's On New Year’s Day the film, Shadow of the Boomerang,” will be shown at 7:30 p.m. in Pontiac Northern High School. The picture concerns the Billy iraham Crusade in Australia. There is no admission charge and the public is invited. The evening program is sponsored by Oakland County Youth for Christ. Eighteen young people of the organization are in Washington, D.C. this weekend attending the National Youth for Christ Conference. More than 800 were expected to be present from Michigan. Rev. and Mrs. Roy Cummings of Messiah Baptist Church will sing a duet and the choirs will combine to offer selections. ReV. J. Allen Parker of Newman A.M.E. Church will preside. 1 st Christian Church Recognizes Students Student Recognition Sunday will be observed at First Christian Church tomorrow. The regular program for adults and youth groups will be held from 6 to 7:30 p.m. ‘The Challenge of the New Year” will be the theme of Rev. Jack C. Clark’s sermon at morning worship. Assisting the pastor will be Richard Kain, lay leader; John Radenbaugh and Eugene Thompson, elders. PONTIAC CHURCH OF CHRIST Listen to the "Herald of Truth" Each Sunday -CKIW-11 A.M. 1180 N. PERRY ST. FE 2-6269 BIBLE STUDY.....................9:50 A.M. Classes for All Ages MORNING WORSHIP.., ............10:50 A.M. EVENING SERVICE....................6 P.Mi EVEN! Bible Classes for Everyone Wed. Night 7.30 >.M. LADIES' BIBLE CLASS . Thursday 10 A.M; United Presbyterian Churches OAKLAND AVENUE Oakland at Cadillac Thootioro R. AUthnch, Roster Audrey lAmkrman, Youth Director Morning Worship........10 00 A M, Sunday School........11 >20 A.M. Youth Mssllngs....... 5:45 PM. Evening Worship...... 7:00 PM. Wednesday Praysr..... 7:00 PM auburn heights 3456 Primary Street F. Wm. Palmer, Pastor M. — Sunday School 11:00 A. 6 P.M.— ’orshlp DRAYTON Drayton Plains, Michigan W.J. TmuuiIshuM, Pastor Blbls School....... 9.45 AM Morning Worship ...... 11:00 AM Youth Groups ...... 6.30 PM Wednesday Prayer and Study Hour.......‘ 7:30 PM CENTRAL CHRISTIAN CHURCH G. W. Gibson, Ministar FE 4-0239 374 N. Saginaw Bible School.......9.45 AM Morning Worship ... 11.00 AM Youth Service .... ,6:00 PM Evening Service . . . 7.00 PM Prayer Meeting and r$lble ._ Study Wednesday .. . 7i30 PM „ FIRST SOCIAL BRETHREN CHURCH 316 Baldwin ______ FE 4-7431 Sunday School. ... 10*00A.M. Sunday Worship.. 11.00 A.M. Sunday Evening .. 7:30 P.M. Wednesday Choir.. 7:30 P.M. Saturday Service . 7:30 P.M. Wev. Tommy Guost. Pastor FE 2-0384 CHURCH -SCHOOL,, MORNING WORSHIP 11 A.M. First Christian Church DISCIPLES of CHRIST Rev. Jack H. C. Clark, Pastor 858 W. Huron St. J 1 f IJL, ART and RICK ORTEGA WATCHNIGHT SERVICE 9-12 P.M. NEW YEAR'S EVE HOLDING FORTH THE WORp PREACHING CHRIST SINGING THE GOSPEL ’ FIRST ASSEMBLY of GOD . 210 N. PERRY "Waterford Township's American Baptist Church" CRESCENT HILLS BAPTIST CRESCENT LAKE ROAD Ntar HATCHERY ROAD Worihip 11 AM 9:4S AM Sundoy School 6:30 PM Baptist Evening Fellowship Largs Parking Lot Nursery During t Central Methodist MILTON H. BANK 3882 Highland Rd. H. H. Johnson, Associate Pastor MORNING WORSHIP 9tl5 and 10*45 A.M. "WHEN WE ARE DECIPLES"-Dr. Bank, preachlhg. NEW YEAR'S EVE PARTY and WATCH NIGHT SERVICES j? CHURCH SCHOOL 9:15 and 10:45 A.M. FIRST METHODIST S CARL G. ADAMS, Minister JOHN A. Hall, Min. of Visitation South Saginaw at Judson I MORNING WORSHIP 8:30 and 11 A.M. “THE HIGH COST OF THE BEST" Rev. Carl Adams, preaching CHURCH SCHOOL 9:45 A.M. MYF—6:1^5 P.M. ijij Wed. Bible Stud/and Prayer-7.36 PM. ST; PAUL METHODIST | I6S E. Squore Lake Rd ft 8-8233 - FE 2 2752 $ Morning Worship 10:00 A M. and 11:15 A M. Church School 10:00 A.M. ■ Intermediate ond Senior Youth Groups, 6:00 P M. n9 MV. JAMES A. Mr Cl UNO, Minister Supervised Nuriery 2j*j ST. LUKE'S I METHODIST CHURCH & Covert Methodist Church 3773 PONTIAC tAKE SO. 2012 PONTIAC St ELMWOOD METHODIST CHURCH ..10,00 A.M. evening worihip.......... 7,00 P.M. 85 . 11,MAM. Prayer Wed. 74)0 PM & SAT., JAN. 5th 7 P.M. to 12 P.M. at the FONTIAC NORTHERN AUDITORIUM AIL NIGHT QUARTET SING U Featuring -Internationally Famous WEATHERFORD QUARTET of Akron, Ohio GOSPEL HARMON pOYS - Huntington, W. Va. ^ TONEY BROTHERS QUARTET - Detroit ADVANCE TICKETS Under 12 ... 75c Adults . L. . . $1.50 AT THE DOOR Under 12 . . . $1.00 Adults ...... $1.75 Rev. Geoffrey Day LES HUDSON HDW. -Available at— CHRISTAIN LIT. SALES CLARK'S DRIVE-IN THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 29, 1962 Vacation Rendezvous Students Oakland County ski slopes are alive this ' week—swarming with students home for holiday vacation. r • ; Those not enmeshed in post-Christmas sale rushes or term paper projects appeared twixt tow and snow. One determined ?ki scholar tdrned up ip ski togs, naturally enough, but Carrying school books. * * , Pontiac Press photographer Edward R. Noble visited Alpine Valley and Mt. Holly ski sites where hills, ski shops and firesides were all doing a brisk-business. IN LODGE * : Corps of toe toasters relaxed inside the lodge, adding to the gay camaraderie that unites all ski enthusiasts. Inside tlhie ski shop, prospective'snow bunnies/ eyed apparel designed for wearer and watcher alike. Outside,* squeals of delight and/or anWish mingled with Alpine melodies appropriate to the activity. ★ ★ ★ Many nonskiers were on hand too—content just watching the gracefuL-and sometimes not so grace-ful attempts at mastery over the glittering' slopes- The sparkle of a bustling ski scene is enhanced by ‘Susan Pill, East Hammond Lake Drive,-Pontiac s Junior Miss of .1963. She will represent the city in the Michigan Junior Miss Pageant here Jan'. 26. Sue is a, Senior at Pontiac Central High School. Gael Sisson of Bloomfield Village appraises after-ski boots for ihawout protection during a lull in the day's skiing at Mt. Holly. Gael attends Michigan State University Oakland. With her braid for ballast, Sue Jordan of Middle Belt Road had little trouble navigating the hills at Mt. Holly with Preston Mann of Birmingham. Sue attends Westbrook Junior College, Portland, Maine. Preston is a student at Flint Junior College. Milce Garavaglia of Bloomfield Township skims Valley. He mends John I summary of a day on the slopes ndy Hughes of OmSfd Lake and hot) ixUSKtu oj iJmruwi ww* Michigan'Spate University. , v. University of Detroit students Kay Harrington and Denny Adams of Bloom- field Township took the scenic route. Not much energy needed. Adding a bit of»Russian flavor to an otherwise-Swiss atmosphere is Bill McNaiighton of Bloomfield Hills, Home from Culver Military Academy in Indiana. Carroll University in Ohio. Skiing is a fine way to spend a vacation. " ■ .hr\ ' . -M -■v.-'-t ' /.' ■ ^ w t :* THE PONTIAC ERBSS* SATURDAY, DECEMBER 29, 1962 ; . iPHrawwwi'Hw Tfi tm , 1 -4- r Await Poet's Daughter Leslie Frost, daughter of the eminent American poet » Robert Frost, will be the house guest at Mr. and Mrs. Henry C. Johnson of Quartci Rond on her visit to Detroit Misg Ftost will - be die speaker at the Women’s City Club Celebrity Series Jan. 7. She is thfe aiithor of a new children’s book,“Really Not Really.” On Saturday, Jan. 5, the Johnsons will entertain for dinner in honor of Miss Frost. tainihg to the yearly luncheon of the entire committee. This year it will be h Mrs. Theodore 0. Yntema, general chairman of the 'Women’s Committee, for Detroit Grand Opera Association, is busy with details per- heldat the Crystal Ball Room, Masonic Temple, Jan. 31. Francis‘Robinson will come from the Metropolitan Opera Company in New York and speak about the Met’s seven performances to take place May .20-25. Following a bachelor’s try Club the Yntemas entertained some 70 of their friends as well as friends of daughter Gwin and son Ted at a late supper in their home. Tort . In home during the holidays from Brown University. The Paul BowerS of Buckingham Road welcomed home their daughter and son-in-law the Albert Thorndikes Jr. of San Francisco for the holidays. In a few days Mr. and Mrs. Thorndike will be leaving for a visit with the Thorndikes Sr. in Boston before returning to California. Jonathan Bowers is also home from Mercersburg, Pa., and, together with brother Henry, will be spending a few days at Otsego Ski, Club. Mr. and Mrs. Fredrlk L. Exams Protect Moms - ANN ARBOR (AP) - Prenatal examinations .have contributed more to the savings of mothers’ lives than any other single factor of pregnancy and delivery, a University of Michigan obstetrician said recently. stages, can be arrested and its threats minimized.” Dr. 'Tommy N. Evans, of the U. of M. Medical Center, said the precautionary exams, almost unheard of SO years ago, have reduced maternal deaths in some areas of the United States by inore than 80 per cent: ‘‘Serious complications of pregnancy may produce no symptoms rat-first- and-yct be detected by laboratory tests or physical examinations, Evans said, “the hazardous disease of toxemirf, if detected in its insipent or early During prenatal examinations, Evans said, the doctor can start preventive measures to control any special problems such as anemia, excessive weight or diabetes which could affect labor. Even father is aided by the advance'checkups, Evans said. If twins or triplets are on the way, the physician can give him fair warning. Easy Woy to Clean Brooms Clean brooms with a vacuum cleaner brush to remove threads and dust that cling to nylon or straw. tertaihed for supper in their home the immediate family and some dose friends on Christmas Eve. '' Mr. and Mrs. Glen Carlson of Country Club Drive and their son Don, home for the holidays from the University of Indiana were there. So were son and daughter-in-law Mr .and Mrs. Glen Carlson Jr. and their children. Mr. and Mrs. George Carlson of Cranbrook Road with/son George Jr., home from Western State University and his younger brother, Harry; Mr. and Mrs. Lee J, Ogur and their son Robert. Also present were daughter and son-in-law Mr. and Mrs. Carl Gunnar Karlstrom who had just returned, from a weekend visit with Mr. Karlstrom’s brother and family Mr. and Mrs. Lars T. Karlstrom of Cincinnati; Mr and Mrs. Clift ford A. Nelson and their daughter and son-in-law Mr. and Mrs. Peter TerMott from Portland, Ore. If* Not Vour Fault—Abby Elderly Parents Blame Selves for Son's Death in Stolen Car By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: My wife is in the bedroom crying her eyes out. It all started when our son Joey had his 18th birthday. I am now 60 and my wife is 50. We were not young when we had Joey. He was our only child and we wanted the best for him He was always such a good boy. ' Well, today a police officer came to our dOor and said our son had Stolen a car and, when the police gave chain, he took to the highway and turned over in a ditch. Joey is now lying in the morgue. I don’t think we will live through the funeral. I still can’t believe our baby is gone. Oh, Abby, if we had given him a car when he wanted it, he would be alive today. God have mercy on u$. Please print this as a lesson to other parents. ' EVA AND JOHN DEAR EVA AND JOHN: Don’t blame yourselves. You did what you thought was best for your son. Read The Sermon- on....the Mount: (“ . . . Thy will be done.”) If we accept God’s will as law, then Godta promise shall be our support and comfort. And every burden will be light. ..Let Us----- Photograph YOUR WEDDING Color or Black and White *34 95 Up 50 Thank Yon Photos FREE If wo do your wedding Varden Studio SS E. Lawrence F® S-DOl DEAR ABBY: I have read some strhnge things in your column but rethink this will take the cake: We,had a cat since she was a kitten. We never had meat ort H’rl days, so we gave the cat fish, too. My sister married a Presbyterian and took the cat with her. They eat meat on Fridays but the cat won’t touch it. Would you say this was a re-religious cat? MIKE B. DEAR MIKE: No, I’d say it was more of a fish-tale! If the cat gets hungry enough, like any other cat—he’ll eat meat. What’s on your mind? For a personal reply, send a self-addressed, stamped envelope to Abby, The Pontiac Press. For Abby’s booklet, “How To Have A Lovely Wedding,” send 50 cents to ABBY, The Pontiac Press. Add LIFE to Your RUM WETS Here’s Real Savings . . \ SPECIAL! 9x12s Wilton, Axminster end Cotton ......... $795 Braided Rugs $972 Restore the color and luster to your rugs—-our deep cleaning does the job — you'll be happy. PHONE FE 2-7132 NEW WAY* RUG AND CARPET CLEANERS 42 WISNfeR STREET, PONTIAC Flowers-Sn Candelabra and white poinset-tias decorated the SunnyVale Chapel Friday evening as Rev. James D. Parker married Carolyn May Snyder and Kenneth J. Flowers. ★ "k. k Parents of the bride are the Lloyd M. Snyders of Prentice yder Rites cut with a sweetheart neckline and short sleeves with gauntlets. A fingertip veil was held in place with a crown of sequins and pearls. A colonial bouquet of white-car- Performed i nationk and pink roses complemented her gown. Mrs. Harold Stout wore a powder-blue taffeta dress styled similar to the bride’s dress for her duties as maid of honor* Dennis Snyder was best man at his sister’s wedding with David Snyder, also a brother of-thebrkle,as;anu8her-Thel Holiday Visit Ends sireecTineDTiaegirooinsparems are the* J. William Flowers of Hancock, Md. - k* k k For her wedding, the bride chose a floor-length gown of French illusion over taffeta with tiered ruffles, Chantilly-lace trim disbursing officer of 'the United States naval regional finance office, has returned to Washington, D.C. after spend- ing the holidays with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Hagel of Middlebelt Road. other usher was Richard Carr. A reception was held immediately following the ceremony in the church parlors. it k k , The bride chose a periwinkle-blue dress with gray accessories J): Mr. and Mrs.. [’/Felix" A. Anderson of Lotu^ Drive announce the engagement of their daughter I Cotta fean .‘to Douglas ,K. Hades, son * of Mr. and Mr s . Hugh < COILA JEAN ANDERSON An August wedding is / plowed for Carol Ann Ponn and James Michael Harris.1 She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Clarence E. Pom of . Preston Avenue. His parents are the James W. Harris' of Royal Oak. Both attended the University of Michigan. CAROL ANN PONN lloRor Mai of the Month M.LDaaMs __PONTIAC was November "Honor Man of the Month" in the Michigap territory of the Modern Woodman life insurance agency force. He gained the distinction by alU around excellence in sales .work and -life insurance programming. •f America Hoaw Oflloo* Reck Island, ■ THE FINISHING TOUCH . , . for any occasion HOME-MADE CANDIES 2440 WOODWARD at Square Lake Rd. PONTIAC MALL Open Dally 'ttl • _ good-things-to-eat for NEW YEAR’S Tender, crisp favorites! Milk or dark chocolate coating."' A SYMBOL OF QUALITY IN 0OOD-THIN0S-TO-EAT Visit the Sanders Department in your nearest National Food Store 685 East Boulevard • 2375 Orchard Lake Rd. (Sylvcin Lake) ~~~ 3415 Elizabeth Lake Road (Waterford Township) 8040 Cooley Lake Road (Union Lake) And a Sanders Store in the Tel-Huron Shopping Center, Pontiac i V 7;| , ‘ r ■ ylKN $ r»K rONTIAd PRESS. SATURDAY. DECEMBER 29, 1962 2 State Finns Get $2.5 Million inWork WASHINGTON (AP) - Air Force award of $2.5 million worth of contracts to Michigan firms was announced yesterday by Mis. Pat McNamara and Philip A. Hart of Michigan. t ' it ♦ Lear Siegler, Inc., Grand Rapids, received a $1,000,156 contract to enable it to proceed with production of components for an for F105 aircraft. Other similar awards are expected. w * * / Bendix Corp., Ann Arbor, got an additional 11.5-mllllon contract for research and development of a communications system for the Strategic Air Command. This brings the total of such awards “t5^Bendlx~to $18,593,500,..with further contracts'to be awarded to the firm. NEW YORK W - American families are entering 1963 in strong credit position, the head of the nation’s largest sales finance company said. ★ , This condition will support the market for consumer durable goods and services at high levels, said L. Walter Lundtll, president r MNMMIMNMMM FireWoes Multiply LOS ANGELES (UPI) — The president of a sportswear shop said he was totaling his Christmas business when the adding machine kept .wdwfW too DM exploded HamMfromits elecWcal § connection and set fire to the stop. Damage was estimated at '$50,000. Credit Position in U.S. Strong as Year Starts Lack of Passengers Derailed’Special' A preference for private transportation has derailed plans for a special train with seats for 300 from Detroit to Lansing Tuesday for* the inaugurtftlon of George W. Romney as governor. The “Gov. Romney Inaugural Royal Oak, Birmingham and Pontiac en route to the state capital, has been canceled, ac-Special,” scheduled to stop at AMC Directors Outfit Romney's New Officte LANSING MMJov.-eMqt George Romney’s former fellow directors at American Motors Corp. have chipped in $1,200 to provide a new desk and chairs for his office at the state capital. AMC sources said the gift had nothing to do with the corporation, but was simply a gesture of good will and friendship on the part of Romney’s former colleagues, acting as individuate. of CIT Financial Corp, “We also look for solid strength in other sectors of the economy,” he declared in a year-end outlook. Lundell anticipated a further broadening of CIT's diversified vices miring 1963. Tfieselriclude the iinancUg of broad categories of production and distribution equipment, the leasing of similar products al well as automobiles and trucks, factoring, commercial accounts receivable financing and the manufacturing a'fld. distribution of radiological equipment for industrial, professional and scientific office to Lansing. There aren’t enough passengers. The thousands expected to attend the ceremonies and Inaugural Ball on New York’s Day apparently prefer to make the tylp by automobile or bus. John L Lewis, 82 OK After Surgery SPRINGFIELD, 111. (UPI) -John L. Lewis, 92, former presi-dant the United Mine Workers. Union was reported in "satisfactory” condition today at a hospital here where he underwent surgery for a peptic ulcer. Lewis was here with two brother* and * sister for the Christmas holidays. Moscow Ready to Start Nonstop Flights to Cuba HAVANA IB—The Soviet Air Line Aeroflot announced yesterday it is ready to start nonstop flights once a week between Russia and Cuba—marking the first regular schedule of flights by a airline to the Western hemisphere. Vioceslav Bascinov, deputy director of the airline, said TU114 turboprop airplanes will be used. V+CHRDJi'^a* Q—The bidding Mt Sooth Double 3 4 Put 4* Pom You, South, hold: 42 VAKJ76 +KQ98 4K4I What do you do? A—Pom. .A further bid 1* BEN CASEY DRIFT MARLO By Dr. I. M. Levitt, Tom Cooke and Phil Evans Astrological Fprecjpwt % * ;*f€ ' * • * 'r a:*• __... fast Innlaht v)k(ntSlh __ Ated to prop*- . Im ”dii" wo*W. . "But few lore in “condition” to book UP1 m«nt> By JULES LOH When some architects aet out to design a truly luxurious home, they take the position of “never mind the budget; fuH speed n’t that kind of Lat O'NEIL Raalry Ce. improve your present LIVINC CONDITIONS. Call FI S-710S, 262 SauHrTaltgraph M., FowHac. _________ Non-Skid Unit steps For a Stop In Boauty 3S5U Manufactured by CONCRETE STEP CO. 0497 Highland Rd. (M-59) ------Phone 673-0775 Open 'til 5:00 Saturday for Fim or Commercial Id FISHING FREE: Building end assembly instructions. Practical to own, inexpensive to bulldi with iturdy,tight«’r weight, wlndproof end worm Upson AN Weather Panels. PARK FREE CORWIN LUMBER and COAL CO. 117 S. Cass FI 2-8385 This^tegani Sp Keeps Budget in Mind Samuel Paul architeqK ★ . of the biggest coat factors house is the cellar,” said Paul. “I’ve eliminated the traditional basement in this house by eliminating its need. “Hie garage, laundry and work shop all are on the main level, as well as the indoorroc-reation areas. Not only 1* R less expensive this way, but more convenient.” The house,, design J54 in the House of the Week series, is an elegant four-bedroom split level with an Early American flavor. ★ ★ ★ But it lSh’t an ordinary split level in which each level is of approximately the same dimensions. Architect Paul has, in effect, Stretched out the main Uvtag level so virtually all the daytime activities are on the same elevation with no stairs. to climb. In this respect the design is^ more like that of a sleek ranch* UPSTAIRS WING Placed at one end of this "ranch” rectangle, like the cross bar of a T, is the upstairs bedroom wing with a 1,025-square-foot area beneath it containing HigMaii Estates ■Sr *134*0 BERT SMOKIER Builders a recreation room, hobby room and heater-storage room. ■ Only six. stopo separate each of these levels lrom the mate,_ ...x;7 ■ living level. COLONIAL ELEGANCE — This four- The main level and bedroom bedroom split level Is In the form of a T, with level total 1,997 square feet, not the mite living level elongated to resemble a counting the 805-square-foot ga- v. rage and adjoining workshop, the lSS-square-foof covered portico. . * ★ * Over-all dimensions are 85 feet wide, by 41 feet deep and architect Paul suggests a 100-by-100-foot plot. Trlake fall advantage of Ms colonial tone, architect Paul ' interesting color fpSS55TPi Conceal laundry Unit. if your laundry area detracts from your kitchen, consider this suggestion. Plaee^ washer and dryer under roomy counter top and conceal uhlts behind cabinet doors. Laundry products can be stored in wall cabinets. fruit in honey PH|| H s i called sweetmeats, forerunner to today’s can-* dy. ; X? - Hie first gfe was made in RID BARN SUBDIVISION FOUR NEW MODELS Just WHt of M-24 Bahind Alban's Country Cauahi ogw is xns m sios r.u. mv CAM.ISU BUILDING CO. streamlined rtmeh. Because all the daylight activities are on the same elevation, there is no need of ah expensive basement. suggests scheme. The vertical boards should be • • white, he said, with gray batten „• *, strips; the stone a golden field- ‘ stone; the roof an earthy brown shingle. * ; For accent, the shutters and , • main entrance door should be red. *r ADDITIONAL DETAILS ,*’» Mark Twain once built a • • house in Connecticut and sped- ? * fled that the kitchen should be n? the front, facing the street, so t ^ he wouldn’t always have to be ^ , rushing the breadth of the house **; « o see who was passing by. ' T It want neighborhood curl- * osity that prompted Paul to pat the kitchen in front, however. The plan makes good sense tor a variety of reaaona, tire most notable of which is that it measurably increases the ease with traffic can flow through and within the house. | STORM WINDOWS--DOORS • Screen Patios • Alum. Siding • Awnings • patios • Porch Enel. WINDOWS turns TILT ALUM. *11* C. Wetdon Ca.—1032 W. Hum 334-2397 FLOOR PLAN — Note the separate hall from the front service entry to the rear porch, completely eliminating traffic through the living area of the house. The house is basically a split level, but incorporates many characteristics of a ranch. SEE VISTA VILLA Sensational ffew Horn* Bargain* Crescent Lake Road North of M-59 • Phone FE 5-9888 CUSTOM BUILT FURNISHED 3 BEDROOM HOME JM H, Ft. Full Prlaa $5,990 Lot Owner* Em/ Term. Model Open let. end Bun. lit* 2580 S. Telegraph Rd. ALL SHOWROOM FIXTURES ^COUNTS* UP TO 50% OFF! 1 SPECIAL—Sava $100 CRANE ; m a [L " pINK 3-PC. BATH Complete Willi Trim *25 how 3130 EAMJES & BROWN, INC. 99 EAST FIKI STRUT Fi lyHOf MODERNIZE NOW! CONSOLIDATE , ALL PRESENT BILLS I through our 20 year SPECIAL FINANCE PLAN oil A separate hall goes from the front service entrance to the rear completely eliminating traffic through the living area the house; and these are only two of a half-dozen exterior entrances. If yon don't Oink this makes a difference, Jnst check the condition of the floor or carpet in a well-traveled passage of year own house, not to mention the plain convenience this layout affords. Hie kitchen-laundry-dinette ensemble would be the pride of any housewife. *s -> A ★ ★ Its double window over the double-bowl sink, abundance of counter space, cabinets and huge storage closets and pantry, adjoining lavatory and direct garage access all add up to housekeeping ease. JOINED BY DOORS The formal living room-dining room arrangement also is planned for up-to-date living. The rooms are joined by doors which can slide into the wall, if desired, and create an expanse of 33 feet. Sliding glass doors lead from the dining room to the screened porch, for outdoor dining under cover. The living room, whose main attraction is a fireplace wall built of the same stone used on the exterior, also fras an 8 foot pair of sliding glass doors leading to the rear patio. ★ ★ ★ k| Upstairs, all four corner bedrooms are of good size, have plenty of closet spa.ee (more than 3d lineal feet total) and are served by two full baths. There are n<> less than four closets, plus a dressing room, in the master suite. Below, the recreation i lures a 14-foot stone wall and sliding glass doors leading to a lower terrace. The third room on the lower level makes an excellent out-of-the-way den or hobby room. level pton J54 Statistics A four-bedroom split love 1, containing 1,997 square feet on living and sleeping levels, 1,025 square feet on the lower level, 005 square feet in garage and workshop, 135 square feet on the screened porch and 227 square feet on the cov-vered portico has over-all dimensions Of 85 feet wide by 41 feet deep. DEAL DIRECT With BUILDER All Types of Remodeling • ATTICS RECREATION ROOMS • ADDITIONS • KITCHENS • PORCH ENCLOSURES • ROOFING • ALUM. SIDINQ • ALUM. DOORS and WINDOWS • HOUSE RAISING Custom Built IMAGES G&M FHA No Down Payment' Up to 5 Yoon to Pay CONSTRUCTION COMPANY Build in p in Pontiac Since 1945 «5« , FE 2-1211 01x10 Highway Operator* on Duly24 Hour* Daily HOWTO BU.ILD, BUY OR SELL YOUR HOME Full study plan information on this architect-designed House of the Week is included in a 50-cent baby blueprint. With it in hand you can obtain a contractor’s estimate. You can order alao, for M. a booklet called YOUR HOME ~ How to Build, Buy or Sell it Included in it dre small reproductions of 16 of the moat popular House of the Week issues. Send orders to House Plans, The Pontiac Press, P.O. Box 9, Pontiac, Michigan. Bpdosed is IB costs for boky blueprint m i design J-H □ 0 j Enclosed Is |1 for YOUB HOME booklet □ j New Furniture of Ductile Iron Very Ornamental Among the newest products in furniture are ornamental French Colonial chairs made of ductile iron instead of metals traditionally considered lighter. New foundry techniques and in due- Variety of Uses Can Be Found for Laundry Tubs Even though the home laundry is equipped with an automatic washer, there is still need for laundry tube. ★ ' ★ * Besides being used for soaking clothes, says tee Plumbing-Heating-Cooling Information Bureau, laundry tube also serve as a convenient cleanup area for children and home hobbyists. They also are useful for cleaning and scrubbing various household items. SEE WEINBERGER I Ml MOMU SILVER LAKE ESTATES NOW OPEN FOR INSPECTION , 321,900 A lovely family hams with quality features throughout. Natural fireplace, gea H-W heat, 3 bedrooms, basement, 1 Vi baths, ceramic tile, wet platter, full face brick, large lot with lake privileges, paved streets, city water, " stormy end screens. EASY TERMS SILVER LAKE CONSTRUCTION CO. Model at 1745 Huntington Park Drive 2 Block* lest of Silver Lake Road, jest eff Walton Bhrd. « BEDROOM HOMI 24x4 84999 PLUS TAX NO MONIY DOWN TOWNSEND-SWIFT PONTIAC RockceU PAINT STOCK ROCKCOTi FAINTS, WALLPAPERS 2 South Case PI 1-7129 Fer True Economy Use top Quality PITTSBURGH PAINTS Pittsburgh Paints Exclusively far 40 Yean ip /v PONTIAC GLASS 23 W. Lawrence SL, Pontiac. Mick. PR 5-R441 Front All of to All of You . As the tlrad Old Year bows out and the bouncing Now Year bounds buoyantly in,... the time is rip* for us to wish you and yours all the bast things of lift in 1963 . . . good health, great love, high happlrwss. ROSS HOMES, Inc. “The Builder That Makes a House a Home” OR 3-8021 FI 4-0591 tile Iron metallurgy have made possible thin Iron sections as light as other metals — and with cast iron’s durability, strength, and superior decorative details resulting from Its fluidity in casting. Live in Beautiful BEVERLY ISLAND ONLY *21,490 Including WATER FRONT LOT ON YOUR LOT Bsvsrly Island OAKLAND CONSTMCTHM CO. Models Open 1 to I P.M. 334-0212 GIANT 8x20-FT. CARPORT Buy NOW at terrific WINTER SAVINGS # Protects Your Car v# 100% Rustproof • Adds Beauty to Your Hortii •Pay 'Pennies a Day (Demonstration in Your Own STERUNS FREE INSTALLATION No Obligation , CALL NOW FE 4-4507 ENCLOSURE Patio Division nmmimummmmmm* Br l / V-v- -4 THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 29, 1962 THIRTEEN IT'S HAPPENING MATINEES 1:00 P.M. Sat.-Sun.-Mon.-Tue$. Arrest Students . Police Soy MSU Pair Carrying Barbiturates CLARKSDALE, Miss. (AP) -Two Michigan State University students who said theywere carrying food, clothing and drugs to 'destitute ,Negroes in rural areas were held by CJarksdale police 'yesterday On charges of possessing barbiturates. The youths were arrested when officers came upon them sleeping in a s t a t i o n wagon early: Thursday. ■ Police identified, them as Benjamin J, Taylor, 21. of Camden, N.Y., and Iyanhoe Donaldson, 21, of New York. L ★ * ★ Officers said they found the students parked in front of a drug store operated by Aaron Henry, president of the Mississippi chapter of the National Association for the ^dvancement-of Colored People. Henry said the NAACP and other organizations were sponsoring the program to bring emergency supplies to N e g r o farm' families left destitute in the winter months. Taylor And Donaldson made their trip into Mississippi from Lodisville, Ky., Henry said. A group of students at Louisville organized the shipment, Henry said. An earlier shipment, brought into Mississippi by the students,! came from Michigan, the stu-j dents said. ,“I don’t know what prompted; the arrest in the first place,” i Henry said. “They found the medicines after rummaging through the truck.” Fifecrtickers Discouraged in Both Berlins (API — Police on both sides of the Communist wall are trying to discourage the old Germanmistom of blazing away with fireworks on New Year’s Eve. ’ The reason: exploding f i r e-crackfers. sound like gunfire and could be'mistaken for the flare-up of'Vborder lncident; rocket bursts lopk like flares that the East Germans fire when escape attempts are made. So the East - Germans have banned fireworks anywhere within about 100 yards of the Red wall, The West Berlin police have barfed fireworks anywhere. What! A Texas Ski Lift? AMARILLO, Tex, (UPI) - A ski lift in Texas? You will find one at Palo Duro Canyon state park in the upper Texas Panhandle near Amarillo. It is used to lift persons at a time from the park’s stream level to a scenic plateau 650 feet up overlooking sd .wilderness area. DTI Rail Co. to Buy Ann Arbor Line WASHINGTON (JB - The Detroit, Toledo & Ironton Railroad Co. received Interstate Commerce Commission authority yesterday to buy control of the Ann Arbor Railroad, a 293-mile line between Toledo, Ohio, and Frankfort, Mich. The transaction will involve purchase of 99.9 per cent of Ann Arbor’s outstanding common stock from the Wabash Railroad for $3 million. Ali three.firms are subsidiaries of the Pennsylvania Railroad. Italy's Top 1962 Wag® Reported at $500,800 ROME (AP) — Giomanni Age-nelll, whose family founded thei Fiat automobile works, iso u t front as Italy’s biggest individual money-earner, for 1962. Reports published so far show, he had an income for the year of 288 million lire ($500,800). He is expected to give up about 90 per cent in national and local taxes. r NESBitt * DAvmswiFT BtMd on thi book "Om Oopp«H« Utftlwf by {RICH KAS1NER « RiImm4 •» WtNA VI8M OllWlNltlOH Co. IN. MEfedTOBifei ttMS 0*> book "0»» Oopp*ll« Iqttchwi" by KASINtR ~ w EAGLE; LAST TIME CHARLTON HKSTONh “THE PIQEON THAT TOOK ROME1* ALSO ' “RINQ-A-DINQ RHYTHM” Pontiac Theaters EAGLE * Sat.-Tue.: “Parent Trap,” Hay-ley Mills, color; “Magic Boy,” color. . Wed.-Hiu.:' “Gone With the Wind,” Clark Gable, Vivien Leigh, color. Starts Fri.: “Tales of Terror,” Vincent' Price, Basil Rathbone; “The Anatomy of a Psycho,” Bonnie Burns. HURON . Sat.-Thu.: “Spiral Rbad,” Rock I Hudson, B(irl Ives, color; “Es-j cape From East Bferlin," Don Murray. - Starts Fri.: “If a Man- Answers,” Sandra Dee, B o b b y Darin, color; “Deadly Companions,” Maureen O’Hara, color. Eighteen states impose some! The 19th amendment adopted form of literacy test to qualify in i920 provided voting rights for IF YOU WANT T0.3AVE 25% ON THAT ADDITION READ THIS AD... FRIE PLANNING-NO OBLIGATION 92 W. HURON—PONTIAC H Mximir !/Girls! Open 6:30 P.M. ELECTRIC IN-CAR HEATERS-FREE! PRESSURE POINT f Girls! GirlsI TECHNICOLOR* TOMORROW l A GIANT DOUBLE-BARREL LAUGH JAMBOREE in mm IP ^^TpriVATE EYE V * 38 : to Gain Big City Triumph Burklow, R. Hayward F Pace Northern Win Before Full House -----By JERECRAIG-------- What was becoming a basketball tradition in Pontiac may have ended last night on the court at Pontiac Northern High School when the Huskies outplayed crosstown rival Pontiac Central, 62-59, in a tension-packed contest. For the first four years of the series, Central could be counted on for a decisive victory and normally produced the same. But last, night the Chiefs couldn’t withstand a strong PNH rally in the last four minutes and fashioned. fralllng 5242 with less than half a quarter remaining, PHN scored It points to the Chiefs’ two and earned its first win in ' V nine starts against PCH. ZZ Northern’s last eight points- • came on foul shots with Jerry Reese giving the Huskies the lead, 5847, with two shots which were followed by Dayne Thomas’ only two points to ice the decision'at 60-57. Reese added two more free . throws with approximately 20 sec-t onds remaining, but Gerald Hen-7; ry offset those with layup for * Central. " . HIT FREE THROWS Charity tosses were the deciding factor in the contest as PCH unofficially hit 26 of 60 field goal attempts to only 20 for 49 on the Huskies’ ledger. PHN, however, converted 22-28 .foul throws to 7 of 18 for the Chiefs. Both teams were called for 18 personal fouls but Northern * ■ took advantage of bonus foul shots to overcome the Chiefs’ field goal margin. A standling-room crowd saw the visiting team jump into an 8-2 . lead and stay on top until early . in the second quarter. Trailing 16-12 at the end of the first session, the Huskies hit their first three shots in the second period to take an 18-17 margin. a a ♦ Sparked by Roger Hayward’s 10 points and Mike Burklow’s nine, PNH hit nine of 18 shots in . the quarter and ran to a 33-28 •; halftime margin. The Chiefs were saved in the opening half on a • 16-point performance by sharpshooting Mel DeWalt which kept them close to the homesters. Early in the second half, Northern grabbed a 38-27 lead on a foul toss by Gary Hayward, Oakland County’s leading high school scorer. PCH began a long climb back, however, and when G. Hayward had to sit out a few minutes’ play with four personal fouls, 4 h e Chiefs harrowed the gap. ; Entering quarter number four, ■ the scoreboard read, 44-43, but this one-point lead by Northern . evaporated quickly. Switching tactics from the sharp outside shooting that characterized the first 20 minutes of play, PCH coach Art Van Ryzin had the Chiefs driving on offense ‘ and these tactics paid off as Henry boosted the Orange and Black 7 into a five-point lead in the final < stanza. / PCH RALLIES The Central forward hit five SPREAD OUT — Eight players were spread out in the night but it was the two others who were together, Mike.jJurk-low of Northern (12) with ball and Ernie Pickett (25) of PCH, who drew, the refprpo’a attention Pickett was detected fouling on the. missed shot and Burklow converted both attempts for a 43-33 lead,by PNH. Packers Favored____Y by 7 Over Giants NEW YORK iJB - Green Bay’s crunching power game and sticky - fingered pass defense majce the defending champion Packers a one-touchdown favorite over Y.A. Tittlh and the go-for-broke New York Giants in Sunday’s Natiohal Football League title rematch at Yankee Stadium. A roaring, sellout crowd of 64, 892 will jam the stadium at pric-892 will jam the stadium. Millions will follow- every play oif network .NBC television and radio, although the New York metro- politan area will be blacked out on television. Game time is 2:05 p.m. EST. ★ ★ a With an estimated $600,000 for the radio-TV rights, gross receipts of about $1.2 million could bring each winning share over $6,000 and each loser $4,000 plus, both records. Few expect a repetition of the 374 rout of last New Year’s Eve when the Packers practically chased the Giants into the snowbanks surrounding Green Bay’s frozen City Stadium. NO LUCK - High-scoring Gary Hayward (50) of PNH slipped away from the tight guarding of Gerald Henry (41) of PCH on this particular play last night but found Central’s Ray Sain (45) backing up his teammate. Hayward missed this shot and all the others he tried from the floor'but was an important factor in the rebounding phase of play as Northern posted a 6249 victory. Central’s McKinley Jones (55) is in the foreground. ‘/field goals In the fourth quarter land coupled with McKinley Jones’ rebound work, had the Huskies’ reeling. Then, two unnecessary shots by the losers gave the home team the break it needed and the finishing heroics ensued. The game may have been the making of sophomore Roger H $ y w a r d for Northern. The young forward with the fine shooting touch played exceptionally well throughout, both with his shooting and rebound work. He hit 19 points but ylel-ed team honors to backliner Burklow who scored 21, including nine for nine at the charity stripe. \ * Reese had 11 points with four of] them on pressure - packed free throws in the last two minutes of play. A . DeWalt was outstanding oil offense with 11 buckets for pCH but fouled out early in the quarter. Henry had 11 of his\l5 in the final quarter and, in addition, stopped Gary Haywarf without of field goal and onlj seven shots from the floor. Hay- ward did play a strong rebounding game which helped the PNH attack considerably. The winners now have won four in a row after an opening loss. Cenfral is 1-4 for the year. The rivals meet again Feb. 12 on the PCH court. PONTIAC PON CENTRAL l«) NORTH! Local Skater Winner George Chapman of Pontiac made his speed skating ability pay off last night with two victories in competition at Detroit’s Cobo Hall. "• .......«;■*! The 11-year-old skater captured both the 220 and 440 events against competition from Michigan and Ohio. Warriors Score Victory 'Back Home' ly The Associated Press iy booed when the San Fran. Warriors came home to idelphla. t the catcalls changed to, •s Friday night as the War-, who moved from Phlladel-to the West Coast this sea-scored a 124-117 victory over Syracuse Nationals In a inal Basketball Association Other NBA action, the Boston ;s cuf off a Cincinnati rally von 121-113. The other teams idle, although th* Chicago yrs picked up a new coach, s Chicago team dismissed McMahon and replaced him team captain Bob Leonard. Zephyrs are in the cellar 0 .» V ' Hodimad Crodook NY Pro Football Fans Stuck With Radio Only NEW YORK (UPI) - It’ll be .R.O. — sorry, radio only- — for New York sports fans who don't hold tickets to Yankee Stadium but who want to follow Sunday’s National Football League championship game between the Green Bay Packers and New York Giants. * a ; a A federal judge yesterday upheld the N.F.L.’s blackout TV policy when he refused to. Itft the local television ban on ithe game. Judge Edward Welnfold held that relief from such restrictions should come from Con-grepj and not from the courtly . ’ ’ X . TUB PONTIAC PRESS. Y; • ' ■ '• V SATURDAY, DECEMBER 29, 1062 I T SIXTEEN* THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, DEC' Jones, Andonian, Moore Lead Highlights Top Sport! Stories of 62 in Pontiac Area Who were the top names in sportsf What were the top stories in the Pontiac arm and Oakland County during 1982? Here’s how they would rate as the top 10.' 1. Hayes Jones — unbeaten in-• doors, sets two world records for indoor track. t. Mike Andonian — wins state amateur championship, later city medal play title. ; 3. Monroe Moore —in national TV spotlight for 18 weeks on “Make That Spare.” —4. Psatiae PBA Opea—? first pro bowling tonrney ever held In Michigan held at 300 Bowl. I. Pontiac Central — No. 1 class A team until beaten by eventual state champion Saginaw. 8. Messiers — brother and sister, Nancy and Harry win TneWr^womenV state wahjr ski championships. 7. Leon Hibbs — county open tennis champion. , 8. Sue Welch — crowned world roller skating champion in Australia. 9. Rowing regatta —tint ever to be held inland on Wolverine Lake by Wayne State crew. II. PNH — scores first basketball victory in 5-year history . over Pontiac Central, 82-59. *■i"1’*'1—W.-.'wh..- - Jan. 21 — Monroe Moore of 300 ' Bowl staff stretches winning streak to four on national television bowling program “Make That Spare,” earnings reach 14,000. ~ Jan. 21 — Pontiac Kennel Club’s . winter dog show awards The Pontiac Press Best-in-Show Trophy to Ch. Margand Lord Baltimore, an English Setter from Mt. Carmel, UUnois. Jan. 22 — Pontiac Central’s basketball team voted top team in the AP state Class A weekly poll by one point over Saginaw. Jaa. M - BiU Boll hitr first sanctioned 300 game while bowling in Lakewood Lanes Wednesday Men’s League. Jan. 28 — Saginaw bombs PCH, 70 • 48, in battle of top-rated Class A teams. Feb. 4 - Glenn (Fireball) Roberts sets Daytona International Speedway qualifying record by driving Pontiac stock car 158.044 miles per hour. Feb. 11 — Women’s team representing Huron Bowl .finishes sixth in a field of 48 at the National Women’s Team Championships near Pittsburgh1 led by Dorothy Aldred and Shirley Pointer. * , s * Feb. 9-19 — Hayes Jones of Pontiac wins 24th and 25h stralgh indoor hurdles events over two year span at the Philadelphia Inquirer Games and Los Angeles Times Indoor Games on successive nights. Feb. II — “Mo” Moore increases earnings to 821,000 on “Make That Spare” show by winning for seventh straight time. Feb. 11 — Sheila and Jamie Young of Birmingham and Paul Mehl of Southfield cap- ture state speedskating, titles at Alpena. Feb. 18 — Harrison Munson from PCH tallies 25 points in his best performance for the University of Detroit as the Titans whip Notre Dame, 104-87. Indoor high hurdle events during two-year period. Aar. 3 “Mo” Moore beatemsi “Make Tahe Spare” by Milt Molhousen of Tulsa, Oklahoma, With winnings of 823,250 during 16-week stretch. Mar. t—Pontiac City Commis- Jain. S ■— ‘Final w«x»k)y state AP sion honors Hayes Jones after ex-Central athlete sets American indoor record of eight seconds for the 70-yard high hurdles While winning..27 straight poll plac'd* PCH eighth in Class I A,i Northville second in Class B, Capac first and Imlay City third in Class ».v •* SSiM * MIKE ANDONIAN Medal Champ State Amateur and City CHUCK LOWTHER County’s Top Gridder HAYE8JONES World Indoor Marks Mar. 22 — The Press announces All-County basketball team, including Rudy Ranson (PCH), Dan Brown (Northville), Hank Akin (Troy), Bill Chilton (Royal Oak Kimball) and Jerry Olsen (Rochester). Coach of the Year is Dave Lqhgridge of Northville. Apr. 8 — Pontiac Parks and Recreation Department names Felix Brooks of the Class A City League championship 300 Lounge team as the division’s Most Valuable Player and re-—cipient of the Pontiac Press Trophy. Apr. 3 — Harrison Munson of Pontiac and George McDaniel of Holly are named cocaptains of 1962-83 University of Detroit basketball team. May 4—Sid Britton sweeps Pontiac Table Tennis tournament in men’s singles, doubles and mixed doubles. May 19-A1 Watrous, Hal New-houser elected to Michigan’s § Hall of Fame. a- ® May 29—Bloomfield Hills wins Pontiac Pross Prep golf tourha-- r men t at Pontiac CC with 398 total, June 4—Northville wins first Oakland County baseball tournament at Jaycee field, beating Southfield 1-0. June 15—Bob Gajda of Forest Lake paces Michigan golfers Jn National Open with first round 75. July 1—Mike Andonian wins state amateur golf championship at Jackson’s Arbor Bills, -defeat-ing Bud Stevens 1-up or 19th-. July 22 — Nancy Messier and brother Harry take top honors in state water ski championships at Oxford Lake. July 22—Art Hudnutt of Elyria, O., wins Western Amateur at Orchard Lake CC. July 29—Leon Hibbs takes men’s title add Sam Walker IH Junior title in county tennis tournament. July 22 — Zadah DeBolt wins Pontiac Women’s medal play tournament at city course for 7th time. AUg. 4—A crowd of 6,200 watch Lions scrimmage under new lights at Wisner Stadium. Aug. 5 — Pontiac skaters, from Roiladlum win national team championship for 8th straight year. Aug. 0—Doug Treats, former PCH cake star, drowns in lake near Clarkston. Aug. 12—Murlel Pace of Pontiac is Women’s Michigan shotgun champion. Aug. 19-Carmen Salvino of Chicago wins PBA $25,000 bowling tournament held for first time in Michigan at 300 Bowl. Aug. 19-Bob Thiefels is all guage Michigan state skeet champion. Aug. 28 — Mike Andonian is city medal play golf champion for 6th timo with 137 total. Sept. 1 —, Spencers Floors is first softball team to retire the Waterford Class B traveling trophy in 20 years. Sept. 3 Joy fair driving a 1983 Pontiac fiiiiahed 9th in 250-raile race at State Fair. Sept. 4 — Bartley brothers (eke Pontiac Parka and Recreation horseshoe League Titles. Sept. 4-n Shelby 01! of Rochester cops Class D honors in State softball tourney at Owosao. Sept. 5 — Jerry Hesse of Sno- East-West Clash SAN FRANCISCO (AP)-It.was ’Johnny bar the gates and anything can happen” today as a stir-studded East team sought revenge for last year’s 21-8 upset against hero-studded West team in the 38th annual East ■ Shrine football classic. West MONROE MOORE Make That Spare Champ player in recreation'department softball.' Sept. 5 — Norman Hamilton of Clarkston wins Press Big Pish Derby- bass division; Ride Cut an of Berkley enters biggest fish; Top Rainbow honors taken by Fred Reixjell. Hubert Alexander of Pontiac won Blue GUI division. / Bent. II — Pontiac Team of Gc-lumbus Burton, Charlie Barker, Harold Daniels and A. K. Burton phis Paul Bade win Michigan Recreation Association golf honors. Sept. 11 — Pontiac Council of Knights of Columbus regained state K of C Golf Championship. Sept. 19 - St. Mike defeats St. Fred in footbaU tilt, 21-0. Sept. 18 — Former PCH Track star Hayes Jones listed on world trade record. Sept 21 — Pontiac Northern wins grid opener against Kettering, 19-0. Sept. 23 — Fred Kammer and Mrs. S. E. Gawne win Bloomfield HiUs Country Club golf Most oddsmakers rated the contest a tossup, hut some made the West a one-point favorite on the basis of a slightly heavier line and that appeared to be a top notch pasa-catch combination. In drills this week, West quar-terback Sonny Gibbs of Texas Christian frequently found the waiting, hands of Washington [ State’s Hugh Campbell. Also the West had on caU such speed burners aS UCLA’s KSrmit Alex-. ander, Washington’s Charlie Mit« chdi and Nebraska’s. BUI Thorn-m. On the East side, Notre Dame’s Daryle Lamonica was slated for the passing chores. He waS hacked up by,such bruising running backs as Michigan State’s George Saimes, Iowa’s Larry Ferguson and Purdue’s Roy Walker. , Or Coach Jack Mollenkopf of Purdue said he'felt the East could mount a better running attack this year -than it did last year even with such greats as Ernie Davis and Bob Ferguson. '• $ '' *,? Missouri’s Dan Devine, who headed the West team, was, equal- LEON HIBBS County Singles Champion RUSS RANDALL Beit In Deer Derby Sept 27 — A1 Berkeley presented with Pike Memorial Award as the most valuable player in Pontiac BasebaU. Oct. 11 — Pontiac roller skater, Sue Welch, crowned. World Champion to Australia. Oct 21 — Wayne State holds first “ regatta on any inland water in 125 years at Wolverine Lake. Nov. 11 — Joe Hay of North-vilie is top county grid scorer with 93 points. Nov. 13 — Mark Foils of Union Lake takes honors in the heaviest class of the Pontiac Press Pheasant Contest while Louis Giordano of Pontiac wins longest bird division. Nov. 19 — Chiefs defeat fired-up PNH gridders, 14-0. Nov. 20 — Chuck Lpwther of Royal Oak Shrine chosen as quarterback of class B All-State eleven. Nov. 24 — ’02 AU-County Football team chosen with Bob Me-Eireath of Troy as coach and Lowther as Outstanding player. Dec. 8 A- PNH swimmers dunk Chiefs, 53-52. Dee. I — Russell Randall of Rochester wins Pontiac Prow Big Buck contest with 242-pound deer from UP. Dee. 9 — Monroe Moore, 300 Bowl Pro finishes 6th in Atlanta Professional Bowler’s Association tourney. Dec. 18 — Pontiac Northern and Hazel Park wrestle to a 55-55 tie In Northern Invitational. Dec. 20 - PNH Matmen defeat Central. Dec. 23 — E. C. Richards and Jack Chambers take top honors in Bowlerama finals at Airway Lanes. Dec. 21 - PNH defeats Pontiac Central In basketball, 62-59, for first time in 5>year history. DETROIT (UP!) - The Detroit Red Wings have summoned left wing Bo Elik from Edmon-tori Of the Western Hockey League to fill in for the injured Val Fonteyns. Elik, S3, wiU be In Detroit’s lineap tonight against the Canadians at Montreal. Fouteyne was injured at Toronto Wednesday Bight when he Wl* crashed into the boards by Dick Duff of the Maple Loafs. The Red Wings will also have the services of goalie Terry Saw-chuk and Marcel Pronovost against the Canadians. Sawchuk returned to Detroit eftor the Terento game with an intestinal disorder. But he recovered quickly and left Imre late yesterday to rejoin the club. College Results. tUr CNjr « MnK Fir«( Send Detroit 101, Oeorietewn, D.C. 11 Dopoul M. weatem Mich, to. OT 3 Cage Powers in Tourney Finals By The Associated Press Out of a staggering total of 00 basketball tournaments—some big and some so tiny you’d need a map to find them—three of the ranking teams in the country— Loyola of Chicago, Illinois and Arizona State—will shoot for major titles tonight. Loyola, the nation’s highest scoring team, rolled over Mem-phis State, 04-82. in the semifinals of thq All-College Tournament at Oklahoma City and will meet Wyoming for the crown. Jerry Harkness led the Ramblers, No. 3 in the current Associated Press poll, with 26 points. Wyoming advanced with a 85-84 decision over Oklahoma City. TV GAME Illinois, No. 4 downed New York University, 91-84, after trailing by 13 points at the end of the-first half. The undefeated Illinl will play West Virginia, 94-82 victor over St. JBonaventure, in the final in Madison Square Garden that Will be televised nationally. Arisons State, once beaten and No. 6 in the country, clashes with Canisiui in the final of the Queen City tournament in Buffalo, N.Y. Both were idle Friday. But the mad whirl will stop abruptly after tonight’s games. All tee tournaments fill be decided and the teams Will prepare , tor the serious business of conference races starting next week. . Two of tee big ones were sett tied Friday night when Georgia Tech edged Florida 63-61 lit the final of the Gator Bow] Tournament in Jacksonville, Fla., and Miami, Fla., squeaked past Pitt, 86-85, in the windup of the Hurricane Tournament in Miami Beach. Both Georgia Tech and Miami still are undefeated. Sophomore J. D. Craddock dropped in two free throws 4 seconds before the end to enable to Yellow Jackets to win. Miami, too, won from tee foulfline, hitting on 28 of 31 free throws. UPSET Mississippi State, No. 18 in the rankings, dropped a 78-76 decision to Houston in the Sugar Bowl Tournament in New Orleans. Houston will meet undefeated Auburn in the final, which was won by Mississippi State last year. Auburn came from behind in the last 4 minutes to whip Xavier of Ohio, 64-57. Duke, No. 8, and striving to pro-»t its ranking after two straight losses, turned back Princeton, 85-74, with Jeff Mullins dropping in 28 points. * ★ ★ Here are tee semifinal results of some of the major tournaments: Action Hot in 'Y' Loop The nqw facilities at the 'Y1 had their first real workout lari night as Macedonia Baptist dropped a 83-39 defeat on First Congregational and Trinity Baptist outpointed First Baptist, 57-22. Both Trinity and Macedonia are undefeated in four starts and are knotted atop tee YMCA cage standings with identical 4-8 records. In other action All Saints took a 43-28 decision from St. Paul Methodist to clinch tee runner-spot (34). HIGH SCORERS High polnf honors for the night went to two Central Methodist cagers, Steve Lyons and Ed Irwin, who netted a total of 84 points, 32 apiece, to' pace their; team in u 96-28 rout of Oakland Park Methodist. High man for Ail Saints was I Gene McCurdy with 26 while St. Paul Mothudlst’s Bob Robinson garnered 11.' ★ Macedonia high point, honors went to Roy Hudson (38) while Congregational’s top man was Kip Lsnaway with 20. Bobby Simmons gathered in 11 and Dennis Burrlil nine for Trinity and First Baptist respectively.: Sports Calendar Collftf* C»| • ftt u. of ta.. Red Winy* at M RtlNDAY \ Fro Coco Los Atjyeles A* 1 Roiladlum Ini Mmai /nv National i Roiladlum at Montreal Datrol Brigham Young 81, Providence 78 and St. Joseph’s 59, Villahova 64. Villanova was tee defending champion. Big 8 at Kansas City — Kansas 61, Iowa State 61 and Kansas State 52, Oklahoma State 44. Kansas State is seeking an unprecedented third straight crown. Motor City at Detroit—DePaul 91, Western Michigan 98, in overtime and Detroit 103, Georgetown 92. DePaul still is unbeaten, Far West at Portland, Ore.- Iowa 62, Oregon 48 and Oregon State 58, California 86, WCAC' at S^an Francisco-San Jose 65, Santa Clara 82 and St. Mary’s 83, San Francisco 82. Poinsettla at Greenville, S.C.— Vanderbilt 88, Clemsdn 58 and Futynan 76, Army 88. In other major games, Southern Methodist tur'hed back Tulsa' 73-71; Dayton vanquished Dartmouth 62-45, Tennessee Tech halted Mississippi 81-71, East Tennessee defeated The Citadel 84-61 and St. Louis beat Northwestern 69-52 for third place in the Los Angeles Classic., Well, Bill Bridges took a night off and look what happened to the Kansas City Steers. Bridges was sidelined with a knee injury Friday night as the Steers put their 18-game winning streak on the line in an American Basketball League game against third-place Pittsburgh. The Rens grabbed the opportunity and knocked off the league-leaders 12-93. In the only other game scheduled, the Chicago Majors ended a four-game losing streak ABL Leaders Beaten Gadsby Fined Total of $275 While extending the Tapers’, losing string to seven. The Steers led at 52-50 in the third quarter before the Rens came on behind the shooting of Connie Hawkins and Jim McCoy. Each scored six points as tee Rens outscored Kansas City 14-1 point and broke it open. Hawkins wound up with 37 points, McCoy 18. tony Jackson and Herachell Turner combined for 13 straight points as the Majors, leading by only 4&41, piiilnH away agnlnat tea Tapers- Jackson scored nine of the points and wound up with Dave Gunther was the top scorer for the Majors with 20 points. MONTREAL (D-President Clarence Campbell of the National Hockey League has fined veteran defenseman Bill Gadsby of the Detroit Red Wings 8200 for lis part in an. altercation during a game against the Rangers in New .York Dec. 16. The Rangers won 8*2. . Gadsby argued with referee John Ashley after Andy Hebenton scored for New York at 17:27 of the third period. He was given a 10-minute misconduct penalty and .0 match misconduct., As the misconduct penalty carried an automatic 825 fine arid the match misconduct $50, the additional,fine imposed by Campbell brought the total strike against (Qadsby’s pocketbook to $275. \ • )\ ty confident. US. Bpat Nips Aussies SYDNEY, Australia 2 to 5 tomorrow afternoon in the Knights of Columbus Hall, 30755 Southfield Road, Birmingham. ★ ' ■ ★ ★ This will be the second such event. The first tea held in October was so successful that foreign students expressed a desire for repeat meeting. ' The outgrowth of,the tea s outgrowth of theMissionaires Scholarship Fund which supports young woman student from Trinidad at St. Mary's Academy, Oxford. At Mtesionaide headquarters, 1130 Myrtle St. another young girl is here from Trinidad on a visitor’s visa, Rosetta LaCaille. Four other students from Trinidad are attending Wayne State University, Maygrove and Madonna Colleges. AU foreign students and their guardians are invited. More than 250 students from University of Detroit, University of Michigan and area colleges and high schools are expected. * * „ ★ Among foreign students in Pontiac on the American Field Service are Preakash Ratnatarkhi from India who lives with the Ward Ross family at 255 N. Berkshire; and Gracieila Llosa of Argentina living with the Charles DeVIieg family on Porter Lane. A program will be presented t the tea. Mr; Cayton died Thursday at Pontiac General Hospital after an illness of one yeaF. His body will be at the Frank Carruthers Home from 7 p.m. today Mr. Cayton has teen in the county-eight months. Me is survived by his wife, Rachael. Surviving children are M. C. Cayton of Chicago, IU.; Mrs. Mel-ma B. May, also of Chicago; Cor-nelious of Detroit; Clophaine of New Orleans, La.; Mrs. Thebna Harris, Arnette and Nelson Cayton, all of Pontiac. Surviving sisters are Mrs. Anna Belt Harper of Hazel Hurst, Miss, and Mrs. Hattie Wallace of Laura, Miss. HARRY J. GALLAGHER Service for former Pontiac ident Harry. J. Gallagher, 78, of St. Petersburg,. Fla,, will be a.m., Wednesday in the Shrine of the Little Flower, Royal Oak, with burial in Mt. Olivet Cemetery. The Rosary will be recited at 8 p.m. Tuesday in the Wessels Funeral Home, 23690 Woodward Ave.; Pleasant Ridge. His body will be at the funeral home at p.m. Monday. Mr. Gallagher died on Christ-mas Day in St. Petersburg, fte was a former stage manager for the old State Theater in Pontiac and a member of St. Vincent de Paul Catholic Church. Surviving are his wife Frances E.; a son Harry J, Jr. of Pleas- 8 p.m. Sunday at the funeral Purse Snatcher Gets 60-Day Jail Sentence Frank B. Clay, of 362 Fremont t., was sentenced to 60 days in the Oakland County jail and placed on two years’ probation yesterday for stealing a purse containing (3 from a woman in Bloomfield Township last Clay, who pleaded guilty to unarmed robbery Dec. 10, was sentenced by Circuit Judge Fred; erick C. Ziem. The Present Standard of Funeral Service ., . . ... Is the result of your desire for something better than our forefathers knew. Donelson-Johns service has improved steadily through the years. Not only our equipment, but our knowledge and understanding have grown. The material things, the Funeral Home, our funeral coaches, and our exptft staff have gradually been built to their present high standard Patience, tact, courtesy, and consideration are personal factors that are old-fashiOneS here, but have also improved with time and experience. troll’s Harper Hospital after a rtef illness. He was retired sales manager of the Ward Baking Co. and member of the J. L. Hudson Post ! the American Legion. Survivors include a daughter, Margaret Ann Wyke of Detroit, and three nephews in Pontiac. MRS. BIDDEN BAILEY IKTONVILLE — semen Mrs. Birden (Ella M.) Bailey, 64, of 670 Sands Road will be 2 p.m. Monday at C. F. Sherman Funeral Home, Ortonville, Burial will be in Seymour Lake Cemetery. Mrs. Bailey died yesterday in Pontiac General Hospital of heart attack. Surviving are two daughters, Mrs. Thelma McGrath of Royal Oak and Mrs. Lillian Strochkirch of Clarkston; a son, Morris Hag-ler of Pontiac, and 10 grandchildren. MRS. WELLS BEAUREGARD ROCHESTER — Service for Mrs. Wells (Lucille) Beauregard, I, formerly of 420 Taylor St. will be at 3 p.m. Monday in the Rich ardson-Bird Funeral Home, Wailed Lake. Burial will follow in Avon Township Cemetery. Mrs, Beauregard died yesterday afternoon after an illness of 10 years. MRS. VINCENT BOBOWSKI . WALLED LAKE—Service for Mrs Vipcent tAgnes) Bobowski, 58, of 2650 Carmel St., Ann Arbor, will be 10 a.m. Monday at St. William’s Catholic Church, Walled Lake. The Rosary will be recited at a sister; and two ant Ridge; brothers. WILLIAM H. HAMILL Service for William H. Hamill, 73, of 190 W. Columbia Ave., will be 1:30 p.m. Monday at Huntoon Funeral Home. Burial will follow in Perry Mount Park Cemetery. Mr. HamUl, a retiree of GM Truck and Coach Division, died yesterday at his home of a heart ailment. Surviving besides his wife, Voda, are two sons, Stanley Sr. of Lancaster, Calif., and George of Wichita, Kan.; three sisters, Mrs. Fannie Johnson and Mrs. Edith Levely, both of Pontiac, and Mrs. Maude Ragsdale of Battle Creek; one brother, Floyd Clyde; four grandchildren; and 10 great-grandchildren. ' IRA A. KLEINER Word has been received of the death of former Pontiac resident Ira A. Kleiner, 64, of 3903 Ray-mert Drive, Las Vegas, Nev. Service and burial were in Las Vegas Mr. Kleiner died in the Sunrise Hospital, Las Vegas, after illness of four years. He was a former employe pf Folrd Motor Co. in Highland Park and a member of St. Vincent tie Paul Church. Surviving are his wife, Bess; son, Joseph, of Detroit; and three sisters. STANLEY MASON Service for Stanley Mason, 68, of IBB Prospect St., will be held at 3 p.m. Monday at the William F. Davis Funeral Home, with burial in Oak Hill Cemetery. He died Wednesday. Mr. Mason had retired from Pontiac Motor Division. Surviving is a brother. BRENDA MORRIS Graveside service for Brenda K. Morris, infant daughter of Mr. land Mrs. Woodrow L. Morris of 4607 Woodhull Dr., Waterford Township, was held 10 a.m. today With burial in the Drayton j Plains Cemetery by the Coats Funeral Home. She was dead at . birth Thursday. Surviving b e stdTltirprents are three brothers, Woodrow Jr., Wallace and Thomas; and a sister, Norma, all at home. Also surviving are grandparents Mr. and Mrs. Uiaah Morris and Mr. and Mrs. Whlller Dew, all of West Virginia. MRS. E. VAN NORDSTRAND Funeral service for Mrs: Emma Van Nordstrand, 89, of 2291 Central St., Sylvan Lake, will be held Sunday afternoon at the Cronrath Funeral Home, Watson-town* Pa. Her body was at the Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home following her death Friday. Surviving is a daughter Mrs. Ralph Cromls, with whom she her l;ome; five grandchildren and eight great-grandchildren. ,J. WILSON WYKE Service for J. Wilson Wyke, 67, formerly of Pontiac, will be 2 p.m, Monday at Sparks - Griffin Funeral Home. Burial will be in Roselarid Park Cemetery, h-Mr. Wyke died yesterday in De- home. Burial will be in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery. The body will be at Richardson-Bird Funeral Home, Walled Lake. jilrs. Bobowski died yesterday at University Hospital, Ann Arbor. Survivors include two daughters, Mrs. Joseph Purtzenski of Walled Lake and Mrs. Robert Ly-jak of Ann Arbor; a son, Staff Sgt. Donald Bobowski, U.S. Air Force, stationed in New Found-land; two brothers, John Kaczor and William Kaczor, both of Novi; and eight grandchildren. ARCHIE R. CAVERLY ORION TOWNSHIP - Service for Archie R. Caverly, 40, of 2985 Judah Lake Road, will be held 11:30 a.m. Monday at the Huntoon Funeral Home, with burial in East Dayton Cemetery. He died Friday after a three-month illness. Caverly had been employed by the Pontiac Motor Division. Surviving are his wife, Mary; his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Norman Caverly; and three daughters, Mrs. Grace Hoffheins of Pontiac, Mrs. Marjorie Joseph of Auburn Heights and Marion Caverly at home. Abo surviving are nine grandchildren; three sisters, Mrs. Gladys Baer of Pontiac, Mrs. Jessie Morse of Clio and Mrs. Helen Kelley of Caro; and four brothers, Norman of North Branch, Alvin of Clarkston and George and Clayton, both of Pontiac. ROCK R. FRENCH AVON TOWNSHIP — Service for Rock R. French, 81, of 1220 W. Auburn Road was to be held this afternoon in the Pixley Funeral Home with burial In Pontiac Township Cemetery, Mr. French died yesterday at his residence after a long illness. STANLEY H. GOULD CLARKSTON — Service for Stanley H. Gould, 81, of 0503 Dartmouth, will be 3 p.m. Monday in Huntoon Funeral Home with burial in Perry Mount "wk Cemetery. Mr. Gould died yesterday in Pontiac General Hospital after Illness of two months. He was employed with the Rich Sign Service. Survivours include his wife, Leona; two daughters, Mrs. Arthur Stottlemyre of Pontiac and Mrs. Grant Sheley of Cjarkston; six grandchildren; and a brother. HARRY A. LaFORTUNE | LAPEER—Service for Harry A. l.a Fortune, 67, of 350 Peninsula Road, Deerfield Township, Lapeer County, will be 1:80 jr. Tuesday. The body will be at Baird-Newton Funeral Home, Lapeer, after 10 a. m. Tuesday. Mr. LaFortune died yesterday in Florence, Ariz. Burial will be in West Deerfield Cemetery. Surviving are his wife, Ethel; two daughter, Mrs. Wilfred R. LaFond of Barnes Lake, and Mrs. Corinne Crawford of Mesa, Ariz.; and seven grandchildren. Mr. LaFortune retired from CMC Truck & Coach Division in Pontiac In 1957.. WALTER V. LaPLANTE CLARKSTON - Ser v ice for Walter V. La Plante, 58, of 0150 Overlook St., will bo 11 a.m. Monday at Our Lady of the Lakes Catholic Church, with burial ii Lake view Cemetery by Sharpe-Goyette Funeral Home. He died Friday after an month illness. Mr. LaPlante had been a bartender at the Pontigc Surviving beside his wife Evelyn b a son, Walter of Saginaw; a daughter, Mrs. Richard White of Waterfoyd Township; and eight grandchildren.. Abo surviving are three sisters and three brothers.^ _ the Rosary will be said 4 p.m. Sunday, and an Elks Lodge of Sorrow at 8 p.m. MRS. JENNIE E. MARLOW LAKE ORION - Service f o i Mrs. Jennie E. Marlow, 73, of 974 Highlander St., was to be held 2 p.nw today at Alton’# Funeral Home, with burial in Eastlawn Cemetery. She died Wednesday after an illness of two weeks. Surviving are three daughters; Mrs. Otto Knotts, Mrs. Phyllb Heddrick and Mrs. Leslie Taylor; and two sons, William H. and Edward F., all of Lake Orion’. Abo surviving are 10 grandchildren. PROF. A. P. PIWOWARSKI ORCHARD LAKE-A Requiem [fgh Mass will be sung at 11 a.m. Monday in St. Mrfry’s College Chapel, Orchard Lake, for Andrew P. Piwowarskl, professor emeritus of Latin and Greek at St. Mary’s College. Burial will ba in Holy Sepulchre Cemetery. Professor Piwowarski’s body is at the Wujek Funeral Home; 17301 Van Dyke, Detroit. He died Friday night in St. Mary’s Hospital, Livonia, at the age of 85. Professor Piwowarskl, who lived in the Orchard Lake Seminary, was a member of the faculty for 40 years. Before that he a*u g h t at Alliance College in Kingbridge Springs, Pgi A native of Poland, hie came to the United States in 1902 after re-ceving his education in Europe. Cyprian of Lansing, tyl., survives. Robbers armed with a hammer, a knife And club up two mdtorbts and their passengers within 30 minutes early this Harley Harner, 41, of 116 Euclid St. told Pontiac police that he and hb passenger William M. Grower, 23, of 685 Northway Drive from their car by four men while waiting for a traffic light at Franklin Road and South Boulevard. -He said they were threatened with a knife and hammer. Harner said he had $163 taken from his wallet and Crower, $65. At 5:10 a.m., just 25 minutes after, the first robbery, Wayne Conners, 31, of 12 Sheridan Ave., Roy Neunian, 39, 2101 N, Woodward Ave., were flagged down by a man white they were driving on West Hughes Avenue. JUMPEDlBYFOUR-Conners, the driver, said when they stopped they were jumped by the man and three others, one of them carrying a hammer, ill-other, a large club. The four escaped oii foot with |80 from Conners and 116 from Neuman. The robberies "occurred within three blocks of each other. MRS. CLARENCE E. PRICE ROCHESTER - Service for Mrs. Clarence E. (Emma) Price, 70, of 3274 John R Road will be :30 p.m. Monday in the Pixley Funeral Home with burial in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery. Mrs. Price died yesterday in St. Joseph Mercy Hospital after brief illness. She was a member of St. Paul Methodist Church, Rochester Relief Corps, Blue Star Mothers and the Grandmother's Club. Surviving are a daughter Mrs. Eva Kerchofer of Rochester; three sons, Ralph of Rochester, Stewart in Florida and Richard of Toledo, Ohio; seven grandchildren; and a brother Arthur Grothers of Hastings. ROYAL II. WOODLEY M E T A M O R A-Service for Royal H. Woodley, 57, of 4507 Thomas Road, wjll be at 1:30 ,i. m. Monday in the Muir Bros. Funeral Home, Lapeer. Burial Will be In the Metamora Ceme-j protest tery. Mr. Woodley died yesterday In Pontiac General Hospital after illness of a few weeks. He was an employe of Pontiac Motor Division. Surviving besides his wife, Wilda, are three sons, Jimmey of Lapeer, Alpheus of Metamora and Jerry at home; two daughters, Mrs. Olive Fuller of North Branch and Vonda at home; two sisters, Mrs. Frank Stenzel of Imlay City and Mrs. Mabel Megram of Ferndale. Also surviving are a brother Ralph of MetamorS, and 10 grandchildren. Robbers Strike Twice at Cars *■ * Hammer# Knife# Club Threaten Motorists Four Ate Injured When Two Cart Crash Head-Ongr Four persons were injured thb morning in a head-on crash on Highland Road in Waterford Township. 3 L.W * tyjjt n oI both-care are. hi satisfactory eeadttiea at Pen-tiaef General Hospital, They are Edward Hieatt, 47, of 1231 Naacyweod St., and Mrs. John Kraase, 49, of Delnrft. in the accident and Mrs. Kraase suffered facial lacerattoos. Mrs. Kraase’s two passengers, her daughter Karen, 18, and Michael Bartnik, 20. of 1793 Sycamore St., Royal Oak, werp treated at the hospitM l^ininorT injuries and released. Hieatt was alone in hb car. ★ ★ ★ .. V, Waterford Township police said that the collision occurred when Mrs. Kraase skidded into the other car while applying the brakes to make a left turn. ★ ★' ' ★ The accident occurred about 7:25 aim. near Pontiac Ltk Road. Three Women Hurt When Car Hits Tree Three women were injured thb morning when their car skidded on ice in Pontiac Township and hit a tree. In fair condition at Pontiac Osteopathic Hospital are Minnie A. Sawyer, SI, of 127$ Sil-verbell Road, Orion Township; Julia West, 35, of 744 St. Clair St., and Margaret Wolflagton, 42, 640 North View Court, both of Pontiac. ' The extent of their injuries is not yet known. The . accident, occurred at 7 a.m. on Auburn Road near Doris Road. Sheriff deputies said the car was travelling about 40 miles an hour when it went out of control. Reds Rap, but Pay, Back Tax on Estate GLEN COVE, N.Y. (AP)-The Soviet government has paid more than 123,000 in back taxes owed this Long Island immunity rather than face loss of the lush estate it owns here. Mayor Joseph Reilly of Glen Cove picked up two checks drawn on Chase Manhattan Bank and totaling 123,132.06 in payment of back taxes on the sprawling estate known as Killenworth. Reilly said he picked up the checks at the United Nations Mission headquarters, where an American diplomat said the Soviets made the payment under News in Brief Dorene Shelton, 25, of N. Edith St., reported to Pontiac Police that 180 was stolen from her apartment yesterday. Thieves stole 135 from Loren-1 i’s Shoe Repair, 514 S. Saginaw _i„ after gaining entrance by| removing a window covering at the rear of the building, the owner Lorenza Farrar, 49, reported to Pontiac Police yesterday. Three Others Charged Sentence Armed Robber Thomas Kabala, 26, of Lincoln Park, was sentenced to 7V4 to 25 years in prison yesterday for his part in the kidnap and holdup Sept. 5 of Royal Oak gas station chain owner J. J. Levy. Kalbala, one of four men arretted for the crime, pleaded guilty to armed robbery Dec. 10. He was sentenced by Clr-mlt Judge Frederick C. Ziem. Another of the four, James E. Wilson,' 27, of Lincoln Park, pleaded guilty to armed robbery Dec. 20 and will be sentenced by Judge Ziem Jan. 15. The other two — Joseph Lon-car, 35, of Lincoln Park, and Joseph Welch, 38, of Hazel Park - are awaiting trial on kidnap and armed robbery charges. Their hearing that began he-fore Judge Ziem Dec. 18 was declared a mistrial when attorneys for Loncar and Welch challenged the judge’s impartiality because Levy had contributed to one of his past political campaigns. A new trial is expected to begin Jan. 22 before a visiting judge from another county. The four were accused of taking Levy, owner of Oakland County Gas & Oil Co. from his home to i station at gun point and forcing him to open-a safe. Death Notices *ijviisijjS vllle: m* U: dear mother of Mr,. Thelm* MaOrotb. Mr,. Lillian fitrockklrch. and Mori, Hotter; 1 ,urviv«d by Un_jrrandebll- Walted Ltk,. Funeral ai ba hald Monday, _PMbnoar >i, at. 10 a.m. at at, William, catholic Church, Waited Laka. Interment in White Chapel Cemetery Mrn. Bobowski will Oa In Mate et the Richardson - Bird Funeral Home, Waited Labe. CAYTON. DKCIMBKR 11. toil, •-“-l ill F'-- — ■ — — -- ?'of RaohaSrCayton; of Mra. MaTmaJl. and Nelson Cayton: dear brother of, Mrs. Anna Bell Harper and Mrs. Hattie Wallace. Funeral aervloe will be held Wednesday. - 7:30 p.m itiat Cbui Ice and burial on Sunday, January I. Mr cayton will lla In atate at the Frank, Carruthere Funeral Home alter 1 p.m. today-caverly, DtcnmfR u, iftt. Archie It a v, 3916 Judah Lake Rd , a«« 49: beloved husband of Mary Caverly: beloved eon or Mr. and Mrs. Norman Caverly: . d a a r father of Mrs. Ctrece Hoffheins. Mrs. Majorle ------h lledya Beer, Ira. Helen 1 o ° wived oil d Clayton Caverly; .j survived by nine irandebu-dren. Funeral service will |m Monaay, j-------- ... _ a.m. ai the Huntoon ,__________ Home interment to Bail Dayteei Cemetery. Mr. Caverly will lla la atate at the Huntoon Funeral OOtfLD, DECEMBER M. iiST Stanley H.. HH - Dartmouth. Clarkiton; tee 61: beloved husband of Leona Oould; daw father of Mra. Arthur iJoaa) tteitte-.nri Mrs. OrSbt (HMliil brother of Jaek ------------------------ Will be at. at i Oould ' Funeral service Will "Si . Oould wlU lla la i Huntoon Funeral HAMILL. DKCEMBERF ll, ISM, William H., 190 Wail Columbia; aia 13: belovtd husband of Vodo Srand ^^orie^AemllL^Jear MW®. Hsesdaie, and Floyd HamUl. Funeral service will be held Month/ ^^wi^oeT^HomeffiU y Mt. el‘Ron PLANTE*.' DECEMBER W, 1963. Welter V (Rusty), 6160 Overlook. -teHcetoni^ije^M^belloved hue- ’Other°o( MreJRIehard While and Vetter W. LaFlante: deer brother n Mrs. jack Uvenson, Mre. Jaok n of tl !a Sunday JteMun- Sanre', _&• -jiii he held Mon>. member 61. et 6 p.m. St intern F. Devle Funarel rltli Rev. T. H. Holt ojWj ■V. tfr.mffot6onl will He in t the William F. Davit MORRIR DECEMBER,.. 36 19«, Baliv Brenda Kay. 4697 Woodhuli Drive. Drayton Plaint; beloved Infant dauthter of Woodrow Lae end Mery Ellen Morris: deal-sister ot Woodrow Jr.. Wallace, Thornes end Norma Fat Morrle: dear arenddeuahter of Mr. end a I Drayton Plaint Cemetery. Dreylon. Plato,. Arraneements were bv’the Coen Funeral Home. Drayton Plalne. . oilELL, DECEMBER 96 1063, of Pontiac; tee 66; beloved husband of rinrollne Odell; beloved son of Mrs. Addle Odell: dear • father of Mr., Roberta Anderson, curl. Charles, and Donald Odell; dear brother of Mrs. Louise Spit-lor. Mrs. oladve Bueekru*. Mrs, Orlol Hadfleld, and Myron and Paul Odell; alto survived by ten, grandchildren, Funeral eervlce w.lU be hald Monday, Deoamber 31 at 1:30 p.m. at the D. E. rurally Funeral Home with Rev. Lae Latent offlola)lB|. interment to Perry Mount Park Cemetery. Mr. Od e ll r ^ jr ■ jvoe, srams, sews usnirsi Street, sylvan Lafttl MW III dear mother ol lire. Ralph crpmUi also survived by five arandchil-dren and elihl area! - irandohl)- 1 dren. Mre. Van Nor detrend, was takid to Uie Oronjatb Funeral Home in watsontown, Pennayl-vantt for eervjoo and burtef^un . wifitk. OgfrtMRER M. (Ml, J. Wilson. EvMttoo. Home,. patrolt; ■ ate 91: dlaF father of Marearet ’"-kdi a‘" “ • - Funeral Roma, jstermanl *jn CLOSE DOWNTOWN I Franklin Blvd. at M Lor-Ct,. la nut tine ibedroom _M tu rooma are otntroua In (IN. hat batht. hat private SaMurs prloe 111.100. mo ut or your own IacFTIoveland ^ mm 3-BEDROOM TRI-LEVEL 4^^995—$1000 DOWN lllMIH lOlW Highland Hd. (MSB) ffl TWENTY Salt MiKtlhiMMf ___. ilk «r 0RNAI4ENTAL IKON POfcCh AND ■faWrB»eS&B3S; mm. - 47 ms-~MhMrting D«p • CHIHUAHUA 8TUD I ; drafttog omci /desks $34.so: files *30.60; secretarial chairs JUgj executives chairs *34 60 -* . tables *13.00; , storage ........ *37.40; W*W portable typewriters *4*. *6: adding machines, shop part* cabtonto. tninaocrapb machines. onset press, coat, racks. FORBES, 410 Frank Bt , Birmingham. MI 7-S444 or 4400 Dixie Hwy., Drayton Plain*. OR 14747. OutW BOARDED. poos TRAnnrip. Dare Grubb's Kcnnc1- ** ““ of ■■■ ______ FE MHL H k ss a n SHEPHERD WJPfBf AKC Res ■ $4S: MA 6-2904._____ PARAKEETS. OIMRANTBED istt. PLUMBING BARGAINS: FREE > standing toilet, 114.41; 30 gal. heater,'”*43.06 : 3-plece bath sets, *10.95; Flberglas laundry Iray. trim ■ *19.91; 31-in. Shower still, trim, •34,44; 2 bowl sink. £.94. • SAVE PLUMBING CO. The Ploor Shop 3293 Elisabeth L BM08LS8S STEEL DOUBLE C< partment kitchen sink. $23 95 M Igan Fluorescent 393 Orchard L •TAUOggE STEEL SINKS ( WITH faucets. *1995 with snrav. O. A. mpsop, 7908 M-59. 4^LBOT3^LUM&£R-- Glass Installed la door* and wln-10» OaMapd AX*. FE 4-4591 ~ TRE salvation Xrmy RED SHIELD STORE 119 WEST LAWRENCE Everythin* to meet your needs. Clothing, Furtatore. Appliance*. We ratse.tbem. V House. -»» First PaRakSsts. CANAWES, caoM, tropical fish, aquarium suppltj*. Poodles, dippings. Crane s Bird Hatchery. 2489 Mjburn. PL 2 220$, POODLES nun. . re. aa. FE s-llll REGISTERED ;. GERMAijiSHEP-herd male, 625-0661. \_____ Auction Sales #0 AUCTIONS. 7:3b P M. WEDN^ j - v i 111 AUCTIONliALES 1 EVERY FRIDAY ’ 7 30 P V. EVERY SATURDAY 7 30 HI EVERY SUNDAY 2 oO P M. I jbft TwH* Sputa. ~ _ ■ tnw SPACES. PONTIAC MOBILE 1 TSdme Park. 214 E. Walton. he -Artulrudt ’ ft GRINDING IN THE car. Cylinders rabered. Zuck Machine Shop. 23 J ---------“ ■MM*. | ’ iMarcrtWii r; ' _ 15 19SS HARLEY DAVIS. A-l CONDI- I TEARS EXPERIENCE IN SELL-Ins quality new and used bikes. Scarlett's Bicycle A Hobby. Shop ■SO E. Lawrence ■ j ' " Boots—Accetiories Livestock CIRCUMSTANCES YEAR-END SALE Brand New '62 Boats Thompson 17.ft. lancer Skee Cfaft 17 ft. Volvo Ffw *«2 Evlnrude Motor* LOW BANF^ RATES—WF TRADE WALT MAZUREK'S LAKE & SEA MARINA S. BLVD AT SAGINAW SUMP PUMPS. SOLD. RENTED, repaired. COnes Rental. FE B-6642 Ok' PAYMENTS $3.61 PER ■I fX."*! “ 5-9407 Capital Sewing 19 TO.... j n'ew singer sew-. tag ^oacbln*^ call singer Sewing I UiSd FURNACE FOR 8ALE..EX-osllent condition. FE 4.52*7. WAREHOUSE CLASSIFIED AD ON PTl.. Lswl* Furniture, 8. (again* w. Hand TooU-Machiiwry 68 1 BRIDGEPORT MIIX-1^H0R8E- Ip Shaper^" mi^htnes*' factory filo&rlbed and In good condition. CLEARANCE s toboggans, guns, bar ___. Is 71 BALDWIN ABRO0ONIC SPINET. Piano, *394- Bench and cartage lieludMl. >■ MORRIS MUSIC 344. Telegraph Rd. FE 1-9147 - Across from Tel-Huroh .Year End Clearance of AH---- FLOOR MODELS PIANOS AND OROANS , SAVE MONEY! Lew Betterly Music Co. MI 4-4092 _ , Acrow froi^Blrmln^ham^Theater * HioRRIS MUSIC "j* ,homWJT.l-HU??nl'0M7 J HOW DID IT GO? Mow that Christina* la over did you receive your favorite musical Prime Beef-Road—«nd~Rlb-Steak* 250# halves While Paee 39c $97.50 or 125# V« lor 949.50. or choice Black Angus i 45c. '/* 49c. All Orders cut We also wrap and i quick mers,1 CHRIST flower older. MARS . Now c POTAT< W. 811 ' Open 84. MAS OREENS. PLANTS. 1 a, poultry, Irnah eggs, baked honey, vegetebtoa. apples, eto. OAKLAND COUNTY 1ET. 2350 Pontiac Lake Road, .pen Saturdays from 7:00 a m. I n.m. PE 3-9073. )B8. $1.25 A BUSHEL. 335 Iverbell Rd., out Perry. Farm Equipment 67 SPECIAL PRICES ON NEW AND Used spreaders and loaders In our great January clearance sale. We finance and trade. Hartland Area Hardware. Phone 2511 HertTend. iGrinnell's Pre-Inventory Sale ’ot Pianps and Organs ne oak, 1377, now $619 Mahotan c 3795 Hsy--GMiii—fssd ^ 84 SECOND CUTTTNO^ ALFM.FA. NO. Poultry ' , ■ 35 YOUNO HENS^FOR SALE. Fn7mProdsct ____________86 FED BEEF, to FARM RICHMOND M Store. 4979 Hlg... Waterford Twp.. ........._ airport. Ph. OR 4-1440., Chrlsl and New Year. Special: B Angus Cuts. • 5# Steer T. Bone 21* Rib Steska 0* Best Roasts 20* Stewing B< i delicious. 71* s JOHNSON MOTORS Star Craft boats and Oator trailers Everything for the boat. OWEN’S MARINE SUPPLIES LATE MODEL FARMALL CUBS WITH SNOW BLADES KING BROS. E 4-0734 FE 4-1112 PONTIAC RD. AT OPPYKE McCULLOCH CHAIN SAWS PRICED AS LOW AS $149.95 CREDIT TERMS - WE TAKE TRADES. USED CHAIN SAWS PRICED AT 175. KING BROS. E 4-0734 FE 4-1112 PONTIAC ROAD AT OPPYKE [EW IDEA. ONE-ROW CORN PICK-er. rebuilt. Davl* Machinery Co.. OrtonvUle, NA 7-3392. Tour John Deer. New Idea. Oehl and Home-llte dealer Also Winnebago Camp-eri with or without plckupa, ■; GALLAGHER’S 11 K. Huron FE 4-0966 tjpurHui Suudt 74 BROWNINO OUNS, ALSO USED |unr Bjn m a n Hardware. FE graph . Buy—Sell- Trade P BOIL. CRUSHED ATONE. °d'rSir<>a CRASHED STONE. SAND. ORAV- st. Earl Howard. EM 3-0511._ dob O' DRfVEWAY GRAVEL 6 yards, *4 delivered. FB 4-6684. Waud-Coai-Coks-Fuel 77 them snd get * demonstrs-st Werner Trailer Sales. 3098 Huron (plan to join on* of ly Bysm'a exciting caravans). HwMtralltrs 19 NEED A MODERN MC home. Quirk cash deaf MY I 10x51^ FOOT PONTIAC CfflWF.^SEV-- lor lurnltur*. Call after 4, FE 2-7028. __ ioai general soxio. like new Will aaerlfle*. call *44-1084 days. FE 1-3361 evenings. 1918 HOY CRAFT DELUXE MOBILE ARE YOU Florida Bound? Then you can’t Afford to miss THIS DECEMBER SALE Entire- Stock Travel Trailers ' REDUCED 14-FOOT TO 29-FOOT ALL SELF-CONTAINED Ellsworth Auto Sales 5177 Dixie Hwy._ MA M40 Year-End Clearance Festival ^ OXF'OiU) TRAILER . SALES Vagabond' 60 Units on I Jispla' PINTERS MARINE MR. OUTBOARDER , Br sure you're The Boat Rider -Not (he Boat (Watcher). JLeft a 1370 N. Ondyko M-24 FB 4-0921 Wanted Cnri-Tmta 101 $$ TOP DOLLAR $$ ----FOR---------7 Clean Used Cars fERQME ''Bright Spot" rd Lake at Caaa E 8-0488 , BUYER OF JUNK "ALWAYS BUYINO”___. 49JUNK CAR* - FREE TOW41 TOP Ml — CALL Ft 1-1143 i BON INC. BHAnr liAIH vn«« Averill's 3929 DIXIE HWY. $25 MORE ■at hlgh^grad^ used 4140 &Xl4 Hlghwa; pUT-STATE MARKETS F'xtra Top Dollar FOR LATE MODELS M&M MOTOR SALKS Marvin MeAnnaUy^ owner JUST N. OF FON^AC 1>RIVE-IN 2127 PIXIE HWY. )R 4-0301 OR 4-0399 OIT MY OFFER” RURSlNC not. I'll big. 398-1940. 339-1 HI DOLLAR JUNK CARH trucks. FI 3-9999 days, svsnlngs CARS 'AND~fRPCKB. WRECKS OR JUNKERS. |k>YAL AUTO PAT v THE PON New end Used Truck*. 103 [Ac press, Saturday. December s • NO RATE ; INCREASE,. ‘ No Membership Fees $11 QUARTERLY $25,000 UabUlIy. $1,250 medical. *29-900 uninsured motorist coverage. Low rate* for collision, road aery-Ice. Including FREE map and B^MMETT AGENCY __.O INSURANCE FOR ANYONE NICHQLIE * HARDER CO. u 14 W. Huron Bt. FE 1-S143 CANCELED? REFUSED?*' YOUNG DRIVER Over 10 yrs. experience Insuring Canceled and Refused Auto Local Service — Terms FOR INFORMATION CALL FE 4-3535 FRANK A. ANDER80N, AOENCY Foreign Can 105 1958 HILLMAN^ HUSKY, 4 8PEED “7958 i-lillm; IRAO- L LIQUIDATION . $397 BLACK VOLKSWAGEN. 950 PEUOOET 4-DOOR SEDAN. 4-cyllnder. 4 speed transmission, sun chrome lugkasa earner, - ‘ Extra cnarp. Only Terms. JBROME- ROME- FERGUSON. Rochester' F er. OL 1-9711. _______ TODAY’S SPECIAL *57 Carmen Ohla, coupe, red an< black, whttewalU, radio, heater Today only 9945. WARD-HTcELKOY.Inc. I Used Cart 106 PUBLIC NOTICE 1M1 Tempest 4-door, straight stick, needs *ome body work. $«95 Full pries. No money down. LUCKY AUTO SALES. "Pontiac's Discount Lot.'" 193 g. Saginaw 81. PE 4-2214. 1992 &UICK ELECTRA CONVERT-■rtrt .......-At—sacrifice. $2,000 seat.*11 (!*» <,&t^5fl. 1 TINY TERRIER: 3 TOY piiodlss. Stud sei'vloa. NA ' " -u J MINIATURE' rooDLE. SfOO. OR 34771, FE 44S10. dAOLtti. salI. fitWi iund. 1443 Oskflsld. bii mAutfsf kittens' MS Mt. Clemens, OR .1-121 FALL SALE up to 9400 off list price Trotwood. Oarway. Laytron. Wa-Wa . and Hblly. Also man GLENN'S , 042 West Huron St. Fg 4-7371 FE 4-171 WANTED: iM-’SI CA*tS Ellsworth” AUTO SALES 5577 Dixie Hwy. MA 5-140(1 Hew awd Used TwKb 103 tons OMC t4 TON PICK UP. * foot box. hydromatle, red and while Will b* sold with or without utility boxes Cali after 5, FE 4-0050, TTU'D J J_li_li "Your Authorlaed Dealer" OLIVER BUjCK TRUCK SPECIALS 10 CHEVROLET one ton panel with 4-iipeed tranamlaalon* 24,000 mllea 10 CHEVROLET % TON PANEL. Sharp 91.095. ^CHEVROLET Sk ton panel. A-l. 11 CHEVROLET Corvan. • h a r p. WE TRADE-EASY TERMS John McAuliffe Ford Temiqi' i»5TT;hevy pickup. % ton'. Vi it" si Shey'/$995.^ Mansfield Auto 1 <>62 y.\ 'I'on Stake CMC 1950 BUICK LeSABRE 4 DOOR BE-dan. with radio, heater. (Tutomal" full price of only 91195. LLOYD'S FE 2-9131 1M1 BUICK LeSABRE HARDTOP sedan, equipped with automatic transmlssloK. power steering, pow. er brakes. E-z eye (lass, radio, beater, and excellent whitewall tlrax. Original artle white faotory finish with an Immaculata 2 tons blue Interior. A low mileage. 1-owner car that handles and performs beautifully. Our special Christmas sale price of only $l,-005 Includes a lull year written guarantee. We will Arrange easy terms to fit your budget at low new car rates. No payments until next February 11 BIRMINGHAM CHRYSLER PLYMOUTH, 019 S WOODWARD, MI 1-3214, ... 1955 WiCK 1936 CHEVY COUPE. Clean. * ““ Parkhurst Trailer Sale* -FINEST IN MOBILE LIVINO-Featuilng Nsw Moon—Owosso--Venturs — Buddy Quality Mobile Homes. Located ball-way batween Orion and Oxlord on M34. MY 9-4911. SHORTS MOBILE HOMES Good used home .type trailers. 10 *^tC*NT, (j °*cJm"Ve't!« •TOP IN AND SEE , The "All-New” 1963 FANS. FRANKLINS. CUKES. BILL1 SPENCE Rambler-jeep " *' M,YlA 5-5861 “ “°' •fok PICKUP Lixe new. no money down. $795 hill price. LUCKY AUTO SALES. "Pontiac's Discount Lot." 193 S. IHC TRUCK TRACTOR. MOD-No. 145'. good rubber, prloed >700. King Bros. FE 4-07.14__ Better. Used Trucks GMC ,. Factory Branch 0A*Wl&CAU » BUICK. 2-DOOR 1961 Chevrolet I.MPALA 4 DOOR HARDTOP m "rTr"..... . Motors r steering. Power brakes. ■awl. MY 2-4793._____________ CORVETTE 363. POWEROLH PS™ MARMADUKE By Aitderson & Leemine' " s Naw w>d Und Cars 106, FORD. LOW-COST BANK LOAN -your'1 new iliac State - I-watched-Laththie wif you . Cowboy Bob wif me! r,. yo|l watch Nsw and Used Cart . II CHEVROLET VS IMPALA iardtoph cou^e ^ wtth^orlglnsd er-"id "white Interior, In now car con. Iltton. Equipped with automatic !rabrX,esf°«dfo,WheatM amf 'wElte- ileased with thl°*Uline car. and our ow Christmas sale price ot only 11,796 Includes a full year written arms to fit your burget rt953 CHEVR 300R 106 j New and Usad Cars 1956 CHEVY,_CLghAN, N 650 Mt. Clemens Street FE 4-9975 1966, 1955. 1969 CHEVYS, 1959 Dealer. EM 3- 1991 CHEVY IMPALA, TAKE O Tiupts. FE 2-0393. V R O L E T. AUi'OMOl "Pontiac’s Saginaw St 54 CHEVY ! | DOOR HARDTOP. $150, FE 2-9004. 384 Alberta. __________ 659 CHEVROLET 4-DOOR STATION WAOON, •RADIO, HEATER, AUTO. TRANSMISSION. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Assume pay- 1954 CHEVY. 2-DOOR. V8 ENGINE, stick shift. Excellent condition, $197 full price. NO MONEY DOWN. Call Mr. Davis credit manager. UNIVERSAL AUTO credit WmanagerIOIMr. "wLlte **! KINO AUTO SALES. 115 8. Sag- an CHEVROLET IMPALA CON-vertlble ^^wUh ^jower # steering, ghie,. and^|u.st^llke brand new Clarkston Motors 45 Dixie Hwy._____ 674-1400 PATTERSON CHEVROLET For a real good deal. 1000 s. Woodward Ave Birmingham____ Ml 4-37. 1954 CHEVY 4, NICE CAR. FE 3-7542 H: Riggins, dealer._ 1959 CHEVY 4-DOOR. REAL NICE. ___106 i RUST. 1955 CHEVY NOMAD 8TATION 1958 Chevrolet Biscayne V8 Automatic. Sharp I $795 "DEPENDABLES” KESSLER'S DODGE I N. LiM«r Rd. Oxfa or &A fr! -GOOD—BAD-NO CREDIT? WE ARRANGE AND -HANDLE ALL CREDIT BUY HERE-PAY HERE! ..UNIVERSAL--- AUTO -312 W. Montcalm Il6w mB Used Cart OLDS 1 J961 FORD WAGON Needs a little work, but a good family car. Good .dial lor quick iXls.^BpoUtt* Building CO.; FE 1992 COMET 4-DOOR MBDAIA WITH radio, heater, whitewalls ahd ex- ^*SoH?I McAULIFFK FORD 530 Oakland AV9-_________FE 5-4101 Clef! r NICE. Bi 42. H. Rlgf OLIVER BUICK 1942 BUICK Special 2-door — BUICK Invlcta Convertible BUICK Special 4-door BUICK Skylark 2-door 1942 BUICK .Special Deluxe , 1982 BUICK invlcta Convertible t942 BUICK Skylark 2-door 1942 BUICK LeSabre 2-door 1941 CHEVROLET Parkwood Wagon - - BUICK Special Wagon BUICK LeSabre 4-door __BUICK Eiectra 5-door I960 BUICK LeSabre 2-door 1960 BUICK lJ>Sabre 4-door .nan crnauhRn.R 4-ri 1960 OLDSMOBILE_'98” 4 1959 CHEVROLET Bel-Alr 4-dour— 1959 BUICK Eiectra 4-door 1959 BUICK Le8abre 4-'*“' ---BUICK "75” Her OLIVER BUICK , 150 fl . Unlvr ‘Tu ^T"D- ^Sr 4-DOOR. conditioned, like ‘fe 2-3336. 958 PON*riAC CHIEFTAIN with radio, heater, automa-. --.-mts'ton. power steering with $wo down and assume payments of $47.15 per month. LLOYD'S Lbicoln-Mnrcury-Comet Meteor-EngUsh Ford 233 8. Saginaw St. FE 2-9131 958 FORD CONVERTIBLE. SHARP, Crdlo*'°iwtln's m ^ ,y *j W; ■ ,> ij:;' * j TONIGHT 1:11 (2) Main Event-Rocky Marciano U) East-West Game (In Progress). (7) Wide World of Sports (In Progress). (9) Popeye and Pals 0:30 (2) Highway Patrol (4) Surfside 6 (7) Casper 7:90 (2) Death Valley Days ______(7) (Color) Beany and Cecil ' (9) Scdtt Island 7:30 (2) Jackie Gleason (4) Sam Benedict (7) Gallant Men (9) MacKenzle’s Raiders 8:00 (9) Road to Confederation 1:10 (2) Defenders (4) (Color) Joey Bishop (7) Mr. Smith Goes to Washington (9) Ski Instructions 8:41 (9) Ted Lindsay ( 0:00 (4) Movie: “Desperate Siege." (1951) " (7) Lawrence Welk (9) Hockey: Maple Leafs vs. Black Hawks 0:30 (2) Have Gun-Will Travel 10:00 (2) Gunsmoke (7) College Basketball: Last half of Holiday Festival Tournament championship game. (West Virgin)* vs. Illinois.) 10:15 (9) Juliette 10:45 (7) Make That Spare (9) Sports 11:00 (2) News (4) News ______(7) News ___________ (9) News 11:10 (9) Weather, Sports 11:15 (2) Sports (4) Weather (7) Weather 11:20 (2) Weather (4) Sports (7) Sports (9) Changing Times 11:25 (2) Movies: 1. "Come Fill the Cup." (1051). 2. “Double Dynamite." (1951) (7) Movie: "We Were Strangers." (1949). 11:30 (4) Movie: “TheThlr Mwn" tl949). - 11:35.(9) Mpvies: 1. “The Man Who Came to Dinner." (1941). 2. “Black Narcissus." (1947). 7:55 (2) Meditations 8:00 (2) Mass for Shut-Ins (4) Industry on Parade (7) Nuclear Age 8:10 (9) Warm-Up 8:15 (4) (Color) Davey and Goliath. (9) Sacred Heart 8:30 (2) Christopher Program (4) Eternal Light , (7) Talk Back (9) Temple Baptist Church 8:45 (2) With This Ring 9:00 (2) Decisions (4) Church at the Crossroads * (7) Understanding Our World (9) Oral Roberts 9:15 (2)To Dwell Together . 9:30 (2) Detroit Pulpit , (4) (Color) Bozo the Gown (7) Rural Newsreel ... (9) Christopher Program 10:00 (2) This Is the Life (4) (Color) Diver Dan (7) Sagebrush Shorty ' (9) Cathedral of Tomorrow 1:30 (2) Felix the Cat (4) (Color) Heckle and Jeckle 10:45 (7) Changing limes 11:00 (4) House Detective (7) Realm of the Wild (9) Herald of Truth 11:15 (2) Cartoon Cinema 11:30 (2) It b Written (7) Championship Bowling (9) Movie: “Black Legion." . (1937). SUNDAY AFTERNOON Television Features Packers, NY Vie for NFL Title SATURDAY JACKIE GLEASON, 7:30 p.m. (2) Paul Anka and George Jessel are guests. SAM BENEDICT, 7:30 p.m. (4) Adoption hearing interrupted by appearance of boy’s natural mother who wants him back. DEFENDERS, 8:30 p.m. (2) Man claims he shot friend in self-defense, but on deathbed, story is discredited and man charged with shooting in cold blood. MOVIE, 11:35 p.m. (9) “The Man Who Game to Dinner." Easy-going lecturer in public is classic 'artist of studied insult in private life. Monte Woolley, Bette Davis,( Ann Sheridan. SUNDAY* NFL CHAMPIONSHIP GAME, 1:45 p.m. (4) World-champion Green Bay Packers meet eastern division champion New York Giants in rematch of last year’s championship game in New York. MOVIE, 9 p.fl»> (4) “Desperate Siege." Woman and niece asked to get off stage and wait at station when it’s discovered four escaped Millers are in area.1 Tyrone Power, Susan Hayward, Dean Jagger. MOVIE, 8 p.m. (7) “Subway in the Sky.” Doctor accused of murdering wife becomes involved" with night-club singer while trying to elude police. Van Johnson, Hilde-garde Neff. - MOVIE, 11:25 p.m. (2) “Come Fill the Cup." Newspaperman struggles desperately to overcome desire for alcohol. James Cagney, Raymond Massey, Phyllis Thaxter. BONANZA, 9 p.m. (4) Hoss Cartwright disagrees with rest of Jury that’s trying to vote man guilty of murder. (Color). SUNDAY MORNING 7:15 (7) Americans at Work 7:25 (4) News 7:30 (4) Farm Report (7) Festival America 12:00 (9) Detroit Speaks (4) U. of M. Presents 12:39 (2) Washington Report (4) Builder’s Showcase (7) Starlit Stairway 12:45 (4) Municipal Reports 1:99 (2) Camera Three. • (4) NFL Highlights (7) World Adventure Se (9) M o v 1 e: “The Cruel Sea." (1953). 1:30 (2) Movie: “Wsong Number.” (1959). (4) Football Preview (7) Meet the Professor 1:45 (4) NFL Championship — Green Bay vs. New York 2:00 (7) Directions ’63 2:80 (2) Return — Documentary (7) Editor’s Choice 3:00 (7) Issues and Answers 8:15 (2) Changing Times. 3:30 (2) Movie: “As Long as You’re Near Me." (1956) (7) To be announced. J (9) Movie: "Crash of Si- MOVIE, 11:30 p.m. (4) “The Third Man." American writer comes to post-war Vienna and attempts to unravel mysterious circumstances surrounding death of old buddy. Joseph Cotten, Orson Welles, Valli, Trevor Howard. DINAH SHORE, 10 p.m. (4) Jack Lemmon and Cyd Charisse are guests. MOVIE, 11:35 p.m. (9) “Death of a Scoundrel." Opportunistic financier found dead in apartment. Yvonne De Carlo, Zsa Zsa Gabor, George Sanders. 8:00 (2) Captain Kangaroo 8:80 (7) Jack La Lanne 8:55 (9) Warm-Up 9:00 (2) December Bride (4) Living (7) Movie: "Gtlda.” (1948) Part 1; (9) Chez Helene 9:15 (9) Nursery School 9:30 (2) To Be Announced (9) Misterogers 9:45 (9) Friendly Giant 9:55 (2) TV Editorial 10:00 (2) Connie Page (4) Say When (9) Romper Room 10:15 (7) News 10:25 (4) News > 10:30 (2) I Love Lucy (4) (Color) Ptay Your Hunch (7) Girl Talk 11:00 (2) McCoys (4) (Color) Price Is __ (7) Jane Wyman (9) Adventure Time 11:30 (2) Pete and Gladys (4) Concentration (7) Yours for a Song MONDAY AFTERNOON lence." (1558). 4:30 (4) This b NBC News 5:00 (4) Update 5:30 (2) College Bowl (4) Probe (9) Tombstone Territory SUNDAY EVENING 6:00 (2) Twentieth Century (4) (Color) Meet the Press (9) Popeye and Pais (56) Musicale 6:30 (2) Detroit ’62 — Analysis (4) McKeevcr and the Colonel (7) Winston Churchill (56) Challenge 7:00 (2) Lassie (4) Ensign O’Toole (7) Father Knows Best (9) Invisible Man (56) Art of Singing 7:30 (2) Dennis the Menace (4) (Color) Walt Disney’s World -Weekend Radio Programs- (7) (Color) The Jetsons (9) Flashback (58) Guest Lecture 7:55 (56) This LancTIs Mine 8:00 (2) Ed Sullivan (7) Movie: “Subway In the Sky." (1959). (9) Movie: “Hungry Hill.” (1947). T..(56) Music and the Renais- sance. 8:30 (4) Car 54 (56) Time for Living 9:00 (2) Real McCoys (4) (Color) Bonanza (58) Producer’s Choice 9:30 (2) True (0:00 (2) Candid Camera (4) (Color)'Dinah Shore (7) Voice of Firestone (9) Close-Up 10:30 (2) What’s My Line (7) Howard K. Smith (9) Quest 11:00 (2) News (4) News (7) News (9) News 11:10 (9) Weather, Sports WJRITM) CKLW(MO) WWJ(MO) WXYZO270* WCAW(IUO> WPOfUMAS) WJBKtlSOO) WHKIJ>I(»4.7> TONIGHT •wjr, a— .W. WXYZ. I------„ WCAR. Baearalla wpon. Dm sport* WJBK. Robert a. Lee WHFI. NpW» • CKLW. 8*«. Stat* WJR Trend* WPON. O’Nall _ —wjr. Town UMtlnf KLW biv, JIOK, DWtiuv; Aft# DM LOW 5k. Haw*. O Ne l Fl, Ouattlon*. Pl«* -WJR. Broadway rj, Monitor L,w, C. HoLallan CKLW, Pontiac WJBK. Nawa. Worl WPON. Central Mol ..^jrA^Chotr WXYZ. Oirluttan In Aetlon OKIWi How*, Anglican WJBK. Prom lb* People L-WJR. Partr Tta MM. H*W*. 0'H»« HFI, Question!. Pie I—WPOM. Htipi. « I—WJR. MtWl RJ, New* JAR, M*W*. 21* WCAR, Dan Lo«Mt Para n*tla6 SHS.-WJK, WXYZ.' MUilo—Wajn* *U WHFI, Bun, B*«t MM)?. CKLW. Marsh ol Faltn liM-WJR. Maw*. Hymn* pill American nil* CKLW. Church of AI)T( wjnrw „»«. CrUdfUd WCAR, Naw*. Woodlln* WPON. Eolsconal Hour V. Btughey Teb. t Avf Rfeti I, Lutheri N, Lutheran Hour V, Baugney TDDiFD*®*® rJR, JftWR# «*< WJBK Mull* with Word ' Si N—WJR. Hywa. Mualo aCioMroadi Otiur.h Radio Blhl. Bathaad* Tampla ; WJBK, v«la* ol Church / wpon,' ProUdtant Hour / whfi. Maw*, itualo IlM-WJR. Moaoow Mualo WWJ. Nawa, S ns. PUtrim*** >N. Relialon In N .w. oral Roban iM—WJR. Mam. I WWJ. St. Paul i WRY 3; lan Baptist 'orld Ravil Method tat SUNDAY AFTSRNOOH ..*•— wjr. n*w«. Ouaa* WWJ. NtWI. Ljrnkar WWfi JllWSi ujummt WXYZ. La* Alan. Maw* CKLW. Wlndaor Labor whfi. Mow*, Muaie m lita-WWJ. Pro Champ > It*#—'wpon. Mow*. Bun. Boot wknL Loo u| w— WCAR. N*1 Haw*. Muaie tiM—WCAR. Mowo. Logan *:**-WJR. Maw*. Plano WXYZ. La* Alan, New* WJBK Maw*. Dave Mtllan CKLW. Nawa, Staton WHPI, N*wr **“-*- 4lM—WJR. Clebanofl String* WCAR. NOW*. Loaan •ll|—WJR. Mow*. WXYZ, Loo Alan, Nawa wpon. Newa.^Mtoy *«<» WHPI, Nawa.*'Mualo iiia—wjr. Hawaii Cali* WCAR. N«wt."Lo«*ir WWJ, Nawa, Youih Fo wxr* liia—WJR._yi«n<».^ Mu* to I choral* mi ..XYZ, Mualo, WJBK. K*W*. Oav* WHPI. Muiio, Pont. SUNDAY EVENING till—WJR. Mowo. Mualo WWJ. Mowo, Chancellor WXYZ, A Onrtatma* Carol WJBi, New* Anelgn. Detroit WCAR. Haw*. Loaan WPON. Nawa. Sunday Beat WHPI,, Maw*. Mualo . 'Slifc-WJH — — —I, Ni WWJ. Nawa, Melody R*f».-^tadnlohlan* CKLW. wxn. —------ WJBK New*. La# to Nawa WPOM. Catwaraatt* “— WHPI, Nawa, Mual* liM-WJR. lotma „ wwj, Mawa. Monitor CKLW. Word o< L* WXYZ, Sebaatlan. I WPON. Teaoher'e Report Card CKLW. Volo# , Speotrum if Praph M:M—WJR. Mawa. Muila WWJ. Nawa. Marwna WX78. Braakfaat Club »:**—WJR, Newi. Hymn* ^ WXYZ, Arch BUhop Deardon WJBK New*. Concert Hall WWJ. New*. WCAR, Brotherhi WCAR. Newt WPON. Newi. Tlno WHFI. New*. Muilc . itM—CKLW. Kennedy Ci lit**—WJR, New*. Oodfre WWJ, Mawa, Lynkar CKLW, Tim* to Chat WJiK Nawa, Raid WXYZ, Winter wpon. Mawa. Ttoo. whfi, Mawa. Mual* UiM-WWJ. Mawa, Lynkar WXYZ. winter, Mawa CKLW, Jo* Viw WXYZ. Jan Aoad. MONDAY AFTERNOON liiui—WJR. Mawa, Bum — Mawa, Lynkar WWJ, Catholto Hour WJBK Nawa, ttarao whfi, Mawa. Mualo IStM—WJR, Aik Pi-.-WWJ. Bteniar Ufbi WXYZ. Ra»l»al IJm* nao-wjR, Nawa, Spon* WXYZ Meat iwaaaor CKLW, Eldar Morton WJBK, Muaie from Alton WPOM, New*. Sun. Beat WWJ. Maw*. Mual* WHFL Mawa. l&ito • tills—WJR. Muilc 'for* Ml WWJ\ Mawa, Mnalo CKLW, Bit Of Heaven WXYZ. Adlal navanton CKLW. Farm Mart WJBK, New*. Avery WCAR, Newe. -therlde WPOM. Newt, WeitoQ •iM—WJR. Mualo Hall wwj; Mawa. Roberta_____ CKLW, By* Opener, David WJBK, New*. Avery 11*0—WJR Mawa^Mualo Hi IKxyz. Kw*. Wolf CKLW, New*, Toby David WJBK, NtWI, Avery WCAR, N*W* WPON. New*, 01**n WHPI, New*, Muila 7:AO—WXYZ. New*. Wolf WWJ, NOW*, Robert* CKLW, NOW*, David WJBK Mawa. Avery WOAR, 'New*. Sheridan CKLW. Cbri.t. il^WJR^*wi,”l"tory Hour I wwui newe, wiuiim WXYZ. Newi, Wolf WJBK, New*, Avery WPON, Now*. Oleon WHPL MOWir Sport* siSu-wjR Mualo Inattf aafr.sp v:z WHPI, Bua. Howa, Bporto liM-WJR, M*wa. Hand* WWJ, Nawa, Marten* WXYZ. Rato Harvey. Wolf CKLW, Mewe. Toby David WJiK, Nawa, Avery WPOM. M*wa. 0to*n WOAR Mawa. Martyn 111*—WJR, La* Murray WXYZ. Brad Wolf CKLW, Mary Honan WWJ. newe, i WXYZ, Winter CKLW. Nawa, Orant WJBK, Mawa. Raid WCAR, Nawa, Pure* WPON, Naw*, Ttoo WHIT, New*. Muaie CKLW. Jo* Van WJBK, Nawa, Raid WXYZ. Winter, Nawa It**—WJR, New*. Llnklelter WPON, Mawa. Ttoo WCAR, MOW*, Mual* WJIK, Nawa, Raid WXYZ, Wtotar, Nawa CKLW, Nawa, Jo* Van WHPI. Nawa. Mual* ItM-WJR Garry Moor* liH-WJR Nawa. Wood WWJ. Raw*. Hultman WPOM, Maw*. MoLauihlln WJBK, New*. Rohart La* WXYZ, Sabaatlan I*—WJR, N ■ wJ? Mawa, I WJBK flaw*. Lee WPON, Ntwi, MoLauihlln WXV|I. Sabaatlan WHPI,' Mawa, Mutld SiM-WJR. Muila Hall wwj, RmphuUi. Hultman Mi WPON, Hate*, MoLauihlln WHFI. Nawa. Muelo «iM—WWJ, Hmphaala, Bump, rnnh Veer*. Device 11:18 (2) Sports (4) Weather (7) Weather 11:28 (2) Weather (4) Sports (7) Sport! (9) Changing Times 11:25 (2) Movie: “Hands Across the Table." (1985). (7) Movie: “Appointment, for Love." (1941). U:38 (4) Thriller 11:35 (9) Movies: 1. "Death of a Scoundrel." (I960). 2. “Madonna of. the Seven Moons.” (1945). MONDAY MORNING 8:15 (2) Meditations 6:28 (2) On the Farm Fn?n( 8:28 (2) News 6:38 (2) College of the Air (7) Funews 7:00 (2) B’wana Don (4) Today (7) Sagebrush Shorty 7:30 (7) Johnny Ginger 7:45 (2) King and Odie (7) One Step Beyond 1:55 (4) Faye Elizabeth 2:00 (2) Password (4) (Color) Merv Griffin (7) Day in Court 2:25 (7) News 2:30 (2) Divorce Gourt (7) Seven Keys 2:55 (4) News 3:00 (4) Loretta Young (7) Queen for a Day 3:39 (2) Millionaire (4) Young Dr. Malone (7) Who Do You Trust? (9) Scarlett Hill 3:55 (2) News 4:00 (2) Secret Storm (4) (Color) Match Game <7) American Bandstand (9) Razzle Dazzle 4:30 (2) Edge of Nlgit (4) Make Room for Daddy (7) Discovery '62 12:00 (2) Love of Life (4) (Color) First Impression (7) Ernie Ford 12:25 (2) News 12:30 (2) Search for Tomorrow (4) Truth or Consequences (7) Father Knows Best 12:40 (9) Morgan’s Merry-Go-Round 12:45 (2) Guiding Light (9) Morgan’s Merry - Go Round 12:50 (9) TOWS 12:55 (4) News 1:00 (2) Star Performance (4) Best of Groucho f " (7) Gale Storm (9) Movie: "Without Love.' (1946). 1:39 (2) As the World Turns (4) People Are Funny DETROIT (AP) - Appointment of seven additional Thousands of Cubans Take Refuge in Spain MADRID, Spain 4AP)------Of- ficial sources said yesterday more than 10,000 Cuban exiles are living in Spain, and the number is growing at the rate of 400 month. Most of these arrive by four Spanish ships still serving Cuba. Several social organizations, including the International Rescue Committee, are working to provide food, shelter and jobs for the exiled Cubans. New Members Named to UP Action Group leaders to the council of Operation Action—UP was announced yesterday by Walker L. Cisler, president of Detroit Edison Co., and Dr. Edgar L. Harden, president of Northern Michigan College at Marquette. Hardam and cisler are co-chalrman of the council, dedicated to improving the conom-ic lot of Michigan’s Upper Peninsula. The seven new appointments bring the council's membership to 21. Newly named members are Allen Merrill, director of civic and governmental affairs fo Ford Motor Co.; A. H. Aymond Jr., chairmdn of Consumers Power Co.; Frank N. Buttomer, vice president of North Central Airlines, Inc.: Richard E. Cross, chairman of American Motors Corp.; Leonard H. Murray, president of the Soo Line Riafroad Co.; Horace Y. Bassett, president of Calumet & Hecla, Inc. and John R. Klnberley, president of Kimberly-Clark Corp. U.S. farmers own eight million motor vehicles and 4 million horses and mules compared with 5.6 million motor vehicles and 11 million horses and mules 15 years Clarinet Comes Shrieking Out of Past By DICK WEST WASHINGTON (UPI) — The clarinet, as the old saying goes, is an ill woodwind that nobody blows good. Even under the best of conditions, its musical values are marginal. In the hands of a trying out for the school band, it normal, healthy adult to a pitiful, quivering mass of ectoplasm. The main trouble is that WEST clarinets are notoriously unreliable. At times, they can be downright treacherous. I. remember Well the first clarinet I ever owned. I treated it as kindly as I could, shined it regularly, gave it a good home and all like that. Yet every time that I took It out of its case in public, it would turn on me in a most vicious way. I would be sailing along through “The Half and Quarter Note March," not losing my place more than once or twice, when suddenly It would emit a piercing screech, known among members of our band as “the cry of the wounded Banshee.” SlIO—WJR. New*. Muelo Hall | WWJ. Nawa, Bumper club / WXYZ. ItbaaUao WPoJfc Sew*,' UeLauiblta Friends, if you have never heard the noise that a clarinet reed produces when the young musician’s lip slips then your flesh has never really crawled and your teeth have never really been set on edge. It is like no other sound heard on this earth, although a piece of chalk drawn the wropk way across a blackboard -win give a close approximation. . LOOK OF PAIN The look of pain that it caused to cross pie face of our band director Is embedded in my memory, but I did not fully understand the extent of his suffering until years later when a young member of my household began taking clarinet lessons. • I recite this now by way of emphasizing the justice that was done this week in an income tax rating handed down by the Internal Revenne Service, It seems that an unidentified taxpayer had a son with a rather severe dental problem known as “malocclusion" or “buck teeth." He took the lad r" j- gr r~ V 7“ 5“ to ii rr IS 14 IS IS t IS r W ■ 2r ! 25 r 27 26 31 sr U 35 • 46 41 1 n i w w 66 sr 52 M IE"* i on* 37 Fruit drink — oil IA Period! of 40 Tabio *( the world 41 Armed o< I Tha holy elite* 41 Soottlah feto."11" 41 Ml [ Depend* I* Crown ACROSS I Saudi Arabia w of S»udl Arabia 40 Landed 40 Pljnerir II baaoahdant 6f Sham 14 Daeh (alans) 17 iutlra 10 Polina 20 Baaantlal being 22 Caraal araaa 24 jjtounSaO 01 Meaeure* of cloth • 07 Continually 2b Britlah money of aeoount ti Turf Anowanoe for to an orthodontist and was told that 'the condition might improve if tha boy began taking clarinet lessons. The taxpayer thereupon purchased a clarinet, enrolled his son in music class and listed the cost of both on his tax return as a medical expense. After duly weighing the matter, the Revenue Service concluded that It was a legitimate deduction and let it stand. ,1 don’t often lead the applause for the' revefltie service, but I think its decision in this case is to be highly commended. A modest tax deduction can never begin to compensate for the horrors that poor father must be experiencing by living within earshot of a bucktoothed by practicing on a clarinet. (9) Mickey Mouse Club. 4:55 (7) American Newsstand ' 5:00 (2) Movie: “Stolen Assign-' * ment." (1955). (4) (Color) George Pierrot (7) Movie: “Web of Evidence." (1950). (9) Larry and Jerry (56) What’s New? 5:36 (66) Americans at Woit 5:41 (9) Rocky and His Friends. (56) News Magazine 1:58 (4) Carol Duvall SONOTONE House of Hearing 29 E. CORNELL JIM LONIE "Kleen Ail" FUINACI BOILER CLEANERS power auction. CLEANING IS OIM BUSINESS NOT A SIDELINE OR 3-0X00 (Off M M Any of till TESA of OAKLAND COUNTY •lectroRic service Reeds. Cola'i TV Ul 2-5100 MI Anbnm M. — P#uH*a D.lby Radio fr TV PI 4-9102 M Lehigh, Pautto* Dibit TV O Radio OL 2-4722 IM W. UalearaMy, Beehaaiar COVTVIim. PI 4-1 SIS in Oakland. Pontine Condon Radii Or TV_PI 4-9716 r. Huron, routine a Radio O TV 625-2168 Lakeland Elactrinic* OR 1-0111 Obil TV PI 4-494S I4HO Xlleaketk Lake, PanUee Pur Appllanci IM 1-4114 11*1 Caaamart* M-. Unlan Lake WKC, Inc.. Sirvici N W. Alley, Paw Introducing The NEW RED-BLUE RADIATION LAMPS m ORCHARDu MICHIGAN FLUORESCENT LIGHT CO. YEAR-END SALE KHttLPOOL WASHERS ad HYERS SAVE 4% MVEITMY TAX On Our Big Inventory Claoranct entory "ylb 123 W. 1 LEOTRIO CO. IfS H. Sena R 4-282! TWENTY-TWO m m m THE PONTIAC PRESS ^SATURDAY, DECEMBER 29, 1062 , — TbHTIBjs Happy New Year Ahead? Auto Makers Wondering ’ W 1 - .. .... iPinonoiaiiv umm ha< h Sears Will Close at 5:30 Monday! Polyester Fiberfilled Pillows "teg. 63.98 2“ pinwale corduroy 72* Reg. 98e Charge It Cornea In a rainbow of aolid color.... 36 and 42-in. wide. Machine waahahle. Drapea like a dream. Save 26c yd. Yard Goods, Main Plot New polyester fiberfilled is non-allergenic, mildewproof and odorless. Never needs Buffing. Stays comfortably buoyant. Cotton cover. 20x26-inch size. 100% cotton floral tick. Domottic Dept., Main Floor 2 for 5.50 Charge It MONDAY ONLY! Sale! Assorted Tier Curtains 24, 30 and 36-in, lengths An outstanding value at this price. Come early for first choice of fabrics, colors and styles in lengths you want Save! Assorted Valances..........ea. 99c Drapery Dept., Main Floor MONDAY ONLY! save! modernize with Homart Lavanette Regular 879.95 Monday Special 59“ NO MONEY DOWN ea Seem Easy Paymrat Pisa Homart quality! 24-inch wide, doable door vanity with bowl and chrome uPp-up faucet. Plastlo laminated; white, gold flecked. Stain-feat steel ring; 2 legs. Give yonr bath that custom-look . . . modernize now and save. Shop Monday until 5:30! Save more at Sears! 8111.93 Deluxe 25“ Vanity..........69.88 Plumbing and Healing Dept., Perry St. Bimt. MONDAY ONLY! mag MONDAY ONLY! MONDAY ONLY! 24-Month Allstate Tyrex • Guardsman Tire Sale 3-pc. Hollywood Beds Serofoam Mattresses Save on Quality Craftsman Tool Chest or Tool Cabinet 15 97 8.00x14 Tubeless Blaekwall 182 Monday Only Special, Leak Headboard 1 , pint tax plus tax • 7.50x14 Tubeless Whitewall.............. 19.97* 8.00x14 Tubeless Whitewall................. 21.97* Strong Tyrex® Rayon cord construction for safer driving. Guaranteed in all 50* state*, Canada, Mexico by Seara., Save! ' •TMofiynn, inn. Auia Aecauorlet, Petty Btmt. •PLUS TAX ■ NO TRADE-IN REQUIRED >38 each* 12" Tool Cabinet NO MONEY DOWN on Seara Easy Payment Plan Includes buoyant urethane foam mattress, matching box spring and sturdy leg-bracket aet. Save Monday! ... $43ee. Furniture Dept., Second Floor Juit say, “CHARGE IT" at Sears Built to professional standards! Full slse, 2-drawer chest with easy sliding drawers, reg. $19.98. 26%xl7%x 28Vk-in. drawer cabinet with compartment on 4 steal feet, re$. $39.98. Buy them Monday at Sears! Reg. $87.96 Combination, now both for..........40.99 Hardware Dept., Main Baiement •PLUS TAX’, NO TRADE-IN REQUIRED OT* A Tl mwanpn, oasemem "Satisfaction guaranteed or your money back" vSK/VjlM 154 North Saginaw St. Phone FE 5-4171 W ii Tshombe VOL. 120 NCC 278 TEE PONTIAC ★ ★★★★- PONTIAC* MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 29, 1962 —22 PAGES SWEARING-IN CEREMONY - Witnessing the swearing in of the new budget director ih the garden of the vacation Winter White House at Palm Beach; Fla,, are (from left) President t&piady; Eric Heller, Son of Dr. Walter Heller, the President’s economic adviser; Mrs. Kermit Gordon; Karren- Heller and Kermit'Gordon, being sworn in by Palm Beach Mayor Claude Reese. Next Budget Gets Polish PALM BEACH, Fla. iff) — President Kennedy has sent his new budget director back to Washington t6 put the finishing touches on the bulky document after three days of policy talks at the holiday White House. Kertnit Gordon, sworn in yesterday as chief overseer of the federal purse strings, flew back to Washington after dusk fallowing 90 - minute conference MIAMI, Fla. — President Kennedy reviewed today surviving troopers of the anti-Castro volunteer brigade which met disaster in the Bay of Pigs invasion, with Kennedy. Before departure, Gordon'said some changes might yet be made in the budget for the 1964 fiscal year that begins next July 1. ELMER R. JOHNSON Confirms Bid toJCeepPost Waterford S u pe r visor Seeks Fourth Term Waterford Township Supervisor Elmer, R. Johnson today confirmed his candidacy for a fourth two-year-term as supervisor. Sitting in on the talks were Elmer Stoats, deputy budget director, and Lawrence F. O’Brien, a key presidential adviser on congressional relations. With this meeting, Kennedy cleared the decks of all announced appointments until after the New Year's holiday. . Some of the final questions about the record $99-hillion budget due in mid-January were resolved at a session at which Secretary of Welfare Anthony J. Cel-ebrezze and Kennedy reviewed new education and medical care legislation they hope will “be more palatable” to opponents. Johnson, SO, will seek the Republican nomination for the office in the Feb. 16 primary. , He had been elected supervisor three times as fl Democratic candidate, but announced his change of party fiffiliations This was the way legislation was characterized by Celebrezze following the 2%-hour session. Celebrezze said that basically the programs will hew to the In revealing his plans to file agpin, Johnson commented that it is important that voters give serious-consideration to the qualifications and motivations of those seeking elective office. PROBLEMS AHEAD “Those elected will be confronted with problems, not new, complex, or even unique to Waterford Township; problems not io be resolved by any one individual But only by combined efforts of sincere individuals cooperating in the best interests of the township and always responsive to the Will of the citizens," he said. ,.A die maker for a tool and die firm before taking public office, Johnson , is a former member of the Waterford Township Board of Education. James E. Seeterlin, township clerk the past six years, announced yesterday that he would be a candidate for supervisor on t^e Democratic ticket, , that ’most of the key question marks were disposed of in meetings this week on tax cut plans, military spending and legislative proposals involving aid to education and medical care for the aged through Social Security. The Kennedy-Gordon session last night was focused on the administration’s 1963 legislative program and its effect on the forthcoming, budget. CLEARS DECKS Thousands Hail JFK and Troops Palace Expect U.S. to Send Equipment WASHINGTON The United States is expected to announce shortly that it will supply more military equipment'for the United Nations’ Congo operation. The announcement Jpay be made within a week and the most urgently needed materiel will be flown immediately to the Congo, authoritative inform a n t s said today. The most important items on the U.N shopping lists are 10 fighter plartes. They are needed to give air protection to U. N. ground troops and to fend off hit-and-run attacks of the Katanga Air Force, estimated to consist of about 20 airplanes of various types and vinatge. The list of requested materjeL —a detailed document drafted by .... . the Indian commanders of Jk w "A1«i Reporter Sees Katanga Chaos Eyewitness Account of Bitter Fighting From Our News Wires A noisy crowd of more than 20,000 cheered the President and the troopers, liberated from prison in time for Christmas, and waved handkerchiefs wildly. Among the spectators were relatives of the prisoners who arrived in this country Thursday. The President, accompanied by Mrs. Kennedy, drove ink " Orange Bowl in an open car. U.N. air' force—was given to Lt. Gen. Louis W. Truman, herfa of a U.S. fact-finding mission which returned from the Congo this week. Truman, Informants said, approved the U.N. list after on-the-spot verification^ of the requirements and he submitted it Friday evening to the Joint Chiefs of Staff. - The final decision rests with President Kennedy, officials said, and added that knowing Ken-.1 nedy’s concern about the deterior- ‘ ating Congo situation they felt sure the United Nations will get what it asks for. The United NaUons also wants a prefabricated steel bridge, air trdtisport planes and Vh trucks. By STANLEY MEISLER WASHINGTON (AP) - Through tax loss, the U.S. government’s share of. paying the Cuban'prisoners ransom could reach $20 million. of administration to gain passage in the last Congress. However, he indicated that some significant concessions would be made to the opposition. NO MAJOR CHANGES * Kennedy asked for some changes ih the legislation posed to him, but Celebrezs dicated these were not substantial. Following his / meeting with Celebrezze and other . Welfare Department officials, Kennedy took his family and a couple of guests on a sightseeing cruise in Lake Wcirth and the Atlantic beech- News Flash AJACCIO, Corsica (UPIW A Frencl with 24 persons aboard crashed today on 3,560-foot-high Mt. Vlz-zanova in the nigged heart of Corsica. It is not known if there are any survivors. ,. The ex-prisoners, wearing U.S. airmen’s khakis issued to them at Homestead Air Force Base, their point of arrival Sunday, marched onto the playing field by two as the crowd cheered and waved Cuban and American flags. TRAVEL BANNED In Cuba thousands of relatives of the prisoners awaited further word from Premier Fidel Castro’s government on the sudden ban imposed on their departures for the United States. bethville, Katanga, this morning from Northern Rhodesia. Five miles from the city 'he was turned back bg retreating Katarigese Gendarmes. Lynch gives an ' eyewitness account of the situation around the Katanga capital. By PETER LYNCH ON THE RHODESIAN-CONGO BORDER (UPI) - Bitter fighting raged in Elisabethville today and it was impossible to either enter or leave the embattled city. High U. S. sources indicated that the United States made no’ committment to supply the fighter planes. •Some officials said that-while the United States will certainly provide transport planes and trucks for troop transportation, the decision on the fighters depends on how many planes other nations turn over to the U.N. force. In - other words, the United States would fill in the'gap if it found that the United Nations > does not have enough fighters to I match Katanga’8 air force. (EDITOR’S NOTE: Peter Say Resistance Mop-Up Begun TEDDY, BOBBY SKI - Sen. Edward Kennedy, D-Mass., (left) and Atty. Gen. Robert Kennedy, brothers of the President, prepare for a swoop dawn the slopes at Aspen, Colo.r where the pair are vacationing. I crossed into the Congo from Northern Rhodesia this morning and got within five miles of Ell»abe: ¥' TUB PONTIAC PRfjSS. IQAY, DECEMBER 20,1962 Birmingham Area News List Special Classes Set tor Winter Season for Skybolt Flare-Up WASHINGTON (UPI) - An over-enthusiastic information release was blamed today for new international furor over the Sky-bolt missile. The controversy flared op again ever aa Air Force test of ' the rocket — which the admin* istration has ordered scrapped ~ in the Atlantic missile range Saturday. The Air Force issued a statement at the time claiming a complete success. But informed sources said that although the Jest was as successful as could be expected under the circumstances, the Air Force statement was misleading. The Air Force said at Cape Canaveral Saturday that the Sky- bolt "impacted in the- target area” and was a “fully guided test missile.” *. * Or Pentagon sources said this was misleadiiig because: —Sincf the missile carried no protective nose cone, it was expected to — and did — burn up like a meteor in the atmosphere. But they said the word “impacted” implied that the missile actually struck the target area. * ★ ★ —The Skybolt carried full guidance equipment, but1 it had no thrust reversal, which shuts off the power.when the missile is on the proper course. For this reason, it had been expected that the missile would overshoot its target by 66 miles. As it turned out, if the missile had not burned up in the atmosphere, It would have overshot the target by 100 miles — 34 more than expected. The latest interpretation of the radio-telemetry data from the Skybolt indicates it flew on course for 067 miles after t bomber fired it from an altitude of 40,000 feet. EMBARRASSED JFK The test was an obvious embarrassment to the Kennedy administration. It came only two days after President Kennedy agreed with British Prime Minister Harold Macmillan to cancel the Skybolt program and furnish Britain with Polaris missiles in- / NEW MAID OF COTTON — Shelby Smith (center) of Albuquerque, N.M., was picked at Memphis, Tenn., last night to reign as the Maid of Cotton for 1963. Her alternates are AF rhotofu Becky Bentley of Thorsby, Ala., (left) and Cynthia Thomas of Memphis. Miss Smith will make' her first public appearance at the Cotton Bowl game in Dallas Tuesday. BIRMINGHAM - Travel films, television funnymen and special olasses for adults and children be featured during the winter season at the Birmingham Community House. •. Children's television personalities Captain Jelly and Bwana Don will appear in Saturday shows within the next two months. Captain Jolly’s visit is sched-dea for 1:30 p.m. Jan. Bwana Don’s for the same time Fhb. 10. * * * ★ Registration for the wlnt class schedule will begin at 9 a.m. Wednesday for residents of the Birmlngham-Bloomfieid Hills rapid reading, Boston (advanced), seamanship and safe boat handling, sewing and tailoring, silversmlthlng and Spanish are some additional courses offered. Youth classes to be offered are ballet, dramatics, pointing and drawing. “Nine Lessons and Carols,” an ancient service practiced in Eng-religious institutions between the 12th and 16th centuries, will be featured at jh:16 and 11 a.th. services Sunday at St. James Episcopal Church., The junior and adult choirs will take part in the special Christmas service along with other member^ of the parish. I On Kashmir Restraint India, Pakistan Agree ‘ RAWALPINDI, Pakistan (*) Negotiating teams of India and Pakistan agreed today restraint 22 Americans Held in Cuban Prisons (Continued From Page One) Two of those listed were later reported to have been freed. A Miami engineer, who has been a prisoner, added two names. The two women are Geraldine Shamma, about M, a native of Boston, and D’NMl of Atlanta, Ga. Both were arrested in 1960 and are said to be held in Carcel de Mujeres Prison on charges of engaging in counterrevolutionary activity. Mrs. Shammsi was giv-en 10 years and Mrs. O’Neal nine years. Other prisoners, as compiled frcfa various sources: . Thomas L. Baker, 26, of Doth-an, Ala.; James D. Beame, 34, of Cedar Falls, N.C.;. George R, Beck, 24, of Norton. Mass.; Loufs SckmUt, M, of (Stonge; Alfred E. CHbrn, of Durham, N.C. and Donald J. Green, of Clover, S .C. ! the -six now are serving 30-year terms in Isle of Pines Prison. Cuban authorities said they landed in a boat in Havana Harbor on Jan. 7, 1961, and linked them to supporters of former Cuban dictator Fulgencio Batista. should be exercised in both nations in discussing the Kashmir Further negotiations are due to open in New Delhi Tuesday. ’ A joint communique was issued at the windup, of a ministerial conference which had been downgraded to informal talks between delegation leaders after a formal meeting Pakistani newspapers said U. S. and British ambassadors saved the negotiations on Kashmir, a bitterly disputed border state, from total failure. ... * A * The Western nations influenced India and Pakistan to agree test month to talk over the issue.. The Indian - Pakistani communique appealed to leaders of public opinion, officials, the press and radio in both nations “to help in the creation of a friendly atmosphere for resolving outstanding differences on Kashmir and related matters.” ASKED TO REFRAIN It asked them also to “refrain from aqy statements, criticism nr propaganda which might prejudice the success of the Kashmir negotiations or tend to create discord between the two countries." ★ A * The two leaders, Z * A. Bhutto of Pakistan and Sardar Swaran of.India, had met again today and called in three officials from each side. Britain had coasted on Sky-tit for its prime nuclear deterrent. Macmillan canto under heavy criticism at home for agreeing to the dptosile swop and the announcement of the successful tost heightened the pressure on him. / :: Jt was learned that the Air Force statement was released without prior clearance from the Defense Department. A Pentagon rule permits sqch releases except in cases that would attract usual newsmedia attention.” Defense sources said the bolt statement obviously should have been cleared before re-ase. The furor was reminiscent of that which surrounded the 1949 admirals’ revolt against the B36 bomber. It seemed likely the Skybolt affair would Wind up tite way, too — with a full-scale Congressional investigation of President Kennedy’s decision to scrap the Skybolt program. Fall U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY - Cloudy with occasional rain , or fronting rain early today. High 34. Tuning colder this afternoon. Cloudy and colder with a few snow flnrrtes tonight and Sunday. Low tonight II. High Sunday 29. Southerly winds 19 to II mUe becoming northwesterly 29 to 26 miles this aj|--------- and diminishing somewhat late tonight and Sunday. ~At • Wind vtlooltjr I DlrcoUon; Bouthwent Sim mm S*Mra«]r it S:W p.m HE rl«»i Sunday it » 02 ».m. • Boon n*t« Saturday at 1:0 p. Boon rtMl Sunday at W:«! a. Friday la FanUaa (aa rrrordrd downtown) Hlchait Umporoturo . Lowoat |—-—|— Moan ----- .JtV KU Friday’s Tempi- . 18 El PMO XT Bismarck Brownsville 88 47 Omihl 41 *9 Phoenix 88, 83 Pittsburg! ST 17 Portl‘4, 1 37 SI Seattle X AP Photofax NATIONAL WEATHER — Snow Is forecast for tonight for » the North Atlantic Coast and Westward through the Lakes and j lffl|tor Mississippi Valley as well as the north central Plains add northern Rockies. Rain la expected for southern parts of '* the mid-Atlantic Const through the southeast coastal region and •astern Gulf• as tall as ovar the Pacific Northwest coastal area. It will be ganerally colder except for warmer weather on the (taUto Coast' and In the southern Rockies. A ■ ■ Sentence German to Hard Labor BERLIN (UPI) — East German refugee Harry Seidel, 24, was sentenced to life imprisonment at hard labor today in East Berlin for digging a tunnel under HAROLD G. WARNER Cancer Drive Head Named the Communist wall in an attempt to help other refugees pScape. Seidel, a former btoycle racing champion, was arrested Nov. 15 as he broke through.# 70-yard tunnel from the American Sector to, a basement in a suburb of East Berlin. East Germay police, disguised as refugees, were waiting fo him, apparently acting on an informer’s tip/ 7 He had Med to the West himself the Jaay the wall went up, Aug. 13, 1961. After that, he helped/others to escape, risking his lire many times. tie East German Supreme 2lit found Seidel guilty of vi-ting the catch-aU “law for the protection of peace,” which covers any. form of anti-Com-munist activity. ( West B erlin Mayor Willy Brandt called the sentence act of vengeance” against a man who “followed the commands of humanity and his conscience to bring together persons forcibly separated from each other by the wall.” ★ ★ ★ Calling on the world to protest the sentence, he said “there are no words to express the indignation felt over this scandalous ver-dict.of a modern inquisition of an Unjust state. Harold G. Warner of Bloomfield Township, a Genet’s! Motors Corp. vice president, has be named 1963 crusade chairman for the Michigan Cancer Foundation, it was announced today by Alfred Glancy Jr., chairman of the. board of trustees. * *, ♦ Warner lives with his wife and daughter at 5950 Snowshoe Circle. He is general manager of the GM Cadillac Motor Car Division. The foundation, a Torch Drive agency, conducts a year-round program of research, education and service to cancer patients in Wayne, Oakland, Monroe and Macomb counties. ★ * * During the first week of April, 30,000 volunteers will conduct a house-to-house educational campaign and fact-finding survey designed to further efforts to control the disease. Halt Revolt by Peasantry SANTO DOMINGO, Dominican Republic (UPI) The Dominican government early today announced this suppression of a peasant revolt near the Haitian border reported to have killed about 30 persons. Troops trained In guerrilla warfare were reported pursuing about 409 of the rebels to the mountains around the scene of the revolt, the town of Palma -Soto, about 160 miles west of htn. The dead were reported to Brinks Tightens Security After $300,000 Theft CHICAGO (UPI)- A $300,000 Christmas .Eve robbery of a Brink’s armored truck has resulted in a nationwide tightening of the company’s security measures, a spokesman said yesterday. John Hoagland, operating vice president of the protection service firm, said the bandits made impressions of the vehicle’s keys while It was stored in $n unguarded garage. He said the locks have been changed' on all vehicles stored in unguarded facilities. ,| Deliberate Car Accident Charged as a Cover-Up From Our News Wires Birmingham man, charged with murdering his mother - inlaw, yesterdhy was accused of deliberately staging an auto accident after her death so he could U.N. Controls Elisabethville (Continued From Page One) five bombs, but the targets am) e not yet known. The raid on Kolwezi was carried out by Swedish-made. Saab jet fighters. It is believed that three planes were destroyed on (he ground by the Saabs. POST OFFICE OCCUPIED U.N. Tunisian troops occupied Elisabethville’s central post office the U.N. claimed to havO complete freedom for its forces, following the seizure of 20 Ka-tangan road-blocks. ★ ★ * The U.N. military commander, Indian Brig. Reginald Noronha, in victorious mood, said the fighting for the roadblocks Jiad been easy, with only one casualty — wounded Indian. But he claimed the U-N. was still having to deal with mercenaries in the Katan-gan army. Asked how he knew that mercenaries were taking part to the battle, Noronha replied: “Who else could have fired mortars?” Earlier U.N. reports said there appeared to have been no mercenary activity. Noronha . accused President Tshombe of being insincere during peace talks on Friday. He said that the fighting Friday night and this morning could have been avoided if Tshombe had signed an agreement to remove his roadblocks. GOOD FAITH? Other U.N. officials have said Tshombe seemed to be acting in good faith in seeking a halt to the shooting. Small arms and machinegun fire was reported continuing today near a group of mining installations and a military camp. There was also some mortar fire. be hospitalized and avoid police questioning. The allegation was made by the prosecution on the second day of a Detroit Recorder’s Court examination of Robert M. Thor soil, 31, of 2352 Buckingham Road. The examination is to determine whether there is reasonable cause to hold Thor-■ son on ft first-degree murder charge. He is charged in the strangulation death of Mrs. Dorothy M. Thomas in her Detroit home on the night of Dec. 3. He has denied toe charge. Mrs. William Breech of 1585 Lone Pine Road, Bloomfield Township, testified yesterday that she saw toe auto accident in which Thorsen’s car went off Quarton Road in Bloomfield Hills iTlDec. 4. Mrs. Breech is toe daughter-in-law of former Ford Motor Co. board chairman Ernest Breech. UNACCOUNTABLE’ She said Thorson’s car suddenly swerved wildly, plunged into a ditch and smashed into a guard rhil. She called the accident “unaccountable.” There was no other traffic and apparently no reason for the crash, she added. The accident occurred while lliorson was en route from his office to his mother-in-law’s home after police notified him of her death, police said. The last witness yesterday was Mrs. James K. Tanbe of 2552 Valley Spring Drive, Bloomfield Township, a fellow worker of-Thorson’s at a Birmingham stock brokerage firm which employed him as a sales- She said she saw scratches on Thorson’s face on Dec. 4 and said he told her they were made by a cat. s~ The hearing was adjourned un-I Wednesday by Recorder's Judge Arthur Jr Koscinskte At 8 p.m. next Friday and Saturday* another production to toe popular World Adventure Series will be shown. Narrated by yachtsman Capt. Irving Johnson, next weekend's travelogue is entitled “Vankee Sails Across Europe,” a filmed tour of toe continent aboard a 50-foot sailboat. SPECIAL DINNERS Special group dinners (or those attending toe film series are held at 6 p.m. preceding each showing; The menu each night features cuisine from the Country visited. Adult and youth classes for toe winter term start during the week of Jan. 14. Adult classes include accounting - bookkeeping, art appreciation, bridge, creative pottery (ceramics), ballroom dancing, techniques of discussion, exercises for women, first aid, flower arrangement, French. _ Fur craft, gardening, home accessories workshop, Interior decorating, millinery, painting, Eyewitness Story of Katanga Chaos Swainson Inks Last Bill OK'd by '62 Legislature LANSING (UPI) -Gov. John . Swainson signed Into law yesterday the last bill passed by the 1962 legislature. It was one of toe final official acts of his administration. (Continued From Page One) ed a heavy antitank gun in it and made us drive them to new positions they were taking up about seven miles from the city. * * * Despite their retreat,,they were still fighting hard. European officers of the Katanga forces were organizing African troops Into flying squfldt in private cars with mortars and antitank guns riding in the luggage compartments. They said that heavy fighting was still going on at the outskirts of toe Union Mtatere copper plant, which was described as a shambles. European officers with the Ka-tangese could give no estimates of the dead but said the casualties on both sides were heavy. * * * Elisabethville was reported without water or electricity. HOSPITAL HIT The retreating Katangese said the ElizSbethville General Hospital and two African townships were heavily mortared. WWW Indonesian paratroops of U.N. command arrived in the city last night and went straight Into action, they said. Mrs. John Winfield^ Service for Mrs. John (Ethel) Winfield, 66, of 525 Watkins St., will be Monday at 1 p.m. at the Manley Bailey Funeral Home. Burial will be in White Chapel Cemetery. Mrs. Winfield idled suddenly Friday at Pompano Beach, Fla. She was a life member of the' order of Eastern*Star No. 220 Chapter of Birmingham; also a hiember of the MOMS Club of Birmingham end a member of the First Baptist Church of Birmingham. is survived by a daughter, Mrs. Roy Richards of Harrisvlile; two sons, Jack R. of Pontiac and Arthur H. of Birmingham; a sister, Mrs. Frank Christie of Sault Ste. Marie, and eeven grandchildren: She was a resident of Birmingham for 33 years. Traffic Toll of 480 Seen for Holiday By The Associated Press Traffic .................... 17 Fires .......................2 Miscellaneous ..............4 Total ................... $3 Thousands of merrymakers and other motorists enjoying 1962’s tost holiday are expected to hit. the nation’s highways today, bringing an estimate from the National Safety Council that between 420 and 490 persona may become victims of the nation’s No. 1 killer—traffic accidents. The tout four-day New Year’s holiday, wwi began at 6 p.m. (local tlme^Frlday, ends at midnight New Year’s Day. The HR-hour holiday began quietly, with only a handful of fatal accidents reported. But most persons were expected to be on the highways today, Sunday and New Year’s Eve. In making it* pre-holiday estimate of 420 to 480 traffic fatalities the Safety Council said studies of past tum-of-the-year holidays show driving too fast for conditions is a factor in more than half the fatal accidents — compared with an annual average o 37 per cent. The NSC also said that drinking drivers are involved In 38 per cent of New Year’s weekend accidents, compared with an annual average of 30 per cent. The council estimated that 18, .10 to 21,000 persons could suffer disabling injuries during the period. S beaten and hacked ty THE ICEMAN COMETH - It’s late at’night. Somewhere A little boy may be up late — sharpening his skates. But it is here at toe rink of the Northslde -Community Club at Montcalm and Edison, streets that the real work goes oh.-A lone man sprays water over toe rink — wetting if a fraction of an inch time. Water* strikes ice and .freezes instantly. The process is re- thick a( a t * 1 . “\ peatod. He is juft a lqfe man working on one of the 20 rinks now being prepared In toe city, with five others already-open. When' his work Is finished, a frost-nlnched hoy on silver skates just might give a thought to Merle Brown of 99 Oliver St., too iceman. I I ’ ’ ^ ■ ■ : ■ y * ■ "'< . kMl lie comihbp sense while traveling wary of one who enoouraaes ■ ipee_.r.r Heed vour own *oouns#l. Pine for efet-tin* together with friends, relatives and fbr WRITINQ raw ------- AQUARIUS (J»n. 21 t first impulse le correct — -----RP f tlonshlpe arj NOT emotionally profit* FIFTEENS THE PONTIAG PRESS SATURDAY. DECEMBER 29, 106? Burklow, R„ Hayward Pac« Northern Win Before Full House SPREAD OUT — Eight players were spread out in the Pontiac Northern forecourt during this third period action last * night but it was the two others who were together, Mike Burklow of -Northern (,12) with ball and Ernie Pickett (25) of '% , By JERE CRAIG What was becoming a basketball tradition in Pontiac may have ended last night on the court at Pontiac Northern High School when the Huskies outplayed crosstown rival Pontiac Central, 62-59, in a tension-packed contest. * For the first four years of the series, Central could be counted on for a decisive victory and normally produced the same. But last night the Chiefs couldn’t Withstand a strong PNH rally in the last four minutes and dropped the game in uncommon fashioned. Trailing 57-52 with less than half a quarter remaining, PHN ... scored 19 points to the Chiefs’ r-i.n___________* two and earned its first win in lead, 5857, with two shots which were followed by Dayne Thomas’ , Charity tosses were the decyl- pgjhJi convert^! SMj 'fOul throws to J 15- 12 at the end of the'first ses- ^ sion, the Huskies hit their.first °" ** three shots In the second period no LUCK — High-scoring Gary Hayward (50) of PNH to take an 18*17 margin. slipped away from the tight guarding of Gerald Henry (41) of ' * ★ * pch on this particular play last night but found Central’s Ray. Sparked by Roger Hayward’s gain (45) backing up his teammate. Hayward missed this 10 points and Mike Burklow’s shot and ali the others he tried from the floor but was an nine, PNH hit nine of 18 shots in important factor in the rebounding phase of play as Northern the quarter and ran to a 33-28 ^ a 02-59 victory. Central’s McKinley Jones (55) is in halftime margin. The Chiefs were the foregroUnd. saved in the opening half on' a 16- point performance by sharp- PCH, who drew the referee’s attention. Pickett Was detected fouling on the missed shot and Burklow converted both attempts for a 43-33 lead byPNH. Packers Favored by 7 Over Gianft NEW YORK If) ~ Green Bay’ crunching power game am sticky - fingered pass defens make the defending champion Packers a one-touchdown favorite over Y.A, Tittle and the g5-for-broke New York Giants in Sunday’s National Football league title rematch at Yankee Stadium. v * A roaring, sellout crowd of 64,-892 will jam the stadium at pric-892 will jam the stadium. Millions will follow every play on network NBC television and radio, although the New York metro- politan area will be blacked out on televlsloi p.m. EST. ★ With an estimated 8600*,000 for the radio-TV rights, gross receipts of about $1.2 million could bring each winning share over $6,000 and each loser $4,000 fm, both records. / j Few expect a repetition of ; the 37-0 rout of last New Year’s Eve when the Paoters practically chased the Giants Into the snowbanks -surrounding Green Bay’s fraara City Stadium. DePaul, U. of D. in Motor City Finals Grosse Pointe, one of the state basketball powers this year, won the Southfield Invitational Basketball tournament by whipping Bedford Union, 8445. The Pointers had a 38-point second quarter in taking a 54-21 halftime lead. Vic Dhooge had 23, Mark Lonesk 18 and Gary Spade 10 for Grosse Pointe while Lynn Lepla had 10 for the losers. * * * In the other games, Livonia Bently whipped Farmington 6642; Ypsilanti defeated Highland Park, 65-57 and Southfield won over North Farmington, 5140. Wayne Stephens and Roland Kent had 23 and 21 for Bentley shooting 8£el DeWalt which kept them close to the homesters. Early in the second half, Northern grabbed a 38-27 lead on a foul toss by Gary Hayward, Oakland County’s leading high school scorer. PCH began a long climb back, however, and when G. Hayward had to ** sit out a few minutes’ play with four personal foals, the Chiefs narrowed the gap. Entering quarter number four, the scoreboard read, 4443, but this one-point lead by ' Northern evaporated quickly. Switching tactics from the sharp outside shooting that characterized the first 20 minutes of play, PCH coach Art Van Ryzln had the Chiefs driving on offense and these tactics paid off as Henry boosted the Orange and Black into a five-point lead in the Jinal stanza. PCH RALLIES The Central forward hit five field goals in the fourth quarter vend coupled with McKinley Jones’1 rebound work, had the Huskies’ reeling. Then,4 two unnecessary shots by the losers gave the home team the break it needed and the finishing heroics ensued. The game may have been the making of sophomore Roger Hayward for Northern. The young forward with the fine shooting touch played exceptionally well throughout, both with his shooting and rebound work. He hit 19 points but ylel-ed team honors to backliner Burklow who scored 21, including nine for nine at the charity stripe. ' Reese had 11 points with four of them on pressure - packed free throws in the last two minutes of play. DeWalt was outstanding on offense with 11 buckets for PCH but fouled out early in the last quarter. Henry had 11 of his 15 in the final quarter and, in addition, stopped Gary Hayward without of field goal and only seven shots from the floor. Hay- ward did play a strong rebounding game which helped the PNH attack considerably. The winners now have won four in a row after an opening loss. Central is 14 for the year. The rivals meet again Feb. 12 on the PCH ceurt. IAC PONTIAC L (MO NORTHERN (( Local Skater Winner George Chapman of Pontiac made his speed skating ability pay off last night With two victories in competition at. Detroit’? Coho Hall. The 11-year-old skater captured both the 220 and 440 events against competition from Michi-and Ohio. Warriors Score Victory 'Back Home' By The Associated Press They booed when th? San Francisco Warriors came home to Philadelphia. But the, catcalls changed to cheers Friday night as the Walk-riors, who moved from Phlladel-phia to the West Coast jhJs season, scored a 124-117 victory over the' Syracuse Nationals in a National Basketball Association , gama. \ ‘ ' In other NBA action, the Boston Celtics cut off a Cincinnati rally and Won 121-113. The other teams were idle, although the Chicago Zephyrs picked up a new coach. lfei,Chlcago team dismissed Jack McMahon and replaced him wiljh team captain Bob Leonard. The Zephyrs are In the cellar .of Division, with a t2-26 incident Referee Norm Prucker ordered Syracuse owner Danny Biasone off the Nats’ bench in the final quarter. Bob Cousy, the old master, and noojue jphn Havlicek teamed up to turn back the Royals, who, drove to wltpin one point of a tie In the third quarter, Oscar Robertson was the big gun in the drive. Havlicek scored four points a Boston push, but-the Royals closed to within two points at 101-99. Then CoUsy with nine points and Havlicek with, six pulled the Celts,to an unbeatable lead. Havlicek led the Celts with 31 points, his pro high. Robertson had 3& for the Royals. the Weste record. A crowd of 7.934 turned put in Philadelphia to seethe Warriors play their first gafne in Conve-tlon Hall since they went wes They hooted the appearance of the old home team, but cheered when the Warriors jumped off to a 6-f lead and stayed in front almost all the way. The Nats closed to* within two points late in the third quarter but Guy, ROdgerjj and Willie Naulls combined for six points, and the Nats never got closer than three again. Wilt Chamberlain had 36 points, and got Into a fight with Syracuse veteran Dolph Schayes, In another Pointe Wins Tourney; Kimball Chops Oaks MSU Defeats Marine Five HONOLULU (UPI) - The Michigan State Spartans staved off a late rally by the Hawaii Marines to win, 68-58, in the Hawaiian Armed Forces Basketball, Festival played last night at Bloch Arena. The Big. Ten team lost Thursday night to SERVPAC, runner-up in the Hawaiian Armed Forces Basketball League, 95-88. The Spartans moved to an early 16-2 lead last night and held 33-22 bulge at halftime In the second half, Michigan State held its lead until midway in the half when the Marines suddenly caught fire and pulled to within point, 56-55, with 4:30 remaining n the game. But Pete Gent dropped a field goal and Marcus Sanders scored sev|n successive points to pull Michigan State beyond reach. Sanders emerged as high scorer with 15 points. Bill Schwarz 13, Gent 12, and Jack Lam-mers 10. with Russ Cleveland getting 22 for Farmington. ★ ^Hr it Mike Bass With 17 and Ernie Slater and Herb Francois with 16 each led Ypsi while Denny Jack-son had 22 for the Parkers. Joe Considine had 21 and Pete McAlpine 13 for Southfield while Mike Flemming had i0 for North Farmington, which was the only team which failed to win in three games ill the tourney. KNIGHTS WIN In another intra-city battle last night Royal Oak Kimball took a 53,-39 decision from Dondero. "Dwight Ebaugh paced the Winers with 12-points and teammate (Jui-t Neaiiman backed him up with 10. ★ ★ ★ It was the Knights second victory in four starts this season and their first triumph over the city rival group in seven tries covering the last six years. Dondero’s 6-foot-4 center, Tom Faus earned high scoring honors for the evening garnering 15 but it wasn’t enough to offset Kimball's sure shooting and tight defense. The Knights dominated the affair from the start leading at the end of the first quarter, 17-9 and expanding their lead to 27-2! at the intermission. fhips Advance in Tournament by 69-63 Win MARSHALL iff) Taylor University defeated Olivet 87-61 and Central Michigan nipped Alma 69-63 last night Jr. the first round of the Optimist Club’s basketball tournament at Marshall high school. .Taylor, from Upland, Ind., led 40-33 at halftime and pulled away in the second half for an easy victory. Dave Sullivan was top scorer for Taylor with 19 points. Mike Boyle was high for Oliver with 16. Central Michigan took a 33-30 halftime ’lead in its closely contested game' with Alma. ’*■ j ; HUSKY WORD - Whatever coach Dick Hall is telling the Pontiac Northern Huskiea at this point is hard to ray, but when it was all over and PNH had scored' IT 62-59 triumph over Pontiac Central, Hall had nothing but high praises for the Huskies. Kimball tallied for 26 more in the final tcrcknch the affair while holding their .guests to 18. Pair Combine for 59 in Boys' Basketball Rick Hicks and Dave Snyder tallied 59 of the 66 points scored by the Slobs in a 66-18 triumph over the FUntstones in the Waterford Township Recreation Department’s b o y 8 basketball league play. it it it Hicks’ 35 points set the pace in the 9-10th grades’ loop. Other scores were Classics 38, Tysons 18; Cylinders 26, Trotters 19; and Rocky’s Fiends 24, Rebels 17. , t ' 4t ★ In the ll-12th' grades’ Circuit: Cardinals 31, Raiders 29; Hawks 31, Playmakers 28; Ivy Leagues 34, Spartans 21; and Playboys * Warriors 0 (forfeit). Western Loses in Overtime By BERNIE KENNEDY DETROIT (AP) —rTwo scoring records and a near upset of the tournament favorite marked the first round of play in the Motor City Basketball Tournament yesterday. One other record was broken, but tournament officials would just as soon forget aboyHf. The two games, which saw unbeaten DePaul defeat Western Michigan, 91-90, and Detroit roll over Georgetown, 103-92, were played before the smallest crowd in the tourney's 11-year history, 2,715. Detroit will meet DePaul tonight for the championship and will be after its fourth straight title. A hustling, sharp-shooting Western Michigan quintet came with-28 seconds of scoring Uie tourney’s biggest upset. The Broncs saw a six-point lead disappear in the last three minutes of regulation time as DePaul staged a comeback and knotted the score at 83-83 on two free throws by guard Dan Laffey, The Blue Demons attempted to stall time and get the game's last shot but were checked closely by WMU and never got a man in tee open. Sr Or * Western’s 5-foot-9 scoring lead-•, Manny NeWsome, put the Broncos ahead by a point with seconds remaining in the overtime, but M. C. Thompson clicked jump shot 23 seconds later to pull out tee - victory, Nev some’s desperation shot at th ^buzzer was just to the left of the bucket. The thrilling opener was enough for most fans. Almost half of them left before the end of the second game which saw the Titans and Hoyaa break two ords. Detroit jumped to a quick 4-0 lead and was never headed as Coach Bob Calehan substituted freely. Five Titans reached double figures as Detroit broke Its own team scoring record for the tournament. The previous high was 100 points in a 100-56 win over New Mexico in 1959. Detroit and Army set tee previous two team record in a 98-78 victory by Detroit The Giants com^fnto the big gama with a nW-game winning streak and a/n-2 season record that compares favorably with the Packers/^13-1 season, marred only Xy a Tfianksgivlng Day (2044) disaster at Detroit, mo ABOUT TITTLE New York has gone mad, simply mad over Tittle, tee Giants' 38- year-old quarterback who threw a new Yecord 33 touchdown passes this year. At tee same time they still chant “Huff, Huff, Huff’* for Sam Huff, the handsome linebacker who Is tee symbol of Andy Robustelli’s veteran defensive unit. Once again Green Bay has sen rechristened “Tltletown, U.S.A.” and tee 1,500 tickets alloted to Packer fans were gobbled up in a matter of min-ites. Allie Sherman, the NFL coach-- tee - year for tee second straight time, herded his Giants to Beat Mountain and the vast field hotise at neighboring West Point for their final tune-up drills. Vince Lombardi’s Packers worked at home in sub-zero temperatures after finishing tee regular season in California. Green Bay has the piayer-of-the-year in fullback Jim Taylor, bruising charger who rambled through — and i over — enemy defenses this season for 1,474 yards and 19 touchdowns and ended Jimmy Brown’s 5-year reign as rushing leader. . , Taylor’s running mate will be either Paul Hornung, the Gold-Boy hero of last year whose 19 points against tee Giants set a playoff record, or Tom Moore who took Hornung’B place when Paul was cripped by a knee injury. Hornung’s true condition probably wlU not be known until game time but he has given Indication in practice teat he again will be ready to block, catch passes and run that deadly pass option play. Tittle’s arm accounted ‘for 3,224 yards on lit completions In 375 attempts, bnt the Packers also have a capable air arm In Bart Starr, the statistical passing leader with a 62.5 per cent completion average. Starr'throws primarily to end Max,McGee, flanker Boyd Dow-ler, and Ron Kramer, his 8-foot-3, 239-pound tight end -- but hits Hornung and Mooref wlth his long bombs’’ when the occasion demands. In 1981 the Packers beat tee Giants 20-17 In regular season play with Taylor gaining 186 yania. In tee title game, Taylor was bothered by a back injury and was used more as a decoy while Hornung romped for 89 yards. Green Bay has a 4-2 record in championship playoffs and the Giants, who have been In the most, 12, have a sad 3-9 record. Iney have not won since 1956 when they routed (Re Chicago Bears 47-7. If the game is tied at the end of regulation play, there will be audden death overtime In which the first team to score is the winner. There has been only audden-death playoff in the NFL, in 1958 when Baltimore beat New York 23-17. The rival American Football League had a double overtime playoff last Sunday when Dallas defeated Houston 20-17. ★ mi&hoT5F griffin- Mon Volk or* THE BALL, FELLAS — More eyes seem directed toward the jumping Bill Street (45) of Western Michigan than.are on the loose basketball during the first half, action In tee fyjotor City Tournament’s opening round last night aft U-D. DePaul’s M.sG, Thompson (30), and WM’s Ajac Triplett (35) and Don Petroff (S3) are other .Identifiable players In gam^ won by • DePaul, 914)0, in overtime. ToUl* M IMI M We»t«rn Michigan .. SWPfclfl ....... ★ ★ GEORGETOWN 'fo ft tf P'derVrt f H S « ? Si Mnnlln j H 1] pf” B | .•n yt4 .. 4. 31 MI DETROIT UJH ?„k TOT. 11 ii i M tom. TOT NFL Title Game Facts and Figures NEW YORK (UPI) - It'll be S.R.O. — sorry, radio only — for New York sports fans who-don’t hold tickets to Yankee Stadium but who want to follow Sunday's National Football League championship game between the Green ay Packers and New York Gi- itS. ' A federal judge yesterday upheld^ the N.F.L.’s blackout TV policy' when he ^refused to lift the local television ban on the game. Judge Edward Welnfeld held that relief from such restrictions should come from Congress and not from the courts. \ 650 Michigan Persons Get New Job Training DETROIT (Af») - Some 6$0 Michigan persons trained or have under the ihanpoweri ment and Training^ t, a government report The 1962 ac> pro- crafts with labor Unemployed persons r given preference. ADVERTISEMENT FpR RE-BIDS Sealed proposals wlllrbe received by H» Avondale School District, Auburn Kelihti, Michigan, until 1:00 p.m„ Janu-My 1. 1003. for construction of. altera* Mono and addition to: ' Auburn Jfatehn School — 300 S. Squirrel Road, Auburn Height!, Elmwood School — 3101 Auburn Road. Pontiac. Mftblian, Stiles School—3070 o. Llrernols, Rochester, Michigan. .Stone Elementary School—3041 S. ■ns. Pontiac, Michigan, ordance with plane and specifics-prepared by O’Dell. Hewlett A uuvsscbaon, Associates, Architects. One contract will be awarded for wort on all four schools Including Arohltec-tural, Mechanical. Electrical and Hitches Equipment. , Plane and specifications together with the reblddlng instructions an$ directions AroniUctv'or* & t the Office ... .... -.—...... ..an tor Blvd., Birmingham. Mlohlgan, on or after December A, ’”** * --“ -f $00.00 will bo ro- islstlng of pi s shall bo V In dupll. e Archl- Offlee of the shah bo ward of Education, Avon-0 Wett Auburn Michigan. • EDDCAl ..HUB i Heights, Michigan VMOMD N. BAKER , .Secretary Deo. 31 and 30, 1003 THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY, DECEMBER 29. 1962 Eying World' 1! 1 t 1 : ■ DETROIT (UPI)r-A bipartisan. been ehosen as. the U.S. bidder to the International Olympic Corn- campaign to bring a world’s fair to Detroit In 1972 .was launched yesterday in a meeting at the Detroit Press Club. S.y’W'’. ’/dr Among those attending were Richard Van Dusen?legal adviser to Gov.-elect George Romney; Democratic Congressman Harold Mi Ryan of Detroit, and . Phillip Jourdan, representing Detroit Mayor Jerome P; Cavanagh. Ryan recently! returned from Paris, where he maced Detroit’s bid with the Bureau of Inter-xpositions, the world’s fair selective body. ‘BIE President Leon Barety showed great enthusiasm for Detroit’s plan,” Ryan said., “Montreal is the choice for 1967 and our changes look good, for ’72.” Seattle had the 1962 world’s fair. OLYMPIC TIE-IN Steve Spilos, president of (he Detroit World’s Fair Board of Directors, said an attempt would be made to correlate the fair bid with Detroit’s campaign.for the 1968 Olympics.-The Motor City already “We are planning to solicit public subscription from all civic, religions, political, business and labor groups,” Spilos added. “A world’s fair in Detroit would add millions of dollars to its economic growth and mean more millions in trade for local merchants,1”Jhe said. ★ ★’ ★' , said Detroit’s urban redevelopment program would provide “available areas within' metropolitan . Detroit” for a world’s fair site. One such area would be the projected State Fairj Grounds expansion. j BATEMM1 TRADE-li POST PRIM CAYTON Service for Prim Cayton, 76, of 541 Fildew St., will be 7:30 p.m. Wednesday at Macedonia Baptist Church.' Burial will be in Mississippi. - . •' Mr. Cayton died Thursday at Pontiac General Hospital after, an illness of one year. His body will be at the Frank Carruthers Funeral Home from 7 pm: today until 7 p.m. Wednesday. Mr. Cayton has been in die county eight months. Ho is survived by his wife, Rachael. Surviving children are M. C. Cayton of Chicago, 111.; Mrs. Mel-ma B. May, also of Chicago; Cor-nelious of Detroit; Clophaine of New Orleans, La.; Mrs. Thelma Harris, Arnette and Nelson Cayton, all of Pontiac. International Tea Sponsored hy Missionaries 8 ROOM-4 bedroom older home in beautiful condition. It's really nice! Carpeting included, gat heat, and garage. Close to Sb Fredericks. Only $7,950—$950 down and no ■mortgage costs. IN CITY—Close to Northern High. 3 bedrooms, basement, FA furnace and aluminum storms and screens. Neaf at a and 3 nice lots. Budget priced at $71200 and Pontiac Missionaires Inc. and the Detroit Council of Catholic Women will hold an International Tea from 2 to 5 tomorrow afternoon in the Knights of Columbus Hall, 30755 Southfield Road, Birmingham. ★ ★ ★ This Will be the second such event. The first tea held in October was so successful that foreign students expressed a desire for a repeat meeting. The outgrowth of the tea was an outgrowth of the Missionaires Scholarship Fund which supports a young woman student from Trinidad at St. Mary’s Academy, Oxford. At Missionaide headquarters, 1130 Myrtle St. another young girl Is here from Trinidad on a visitor’s visa, Rosetta LaCaille. Four other students from Trinidad are attending Wayne State University, May grove and Madonna Colleges. p All foreign students and their guardians are invited. More tth&n students from University of Detroit, University of Michigan and area colleges and high schools are expected... KUIIMY Kealftf Surviving sisters arc Mrs. Anna Bell Harper of Hazel Hurst, Miss, and Mrs. , Hattie Wallace 0 Laura, Miss. HARRY J. GALLAGHER Service for former Pontiac res ident Harry J. Gallagher, 78, of St. Petersburg, Fla., will be a.m. Wednesday in the Shrine :of the Little Flower, Royal Oak, with burial in Mt. Olivet Cemetery. The Rosary will be recited at 8 p.m. Tuesday in the Wessels Funeral Home, 23690 Woodward Ave., Pleasant Ridge. His body will be at the funeral home at p.m. Monday. Mr. Gallagher died on Christmas Day in St. Petersburg. He was a former stage manager for the old State Theater in Pontiac arid a member of St. Vincent de Paul Catholic Church. Surviving are his wife Frances E.; a son Harry J. Jr. of Pleas-sister; and two brothers. WILLIAM H. HAMILL Service for William H. Hamill, 73, of 190 W. Columbia Ave., will Among foreign students in Pontiac on the American Field Service are Preakash Ratnatarkhi from India who lives with the Ward Ross family at 255 N. Berkshire; and Graciella Llosa Argentina living with the Charles DeVlieg family on Porter Lane. A program will be presented at the tea. Sporks-Griffin FUNERAL HOME **Thoughtful Service” 46 William* St. Phone FI 2-5841 Purse Snatcher Gets 60-Day Jail Sentence Frank B. Clay, of 362 Fremont St., was sentenced to 60 days in the Oakland County jail and placed on two years’ probation yesterday for stealing a-' purse containing $3 from a woman in Bloomfield Township las Clay, who pleaded guilty to unarmed robbery Dec. 10, was sentenced by Circuit Judge Frederick C. Ziem. Funeral Home. Burial will follow in Perry Mount Park Cemetery. Mr. Hamill, a retiree of GM Truck and Coach Division, died yesterday at his home of a heart ailment. Surviving besides his wife, Voda, are .two sons, Stanley | of Lancaster, Calif., and George of Wichitaj Kan.; three sisters, Mrs. Fannie Johnson and Mrs. Edith Levely, both of Pontiac, and Mrs. Maude Ragsdale of Battle Creek; one brother, Floyd Clyde; four grandchildren; and 10 great-grandchildren, IRA A. KLEINER Tvord has been received of the death of former Pontiac resident Ira A. Kleiner, >, of 3903 Ray-inert Drive, JLas Vegas, Nev. Service and. burial were in Las egas . Mr. Kleiner died in the Sunrise Hospital, Las Vegas, after an illness of four years. He was former employe of Ford Motor Co. in Highland Park and a member of St. Vincent de Paul Church. Surviving are. his wife, a son, Joseph, of Detroit; three sisters. trait’s4 Harper Hospital after a brief illness. V He was retired Mies manager of the Ward Baking Co. and member of the, J. L. Hudson Post of the American Legion. Survivors include a daughter, Margaret Ann Wyke of Detroit, and.three nephews In Pontiac. i MRS. BIRDEN BAILEY ORTONV1LLE — Service for Mrs. Birden (Ella M.) Bailey, 64, of 670 Sands Road will be 2 p.m. Monday at C. F. Sherman Funeral Home, Ortonville. Burial will be in Seymour Lake Cemetery. Mrs. Bailey died yesterday in Pontiac General Hospital of heart attack. Surviving are two daughters, Mrs. Thelma McGrath of Royal Oak and Mrs. Lillian Strochkirch of Clarkston; a son, Morris Hag-ler of-Pontiac, and 10 grandchildren. MRS. WELLS BEAUREGARD ROCHESTER — Service for Mrs. Wells (Lucille) Beauregard, 80, formerly of 420 Taylor St. will be at 3 p.m. Monday in the Rich-ardson-Bicd Funeral Home, Waited Lake. Burial will follow in Avon Township Cemetery. Mrs. Beauregard died yesterday afternoon after an illness of 10 years. MRS. VINCENT BOBOWSKI WALLED LAKE-Service for Mrs. Vincent (Agnes) Bobowski, of 2650 Carmel St., Ann Arbor, will be 10 a.m. Monday at St. William’s Catholic Church, Walled Lake. Burial will be in White Chapel Memorial Cohaetery. The body will be at Richardson-Bird Funeral Home, Walled Lake. Mrs. Bobowski died yesterday at University Hospital, Ann Arbor. Survivors include two daugh- Overlook St., will be 11 a.m. Monday at Our Lady of the Lakes Catholic Church, with burial in Lakeview Cemetery by Sharpe-Goyette Funeral Home. He died Friday after month illness. Mir. LaPlante had been a bartender at the Pontiac “Ilka Club for J3 years. Surviving beside his wife Evelyn is a son, Walter of Saginaw; a daughter, Mrs. Richard White of Waterford Township; and eight ’grandchildren. Also surviving are three sisters and three brothers, The Rosary wili be said 4 p.m. Sunday, and an Elks Lodge of Sorrow at 8 p.m. MRS,. JENNIE E. MARLOW LAKE ORION - Service foi Mrs. Jennie E. Marlow, 73, of 974 Highlander St., was to be held p.m. today at Allen’s Fuqeral Home, with burial in Eastlawn Cemetery. She died Wednesday after an illness of two weeks. Surviving are three daughters, Mrs. Otto Knotts, Mrs. Phyllis Heddrlck and Mrs. Leslie Taylor; and two sons, William H. and Edward F., all of Lake Or-in. Also surviving are 10 grandchildren. be 1:30 p m. Monday at Huntoon iers, Mrs. Joseph Purtzenski of The Present Standard of Funeral Service ... ... Is thq result of your desire for something better than our forefathers knew. Donelson-Johns service has improved steadily through the years. Not only our equipment, but our knowledge and understanding have grown. The material things, the Funeral Home, our’funeral coaches, and / our expert staff have gradually been built to, their present high / standard. Patience, tact, courtesy, and consideration are personal factors that are old-fashioned here, but have also improved with time and experience. > * Taxi Im, On Our ‘Pnmlui CDomlson-Johns FUNERAL HOME /'flu. FEDERAL 4-4511 855 WEST HURON ST. PONTIAC and STANLEY MASON Service for Stanley Mason, of 188 Prospect St., will be held at 3 p.m. Monday at the William F. Davis Funeral Home, with burial in Oak Hill Cemetery. He died Wednesday. Mr. Mason had retired from Pontiac Motor Division. Surviving is a brother. BRENDA MORRIS Graveside service for Brenda K. Morris, infant daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Woodrow L. Morris of 4697 Woodhull Dr., Waterford Township, wad held 10 a.m. to-ly with burial in the Drayton Plains Cemetery by the Coats Funeral Home. / She was dead at birth Thurs-lay. Surviving b e s 1 d e her parents are three-brothers, Woodrow Jr., Wallace and Thomas; and a sister, Norma, >t home. Also surviving are grandparents Mr. and Mrs. Uiaah Morris and Mr. and Mrs. Whlller Dew, all of West Virginia. MRS. E. VAN NORDSTRAND Funeral service for Mrs. Emma Van Nordstrand, 89, of 2291 Central St., Sylvan Lake, will be held Sunday afternoon at’ Cronrath Funeral Home, Watson-town, Pa. Her body .was at the Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home following her death Friday. Survivihg is a daughter Mrs. Ralph Cromis, with whom she made her home; fivq grandchildren and eight great-grandchildren, J. WILSQN WYKE Service for, J. Wilson Wyke, 67, formerly of Pontiac, will be 2 pm. Monday at Sparks: Griffin Funeral Home. Burial win be in Roseland Park Cemetery. Mr. Wyke d|ed yesterday In De- railed Lake and Mrs. Robert-Ly- TVhl, , loir nf Ann ArW- n was 8 member of the facul- jak of Ann Arbor; a son, Staff Sgt. Donald Bobowski, U.S. Air Force, stationed in New Found-land; two brothers, John Kaczer, and William Kaczer, both of Novi; and eight grandchildren. ARCHIE R. CAVERLY ORION TOWNSHIP — Service for Archie R- Caverly, 49, of 2985 Judah Lake Road, will be held 11:30 a.m. Monday at the Huntoon Funeral Home, With burial in East Dayton Cemetery. He died Friday after a three-month illness. Mr. Caverly had been employed by the Pontiac Motor Division. Surviving are his wife, Mary; his parenffl. Mr. and Mrs. NoD-Caverly; and three daughters, Mrs. Grace Hoffheins of Pontiac,1 Mrs. Marjorie Joseph of Auburn Heights and Marion Caverly at home. Also surviving are nine grandchildren; three sisters, Mrs. Gladys Baer of Pontiac, Mrs. Jessie Morse of Clio and Mrs. Helen Kelley of Caro; and four brothers, Norman of North Branch, Alvin of Clarkston ’ and George and Clayton, both of Pontiac. PROF. A. P. PItyOWARSKI ORCHARD LAKE-A Requiem High Mass will be sung at 11 a.m. Monday in St. Mary’s Col-Chapel, Orchard Lake, for Andrew P. Piwowarski, professor emeritus of Latin and, Greek at ;. Mary’s College. Burial will be in Holy Sepulchre Cemetery. Professor Piwowarski’s body at the Wujek Funeral Home, 17301 Van Dyke, Detroit. He died Friday night in St. Mary's Hospital, Livonia, at the age of 85. Professor Piwowarski, who lived in the Orchard Lake Sem- ROCK R. FRENCH AVON TOWNSHIP - Service for. Rock R. French, 81, of 1(120 W. Auburn Road was to be held this afternoon in the Pixley Funeral Home with burial in Pontihc Township Cemetery. Mr. French died yesterday at his residence after a long illness. STANLEY H. GOULD CLARKSTON - Service foi Stanley H. Gould, 61, of 9593 Dartmouth, will be 3 p.m, Monday in Huntoon Funeral with burial in Perry Mount Park Cemetery. Mr. Gould died yesterday in Pontiac General Hospital after illness of two months. He was employed with the Rich Sign Service. Survivours Include his wife, Leona;, two daughters, Mrs. Arthur Stottlemyre of Pontiac and Mrs. Grant Sheley of Clarkston; six grandchildren; aiuj a brother. HARRY A. LaFORTUNE LAPEER—Service for Harry A. LaFortune, 67, of 350 Peninsula Road, Deerfield Township, Lapeer County, will be 1:30 p. m. Tuesday. The body will be at Balrd-Newton Funeral Home, Lapeer, after 10 a. m. Tuesday. Mr. LaFortone died yesterday in Florence, Arts. Burial will be in West Deerfield Cemetery. Surviving are his wife, Ethel; two daughter, Mrs. Wilfred R. LaFond of Barnes Lake, and Mrs. Corinne Crawford of Mesa, Arlz.; and seven grandchildren. Mr. LaFortune retired from GMC Truck & Coach Division in Pontiac in 1957! WALTER V. LaPLANTE CLARKSTON-Service for Walter V. LaPlante, 58, of 6150 ty for 40 years. Before that he taught at Alliance College in Kingbridge Springs, Fa. A native of Poland, he came to the United Slates in 1902 after re-ceving his education in Europe. A son, Cyprian of Lansing, 111., survives. MRS. CLARENCE E. PRICE ROCHESTER — Service for Mrs. Clarence E. (Emma) Price, 79, of 3274 John R Road will be 2:30 p.m. Monday in the Pixley Funeral Home with burial in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery. Mrs. Price died yesterday in St. Joseph Mercy Hospital after brief illness. She was a member of St. Paul Methodist Church, Rochester Relief Corps, Blue star Mothers and the Grandmother's Club. Surviving are a daughter Mrs. Eva Kerchofer of Rochester; three sons, Ralph of Rochester, Stewart in Florida and Richard of Toledo, Ohio; seven grandchildren; and a brother Arthur Grothers of Hastings. jobbers Strike Twice at Cars Hamm«r, Knife, Club Threaten Motorlin Robbers armed with a large hammer, a knife and club held up two motorists and their passengers within 30 minutes early morning. Harley Hamer, 41, of 116 Euclid St. told Pontiac police that he and his passenger William M. Crower, 23, of 685 Northway Drive were dragged from their car by four men while waiting for a traffic light at Franklin Road ant South Boulevards He said they were threatened with a knife and hammer. Har-ner said he had 9193 taken from his wallet and Crower, $95. At 5:10 a.m., just 25 minutes after the first robbery, Wayne Conners, 31, of 12 Sheridan Ave., and Roy Neuman, 39^ 2101 N. Woodward Ave., were flagged by a man while they were driving on West Hughes Avenue, JUMPED BY FOUR Conners, the driver, said when they stopped they were jumped by the man and three others, of them carrying a hammer, another, a large club. ; The four escaped on foot with |80 from Conners and $16 from Neuman. The robberies occurred within three blocks of each FourArelnfureif When Two Cpts. Crash Head-On Four persons were Injured this morning in a head-on crarii on Highland Road in Waterford Town'ship. ! * * * The drivers of both care are lu satisfactory comMUm at Pa» tlac General Hospital. They are Edward Hleatt, 47* of 1231 Nancywood Si, and Mrs. John Kraase, 49, of Detroit. Hleatt receivod a broken kaee, in the accident and Mrs. Kraase' •offered facial lacerations. Mrs. Kraase’s two'passengers, her daughter Karen, 16, and Michael Bartnik, 20, of 1703 Sycamore St., Royal Oak, west treated at the hospital for mindt injuries and released. Hleatt was alone in his car, 1 ★ * ★ w" Waterford Township police said that the collision occurratf when Mrs. Kraase skidded into ghm other egr While applying the brakes to make a left turn. .1 ★ ★ Or The accident occurred about :25 a.m. neap Pontiac Lake Road. Three Women Hurt When Car Hits Tree ROYAL H. WOODLEY M E T A M O R A—Service for Royal H. Woodley, 57, of 4507 Thomas Road, will be at 1:30 p. m. Monday in the Muir Bros. Funeral Home, Lapeer. Burial will be In the Metamora Cemetery. Mr. Woodley died yesterday In Pontiac General Hospital after !S8 of a few weeks. He was amemploye of Pontiac Motor Division. Surviving besides his wife, Wilda, are three sons, Jimmey of Lapeer, Alpheus of Metamora ' Jerry at home; two daughters, Mrs. Olive Fuller of North Branch and Vonda at home; two sisters, Mrs.' Frank Stehzel of Imiay City and Mrs. Mabel Megram of Ferndale. Also surviving are a brother Ralph of Metamora, and 10 grandchildren. Three women were injured this morning when their Car‘ skidded on ice in Pontiac Township and hit a tree. In fair condition. at Pontiac Osteopathic Hospital are Minnie A. Sawyer, 51, of 1275 811-verbell Road, Orion Township; Julia West, 35, of 744 St. Clair and Margaret Wolflngton, 42, 649 North View Court, both of Pontiac. the extent of their injuries is not yet known. The accident occurred at 7 a.m. on Auburn Road near Doris Road. ★ Sr it . Sheriff deputies said the car was travelling about 40 miles an hour when it went out of control. Death Notices V .J*. _ •iso sur»T»id"by t«n "trondchn: •WW* will bo hold Monday, Docsmbor 31. at Jl p.m ■ fc* «• Funaral tSi W4S!» A**vSSJ* Klllott otfjeiatiac, InUrmsPt In Oaymour Lak# Comstar*. Mrs. Ballsy «ui n, m stat* at'tba O. BOBOWSKI, bkcCMBER ]*. 1MT Amiss, am Carnal at., Ann Arbor, formsrly of Pontiac; at* tl: doar mother of Mrs. Joseph Purtsoaskl. Mrs. Robert Lyjak. ,. and Stan Bgt. Donald BobowiaT; dear sister at John >•>$ william bp eight >n of the Silo Church, Wailed L_.. ment- in Whit* Ohapol Get Mrs. Bobowski will fl* la at__ Iho Richardson • Bird ruhorai Homo, Walled Lalte. ' nhOBMUR Macedonia Baptist Church. Mr. 1 Cayton wIII^mmml bo taken to McCoing, Mississippi, tor service and burial on Sunday, January t. Mr. Oayton will lie In state at the frank Carruthers funeral Home after 7 p.m. today. CAVIMLY. bBCEUatR $*, 1M3. Archie Ray, 3111 Judah (in ltd., * • " - main Mary of Mr. -and Reds Rap, but Pay, Back Tax on Estate GLEN COVE, N.Y. (AP)-The Soviet government has pajd more than $23,000 in back taxes owed this Long Island community rather than face loss of the I estate it owns here. Mayor Joseph Reilly of Glen Cove picked up two checks drawn on Chase Manhattan Bank and totaling $23,132.96 in payment of back taxes on the sprawling estate known as Killenworth. Reilly said he jpicked up the checks at the United Nations Mission headquarters, where an American diplomat said the Soviets, made the payment undeir protest. News in Brief Dorene Shelton, 25, of N. Edith reported to Pontiac Police that $80 was stolen from her apartment yesterday. Thieves stole $35 from Loren-i's Shoe Repair, 514 S. Saginaw St., after gaining entrance by removing a window covering at the rear of the building, the owner Lorenza Farrar, 49, reported to Pontiac Police yesterday. vln. Oeorge and Cl'ayti it$o lurvfvtd by nlnt rfiiuSon caverly wUHm In i Hunt DECEMBER Tiei. Dartmouth. Clarkston; ago ji; nsloved husband of Leona Oould; doar father of Mr*. Arthur (Jnh) itonle-mvr* and Mrs. Oront (fatrlolsl Bholty; doar brother of Jock Oould. Funoral service will b* held Monday, December It, at 1 Em. at the Huntoon funorcl lom* with Rov. Carl Adams officiating. Mr. Oould will He In ■tits at tha Huntoon funoral HAMILL, DECEMBER? william H., 1(0 West C______ agt II; beloved husband of V-— Hamill; doar fathar of Stanley Sr. and Seor$* Hamill; dear brother of Mrs. fannt* Johnson, Mrs. Edith Lovely. Mrs. .Maud* Ragsdale, and Floyd Hamill. funeral service will be held Monday, December 11, at 1:30 p in, at . IMS, 0 Overlook, eo; oelovM hus-i LaPlante; dear r oi Mrs. Richard White end ir W. LaPlante: dear brothar -rs. Jack Lcvtnaon. Mra. Jack nuhr, Mrs. Anthony iohlllo. , and Jo* Laflant*., the it-Goytit* Funrri OoyttU Mont!*v, uLoefttbor 31. »t 1 •t Our Lady of ijiho Liku ; Dalanoy offlolfttl Lakfvkw Omwti *. LaPlant* will I 9 Sharp# • Clot m#, Clark a to? ........ DECEMBER 38, Bm, Atanlav, 188 Pronprft «», Of* 88;