Th« Pontiac Prow, Monday, Docombor 15, 1969 v P i MONDAY R — Rerun C — Color MONDAY MORNING 5:50 (2) TV Chapel 5:55 (2) C--On the Farm Scene 6:00 (2) C — Sunrise Semester 6:25 (7) C — Five Minutes to Live By ' 6:30 (2) C — Woodrow the Woodsman ___ Q (4) Classroom -X^Seek-ers: Golden Decade” i7) (Return) Meet the Masters — Guy Palazzola deraonst rates Rembrandt’s painting style and technique. 7:00 (4) C — Today—Lionel Hampton guests. (7j C — Morning Show 7:30 (2) C—News, Weather, Sports 7:55 (9) News 8:00 (2) C — Captain Kangaroo (56) Americans From Africa 8:05 (9) Mr. Dressup 8:30 (7) RC —Movie:. "Inn of the Sixth Happiness” (British, 1958) Ingrid Bergman, Curt Jurgens (Parti) (9) Friendly Giant 8:45 (9) Chez Helene 9:00 (2) R - Mr. Ed (4) C — Dennis Wholey (9) C — Bozo 9:15 (56) Book Parade 9:30 (2) R C —.Beverly ■ Hillbillies (56) Let’s Go Sciencing 9:45 ( 56) Art Lesson 9:55 (4) C — Carol Duvall 10:00 (2) R C — Lucy Show (4) C — It Takes Two — Mel Torme, Edie Adams, Norm Crosby and their spouses guest this week. (9) Ontario Schools I (56) C — Sesame Street 10:25 (4) C —News 10:30 (2) C — Della Reese — Vic Damone and E d McMahon guest. (4). C — Concentration (7) C — The His and Her of It (50) C — Jack LaLanne 11:00 (4) C - Sale of the Century (50) C — Strange Paradise (56) Reason and Read 11:15 (56) Misterogers 11:20 (9) Ontario Schools II 11:30 (2) C — Love of Life (4) C — Hollywood Squares — Arte Johnson, Nanette Fabray, Sebastian Cabot, Meredith MacRae and Stu Gilliam guest this week. (7) C—Anniversary Game (50) C — Kimba . 11:45 (9) C-News MONDAY AFTERNOON 12:00 (2) C—News, Weather, Sports (4> C — Jeopardy (7) RC —Bewitched (9) Take 30 (50) C — Alvin 12:05 ( 56) Americans From Africa 12:25 (2) C — Fashions 12:30 (2) C - He Said, She Said (4) C — News, Weather, Sports (7) R C - That Girl (9) C — Tempo 9 (50) C — Galloping Gourmet „ 12:35 ( 56) Friendly Giant 12:55 (4) C — News 1:00 (2) C — Search for Tomorrow (4) C — Letters to Laugh-In (7) C — Dream House (9) R — Movie: "The Twinkle in God’s Eye" (1955) Mickey Rooney, Hugh O’Brian (50) R - Movie: "Nobody Lives Forever” ( 1946") John Garfield, Faye Emerson 1:10 (56) Listen and Say 1:25 ( 56) R —Book Parade 1:30 (2) C - As the World Turns (4) C — You're Putting Me On — Peter Lawford, Rita Moreno, Peggy Cass, Bill Cullen and Corbett Monica guest this week. (7) C—Let’s Make a Deal 1:40 ( 56) R — Reason and Read 2:00 (2) C - Where the Heart Is (4) C—Days of Our Lives (7) C—Newlywed Game (56) R — Speaking Freely —Lee Sfrasberg, theatrical directorand a founder of the Actors Studio in New York City, guests. 2:25 (2) C-News 2:80 (2) C—Guiding Light (4) C — Doctors (7) C — Dating Game 3:00 (2) C — Secret Storm (4) C — Another World (7) C — General Hospital (9) R — Candid Camera (56) Innovations — An examination of the Small Business Administration's new technology utilization program. (62) R—Movie: “Just My Luck” (British, 1 957 ) Norman Wisdom, Margaret Rutherford Lucille Ball play unexpected hont to a litter of nine puppiet on “Here't Lucy" at 8t30 p.pi. Mondays in color on Channel 2. 3:30 (2) C-Edge of Night (4) C — Bright Promise (7) C - One Life to Live (9) C — Magic Shoppe (50) C — Captain Detroit (56) Roger’s Pass—Story of the American engineer who discovered the pass through the Selkirk Mountains. 4:00 (2) R C - Corner Pyle (4) R C - Steve Allen -The Brothers Sincere, Robert Q. Lewis, George Lindsay and Hal Frazier guest. (7) C — Dark Shadows (9) C — Bozo s (56) Sesame Street 4:30 (2) C - Pnhrvct - Mike Douglas RH Ames wel- comes Marty Brill and the Irish Rovers. (7) R C — Movie: “The Castilian” (1963) Cesar Romero, Frankie Avalon, Broderick Crawford (Part 1) (50) R — Little Rascals (62) C — Bugs, Cyrus and Friends 5:00 (4) C—George Pierrot — “Mexican Holiday” (9) RC — Flipper (50) R C — Lost in Space (56) R — Misterogers 5:30 (9) R C — Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea (56) R — Friendly Giant (62) R — Leave It to Beaver 5:45 ( 56) Mr. L i s t e r * s Storytime MONDAY NIGHT 6:00 (2) (4) (7) C - News, Weather, Sports (50) R C — Flintstones (56) High School Bowl -Cranbrook vs. Roeper (62) R — Ozzie and Harriet 6:30 (2) C — News — Cronkite (4) C — News — Huntley, Brinkley (9) R —■ Dick Van Dyke — One of Ritchie’s pet duck dies. (50) R — Munsters — the family inherits $10,000 from a Transylvanian relative. (56) Beyond the Earth — The physical conditions of the moon as an environment for man are assessed. (62) C — Robin Seymour 7:00 (2) C — Truth or Consequences (4) C — News, Weather. Sports (7) C — News — Reynolds Smith (9) R Movie: “This Woman Is Dangerous” (1952) A woman, high on the social register of the underworld, finds true love after an operation to save her eyesight. Joan Crawford, Dennis Morgan (50) R — I Love Lucy The Pontiac Pratt, Monday, December 13, 1969 m COLOR (56) What’s New — “The Princess and the Swineherd” is the story of a poor but handsome prince who wants t o marry the emperor’s daughter. 7:30 (2) C — (Special) Dick Clark Guests include Davy Jones, the Grass Roots, Gladys Knight and the Rips, Paul Revere and the Raiders, Merrilee Rush, Tommy Roe and SteppenWolf. (4) C — My World and Welcome to It — Monroe . gives his daughter a Christmas present that incurs the wrath of the neighborhood. (7) C — Music Scene — Guest host Lou Rawls welcomes Gordon Light-foot, Little Richard, Spirit and Charley Pride. (50) C — Beat the Clock — Frankie Randall guests. (56) French Chef — “Cold Souffle-Bavarian Cream” (62) C — Of Lands and Seas — “The Atomic Island” 8:00 (4) C — Laugh-In — Greer Garson guest-stars. (50) R C - Hazel (56) World Press 8:15 (7) C — New People — Warren, in a recurrence of drug-induced delusions, sets out to get rid of George. 8:30 (2) C — Here’s Lucy — Kim and Craig persuade Lucy to keep a lost dog overnight. (50) C — To Tell the Truth (62) R — The Nelsons 9:00 (2) C — Mayberry R.F.D. — An old Army buddy makes a play for Sam’s girl. (4) C — Movie: “Mission Batangas” (19 08) Opportunistic pilot becomes involved in removing the Philippine government’s entire stock of gold bullion from Corregidor before the Japanese find it. Dennis Weaver, Vera Miles, Keith Larsen (7) C — Survivors — Duncan finds Baylor dead. (9) C - What’s My Line? (50) R — Perry Mason (56) NET Journal — “Kaddish” tells the odyssey of a man searching through Israel for a friend with whom he survived his detention in a German concentration camp. (62) R C — Movie: “Man From Mykanos” (French, 1966) Anne Vernon, Gabriele Tinti 9:30 (2) C — Doris Day — After working overtime several nights, Doris plans a full weekend of “family fun.” (9) C — Tommy Hunter — Pat Hervey guests. 10:00 (2) C — Carol Burnett ‘ — Garry Moore and Durward Kirby guest. Documentary probes the nationwide problem o f inflation, including a n evaluation of Nixon’s antiinflation policies and a discussion of the causes, effects and cures by economist John Kenneth Galbraith. (9) Country Music Hall (50) C — News, Weather, Sports (56) People in Jazz — Blues-rock singer Lou Rawls discusses his beginnings as a gospel singer and the transition to his present career. 10:30 (9) Man Alive (50) R — Ben Casey — An operatic diva faces blindness. Mary As tor guest-stars. MONDAY (56) R — Folk Guitar Plus (62) R — Sea Hunt 11:00 (2) (4) (7) (9) C -News, Weathef, Sports (62) R — Highway Patrol 11:30 (4) C — Johnny Carson — Ingrid Bergman and Jaye P. Morgan guest. (7) C - Talk Show -Guest host Frank Sinatra Jr. welcomes Jackie De Shannon and Jerry Shane. (9) R — Movie: “Ladies Who Do” (British, 1963) Cleaning women in financial offices get tips on the stock market from waste baskets and form a stockbuying syndicate. Peggy Mount, Robert Morley (50) C —■ Merv Griffin — Gregory Peck guests. (62) R — Movie: “A Woman’s Temptation” (British, 1958) Patricia Driscoll, Robert Ayres 11:35 (2) R — Wagon Train — A Brooklyn hoodlum, his sister and mother join the wagon train. Annette Funicello guest-stars. 1:00 (4) Beat the Champ (7) R — Texan (9) Viewpoint 1:05 (9) C — Perry’S Probe — “The Police Museum” 1:30 (2) R - Naked City (4) (7) C — News, Weather - 1:40 (7) C — Five Minutes to Live By 2:30(2) C - News, Weather 2:35 (2) TV Chapel ADD-A-BEDROOM MODERNIZATION FAMILY ROOMS - OORMERS ROOM ADDITIONS -BREEZE-WAYS - ALUMINUM -KITCHENS 5744 Highland Rd. (M-59) OR 4*0371 DIXIE GARAGES Briok • Block • Frame Free Plant, No Confuting * Prices, Buy Oiract from Owner and Save1 F.H.A. Termt e Up to 7 Yr. Terms FREE ESTIMATES SEE MODELS ON DISPLAY SAME LOCATION 15 YEARS Every Job Fully Guaranteed OWNER SUPERVISION ON EVERY JOB Nixon Likely to Disclose More Viet WASHINGTON (ff) —' President Nixon Is expected to announce a third round of U. S. troop withdrawals from Vietnam when tie speaks to the nation tonight in an updated report on his efforts to end the war, ' | r v * * ★ | All three major television and radio networks — ABC, CBS and NBC •»- will carry the President’s address live at 6 p.m. (Pontiac time). Thp speech will be limited to about five minutes, according to the White House. * ★ * Nixon had said during his last news conference a week ago today he would announce another American troop pullout from the war zone by Christmas. Nixon made ho estimate ti\en of the l number of U. S. troops to come out of Vietham and the White House in announcing this latest speech did not men- tion any figures, but widespread speculation has placed the total at 30,000 to 40,000. 40,000 MUST GO ' _ So far, the administration has pulled out about 63,000 troops from the war zone, which means some 40,000 more must be withdrawn if Nixon is to meet the 100,000-man reduction goal'he has set for this year. Secretary of Defense Melvin R. Laird also declined yesterday to disclose how many troops might come out in the next round of withdrawals, but he said the situation is encouraging regarding South Vietnam’s ability to take over more, of the fighting. ★ ★ ★ The President has said American disengagement from the war depends on three things—a lowered level Of enemy Pullouts battlefield activity, increased ability of Saigpn to take over the fighting and progress at the Paris peace talks. Laird acknowledged little if any movement at Paris and he said there has been t an increase of North Vietnamese Infiltration into the South recehtly, s VIKTNAMIZATION SUCCESS But, the Pentagon chief said, "we have had great success this year” in the Vietnamization of the war, which, he described as the "cornerstone" of ad* ministration policy in the war. The secretary also said as of today the U.S. troop ceiling in the war zone is 484,000 men, a reduction of 63,500 troops since the administration took office nearly a year ago. Laird spoke on a television-radio interview program. 1.2T m&m'; ■' ;;^*>*;*-:* mnw ■ POIVTT API PR. SIS Ite PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, MONDAY, DECEMBER 15, im 'ifffPM'IPPk —*5e PAGrES Weatherman Sets Holiday Mood The weatherman is no Scrooge. He’s doing his bit to create a holiday atmosphere as snowflakes cover the ground with a chance of more light snow coming today and tonight. Tonight’s low mercury reading, is expected to fall into the 18-to-23 degree range. Warmer weather is on the agenda for tomorrow with highs bouncing into the low 40s. v ■. . ■■*>■■■ Clouds will continue to banket the area through Wednesday when additional snow or rain showers are due. Precipitation probabilities in per cent are today and tonight 30 and tomorrow 20. The five-day weather forecast predicts average temperatures with the highs ranging between 27-tor40 degrees and the lows 13-to-23. companions also suffered minor injuries. He was removed by reamers minutes after this picture was taken. 2 Moves Seek Compromises on Tax Reform WASHINGTON Iff) — Two major moves to resolve the House-Senate conflicts over massive tax reform legislation confronted Congress today as efforts began to reach a compromise before Christmas. Sen. Albert Gore, D-Tenn., said yesterday the Treasury Department had prepared an Alternative plan for increasing the personal income tax exemption. The House ^scheduled a vote on a separate bill increasing Social Security benefits by 15 per cent. The Senate tacked on these benefits in a rider to its tax reform bill but went further, boosting the minimum monthly payment from $55 to 2100. The center of action this week is the Conference committee, where moves are expected to scale down the new Social Security benefits and tax slashes the Senate added during floor debate. MAJOR ISSUE One of the biggest issues of about 100 substantial differences will be whether to grant tax relief to the nation’s 70 million taxpayers through a cut in rates, as voted by the House, or by an increase in the exemption from $600 to $800, as voted by the Senate. Many leaders expect the conference will hammer out a combination of increased personal exemptions and tax rate reductions to begin after 1970. President Nixon promised to veto the measure if it contains the costly Social Security and tax exemption provisions written in the Senate. Lawmakers were uncertain whether Nixon objected to the increase in the exemption of the fact that Gore’s amendment would make it effective next year and in 1971, thus putting an almost immediate strain on the Treasury. FOUNDATIONS EYED The conferees also had scheduled the issue of taxing private foundations for consideration. The House voted a 7Vt, per cent tax on the income of such foundations but the Senate came up with a lower levy on the assets of the foundations to pay the cost of administering regulations on foundation activities. j ★ ★ ★ Rep. Wilbur D. Mills, D-Ark., chairman of the conference committee, said it will push hard for final disposition of the bill before the hoped-for pre-Christmas adjournment. Shopping: Days 1 Varner Leaving OU for Nebraska Post Durward B. Varner Oakland University Chancellor Durward B. Varner, who has nourished and overseen tremendous growth and expansion at OU since its birth 10 years ago, has announced his resignation. He will leave Oakland Feb. 1, 1970, to become chancellor of the University of Nebraska, where he will be in charge of three campuses — the main campus in Lincoln and two in Omaha, one of which is the University of Nebraska Medical Center. ★ ★ ★ He will succeed Clifford Hardin who left that post nearly a year ago to become U.S. Secretary of Agriculture. • WWW Varner served at one time under Hardin at Michigan State University before coming to Oakland, when Hardin was dean of the College of Agriculture there. ‘TOUGH DECISION’ Varner called his decision to leave “an extremely difficult one,” because of his “Strong emotional commitment to Oakland University and all it means’* and because the community support and involvement have been a source of pride and inspiration to him. He said he and Mrs. Varner came to the decision to accept the University of Nebraska offer “after concluding that in these turbulent times 10 years may be long enough for any president or chancellor on a single campus.” ★ * ★ “It may well be that our greatest contribution has been made, and that now is the time for new leadership to provide the energy and creativity for the next decade,” he added. Project forj^leedy Jeopardized Eqtial-Education Fund Hit WASHINGTON (A - The federal government’s multibilUan-dollar answer to the educational needs of America’s disadvantaged children is at a critical crossroads, its future clouded by evidence of blundering management and misuse of fund*. ~ Title I, the heart of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965, established a national goal of equalizing educational opportunities for all children by compensating for the disadvantages suffered by those who grow up in impoverished communities. ★ ★ ★ To this end, more than $4 billion has been appropriated over the past four years, including $1.2 billion in fiscal 1969. Yet Title I has not worked out, so far, as its sponsors intended. ‘HASN’T REACHED CHILDREN’ According to audit reports, Money has been spent in the wrong places and in many instances has not reached the impoverished children who need it most. Commissioner of Education James E. Allen Jr; recently appointed a special task force to take a hard look at the program. ★ ★ ★ Allen formed the study group after • $16,000 in Title I funds went for a sewage disposal plant in Attala County, Miss. • In three Georgia school districts — Gwinnett, Bibb and Muscogee counties — $870,000 was used to set up curriculum centers and a reading clinic to serve all schools, regardless of whether they were Title I targets. • Detroit overcharged Title I by $1.3 million in one year for overhead costs which would have been incurred even if the district had not beeh participating in the program. • In Fresno County, Calif., several school districts used $930,000 in Title I funds to construct, equip and operate a countrywide instructional television station designed for all children, including those not under the Title I program. • In Milwaukee, Wis., $21,605 went for salaries of non-Title I school personnel. And in New Jersey, $44,000 was used to pay employes who devoted less than full time to Title I activities. • Title I money paid part of the rent on a building housing administrative offices of a school district in Cairo, Hi. In a survey based in part on government audits, the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund said last month that millions of Title I dollars had been misspent for general aid to schools rather than as aid to individual disadvantaged children. I The Story of Herod | Starting today, The Press will carry a six-part Assodated Press series about Herod the Great, ruler of Judea at the birth of Christ. Christ’s birth usually is presented only in the context of conditions in Judea at the time. But* its impact was worldwide, and itmtherefore should be seen against its total background in human history. ★ ★ ★ on Page C-12, perspective, “We have assembled an exceptionally strong administrative staff at Oakland and there is not the slightest reservation in my mind about the ability of this staff to move the university to great new accomplishments in the decade ahead,” Varner said. ‘GENERAL LEADERSHIP’ Explaining his new job at Nebraska he said, “As chancellor, I will be asked to provide the general leadership for three campuses, each with its Qwn president and staff.” “I am particularly excited by the (Continued on Page A-2, Col. 5) School Recall Drive Leaders Seek 1,200 More Signers Organizers of a recall drive against four Pontiac School Board members still have until next Monday to collect additional valid signatures. The petitions bearing 3,622 signatures were turned in last week by Carl Tenuta, of 430 N. Saginaw, a participant in the drive. Tenuta said he received a registered letter Saturday from School Board Secretary ‘ William Anderson, verifying the number of signatures and stating “It appears there are not enough valid f signatures on the petitions to meet recall; requirements.” Libya to U.S.: Leave Base Fast CAIRO (AP) — Libya’s military government called for a speedy American withdrawal from Wheelus Air Base as the regime and U.S. officials prepared to open negotiations today on the future of the $100-million base outside Tripoli. ★ ★ ★ A government statement said a quick pullout is the only thing that “can keep the door open for the development of strong AmeriCan-Libyan relations.” Ambassador Joseph Palmer was the American negotiator, aided by a team of Air Force officers and a State Department legal expert. The Libyan team was headed by Capt. Abdel Salam Jalloud, a member of the ruling junita who negotiated a withdrawal agreement with the British last week. Britain agreed Saturday to withdraw its force of 1,700 servicemen from its bases at Tobruk and A1 Adem by March 31. Families of the men began leaving over the weekend to spend Christmas in Britain and will not return. Two Are Killed in Avon Crashes A Pontiac motorcyclist and a Florida woman were killed in separate Avon Township automobile accidents, one yesterday and one Saturday. Dead are John R. Gillum, 20, of 55 Summit and Mrs. Robert Stephen, 26, of Hollywood, Fla. Gillum was dead, on arrival at Crit-tenton Hospital, Avon 1 1 Q Township, at 2:15 a.m. X JLO yesterday. Mrs. Stephen died at 3:50 Saturday, two hours after she was brought in. Gillum was riding his motorcycle east on Auburn near Liver- Oakland Traffic Toll in ’69 The law requires that petitions contain valid signatures equal to at least 25 per cent of the number of votes cast for governor in the la$t state election In the electoral district in which the petitions are circulated. ONLY CITY FIGURE Although the electoral area of the school district includes not only the City of Pontiac but also Pontiac Township and parts of Waterford, Bloomfield, West Bloomfield, Avon and Orion townships, ’ Anderson mentioned only the 19,370 votes cast in the last gubernatorial election in Pontiac, Tenuta said. * ★ ★ This would mean that from the City of Pontiac alone, .about 4,482 signatures would be required for a recall. Under state law, recall leaders may continue to collect valid signatures fttr 10 days after being notified by school officials that signatures have been counted on petitions. # ★ ★ The drive, started Sept. 5, is to recall Russell L. Brown, John K. Irwin Jr., Mrs. Elsie Mihalek and Mrs. Lucille Marshall, because of their “lack of responsibility and sensitivity to the needs and wishes of the people of the Pontiac School District,” its leaders said. Related Story, Page A-3 nois when a car driven by Richard A. Fearn, 19, of Rochester collided with it in the rear, witnesses told Oakland County Sheriff’s deputies. Undersheriff Leo Hazen said Fearn is being held for “further Investigation” into the cause of the accident. it ★ ★ - Mrs. Stephen received fatal injuries when a car driven by Robert P. Albert, 41, of 2980 Emmons, Rochester, collided with the Stephen vehicle. Police said it had disregarded a stop sign on John R at Avon Road. Stephen, who was driving the car, told deputies he did not see the sign. He and his two-yqar-old daughter received minor injuries. Unit to Be Inactivated WASHINGTON UP* - The 498th tactical missile group, which operates four missile sites op Okinawa, is scheduled to be inactivated at the end of the year. The Pentagon, announcing this yesterday, said, “The move is part of continuing U.S. Department of Defense actions to streamline military forces, reduce personnel and cut spending overseas.” A—2, TJIE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, DECEMBER 15, 1009 Ed Reform at Crucial DANIEL B. BURKE Capital Cities Splits Operation Capital Cities Broadcasting Corp. today announced separation of its operations into two divisions — owe for broadcasting, the other for publishing. Joseph P. Dougherty, an executive vice president of Capital Cities Broadcasting Corp., was named president of the company’s broadcast division, including all the radio and television stations operated by Capital Cities. Daniel B, Burke, also an executive vice president of Capital Cities, was named president of the new publishing division including the recently acquired Pontiac Press Co. and Fairchild Publications which merged with Capital Cities in May 1968. Dougherty joined Capital Cities in May 1959 as general manager of WPRO-TV, Providence, R.I. He was elected vice president of Capital Cities in December of that year and in September 1964 was made general manager of WPRO-AM-FM, in addition to the TV Station. He was appointed executive vice president-television in July, 1966 and the following year took over responsibility for all the radio stations. ★ * * • Burke joined Capital Cities in July 1961 as general manager of television station WTEN, Albany, N.Y., and was elected vice president of Capital Cities in January 1962. In September 1964 he went to Detroit as general manager of WJR-AM-FM, a division of Capital Cities, and was named executive vice president in March 1967. LANSING (UPI) - As far as Gov. \ William G. Milllken’s education reform plan is concerned, it’s the bottom of the ninth and the bases are loaded. ' The next five days are the ones which will make or break his program in the Michigan Legislature. * * * While its path this week is going to be far from smooth, backers of the package remain optimistic at least part of it will be passed by Friday evening. liie coming week will be filled with a continuing succession of “crucial” votes and legislative maneuverings as the pressure builds on each decision to be made. ' ALL PARTS ARE ALIVE As the week begins all [tarts of the program are alive and in a position to be passed this week if the Legislature decides to pass them. The question is purely one of whether the necessary votes can be mustered. The tensest moment is expected to come when the House gets to a vote on the 825-million parochiaid section in the senate-approved 81-billion school aid bill. A parochiaid proposal fell six votes short in the House last spring and obkervers remain unsure whether those, , six votes have been picked qp. Also yet to be wprkcti out is whether the bulk of'financing for the school-aid bill will come from a state income tax increase, a repeal of property tax Credits or a combination of the two. CHILLY reception A House-approved cigarette tax increase is expected to meet a chilly reception in the Senate Taxation Committee, where chairman Harry De Maso MW5*3M* '**» Viet Vets Get | Free Stay at Inn I PHOENIX, Ariz. (AP) -| Everything is on the house for 36 I Vietnam war veterans who are g | guests of the Camelback Inn in its | I fifth annual “Christmas out of the I I Foxhole” celebration. £ The men started their stay with I ■ breakfast in bed yesterday. % * ★ ★ I Before the week is out they will | ? be guests at steak fries, swim- | | ming, golf, surfing and a com- I I munity banquet with half the pro- I | ceeds going into a Christmas I I shopping fund for them. || The men were flown here from i i Vietnam in a National Guard | | plane. Ten others, delayed by bad g I weather, are due later. Their I I Vietnam tours have been com- I | pleted and they are en ’ route to I :’f discharge or reassignment. I I' j I W'. Ex-Newark Aide Is Linked to Payoffs From Contractor has bottled up a proposal by MllUken to raise the tax five cents. . v But rn Senate can, through a serler of parliamentary maneuvers, Urt the bill from the committee if, it wishes and the leadership is expected to do this if D« Maso remains adamant In his opposition. * ★ * The other, less controversial, parts of the package up for a final vote of one type or another this week are: • Three bills closing $48 million worth of tax loopholes. The bills were drawn up by.DeMaso and were not an original part of the program. • a bill allocating 850,000 to establish a deacher incentive pay program. • A bill providing for statewide testing of students in reading, mathematics and vocational education. • A bill authorizing development of neighnorhood education centers. Birmingham Vi NEWARK, N.J. (AP) - Mayor Hugh J. Addonizio says the city’s former corporation counsel, Philip E. Gordon, has told him that he accepted cash payments from a man whose firm was doing business with the city. Related Story, Page D-1 Addonizio said yesterday that Gordon, who resigded last week from his city post, told him he had shared the payments from Paul Rigo with another official- while both served on the City Council. : Addonizio, who refused to answer questions before a federal grand jury last week, said he had not completed an investigation of the other official and therefore would not reveal his name. .* Neither Gordon nor Rigo were r | ' Dem O'lJHen jMay Seek Lodge S|ate Senate Seat Democrat Carl O’Brien, mow on the Oakland County Board of Supervisors, is considering running against State Sen. L. Harvey Lodge for the seat O’Brien once held. * “I am considering running foi* either a State House or Senate seat in 1870,” O’Brien said, "add in the case of the Senate seat, I predict it will be won by a Democrat this time." ’ The 17th Senatorial District encompasses the City of Pontiac and the ^townships of Waterford, Independence, Oxford, Orion, Brandon, Addison and Oakland and all of Lapeer County. O’Brien lost the 1966 election to Lodge in the Romney landslide. Although he defeated Lodge in Oakland County returns, O’Brien lost by a few thousand votes in heavily Republican Lapeer County. ‘QUITE VULNERABLE’ O’Brien said “certain people have talked to me” about running against .vulnerable tills time around.” ; * i O’Brien also said that Democratic State Rep. Arthur S. Ldw, who; represents the Ctiy of Pontiac, “may be open to a contest.” O’Brien said that either he or some “other prominent in-dividuals” may challenge Law in the primary. available immediately for comment. Rigo was an> officer of Constrad Inc., which did construction work for the city. LOAN REPAID In his statement, Addonizio said: “In the summer of 1968, I borrowed 814,000 from Constrad advanced by check. This loan was secured by my personal written notes and repaid with six per cent interest in six months. Mr. Rigo and another former official of Constrad, Charles FallOn, subsequently requested my help in getting bills paid by the city of > Newark to the Capen-Rigo partnership and Cbnstrad.”... The Capen-Rigo Co., also did work for the city during the Addonizio administration. ||§ * * '★ ; The mayor said'he ‘'declined to furnish such help and properly advised the business administrator* the director of public, works and 'the Newark Water Authority to scrutinize these bills with extra care.” “Major portions of these bills have not been paid,” Addonizio said, “in spite of every pressure upon my administration, including lawsuits filed against the city in September totaling approximately $2 million.” Addonizio 'announced Gordon's resignation as corporation counsel last Wednesday. Gordon, 51, was a councilman when named to the 823,000-a-year corporation counsel portion by Addonizio in April 1968. * % „ Gordon was the first person to testify before a federal grand jury investigating allegations of corruption in the Newark city government. Varner to Take Nebraska Post ' (Continued From Page (hie) University of Nebraska’s potential for making even further significant contributions to the human welfare and educational advancement of the citizens of that state and the surrounding area,” he added. ' ■ * "* * Varner was suggested for the presidential post at Michigan t State University in September, but assured more than 2*000 students who staged a rally in support of his stayipg at OU> that he would not go back to MSU. The 52-year-old Varner was named in 1959 as administrative director of Michigan State University-Oajdand, as OU was then called. A ' * . *, ; Varner has seen Oakland grow from its opening enrollment of 570 to more than 5,800 students; from two buildings to its present 20 on the 1,400-acre campus in Avon and Pontiac townships. He has spearheaded a drive for Oakland University’s independence from Michigan State University. Varner said he would recommend that Vice Chancellor and Provost Donald D. O’Dowd be named acting OU chancellor Ijtntil t|e positiop js filled. Z $ No anrtbuncemjent was made *to o ’* possible successor for Varner at Oakland and the decision will be made by the Michigan State Board of Trustees. 2 Dividends Are Declared by Kuhlm BIRMINGHAM—The board of directors of Kuhlman Corp. with headquarters here, has declared a regular quarterly cash dividend of 10 cents per share, plus an extra dividend of 10 cents on the company’s common stock, payable Jan. 10, 1970, to stockholders of record Dec. 26* ' ’ A total of 50 cents per share in dividends has been paid by thfe firm this year. Consecutive quarterly dividends have been paid since 1946. ★ ■ ★ . ★ A total of 48% cents a share was declared last year, including an extra dividend of 10 cents. Effective May 1, 1968, Kuhlman’s stock was split two for one, and the 48% cents per share is adjusted to reflect this action. The Birmingham Exchange Club has presented a check for 8400 to the local chapter of the Michigan Association for Children with Learning Difficulties (MACLD). , , The money will be used for kits of literature to bb distributed to elementary schoolteachers who are concerned with {fie problem of learning and perceptual difficulties. | .?*£■ » ' _ j'j; V-* . , ■ . BLOOMFTELD TOWNSHIP—James M. Olin, 870 Fox Run, has'Been named manager of the Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner and Smith Inc, office in the Fisher Building. He joined Merrill Lynch in 1959 as an account executive apd served in that capacity until assignment to the firm’s management training department in New York earlier this year. ★ -it ★ Olin is a 1956 graduate of Notre Dame University. . The Bloomfield Hills Board of Education will hear reports from committees concerning buildings and outdoor education at a regular session tomorrow at 7 p.m. at the administrative building, Andover Road. Other items on the agenda include the senior trip for Lahser and Andover Wgh schools, led'- legislation on road jurisdiction with application to Lahser Road and discussion on bids on fence work at the bus garage. . $20 The Weather ft . ■ . V-« , Tfc* « PONTIAC AND VICINITY—Mostly cloudy today, tonight and tomorrow. Chance of occasional snow flurries today and tonight. Highs today 28 to 33. Lows tonight 18 to 23. Warmer tomorrow with highs of 35 to 40. Wednesday’s outlook: Cloudy with chance of rain or snow. Precipitation probabilities in per cent: Today and tonight 30, to spend? Make it the most versatile gift $20 will buy! A slinky linky ’70 Sheffield fashioned precision for lasting chic NATIONAL WEATHER — Snow is expected to continue tonight from the Great Lakes to the Atlantic Coast with scattered showers in the far Northwest. Elsewhere, mostly sunny skies are forecast. Temperature changes should be minor. Select from an exciting variety of new links and .faces, ifcany one of a kind All anti-magnetic, shock resist^ and just $20 in Fashion Watches, Pontiac 1; Dovmtc|yn, Northland'EAstland, Westland, Oakland It’s Cliristma3 time sub HUDSONS Iv y. PAMELA GREENWALD Junior Miss Regional Finals at Holly Narrow Field to 12 HOLLY — Five area girls were among the 12 winners in the regional finals of the Junior Miss Pageant at Holly High School Saturday night. ★ ★ ★ Winners included Diane A n k e 1 e , daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William P. Ankele, 5542 Normanhurst, West Bloomfield Township; Jan Felt, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Norman Felt, 2150 Ostrum, Pontiac; and Susan Griffiths, daughter Finch Prods Senators WASHINGTON UP) - An amendment adopted by a Senate subcommittee could crijtple the government’s school desegregation efforts and possibly lead to a reversal of the process, Secretary of Health, Education and Welfare Robert Finch says. ★ ★ * In a telegram yesterday to the 24 members of the Senate Appropriations Committee, Finch said that, if the amendment becomes law, “recalcitrant school districts would be encouraged to harden their positions, and districts which have complied with the law would be tempted to go back on their com-' mitments.” . it h h The amendment would in effect legalize so-called freedom-of-choice' desegregation plans. of Mr. and Mrs. Douglas W. Griffiths, 6606 Pear, Clarkston. * * ★ Others were Pamela Greenwald, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Greenwald, 549 Sashabaw, Ortonville, and Connnie Crawford, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ray D. Crawford, 3168 Herbell, Waterford Township. ★ * * The five girls will join seven other winners from the Holly regional competition at the state pageant at Pontiac Northern High School Jan. 22-24. Twenty-six girls from Southeast Michigan competed in the Holly regionals. * * ★ Contestants were judged on poise, personality and talent. The Holly and Davisburg Jaycee clubs hosted the regional pageant. Senior Citizen Party Set A Christmas party and show for senior citizens in Oakland County is slated for 7-10 p.m. Thursday at Hazel Park Senior School, 23400 Hughes. There is no admission charge. Yule Concert at Romeo ROMEO—The Romeo High School music department will present its annual Christmas concert today at 7:30 p.m. in the high school gymnasium. DIANE ANKELE Final Word Near on Road Pact WIXOM — The final ruling on award of a contested 313-million contract to a Wixom construction firm is expected tomorrow from the State Administration Board, headed by Gov. William Milliken. ★ ■ ★. Last week the State Highway Department confirmed its initial ruling that Walter Toebe & Co. of Wixom was low bidder, at $13,140,414, for construction of an interchange linking 1-475 and M74 freeways. ★ ★ ★ Holloway Construction Co. of Wixom had a lower bid of $12,920,028. It was declared ineligible because a letter of intent to perform a portion of the project from an electrical subcontractor was not included. The firm had protested the initial ruling and asked for a hearing. C. J. Rodgers Co. Inc. of Detroit also submitted a lower bid ($13,103,992), which was rejected because a unit price waS left out. HIGHLAND TOWNSHIP-Employes at Hi-Mill Manufacturing Co., 1704 Highland, believe a Christmas party for homeless children is better than a Christmas party for themselves. * *' w The company will take some 35 “The action taken is in accordance with standard practices established by the Michigan State Highway Department Commission to be followed by contractors submitting bids on state highway construction,” said Charles Hewitt, commission chairman. children from the Oakland County Children’s Village to dinner and back to the plant for a party this Thursday. Employes will present gifts at this third annual party for the children. The party is financed by funds once used for company parties. Employes Plan Party for Homeless Children To Decide on Highland Department Police-Levy Vote Tdksday HIGHLAND TOWNSHIP - Voters decide tomorrow on a proposed two-mill levy for establishment and maintenance of a full-time police department. \ The 10-year levy would allow a four-man department,, including a waking chief. Three men would cover the regular4 shift aided by auxiliary police. A fourth would cover during holidays and vacation^. ★ ★ * If the millage is approved, the township will immediately hire a working chief and buy a police car, according to Chester Burton, township supervisor. The department would be housed in a building formerly used as a post office. Some $25,000 from next year’s budget has been allocated to organize the department, providing there’s a favorable vote tomorrow. The first tax would be collected in December 1970. PROPOSED SALARIES Additional men and another car would be added as money becomes available. Proposed salary for the police chief would be $9,000-$10,000 while patrolmen would receive .$7,000-$7,500. The township also has acquired an estimate for a 1969 police car of $2,519. Added' to the car would be a two-way radio, flashers and a siren costing approximately $934. Currently, police protection for township residents is paid from each resident’s county tax, Until 1968, the township also 'arranged for an additional county car to cover the'community at a cost of $16,000. ' v * it *' \,' . , I In 196$, the township proposed s' one-mill levy to operate and maintain a police department which was defeated by 12 votes out of 1,730. Reconsideration of-the proposal came after some 200 residents signed a petition. Hiey expressed fear of increased vandalism, robberies, speeders and disturbances of the peace. An open hearing on the question was held Nov. 3. After that meeting, the Township Board formally voted to hold the election. EXPRESSES HOPE “We hope that the people will evaluate the problem and will go to the polls with the good of the township in their minds realizing that the costs are low and returns are high,” said Burton. A two-mill levy on a $20,000 home would be $20 a year. ★ ★ * Only property owners may vote. Polls are at the township post office, 185 John and the fire stations, 3570 Duck Lake Road. the press Area News PONTIAC. MICHIGAN. MONDAY. DECEMBER 15, I9t>9 A—3 LIGHTS OUT — Firemen are in the process of mopping The firm was noted for its production of beeswax candles and up after extinguishing a fire at Going Enterprises at 600 for its packaging of industrial gifts. Springfield Township Fife Broadway in Springfield Township Saturday. Flames gutted Department officials said the fire apparently started in the the two-story structure, causing damage in excess of $30,000. area of the furnace. Weekend Highway Toll: 20 Persons Dead in State CubScoutsHelp ' Santa to Bring Yule to Elderly A group of Santa’s helpers is working to bring an early Christmas to needy senior citizens in the Pontiac area. The boys in Cub Scout Rack 133 in Clarkston’s Andersonville school will deliver food baskets to the Pontiac Senior Citizens Drop-In Center at 1 Lafayette. * ★ In addition to food, the baskets' will contain gloves and head scarfs, gifts from the boys. The Cub Scouts in recent years have donated gifts to childre this year, however, the den mothers decided to play the Senior citizqfis. ‘NO AGE UMIT’. “Santa knows no age limit, mother said. “We citizens will enjoy helpers bring them." Before delivering the baskets, volunteers will put in hand ogne, dusting power, or that have been donat Produces and Tusgy. .The Senior Citizens Op port uni Program, a part of the Oakland County Commission on Economic Opportunity, is the coordinating agency for the project. Other projects being planned include the Senior Citizens Advisory Council meeting tomorrow at 1 Lafayette and a Christmas party to be held Christmas week. An OEO spokesman said all senior citizens in the area are invited to attend the above events: He 'added that recently opened Drop-In Center on tiiie main floor at 1 Lafayette is open from 9 S.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Fr‘J— pilot Trooper Donald Langoni (left) explains the controls of thfc new police helicopter to Col. Frederick E. Davids, director of the Michigan State Police. Davids says the five-passenger craft, first helicopter owned by the State Police, will be used for selective highway surveillance and emergency By The Associated Press A New Boston mand and his 7-year-old son, killed in a car-train collision, werre among the 20 persons who died in traffic accidents this past weekend on Michigan highways. Killed yesterday when a train struck their car in Sharon Township of Wayne County were Kenneth J. Debacker, 27, and his son Mack. The Associated Press weekend traffic fatals counfbegan at 6 p.m. Friday and ended last midnight. Other fatalities include: Mrs. Ruby Shull, 59, of Elbridge Township was killed when her car skidded at an icy intersection and collided with another vehicle. Authorities said Mrs. Shull was driving a group of children home from singing practice at an Oceana County church. ★ * ★ Mrs. Marie LaChance, 66, resident of a Bay City nursing home, struck by a car Saturday night while crossing an icy street in Bay City. Mrs. Mary Dean, 63, a companion, died later yesterday. Five Arraigned in Lapeer on Arson, Larceny Charges LAPEER — Five young men were arraigned this morning on charges of arson and larceny after a roundup early Saturday morning by state and county police. The five were arrested in connection with fires and thefts dating from 1967 to September of this year, according to State Police Detective James Thomas. At least two more suspects are sought by police, he said. Those arrested are Herbal Mathias, 22; Robert Zacharias, 18; Randolph Begley, 18; William Robinson, 18, all from Otter Lake in Lapeer County, and Lyle Johnson, 23, of Flint. * * ★, Mathias and Zacharias were charged with arson and larceny from an automobile. Begley and Johnson were charged with arson and Robinson was charged with larceny from an automobile. V FIRE DEPARTMENT MEMBER Johnson we* • member of the Otter Lake-Volunteer Fire Department until June 1969. Detective Thomas said the State Police Lapeer Post and its arson squad, as well as the Lapeer County Sheriff’s Department and an insurance investigator, spent months investigating numerous fires in the Otter Lake area. He said among the fires the men are charged with setting are: a l^rge farmhouse, one jn the Otter Lake Junior High School, qne which destroyed a railroad bridge overpass and numerous grass fires. The larceny charges against three -of the men are in connection with the thefts of hubcaps and "the dismantling of cars in the area, Thomas said. ‘ \ * ★ * No one Was hurt hi the. fires, Thomas said. a The five men were to be arraigned in 7lst District Court, Lapeer. Mrs. Cecilia Stephen, 26, of Hollywood, FTa., in a collision at an Avon Township intersection. Oakland County Sheriff’s deputies'said her husband, Robert, also 26, and daughter, Michele, 2, were injured. John R. Gillum, 20, of 55 Summit, Pontiac, whose motorcycle and an automobile collided last night in Avon Township. Olga Campbell, 72, of 3603 Phillips, Berkley, struck by a car Saturday while crossing a Berkley intersection. William J. Allman, 19, of Kalamazoo, whose car ran off a Kalamazoo street Saturday and struck a utility pole. Randall Roat, 17, of Flint, a passengerr in a car which ran off a Tuscola County road Saturday. Parris M. Milley, 23, of Portage, in a four-car collision Saturday in Kalamazoo County’s Oshtemo Township. * * * Dewayne Hendee, 25, of Pewamd, when his car struck a roadside tree Friday night five miles north of Portland in Ionia County. Gary Peterson, 26, of Belding, whose car overturned after running off a rural road Friday night in Antrim County. DETROIT VICTIM Katherine Nolan, 53, of Detroit, in a collision Saturday at a Detroit intersection. ★ * ★ Jon D. Vandellen,’ 21, Barryton, in a two-car collision last night on M46 in Winfield Township of Montcalm County. Marvin Oja, 30, of Pelkie and Sharon Korpi, 18, of Ishpeming, when cars in which they were riding collided last night on U.S. 41 in Ely Township of Marquett4 County. • Zr it ★ Mary Vargo, 58, of Madison Heights, in a collision Saturday night in Warren. CRASH YESTERDAY Walter Wierzbidki, 53, of Detroit, lit a collision yesterfiay on Detroit’s West > side. , Madeleine Hendron, 63, Saugatuck, died yesterday after she was struck by a car while walking her dog in Holland, A—-4 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, DECEMBER 15, 1969 Head of Violence Study Sees Need for Handgun Ban BALTIMORE (UPI) - Or. Mil too S. Eisenhower, who headed an 18-month study of violence in America, said today the nation eventually will have to take pistols from private citizens. > ' Eisenhower, chairman of the National Commission on the Causes and Prevention of Violence, gave his personal views on gun control, the causes of violence and student unrest in an interview with United Press International for publication after the panel’s final report. That report came out last weekend. * ★ He also urged a national] Four of the 13 commission members — Sen. Roman Hruska, R-Neb., federal Judge Ernest McFarland, Rep. Hale Boggs, D-La., and attorney Leon Jaworski — issued a dissenting statement saying, “E^ch state should be permitted to determine tor itself without additional restrictions by the federal government the system which best meets its needs to control the use of both the handguns and the long guns.” passage of civil rights legisla-j incidents in television pro- said, improvements are needed ilon in die late 1950s and early gramming starting this fall has been greatly reduced.” MUbaMF the most in-j I rlsioB crime rate in fluenctial single factor overcome the baste socioeconomic conditions that make for a high level of violence.” “This is going to cost billions of dollars per year over a long period of years,” Eisenhower said. areas other than urban rebuilding: “We need greatly to expand the number of policemen, to get police of higher education and better training. We need more and dfbetter courts and we need better correctional institutions.’ NOT DISMAYED Eisenhower is anything but dismayed by the youth of today. Editor, 78, Dies DETROIT (AP) — ] services ware to be held in De-L 'These students, being informed, feel a deep sense of Christian involvement in these problems,” he said. “I do believe most strongly that a high percentage of tbe total college population cares ever so much more so tium any previous generation about overcoming the disadvantages that tiie urban youth in the shims have encountered.” Eisenhower believes if the voting age were lowered to 18 and if youth were offered an opportunity to contribute “something useful to society1 through participation in fL “volunteer national servlet corps,” much violent protest would diminish. Eisenhower cautioned agatost any belief that violence would disappear if his suggestions were adopted and if all poverty, discrimination and ignorance were eliminated in America. '/I “There is something in the ...Jinan makeup, the human spirit,” he said. “There is sufficient variety that we’ll always have some violence.” AUTEN FURNITURE * FURNITURE i CARPET > DRAPERY Hart Favors Home Use of 'Peace Bonus' ANN ARBOR (AP) - Sen. Philip Hart says Americans' should not expect a tax cut] when the war in Vietnam is finished. The |20 billion a year thatl America will save with an end to the war should be plowed into domestic programs such as poverty, police protection and pollution, the Michigan Democrat said at the University of Michigan commencement exercises in Ann Arbor Saturday. k k k Hart said the county has overspent for defense at the expense of liberty and security at home and has been preoccupied with guarding against external threats while ignoring threats from within. The real danger, Hart said, “comes when there are a number of threats, and a myopic society guards against only one of'them. And for a number of years our nation has nursed the myth that it faces no threat that does not originate in some foreign capital. k k k “We are a nation so busy keeping its armor in repair that its tumors and rashes go neglected,” the senator said. | Hart, a member of the National Commission on the Causes and Prevention of Violence, quoted a commission statement that young people are “a new breed of American . . . with energy and talent and determination tob fulfill the promise of America.” Vandals Strike at Two Schools in Port Huron PORT HURON (AP) - Vandals broke into two Port Huron1 schools during the weekend,] causing damage estimated at more than 82,000. Supt Gerald DeGrow said the break-ins were the most serious in a series of incidents vandalism going back to the opening of school last fall. DeGrow said the vandals, who entered both schools through broken windows late Saturday or early Sunday, caused $2,000-83,000 damage at Port Huron Northern High School and $200-8300 damage at Kimball Inter-! ] mediate School. The vandals broke windows and smashed equipment at both] schools. the rising crime rate i n nuimctial*~single factor" i*n' But because of the Vietnam! America Eisenhower said, ««j American life. We have today a war, other heavy costs 6f the frustration of black people,]generatlon that has spent mme government and a very high tax]1™11 today ** DavW &slin, Decommitment for rebuilding the|“r1ba?Ji«ualor “d the effect oftim. watching television than it]rate, Eisenhower feels thejtroit editor of the Jewish Daily nation’s cities, upgrading law]television on children. /has spent in school.” rebuilding of the cities cannot Forward. Sislin, a native of enforcement and criminal..Eisenhower “id the hopes ofi He said “I am terribly pleas-lbe undertaken at this time. Russia, died Saturday in Sinai justice and cnntinning the olaex peopie soared very high that the amount of violent! At the same time, Elsenhower'Hospital. He was 78 years old. 01 ~— The violence commission wasi appointed by President Johnson] following the assassination of] Sen. Robert F. Kennedy in June 1968. FOUR DISSENTERS The commission said “a national firearms policy which significantly reduces the availability of handguns will reduce the amount of firearms violence.” to SIMMS i Hie Bible has been translated, in whole or in part, into more than 1,000 languages. PileTreatnient Works Wonders For California Couple Treatment Shrinks Piles, Believes Pain In Most Cases Sacramento, CaL Mrs. C. Arnold of thin city reports: “I can’t contain myself any longer to wnte you about wonderful Freparation> H.for hemorrhoids. My husband has also been using same and it’s doing wonders for him” (Note: Doctors have proved in most cdses-Preparation H® actually shrinks inflamed hemorrhoids. In case after case, the sufferer first notices prompt relief from pain, burning and itching. Then swelling is gently reduced. There’s no other formula for the treatment of hemorrhoids like doctor-tested Preparation H. j It also lubricates to make bowel movements more comfortable,! soothes irritated tissues and helps1 prevent further infection. In ointment or suppository form.) CONSTIPATED? MIC Tlk I AMT AC KAAA ™ IDE FOR TODAY'S LIVING ...(ivuLGwiMjg, RECHARGEABLE TRIPLEHEADER 45CT Almost twice as many shaves per charie aa any other recherfeeble. Close, tost, comfortable shaves with or without cord. New Micro* groove™ floating-heads, pop-up trimmer, 110/220 voliaga selector, on/olf charge switch, handsome metal wallet. HOME BEAUTY SALON 25LS NEW COMPACT 20B Perfect shiver for men on the go. Provides 30 close, comfortable shaves on 4 penlight batteries. Microgroove floating-heads, Flip-Top cleaning, on/olf ’ switch. Built-in mirror. flare/cf? s ‘Santa SIMMS’ Gift You... GIFT ITEMS at Cost & Below Cost for Christmas Gift Shoppers Today-Tuesday & Wednesday Look at those gift buys — compare and you’ll sea that Santa Simms is selling at cost and bolow. Wo reserve the right to limit quantities and Items subject to stock on hand at time of advertisement. CASH? You Don't Need It at Simms-Just Bring Your MASTER CHARGE or MICHIGAN BANKARD- and you'll get ail the credit veu need for your Christmas gift buying needs without spending y«yr cash now. 7-Speed Push-Button $UNBEAM ELECTRIC Solid State Blender Model 8170; Regular $29.95 Sunbeam electric blender .has 5-cup heat resistant container. Power and versatility to whip, chop or liquefy. Housewares—2nd Floor 3 Speeds to Whip-Mix-Stir FORWARD Electric Portable Mixer Regular $14.98 value. Forward hand mixer has power for all your mixing needs. With' handy beater ejector. A gift to please any homemaker on your list. Bowl........ 99c Housewares—2nd Floor North American Philips Corporation TOO EAST 42ND STREET NEW YORK, NEW vORK 10017 $24,95 values. Your choice of famous Sunbeam, General Electric or Schick hard top professional type hair dryers, fold down Into cqmpact carry case. Drugs—Main Floor' With 8-Way Control CASCO Electric Thermal Massager $39.95 list, Casco flexible thermal massager has 8-way control to use with ,or without heat and with or without massage. Soothes tired muscles, aids circulation. Sundries — Main Floor 98 N. Saginaw St. Downtown Pontiac SIMMS"* or Don’t bring just bring your your |3b| and CHARGE IT! Cash is not a requirement to buy at Simms (tho It will be accepted) all you need is a major credit card to charge it at SIMMS. SIMMS CAMERA DEPT. DISCOUNTS First Come, First Served On This Limited Quantity Gift Sale! Hurry to Simms for, this special gift sale — all items in limited quantities and will be indicated and prices good while stock remains this week. CUBE! IV CAMERA SET 399 $8.95 value — flashcube camera set in molded luggage case. Only 9 sets to go at this price. KODAK 124 CAMERA SET $21.95 value — Insta-matic camera with film, flashcube and batteries. 22 sets left. ARGUS SLIDE PROJECTOR ;$60_valuq4 — model 538 is jcknproof and automatic. 5)30 watts blower cooled. 12 left. With Feeding and Training Needs GENERAL ELECTRIC Heat Sene Baby Feeding Dish $14.95 value. Divided baby feeding dish keeps food warm all during feeding.' Immersible for cleaning. Stainless steel spoons and training cup Included. Drugs—Main Floor Choice of Famous Brands Hard Top Professional Electric Hair Dryer I8« ELECTRIC FM/AM RADIO $24.95 '8ig Ben' radio operates on batteries or AC current. Solid state. Only 18 to go. I484 DJECT0R 3984 IADI0 1284 A IE* POLAROID 320 CAMERA 9788 Serves a Jigger in a Hurry MERRY-GO-ROUND Bar Drink Dispenser $7.95 list. Revolving bar dispenses one ounce. Has polished brass or chrome tray and 5 individual glasses. A handy bar accessory for yourself or gift. Sundries—Main Floor Electric eye. Transistorized shutter. Color snaps In a minute. B&W T in seconds. 20 remain. $99.50 Gold Crest movie projector, shows both Super 8 and Reg. 8mm film. Only 4 left. 7x35 power, with case and straps. Model 13-7390 on sale. Only 19 4284 ITQR 7488 BINOCULARS *jf84i 1 m MALLORY BATTERIES All sizes — stock up to make sure everything works at Christmas time. Model 525. 2e% in1 FM/AM RADIO-RECORDER $99.95 Roberts FM/AM radio and Cassette tape recorder. Operates on battery and electricity. Only 5 left. 7995 3-BAND PORTABLE RADIO Famous 'Aiwa' FM/AM/ SW radio operates on batteries. Only 6 to go at this low prices AR-123. PANASONIC FM/AM RADIO Bar Harbor model is a regular $39.95 seller — pnly 17 remain. Model RF680. 1384 UR RADIO 2!84 WESTIN6H0USE PORTABLE STEREO PHONOGRAPH MMei PS63D28 As shown — Automatic 4 speed changer, detachable speakers diamond stylus. Only 4 left. Regular $129,95, 6984 Simms Bros.-98 N. Saginaw St.-Downtown Pontiac \ THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, DECEMBER 15, 1969 pipe Most December War Protests Are Over By the Associated Pres* Most December antiwar Moratorium activities around ' the country have ended quietly. Many of them featured fasts or vigils. But scuffling broke out In Ocednsfde, \ Calif., following a two-mile peace march by 3,000 persons, Including a contingent of antiwar Marines estimated by inarch officials to number, 750. The marchers chgnted.Base, were readily identifiable,said some students would fast veterans read the names of “One, two, three, four—We by their characteristic short won’t fightjour fascist war." haircuU> The two groups ex. changed Insults during the protest. About 20 persons fought briefly during the confrontation between the peace marchers and about 200 off-duty Marines who came to heckle them.. The pro and antiwar Marines, all from the neighboring giant Camp Pendleton Marine Corps STUDENTS TO FAST ' In Tucson, ^riz., University of Arizona students distributed antiwar literature at local churches add synagogues. Bill White, student - body vice president, from next Saturday through Dec. 24. In San Francisco, antiwar Vietnam veterans spoke at various churches. At CdmbVid&e, Mass., about 2,300 Harvard and Radcliffe students muled a 30-hour fast for peace. They said they will do-the 60-cent refunds for 'Made Progress in Peace Try1 N. Viet Visit Heartens Exec HONG KONG (AP) - American industrialist Cyrus Eaton said today he believes he made “some progress" toward con_ vincing North Vietnamese leaders “that President Nixon and his administration seek peace and do not want to continue the war." Eaton, on his way home after eight days in Hanoi, told the Hong Kong Foreign Correspondents’ Club the “greatest single obstacle to peace in Vietnam is the absolute conviction of Hanoi’s leaders that President Nixon wants to continue the war.’1 (ivered, and have his letters back home dispatched, ★ , * ■ * • Eaton said the North Vietnamese themselves brought up the prisoner situation. He said he did not initiate the subject because he thought it would not be conducive to talks about how to end the war itself. But Eaton said he “discovered enough give and enough good will in Hanoi to Indicate that compromises are possible1 to end the war." As one indication of this, Eaton said the North Vietnamese told hint they were going to take “a more liberal attitude toward; Americans held as prisoners of war fat North Vietnam." | * GETS ASSURANCES "They assured' us that every prisoner was going to be weU taken care of, Well fed, Will have.his mail from home de- as he returns to the United States. He said he was not carrying a message as such from Hanoi to Washington. Store Is Robbed DETROIT (AP) — Employes, and customers of an East Side, Detroit supermarket were held at gunpoint for 20 minutes Saturday while robbers cleaned out tiie safe. eachrmeal missed to a Quaker group to aid refugees in Viet-am. In Washington, small antiwar gatherings replaced the mammoth rally that attracted timated 250,000 antiwar demonstrators Nov. 15. NAMES OF. DEAD In New York City, 40 Vietnam Pirig-Pong TABLE TOPS %"x60"x54" Painted and Striped American servicemen killed in Vietnam, as part pf a Riverside Church daily recitation of war dead. The reading has gone on for 337 horn's thus far. In Cheektowaga,\ N.Y), 150 persons picketed for IVii1 hours outside the locked gates of Cornell Aeronautical Laboratory to criticize its work in defense research. In Rochester, N.Y., a candlelight march through the downtown streets was attended by 2,000 persons. He said he “would guess that it will not be long before they will release the names of those held prisoner of war.”; l” * w "* * ’# * Melvin. Schmidt, manager of Eaton said he planned to re- the A&P store, said the bandits port to President Nixon as soon I escaped with about $4,500. Sinus Sufferers Here** good new* for youl Exclusive new “hard core” SYNA CLEAR Decongestant tablets act instantly fud continuously to drain and dear all nasal-sinus cavities. One “hard core” tablet gives you up to 8 hours relief from pain and pressure cpngestion. Allows you to breathe easily — stops watery eye* and runny nose. Yon can buy SYNA-CLEAR at SIMMS without need for a prescription. Satisfaction guaranteed by maker. Try it todayl Introductory Offer Worth Cut out this ad — take’to store liifed. Purchase one pack of SYNA-CLEAR 12’s and receive one more SYNA-CLEAR 12-Pack Free. SIMMS - 98 N. SAQINAW ST. — DRUQ DEPT. *1.50 * f:.; ’21 95 . Table Leg Seta . $15.95 poole-diclcie Lumber—Hardware Building Supplies 151-165 2405 Oakland Ave., Orchard ‘ Lake Pontiac Keego Harbor PH.334*1594 Ph.632-1600 Sears is OPEN EVERY NIGHT Monday through Saturday Kenmore floor .Care Sale YOUR CHOICE Get Ready for the Holidays with a Kenmore A. ONE SPEED CANISTER VACUUM has 20-ft cord and imtoauitie recL Tool storage. Vinyl bumper. / Included are: rug-floor brush, upholstery noixle, dusting brush, crevice tool, steel wands. B. FLOOR CONDITIONER with 90-os. dispenser built on handles This Kenmore will shampoo your carpeting, scrub and polish your hire floors with 3 sets of brushes and I set of buffing pads. Has a 3« speed heavy duty motor, yinyl bumper. 18-fL cord. C. ONE SPEED lIPRIUHT. VACUUM with revolving nylon-bristle brash has a 6-in. sealed'suction. Dust bag in plastic housing on handle eliminates dost puffs. 20-ft. cord winds on cord hdbks. Vinyl bumper protectafurniture. 2 dust bags. fUrfyr PfffiTSl Dnwtitnwn Prvntiqf- Phone FE 5-4171 am to 9pm Daily Until Christmas... SUNDAY 12 Noon to 6 P.M. PARK FREE for 1-Honr in Downtown Parking Mall Simms will pay for 1 -hour of parking, just have ticket stamped at time of purchase (except tobacco and beverage purchases) Wis'^kS^leiici SIMMS Presented By Mrs. Jane Bergman Former Miss Detroit, wife of Detroit Red Wing Hockey Star Gary Bergman Mrs. Bergman, a Professional Wig Stylist, will be at SIMMS Tuesday, and Wednesday, December 16 and 17 from 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. to Cut and Style Your Wig. A Professional Styling for only 3.50 iftdesired. And SIMMS Has Just The Wig Fur You Natural as Human Hair, 100% Dynel S-t-r-s-t-c-k Wigs Curly and Straight Styles Our Famous Brand - Charge It Our famous brand stretch wig is feather light and lovely. Fits perfectly. Unbelievable natural without the problems of human hair. And Mrs. Bergman will style it to suit your r facial characteristics. They wash clean in cool or lukewarm water. Your choice of 30 fashion shades. Wigs — Main Floor 98 Forth j Saginaw St. lwt£WW«sSW*SSP*WWlw<5S SIMMS «£ Downtown Pontiac THE PONTIAC PRESS « Wert HttronStreet ' i l j Pontiac, Michigan 48056 PuWMw 1914-1916 - MONDAY, DECEMBER IS, 1969 O. MARSHALL JORDAN Local Advertising fAoi^agar RICHARD M. SAUNDERS Facility’s Fate Cloudy Oakland County faces a problem related to the operation of its Sanatorium located in the County Service Center. The institution-cares for 166 tubercular and chronic patients. Central to the problerii is the continuance of the facility and the nature of the care to be given 58 patients now supported by Medicaid. A recent decision of the State Social Services agency would reduce such support which runs as high as $40 a day to the $12.25 and $14.48 a day charged in nursing homes. The difference could cost the County as much as $90,000 a month, unless other arrangements were made for the patients. ★ ★ ★ The Medicaid agency’s decision however has been appealed by County authorities, and a “stay of execution’’ was granted pending a re-evaluation of pa- tient services administered by the Sanatorium. ★ ★ ★ ' 'The Sanatorium has been a source of continuing expense, and there is a question in some official minds as to whether Oakland County should even be in the hospital business. To obtain medical facility rating in 1965, the County spent $340,000 for renovation of the building. Updating it through 1968 cost as much as $27,000 a year with a similar program amounting to $71,000 scheduled for 1970. Bearing on the uncertainty respecting the status pf the Sanatorium is the fact that a survey of community hospital needs is under way to help determine whether the County should build a new medical facility that might additionally provide treatment for drug and alcoholism addiction. Voice of the People: ‘Need* Severe for Breaking ^ I read about the swindle manipulated by the two St. Louis businessmen. It makes me np^ to read that they could be sentenced to 45 years and $90,000. Do they cajl this punishment for a $4 million swindle? They should be made to pay the entire Amount taken, plus five per cent interest lost. If the average citizen is convicted -he must pay everything back to the government, plus interest. ★ ★ ★ If the penalty for breaking the law were made severe enough It might curtail this type of thing, or at least pnt this type of individual out of circulation. HARVEY PRESTED Vietnam Atrocity Stuns U. S. Few wars, tragically, have been fought free of atrocities committed against civilian populations — perpetrated either by command decision or bestial impulse of individual soldiers. Our Indian wars, dating back to colonial days, were made hideous by massacres initiated by both Indians and whites. More recently, history records wanton killing of the unarmed and defenseless by the Germans in both World Wars and the Russians are guilty of the slaughter of tens of thousands of civilians in times of war as well as in peace. ★ ★ ★ But never before have American men been accused of wantonly and coldbloodedly slaughtering women, children and even babies. Their countrymen have recoiled in horror and disbelief as details have unfolded in recent days of the Vietnam savagery. Th$re is, -to be sure, no incontrovertible proof that GIs deliberately shot down civilians. Pictures .of piled-up bodies do not show how or by whose hand they were killed. The Army’s investigation into the matter must be pushed until ah the facts are known.* By all means, the Senate should initiate its own investigation as several of its members have demanded. The ugly truth of what caii happen when civilized standards of behavior are put aside for one instant must be faced, lest in attempting to save a nation from communism we place ourselves in danger of losing something infinitely more valuable— own own decency, humanity and self-respect. Maxicoats Hold Eye Appeal Gentleman of our acquaintance, a . long-time observer of the passing parade, is quite enthusiastic about the new maxicoats. On a particular windy day downtown last week, he caught glimpses of a number of well-turned ankles. WASHINGTON (NEA) — President Nixon’s top economic advisers will admit in private they’re faced with a paradox. Some of the major steps they’re CRCMLEY pension means industry will be progressively less able to meet demand. Yet these same men say inflation is here because demand is too great compared to supply. Tighter credit drives up interest costs and makes it more difficult for the average man to finance; a pew house. This may cool, the, economy but it will result, of course, in a- greater scarcity of houses — and higher prices. And so on. * ' ★ * No one knows, of course, whether these steps will work. But if they do, the Nixon men will have a tricky, intricate dance to perform. They will have to reverse their field, determine how to encourage the businesses they’ve been discouraging to turn about and expand their production at a pace rapidly enough to meet the heavy demands economists expect in the 1970s. DIFFERENT APPROACH When this time comes, as some key government economists see it now, their approach is going to be quite different from that of, recent ; administrations. 1 f These men have strong prejudices against subsidies, tax incentives, price-wage guidelines; The, thinking these days in some rather high levels of the Nixon group is that the federal government should have a heavy role in financing experimentation in new industrial projects and in new ways of approaching production pnd distribution problems. , \ RESEARCH FUNDS The argument for this ap- Verbal Orchids -Albert A. Seeterlin • of Waterford Township; 80th birthday. Guy Beatty of 1011 Boston; 89th birthday. Frank Ousnamer Of Ortonville; 86th birthday. 'Get Lost, Man, You're Over 30!' Boost for Tot’ Defenders Seen By MERRIMAN SMITH UPI White House Reporter WASHINGTON/- President Nixon and leaders of his administration, with no thought whatever of doing so, may have supplied defenders of marijuana with unexpected ammunition in the recent daylong drug abuse clinic . here for governors, * their wives and children. WWW Each participant in the discussions, sponsored by the White House, received a massive kit packed with the government’s latest research on narcotics. The President, Vice President Spiro T. Agnew, Atty. Gen. John N. Mitchell, HEW Secretary Robert H. Finch and other officials took turns in addressing themselves to the problem. All conceded a need for making better drug in* Comments on Report of Mass Murders Humane is a thing of the past. The world was shocked by reports of mass murders inflicted upon the people of South Vietnam. Will the American people find these killers-the ones who pulled the triggers—guilty? Better still, will this verdict be placed upon the source Of this command, “kill?” I doubt it. We will deny, overlook, or try to silence the incident. - • W ' w w What if men or our government were tried in Vietnam by the Vietnamese? Would the outcome be the same? This war cannot do anything which Is just or honorable. End it and you save humanity. Continue it and you end humanity. MICHAEL P. LIBBIE 632 UNION, MILFORD ‘Let All People Unite During New Year’ We will soon begin a new year. Let all people forget port* tics, race and religion or ethnic background and become a united nation. We were all created by one God . SENNATE MARTIN 6866 OAK HILL, CLARKSTON Ray Cromley Nixon Inflation Controls Paradoxical proach is simple; It has worked in agriculture, w w w Heavy government expenditures 1 n agricultural research, combined with a nationwide county-agent system, have combined to create In American agriculture perhaps greater revolutionary advances i n production than in any other area of U.S. endeavor. In addition, steps will be taken to encourage companies with experience in mass production to move into the home-building field in the hope their approaches will produce breakthroughs. * A * If these plans work out as the Nixoh economists hope, costs will be kept down and production increase rapidly enough to hold 'inflation at 2 per cent a year. / I <1 ‘ ,. ( But, of course, no one is certain these plans will work. Arthur Hoppe Dick Nixon Broadcasts *Game of the Century> “There’s , nothing I’d like better than to-have Bud’s (football broadcaster Bud Wilkinson’s) job” — President Richard M. Nixon at the Texas-Arkansas football game in Fayetteville, Ark. Hi. Hi, there, folks. Well, here we are in the closing minutes of what, in my judgment, is certainly the game of the century. To be very candid, I don’t think I’ve seen a more exciting game of the century, in my opinion, since last week’s game of the century in Pocatello, Idaho. Now I want to make one thing perfectly HOPPE dear. In'the past I have indicated that the winner of this gallant struggle between Texas and Arkansas today will be the number one team In the country. I have received some criticism on this. And let me just say on that score that I Certainly didn't intend to indicate that the loser wouldn’t also be the number one team in the country. Along with Penn State. Not to mention a number of other number one teams in this great land qf ours. TEXAS HAS BALL? Well, now, I see that time is back in on the field, It seems to me. I would say that Texas has the ball — I don’t . want to prejudge the officials on this, I don’t always agree with the officials. Many decent Americans don’t. But let me point out that what the officials say is, in my opinion, the law and it is the duty on a sportscaster, in my judgement, to uphold die law, whether he agrees with it or not. Yes, Texas, I’m proud to say, does have the ball. The quarterback is fading back to — and I do not say this to limit his options in any way — pass. Yes, he has instituted a pass and, quite candidly, it is the finest pass I have ever seen. A perfect spiral, it seems to me. ★ ★ Sr By this, I do not mean to detract in any manner from the Arkansas quarterback, wjio has also thrown many of the finest passes I,have ever, in my judgement, seen. All perfect spirals, it seems to me. Well, there’s the final gun, my fellow Americans. The two number one teams in the country are now staging a planned withdrawal from the field, just as. I confidently predicted they would at this time. NO STATEMENTS Let me be perfectly hondst on one filing: I don’t think this is the time or the place, in my judgment, to make any emotional statement on who won or lost fids game of the century today. In my opinion, this would amount to kicking the’ loser when he’s down. I have never kicked losers when they are down and I do not intend to start in now. That is my position on this matter, rightly or wrongly. But I would say, in my opinion, that it’s been a pleasure, in my judgment, bringing you this sportscast today. It seems tome. • , / . r... ’ v-' /-' ’■ (Chronlcl* Futures) formation available younger Americans. In faet, the President said ‘Many Prefer to Continue Living in Past’ an effective education pro- . gram at the state and local If you pick up an old book and flip through the pages you level r*«nid be “more im- see the picture of a man with a beard and long hair; and a portant than the criminal woman with a long dres^all pictures of the past . Look out penalties” that many adults urge ' as , the answer t o narcotic problems. But in their efforts to close this communications gap, these federal officials may have widened it — particularly when viewed from the position of a potential young experimenter who is bombarded with adult predictions of the dreadful consequences of marijuana and other hallucinogenics. DRUMMED IN M w H 1 _____ Xrc...M. advertised this doll but had none in stock. I believe this is gg S the biggest come-on of all times. What can be done? MRS. JAMES Z. BETZ 2772 MOTORIST, HIGHLAND the window and walking down the street is a young man with a beard and long hair. He is living in the past, not thinking of the wonders of hot water, electric razors and all the wonderful things we have to keep us clean and looking our best. ★ ★ ★ Many people say, “what a waste of money to send man to the moon.”. They are not thinking of the future, the wonders we may find on the planets. How many really want to live in fiie past or want to live for the wonders of the future? MARION SESSIONS 1195 DESIAX ‘Advertisements Seem to Be Come-On’ I tried four times in six days' to buy a Beautiful Crissy doll for my daughter for Christmas. It seems that Stores over the age of 12 or 13 have had it drummed into them by the revered heroes of their peer group that pot isn’t nearly as bad for the user as boqpe. This is the stuff defiant kids latch onto, Pot-heads o r youngsters merely debating whether to join the in-crowd by sucking on a marijuana “Joint” would be overjoyed by some of the literature distributed at the President’s briefing .for the governors and their families. One document, entitled BERRY’S WORLD-By Jim Berry “Answers to the Most Fre- ‘It’s Heartwarming to Know People Care’ It’s heartwarming to know that people do care and will help in a time of need. May God bless the owners who rented a house to the Jack Pierce family so that Mr. Pierce doesn’t have to climb stairs. MRS. J. P. I. (Editor’s Note: All letters to the Voice of the People must be signed and an address given. In some instances a pen name may be. used in the paper.) quently Asked Questions.* about Drugs” and published by the U.S. Public Health Service, said a recent nationwide survey showed that some 8 million Americans of all ages have tried marijuana at least once. Of (this 8 million, it said, 12 per cent were “young.” The same document said “more , telephone listing, and you couldn't give us ah Undress, so we suggest you contact the Better Business Bureau of Miami. Perhaps they will 4>e ablii to trace t^e company. YoU ifoight also report it to the Post Office, since you ordered th^e merchandise from an advertisement that came in the mail. * THE rONTIAC TRESS, MONDAY, DECEMBE& 15, 1969 It Seems to Me A—T 1 Rock Contest Early Independence Foreseen’ Strife Hurts 7 for the Administration of OU Eight Are Arrested in Detroit Trouble \ By HAROLD A. FITZGERALD Prestige for this area leaps solidly forward with the anticipated announcement that Oakland University will become an independent institution. Currently, the top control actually rests with Michigan State University in East Lansing. Problems lip there, however, are so great that the local branch has been allowed to map its own course for the most part, • Still,, approval is needed. MSU could say “yes’1 or “no.” matter with the great sense of direction with which he has been blessed. Oakland University has approximately 6,000 students right now. There are hundreds of universities and colleges half a century old that can’t begin to touch this figure. We are located in the second biggest county in Michigan with the largest—Wayne—-right next to us. .Then we have another sizable unit on the east, for Macomb stands third. Thus, Oakland U. is in the midst of a very' populous area. With 40,000 students, East Lansing has monumental problems of its own. These are astronomical in size and number. In the meantime, we have “growing pains” down here. The expansion has been so rapid and so continuous that the combination presents an unending list of vital factors for consideration and decision. Fortunately for us—and for East Lansing—we’ve been blessed with one of the greatest university administrators in the Country. Chancellor Varner has surrounded himself with a capable and imaginative group of associates and faculty personnel. Without them, we would never have enjoyed the gigantic gains that have come this way. Oakland University is destined to become one of the Nation’s great institutions of learning. It is new, fresh, vigorous and is not inhibited by time-honored traditions that all too often drop powerful fetters around advancement. Chancellor Durward B. Varner sensed the unusual opportunity that existed here and he plunged into the This means a huge number of students can still live at home and “go to college.” At the same time, because of its early achievements and high standing, the reputation of this University spread across the Country much more rapidly than anyone anticipated. The influx of students from outside the area has contributed mightily to our over-all And this continues. In fact, it increases steadily. ★ ★ ★ % When OU’s independence becomes official, a new board will probably be named by the Governor and this is a step forward. When the members are elected by the voters, the jobs become political footballs to some extent and this often blocks good men. This current step is probably the biggest single thing that has happened to Oakland University since the day it opeped. All concerned can rejoice. The future is bright. ★ ★ ★ * The announcement of Chancellor Varner’s departure took place after this was written and when I recover sufficiently from the shock to become articulate again, I’ll take that up by itself. jDETROIT (API — Seven persons were Injured' and eight arrested Sunday afternoon after a rock music concert at Detroit’s Cobo Arena. Four of those injured were policemen and all were reported in satisfactory condition at Detroit General Hospital. An 11-year-old girl was treated for head injuries received when someone threw a mustard jar; through a window. A 17-year-old boy and a chaperon for the I group sponsoring the concert! were cut by flying glass. The trouble reportedly began when police attempted to arrest! some youngsters they allegedly, caught stealing from purses. An; unofficial police spokesman said the crowd surrounded the policemen and forced them into a 'men’s rest room. Some 20 po-j jlice scout cars responded to the! [call for help, and the situation! | was quickly brought under con-1 I trol. j Seven boys and a girl were arrested, police said. Five boys-were charged with resisting and| I obstructing police officers and. two others with purse snatching. I The girl was charged with car-1 rying a concealed weapon, a knife. ' ★ * * An estimated 6,000 to 8,000, youths attended the concert; sponsored by Keep Detroit! ^Beautiful (KBD). The concert! Was a reward to the teen-agers j for their help in community beautification and cleanup• pro-' grams during the past year. Times Change... Times change . . . Do tell. U.S. jazz and far-out music has hit the Russians and it’s knocking them for a loop. “Jazz” was once pronounced a dirty word by no less an authority than Nikita Khrushchev. That was six years ago. But times change. k k ★ The University of Illinois band has been on tour in Russia and its jazz numbers have made the greatest hit. The payoff just appeared in Moscow newspapers. They accept the new beat with the solemn declaration that “it all started in Russia.” Once again, the brazen Russians prove themselves the all-time international liars. This is the 4,763rd time. Ex-Governor i Sanford Duke Prexy DURHAM, fi.C, (AP) - Terry Sanford, a former North Carolina governor who gained a na-j t tional reputation as a promoter of education, has decided to pc-! cept the presidency of Duke! University rather than run for! office in 1972. ‘‘I thought for several years; that I might re-enter the political arena,” Sanford said Sunday. “But there is more chal-' lenge in this.” L -k k k Sanford, who served as governor from 1961 to 1965, was named Duke president Saturday. Sanford had been mentioned as an opponent for Sen. B. Everett Jordan in the 1972 Democratic primary. i ; As governor, Sanford redesigned the consolidated Univer-' slty of North Carolina system,! opened three liberal arts col-j ileges and established a state-| wide system of community col-! leges. k iir k ! He was chairman of the Na-. tional Citizens for Humphrey-Muskie Committee in 1968. And in Condusion..... Jottings from the well thumbed notebook of your peripatetic reporter: Bob Hope’s Vietnam TV show will be broadcast January 15th. This is one of the great spectacles of the winter and attracts a top audience. . . ....... Nader wants GM “broken up.” Maybe we’d be better off if we broke up Nader. .......... Overheard: “There ought to be a 15-yard penalty against the home football team when the ball’s put in play during a commercial.” .......... Senator Charles Percy gets more mail than anyone in Congress except Ted Kennedy. He is averaging 5,000 letters a week. / ★ ★ k j Trusted scouts suggest parol 7 Biederman, currently an airline hostess, is one of our attractive young ladies.... .... .... Joe Namath confesses he lost $10,000 in three attempt'd to throw passes in the Las Vegas gambling centers.......,... If I ever get arrested for stealing a dime or for cold-blooded murder, I want to appear before Judge George W. Crockett Jr. ... ... .President Nixon is under steady fire from Washington sources that won’t countenance his retention of so many Democratic holdovers. They’re scattered all through the administration. Florida’s two senators are hard at work to have the name of Cape Kennedy changed back to Cape Canaveral as it was originally. President Johnson introduced' the abrupt shift. The Florida legislature is receptive. .. 7 . A, Great Big Round 'of Hearty Applause for Pontiac Mote’s Hack Anderson, just on general principles. . :....,7. Overheard: “Yes, the baby looks exactly like his father, but plastic surgery can take care of that.” .. ../.... These shoestring manufacturers that make products so slippery and round they won’t stay tied tights ly ought to be thumbed into oblivion. ......... Dept, of Cheers and Jeers: the C’s—-Bill Flemming’s TV football coverage this fall; the J’s —the filth that abounds in the U.S. mails. Train-Station 1 Wedding Late INDIANAPOLIS (AP) jjgp Time-worn Union Station has hosted its first wedding in its 81 j years. - And the wedding, like many of the remaining few trains, was behind schedule. •• ★ it ■ ★ ■ j Ralph A. Condo, 27, Indianapolis, a Penn Central brakeman, married Patricia Markey, 25,1 Indianapolis, a professional artist and art teacher'. , Freight trains rumbling over former passenger tracks and! the sound of a lone saxophone provided the music Sunday. AN HOUR LATE There was supposed to be a| five-piece band, but only the! saxophonist /showed Up,/ The: bride was /an hour late, Cohdo said the couple chose! Union' Station for their wedding] for sentimental reasons. His grandfather was a railroad man! and his father is a derrick oper-! ator on a wrecking train. 1 ^ £( ' I + ' ^ 1 '/j , The elder, Condo couldn’t make the wedding: He was help-! ing clean up a wreck on the railroad. '.. M >--------mm.------------ j i The Spanish guitar is a legacy from the 700 years of Arab rule! that ended in the 15th century. | Grab up delightful gifties! Splurge on stocking stuffers galore! In HBS’s giant “Tox Box "of treats! As 88. Boppo. the clown j. Friction Fire Engine, giant punching bag . . 88* Sounds so realistic.. . . 88- 6. Kandy Krome Racers. 8. Lear Jet. 8 Vi” wing With intricate detailing. 88* span; friction motor 88* 24. Ice Cream Truck. With • 402. SSTJet over 18” long; friction motor............88* friction powered .... 88* 32. Kennel Truck. Top 35. Construction Car set. separates; 12 dogs . . . 88' Fleet of 6 trucks .... 88* 44. See-Thru Dump Truck. 56. Clock Counting Bosrd. Take it apart..........88* Great for pre-school.. .88* 64. Blackboard-bulletin 78. Freckles doll. Says combination. *..... 88* ’Ma-Ma’; eye* dose.. . 88* 79. Terry Joe; 12” with 82. Shower PowerSue. Arms vinyl head; hair, . . . .88* and legs that move. . .88* 92. Pup Tent. Waterproof 126. Flower Powerumbrella. vinyl; use outdoors! 88* Bright vinyl..........88* 133. Train Case in vinyl. 136. Doll furniture. Fill 8"x6”x4" big for carry. 88* 3 whole rooms.. . , . .88* 139. Fiesta tea set. Pieces 142. One-year diary and and silverware, too. ’. . 88* autograph book. .... 88* • 154. Maddi Mod earrings 159. Badminton Set. Bird, and pin. like Mom’s. 88* Raquets and net. . . . . 88* 161. Jumbo bowling game 162. Magnetic dart game with instruction sheet. 88* with harmless darts. . . 88* 173. Construction -kit with 174. Blocks. 44 pieces and colorful squares.......88* counting frame; plastic. 88' 185. See-Thru piano makes ' 189. Tambourine beautiful music. .... 88' real 'jingle-jangle' . . 211. Rock-a.byc music^all. 221. Roly-poly clown. In Musical diiipes. .... 88* bright-colored ; vinyl. 88* 223. Stuffed Clown. 12” 228. Tedcjy Bear 11 Vi” big. ' falL In funpy dress! 88* Socuddity afriend!. , . 88* 235. Junior Carpenter Set.' 236. Camera usgs 120 black 246.' Roller skates in safe 469. Magic Sponge toy. Tool box; 'plastic parts. 88* & white otcplorfilm. , 88* plastic; roll-along fun! 88* . Hours of building fun. 88* - Hudson’s Budget Store press; monpay, to spend? Make it l gilt edged gift \ from Hudson’s .... - ittfiiliilUW’ M. $4 Well even wrap it for you Look for the Gift, Wrap Center* at Hudson’s Pontiac, 1st, for the perfect finishing touch to ell of your Christmas gifts. f Special shops for the children’s gifts Visit our* Zodiac Shop at Hudson's Pontiac and just sec alt the gifty idea, for kids, ■ «if with. Zodiac; themes. Pontiac, let. Slop by the Snoopy Shop for pillows, banners, sweat shirts ; featuring the famous- Peanuts line-up of characters. And also |i stuffed Peanuts dolls ip lets EXTRA HOURS TO GIFT SHOP AT HUDSON’S PONTIAC Now Hudson’s Pontiac is open 6 nights s week, Monday through Saturday for your convenience. Shop from 9:30 a.m. to 9:30 p.m. use your charge Gift shop tbs easy way, with a convenient Hudson’s Charge Account with option terms. Or, use our Extended Payment Plan for al) major purchases. Give Hudson’s Gift Certificates A Hudson’s Gift Certificate is jutt the ticket for thole hard-to-choose-for names on your list. Pick them up now at the Cashier’s Office at Hudson's Pontiac, See Hudson’s Christmas Trim and Wrap Shops Trees and trimmings, wraps •nd ribbons .. . find everything you'll need. Pontiac, 2nd floor. Let Hudson*s deliver it for you why earry . . . when Hudson’s delivers to 19 Michigan counties and Toledo, Ohio at no charge for purchaso of $5 or more. Add SO* for purchases under $5. Add SO* for C.O.D. under S30. Giftarama has gift ideas for everyone Whara the Trifari collection shines with the gilt and glamour that contemporary gals of dll ages treasure. This golden group indludes slender' lengths of chain, wrist bangWand earrings designed with the tailored simplicity that never goes out of fashion. lust $3 to $6 in Fashion Jewelry, Pontiac, Downtown. Northland, Eastland, Westland, Oakland. Its Clix’istma.s time set HUDSONS It’s the just-whst.they-wantod place to shop for gift* for overyone for $20 and under. Como browse hero. Pontiac, 1st. Toy land9s open at Hudson’s Pontiac Find all their favorites right now in our apanking new selection of Christmas toys for all .good girls and boys. Pontiac, 2. of sizes. Pontiac, ‘1st floor. t i * r k* \ f. , \.r h, .s'....... V ; ■ k ! Cvv* THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, DECEMBER. J5,' 1969 Give Arrow Decton® the fashion shirt from Hudson’s with no wilt of its own. Give him Dacron® polyester/cofton broadcloth dress shirts for Christmas and keep your own handsome Arrow collar man permanently pressed. You can’t go wrong with Arrow, especially in Decton® the eaky-gare fabric. Classip white with new long pointed Madison collar and French Cuffs, 7.50. Or Kent Collection Drake If collar which is higher with a longer point and new 2-buttbn cuffs: We show blue, it’s also in gold or brown, i8.-4"silk twill tie, *6. Hudson’s Men’s Shirts and Ties, Pontiac, 1st floor and branches.-You can shop late Monday through Saturday till 9:30 p.m. It’s Clirlstmsis time-at V—i““ ---1 i—* i|£ fi — I. utes with'.South Vietnamese President. Nguyen Van Thieu, presumably briefing him on President Nixon’s speech an-pouncing the third withdrawal There has been speculation in Saigon as well as in Washington that the cutback will number was only a “seasonal fluctuation,” resulting from troops due for normal rotation home being allowed to leave early so as to get there for Christmas. ALLSTATE Pauenger Tire Guarantee Tread Life Guarantee Guaranteed Agaimti All failure* of the tiro resulting from normal road hamnU or defect* in material or work* atamhip. For How Lon*: For the lifeof the orifrinal tread. What Sears Will Dot Repair nail puncture* at no charge. In case of failure, in exchange for the tire, replace it ehaigiiMC only the proportion of current regular celling price pin* Federal Excite Tax that represent* tread need. AU thirti art tailoriJ »y Btnd’twith dwr t nationally.famtui qualityrtoMtrol nttdlttetrk. PONTIAC MALL Talagragh at Elisabeth Lake Rd. THE PONTIAC PRKS& M6N1PAY, DftCEMB&R 15, 1B6P Soigon: 92% of People Under Control SAIGON (AP) — The Saigon,822,000 (4.7 per cent) were in a day of scattered fighting Sun-| American troops from the 1st government today claimed con- contested areas, those where day in the U Minh Forest in the Air Cavalry Division uncovered trol over 92.5 per cent of South neither the government nor the Southern Mekong Delta. No a four-ton North Vietnamese Vietnam’s population. It was t|ie |Vietcong is considered to have South Vietnamese casualties [ munitions stockpile during a highest percentage in the ijisto-1 decisive control. '' were reported. ' 'sweep through thd jungle eight ,,___JJ ry of the Vietnam war but only . At the start of the yeai\ the SMALL clashes | miles from the Cambodian bor-lpf Amerlcan h?«oi*- one half of one per cent mote government claimed control 5 5 der and 83 miles northeast of than the claim last month. jover 13.8 million of the popula-1 Other allied forces reported Saigon. The fine included 50 tion, then estimated at 17 mil-;killing 116 North Vietnamese The monthly report of the lion. The extent of government'and Vietcong in 10 other small government’s pacification pro- control has expanded steadily:clashes from the Mekong Delta gram said that on Nov. 30 16.1 since that time, according to the to South Vietnam’s northern-million of the estimated 17.5 government figures. most provinces, the U.S. Corn- million population were living On the battlefields, South mand said three Americans under government control,‘Vietnamese troops reported kill-1 were killed and 17 wounded. 492,000 (or 2.8 per cent) werejing 40 enemy soldiers with the Again, no South Vietnamese under Vietcong control and help of artillery and bombers in casualties were reported. I Chinese submachine guns, 11 rifles, two light machine guns, WWII Admiral Dies in California at the Age of 83 MONTEREY, Calif. (AP) — Retired Adm. Raymond A. Spruance, who commanded U.S. forces, in the victorious battle! of Midway in June 1942, is dead | at 83. * ★ ★ Spruance died Saturday at his, home in nearby Pebble Beach of complications frqm hardening of the arteries. Four Japanese carriers and a destroyer were sunk and 320' Japanese planes were destroyed in the battle at Midway, which was considered a turning point in the naval war of the Pacific. 'Key to Prosecutions' Laird Awaits My Lai Probe one flamethrower, 86,640 rounds between 30,000 and 40,000 of small arms ammunition, 449 troops. There is much expects-mortar shells, and 269 rocket'tion that among those leaving grapades. i will be (he 1st Infantry Division, * * * which has been in Vietnam In Saigon, U.S. Ambassador slnce juiy 1965 and was the first Ellsworth Bunker spent 45 mtarjfoH division to enter the war, and the 199th Light Infantry Bri-jgade. OFFICIALLY COMPLETED I The U.S. Command nounced that Nixon’s second | cutback of- 35,000 American troops was officially completed today with the departure for the WASHINGTON (AP) — The ling any allegations before an I Pentagon will bring to trial any investigation is conducted is present or former U.S. soldiers {certainly not in the American if an investigation reveals they} tradition.” took part in the alleged massa- file defense chief said he ere of civilians at the Vietnam made no attempt to get a House1 hamlet of My Lai, Defense Sec- committee to bury its investiga-| retary Melvin R. Laird says. tion of the March 1968 incident. Laird said Sunday if the probe But he faid he did contact some, warrants charges, “the charges committee members to voice, will be made—but we are not.his concern that there be a fair i going to announce the investiga- trial. |tions in advance because this iS pFTmnN nRIVF not the way to operate in this PE1™N DWVE 1 country.” Laird,wds interviewed on the; ’ * it * ABC television-radio program' He added, “It seems to me “Issues and Answers.” that advance publicity regard-) Meanwhile, at Atlanta, Ga., ai United States of men of the group of former servicemen: 55^ and sS3rd Combat Support said they will continue a petition Companies. Both units were movement seeking to get the[deactiVated. The I/.S, Command also announced that American troop strength in Vietnam totaled 472,500 men last Thursday, the lowest hr more than two years and 11,500 below the ceiling of j into My Lai. He has been 484,000 set by Nixon in his last Army to drop its against 1st Lt, William L. Calley Calley, 20, was a platoon leader in the company that Went charged with murder of 109 Vietnamese, civilians at the village. James A. Smith, a spokesman for the group seeking to get the charges dropped, said it has collected 3,000 signatures on its petition. day through Saturday Get Sure GO-IN-THE-SNOW with Sears Colorful and Carefree llynamic New-bree Glowing Pastels ...and they're all Permanent A. Deeptone Dress Shirts. €5% Dacron polyester, 35% ootton. 100% permanent press. Longer point collar, French cuffs. Raspberry, moss green, Belgium blue, antique gold. 14V4-16V4. 32-35. *- Double-track Stripes' on Button-down Oxford. Permanent Press: 50% Kodel polyester, 50% combed cetton. Blue stripes on maize or raspberry. Maize stripes on blue or green. 14%-1614,32-35. $5.00 C. Permanent Press Duo-cuff Shirts. No-iron 65% Dacron polyester, 35% cotton. Linentone, white, blue, maize. 1414-17,32-35. $5.00 D. Button-down Oxford Shirts. Permansnt Press 65% Dacron polyestsr, $5% combed cotton. Maize, blue, white. 14V4-17.32-35. $gM Full 4-ply rayon construction gives excellent stability . . . retains its superior traction qualities even when worn. Tread lifetime plus 36 month wearout guarantee. Tubeless XST Tire Plus Snow Tire Price ' F.E.T. 6.50x13 Blackwall 19.95 1.79 6.96x14 Blackwall 21.95 1.96 7.86x14 Blackwall 22.95 2J7 1 7.76x14 Blackwall 24.95 *■» 6.26x14 Blackwall 27.95 2.36 6.65x14 Blackwall 30.65 2.57 6.16x16 Blackwall . 27.95 2.31 Whitewalls Only $3 More Per Tire WHEELS BALANCED weights included 4 ,ar n Ask About Seofrt Convenient Credit Plant Sears! Downtown Pontiac • Phone FE 5-4171 Retread Snow Tires ... Guaranteed for a Full 18 Months ears Steel Studded Snow Tires Available at Extra Cost Look how little it costs for dependable winter traction! Made with carefully selected sound tire bodies. Tread lifetinte plus 18 month wearout guarantee. . ' Tubeless Retread Tira Plus Snow Tire Price F.E.T. 6.50x11 Blackwall 11.96 43c 7.1Sx14 Blackwall 11.95 51c 8.26x14 Blackwall 12.96 etc Smooth Riding XST Snow Tires with 36 Month Guarantee * A—1I THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, DECEMBER 15, 1969 D INET ORGAN Do you have to spend a thousand dollars to own a genuine Hammond? Definitely not! To prove it, we havp this new full-size spinet organ priced to fit your budget. Using the "Instant Play" method, you'll play songs the first day even if you've never studied misic before. Lessons and bench included. Organ specialists to help you select the organ for you! *555 GRINNELL DELUXE CONSOLE PIANO Holidays bring people home but music brings them together. Picture your family around a piano, enjoying the holiday music and the warmth of being together. At the heart of the picture, a fine Grinnell console piano that will stay in'your family for many Christmases to come, with lovely mellow tone. Italian Provincial styling. Specially priced. *725 French Provincial, Early American, Mediterranean slightly higher. i famous cAIawe <_TAustc Qi|te RINNFELL’S A DIVISION OF AMERICAN MUSIC STORES INC. LAYAWAY, 4 PAY PLAN (90 days same as cash) or BUDGET PLAN .Set and forget. "The Madrid' (put Joy in QJouit C^stmas uith a lliom GRINNELL'S "The Bornholm" ASTRO-SONIC STEREO CONSOLE ADVANCED ACOUSTICAL SOUND SYSTEM MAKES THIS STEREO SUPERB Magnavox superb engineering produced this stereo FM-AM radio-phonograph with airrsuspension speakers that project sound from both front and sides for dynamic dimensional realism. 50 wafts undistorted mysic power delivered through two 2-way speaker systems. Choice of 4 fine furniture styles. tMAGNAVOX COLOR STEREO THEATRE f l has 100 watts of music power A Rich Mediterranean design and grained pecan finish give you ah outside view — ■ !#of the quality that's built into this total entertainment cehter. With 295 sq. ; inch brdliant color TV and stereo FM-AM radio-phonograph. Magnavox has Astro-Sonic stereo to fit every decor and budget. For example, this long, low console stereo is the perfect focal point for a contemporary decor. With stereo FM-AM radio, automatic changer, 4 speakers and 50 watts undistorted music power. ENTERTAIN FAMILY AND FRIENDS with TAC* COLOR TV •TAC means Total Automatic Color — Magnavox's patented "set and forget", color tuning system. You get constant brilliant color reception at every point on the 295 sq. Inch screen. Choice of 4 furniture styles. PHONE TODAY FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY PONTIAC MALL 682-0422 Open Every Eve 'til 9 27 S; SAGINAW 334-7168 Men. and Fri. Eve 'til 9 . "The Americana" BIG SCREEN MOBILE COLOR TV Exciting new Magnavox has "Quick-On"—.instant 227 'lAARQ sq. inch color pictures. The cabinet is crafted in a fine walnut grain finish. Mobile cart is optional. w x w THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, DECEMBER 15, 1989 Clock Repair .■ •. .. Antique Clock SpecialitU ’• $P ‘ Sales & Service Wm 1S1 S. Bate*, Birmingham 646-7377 mean the end of the talks would not take'place as expected. The last meeting between the delegations, headed by Gerard C. Smith and Deputy Fpr-v eign Ministry Vladimir Seme-nov, took place last Wednesday. The pace has slackened off as the talks approached their apparent conclusion. One known continuing point of difference between the two delegations is the choice of a site for full-scale talks after the lie# year. The United States Would prefer Vienna, while the Soviet Union favors staying on here. pected to stop the fWo.countires from proceeding with their search for a way to stop the nuclear missile race. It was considered ft possibility that the communique here will not announce the next site, with this being doAe only after the delegations return home. TUESDAY-WEDNESDAY ONLY! Soy* $1—.Half-slip for misses RE®. Sleek nylon tricot. S h ado w penal, embroidered Vrim. Pro. portioned 10-20. Lingerie Special! Rings, earrings, more! Sale-priced! Big sewing box 929 re®. 3.99 Sturdy stymie box with brass hardwara and removable fray in colors. 14x9(/|4Mn. Ter* Good* AAOIVTCOA/VER WARD First -Stage Arms -Curb Talks on Verge of Success HELSINKI (AP) - The United States and the Soviet Union today held the ninth session of their preliminary strategic arms limitation talks and apparently were on the verge of agreeing to full-scale-negotiations. The present phase of SALT is i to see it the two great powers can find enough common ground to justify going on with bilateral* efforts at arms control. Both sides have expressed satisfaction with progress so f&r and indicated that the talks here will end successfully in the next two or three days. Today’s session at the U.S. Embassy was postponed four hours from the usual-starting ° time at the Request of (the Soviet y delegation, . which Was understood to have been awaiting In-structions from Moscow. Conference sources said the delay did not indicate trouble or CHRISTMAS STORK HOURSt Pally IS WRt ta fiSS p.m. Sunday 9iSS •» »• MO y* . Sunday Naaa ta A pa, - SPECIAL! MISSES1 CAR COATS WITH FUR TRIM XiV REG. $35 Wonderful winter warmers with lush fur collars. Just the thing with sportswear. Fashion shades. Lined. 8 to 16. Fart IMtltd tor country of orlpln of <1 Women's D*pt. YOUR CHOICE Sal«-prlcod! Misses'vasts 4.. 100% acrylic sweater vasts have self belt, gold-finish buttons, V-rveck. Misses'. Sportswear Childran'sand woman's slippars *2 PAIR Cozy warmers for winter mornings. Several popular styles end colors. Shoe Dept. A bewitching bushel of bauble* and bangles. "Gems" and "moon 'jewelry"—cute gift! Accessories Sava $10! 24" modern vanity 74MEfc includes top end chine bowl. Storage space. Update your bathroom. Faucet extra. Sava $30! Traditional swivel rocker Comfy chair with full slid, _ button-tufted beck In nylon O fabric treated with ZepeP. jW. In oliva, gold or russat. rei Furniture Dept. the sporty look in rich black ( vinyl —so modern end so smart. Adjust to three positions. He'll love HI Furniture Dept. OPEN MONDAY THRU FRIDAY IO A.M. TO 9:30 P.M SATURDAY 9:30 A.M. TO 9:30 PJM. SUNDAY 12 NOON TO 6 P.M. e 682-4940 Save 61.95! 72-sq. inch!* portable co|or television Reel vibrant color in e truly ^ portable cabinet. Color Magic keeps colors true. I aF w# AGC ends fluttering. RK6. 259.95 • raw TV-Pedle Dept. Save 15.12! Signature® zigzag sewing machine head Versatile machine has built- 0^4% a a in buttonholar and blind Ham- M Doo mar. Pushbutton forward-ra- m JF verse control. Handy light. RE®. $95 Sewing Machines Sava $1—laid ‘ Spanish accents s-21 REG. 3.' EACH Unusual gifts of Spain! Chests, woodan statues, candlesticks, swords, foils, plagues. China Dept. Sava 9.07! Handy lightweight vac 88 RE®. 24.95 Quickly end thorough* cleens rugs, bore floors. Easy to handle, store. Accessories. Vacuum Cleaners ' Sava $30! Big dishwasher unit 95 RE®. 239.95 209 Appliance has 5 levels of wash action to get dishes clean. Converts to built-in. Appliance Dept, Sava! Fringad scatter rugs 349 WML 499 24x36" Smart colors! Rayon , pile, non-skid back. 6,49, 27x45" rug 5.49 ? 10.99, 36x40" rag 9.49 - Carpet Dept. Sava $12! 7-foot pool table *277 5“ Fun for the family! Pro styling; includes 4 cues, Belgian bells, triangle, bridge, etc. Spertlsg Geeds Sava $13! ,U-spaad blandar 36 99 RE®. Hi-low range solid state blender lets you do any job. Graduated 58-ounce jar. Hensawaras Plumbing & Heating Sava 1.12! Corn popper sat 3«S REG. Includes 2-qt. popper and butter matter. Fun end enjoyment for the whole family. Housewares THE PONTIAC PRESS, TONDAY, DECEMBER 15, 1969 A—18 She's Letting the Sunshine BREMERTON, Wash. (UPI) — Dana Tift, 10, now can open np her eyes and let the sunshine ■■ to.'. ...; But until recently she had to about wearing; sunglasses, Since she was 9 months old she wore sunglasses. And because she also suffered from nystagmus, a rapid, jiggling movement of the eye, it was impossible to obtain an Be- fitting the tiny, plastic discs fori and yet not too tight to restrict 13, years. *u- n-------j *----- In keeping her eyes partly closed curate test of her vision, and her head down. -i But last year, her parents * * * took her to Dr. Carl Alleger, an Dana was born without irises optometrist in the tiny com-in her eyes. This is like havuw munity of Silverdale, Wash, a camera without a> shutter. [ * ★ Most p^rsonp have blue, cjT They had heard that Dana brown or hazel Irises. Dana has might be helped by contact only pupils. I lenses and Dr. Alleger had been The idea was to fit her with a pair of painted7 contacts that would screen out all but a small amount of light and at the same timfc make corrections in her vision. SERIES OF FITTINGS He began a series qf fittings and finally,, after four pairs, he whs satisfied that the fit was tight enough to stay in place the flow of tears. Dana was a good patient and quickly adapted to the These were clear plastic. The next step was to fit her with a pair of painted contacts. These were colored black except for a four-millimeter clear spot in the center. Finally, Dana’s eyes beqhme used to the black colored lenses, and Dr. Alleger was ready for the final step. From Chicago he ordered a tinted pair. An artist using photographs of Dana’s parents duplicated the color he believed Dana’s eyes might have been. * * ★ Now instead of seeing the world in overexposure, Dana says she enjoys a sharp clear image. A possibility in\the future is mining on the ocean floor off the Pacific Coast of the United States. (AtvarthwiMirt) TEETHING PAIR? baby ora-Jel Gunmnqhams': m SuggiM TUESDAY-WEDNESDAY ONLY! /V\ONTGO/VYER ARD CHRISTMAS STORE HOURS: Daily 10 e.n. to 9:30 pan. Sat. 9:30 a.m. to 9:30 p.m. Sun. 12 Nona ta * pan. Adjustable-back r , /\ IMS . Save 3.50! Full- r IqT sleek bra-slip IflEOL* !:j| size bedspreads 450 REG* ■fi 6.50 gsjpjLkJJ 099 REG. W 13*49 For a smooth line under fashions! Nylon tricot; nylon spandex. A32-36 and BC32-38. HSlf 2 * t o n o d jacquard-weave with charm of hand-loomed. Reversible. Machine wash. Uugerle Lluon Dept. / Special! Boys’ brief, T-shirts 3-2" Soft absorbent underwear of Kodel® polyester and Supima* cotton. 6 to 20. Soys’ Dept. Save 2.12! Men’s Banian4 pullover 588 Reg. 58 Most wanted pullover shirt in high crew neck style. Washable long-sleeved. Sizes S-XL Men’s Dept. Save $2! Dress shirts 550 REG. 7.50 Better dress shirts with regular, spread collars. Solid colors, including white, Men’s Dept. Geology, chem., microscope sets YOUR "Jf 77 «ACH choice / ^ Take your pick of 3 education sets! All designed to stimulate youngsters in science. Toy Dept. Save $15! Elec- , trie fireplace $74Y.G, Just hang on the wall and plug into 110 volt outlet. Includes electric wood - look logs. Mem# Improvements \ A Special purchase! Sweater/shirt set 14 88 WERE $25 Elegant cardigan and color-toned shirt in boude-stitch. Smart shades. S to XL Men’s Dept. Sale-priced! Talking Santa 247 REG. 3.99 17-in. tall Sarita delights young and old! Pull his talking string, he says 10 things! Toy Dept. Save $3! Handy auto vacuum 95 Reg. 14.95 Powerful I i 111 e vac plugs into car lighter. Makes cleaning easy. He’ll love it! Auto Accessories 11 Save $20! 6-foot bar of diamond-tufted vinyl ’ Amber, green or'beige vinyl ^ upholstered front, easy-care 111U77 Plastic top. Elegant, useful. I \m M 34.99 bar stool... .29.99 REG. 129.99 Furniture Dept. Special! Nine-transistor wolkie-talkie unit Transmits and receives up to one mile. Volume control, AC adapter, die-cast body. Ideal for campers! Toy Dept. REG. 14.99 Save $2! Travel calendar-alarm 499 REG. 4.99 Tells you date and time calendar changes automatically. In leather-like case. Jewelry Dept. Save $4! Handy socket outfit 21 99 13 Save $25! Duo-8 movie projector for your home 99 Show regular or super 8 films in slow motion, forward, reverse, and special ‘’still". 99.95 Auto, slide pro;., 89.99 REG. 114.99 Camera Dept. 89 REG. 25.99 3/8” drive ratchet, flex handle, bar; 5" ext.; 23 sockets; %-•fa" adapters; more! Hardware Dept. Save $2! 4-amp. battery charger 99 REG. 15.99 Full charge in 10-14 hours for 6- and 12-volt batteries. Be prepared for winter. Auto Accessories Rad-lin* "Chaatar V Slick* Save 1.96-Deluxe lighted mirror 799 REG. 9.95 Great for applying make-up. No glaring! Magnifier is built right in for her. Cosmetics Save 2.11—5-in, bench grinder 7 88 REG. 9.99 Sharpen tools and knives. Ball bearing construction. 30 and 40 grit wheels; rests. Hardware Dept. Wards portable 4-traek player Plays 4-track monaural tapes on its own power. Portable! Reg. 39.99. 8-track 34.99 Auto Accessories Save $18! Boys’ deluxe 5-speed Mustang bike Deriilleifr^ gears shift withT — ease from low-low to ultra- • high. Caliper brakes. Finished Jr in bright magneta, REG. 67.99 Sporting Goods OPEN MONDAY THRU FRIDAY 10 AJtf. TO 9.30 P.M. SATURDAY 9:30 A.M. TO 9:30 P.M. SUNDAY 12 NOON TO 6 P.M. . 682-4940 A—14 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, DECEMBER M, 1969 Airport Development Is at Issue in tlie Coui#y (EDITOR’S NOTE — This is the final article in a three-part series on airport development in Oakland County.) By JEAN SAELE Airport development is a controversy item in Oakland County—the county is now operating the state’s third busiest airport, Oakland-Pontiac Airport in Waterford Township, and is considering improvement of another largely undeveloped field, Oakland-Orion Airport in Orion Township. To add to the controversy there has been talk among county officials about buying the privately-owned Wixom airfield. The county was given an opportunity to purchase 12S acres last summer, the land consisting of the field proper. The present owners intended to keep the surrounding area to be privately developed as an industrial park. The asking price on the land offered to the county was $2 million. * * * Daniel T. Murphy, chairman of the County Board of auditors, believes if the county were to get involved (and it would have to If any federal funds, were to be made available for site development), it should, take on the total airport area and thereby stand a chance of getting some return on its investment. PREFERABLE SITE The opinion of somp flyers interviewed generally, the Wixom site is preferable to the Orion site. One flight instructor noted he had never had a pupil able to make a successful east-west landing on the Orion field. The ground drops at such a rapid rate that it becomes very difficult to successfully land a plane. The fact that this strip should be getting the most use due to prevailing winds adds to the problem. * * * While both airports are accessible to interstate highways (which the Pontiac field is not), the Wixom site is level and is not nearly an built up as the Orion site. The Wixom field also has sod runways and would require considerable development. Starvation Rules Forgotten Isle AMPENAN, Lombok Island,, 1966. Hundreds died in Indonesia (AP) — Only 10 min- Many have died this year, utes’ flying time from the leg- * * * endary island of Bali, where! Hundreds more will die in the well-fed tourists cavort on the j next few months if rice, Indone-beaches, thousands of men, sia’s staple food, is not shipped women, and children face a jin soon by the government. The region’s rice crop this chip vainly at their fields with j of the more enlightened officials picks and sharpened iron bars. 0n the island, exclaimed: “It’s BITTER IRONY Ilike knocking your head against slow death by starvation. This is Lombok, the forgotten Island, its central plains dried to a thick crust by the sun, plagued by drought, and dis- Centuries-old superstition and a blind faith in Allah tie the simple Moslem people to the wasteland. “We cannot move from this place,” explained grizzled Hadj Umar Manan one of the island’s religious leaders. “Our ancestors lived like this. They are buried here. If God wants us to die, then we will die. Here, in our lands.” STARVATION DEATHS Lombok lies across a narrow strait from Bali, lush and green and fertile. Few. visitors ever come’to Lombok. There is little here, and “foreigners”, anyone who is not a native islander, are greeted with suspicion. In the central region 20,000 men, women and children have died from starvation and disease. Most died in a famine ii year was short by 33,000 tons. So ar, the government in Jakarta has sent only five tons of rice for the hungry, say officials. They need at least 15,000 tons to stay alive. PLAGUE OF RATS A plague of. rats first laid waste hundreds of acres of rice fields. The superstition-ridden villagers say the rats fell in a shower from the sky and are led by a giant white rat “as big as a dog.” Then came the grasshoppers, stripping clean most of what the rats left over. Later, the rice was stricken by disease and rotted. And all the time the land got drier and the rains did notj come. Now, after many months without rain, peasants live on plants, roots and insects. They cannot afford to buy rice. In the village of Sengkol, women sit weaving outside their mud houses. Naked urchins play in the rust-brown dirt. The men very thick brick wall! I and the men before me have tried to convince these people to move from the dry areas, but they are rooted here. I don’t think they will ever move. Besides, I suppose there just isn’t enough rice to go around.” ★ A * Disease takes its toll. Smallpox, cholera and dysentery kill. There is only one tiny medical center in the whole of the central region, manned by two dedicated doctors. This island is so primitive oth-j er Indonesians wince when it is mentioned. | IMAMS POWERFUL The people of the central re- jjere reaj p0Wer yes with gion use their meager moneyjmams. They have many; and food on seasonal celebra- own hundreds of acres of tions circumcision ceremonies |land and many buffaloeSi ^ and festivals. The imams, the .qj the Squaior anij misery, the I religious leaders, say this is'onjy impressive building is a I how it must be. mosque. FUTILE EFFORTS ★ * * Some officials have tried to Hadj Umar, asked why he didi The bitter irony is that while this central land withers and dies, its people stay doggedly rooted to their barren soil. The northern and western parts of the island have plenty of rice; not abundant, but enough to stave off famine. But the people of the central plains do not beg, and the people of the north and west dp not offer. •k k k Hie key is water. The north and west are fed by rivers from the hills all the year round. The plains people are at file mercy of the weather and pray for rain. Irrigation is poor. So far, there has been no action to acquire any or all. of the Wixom facility, however the supervisors’ aviation and transportation committee is pushing legislation which would allow airport development to be paid for on a special assessment basis. That would mean that industrialists, who might expect to benefit the most froth the airport, would be charged for its development. ,1 ; \ \ \ ! ' 'The efforts of Supervisor Niles Olson, D-Lake Orion, to halt the Orion airport development have been hamstrung by the fact that he faces two formidable opponents on both the three-man airport committee of which he is chairman and on the aviation and transportation committee. PLANE BUFFS The two, Supervisors Mahlon Benson, R-Waterford Township, and Wallace Gabler, R-Royal Oak, are both pilots and use planes in their businesses. They are committed to future airport development. Benson and Gabler have so far been able to outvote Olson and his supporters, and In the case of the Orion appropriation, it might even be said that they seemingly outmaneuvered him. ;#r * . itr ★ Olson told The Press he had no knowledge of tin 3250,000 appropriation request made to the finance committee for Orion development until he read about it in the paper. Both Benson and Gabler say they view airport facilities as an inducement to industrial and commercial development. The fact that both Orion and Wixom fields lie within easy access of interstate highways leads them to believe that it won’t be long before both those fields supersede the Pontiac field. Ik- k k Murphy agrees. “The freight business will come in to those ields serviced by good roads. In a ew years Pontiac may be devoted primarily to general aviation with the outlying field or fields handling foe freight business,” he said. break down this barrier of ignorance and convince the imams they arl wrong to preach hanging on in the lands of ’their cestors. | The regent (administrator) of around the old man silently nod-Central Lombok, Sri Gede, one ded in agreement. SPECIAL SELLING! OUR FINEST WIGS SPECIAL SELLING! — WARDS BEAUTIFUL, FASHION-STYLED, 100% HUMAN HAIR WIGS -A HEAD START TO GLAMOUR! Give yourself a fresh, new beauty look —enjoy the luxury of "instant glamour" for those special occasions! Come see what a difference a new hair style or color will do for you. We have a wide selection—blondes, brunettes, redheads —styled in the* latest accepted fashions. We'll help you find the one style that's just right for your face, coloring, and desired mood I MIRACLE FIBER WIG — TAPERED BACK, TAPERED CURL ..___19.95 OUR 100% HUMAN HAIR WIGLETS Increase your styling potential—give short styles that long hair look I Many soft or glossy hair pieces to match your own color. 9” BURKE . BUILDING CENTER is MTEIIVIEWHW Ifor IN STORE SALES PERSONNEL OPPORTUNITIES FOR DEPAR1MENT HEADS IN DIE FOLLOWING: • HARDWARE • ELECTRICIANS • BUILDING MATERIAL • LOUDER DEPARTMENT (EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER) Last week to save on her best not lead his people to a better land, replied: “If we are to die,| we will die here. It is foe will of' Allah.” f A score of peasants standing SHE’LL SEWBiNCY EMBROIDERY, EVEN BASTE; sew zig-zag stitches, dam, mend SHECANDHLA BUTTONHOLE! Just a couple of turris of the Built-In Buttonhole dial and monogram withthis machine. gives her showed buttonholes. OFF REG. PRICE GoldenTouch&Sew’zief-zag sewing machine by SINGER in “Balersfieltf’cabinet This is the year to give this superb sewing machine to the most deserving woman oil your list It’s sew easy to use-she’ll sew more, save more money all through 1970and for years to come! SHE’LL NEVERTANGLE WITH BOBBIN-WINDING AGAIN. Not when she has a Touch & Gew machine with the Singer exclusive Push-Button Bobbin. One touch and it winds inside the machine. There are over 150 Singer sewing machine and cabinet combinations to choose from. Sewing machine prices start at $69.95.. FPPP CFWINfl I p1SingergivesfreelessonsonhowtOHisea 1 1VLL uLVV liivl LLOol/liOi sewing machine with every machine purchased. FREE GIFTWRAPs».‘^“M*tSo,0“’raft,rtan““p FREE DEUVERY-nw'bmftth.U.SAincltidiiigAlaskaancIHamiil BUY NOWON YOUR SINGER IfHbSfi CREDIT ACCOUNT and if vnti chonse. rtafor mnnfhlv nawmanfs until Fehnnnt 1070 and ifyou choose, defer monthly payments until February 1970 ...OR usetheSingerLayAwayPlan-a small deposit will hold any itetrt until Dec. 2ft For address of store nearest you, see white pages of phone book under SINGER COMPANY. PONTIAC MALL 682-0350 OAKLAND MALL 585-5010 SINGER Whatt new for tomorrow f. at SI N.G E R iotayl * ^Trademark of THE SINGER COMPANY TEL-TWELVE 353-1330 BIRMINGHAM 323 E. Maple Ml 44050 the powtiac press, Monday, December i 51 1969 A—15 . -J&- ME 108 N, SAGINAW ST. SN FE 3-7114 Put Joy inYbur Magna fromWKC a X. Bfes; A REMOTE CONTROL HOME ENTERTAINMENT CENTER WITH COLOR TV, STEREO FM-AM RADIO AND PHONO, Total entertainment — designed into elegant, space-saving armoire cabinetry. The 295 sq. inch TV has Total Automatic Color. Set it'once and it monitors the color constantly. Exclusive Astro-sonic solid-state stereo FM-AM radio-phonograph makes the best sounds sound better. 100 watts of undistorted music power are delivered through a 4-speaker air suspension system. And all remote control 1 $1495 ADVANCED ACOUSTICAL SOUND SYSTEM MAKES MAGNAVOX STEREO SUPERS Magnavox engineering produced this stereo FM-AM radio-phonograph with air-sus-pension speakers that project sound from BOTH front and sides for perfect dimensional M f\cr\ -realism. 50 watts undistorted music power delivered through four speakers In a two-way Speaker system. Choice of 4 furniture styles. te#^T W m COMBINATION STEREO AND COLOR TV THEATER OFFERS 3-WAY ENTERTAINMENT Rich Mediterranean design and grained Pecan finish give you an outside view of the quality that's built into this total entertainment system. Has famous Magnavox 295 sq. Inch TAC TV, solid-state stereo^ FM-AM radio and phonograph with Micromatic changer. Remote Control Cabinet has concealed swivel castors. Optional *825 ENTERTAIN FAMILY AND HOLIDAY GUESTS WITH TAC ... PERFECT PICTURE COLOR TV TAC means Total Automatic Colors-Mogno- \ \ * vox's exilusiye ,Set and Forget cofor tuning i / ) ■ 'I ' system. You get conslow. brtlUcnt-cdlor recep- ' - * / tion at every- point an the 295 square Inch screen. Choose from 4 ” £■ 50 fine furniture styles. ^ yll , 1 ASTRO-SONIC STEREO FM-AM RADIO PHONOGRAPH STYLED TO SUIT YOUR HOME Whatever your decor, listening preference or budget, Magnavox has Astro-Sonic stereo to 'fit your needs. Take for example this Contemporary console with FM-AM stereo radio-phono developing 50 watts undislarted music power. Has automatic changer, 050 iftatchedtpeaker system. -j W Q CHOOSE FROM THE WIDEST MAGNAVOX SELECTION BY F^R AT WKC MOBILE TV WITH AUTOMATIC FINE TUNING & BRILLIANT-COLOR TUBE PARK FREE in WKCy*Own Lot at Rear of Store or Park for Etlour in Downtown Parking Mall-Rave Ticket Stamped at Cashier's Office, WHO This big-screen contemporary has "Quick-on"—flick it on and you have an instant 180 sq./inch color picture. .The cabinet ii Crafted in Hardwoods with walnut Wood finish. Attractive matching' mobile' easy-roll ^art Is / A/SQgQ ' optional." J J7Q A DIVISION OF "S MUSIC------~ .EASY CREDIT AT WKC-90 I Days Same as Ca or Use Your * MASTER CHARGE CARD and JYo Payments ’ Feb. 1st. THREE THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, DECEMBER IS, 1099 Shop NOW for These Vk6$mehrn ti'mfy- jfj&k your gi: SOLLARS Gfiitwntmcf Handsome and rugged, this 26-jewel Chronometer is completely water-re* sistant. Hand - crafted in 14K gold or stainless steel. The watch for active men. Styles from $135 Marvelously crafted in 14K gold. Round diamonds blaze in the bracelet case. Designed to today's fashion. Styles from $135 Charge • Layaway • Michigan Bankard f STORE HOURS 9:30 A M. to 9:00 P.M. 5905 Dixie Highway, Waterford Independence Commons at Waterford Hill l Phone 623-9300 DOWNTOWN PONTIAC A JEWELERS Corner of Huron u and Saginaw Streets FE 2-0294 31..H Saginaw at Lawrence St. Across From Community National Bank Phone 332-0231 WIG CO. From the workshop of Pearce's ORDER YOUR POINSETT! AS {.r CMtfbwit Matthews-Hargreaves Puts YOU First for Christmas! Christmas excitement first begins at Matthews-Hargreaves Chevrolet. With you in mind, our professional sales staff begins TODAY offering Special Pre-Christmas prices on a complete rainbow of Chevrolet colors at Pontiac's favorite Chevrolet Dealership! 1970 Chevrolet Nova 2-Door Traditional bright red, pinks or whites, grown under controlled conditions in bur own greenhouses. It, is the personal expression of your good wishes for this gay Holiday Season. Equipment Indudedi 6-cylinder engine, 3-speed transmission, seat belts, back-up lights, head rests, shoulder harness, exteripr decor grpup. > Be S6re to Visit Ouf NeW Sports Car Showroom at 630 Oakland Savings Service Satisfaction $y?50___$1Q00____$1C00 OTHERS to $25 FLORAL COMPANY 559 Orchard Lake Ave. Phone FE 2-0127 631 Oakland at Cass FE 5-4161 MATTHEWS HARGREAytS Raise Glass Sextuplefs Some 20 sets of sextuplets have been reported bom in the world since 1900. Britain’s first set was bora Oct. 2, 1968, to Mrs. Sheila Thorns, who also had been taking a fertility drug. Three of the babies survived. * * * “They’re lovely, really lovely, every one of them,’* said Mrs. Letts’ husband, John, 25, as he looked at the five babies in their incubators. “I can’t believe it’s all over." :J NAME PROBLEM Letts said he and his wife had picked out only three names for the bathes. “We always planned a large family,” He said, “But we never expected to get it all at once. We think it will be great fun.” The couple was married in 1966. Mrs. Letts had been in the hospital for four months, since early tests indicated a multiple tSrth. Her 25-year-old husband works in the north of Britain and traveled 500 miles to London every weekend to visit her. „ By SHIRLEY GRAY As far as the Village Woman’s Club is concerned, 4t’sA Christmas right now. After the annual Christmas dinner dance Saturday at 6 p.m., chaired by Edward and Penny Nicholas of Bloomfield Hills, comes the annual Santa Claus brunch on Sunday from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Santa will be there, ho-hoing and passing out presents. Serving as helpers will be three mlcro-minied young actives; Mrs. John Biraey, Mrs. Richard McCtear and Mrs. Wendell Smith Jr. A On - | Tuesday'/ at i p.m., VWC’s / ' Armchair Traveler series will1 feature a visit to the Holy Land via color slides, with Mrs. George Goodwin of Bloomfield Hills, herself a member, as travel guide. Hazel and George toured the Middle East extensively twice, in 1960 and again in 1964. They spent a year on research before the first trip, and another two or Former President Lyndon B. Johnson has a word with . his~‘ three months sorting the 2,000 or so former secretary, Marie Fehmer, after, her marriage to Dr. Andrew slides afterward. J. Chmodo, right,in the Church-of the Epiphunym - tf3 section of Washington; Saturday. The bnde is from Dallas, Tex she visite(j there, and is even Dr. Qhiarodo is a professor of biology at Georgetown University, more bo since. One thing not often realized about the Holy Land is. its compactness. The places where Christ lived, walked and died are all quite close together, from Bethlehem to the Garden of Gethsamane with its ancient, gnarled (dive trees to the tomb in the Garden of Joseph of Arimathea. Says Hazel: “Israel is an archaeological treasure house. Digging within the walls of a convent in Jerusalem has recently ^uncovered the Pavement, believed to be the actual spot where Jesus stood to ^e sentepcedy / Modern^ Israel is1 Hazel’s favorite Mideastera country. She calk it “a friendly, loving country. There is no delinquency, no illiteracy and the people all help one another.” .w' Unfortunately the Am^-Isriteli cqeailict rules out any more tips to the Holy Land for the Goodwingf at l|aSt;fbr‘the present. But Hazel is confident that prophecies concerning Israel’s survival will come true, as so many Biblical prophecies already have regarding Israel. - ; “Read them,” she says. « ■* Woman in the White House Pat Nixon Reflects on First Year By FRANCES LEWINE < Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON W - Pat Nixon, ending her first year as first lady, says the thing she enjoys most about the White House “is to share it with others.” She misses most “the chqice I used to have to Just go where I Wanted.” ' ★ ★ , ★ The President’s wife said appointment of a new advertising-television oriented press , staff doesn’t mean she’s seeking a new image, “No one could change my image. I could never change.” She set to rest rumors that her thinness comes from ill health, saying she had a complete physical exam at Bethesda Naval Medical Center in-November and “got 100 per cent.” There was absolutely nothing wrong, she says. “I didn’t even.have the least bit of anemia.” Mrs. Nixon says she’s thin because “I work hard. I run off a lot of energy.” Happily optimistic; preferring to think of tiie favorable things happening, Mrs. Nixon feeis her husband is doing a superb job and “could do wonders in eight years.” THE CRITICS Criticism doesn’t bother Mrs. Nixon. “I don’t know a man in history who hasn’t received criticism;” she says, Sitting in the cheery yellow oval , room of the family quarters, the first lady was relaxed and unruffled by questions about her public and personal life. She said she lives, by the Golden Rule, doesn’t drink, no longer smokes, keeps a diary in her own brand of shorthand but “won’t write a book.” jjj&; „ *V\ She declined to set the record straight on how much She spends on her wardrobe. “I love clothes,” she says. I’ve never been a clotheshorse. I would never want to be among the Ten Best Dressed. I think it’s very Important to represent American women and be fashionably dressed. It’s certainly not the greatest thing in life.” ■ fa * * Mrs. Nixon , wants to reinstate the campus trip postponed by her flu last October and make it next spring because she’s impressed with what young people are doing in areas of social betterment. “I think it’s good to give them credit. Young people are lumped together and judged by the few,” She advises protesters “there are ways to work through the*system;” maintains the Nixon administration “is open to young people. They have access. I hear from them constantly. I’m proud of young people. They’re doing a wonderful job.” She reports the Nixons didn’t hear or see the thousands of Vietnam Moratorium ’ marchers parading with peace candles around the White House in November. “We’re quite a ways from the street. We weren’t aware of any special noise or commotion,” she says. EXERCISE A problem of getting exercise and fresh air prompts the Nixons to spend SO many weekends at Camp David itl the Maryland mountains and at their vaca? tion homes in Florida and California. -v “We are shut in” in the White House, Mrs. Nixon says. They could take a turn around the south driveway “but what’s the fun with people watching?” the first lady asks. Walking is one of the things Mrs. Nix* on misses most and it is places like Camp David that “we can get out.” She also wishes she could go shopping or visit museums the way she used to. She tried shopping once in Washington, but “I didn’t get anything done” for signing autographs. But a recent dinner out in New York as a 'treat and Mrs. Nixon promisw&Wre going to do more of that." If she had it to do all over again, what sort of life would Mrs. Nikon prefer? Hi never reliye, even in my thoughts, my life. I always would have been, busy. A jet set fife wouldn’t have interested me at all,” she1, said. > EXPERIENCE Mrs. Nixon, now 57, came to the White House with more experience than most first ladies, havirig served eight years as a vice president’s wife. She said she learned a lot in those years from Mamie Eisenhower, a “superb hostess. She always made people feel at borne.” She finds this first year “has gpne terribly fast ... I can hardly believe we’re here. I never take it fOr granted. It’S always a thrill.” Mrs. Nixon gets along on six or seven hours sleep, is up by 7:30 a.m., finds breakfasting alone “the most relaxing part of the day.” She reads newspapers over orange juice, toast and coffee in the family’s West Hall sitting room. She says she reads three Washington newspapers aru^ The New York Times “to keep abreast ... in case anyone asks me Anything.” h * -k She. has had an outpouring of friendly mail — over 45,000 pieces, including 5,000 get-well cards when Tricia was ill last summer. She spends four hours a day keeping up with it because “I feel it keeps me close to people.”. * The Nixons often discuss everything but she doesn’t offer the President advice. While she’d like hsr husband to finish what he starfed, Mrs. Nixon said she isn’t thinking ahold reelection. “I’ve always had the philosophy of living a day at a time — you’re too busy to be thinking ahead.” Pat Nixon relaxes in the yellow oval room of the White House family quarters during a recent interview on her first year as first lady. The President’s wife said the thing she epjoys most about the White House “is to share it with others.” Five Babies Expected to Live Second British LONDON (AP) — The five surviving babies from the second set of sextuplets recorded in Britain have “a better than 50 per cent chance of survival,” one of their doctors said today. Rosemary Letts, 23-year-old wife of a computer engineer, was delivered by Caesarean section of five girls and a boy early today, but one of the girls was stillborn. The babies were about two months premature and weighed less than three pounds each. They were placed in incubators and were. being fed minute quantities of human milk, intravenously and orally, every 15 minutes. ★ ★, ' ★' Mrs. Letts had been treated with a fertility drug, a treament that is conducive to multiple births. She was told last week she might have as many as seven babies. Empty or Not for Situation By ELIZABETH L, POST Of The Emily Post Institute The following letter has been chosen as the prize j winning one for this Week- A copy of Emily Post’s Etiquette has been sent to Mrs. LaBastille of Massapequa, N.Y. ★ ★ ★ Dear Mrs. Post:. Please write something concerning social conventions involving alcoholic beverages for those of us who are total abstainers. I know, of course, the rule of common courtesy that dictates that abstainers never act holier • than - thou or disapproving. Also, the wisdom of not arguing or getting into lengthy apologies or discussions. But toasting is the area in which I am unsure. When in a crowd I have simply put the glass to my lips without sipping and engaged in the toast. And at ceremonies where champagne is served I have learned to take the glass even though I don’t drink the contents. But what does one do at a table for two or four when.water has not heen Served and where one’s partner — who has already been served wine with the meal — offers a toast? This happened to me recently and I was faced with the choice of confessing frankly I didn’t know what to do, or of joining in the toast with an empty wine glass (no other liquid was on the table). Please cover this subject in a column some day. You might help a half dozen or so of us — Jeanne LaBastille ★ * ★ . . Dear Mrs. LaBastille: There are far more abstainers than you may think, and I have nothing but disgust for anyone who would be so rude or so stupid as to criticize them for sticking to their convictions. You have truly solved the problem very well in every way — except for the “private” toast, and that, I agree, is difficult. There are two possible ways of handling the situation, neither of Which is ideal, but they are possibly better than doing nothing. You may raise your empty glass toward the person being toasted, nod, smile your agreement, and refrain from putting the glass to your lips. . Or, if there are just two or four other people, you might say, when one of the men appears to be about to give a toast, “Would you wait until the waiter gives me some water (or gingerale, or whatever) so that I may join you in toasting Joan?” If the toast is for you, of course there is no problem, since the one being tpasted does not join in. Calendar Seeks fo Revive Romance! I With Tired Young Spouse! TUESDAY I Zonta Club of Pontiac andvSal-| vation Army doll display,. 9 a.m. I until 5 p.m. today and Wednesday 1 in the Citadel on West Lawrence I Niblick Club, 1 p.m., Elks Tern- 1 I pie, Luncheon and Christmas I I party. | Pontiac Osteopathic Hospital 1 J Guild, 1 p.m., Sylvan Lake Luther- J I an Church. Regular meeting. Wa- 1 I terford Township High School 1 p Choral Group will entertain. j| £ Bloomfield Welcome Wagon Gar- | i den Club, 1 p.m., home of Mrs. I I Ray Koertge of Inkster Road. An- I i nual Christmas tea and gift ex-1 change. 1 Detroit chapter, American So- Iciety of Women Accountants, 6 p.m., Christmas dinner meeting Schweiser’s, Detroit. Gayle B. Knapp, retired from service with the United States Army Audit 1 Agency, will speak. By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: Please rush me 10 “DO’S AND DON’TS” on how to get my husband back. He hasn’t actually left me, he’s just not here.' I am 26 and Harold is 28 and he hasn’t even held my hand since last June, We have two adorable children. We had planned to have Tour, but if I’m going to have any more, I will have to look into artificial insemination. I’ve been complaining about this for a long time, but it hasn’t done me much good. Harold says he’s “tired.” (But he’s not too tired to play 36 holes of golf every Sunday ij * Then it suddenly hit me. I guess I just don’t appeal to him anymore. I don’t know why. I’m the Same girl he chased .all aver the campus at Nebraska U. back, in 1963. I haven’t let myself go to seed and I know there’s nobody else. I just hate to be the aggressor, but if I wait for Harold to make the first move nothing will ever happen. Besides, I have my pride. So please be a pal, Abby, and send me those 10 “DO’S AND DON’TS” on how to get my husband back. Thank you. * LOST HAROLD DEAR LOST: I wish there were 10 “Do’s and Don’ts” on how to revive a marriage, but there aren’t. Every marriage is different. (And so is every “Harold.”) Face your problem squarely, and tell it to Harold! Don’t play a waiting game, and forget your pride. Harold obviously has a problem. It could be physical. Or emotional. In any case he has cooled off far too much for a young man who is still on the sunny side of 30. DEAR ABBY: Your column in which you sounded a note of warning to those who could be having a “treat” instead of a treatment interested me. Unfortunately, some properly licensed and presumably “ethical” therapists, both medical and otherwise, are now engaging in a wide range of body contact intimacies in the name of “sensitivity training” and other euphemisms. I am aware that you must remain neutral with respect to your comments on techniques in the professions, but when you advised parents and responsible family members to use a little common sense and investigate any suspicious “treatment,” I couldn’t agree with you more. If more people insisted on more information from doctors, psychiatrists, psychologists and others in the allied professions, “treatment” would cease to be a mysterious ritual, and could be much better understood by everyone. VIRGINIA JOHNSON, CLINICAL PSYCHOLOGIST What’s your problem? You’ll feel better if you get it off your chest. Write to Abby, in care of The Pontiac Press, Dept. E-600, P.O. Box 9, Pontiac, Mich. 48056. For a personal reply enclose stamped, addressed envelope. For Abby’s booklet, “How to Have a Lovely wedding,” send $1 to Abby, in care of The Pontiac Press, Dept. E-600, P.O. Box 9, Pontiac, Mich. 48056. Christmas Spirit Invades Club as Members Prepare for Events WoirtenA £edjm THE EONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, DECEMBER 15, 1969 B—1 Ho&claij/ Wa/uutfu ^)OA/ EueA^Rwat WITH FLOOR COVERING FROM THE FLOOR SHOP OZITE Use Anywhere’ Kitchen Carnet NYLON *3?.. HEAVY ROBBER BACK Uyi AM Continuous Filament, 095 N T LUII 2 - Orange, Blue £ sq. Yd. 95 Sq. Yd. at has dense nylon ive now at this low Attached foam rubber back. This rugged carpet has dense nylon construction. Spills and stains blot right up. Save now at this low price. VINYL ASBESTOS CARPET TILE TILE Create Your Own Use anywhere in the home. Designs! 12x12 or 9x9 R49Per W Carton 27.1 I CERAMIC TILE 391 Install Yourself a Save Many Dollars! 1x1 or 4V4X4 the inside of your boy’s trouser band will help him to keep his shirt tail tucked in. Works with girl’s skirts and slacks, too. Exotic Cover-Ups | for Party-Time I By ED BLANCHE | The sultan invited. 2,000 the bridegroom’s foot. Hej I Associated Press Writer |guests, including P r e s id e n t crushed it, symbolizing his ac-on Fashion Scene) JAKARTA, Indonesia UP) Suharto and countless generals Dramatic cover-ups are the order of the evening in holiday fashion collections. Pants, long skirts, culottes, and jumpsuits are worn with glamorous cover-ups that complete toe costume while serving as the evening wrap. Designs include the poncho, the cape, the long sleeveless scene from ancient Javanese legend was re-enacted when toe eldest daughter of the Sulton of Jakarta became the bride of a commoner. The wedding was carried out with all toe pomp toat could be mustered by Java’s dying aristocracy. The s u 11 a n, i Hamngku Buwono IX, is and dignitaries. Eight chartered planes brought theiri to this cradle of Java’s culture. Only a privileged few were allowed to witness the ceremonies uniting the sultan’s daughter Bandoro Raden Adjeng Murhandjati with Budi Permana, a lieutenant in the army. The cloister-quiet palace ceptance of responsibility and the fact that his life had changed forever, since the egg could never regain its original shape. The bride then washed his-feet, showing to all her fidelity and willingness to go through life with her husband. After that each sat on the sultan’s knees, 'and the sultan’s wife asked: vest, and the side-wrapped)minister of state fpr financial, dappjed }n shadow, hummed “Who is heavier, father?’ tunic. Even the maxi-coat is economic affairs in with eerie chants and gentle answered for all to hear: “They part of the cover-up layer game republican government a * bustle as silent, bare-shouldered both weight the same.” This for the holidays. Jakarta. He was the only prince ]a(jjes jp wajtjng shuffled alongshowed his acceptance of toe Another exotic evening wrap permitted to retain his title and the corridors The stH1 air was young man into toe family as C,omei!f!?m th,!,tali0n,e[a 5palavce thUs JavaTeS* ^'perfumed with flowers. |anrequal. The bridegroom then the thirties. Its the fringed Thi* was a reward lor his ^ ^ handed his wife “gunb koyo” shawl. One new style is made of |services to Indonesians’ strug- j CEREMONY STARTS an off-white cotton embroidered jgie for independence from toe To start things, a relative of with Turkish patterns in red, Dutch; he so]d ad hu iands to the bridegroom broke a single gold, and blue. It’s edge with a hejp finance the revolution. The thread strung between the high deep border of blue cotton Lug will die with him. wooden palace gates. Then the fringe. Hie shawl comes with ■ _ •'bridegroom could officially matching fringed pants, but can Thus toe weddingwas a sort dressed in a batik be worn with other evening last fling for royalty in these,^, outfits as well. _______________| an . washed by his attendants. In another chamber, his bride was bathed by her handmaidens to I courtiers and guests, cleanse her before taking toe I * * * marriage vows. ' Fragile-looking dancing girls ★ ★ * I moved sensuously to discordant The palace gates were shut gonging music and the shrill, and the bridal couple came face to face. Despite the solemnity, their mouths curled in shy smiles for each other. Then began the simple, symbolic rituals. By throwing betel nuts at each other they signified their mutual decision to mar- performed a dance written by ry. her father to celfebrate her elder % * ★ * {sister’s wedding. The sultan An attendant .touched a wrote it in 1942 — when his: chicken egg against the bride’s daughter was still a babe in' forehead, then placed it under [arms. rice, corn, flowers and coins to show he would provide fori her. BLUE SARONG I At the reception later, toe! sultan, elqgant in a rich blue sarong and brocaded jacket, sat with his daughter and son-ini-{ law before toe assembled1 keening wail of chanting! women.' ★ ★ * As the sultan watched,! another of his daughters, Kus Wartjandi, tall and slender and sheathed in a golden sarong, /?- iO/\ MIRACLE MILE o/ream %tue offfifti Gift Boxed FREE •Come to the Lion Store and discover a world of gifts for every man and hoy on your list . . . gifts with America’s most famous names! Dress Shirts-*6 to *9, Ties *2 to *750, Coldgne-*350 to *1250, Knit Shirts-*7 to *25, Hose-*].25 to *5, Slacks-*9 to $32.50, Sport Shirts- •6 to *21, Jewelry-*5 to *17, Pajamas-*6 to *15, Sweaters-*!! to *285i> THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, DECEMBER 15, I9ft9 B—8 1 PLEATS ARE ON THE MOVE IN Sweet young thing* with more toste then money always shop Arthur's for the best fashion values. Pleats make quite a stir in gala dresses. Wrinkle free, some washable. Yours in white or melon. Sizes S to 13. Winter Studio Classes Other Jr. and Misses' Pleated Styles from $26 mm m CLASSES DESIGNED FOR CHILDREN Ml TEENS AND ADULTS —I BEGINNER AND PROFESSIONAL INSTRUCTION IN ALL MEDIA llgffff Whan in Doubt Give An Arthur’s GIFT CERTIFICATE for class schedule call 644-0866 1516 S. Cronbrook Rd. Birmingham listed by the American Craftsman Council Ctowtito Exceptional Fashion Value — Black Beauty Persian lamb Coats Each Collared with Magnificent Natural MINK Obvious Values at Thg Bart 6f Broadway 1970 • 2 nights at Americana Hotel e Broadway Show Tickets e Radio City Music Hall Shew • Tour of NBC ROdib-TV studiof W 9 0 W w W others to 8699 If she'sbeeft hinting and ypu'ye keen premising ,, give her the gift of gifts — 6 precious % length sleek, shimmering black - dyed Persian Lamb, magnificently collared in Natural Mink. A small deposit will hold your choice. Credit terms of course. t Magnificent Full Skin Cost $51 >35 per person double occupancy plus air tiro In time to moke her Christmas abound with elegancel Exquisite opulent full* akin male minK hats .are the perfect holiday occessory. Choose from white, natural ranch, pastels, tourmaline, grey.' Make this Christmas the most memory able and happy onO far her .., Furs labeled for country of'origin of Imported Furs Millinery Solon — Second Floor PONTIAC TRAVEL SERVIOl 108 Pontiac-Mall Office Bldg. 682-4600 Asian Music Is Topic Gentlemen Don't Prefer Blondes William P. Malm, University df Michigan professor of music literature, will be the featured speaker at the Ikebana International, chapter SB, tea to be held at 1 p.m. Wednesday in the; Bloomfield Hills home of -Mrs. H. E. Bumgardner. ★ W, h\ r ' .. a 1 Prbfessor \ Malm spent two years In Tokyo in the 1950s as a Ford Foundation Fellow. In the spring of 1966 he spent two months in East and Southeast Asia collecting instruments and materials for the University of California, following a UNESCO conference on Asian music in Manila. ★ * * He is a member of the Society for Ethnomusicology and the Association for Asian Studies. ★ * * Professor Malm has written widely for scholarly publications in the field of Japanese music. He is the author of three books, all concerned with Japanese and other Asian music cultures. WILLIAM P. MALM Plastic Drawer Lining Quilted plastic is fine to use when lining drawers as it not only protects fragile garments from snags but is so easily wiped off at cleaning time. Brunettes Score High By HELEN HENNESSY |ladies, actresses and literaryinedy all endorsed the dark-NEA Women’s Editor [figures. haired lode by marrying NEW YORK — Would ^you The Hanging Gardens of brunettes and relying heavily believe' that the hair-coloring firm' that asked “Do blondes haye more fun?” now claims that brunettes are the world’s most sought - after women? seems to me that Just being sought after might be a lot of There is no need to envy blondes. Brunettes do just as well, such as, from left, Katherine Hepburn, probably the most enduring star of them all. Center, Elizabeth Taylor Burton’s dark beauty has won her share of famous men, the admiration of millions pf fans and the 69.42 carat Cartier diamond. At right is Jacqueline Kennedy Onas-sis who brought unequaled style and beauty into the White House as First Lady. Look, See Mother Waving By BETTY CANARY i NEA Writer ; Look, Dick! Look Jane! , Mother and four children are at the airport. She is taking the . children to Chicago for the ‘ weekend. She calls it an educational tour. Mother is crazy. See Babs wave goodby? See Tad wave goodby? See Cissy /wave goodby? See Stu pretend he la not with them. Stu Is 13 years old. earth,” calls Tad. 11 Good She is smiling again. Why are NIGHT, mother” says Stu.!they smiling? Because they are “Can’t you make them sut up?” staying on the plane, that’s why. 1 Have You Tried This? I Cookies Full of Fruit Babylon, o^e of, the legendary upon them for inspiration, sup-Seveh Wonders sof the. World,'Port and advice. * ' > . 3 was built by Nebuchadnezzar to! When it comes to literature, cheer up his homesick brunette who are the most famous fem-bride. And the magnificent Taj me fatales-bnmettes like Em-Mahal was built as a shrine for ma Bovary, Scarlett O’Hara, a mogul emperor’s dark-haired! Anna Karenina and Camille, wife. | not to mention the legendary Do you think that the answer! an INSPIRATION I Beatrice who Dante said into that leading question on . .. r spired every word he wrote, blondes was supposed to be,A * df tbe Gr®at..si And some of the brightest “no?” favorite girl — a brunette stars in theater and films prove JSBk*HSmSSSl 251?,, STJhistory's example of the power burn, Ava Gardner, Elizabeth hnr«n ^ fh being 8 brunette by wearing .Taylor, Joan Crawford, bureau for blondes, too that'a black wig over her strawber-1 Rosalind Russell, would come up with a good case Pv hlnnri hair I AC, II- It ,u for the light side-come these y bl d h After mullmg over 8,1 these facts and figures Theodora, a captivating dark-[statistics it occurs to me that ." . ihaired circus performer, cap-jthere’s really no conflict , . . tured Emperor Justinian and.between the two Bs. Blondes nli fLl ihoi e! 0f,acrecent!with him the title, Empress of [may have more fun but eiaw man n ®eti1X °h ,eve^! the Byzantine Empire. Even-brunettes over the centuries Hark haired!! m«i« iLf ^ ' tually she came to wield more seem to have had more power. ETC h Power than her husband. And in'And since you can be either women ft M Ann Boleyn’sione by simply shampooing in comfort to know that it’s not bru"ett* M u 8 * dhair S® or donn,nK 8 3™ cent of the feminine ?ngla.ndk sP.ht . with £h e can -take a crack. at being | just 30 per c § population who Hum WAnrf refused to sanction her mar-weary of laughing and as Sn tl dark to Henry W 85 darkened your hair c e Napoleon’s Josephine did a you can sway a few nations, tremendous amount to advance What a wonderful world! her husband’s career but she also turned out to be his “Waterloo.” When they parted, the emperor’s political and military fortunes took a turn for the worse. Catholic Church when the Pope “toujours gaie” until you get What is mother saying? Oh, oh, we can’t put THAT in the book! ★ ★' ★ The pretty stewardess brings the children little trays. On each tray is a sandwich and something to drink. What is in Did the children have fun on their educational tour? Will they have interesting things to tell about the trip when they return to school! What did the children see in Chicago? They saw the rest rooms at the glass? A soft drink? Iced [the airport. The! saw the rest rooms at Marshall Field’s They tea? Poison? See the stewardess trip over Tad’s loot? See the saw the rest rooms at the Adler drinks splash on her dress? Planetarium. And the rest' See father? See father wave i Now we will never know what it rooms at the Museum ofi goodby? See father laugh? Why .was. See her step on the Science and Industry. And the I is father laughing so HARD? j sandwiches? They were egg rest rooms at the hotel. Now the family is goihg inside salad. She does not look so * * * the big jet. See the stewardess? pretty any more. I What can mother, tell? Where § She is pretty. She is smiling. | The plane has landed in IS mother? You saw her get on l “Hellti” she says. “Are you [Chicago. The people on the [the plane for the return trip. | S going to fly in the big airplane?.plane say goodby to the Oh,' oh! Maybe she is still | Are ydu going to Chicago?” children. They are smiling.. The!locked in the rest room on the'I “No,” says Tad. “Isn’t this sewardess is waving goodby. | airplane, the bus to Detroit?” Funny, By JANET ODELL Food Editor, The Pontiac Press /! Hoping to find some recipes for the holidays in our file of readers’ submissions, we came across a recipe for Christmas drop cookies. When you are in a hurry, there’s nothing like drop cookies. Mrs. Carl M. Bolten gave us this recipe quite some time ago. She is an active worker In the scholarship committee at Oakland University. She also enjoys the theater and bridge. CHRISTMAS DROP COOKIES By Mrs. Carl M. Bolten Vi cup butter or vegetable 44 cup nuts, chopped . i As to character, brunettes are described as being very marriageable, vigorous, faithful■! energetic, passionate and in-1 telligent. Translate all this into personalities and you have some of the most important, | beautiful, famous and infamous FIRST LADIES Abraham Lincoln, It Took a While LONDON m — Edward Williams filed for divorce, claiming his wife left him 48 years ago. He said at age 67 he wanted to marry again, and the women of history—queens, first Lyndon Johnson and John Ken-| divorce was granted. shortening 1 cup brown sugar 1 egg 1% cups flour Vt teaspoon salt % teaspoon soda 44 cup sour milk or buttermilk funny Tad. The stewardess helps the children find seats. She is still - smiling. Why? Is SHE crazy? | The pretty stewardess shows! the children how to fasten their! seatbelts. She fastens Tad's fori him. She pulls it so tight that he cannot talk. Isn’t that funny? j The airplane zooms up into the air. Up, up, up “Goodby, father,” calls Babs. “Goodby, j . airport,” calls Cissy. “Goodby, Open to Public .The children of McCarroll School •will present a Christmas p%, “Symbols of Christmas,” at 7:30 p.m. Dress rehearsal at 1:30 p.m. may be attended by parents unable to attend the evening performance. 44 cup candied cherries, chopped % cup chopped dates 3 rings candied pineapple, chopped; 1 each red, green and white Cream shortening and sugar. Add egg and beat well. Sift dry ingredients and add alternately to first mixture 1 with milk. Add fruit and nuts. Let stand overnight in a |l cool place. In the morning, drop by spoonfuls on cookie sheet. 1 I m Put a whole nut meat on top of each cookie. Bake 10-13 1 | I minutes at 350 degrees. Makes about 3 dozen. Leisurely Bath Will Relax the Tired Shopper . After visiting every floor of the local department store in a single day to hunt presents for dad, the kids, grandma, and^ [ grandpa, you’ll be ready for a f|B '“tired shopper” bath when you If*™ •get home. Hang a “don’t disturb” sign, on the bathroom door and soakj away in mildly warm water as!— •though you had all the time in I the world. Take along a pillow, ‘ or rolled-up towel to rest your!|HK head on and a shower cap to IHf protect your curls. ★ ★ ★ ’ Suds slowly with a deodorant soap, which can control, the bacteria that cause body ordor. When you begin to like the world again, let the water out of the tub, turn on the shower, also mildly warm, and sit down under it. Rest your head on your knees, and let the spray pelt you tenderly for a few minutes. After drying, dust with bath powder, and you’ll be ready to battle the holiday rush once more. Kow FcmL-FuB Vm* GET AWAY WEEKEND FDR, the complete way to cover pray ... to soften or ton lightened hair. Our stylist shapes your curls and swirled coif, and before it's set Fanri-Full has done it's wonder-work. Color instantly, then shampoos out easily when you wish. No peroxide, no after rinse. 1 ibrant new colors are awaiting you with Fanci-Full and a styled coiffeur creation adds the crowning touch Cu|. Set. and Roux Fanci-Full Rinse.only $375 Our Aelnxe PERMANENT WAVE includes set, eut. and Roux Fanci-Full Rinse. only ^6^ HOLLYWOOD BEAUTY Open Mornings at 8 A.M. 78N No Saginaw Over Bazley Mkt. 338-7660 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, DECEMBER 13, 1909 k—4 P^lan Wedding vlcffte, PowersAqhiev uj gr Michigan State University graduates, Jean Carol Wohlgehagen and William F. Johnson are planning to be married. , She is the daughter of John W. sWohlgehag$t\ \vdf Farmington. Her fiance is the son of the Floyd E, Johnsons of Birmingham. March 21 wedding vows are being planned. blot and dry.1 whimsical and effective one. With tweed and homespun The capsules look just like clothes returning to favor, you beautiful pearls and are filled can have the knees of yours with mink oil, which is now Uned b the neighborhood tailor having quite a play. This is as . . . ... . it should be since you have to t0 teeP them from 8ettin« bag-be well “oiled” to buy pearls. By- One word of warning! Even . 1 though you do not ordinarily j If’8 an inexpensive job and feel the need of a rubber, non- immediately sprii lubrication which is so good for|area with salt. If wil your skin makes a fall much the harmful ingredients more apt to occur. Also you will leave a permanent staift find that some bath oils make ------------ the tub much slicker than - .. , others which are just as good. RGiIGVGS ClOQQiriQ Another word of warning! Pollution, sinus congestion Widespread and p e r s 1 s t e n t and colds plug up breathing itching which is not seasonal passages. A nasal hygiene unif • If /you 'receive y o u r bul love women seem to be the greatest pleasure from personal popular social ideal. The relationships and will sacrifice categories established a p p 1 y other satisfactions to that equally well to all people, and end—you’ro a LOVE person. ,it’s fun to try to fit weU-knbwn • If your greatest need is tojand not-so-well-known people have impact on others, to bejtoto them, recognized, to be bn- Extensive research studies oil portant—youfre. a POWER'human motivation have been |Peraon- j conducted by Profess# David ! • If you concentrate on get* C. McClelland of the Harvard ting the job done and look!Department of Social Relations, around for new worlds to con-j His findings point out that quer—you’re an ACHIEVER, {although everyone has all three i December *G1 amour’ needs to some degree, one need describes these three inner usually predominates. needs as those that are the real Typical power people are drive behind people. Which kind p 01 i ticl a n s. Their past of person are you? achievements, p r o m i s e of * * . * achievements to come, the , At the present time, the rigors of campaigning, ex- achievers are most h 1 g h 1 y hausting public performances v a 1 u e d—particularly men. and the gamble involved, are Achiever women are tolerated,'all motivated by power needs.il Other power people are actors, I entertainers and celebrities who| are well known for being well known. Franklin D. Roosevelt, Winston Churchill, many rock, film and stage idols, Jackie Onassis, Abble Hoffman, Mrs. Portnoy, Shirley Chisholm and F; Lee Bailey are all power people. FEAR FAILURE The classic achievers fear, above all things, failure. They don’t like to try anything too easy or too difficult. Achiever women make great backstops for power men: The public man’s perfect hostess wife is an example. Women achievers also run businesses, devise and set into motion community programs, and operate effectively! but inconspicuously on all levels. Love people are motivated by the need for affiliation. Hippies, the suburban good-lifers with the mortgage and toe barbecue set, women executives in noncompetitive fields, the waitress who kids with all her customers are love people. , m w g? 1 \ Ultimately, loVe people'may be too most socially desirable group if our Society becomes a cooperative one rather than a competitive one. If improving the auality of life becomes the priority, goal, then power people and achievers may well have to re-direct toemselves 1 n t o becoming love people. For \love is the motivation most likely to make such a world go round. Snowflakes, Christmas Trees Put Sparkle in Holiday Panes Windows will sparkle with a| For snowflakes, cut tiny holiday air if you decorate panes with cone-shaped Christmas trees and lace snowflakes. TO make trees, sew trims on like ruffled lace and cotton rick-rack dotted with As a guide for window trees, apply dear tape to the glass first. Use three strips of tape to form a triangular cone. Then glue trims to toe tape. flower designs from flat Venetian lace. Scatter the flower around the lace tree, glueing in place. To make a rick-rack tree, use alternate strips of red and green cotton rick rack, also cut in graduated sizes. Make the tree as big or as small as you like. Clue clear tape cm first in horizontal strips to serve as a guide. Decorate toe rick rack “branches” with colored se-cotton lace quins. To make a tree stand, cone treejuse a piece of red or green at the topi adhesive tape. base.l ...... ; ,*<* will not be broken off asparagus if you open with care from toe bot- Have Guests can be the symptom of systemic disease. If toe condition is extreme and does not respond to the measures I have mentioned, you should see your doctor. will provide relief through mentholated mist that en-j’ courages the flow of noxious materials from nose and ill Mrs. Amy Burrows, 84, a patient in Flint’s Osteopathic Hospital since Thanksgiving, received a parakeet from nurses upon her discharge from the hospital The parakeet she left at home when she entered the hospital died of lonesomeness, Mrs. Burrows said. QUALITY and QUANTITY! C. R. HASKILL STUDIO “iwrm^aS” FE 4-0553 Create Trims | To create party fun, try letting guests exercise their in-' genuity on “do-it-yourself” ornaments. All you ned are picture wire and plenty of soap or detergent. * * * While friends twist the wire Into amusing and charming small shapes, you whip up a batch of “suds-snow.” To nuke this, add a little warm water to several handfuls of sup or detergent and beat with an electric or rotary mixer. When the suds stand in thick, meringue-like peaks, invite the j “trimmers” to coat their crea-! tions with this special Christmas snow. While refreshments are served, the j ornaments will get partially dry. Then these snowy silhouettes can be hung on toe free for all to admire. Pod Stops Creeping Glue a piece of foam rubber to toe bottom of your sewing machine’s foot control to keep it from creeping. Weight Watching TUESDAY Fashionette Club of Pontiac, 7 p.m., Adah Shelly Library. WEDNESDAY Waterford Fashion Your 1 Figure Club, Schoolcraft i Elementary School, Mace- 1 day Drive, Waterford. I Wednesday at 7 p.m. 1 THURSDAY j Fashion Your Figure i. Club of Pontiac, 7:30 p.m., j Adah Shelly Library. 1 .............— ENROLL NOW!! Class Limitad To 20 Students, So Hurry. Quality Training by Lopez PABLO’S SCHOOL of BEAUTY 4823 Dixie Hwy. 1 Mk. N. «f WlNIwm Ik. Z4. OR 3-0222 FRAGRANCE OVAL Smoothing Bath Oil, refreshing Cologne and a boutique bottle of Eau de Parfum Spray. 5.00 CHRISTMAS fpydfaL gift collection of Youth-Dew treasures for Christmas1 This season, Estee Lauder presents her inimitable fragrance, Youth-Dew, in a brilliant collection of CHRISTMAS SAPPHIRES. Each gift of this pervasive essence,comes to you elegantly wrapped in one of the two CHRISTMAS SAPPHIRES themes, to this Christmas one OF PONTIAC ROCHESTER OAKLAND MALL Open Every Night Til Christmas THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, DECEMBER 15, 1969 B—3 Zodiac Symbols Decorate Tree wiljBi MRS. K. E. WALKER Velvet, Lace j Chosen by Terry Code Wearing a gown of velvet with, Venetian lace accents, Terry} Ann Code became the bride of; Kenneth E. Walker of Walnut! Road, Pontiac Township' on Saturday. White Lake Presbyterian Church in Davisburg was the setting for the candellight-ex-change of vows. The coiiple was honored at a reception in Mountain View County Club. Rin Imhoff and Gary Taylor assisted the couple as maid of! honor and best man. it ★ ★ Parents of the bride are Mr.| and Mrs. George Code of i Schuyler Drive, White Lake} Township. The son of Mr. and Mrs. John' Walker of Pontiac Lake Roadj will reside with his bride in1 Pontiac. Made with long hours of patient labor and hung with the greatest of pride. That was the route of Christmas tree ornaments in the old days, when the entire family had a hand in the trimmings. For Christmas 1969 why not rimve the custoip. Family collaboration can be fun. And it’s so contemporary if each one creates ceramic renderings of his or her own zodiac sign, for lambs, rams, lions and goats are cavorting all over the scene these days. it ★ ★ The financial investment is tiny for the ornaments are custom crafted of a clay con-! cocted from kitchen shell | staples, baking soda and corn ! starch. The rewards, though, ! are huge ... a delicious sense of accomplishment for the! ornaments are more personal j! and special than anything you,! can buy at any price. What’s more, they’re enduring. it it it i You’ll be wearing your zodiac!! sign after the tree is long gone, since conversion from tree ! trimmers to medallions or pins comes naturally. And if you' get1 carried away with the clay and ! make extras . . you’re ! for “present” oc-jj . birthdays and the like. No great talent is needed. Nor is it as time consuming as you might expect. COOK CLAY To begin with, let one member of the family cook up the day, thusly. In a saucepan, combi net On waxed paper, roll clay tot thoroughly 2 cups baking soda> %-inch thickness, and using! (one 1-pound package) and 1 cookie cutters cut out clay' cup com starch. Mix i n circles and-or stars. For tree thoroughly, until Smooth,, iy« fillers, cut out mini stars with cups cold water. Bring to a boij aspic cutters.t over* medium heat, stirring a ' ★ ★ v ■ constantly. ,, \\ j ^or ^ose tne?Sre talent', \Cook one minute longer or settle on stars and do the until mixture resembles moist following: With toothpick, mashed potatoes. (Over cooking! pierce hole in one point of each! makes day crumbly.) Remove star for a loop of thread for! from heat, transfer to plate and j hanging. Let dry and harden! coyer with a damp towel. When overnight, cod enough to handle, knead a!' Consult the chart below! little and store all but the clay]before painting the large stars] you’re about to use in a closed with water colors or tempera,1 plastic bag. |for each planet is assigned its; Buys Memento of Time Post BIRMINGHAM, England (AP) —.Harold Steele, 57, bought a clock as a memento of the first time he met his wife the huge station clock of a disused railway terminus here. They met under the clock 33 years ago. When Steele heard; the British Railways were building a modern station on ai new site, he purchased the old timepiece for $325. It will g a field on his Staffortdshire farm. wwiww ,.i«. - Zodiac Dates, Signs, Colors Aries March 21-April 19—sign: ram (color: red, green Taurus April 20-May 20—sign: bull color: blue I Gemini May 21-June 20—sign: twins (color.: green » Cancer June 21-July 22—sign: crab - color: blends I Leo July 23-August 22—sign: Lion color: blue-red I Virgo ‘ August 23-September 22—sign: the virgin color: red-brown; green, yellow ! Libra September 23-October 23—sign: scales color: green-blue Scorpio . October 24-November 21—sign: scorpion color: blends I Sagitarius November 22-December 21—sign: goat color: red-blue-green I Capricornus December 22-January 19—sign: goat color: red-blue-green I Aquarius * January 20-February 18—sign: the Water man color: dark red 1 Pisces February 19-March 20—sip: the fishes color: purple Duplicate Bridge TUESDAYS YMCA Bridge Club, 7:30 p.m., in YMCA. All bridge players may at> teud. ' ' I FRIDAYS j Bonneville Junior Dupli- I cate Bridge Club, 7:45 8 'pirn., The Pontiac Mali. | All beginners and inter- 1 mediate players may at- I tand. SATURDAYS | Bonneville Duplicate |; Bridge Club, 8 p.m., The |j Pontiac Mall. All bridge |j players may attend. | ...............-Jj! Linda Gwen Hill and Airman l.C. Gerald Belcher, USAF, are planning an October wedding. Parents of the couple are the William Gerbers of West Yale Street and the Henry Belchers of Huntington, W. Va. Linda attends Oakland University. Her fiance is stationed at Kelly AFB, San Antonio, Tex. | Trick and Treat j ] LONDON tin - Kenneth] Pateman emerged from his bank. Three men pounced on him, grabbed his bulging briefcase and sped away in a car. Pateman had been putting in, | not taking out. His case held six treacle tarts j and a loaf of bread. own color. The minis can be any color. When paint has dried, paste to center of each large star Its color-corresponding zodiac sign cut from magazine, note paper, napkin or wherever you1 happen to find it. Add a twinkle to each point with a gold or silver paste-on star. ■ w . * * Somewhat more demanding of time and talent is this alternate method in which you make the zodiac symbols ... the abstract renderings of the signs which you also find reproduced here, there and everywhere. Cut out the symbols, place I each on a circle of clay and trace the outline lightly with I pencil. Remove pattern and II with the tip of a sharp knife cut | ] away clay from around symbol. |'Add hanging attachment by I pressing snip of twisted wire, | the tip end of a hairpin or paper I clip into top edge of clay circle. I Be sure symbol will hang right I side up. I; * ★ ★ I When designs have hardened, | paint symbols black, the sur-| rounding circles their respective f planet colors. Dunk in a panful | of clear shellac. §. To crown your tree with a sun I or moon . . . they’ll make I magnificent pins later ... use | crescent or round, jagged-tooth i cookie cutter for forming your .clay shapes. Stick round-headed straight pin^into outer edge of circle for sunburst. Paint gold. Paint moon silver. Add face. ! F o r the p ost-Chrlstmas | transformation, simply paste pin attachment with white glue I to back side of each zodiac sign jfor a big brazen brooch. Or slip, j chain or ribbon through hanging j attachment for a swinging medallion. It’s an astronomical tree . . . where every member of the family collaborates and decks it out in ceramic renderings of his or her own zodiac sign. The creating is done with a clay concocted of kitchen staples, baking soda and corn starch. BUY! SELL! TRADE!... USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS Make your own smashing formal outfit for the coming holiday party season. The soft feminine A-line gown with its wide velvet sash calls for a companion maxi evening coat. When you make your own, you have unlimited choice of fabric and color.' Patterns by McCall. u^eumode FOX keeps you WINTERPROOF! Wlnttr’* beginning and now** the * * time to check your ftr 'll/* winter wardrobe * tor loll*, *taln*,and water repellent;.. ;! iL— - particularly winter action put*rwear,/|aytima ■ Ond casual Winter garment* look better, last / i longer and protect* more with Fox guaranteed > water repellent. Keep your family well groomed and healthy ... call today for convenient pickup ond delivery. Quality Cleaning ■ Since 1929 719 West Huron FE 4-1536 DRY CLEANERS NYLONS QIVE HOSIERY FOR CHRISTMASI MIRACLE NO-BINDS TOPS (TISSUE SHEERS or 'deluxe mirco toe & heel reinforcements RUNLESS NEULOCK reinforced toe & heel CAREER GIRL walking sheers with or without seams $1.19 a pair Parity Hose Stretch nylon $1.49 %ticro-weave with nude heel RUNLESS $1.95 Cantrece II with nude heel opXques , $1(95- in high fashion colors > AGILON $2.50 lovely clinging fit "TUMBLED” $1.-19 Stretch with denrii-toe & amazing fit! BEAUTIFULLY WRAPPED FREEI JNeumode Hosiery. Shops 82 N. SAGINAW ST. PHONE —332-7730 GIFT WRAPPED FREE A. HANDBAGS for Her Casual ond Dressy styles. A size and style for every $15 sS *35 I B. ECHO SCARFS Colon that blaze and designs that omazel Beautiful Christmas gifts to . complete this year's long ond lanky • look. *4 .o *12 C. SWEATERS for Giving beautifully tra all .colors. ♦14 *>’55 ^he/L/me/um -A &ift F/1M ' Use your Alvin's Charge,. Michigan Bankard, Security of Master Charge Italian Provincial Banch extra KIMBALL FULL-SIZE CONSOLE PIANO Put this piano in your home, gather your family around it and you have the formula for the happiest Christmas yet! You can be sure you'll be getting genuine Kimball quality In a full-size console, designed and priced to fit a family's heeds. $725 A STAR IS BORN Our beautiful bodly stocking of second-skin ribbSd nylon—complete with feet and a full back zippir (plus an open-pleat convenience overlap). It goes with everything or goes alone, looks grafet in black or navy or brown. Short average or tall...................................HO (Shown with separates from our knit collection) STICK CONSOLE French Provincial (Bench Extra) $1195 KIMIALJL-WHITNEY Italian 'Provincial (Bench Extra) $575 OUR PONTIAC MALL StOBtt IS OPEN MONDAY THROUGH SATURDAY TO 9.00 P.M. TELEGRAPH at ELIZABETH LAKE RDS. TUB PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, DECEMBER 15, 1069 W Fr iday Thomas and Norberg were in Aldersgate Church. 'Job Interview Like Blind Date' U I ■ By VIVIAN BROWN i g) Not see the Jo$ to be donei Use a conditioner to bring outimake sure it Is comfortable. AP Newsfeatures Writer |or even feel any need TO be I highlights after a shampoo If It Avoid theatrical make-up ef- Girls planning a career might busy. |Is needed. . ifecja (false eyelashes, high' fhmi some tips suggested! The first two attitudes are; Nalls: Be sure they are dean, teased hairdos, too much1 uin Hall, Deputy Com-;best. Good employes hop rigid medium length and that the jewelry). Use lightweight foun-j L missioner vof the 1 New York to lt when there is a job to she cuticles are smooth. If you wear detton1 make-up and a gentle' Diana'Lee Wise and James State Woma"’* apartment of;done, )says Miss Hall, a former polish; use a jkle ahadS. blusher of liquid or brush-on1 Whitehead assisted the couple C|®™^™^ newsPaPer'voman- i The night- before the In-tint. A transparent powder may j s honor attendants. The bride chose length dress of crepe and carried a bouquet of carnations. She is the daughter of Mrs. Douglas Wilson of Pleasant Manor Drive and Harold J. Thomas of Kingfisher Lane, Independence Township. Many girls enter the work *uow-TO’ I terview, take a long leisurely • >" •" -ivtoln. worn* U« moi.tt,rtel^b.lh ali. chance to figure out what it is ?" to N**»ve todr work all about shesavs Uves and market their work Miss HaU potato out that it's aerv|c? ’ Nef York. Stat* b extremely important not to Prov,din* a how-to boot let goof-off on a Job. If you want to PrePar*d by cosmetic expert get ahead, give it your very Estee Lauder^Miss Lauder iila | jf. I mamKaP Av fha Wnman’e Pnirn. t Stretch out. Relax. Peel lux-j. urious firom head to toe. Make 8 sure any fragrance used will t not overpower the interviewer. I Remove all make-up before i bedtime. Go to bed early. 1 j member of the Woman’s Couti- .In1tke morn}"8- allow W D , ...... * * * cB, 'an outstanding group In ®* *""* *° dress •n<* aPP*y Parents of the bridegroom are * * * ■ business industry education mak«-“P so that you arrive on ---------------------------- ■■{---------------------------Ify°u kad C7P^ Find a hemline 0181 Uw and koncst- friendly- work assignments and an AJ*ntojjw is m a blind flatterg your ,egg but p*rrnlt8 Don’t smoke or chew gum. SSS ar08e ,D y0UF °Hh*’ Ndtae? nS knowsP what !£*« S ease ** to ** job may be lost give your skin a beautiful porcelain finish. Check yourself before the interview. Do you have the right handbag? Are your shoes shined? What about gloves? At the Interview: Walk tall, sit tall, start with a smile. Mind your manners, Stand when being introduced. Listen with ta-jterest. Respond clearly. Never (put-on or put-down the Inter* not viewer or yourself. Be affirma- Marijuana Gake Makers Served Fine College Boys' „ vZZ-TZ'E ffUl-t** "».**» Dating Guide Is Published a) See what job had to be expect. ' _ done and do it. before an interview begins. You b) Organize with others to do must prepare to be unaffected, attractive, assured, friendly, neat and clean. Here are tips: It in the most efficient way. c) Not knowing how to do It, do nothing. d) Do only the part' of it that Half: Keep it simple. Don’t Sorority Ball Benefits Pontiac State Hospital OXFORD, England (AP)-A WILLIAMSTdWN, MASS . promotes your personal am-experiment with a new hairstyle local judge fined four Oxford (UPI) — Four Williams College bition. , or wearan evening style for the University students and two of students say they haye written e) Feel no responsibility to do job interview. (This applies also their girlfriends $1,608 Thurs-the “ultimate guide" for the It, doing only what you must. to clothes.) Brush hair briskly day following a student party at date-seeking m o t o r 1 z e d col- f) Not quite understand what with your head down to get the which chocolate cake spiced leeeman. 1 needs to be done, but try to do circulation perking and with marijuana was served. : Their book is called “The something. stimulate the scalp. The prosecution read this Roadtripper" and it covers 59 statement by a 17-year-old girl women’s and coeducational who was not identified by name,coj|eges £rom Maine to Virginia, and who was not a defendant: plug interviews with hundreds .... of coeds. "I ate several pieces of this m . , . . . . chocolate cake. I knew before i! wanted ? ate it that the cake contained I’really complete riattag guide,’ t„ said Thomas A. Crowley of She was found afterward in alChaPPa2ua- J,Y- the book’s trance, screaming and lashing re9earch director. • The first ball, sponsored by] cocktail party at the Mqtor Inn. out. ' _ . , , . Beta Chi members of Epsilon'Before going to the inn for din- ! * * * 1 “,e book portrays each c?'* sigma Alpha sorority to benefit ner, the C. L. MacDonalds, Remains of the ,cake, a recipe *eK® and *‘s female students, ponyac state Hospital, was held entertained friends in their for making it and special cook- us'n8 prose or poetic text, Saturday evening at the James K Boulevard home; tag instructions were displayed photographs and a map. Social sheraton-Pontiac Motor Inn. several of the group joined the in court. The ingredients listed regulations and the . dormitory Many ©| the Sorority members dinner party. “pulverized cannabis resin" and of house telephone numbers entertained at cocktail parties There Were 14 guests at the the recipe warned: "Nibble ®re Med ta detail. Information before the dance. Orchard Lake home of the Carl with caution.” on travel routes is Included as -* * j Roses before the dance. And the + * * I well as critical appraisals of The Edgar Plympttois ofjLou Scarlottis of St. Jude Drive Prosecutor Robert Meirion-|local restaurants and en-.Manson Drive honored their had a long guest list for their Williams declared: “Statements tertatament spots and where to son, So. 4 Edgar D. Fiympton and other information . . . stay over night. [who flew home on leave from The four authors c a 11 his Army base in Ft. Stofy, Va. themselves the Ancana. j Among their guests were Connie It is the feminine Latin word!Walter of Oxford, Margot for secret. The Ancana and the LaClaire of Rochester and Youth Market Instrumentation Debbie Strohmeyer of Grand Inc., of Boston,-jointly published Rapids who is the fiancee of i and stockings for the right,overwhelmed when you get the dress are important. Wear.; a job, that you will cry for sheer girdle, if you need one, butt joy.) Manicurist Now Available Sired Salon varan , rJ!a iJerandi 1062 West Huron Phone 681-1330 Located only 2 block* from Pontiac Mall, next to China’City Rattauranf IT BEGINS AS A BODY STOCKING... disclose something of what we ; may call the dolce vita of Oxford. | "Marijuana or hash parties ' are quite a common form of entertainment and hash cake containing cannabis resin has been served with tea." cocktail party. Members working on rangements for the dance eluded cochairmen, Mrs. James Stone and Mrs. Scarlotti,, and Mesdames: Robert Williuns, Joe Ordpey, John Or os e y. Thomas L Thomson, Edgar the book, on sale in college book-1 Brian Piynyrtpn. (Plympton, James Vincent and stores ta the East. < The Rudy Mazzas hosted a Bob Bolt. ANDRE’S SPECIAL Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday Reg. *15** Perauweit I Haircst xa-no*® 1 tr* 5 100% Human Hair Wigs, Rag. IBS, Now $23 Phone FE 5-9257 Beauty Salon Say It With Music from RINNELL’S A DIVISION OP AMERICAN MUSIC S T OR E S I N C« piano and organ headquarters CO-STARS WITH A SWEATER OR SKIRT,. FULL-SIZE HAMMOND SPINET ORGAN Now you can own a genuine HAMMOND for the lowest price ever! Stop in and let our trained /organ specialists show you just how easy it is. Playing's easy too—you'IIJearn i;eal tunes the very first day. Bench Included. j[ $555 CONSOLE ORGAN with' 25-pedal board. From $2615 DELUXE SPINET SOLID-STATE SPINET Theatrical sounds! Full orchestra effect. From $1940 From $820 (Bench Extra) $1650 PONTIAC MALL, 682-0422, Open Every Evening 'til 9 — 27 S. SAGINAW, 333*7168, Open Mon. and Pri. Evenings 'HI 9 _ UNDERSTUDIES ALL YDUR FASHIONS. THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, DECEMBER 15, 1969 B—r jewelry Designed for 'Coco' Available The entire jewelry collection ropes, wide bracelets, pendant'bottom of the long ropes oriUnka Most are Iona and Imm designed especially for the necklaces and huge brooches even brought up to be pinned and some have^coardinated Broadway musical, Coco, that have a pendant effect. anywhere one chooses. (belts "ow J* available in stores The starring color are ivory,' In one scene, a huge stone-1 Even thounh rnanv HifUmt throughou the country the entire range of greens and studded ivory bracelet is worn hiBSL Bill Smith of Richelieu was combinations of red and white on each wrist. selected to design the jewelry and brown and white. * * * ’ 8ffl.ba8.«8?ft IZ CHANEL W™ v Because emeralds have longcE’ie^deS--^ rZjTBmm ^(5* '^Because^ have lo^b^Sr • C6«favorS.Slisml^ * * *7 5?t *rt sr*z& Lsr1 a“T s■1*iia “sstfa. ss?' ^ *«*«*■ geometric feeling. I ropes, Maltese crosses, pins and « Pearls in 10mm size, ex-fairings. t travagantly used, are combined The red and white group, also t in whites and browns and worn done with diamond effects, is with brooch pins that can be strong in huge beads that are hung on the sides, hooked at the!combined with gold chains and Hottest Gem Is Tanzanite Bill Smith of Richelieu,- found while researching with original Coco Sketches that emerald was her favorite, and she was seldom without a necklace of them. Above Bill creates a gold link and oval stone necklace ending in a large pearl and emerald drop. It’s shown with other emerald ropes, for a total Chanel signature look, featured often in the play. Another group featured will be in pearls and diamond effects. Sketched from the group is this great Boroque pearl pendant circled with diamonds and dripping with tear shaped pearls. This ip worn on'the sides of the ropes (same pin also is attached .at other angles) with this is a matching oval earring. The pearl ropes are 60 inches long. Boroque pearl is Bill Smith’s favorite in designing the Chanel jewels. Lefties Hove Problem Smith is the winner of seven different fashion awards for his unique designs and contributions to tile jewelry and fashion industries. For this collection he worked closely with the costume desiper, famed Cecil Beaton. ★ Hr ★ Chanel is the woman who gave us costume jewelry, as! well as her often-copied suits.! She also is noted for starting xt__. v slacks, cardigans, the trench' NIS™ YORK (AP) •— Next to discovered in more than 2,000 coat and, of course, "chanel diamonds, tanzanite, a newly! years,” said Henry Platt, a vice Number Five” perfume. discovered velvety blue Jewel!president of Tlffany,s 0ne Because Chanel likes move-bas become the best seller at: , . . ment in her ornaments, Bill Tiffany’s one of the natoin’s I ™“°“.tor. its. P°Pular,ty' j* Smith made certain the entire|best known collection would flow, as well as I establishments, have the strong and pure look' It was named after its cOun-that is so Chanel. One of the try of origin, Tanzania, where it major problems he overcame was first discovered in 1967 by was to make certain the jewelry a Masai tribesman who picked for the dancers would be silent it up because he liked the pretty prlce of saPPWres-yet still project from the ,bFC>»: blue crystal, of the stage. * * * _ ... , * * . . “It is the first transparent Specific jewelry was designed deep blue gem-stone to be for each of the more than 155 —-------- costumes in the lavish pro- j i (faction. Featured are long, loog Ro^et Lunchef j Richelieu, women who admire 3 the Coco Chanel look have yet another season of her Influence ® in which to wrap themselves. One of'BlVs favorite J e welry added’18 that blue is a favorit« pieces in his collection gem stone coior. Lapis lazuli is for Coco is this bracelet. very pale blue and sapphire!' made of anew Ivory are very costly. Tanzanite is color with an emerald from one-third to one-fifth the and diamond maltese cross. College Students Make News Street, Carol Bowen, daughter . Choir Kansas in Lawrence, Kansas. U OF M Allan Dohner, son of the 'of the William Bowens of Robert Dohners of Gertrude Brookneal Street in Commerce _ . . Road has been pledged to Tauj Township and Charles Ross, son By the age of 2, most toddlers ble danger sip concerning left-Beta Pi, the Gamma of of the Charles Ross’ of East show a preference for their handedness that all parents of Michigan, an honor engineering Boulevard North, right or left hand. The Majority preschool children should know fraternity. He is a-senior. UNIVERSITY of tampa favor their right hand for in-about. ' .wwvwiaiix or iamfa tricate tasks but five to ten of The moon mission has a down-to-earth counterpart — a rocket-shaped lunch box com-' plete with secret compartment (for a small toy. Made of plastic,1 the University of the food-serving missile is easy to keep clean with a daily splashdown in sudsy water. ALBION COLLEGE 100 insist on using their left hand. These children, says writer Alix Kerr in a recent issue of Family Circle, don’t get completely fair deal from the world. A young lefty soon comes up against the fact, that mgnw DOMINANCE “It seems that the establishment, early in childhood, of a brain pattern that makes one hand strongly preferred or dominant, is much more important than whether it’s the * ’ * * right or left hand,” she points Ensoi' is a sophomore, ma-t.; . jjoring in philosophy and '‘Developing a dominant eye, biplogy. Douglas R. Ensor, son of the Ronald Ensors of Bloomington Court in Franklin Village, has been awarded a scholarship at Albion College by the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation. Thomas M. Mehlberg, son of the Robot J. Mehlbergs of NormanWood Avenue In West Bloomfield Township, has. enrolled at the University of Tampa as a senior. He is seek-1 mg a major. in elementary education. Also enrolled at the Universi- - I ■ • «««««•» «»«, jfy of Tampa is John P, Liv- everyday implements, ^ffl|.a (|omffiMt foot and a dominant! ,* * * jingstone II, son of Mrs. John P. scissors to gearshifts ;arej8i(ie. of the 'brain to control Timothy Huemlller, son of the Livingstone of Huntingwood designed for r ighthandedigpeech apparently is necessary Clarence F. Huemillers 0f Road in Bloomfield Hills. Person8- * to avoid confusing riva 1 ry| Baldwin Road is a member ofl * * * Aside from the special dif- between, the two sides of the w® Albion College Concert Band | Livingstone is majoring in ficulties involved in writing, she body when complicated physical which performs throughout the business and minoring in econo-1 reports that “recently there have been claims, based on questionable evidence, that a large proportion of stuttering, I eyes, bedwetting, UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Terry Knowles, daughter of and mental skills are being school pear. He is a freshman, learned.” - ' |MSU ' By age 2 or 3 the fact that a ■ Diane Cheal, daughter of the jchild may not have shown a|William Cheals of Cherokee the D D KnnwlM w«t ism* ....... J -. -definite hand preferencemay Road, has been pledged Alpha firJJJf1fflS1 ficulty in learning to read and provide an advance warning Delta Pi Sorority at Michigan![f write and emotio ut hgi^al that he may have troubleistate University. 8 8”1® * T disturbances in children - is with reading or writing, she * * , * related to left handedness or to days. Diane, a sophomore, is also a forcing a left-handed youngster j Although later teachers watch'member of the State Singers, to use his right hand. for mis sort of situation a the top traveling University “The real and imagined pro-!mother should also keep a choral group, blems faced by left-handed watchful eye on her child’s BETHEL COLLEGE (Pdren,” she c o if fl n u e s . developing hand perference and Among the gtudentg who sing ' gM?dnlbe exaggerated. The general coordination. j with the Bethel College Concert fact is that most left-handers| If i youngster seems choir in Mishawaka, Indiana, FOR SALE BEAUTY AT A BARGAIN! A COMPLETE PERMANENT Includes Haircut, Shampoo & Set’ 95 No Appointment Needed 4& sTcT 42 Saginaw St. FE 8-1343 No Appointmont Necessary CHAIRS IN PAIRS A Great Gift for Your Home! find ways of getting annum backward in these respects, their differentness and lead consultation with a pediatrician perfectly normal lives.” loften shows nothing to worry There is, however, one p< throughout the school year are the following area residents. Colleen Clothier, daughter of OPEN 9:30 A.M. to 9 P.M. MON , THU RS. S> Fill. (Othor Doyt 9:30 to 5:30 ORIGINALS The easy swing and turn of these make rocking beautiful. These are elegant chairs tiiat hide their relaxing mobitity. Such fine-lined and well proportioned comfort it always easy to look at and to sijt in. Living room, playroom, den or, bedroom will welcome these vyeil styled chairs, when covered in your choice of fabrics, from silken damasld and, Wood mark's antique velvets/ to new casual textures or gay prints. Order a, price-happy pair to pamper two of youl $164.50 efOh (Swivel Rocker in Velvet) Also Available Without Swivel 2750 Woodward Avenue Lewis Interiors for horned office Bloomfield! Hills ft ennuui ALWAYS FIRST QUALITY * MISSES’ SHIRT CLOSEOUT! What an opportunity save, and y play Santa to yourself. Stacks of skirts, in status collars, small shaped, painted collars. Some with single pockets, double pockets, in whites, colors, paisleys, more. AIL machine washable, misses' sizes. A real Christmas saver. . MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER, v\ TELEGRAPH and SQUARE LAKE RD. Shop'til 10 P.M Mon. thVu Sat. ... Charge ltlv the Pontiac press, Monday, December 15,1909 hi , X' ''rt «, 11 * / ,| * Vr EXTRA HOURS TO GIFT SHOP AT HUDSON’S PONTIAC Now Hudson's Pontiac is open 6 nights a week. Monday through Saturday for your convenience. Shop from 9:30 a.m. to 9:.'JO p.m. use yoUr charge Gift shop the easy way. with a convenient Hudson's Charge Account with option terms. Or, use our Extended Payment Plan for all major purchases. See Hudson’s Christmas Trim and Wrap Shops Trees and trimmings, wraps •ml ribbons . .. find everything you'll need. Pontiac, 2nd floor. Let Hudson9s deliver it for you why carry . . . when Hudson's delivers to 19 Michigan counties and Toledo. Ohio at no charge for purchase of SIS or more. Add 50* for purchases under So. Add 50* for C.O.D. under $30. Giftarama has gift ideas for everyone It's the just-w hat-thoy-wanted place to shop for gifts for everyone for $20 and under. Come browse here. Pontiac, 1st. Toyland9s open at Hudson’s Pontiac Find all their favorites right now in our spanking new selection of Christmas toys for all •good girls and boys. Pontiac, 2. Give Hudson’s Gift Certificates A Hudson's Gift Certificate is just the ticket for those hard-to-rhoose-for names on your list. Pick them up now at the Cashier's Office at Hudson's Pontiac. Wee’ll even wrap it for you Look for the Gift Wrap Center* at Hudson's Pontiac, 1st, for the perfect finishing touch to all of your Christmas gifts. Special shops for the children’s gifts Visit our' Zodiac Shop at Hudson's Pontiac and just see all the gift/ ideas for kids, oil with Zodiac themes. Pontiac, 1st, JStop by the Snoopy Shop for pillows, banner^, sweat shirts featuring the famous, Peanuts line-up of characters. And also stuffed Peanuts, dolls in . lots of sixes. Pontiac, 1st floor. sparkling crinkle texture bags are big deals this year in winter and resort shades— even bigger deals at this happy holiday price Lewis has lots of bright ideas in bright * crushed vinyl. Strappy, chainy, boxy, pouchy, many more *70*shapes to set off her new winter and sun-bound wardrobes. Each beautifully crafted bag comes in black, navy, brown, camel, red and white. They’re quite a coup .for the with-it gals on your list* Hudson’s Handbags, Downtown 1; open Moriday-Friday 9:15 to 8:30, Saturday 9:15 to 6:00. Northland, Eastland, # Westland, Pontiac, Oakland open Monday-Saturday 9:30 to 9:30. Phone 964-4444 anytime. It’s Cliristxxisbs time-at It’s CSiristinasLS time at HUDSON’S Y ~ Special shops for the children’s gifts Yi*U out' Zodiac Shop at Hudson's Pontiac and just *cc all the giflj idea* for kids, all with Zodiac theme*. Pontiac. !*t. Stop by the Snoopy Shop for pillow*, banner*. *weat *hirt» featuring the famous Peanut* line-up of .characters. And al*o stuffed Peanut* doll* lit lot* of size*. Pontiac. l*t floor. THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, DECEMBER 15, 1969 , B-—> Samsonite is the name of the game in folding furniture, and Hudson’s has bridge sets in more colors, more shapes, more designs than you ever dreamed existed! It’s the quick-and-easy way for game playing, seating, serving, and for storing after use. Marvelous family gifts, and especially useful for the holidays. Come now to Hudson’s Casual Furniture and see! Pontiac, 2nd floor. See Hudson’s Christmas Trim and WrapjShops Tree* and trimmings, wraps and ribbons .. . find everything you'll need. Pontiac, 2nd floor. Let Hudson’s deliver it for you why carry . . . when Hudson's deliver* to 19 Michigan counties and Toledo. Ohio at no charge for purchase of $5 or more. Add 50* for purchase* under 15. Add 50*'for C.O.D. under $30. Ciftarama has gift ideas for everyone It's the ju*t-what-they-wanted place to shop for gifts for everyone for $20 and under. Come brow*e here. Pontiac, 1st. Toy land’s open S| at Hudson’s *1 Pontiac ifiad all their favorites right -Taow in our spanking new selection of Christmas toy* for all .good girl* and boy*. Pontiac, 2. Give Hudson’s Gift Certificates A Hudson'* Gift Certificate is just the ticket for those hard-to-chooae-for name* on your list. Pick them up now at the Cashier's Office at Hudson's Pontiac. We’ll even wrap it for you Look for the Gift Wrap Center' at Hud*on4* Pontiac, 1st, for the perfect finishing touch to all of your Christmas gift*. Samsonite 3d" square Celebrity table. Bronze frame, vinyl top in moss green, antique gold, Danish walnut color. For many uses, 1I.IB. Use with Celebrity chairs, 13.98 and 18.98 ea. EXTRA HOURS TO GIFT SHOP AT HUDSON’S PONTIAC Now Hudson’s Pontiac is open 6 nights a week, Monday through Saturday for your convenience. Shop from 9:30 sum. to 9:30 p.m. use your charge Gift shop the easy way, with a convenient Hudson's Charge Account with option terms. Or, u*e our Extended Payment Plan for all major purchases. Samsonite Celebrity table with stain and bum resistant laminated hard top in Danish walnut color. A practical family choice. 36" sq., 24.98. Mix.with Celebrity chairs, ea., 13.98 and 18.98. Samsonite Tempo vinyf-top table in Danish walnut, avocado, patch* ment color. Get ready now for extra holiday entertaining. 36"' sq., 16.95. Chairs in same color, plus forest floral, ea., 10.98. Samsonite King Size vinyl-top table in deepwood, antique white, antique green. So moderately priced and so handy for extra holiday guests- M” sq., only 12.98. Matching chairs, ea., 8.9,8. Samsonite Monarch vinyl-top table in deepwood, antique white, antique green. So versatile and so low priced. For now and year-round family use. 30” sq., 9.98. Matching chairs, ea., 8.98. B—10 THE PQNTJEAC PRESS, MONDAY,, DECEMBER 15, 1960 HOW WYN SOCK SAVED CHRISTMAS -By Paul Gringle 8 Americans Die in Viet WASHINGTON (AP) - Eight | Missing » /* result of bos-servicemen killed in action in tile action/ I the Vietnam war have been: M. cm<»f. john oAvoYrff. I named by the Defense Depart-! Died not as a result of hos-ment. {tile action: * * ★ I MlMourl—Spec. A4R David L. Nicholson. J The list includes three men ciauda s. a«• • r'», from the Midwest. Killed in Wl>comin-Pa>ftlUa* punishment, says; “I think it likely that abolition will be made permanent In this Parliament but there’s the likelihood that die next Parlia. ment with a Conservative ma-then jority bring who wanted a qualified return of the hangman- V: } * Quintin Hogg, who would be Home Secretary in a Conservative regime, said: “If avdid arrest; against policemen or prison officers, and second! murders. This gave rise to the curious situation whereby you eould poision but not pistol a person, to death without fear, of hanging. The Howard League for-Penal Reform has pointed out that between 1957 and 1964 there were only two or three executions a year in Britain. "So we are really discussing the fate 'of tyo or three murderers a year,” it spokesman said. ★ ★ J ‘ One argument is that' hanging can’t be undone and human I justice is fallible. Often cited is ! the hanging of Timothy Evans, 26, in 1950 for the murder of his infant child. Three years later the crime was Mamed on John Christie, 55, who was hanged for killing Seven women as well. I Abolitionists deny the deterrent effects of capital punish-! ment, using Christie as a prime example. He killed four women after he testified in the Evans trial. ★ ★ ★ Leon Radzinowicz of the Cambridge Institute of Criminology, who calls the death penalty “the mark of a retrograde society,” says: “If crime generally was stationary people would probably be happy with the abolitionist position, but we are confronted with a burgeoning crime wave.” A recent Htime Office report! showed a rise in murders which might previously have drawn! the death sentence. In 1104, last! year of the nooste, there were 10 capital murders; In 1968 there were 26. CHRISTMAS CLEARING HORSE OPENS Dec. 1st thru Dee. 15th, 1969 9:30 to 400 P.M. Mon. thru Fri. Those GIVING Christmas gratuities, please -----------— * LEM BATTLES PAT - Lem Barney (29) Detroit Lions’ comer back battled with Pat Studstill for a pass thrown by Karl Sweetan in yesterday’s game at Tiger Stadium where the Lions whipped the Rams, 28-0. Studstill came up with the ball, however, the official ruled be trapped it after it hit the ground. Become NFL's Winningest on 12th Straight Weather Experience May Prove Valuable in Western'Playoff MINNEAPOLIS-ST. PAUL (AP) — The Minnesota Vikings became the National Football League’s winningest team Sunday and got some valuable weather experience for their Dec. 27 showdown at Metropolitan Stadium against die Los Angeles Rama.' free ball. Instead of F™? a Until Charley Johnson ap- cimm-pc® losing pggj-gd jaie jn the third quarter/ c£^v*%fwr(e p»»*«,*ri ■ y i | The Vikings warmed up for £v the Western Conference title 7 ®t»),*-”igame against the Rams with a «ram N«i**n' io-7 victory over the San Fran-49ers in a game-long s quarter. Lions Hand Off-Side Rams 28-0 (CodtroW kick) Pasting (Continued from Page C-l) I A victory in Chicago would Barney made his seventh in- give the Lions a 9-4-1 mark aqd terception of the year and Tom a pot of 637,500 in position Vaughn stole the other Gabriel J money. The Baltimore Gilts are pass. j 7-5-1 now and must play the Mnnn kicked a 22-yarder to! Rams next week on the coast, make it 22-0 in the third ;SWEETAN PLAYS quarter, added a 17-yarder and Sweetan, who formerly played finally a 42-yarder in the fourth for Pontiac in the Midwest period. ' Football League and was traded This gave the little specialist to the New Orleans Saints when 23 for 34 to the season. Ithe Lions obtained Munson and FINAL GAME {drafted Greg Landry and Greg _ , „ , {Barton, came into the game The Lions play their season afto Gabriel started the open- finale against the Bears in Chicago’s Wrigley Field next Sunday, hopeful of with the third best record to the Western Conference. Horn Passes Over Bears in 21-3 Win tog series. “Coach Alien wanted to keep the consecutive streak going as a starter to Roman, and he Wanted both of tis to play under cold weather conditions because we can expect something similar up in Minnesota to a couple weeks,” said Sweetan. “I would say the Lions gave us a good physical beating,” he {added, “we couldn’t even get a {field goal out of it.” Sweetan threw one pass to CHICAGO (AP) — Travis Wil- Pat Studstill late in the second, liams scored on a 29-yard run {period, but the official ruled it' and again on a 69-yard piss incomplete when Barney went! from. Don Horn in a 21-point|Up with Studstill and the ball! possession, Cleveland w a s the biggest thing going against. awarded a first down at tis 31 g,e cardinals was the right arm' JJlSaf”8 and ran out toe clock. i<$S£^ekN*w"!«nd 20-degree temperatures - conditions similar to what they | may find the 27th. ‘I was after it to pick it up and run it into the end zone,” ’Healy later recounted. “I didn't know the rule, but *1 guess there’s lot of judgment that goes with it” “I always thought that if you Cowboys Ride By Colts, 27-10 Morton Fires TD's; 4 Interceptions Help LION ADVANCE - Altie Taylor (42) goes high into toe air-to take a pass from Lions’ quarterback Bill Munson. Earl McCullouch who took a 32-yard touchdown pass earlier is in the foreground while Roger Shoals (73) is in the background blocking. DALLAS, Tex. (AP) — Quarterback Craig Morton picked Baltimore’s zone defense apart and Dallas’ new look secondary intercepted four Colt passes Saturday to give toe Cowboys a 27-10 National Football League victory. Morton, who has been bothered with n sore shoulder, rifled touchdown passes of 18 yards to Lance Rentzel and 18 yards to {Pettis Norman. He set up Walt {Garrison’s one-yard touchdown plunge with a 44-yard strike to Bob Hayes. “We pounded a lot of snow into the field,” said Coach Bud Grant after his Vikings notched their 12th straight after an opening day loss. “It will be hard to remove. And we don’t have too many 3(kiegree days left to December. I think it will be clear and cool off a bit more to the 27th.” Grant and 49er Coach Dick Noland said afterwards it appeared the defenses were at a disadvantage to the snowy con-Iditions. But the offenses made the vital mistakes before a crowd of 43,028. SWEET SAILING - Bill Munson (19) Lions’ quarterback had a sweet day in sour weather conditions as the Lions handed the LA Rams a 28-0 walloping yesterday in Tiger Stadium. Amid a constant snow and on a slippery field Munson threw for two touchdowns to the game against his old teammates. TOUGH ON DEFENSE “The defense can suffer on a bad field," said Grant. “The cornerbacks find it slippery trying to cover receivers. And the offensive linemen can make a cup around the quarterback that is hard to penetrate.” Wide receiver Gene Washington outmaneuvered Kermit Alexander of the 49ers and took a 52-yard touchdown pass from Joe Kapp to the winning touchdown in the fourth period. third quarter which swept the Green Bay Packers to a 21-3 National Football League victory over the Chicago Bears Sunday. Horn also fired a 10-yard touchdown pass to Marv Fleming in the third period explosion which broke a scoreless tie and sent tiie Bears reeling to their 12th loss in 13 starts. Green Bay boosted its record to 7-6. The Bears, defeated 17-0 in a season opener at Green Bay, avoided a shutout on Mac Per- bpunced into Studstill’s hands. Sweetan and Studstill hold the! longest single pass record for] the Lions, a 99-yarder against] Baltimore in 1966. Redskins Tip Saints After Late Rally Fails I The nationally televised victo-{ry gives the Capitol Division I champion Cowboys a 19-2-1 season record and dropped the Coastal Division Colts to a 7-5-1 mark. Each team has one game remaining. It was the first time Dallas {had defeated Baltimore to a regular season game. i az pan from Munsoni WASHINGTON (AP) — Run-| their victory after jumping off L|r>, down, 42 post from Munson! ning back CharleyHarrawaylto a 17-0 halftime lead. ; M {scored two touchdowns Sunday Harraway scored on a 12-yard passes iione)1** ,L,Hood as Washington edged New Or-{run in the first quarter and on a |puSh" v* ...'! 77 * j leans 17-14 and assured toe 30-yard pass from Sonny Jur- {Yi«S'“r- at Redskins their first winning sea- gensen in the second period. Berry's TDTosses Pace Falcons' Win Steve Spurrier, 49er quarterback filling to to toe injured John Brodie, passed to 292 yards despite the snow, which had obscured yard markers and {forced officials to use brooms to find them. Spurrier’s one-yard pass to rookie Ten Kwalick gave toe 49ers a 7-3 lead early in toe period. son since 1955. < start of the fourth quarter. Chicago’s league-leading rusher, Gale Sayers, piled up 90 yards on 25 carries for a total of 972 to move within easy i0#brl#| reach of toe 1,000 mark to the season in next Sunday’s finale here against toe .Detroit Lions. Washington also got a 19-yard | * * * field goal by Curt Knight to give The .Redskins, however, had them a halftime margin. Dal—FG Clark 15 PHILADELPHIA (AP) - Atlanta defeated the Philadelphia Eagles 27-3 to a National Football League game Sunday as quarterback Bob Berry threw three touchdown passes and the - P j ,j Falcons’ alert defense intercept- der. The drive* however, stalled ed four passes and recovered a and Sam Baker booted a 20-yard from Morton fumble. field goal. Atlanta led 3-0 at halftime on. The Eagles sewed their only points with 12:14 remaining to toe third period when they marched from their 26 to the Atlanta 11, mostly on the running of Leroy Keyes and Syril Pin- The touchdown was set up after Minnesota punter Bob Lee fumbled frying to avoid a hard rush. The* Viktogs recovered but toe 49ers took over on downs at toe 32. 'A game like this comes to breaks,” said Nolan. | to hold off a second-half come-J back by the Saints to preserve j; Saints Rtdskins (Clark I Picktri Mrs Passing yardaga Totals It 49 Totals g.24.2 | PINAL TEAM STATISTICS i a Total first downs ......... 4 Giants Sneak Past Steelers TOKYO— Masao Oba, 113, Japan, out- Wash—FG Knight 11 wash—Harraway 30 an (Knight kick) BUENOS AIRE3—Oicpr Bonavana. 207, mpsay kick) Argentina, stoppad Albarto Lovtn, 20714, run (Dampsay kick). Argentina, 8. 1 D527aes Dec. If . a 28-yard field goal by Bob ter. Ken Reaves intercepted ifBBg pass at the Philadelphia 45 to! Passes setup the score. • In toe third period Atlanta increased its lead to 194) on a 76-yard drive, highlighted by runs of 17 yards by Jim Butler and 38 by Hannon Wages. Berry passed to Jim Mitchell for toe TD from two-yards out. KICK BLOCKED And the Vikings defense got most of the breaks. Roy Winston^ intercepted two passes. Earsell Mackbed intercepted one pass Philadelphia ... . - ' i-5r7™ All—FG Ettar S Ati—Mitchaii 2 past from Barry (Bttar jj, •; J8 and recovered a fumble on toe Jg • g| Viking 12, both in tote final peri-» ■ u-aw.od. And a 49er field goal at-n tempt was blocked when Mom- kick i phii—fg sakar a * ■— pass from Barry.(Btfar eilo Gavrio’s kick hit Alan Page’s helmet Atl—Flatlay 71 Kick) AH—FG Ettar a All—Cogdill 24 pati B kick) from Barry (Ettar S KT1 GB—T. Williams 2 GB—Fleming 10 p. tig kkjc) » PITTSBURGH (AP) - Fran 1 o Tarkenton fired a four-yard i4» touchdown pass to Ernie Koy in with less than a minute remain-1 Basketball Not Good After All Sports Calendar n the game to give the * York Giants a 21-J7 victory over * the Pittsburgh Steelers Sunday, in a National Football League1 ! game. Detroit at St. Bonaven_ Northern Michigan st Nebraska HIGH SCHOOL WHISTLING Avnnrtal* Warron Mott It was toe 12th straight loss jfor toe Steelers, who haven't won since their season opener when they beat Detroit 16-13. MANCHESTER, N.H. ! (UPI) — St. Anthony’s i high school thought it Vrould be a good idea/ to i lattmch Its first inter scholastic basketball season ; this year. It wasn’t After losing to Alton, 87-i 19, and to Simonds High { of Warner, 89-7, St An-; thony’s canceled its sea- MontroM at Holly Tuesday's Schedule / HIGH SCHOOL BASKETBALL | The Steelers had taken a 17-14 lead with seven minutes left ! when Gene Mingo booted a 41-yard field goal. Quarterback"! Dick Shifter set up toe i>lay with m ! a 23-yard pass to tight end J.R.’ p I Wilburn. “We found out it was 1 not a very wise decision I to enter this league It 1 this time,” said Msgr. | Milfrid Paradis, director I of the school 1 Waterfor. I Saginaw McArthi Say City Central at Midland Dow V HIGH SCHOOL WRESTLING Bishop Foley at St. Rita \ Andovar at Country Day ... Fitzgerald at Hazal ParV Berkley at North) Farmington \ Roseville at Pontiac Northern . — Kattarjng Rochester at Mount Clamant a Bentley at Pontiac N Warren Couslno at Utica Stay* Auburn Five Wins, 107-99 T think we leaned a few things about this type of field,” said end Jim Marshall, Minnesota’s defensive captain. “The footing was bid, We are going to have to make some more adjustments when we play this type of game the next'time.” I He meant the Rams on toe 27. Oakland Auburn Hills C6m-|P“n*« munity College coasted to a 107-99 win Saturday over Eastern Michigan University’s freshman basketball squad. The losing Hurons jumped off to a quick 21-8 lead early in toe first half before the Nfites caught fire and took command of the game to even their record at 2-2. Dewayne Blanchard jrnd Richard, Neal paced the Nikas to a 49-48 halftime lead and toe winners were never headcid. Blanchard finished the game Yards PcnaliMd San Francises ..... Minnesota ......... Minn—FG Co* 37 J5F—Kwaliek if pa (Gavrlc kl BB 26-48-3 4-KM 7-35 6-37 26-40-3 4-10-1 Lakeland Ice Teams Win The Lakeland Hawks’ Ban-| with 31 points while Neal led all'toms downed Huron Point 5-2 scorers with 32. The Nikes hit 55 per cent of their field goal tries in the win. and the Midgets topped Warren 5-3 in Southeastern Michigan League action Sunday, AUB. HILLS (1(7) Be PTTP Blanch'd 11 0-1B» Bradley \ J 1-4 S Malar LOOKING FOR LINES - Referees also turned sweepers in an effort to uncover the yard markers during the first half of toe game in Minneapolis between toe Vikings and 49ers yesterday. Both teams bogged r ■ • !; ■i AP wirsphete EMU FROSH BG fttB 12 Sr 2* « 3-1 “ down in 2-3 inches of snow which fell to the first half. That’s Joe Kapp (11) watching the placement of toe ball. The Vikings won toe game, 10-7. B.Wooda 7 6-4 26 ’ Talal* 41 17.23 46 Eric Rose pulled a hat trick fw the Bantams addle Dave {Jamnik and Brad Strohm each had a goal. Pat Dolan sewed twice tor toe Midgets .with the other goals coming from Jerry Vought, Mark Coder* and Pat TIIE PONTIAC PRESS, BASKETBALL SCORES Cleveland New York it. Louis . Pittsburgh Dallas Wuhtf Saturday's College Basketball Results Marquette S3, ,By The Associated Press Depaul f i -esj Ngnhen Missouri 1. 90, la 75, S3, Seton ™ wm^ Manhattan so, Templi Providence 10, St. Fi iP0Wl£Woheestar' , ■ Niagara SI, Long Island U. SM4 Connecticut 77, Boston Cotiaga 7 Fairlelgh Dickinson 71, Iona 49. Lehigh IS. Washington S, Lea 71 Colgate *7. nuckneii n Syracuse Pennsylvania S3, Princeton 42 Holy Cross IS, Yale M Harvard. 90, Amherst 0 Columbia 75, Cornell 17 NOW York 0. 92, Adelphla 44 St. John's, N.Y., S3, Seton Hall; 44 —zkf&i wear i* 76< Ntw Hampimr# ^%etnr'- Canlslus 75, DHrMhM La tAOyne, n.y., 77, Scranton u. 7t Oneonta 0. 0, Plattsburgh St. 0 St. John Fisher 70, Waterloo Cwthi Johns Hopkins 82, swathmora 77 -Lode Haven St. 82, Ithaca SO Hutztown St. tt. Cheyne St. SO Muhlenberg 93. Albright ft East Stroudsburg SI. Shlppensburg 71 Wilkes 94, Draw 0 . _ Western Kentucky 47, St. Francis. Pa. ^Bridgeport 85. Springfield 44 Conn. Wesleyan 75, Bowdoln 42 Sacred Heart 105, Merrimack 92 Assumption 92, Siena 0 Rhode Island Coll 10, Boston St 91 Westminister, Mo., 90. Illinois Collegr JWut 92. Whitewater 78 ’ \ N lau Claire 74. PlattesVIlla 0 Osrkosr 92, River Falls 74 ‘ 0. Norbert 109. Lakeland ft ||mhie0 72, Carroll, WIs., 70 RSckiHgt C ejyyisJ*-» Grace 99# MinciMtnir 77 Indiana Central 92, Mllllkln 71 Thomas More 75, Hanover 72 Sprint Arbor V, Hope 0 Adrian 0, Grand Valley 74 Northwood 0, Mercy SI Katamaxoo 0, Aquinas 77 _ Iowa Wesleyan 17, Graenvllte 72 WscOnem-ParksIde m, Roosevelt S7 George Williams 107, Detroit Tech 0 Saginaw Valley 91, Davfnport, Mich. MarM 82, Money Brc . central Com. -twllng C— • rack Ml OK, N.T. 71, T in. St 73, C.W. ■MU —41 1 4, King's L-.......... Nyack Missionary 48. Shelton 72 Fredonla 0. 74, Now Paltz St. 43 Rochester Tech 84, Utica 0 . ■ ~-----r Poly 100, Brooklyn Poly 48 - 98. Alfred 73 ..„e 93, Paterson St. 88 4, Lycoming si ,h. Conn., 70 New Haven 42 ________a 70, Madlson-Falrlelgh dlcklr *°Montclalr St. 101, Newark Engineering Haverford 79. Stevens Tech 49 _ New Hampshire Coll 0, Fitchburg St 49 Trinity, Conn.. 94 MIT “ Geneseo St 0, Harpur Si, two ot Morris Harvey 90, New York Tec South___________________ North Carolina 84, Flortar-SL 75 South Carolina 42, Virginia 51 Louisville 93, Furman 49 Marshall ft, LaSalle 88 Baltimore Loyola 0, catholic U. Louisiana 0. 97, Tulane 91 Richmond 90, East Carolina 72 Arkansas St. 81, Citadel 72 Vanderbilt 93, Mississippi St. 79 Jacksonville 1M, Blscavne 45 Wake Forest 1M, Mary1and S7 Dayton 0, Eastern Kentucky 0 Duke 34, william E.Manr 77 No. Car. St 78, Virginia Tech 0 West Virginia W, George Washli Keorgetown, D.C., 90, Navy 81 American U. 0. HoWra 49 Murray 0, Abilene Christian 49 Gullfora ll2, Atlanta Christian 4. Maryville 0. Lincoln Memorial 71 Voorhaas 104, Florida Memorial 88 Virginia Union 94, Morgan st. 81 ... VBSSE ..Ji—«4, Lychburg 72 s ’colP 457'Georgla Southwestern > 133. Neuse orth Texas St. 0 Ben Tenn. St 77 llTnols 82, Illinois 0. 79 0, Northern Michigan 71 77, KansasjSt 71 Wittenberg 957 Kenyan 0 Rio Grande 121, Plkavllle 91 Central State, Ohio. 85, Marian 50 Bowling Groan ft. Ball St 0 Denison 54, HiramTS ■■■ Central Mo. 0. 88, Mlsseurl-Rolla 0 Southwest Mo. 0. It, Southeast Mo. St. NFL Standings ■shfngton NBA Standings 1 .833 348 213 Iphia 4 8 1 .333 244 ___ leans ..... 4 9 0 08 284 369 Cent al Division ...... 12 1 0 .923 374 ....... 8 4 1 .447 09 .. ... 7 4 0 .538 ElWI 1 12 0 .077 207 319 Coastal Division .... 11 2 0 .144 313 230 rancisco ...3 It . 73 Saturday's Rsiult . Dallas 37, Baltlmera 10 Suaday's Results _____j Bay 21, Chicago 3 Atlanta 27, PhlladHphla 3 Cleveland 27, St. Louis 21 . ..._Jrghl7 ____ Sjm Franclsw 7 Baltimore Cleveland 0 Now York Datrainn Chicago ..T.^ rr 0 Atlanta - •- at San Franclico it New Orleans Green Bay hMarks71 Westmar 58 9% Buena VI0 htl, Kan.. 54 Pershing 1 Wayne 0. t Olivet 0, Wabash loiTicnox Central Michigan 1., Moorhead, Minn., 10, Northern S.D., 71 North Dakota 0. 75, st. Cloud 7 Loras, Iowa, 0, Winona 0 St. Mary's Mtnn., 71, Hamtlne 4» St. Thomas 77, Green Bay 0 St. Olaf 83, Augsburg 01, ot Fort Hoyt St ». Pltsburgh St 80 Mount Union 02, John Carroll 44 Washington E Jefferson 74, Wostoi 5Ashland, Ohio 49, Point Pork 24 Drtlance 42, Malone 51 Earlhbm 114, Franklin 72 Tovlor 93. Anderson 70 Quincy 93, Washlngton-0. Louis 4( Concordia, Neb., 33 Concordia. I..., .. Missouri Seufhem 94, central Methodist Tabor 90, Starling 0 net's, Kan.. 70. Washburn » Baylor 95, Southwestern Louisiana 0 Texas AEl 93, Tarlaton St M Lamar Tech 107, Pan American 79 Arkansas 85, TaXMNUHlngton 73 Rica 0. Cote. St. Coll 47 Corpus Christ! 75, T«tdS Lutheran 0 Howard Payne 119, Sul Rosa 100 ■ts&iifi Southeastern La. Coll 0, Louisiana Coil Transylvania, Ky., SO, Centro, Ky. “ -folk St. W "—r“'“ Grambilng 74, Miilaapt as, L..™,.... Alcorn ABM 134, Miss. Industrial 14 Arkansas AMEN 112, Wley Coll 104 J Miss. Valey St. 92, Philander Smith 0 Okla. Chrlstlan.CoM 0, John Brown Tonnosseo-Marfln 0, Delta St. 0 s:.isrsn wr Midwest N0ra Dams 0, St. Louis 0 Orlo U. 82, Ohio 0. 0 Kentucky IN, Indiana 92 Southern Illinois 74, Wisconsin 0 Illinois 0, Creighton SI —3—/. ohIo, 55 Loyola Chi., 71 84,Western Michigan 71 Urban* 85 104, Westminster, Pa., is, idaho St. 49 w 87, MacMurray 77 n, Oklahoma City 41 JMIIee baptist 74; 0 ' Tennessee Tech 0 Tex., 73 BasTfoxaY StrTi.Southwest Texas 71 Par West California 70, Iowa St 0 _ ...Texas 54 Mexico St 94, Arizona St U , Wyoming 70, Air Force 47 New Mexico 87, Texas Tech 0 Oregon st 47, Ooiaaga 0 , , Utah 84, LolTMigeia* Loyola 74. 01 Colorado 0. U. 48, Donvo 54 Papperdine 93, MUml, Fla., 90 0 Weber st 97, West Texas st 78 Western Montana 94, Woetm' Washington St 104, Montana 77 Northern Arizona ll. Cal Poly Porno 0 s -* Toledo 100, Fullerton St W .. Pacific Ore., 79, Alaska Methodist 0 Cent al Washington 91, Llnttald 78 C0lage 0 Idaho 70, Eastern Oregon 0 Kearney, Neb., 183, N Mexico High- mmm_______________ luis «>- 5 Los Angeles Ba0l0 01, Principle, "4' ; ' EL* Pacific 118, Fresno 0 Sacramento 0 71, Pasadtna Coll 45 kM&te^fyoyfts 95,0 n-----92, cent al Wyoming 91 Nab., 79, Eitsrn wiromi AFL Standings Phoenix 124, Cincinnati 110 Sunday's Results Milwaukee 118, San Dlago 10 Los Angslee 131, Seattle 127 Cincinnati 137, Phoenix 130, tv times Philadelphia 124, Chicago 121 Today's Games No games scheduled. Tuesday'* Games Atlanta at New York Diego at Chicago ABA Standings NHL Standings tlonal League .torn dJS°ot Pssst! Men, call Sunday's Results 642-9040 Detroit 5, Montreal . Toronto 3, New York 1 Boston 2, Pittsburgh 1 Chicago 4, Philadelphia 1 Today's Gpnts COLLEGE TOURNAMENTS Toumamonts Bluebonnet Bowl classic At Houston, Tox Championship Houston 74, Kent State 0 Consolation Nebraska 78. Texas ABM 0 ......... ... Carson-Newman 90 Consolation Union university 89, Cumberland Daffodil Clitic Championship Puget Sound 87, St. Martin's 74 Third Placs Nevada-Reno 0, Seattle Pacific 74 Cable Ca~Classic Championship Santa Clara 0. California 25 Third Place Army 73, San Francisco 44 Randrtph-Macon Invitational Championship Randolph-Macon 72, Muskingum 4< SNO-CAPS 4 FULL-PLY FAST MOUNTING & 2 tor *21* UNITED TIRE INC. 1007 Baldwin Ave. 8 Win. from Downtown Pontiac N«ar Fisher Body INSTALULTION SPECIAL Have any of the under ^la$h units installed at either oi?e of our four aiftomotiyf centers .. Grand,River at Greenfield, Warren at Conner, Drayton Plains or Pontiac. 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Use in or out of car. 1 32.95 MONDAY, DECEMBER 15, 1969 c-a SOUND ^.SAVINGS... for Kim or her in time for Christmas Famous Lear Jet 8-track tape player Regularly 49.951 Lightweight, compact 8-track tape player operates on flashlight batteries. Totes about easily ... entertainment goes where you go! Gives you superb stereo sound ... almost unbelievable in quality. Buy now and save! 38.88 Reg. 184.88 Lear Jet new arm-rest console 133“ Portable 8-track tape cartridge player gives quality stereo sound. Use in your car, boat or home. With 2 speakers and AC/DC converter. Save! AVE <50 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, DECEMBER 15, 1969 ot only is he having, up our hustle,” he says, "we in obtaining a site,'but could go all the way in the got two opponents, league. But any team is capable status as a convicted f bea,t,in« any other in this er from the draft has league-him throughout South CAUTIOUS COMMENTS ind now its hitting him He is even more cautious loma’s Tulsa County, when discussing the state Portland, Maine, pro-tournament ys that’s just fine, he’ll “We host a district touma-million for a Clay-Joe ment this year,” he points'out, Ight in Australia. “and it may be one of the * * * , toughest in the state. Orchard is the heavyweight Bake St Mary, Country Day i in seven states, but and Femdale St. James are all incher Gene Hopkins amon* our competitors in the 1 have tp be second inldi®^ct ’’ lay Meeting tough competition > 8avg cj-v definitely won>t new to 001,1611 or 0,0 Canine Shines for Bobcats Past Haunts Titans Fro® Our News Wires I half points and the HuronsiHie Flying Dutchmen The past continues^ to haunt scored 00 per cent from the a 97-01 gam* with Arbor. Northwood Institute Mercy College of Detr behind a 17-point second half performance by Bill Oates, hit only one field goal in the first half. University 1 of De t r o 11 field. v ! Tonight, the Hurons host John While last season’s All - F. Kennedy Colleg^ of Wahoo, Spencer Haywood, is. Neb., who woe on the short end i hero with the Denver Rockets,;of a 98-87 brush with Wayne he Titans dropped a 75-64 State Saturday night. The clash to Canisius at Tartars won their third in a row lufialo, N.Y. behind the 15-point each! * * * „ shooting of Fred Martus and! Detroit Tech was buried 101* And Ohio University star John Jerry Coury. 69 by George Williams College from Hazel Park con- ( * * * at Downers Grove, ID., despite to haunt Bobcat foes, the) Central Michigan was hot and 23 points by Raphael Payne and, being Ohio State. Canine Indiana State was cold in the 22 points from Ike Bundy. j file Bobcats’ 82-00 victory opening minutes of the game! Michigan Lutheran topped with 25 points. | Saturday night and the Chips Chicago State 77-69 behind the Former Birmingham Groves poured it on to win, 70-61. CMU 20 points of Marvin Copeland, I Craig Love is the regular Is now 4-1 for the season. Paul1 and the 19 of Eddie Jenkins, for the Bobcats (3-0) and Botts paced file winners with 24] with six points. Most points wen scored n long shots. The U. of D. Titans came to one point in the first when Larry Miller poured Missouri obliterated Northern: S/DOrfCHl SoJdH Michigan, 195-70, for theiri fourth straight win, j PoiirC in AO ! to MIAA action, Olivet came r ° ,,, w«u vxuijr mm fiuiucu from behind to win its first . . ...... , 15 points, but Canisius pulled game of the season, 88-82 over! AOOinST W /vlU ray and led by as much as 19 Albion, despite Rick Ziem’s 33 ® LIBERTY BOWL WALTZ — Alabama end David Bailey (84) and Colorado defensive back Erick Harris (14) appear to be enjoying a waltz but Bailey is actually throwing his head back in anguish after missing a pass AP Wire*hate from quarterback Scott Hunter in Saturday’s liberty Bowl in Memphis. Interference was called on the play on Harris a comerback. Colorado won the game. DEFIES THE ODDS — Referee Russ Kaefer looked as s everyone in the house when a basketball landed and stayed balanced on the top ot the backboard in the game between Miami and Cincinnati Saturday night. Hie odds ot this happening are unbelievable. A student mounted a ladder and knocked the ball to the floor. Cincinnati won the game, 56-55 over Miami. away points. The Titans play Bonaventure tonight. EMU TRIUMPHS Eastern Michigan won »»Vallev *3.74 third straight Saturday night, a y' KALAMAZOO (AP) - Some record crowd of 10,100 points. Kalamazoo College beat; nonconference rival Aquinas, 83-1 77 and Adrian also stepped out! - ■ of toe conference to beat Grand J®1 were talking today about the sensational 42 • point performance of sophomore Ralph Teen's 739 Top Keg Effort 101-73 pounding of Parsons of SHOT DOWN . Simpson of Michigan State in Iowa. Ken McIntosh and Earlj Going out of the conference the Spartans’ 86-71 basketball1 Higgins combined for 31 first'wasn’t so pleasant for Hope.'victory over Western Michigan ——--------?----;-------!-------------------------------------’ here Saturday night. In AFL Playoff Game Oilers Are Next for Raiders Players' Rep Sees Fruitless Negotiations OAKLAND (AP) — Although they may be hesitant about saying so out loud, .the Oakland Raiders are glad they’ll be playing the Houston Oilers here next Sunday rather than the Jets ' New York on Saturday. the Kansas City Chiefs 106 here to (he Super Bowl. Saturday and wrapping up their third American Football League Weston Division championship in as many years. Wilson Frets Even at End Dolphins Take 27-9 Pasting by Jets MIAMI (AP) — Weeb Ew-bank fretted about challenges ahead. George Wilson, coach of the last-place Miami Dolphins, hoped he’d be fortunate enough to someday have the Jets’ playoff problems. The Dolphins took a 27-9 Sunday pasting from New York. Simpson sank 19 of 25 shots | from the floor and four of five j from the free-throw line. He also: {captured 16 rebounds. ! And there still was 2:05 left when Coach Gus Gankas pulled SAN JUAN, P.R. (APj -Simpson. Kankas later told see no end in sight at this newsmen: “I didn’t know any- ment.” thing about a record.” (' With those words, * ★ ★ Miller, armed A home game with the OUerSjthey will meet here again Jan. j touchdown, Kansas City Coach; The shooting performance three-year contra is their reward for outlasting|4 for the AFL title and a trip Hank Stram said, “We bad con-jmissed by only three points toe director of the The Chiefs, who finished second to the Raiders, must play the Eastern Division champion Jets in New York and that is not an assignment for the faint of heart. “I’m very glad I won’t have the problem of having to go bade to New York and throw the ball in that kind of weather,” says Oakland quarterback Daryle Lamonica. “The weather may be the big factor in the Kansas City-New York game. If there’s any advantage, Joe EARLY TITLE “New York is another tough football team,” says Dawson. I’m sure it’ll be a game as tough as this one. New York hasn’t played up to their capabilities, but they haven’t had to because they sewed up their division early.” Dawson kept the Chiefs almost completely on toe ground in their losing effort to the Raiders, throwing just six pas-and completing only two of those. trolled toe ball most of the game and it was reasonable to assume we’d get the ball back. "I still felt pretty good about the game then,” Stram went on, “but they kept the ball the rest of the period and that was the deciding 1968 Champ Those Not in Finals (Continued from Page C-l) Present plans for next Sunday call for a morning session of actuals invitational competition at the 300 Bowl, with high-average bowlers who entemi the tourney and all who rolled 600 actual series being given a chance to compete. MSU single - game record of 451 Baseball set in 1956 by Julius McCoy and summed u came within four points of the fruitless negotiations between Read Field House record of 46 the players and dub owners. I ", ", set by Western Michigan’s Gene* After two days of talks, which SECOND BEST — Clint Final-round action in the Ford last year. | Miller said was to hear “a de-| Yokes of the 300 Bowl turned singles competition will be held The 10,100 customers set a tailed report on the (owner) j the second highest series in in the afternoon, with three new fiekihouse attendance rec- committee’s latest offer,” the1 Sunday’s Pontiac Open semi- squads tentatively planned by wnw ord. | two sides were described Sun-i toials. a 730 total. His games Shirley Pointer, tournament The Raiders, who got theiri ★ day as “nowhere near agree-) olJ?®’ and 205 gave trim supervisor. The finals will be only touchdown early in the| In running its seasons ree- ment.” j a 676 actual series to go with rolled at Airway Lanes, fourth period on an eight-yard ord to 2-1, Michigan State got A strike over pension benefits bis 54 handicap. Announcement of those In- pass from Lamonica to Charlie'an outstanding .607 shooting av-Smith, ended up on the Chiefs’ ierage from the floor in hand* Not until late in toe game, # with the Raiders ahead 106 did:8amers-s- the Chiefs score and, after mis-!Plr(t downs e sing a two-point conversion and | |£»j;w '» Namath ought to have it be-thus needing another touchdown Return Yanaga i cause he plays in it all toe to win, the Raiders controlled RES* ‘ tim«” toe ball for the final five and|^?%e^2ni«i Len Dawson, the Kansas City one-half minutes to run out the,gjj”*d Cl*v * quarterback, knows he will have clock. *fcoek-FmithBlanda his hands full. If the Chiefs Asked why he didn’t order, (BiaMaSnkick> * p Ewbank used a collection of Raiders both win next week I an on-side kick after his team’s' benchwarmers to protect his stars from injury with toe American Football League playoffs ahead, but the world champions took the Dolphins apart nonetheless. Wilson sat staring into space with a pair of bloodshot eyes. His troops were 3-19-1 and the burly former Chicago Bears end wondered what lies ahead. Rumors floated that Wilson might be through after four years with the infant pro team. seven-yard line as the gun sounded with Colgate rookie Marv Hubbard keeping the final drive alive with several long ing the Broncos loss in four starts. Slmnan Gutkowskl Gibbons WonT Miller Benlemli Cohn and other benefits last year delayed the opening of spring training for most players. There! was no word on whether it might come down to a strike' again, but Miller complained |] about what he called “a lack of. progress” after 15 meetings. “I would wish they (the own-1 ers) would have a much more mature outlook on this thing than they give the players credit for,” Miller said. Neither Miller nor Tom Haller. of the Los Angeles Dodgers, *SAN DIEGO, Calif. (AP) i representing the Nation a 1, Wide receiver Lance Alworth of* {League, would go into details of,the San Diego Chargers broke{i Alworth Grabs Hutson's Mark Catches Pass in 96th Consecutive Contest vited to toe morning tourney and squad times for the afternoon finals will be made late this week. 7M AND OVIK ). Mf; Donald Lawson, 473; James Schuman, <73; Bertha J lyerelt Platt, *72; Y. E .Keller, <72; .Duane Rogers, <70; Charles ..ter, <70; Carl Harris, <<9; George <<*; Bernard Loughran, Pontiac Catholic After No. 6 Titan Cagers Have Priorities | Defense and free-throw;this season while holding their 'shooting may get shoved into foes under 60 on toe average. - - . P_________. the back row of the bleachers in Leading the Titan scoring at- Miami was perhaps toe most high basketball tack is 6-4 senior Sam Brady, injury-socked team in the sport | programs, but at P o n t i a o with nearly all 22 positions embolic they are number-one being hit at some time or toe priorities. would be helpful,” Miller said. But toe more important topics were believed to include the number of games in a season, reserve clause, minimum salary and grievance procedure. MSU Booter All-Midwest four-year, veteran who is hitting] somewhat unexpected at a 25-point dip. Also averag- this season, ing in double figures are Herb| The rapid development of 6-4' Larson (11) and Kellie Dean junior Rich Schachem has - Ul-5). “taken some of the pressure offi“ °fu M,chlgan But Conlen considers two'Brady.” and fan suonort has!811316 . Diversity has been when he caught a pass for toe «< J,rri{| 96th consecutive game. lam l'ucm/ Qw Sa»r.„44j;_Nick !oara!* I EDWARDSVILLE, 111. (AP) other. Fumbles lost Yards penalized New York ........ Miami . 14 10 1 0-27 a 3 0 4- » i Namath n Namath (J. Ti»r- “In practices as well as in games, we stress defense and free-throw shooting,” new varsity coach and athletic director Jim Conlen says as he surveys his unbeaten Titans. ★ Or ★ ‘There are going to.be nights, as all coaches know, when toe bail just won’t go through toe hoop,” Conlen points out. “We try to be ready for those nights with our defensive ability and free-throw shooting.” The Titans, who take their 56 record to Gabriel Richard for a Catholic League A-West game Tuesday night, have hit 71 of 95 free-throw tries for^74.7 per cent so far this season. Their 15-for-19 night DENVER (AP) — Two field i Friday’s triumph over rugged goals by Denver’s Bobby How-field, one for 51 yards, and a 71-yard pass play enabled toe Broncos to tear open a tight gamp in toe final quarter and other factors portance in his 2 FG's Start Broncos on to 27-16 Victory Clay's Fight May Now Go to Australia whip toe Cincinnati Bengals 16 »to toe / American Football; was their second-worst of the season. INTEGRAL PART “Free throws are an integral part of our, game. We practice them as much as we do defense/ said Conlen, who roncM coached toe Titan jayvees to a 188J1 league title last year. 207 | Conlen feels his charges, “Are .,7“ pretty good offensive , JJ performers, so we don’t need to •r“ ** «**“ ,r#m c*ek is “pretty . good” offensively probably sounds understated. The Titans have averaged more than 74 points per game League Sunday. twojBrady,” and fan support has! prime im- been “just great,” he says, squad’s » * ★ ★ j “Schachem came off year’s junior varsity club to {give us better depth, which we {needed badly,” Conlen points out. ' “But he has developed into a strong player who can shift to a forward to permit Brady to play at toe guard, which he does: about half the time.” s—'ll While Conlen is ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) — Cas- derstandably pleased with sius Clay’s comeback to the ring team’s progress, he is not yet is getting more complicated'ready to make any predictions, than his sparring with the draft! “If we stay healthy and keep board. N< problems now he’s get two Clay’s status as a sidestepper from the i____HP hounded him throughout South Florida and now its hitting in Oklahoma’s Tulsa Coi And a Portland, Maine, motor says that’s just fine, put up $1 million for a Frazier fight to Ml ■ ■ * I /Frazier is tod champion in seven Tulsa rancher Gene says he’ll have tp be second line at Clay. former Great Bay star Don fcj JimJblpp,” <& 'Don BH1 ,, iConttt, 442; OMMM Roth, Mi; rrann to congratulate Alworth. ,j* sSww, md> bid Fir. 'mont Jr„ 640; Jay^Hwnbrte, <40. lit Choraon Brian Lawton, <32; Dan Romlne, <31; .48 Don Bowat, <35; Larry Thompson. <37; Chorlai Wood, <37; Gono Tuttlo, *37; Al named to the Midwest Collegiate Soccer Squad. He was the only player from a Michigan college to make the team. Thirteen players were selected Sunday night for toe squad. Some 145 candidates from 51 schools participated to toe two-day trials to select Olympic material. Rogars, <37; Doc L..ln», „ Mama, <34; Marvin Earnast, <34; C Freeman, <34; Marge Cochran, < “— i«i par Mia • Datoras Yanna, <33; Pet# Hodgint, <: Mil iOrnmmiWk^mammta. <3z; Stodadrd, <31; Komioth Carol hers, jaBgasrflBM'a.f'B fihS K «,«jSfjir,aS8nu“a; bj.. Jr., <24; Carl Wick III, WWW Jrwln, <25; KM Rlopan, <23; gloyd Pass, <23; Law Van«r<23i Ed ”****-ian, <23; Alvin Townsend. <23; s-. -InouW, <22; DgNto SMtar, <22; Ipnram Llinn» mi M Olbba. <21; Don ■HSt■Jjat Richard Goldworthy, <20; UM-ry Vandevelde, <20; Sonny Tompkins, •"> Karen Curtis, 419; Bonnie Herman, 411; Milton Franda, <11; Al Johnson, Kirkland, 417; johFWmi^V'jr* 417. RICK SCHACHERN Hopkins says Clay' definitely has agreed to fight in Tulsa Jan. 10, against Billy Joiner-who hasn’t yet won a ranking by Ring Magazine. The Oklahoman, however, said Sunday authorities had overruled toe ■ stadium he had bullion his ranch and another site was being considered. won’t be ne Titans. They are one of three Class C schools in Catholic First Division, v ★ -★ pr y§ Detroit St. Martin De Porres is one of toe others, along' Dearborn Sacred Heart, whom the Titans host Friday. All toe, other teams are Class orB. . BALL TOTING TAYLOR — Rookie Altie Taylor got the starting assignment in place of toe injured Nick Eddy for the Detroit Liohs yesterday and he picked up some key yardage running against toe big LA Rams. Here he is running right into Ratos’ tackle Coy Bacon (79). Andover Tankers Take 56-49 Loss Bloomfield Hills Andover won both relays but managed victories to only two Individual events in absorbing its first swimming defeat of the year, a , 56-49 trimming by Ann Arbor Huron Saturday. Andover is now 2-1. AMOR HURON 54, ANOOVIR 49 Iff. tyjPW ReKy—Andovw (Kuzma, .Mm, (Mrt. May). 1:4A4. WL Freoty|a—Ktaalarlng (H), McClan-43 Passing ya daga 174 299 Return yardaga 27 1 Passes 12-11-0 2M9-J ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. W -Quarterback Tom DiMuzio lived up to his billing as a second-team Little All American as he furious Passet* f°r two touchdowns and fan for another in leading Delaware to a 31-13 victory over North Carolina Central* Saturday in the 2nd annual Boardwalk Bowl. ET—Daughtry r r ET—Haute' 37 pi old kick) Toch—Horran I (Gertz kick) ET—Spinks 19 I (Gertz kick) CT—plbson 39 (Harold kick) 'rat A capacity crowd of 10,1 watched the 200-pound senior throw touchdown passes of 13' and 32 yards, and run 15 for the final Delaware score on the Convention Hall indoor football field. SACRAMENTO, Calif. (A -North Dakota State overwhelming Montana 30-3 in the Camelia Bowl Saturday to claim undisputed title as the nation’s No. 1 small college football team. MEMPHIS, Tenn. (APl^-The University of Colorado' football brochure, published before the opening kickoff of college * ' ball’s 100th year, pegged Bob Anderson as a “coed’s dream— movie-idol handsome, powerfully built, smart and mature." s from Baathari n (Garela kick) Ex-Amateur Champs| Post Pih-Am Win I Bruins Asking for Requirement to Use Helmets BOSTON (A - The Boston i Bruins announced Sunday night PORT ST. LUCIE, Flf (AP) - Former national amateur champions Bob Murphy and Steve Melnyk teamed for a two- s^oke victory Sunday in the HETEdo Motion “with U.S. ^Am C^ T^ament. ^ National Hockey League Murphy and Melnyk the,am-^es Committee to make the ateur in^e team, shoh » 6? wearing of heltnets by players mandatory in all pre-season, regular season and playoff games. Weston W. Adams, chairman ‘ of the board of the Boston club, filed the motion with Ian 'Sdotty and chairman ot thej Hous-FG Garela 11 Mantana North Dakota it. First Downs Rushing yardaga Passing yardago . Return Yardago NDS—Grasamko 1 .. 7-30-3 19-26-2 NDS—fg Twardy 23 NDS—Prabosk! 36 run (Twardy kick) NDS—M|os I pass from Br---------- Northville Entries Lloyd Good Smoko Yatas Lynn Vonzay --- taoo/Ylalmlng PWC0t><9/14 ^"mi Lennys Girl Penny Helen 3rd—$700; Claiming Paca; 1 Mlloi Chief Dusty Batter Believe It My Real Contact -Vnn Easy Boy Pick Rushing yardago the final round to finish with a 20-under par 196 for the 54 holes. Tied for second were the second-day leaders, Larry Ziegler and amateur Sid Salomon of St. Louis, and Tim Colbert and amateur Ron Schmedemann of: Kansas ^-Ity. rules committee. Dan Sikes and amateur Rayi Terry of Jacksonville were1 * * * fourth at 199. I Adams requested that if the Die winner picked up $4,000.'rule should be adopted, it be- ------------i---- | come mandatory and effective not later than Jan. 15, 1970. The question of wearing helmets has been raised strongly this season, partly because of; the serious head Injury suffered! by Bruins defenseman Ted ;Green in a stick swinging duel! Six boys Wayne Maki of St. Louis in . . •_______..LlkUl— Nn—A ______ Mite B. Tima l Cottonwood Tippy Wllmlta i Deco Dale - ---- Conditioned Pace; I Mllai Remarkable Cottonwood Leigh DouM.%. L. Pam Tima Bobbla Chief Taconlte Kathy Chief Speedy Buckeye 4fh-49M|- Conditioned Trot; t Mllei Pair worthy Dee's Dream р. c's champ virgnea Beauty с, -kont Lassie Addld Expanse e Dancer Gale Favor -Conditioned Pace; 1 Mile: stal Spud Buds Valentine Prudence Truae Vans Adloway Princess Pennine Lighting Star Cottonwood Hal tom—claiming Price; (all •iiH>; 1 h Six in Finals of PPK Await Eastern Foes DETROIT (AP) -from around the west and midwest won championships Sunday for National Football League Western Division of the annual Ford Motor Co. punt, pass and kick competition. These six will meet six from the Eastern Division at the NFL playoff bowl in Miami January The winners, by class: 8 -year-old, Lonnie Oleniniczak, De corah, Iowa; 9-year-old, Mike Marshall, Buffalo Grove, 111.; 10-year-old, Blake Sartini, gas, Nev,; 11-year-old, Bobby Ledbetter, Moline, 111.; 12-year-old, Jay Bender, Pella, Iowa; Bruce Carlson, Great Falls, Mont. a pre season exhibition game. m MITJULS 1 No. 1 Copper. 4. .. ib. 50* No. 2 Copper.....,. * ib. 45* Brass ............ A £' 2S$ Radiators ...... •.. ib. 25* Aluminum ........ lb. 8* Batteries "SSS&8* Steel - Cast-Junk Cars Sav* money on used auto parts Pontiac Scrap Co. 4-16-3 14-34-0 Yards penalized Col—Walsh 15 i (pass fallad "ftr kick) (Buck” kick)'" i pass from Hayden: ss from Haydtn (Buck Col—Andarson 2 run (Haney kick) Col—Safety Hayden tackled In end zi Col—Andarson 3 run (Hanoy kick) For SKI-D00 It’s CRUISE OUT 63 E. Walton -Pontiac FE 8-4402 135 Branch Hoastt. GENERAL'S FINESTI SLP WINTER CLEAT • FIRST LINE* QUALITY Not a second or third Una ttra. • 4-PLY NYGEN® NYLON CORD o DEEP DURAGEN* TREAD RUBBER... Thousands of gripping edgesl • CONTOURED SHOULDER DESIGN... ONLY •aeh,slzo *Thire Is no Industry-wide I 6.50 x 13 standard for tlras. First tubolesa Una refers only to Ganaral'i blackwall, line Of tlrsa. plus »1.79 Fad. fx. Tax. ED WILLIAMS 451 S. SAGINAW PHONE FE 2-8303 si' srr.rWip T0YJ And Look at These 5avi«ss .. / TELEVISION Jf.ATAAtf tk) ^84** -Sw Z1*C*l.a-Q4a*«*. H\t* Saw iio'i" SACK MAWlAtVK ZO Cot_DA-nUntAiA IZ." CoUO. SHAxP 2.1S& Sa«« 30^ KELVINATOft 3C*Si^OUlK RSPklfc. I-ONL/ .......Virf 32<|«'W DUUHaiAiHCR JfEC/AL <*IS«I^' RAEtlO-S Multi -6a«o- Aai-f ffl -ftn ALL /flcroAoui fteiutwo file. Cuaiaijc* . FREE TURKEY With £AcM &VMUA V/Acovm, cuAMta fa«m BIKES Svkk Firfball. ni'iM^e cHos TAHDcm BttfC Z.-oA»ty m£5 5* fig LMHISO CHANC6-0U6R.S owuhtks - Fn*%r»x UAX's..........-......If^fTAX Portabix STEREO taps mm li)0SKf 0A» noV- flV- tArnenks Ftornffl#/A!CLV0,A^_LFRems tAm - Y.------!—fc&Lgp----------1 swarmed over an\ American .. /i;:. \ /. exhibition here with their feelings on display. . ! "Many thanks for making a fairy tale come true with your; Apollo 11 and 12," said one!, Muscovite writing in a book of, impressions placed near the exit of the “Education-U.S.A.” j exhibit in Sokolnikl Park. the U.S. State Department, attracted ap average 10,000 persons daily when it opened Nov. 12. . Anchorage Gets 2-Inch Snowfall, White Christmas Said another, ANCHORAGE, Alaska (AP) * I— It looks like Alaska's largest ‘Come here i ^ wiU **ave 8 WM*® Christ-. . mas after all. more often so we can get to . . „ . ........—..................! Anchorage, usually ankle- deep in snow this time of year, had no snow through last week, and residents feared the city would have the first snowless "YOUR HEALTH" SEVEN DANGER SIGNALS 1. Recurring headaches 5 NarvOUI tendon and/ 2. Nock pain or "crick" or dizziness 3. Grating and pepping 6. General body mutcla noise whin turning tension h*a‘1 7. Pain between 4. Backache or leg pain shoulder blades 'WARNING If any of those‘symptoms persist CALL YOUR CHIROPRACTOR Christmas in more than 10 years. The concern reached such! proportions Saturday that Mayor George Sullivan and Borough Chairman John Asplund issued a joint resolution naming Monday “Think Snow Day.” However, any more snow will be a bonus. The Weather Bureau reported two inches of snow fell at the Anchorage International Airport Sunday. 1028 Joslyn Ave., FE 2-0111 BIG FEATURES 'Die'theme was edt^ation, but an American moon rock and film about the Apollo 11 mission were the big features for most Muscovites. 'Please organise hibition of your space efforts so we can learn more about the U.S. space program. We know so little about it,” wrote o Russian in the visitors' book. ★ * ★ Not all remarks written in the book were laudatory. “Yankee out of Vietnam,’ was all “A group of coal miners! from the Donbas,” wrote. A group of Leningrad sailors used the opportunity to criticize President Nixon and “many senators who are heating the A American working clash badly.’’ J Another person made spelling corrections and advised the sailors, “You’d better learn how write.” ) MOST FAVORABLE But nine out Of 10 remarks were favorable. According h Thomas Craig of Seattle, Wash, director of the e $ ,h i b i t i o n. “We’ve had great success hi Moscow.” “There is a tremendous thirst for books here,” Craig said. With taste . an, . SEVEN STOR Whiskey Scotch Lightness Canadian Quality A Smooth American Blend 86 PROOF $2»5 $452 $1286 All Taxes included BlEnOED WHISKEY, 86 PROOF 60% GRAIN NEUTRAL SPIRITS, g60DERHAM l WORTS LTD., PEORIA, ILL. Sees Weird Dress of Public Killing Gimmick of Comics By EARL WILSON NEW YORK—“Milton Berle’s funny clothes wouldn’t getj laughs today—not even his dresses,” Comedienne Fannie Flagg said. Normhl people dress so wierdly that they’re killing comedy. Fannie had been walking along frantic West 57th St. to the Russian Tea Room to meet me and had encountered a man with a pony tail. “Men have found out,” she said , i“that it’s great to have long hair till it . in your food. Then you got to put it in a * ★ ★ Fannie said this was on her mind as took off for Toronto to do a Bobbie Gentry special—wearing her special ear plugs for plane trips. She can’t stand to hear the plane’s motors. On-one trip from Chicago to NY, she was very happy, not hearing the plane motors, till arrival when a stewardess said, “Thank yon for being so calm and cool smiling all the time.” “Calm and cool about what?” Sort of an emergency landing in Boston. Everybody was . terrified but Fannie who thought everything was fine and was smiling away at one and all. Fannie, who’s from Alabama and only in her mid-20’s, I puzzled Hollywood recently making her first movie, “Five Easy Pieces,” dressing normally. “If you don’t dress like an Indian princess today, you’re j a weirdo,” she said. “I finally got money to buy some i clothes—and everybody else drops out and starts wearing ' rags.” THE MIDNIGHT EARL ... Peggy Cass, who’ll replace Maureen Stapleton in “piazh Suite” Jan. 5, Ahowed off her new figure—15 lbs. trimmer . . . Harriet Ames- Christmas gift to her brother, Ambassador Walter Annenberg: A nutria fur coat bought from her dx-son-in-law, furrier Dap Grossman ... Rod Steiger, back from Moscow, was at Mykonos with pretty Kouia Papageorge, dtr. of a Greek music publisher. > A midtown hotel hushed up the story when a male guest crept along an eighth floor ledge to get into the adjoining room1 of a female guest.. .. Frankie Laine, who sold his interest in an auto dealership, will open a dealership in boats near San Diego, j ★ # ★ TODAY’S BEST LAUGH: “I can’t understand,” writes Art Paul, “why cops, use nightsticks to disperse a crowd. AU they: have to do is start selling tickets to the policemen’s ball,” j WISH I’D SAID THAT: Richard Brooks’ film “Happy Ending,” about a crumbling marriage, has this line: “Np one asks a woman why she married—only why she hasn’t.” t REMEMBERED QUOTE: “An optimist is a woman who mistakes a bulge for a curve.”—Ring Lardner. { EARL’S PEARLS: Taffy Tuttle figured out what to do with1 her old miniskirt—she’s making a lampshade out of it. i A TV executive said the Apollo 12 moon shot got lower TV ratings than the Apollo 11 shot, “and now they’re thinking of1 canceling the program.” That’s earl, brother. . (Publisher s-Hell Syndicate) guess we've lost about one-third: of the books bn display.” | /** * * * , “They are ail tremendously! interested in that’s going cm in' the United States*, particularly in ordinary things such sis' salaries, prices,” said Xenia Ordovsky, 26, of Loa Angeles, erne of 21 young Americans on Craig’s staff. All of them speak fluent Russian. They man the exhibit, demonstrate U.S.| teaching techniques and answer! the visitors’ questions. The exhibition, which closed Dec.. 3, will travel to Baku, Tashkent and Novosibirsk during 1970. ' * . ★ * ' In addition to the moon rock; and tiie Apollo 11 film, the1 ‘ s‘ ■ were attracted by| closed-circuit television systems demonstrating teaching techni-l ques, including one showing the teaching of languages. The exhibition drew morej than 150,000 EVERY NITE - SUNDAY 12 to 6 SHOP TIL Hlv 2455 Elizabeth Lato Bd. 3 Block*, West of Pontiac Mall Choose from' ' 3,000 1701$ in Cental?’* Big 232-Page DISCOUNT CATALOG WITH AMAZING VALUES FREE CATALOG USE YOUR MASTER CHARGE OR BANKARD PLENTY OF FREE PARKING LWKCJ 108 N. SAGINAW ST. - Downtown Pontiac - CALL FE 3-7114 OPEN 9:30 am to 9 pm DAILY Until CHRISTMAS! Everyone Can Use Appliance Gifts Come to WKC (or BIG SAVINGS on SUNBEAM APPLIANCES '‘R/teofeku. Reg. $14.88 $1 088 SAVE $2 I £ , Model AP63 percolator keeps coffee serving warm automatically. QtUllbuUH. 4-S&C4. *13OvttiAA, Reg. «7.«S / SAVE $6.07 Model AT90 toasts 4 slices at the same time as you like It. Qu/sium. TW&fck. . -UouuL Reg. $9.88 $Q SAVE $1 O . Model H mixer with speeds for any mixing chore. Beater ejector too. Qvusitem, CzitibuG C(Mt OfttOWL Reg. SI7 88 $1 C88 SAVE $2/ // J J Opens any tlze, shape can automatically. Also sharpens knives and scissors. SHOP WKC FOR OTHER SUNBEAM APPLIANCES AT COMPARABLE SAVINGS! PARK FREE in our lot at rear of store or l-Hr. in downtown parking mall-Just hate ticket stumped at cashier’s office EASY CREDIT at WKC — 90 Days Same ns Cash or the Your Master Charge Credit Card l HAS YOUR: WIFE, HUSBAND, DOCTOR, KIDS. boss, MIRROR! *?*CLOTHES CONSCIENCE MMhtold you to - W SHAPE UP? Then WHY NOT ACT NOW? DECEMBER SPECIAL! BEGINNERS INTRODUCTORY COURSE lOmnflO THAT’S THE TOTAL COST. I?*!!™*™11*?*1 f°R mis introductory ACCELERATED CRASH WEIGHT COURSE. Ceeiplele «!*« physique analysis: c.mpi.,. unef all lacihti.il Beginner,' clone, Mart dalle Al MEN-W0MEN! ACT MOW - CALL MOW OR STOP BY TODAY FOR A FREE TOUR AMD PRIVATE FIGURE OR FITNESS ANALYSIS. 682-5040 3432 HIGHLAND RD. (M-59) All NoNday FITNESS and FORM PROGRAMS INCLUDE: • Individual Course, under The Guidance of Courteous In,tractor, * ■*>sn Equipment to .Reduce, Build, Firmand Tone e Whirl-f00.1 ? £nv?re t>™»m? Booths e Redwood Finnish Sauna's e Swiss Fqc«q Machine * Mechanical Massage • Private Sunning f Relaxation Lounge • Pnvat* Showers. Become Healthier, Happier, Thinner at HOLIDAY HEALTH SPAS Created for discriminating men and women who like to be trim.., healthy... younger lookinig* SHOP LATE AT HBS Hudson’* Downtown is now open from 9:15 a.m. to 8:30 p.m. Monday through Friday: Saturday* till 6. All branch?* open 6 night* a week, from 9:30 a.m. to 9:30 p.m. Mondavi-Saturdays. Time to think of trees and trim You'll find a foreat lull of liter* real Christma* trrra of all sizes and kinds at HBS now. Plus, all ‘you'll nerd to trim them from glittery ornamenta to in* door-outdoor lights. Even room , and table decoration*. Down* * town, Westland, Lincoln Park, Dearborn and also at Madison. Say “charge If” It's the easy way to gift shop, with a convenient Hudson's Charge Account with option term*. Or, use our Extended, Pay* -ment Plan for major purchases. Shop by phone any day, any hour9 dial 964-4444 Hudson’s linos art open 24 hours a day, 7 days a week for your shopping convenience. You can even call in your order after the children are asleep. Our automatic order taker will serve you after store hours. Suburbanite* ran still call toll-free during our regular Downtown store hours. If you can’t carry it Hudson's delivers to 19 Michigan counties and Toledo, Ohio, at no charge for purchase of 15 or more. Add 50* for any purchase under 85. Also add 50* for any C.O.D. under 830. It's t6ytime at HBS Find all sorts of stocking stuff* er surprises, battery and mechanical toys, game* for all ages and much, mote. Downtown, Northland, Eastland, Westland, Pontiac, Oakland, Lincoln Park, Madison and Dearborn Budget. 9 Hudson’s Budget* Stores to serve you Downtown, on Woodward Ave* nue; Northland, 8 Mi.-North-western; Eastland, 8 Mi.-Kelly Road; Westland, Warren-Wayne Road; Pontiac, Elis. Lake-Telegraph; Oakland, 1-75 and 14 Mi-Road; Lincoln Park, Fort and Emmons; Madison, John R and '12 Mil* Road; Dearborn Store, Michigan Ave. it Greenfield. — ■ | _____THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, DECEMBER ysfcj, . ' .< , li JM'V''■' /* ifelt i ■* ii f:*■ ■. ' • * , - r . • /. '/ : ; jj ' • 'Sr*.?- HBS gifts that look expensive now sale-priced for less than $10 SALE... water lily print SALE... our imported SALE... gold-tone towel ensemble tablecloth set framed mirrors Gift ensemble in cotton terry includes face doth, hand, bath towel. Pink, blue, chestnut or gold. Bath towel.. 1.66 Hand towel. 96* Facecloth ........................46* Formal and ever-so elegant for entertaining so sociably. White, aqua, pink or gold cotton-rayon damask. Set includes 1 tablecloth (58x88) and 8 napkins. Giftably sale priced now! Period frames with premium quality glass. Reflect your fashionable taste in oval (17x29) or rectangle (20x 29). Just the right accent touch for nearly any decor. Gift savings priced! SALE ... Italian car robe in many plaids, handy A great gift for travel, camping, sporting. Wonderful for cottage* or students, too! Ih its own bag—ita haqdy qishion (those vinyl seats do get chillyv don’t ' / , they!).^oeasilycarried,Plaid;o£ryfl.1>lue. green or)>rowgi.Thick an^ warm. 50* l reprocessed wobl—2^6 rayon—j20^ *crylic—5£ cotto)i. Measure* 55x72 in. Unont, Badding, Lamp*, Draptry Material* and Slipcov*n-?Hudton'* Budget Storti— Downtown, Northland, Eastland, Pontiac, Oakland, Lincoln Park, Madiion, Dtarborn Hudson’s Budget Store 4 200 Gallons A Year—And It's Legal Pontiac Press Photos by Rolf Winter Fermentation Bung—Just A Cork And A Tube—Assures Against Vinegar Froth On Top Means There's Wine In The Making—But It Takes A While n . m TlTtt POVTTAf! PTTES5S. MONDAY, DECEMBER 16, 1069 Bubble, Toil and Trouble —Homemade Wines a First Step: Crush Fruit In Blender Or Grinder Add Sugar, Hot Water To The Crushed Fruit (EDITOR’S NOTE - One of .par copy editors,, port-ly Ralph Kingzett, had this corking-good story bottled up hslde him. It just goes to show that the life of a copy editor can be rosy (or is that rose), Anyway, he bubbled up the story, so here it is.) There’s a man on our street Who has purple feet » —Little Old Winemaker, Me By RALPH KINGZETT When people first hear , that I make wine, they usually make some comment about tbe possibility of an explosion in my basement. It’s a common reaction. But there’s nothing dangerous—or Illegal—about it. In'fact, you can get a free license from the Alcohol, Tobacco Tax and Firearms Division of the U.S. Internal Revenue Service. It permits' you to make 200 gallons .a year—for home use only. ★ ★ Sr You don’t need fruit presses or barrels or anything like that to; produce drinkable wine. All it takes is a few gallon or five-gallon glass jugs—and a great deal of patience. And you don’t even need fresh grapes. It’s a common • misconception that only grapes make good wine. But I’ve known people who have made wine from rhubarb, dandelions, cranberries and even wheat. RIPENING PROCESS Basically, wine is a ; fermented beverage. In fermentation, the natural sugar in fruit is converted to alcohol and carbon dioxide. It’s a natural continuation of the ripening process. Wine is hailed as a boon ‘ to the digestive r processes. There are many' references to it in ancient literature. ★ ★ ■ But enough of the pitch. Yes, you CAN make wine at home. You have, or can get, everything you really need as a beginner with practically no effort. One thing, though. Most people will find the flavor of wine made from undiluted Juice a bit too full-bodied. A large can of juice or nectar, or a quart of fruit pulp, per gallon makes a good, tasty "wine. ALCOHOL CONTENT Addition of two pounds—eight cups —of sugar a gallon produces a wine of about the same alcohol content as that available on the shelves of the friendly neighborhood party store. If you plan to work from fruit—the canned or frozen variety is suitable, too—first mash it to a pulp* in a blender or food grinder. - Sr a * Then- pour the juice or pulp into- the; jug. Dissolve the sugar in hot water and pour it in oh top—or you can pour the sugar In first, then add the water. Don’t' fill the jug too full at first; it, will bubble out. Grape stains on my basement ceiling are mute testimony to the fact that I have goofed. PINCH OF YEAST If you are Using canned or frozen fruit or juice, a pinch of powdered yeast must be added to start the fermentation. Fresh fruit usually has enough natural yeast. To keep out dust, stretch a piece of cloth held down by a rubber band over the mouth of the jug. In three to five days, the mixture will start to bubble vigorously. This may continue a week or so. As the bubbling slows down, you can add hot water to bring up the level of the liquid. After the bubbling slows, there is them possibility pretty remote, in a jug with a small mouth — that thi wine will turn to vinegar. Contact with the air will do this. '•* ★ To keep air out, you can make a fermentation bung. All you need is a cork, available at practically any store selling vacuum bottles, and a length of plastic tubing. The tubing you can get at most pet stores, in the aquarium supplies area. Punch a hole in the cork, push the tubing through and seal the opening with a caulk. Aquarium sealer is a good one. * After the caulk dries take the cloth off the jug, insert the cork and put the other end of the tqbe in water. - That way the gas, can bubble out.and the air doesn’t 1 get in.fi|' &&: J!|, Depending on the kind of fruit, fermentation will last one Ion two months. But don’t figure you’re all set to atari drinking. HARP ON TUMglY For one thing, the wine probably will be pretty cloudy yet. For another —and tide is far more important.— there’s a lot of fairly Indigestible acid in new wine; hard on the tummy. Tib*e is the answer. Tr •' Cork up the jug apd just let the wine sit for two weeks, loosening the cork every day to let out the gas as it builds up. Then filter through cheesecloth into another jug and let it sit for two more weeks. Filter again and let set for a third two weeks. j] A i ,' jk . ;■ % Then, it’s drink time. But there’s one word of caution: Try the wine both chilled and at room temperature. You will find it makes quite a difference in flavor, and this will help you decide how you like it best. Mrs. Kingzett Shows Off The Finished Product THE PbNtlAC PRESS, MONDAY, DECEMBER 15, I960 BAZLEY'S EARLY BIRD SPECIALS BEEF LIVER 39; ROUND STEAK* 99S 3 MARKETS to SERVE YOU BOWNTOWN DRAYTON 1220 PERRY In Wrestling Career Dr. Sam a Good Guy' COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -Dr. Samuel H. Sheppard, once convicted and then exonerated In theslaying of his first wife,I has begun a neW career as a wrestler—one of the “good guys? in the ring. | It is the fruition of an old passion for the former Cleveland' osteopath. ! Sheppard, now 45 and balder! than when he went to prison 15 years ago, has shown a lifelong enthusiasm for sports. His manager" and tag-team partner, George Strickland, said Sheppard was an excellent amateur wrestler in his high school and college days. WINNING RECORD | In the four months since he took up wrestling professionally, Sheppard and Strickland have-'compiled a 31-2 record. I Sheppard wrestles pounds, 20 pounds heavier than' when he entered Ohio Penitentiary in 1955 on a life sentence Aussie Troops Toldto'Strike' for second-degree murder in the slaying of his pregnant wife, Marilyn' Soon''afterwards, because of a previous interest in. sports cars,; Sheppard became aii instructor! | in automobile mechanics. He also played basketball, took up| | tumbling, worked out with, j weights and refereed wrestling matches in prison. During his 10 years in prison, Sheppard wrote several articles on sports for the Ohio Penitentiary News. One poo-pooed a notion that sports are dangerous. LACKED ROOTS Since being acquitted at his second trial in 1966, Sheppard hasn’t established the community roots he had. as a successful j neurosurgeon in Bay Village, a I suburb of Cleveland. His second marriage to Ar-iane Tebbenjohanns two days after he was freed from prison,! lasted four years. In December 1968 she filed for divorce. The Ohio Medical Board returned Sheppard’s right to practice osteopathy in December 1967, and four months later he Joined the staff of a Youngstown hospital. In | September 1968, Sheppard and the hospital were named in two wrongful deaths suits in which survivors seek ov^t1 21 million^ He resigned '1 from the hospital in December 1 of that year without giving any reason. Sheppard’s next move was to Gahanna, a Columbus suburb, but his medical office there was iopen only a short time. Then he moved his practice to Strickland’s $40,000 home in the wealthy Columbus suburb of Bexley. DRAWING CARD From the start of his professional wrestling career, Sheppard has been billed under his own name. “There couldn’t be a better drawing card,’’ said Strickland. I On Oct. 30 Sheppard disclosed in Columbus he and Colleen Strickland, 20, his wrestling partner’s daughter, had been married in Mexico Oct. 21. j He said he fell in love with Colleen because “She is beautiful, modest and has class." “She has been brought up on wrestling," he said. “She enjoys it, and we enjoy sports cars and facing them." KEEPING IN SHAPE-Dr. Sam Sheppard (left), once convicted and then exonerated in the slaying of his first wife, works out with weights with his wrestling partner George Strickland in Columbus, Ohio. Shep- pard, who continues his medical practice, has turned professional wrestler. He and Strickland operate as a team. Sheppard recently married Strickland’s 20-year-old daughter, Colleen. , MELBOURNE (AP) - Representatives of 32 Australian trade unions today urged the 3,300 Australian conscripts in Vietnam to lay down their arms. At a special meeting, the unions called on the soldiers to “mutiny against the heinous barbarism perpetrated in our name upon innocent men, women and children in Vietnam." They also appealed to young workers to refuse to register for the draft and urged all workers to participate in a nationwide i strike next April 17 to protest! | Australia’s part in the Vietnam' I War. BUY WITH CONFIDENCE AT BILL PETRUSHA & SONS! FRIGIDAIRE REFRIGERATOR “REST BUYS” "Stuffin** sfireddies' Polyfoam bits for stuffing animal toys, cuddly dolls, pillow gifts, SEW A GIFT OF LOVE! GIANT SIZE BAGS 72-INCH WIDE NYLON NET ° • Trim a package • Make an angel • Design a tree • Ruffle an apron 20 COLORS empty holiday uses Rcr. 29c Yard 72-INCH WIDE FELT great for making toys to stuff. Christmas cut-outs colorful package trims. colors — you need it, we have it. Including red, green, and white special m «*&**#> B BEDSPREADS QUILTED BEAUTIES • PRINTS • SOLIDS All first quality fabrics, workmanship . I ALUES TO $24.95 TWIN OR FULL SIZE CM Each OPEN 9:30 AM f Phone 682-3930 THE'PONTIAC MALL - TELEGRAPH at ELIZABETH LAKE ROAD ■ gives you lowest prices. We buy In sufficient quantity to attain the maximum discount and wo e savings come to where all the Frigidaire Happenings are... RO DOWN PAYMENT • 36 M0NTBS TO PAY! WITH APPROVED CREDIT OPEN Every Evening Until Nine TEL-HUR0N SHOPPING CENTER Pontiac _______________FE 3-7879 %%Jtpej7MkoiS-$w4- PLENTY OF FREE PARKING 1550 UNION LAKE ROAN Union 4-akc____ 380-6286_____ m C—10 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY,DECEMBER 15, 1909 CCASIONALLY, SOME OF OUR WANT AD RESULTS EVEN AMAZE US RIGHT HERE AT THE PRESS, We expect marvelous happenings and we expect them to come abouLrapidly BUT SOMETIMES ACTION" LEAVES ON WEST HURON THE PONTIAC PRESS To Place Your Want Ad Dial 334-4981 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, DECEMBER 15, 1969 |peaths in Pontiac,Neighboring Areas with burial in Oakland Hills Memorial Cemetery, Novi. I Panama Chief,Independence- YouthCharged in Theft Ion Trip, Gets Overthrown PANAMA CITY (UPI) - /City police have charged an Officers said they spotted Independence Township youth tires missing from cars in an with larceny after his arrest outdoor lot on routine patrol! early today at Spartan Dodge, at 1:31 a.m. today and investi-j 855 Oakland. gated. They said they traced * * * tracks in the snow leading from | Thomas F. Burke, 19, of the stripped vehicles to a cur RENT, SEtL, TRADE... USE PONTIAC PRESS WANTAD8I M Csyin. A. 'Earl «• Pay*°n Ark’ andfour brothers. ^^cpSL'ij Tilley ami h trin will not ho Mr. Payton, a retired Kaiser-land Mrs; Jess Middleton and]anowed to return! Frazer automobile manufactur-1 Mrs. Alice Goldsworthy, all of * * * 5* e*^ve. Ji^y“ierday. j Waned Lake; four brothers, Col. Ama do Sanjur, third In Lutheran Church, Pontiac, and SesbyteriL ^urch to iXl w“t SjfT* “^command of the 5,000-man na- a charter member of the Quick 2am 'w nJ'fl Mfdleto,!> aU of|tiona> 8uard- said, “It is true is-. w«r«n A SewtoB Circle i c.Zm.i..,. — - Wailed Lake; two s i s t er s , ;and Gen. Torrijos is in Mexico. #"•'W A' D 1 •»* survived B, her hus-hte*! R tobbte fgZ1***?** !W **?•«. "»« «• J"*** «»** Home, with burial • • second and third ih\command. Surviving besides her husband toe a son, Harold S. of Iowa Sty, Iowa; three sisters; a bunal ™ Htjca Cemetery, toothor, Richard L Moore of Mrs- RaPson died Saturday. Pontiac; and three She was a member of Grace grandchildren. Vince L. Shrum jService for Mrs. Warren A.'band. (Marian N.) Doty, 87, of 38. Candlelight Lane will be 3 p.m. Wednesday at Richardson - Bird! . . Funeral Home, Milford, with' Service for Vince L. Shrum,' dremation at White Chapel of 541 Stirling will be 11 a.m. i Memorial Cemetery. Tuesday at Sparks-Grifftoj Mrs. Mrs. Doty died Saturday. j Funeral Home with burial jg Me is survived by a Rerry Mount Park Cemetery, daughter, Mrs. David L. (Viola) j shrum died Saturday. He Vivian of Union Lake; a soa, was a retired employe of Pon-Ted of .Seymour, Tex.; two tiac Motor Division, brothers; two sisters; and two He ls survived by his father, grandchildren. j Walte!“ of.Walnut Ridge, Ark.; a 8 son, David V. at home; three Willard E. Harroun j brothers, including Norman of ' both of Walled Lake; and Cur- family now.” I' ry’s grandmother, Mrs. Faglenejj^^ ly Hills, Calif. 'Charles F. Payton of Birming- IB ZXZ*!™ CHARGE ham; a brother; nine grand- T „rp _ d h i s* vr^e at ’' Sanjur said Col. Ramiro 2aSldr!!nnd *“”* ***' grandmother, Mrs. Frfnk Hale S;,vara- chief °f th.® «®nera] grandchildren. ®f s T ’ staff, was now in charge and ..... _ , P > • that he, Sanjur, was second in Lillian Pemberton i ui^„ command. “But we are only going up in LOOMFIELD Position, not in rank,” Sanjur Mrs. L. Clare Utley AVON TOWNSHIP - Service for Mrs. Lillian B. Pemberton,! 68, of 1480 Walton will be 1 H . TV ■ „n , p.m. tomorrow at the WiUiam|^?f®_^ adys. 69» 01 R. • Potere Funeral Home. Ro-!!1,1^ Telegraph "illbe “ a m-Chester, with burial in LakevilleWednesday at the Sparks-Grif-Cemetery fin Funrral Home, Pontiac, with Mrs. Pemberton died Satur-“ Bristo1 Cemetery> Torrijos left Panama on Pan Am flight 88 to Mexico Saturday night with several aides, allegedly to attend a showing of| ------- -I horses. Pontiac; and two sisters, in-!day. She was a cook at Haven M‘ SSfaJl-,„ntnr.QV I Sanjur said Torrijos would not Service for Willard E. Har-, eluding Mrs. Sylvia Halcom of Sanitarium, Avon Township. ~7',. ' be allowed back in Panama, rmto, 65, of 69 McKinley will be' Pontiac. I Surviving are two daughters,lr^,vin8^®ason'1fiarun Torrijos had been in powerl 3 p.m. tomorrow at Huntooni . Mrs. Helen Henry of Pontiac jV .. „ lesion, .j1™.’ . a since he and high-ranking of- Funeral Home, with burial taj Howard Clark and Mrs. Lucille Schatz of Lake d r’ ^ ‘ G„?,d Tu.cker|ficers overthrew President perry Mount Park Cemetery. (Orion; a sister; seven grand- °L..Bloomn. . HlUs; t?roiAmulfo Arias on Oct. 11, 1968.1 Mr Harroun died Saturday.! PONTIAC TOWNSHIP—Serv-children; and six great-grand- ro"Jer®.’1a sls^er; and f*ve Arias had been in power only 111 He was retired from Chevrolet«“ Howard Qark, 91, of children. grahdchildren. days. Gear and Axle Division,^ Carohne wUl be 11 *jn. .Wednesday at Harold R. Davis Surviving are U. rtle, ^ ORION _ Roy E.; three daughters, Mrs. MaryiQ^ Qemetery. Raines, 63, of 675 Central died Eager of Pontiac, Mrs. Shirleyl Mr dark' - retired dairv yesterday. His body is at Al-1 Westmoreland of Culleoka.L^ Qark’ dairy ^ Funeral HomI j !. nr*Ann and Mrc RnVlPTlA HovAf ~ J . r Roy R. Raines Ezra H. Robinson i^lAussiesFindLinkpuperjetHas i in Flea Evolution j Minor Accident ■HI , , I vbslbtuhv len’s PunerSl Home. Mrs Royiene Heyer Su^tog is^oTsX, Mrs. of Mnwaukee, Wis.; two ■ sons 'Mabel of Minden City. Sgt. Willard E. Harroun Jr. of, ________ ru Leonard Wood Mo and M Anrlr-aw A * OXFORD-Service for Ezra MELBOURNE, Australia, _ ^ iSttar’roun’ ofFt] Andrew A- Gamrat H. Robinson, 63, of 5 Jersey wUl,(AP) - The world’s oldest flea RENTON, Wash. (UPI)—The Brace NC I TROY — Andrew A. Gam- be 2 P m- Wednesday at the and the missing link in flea evo-|R0eing Co. blames a crew Also’ surviving are five rat, 50, of 5801 Wright died Bossardet Funeral Home with •«««* has been discovered, ac-Hscateulation for the first in-, brothers, Claude ol Devlson and yestertay. His body la at the burial In Oxford Cemetery. ** *^li%^^I^^Ser'«° ZLteT’ F»«d, Earl, n*. and Jack. ,11 •*» Hfane. | Mr. Robbma, died y^te^yj^ M^lfa_,g_Mustml .of Pontiac; five sisters, Mrs; M „ He was employed at Bellaire Della Justin of Lake Orion M Mrs- JosePh Jaconefte Service Station, Oxfofd. Surviving are four sons, m*™** Hnd Monday, said Dplhprt nf Ovfnrri Uprhprt nf "W flea> wWch scientists dubbed, -- , - rWt eng ^ of Milwaukee and James of mdUon years ago dinging to cowling. + ^ + People like you... people who want better things to happen Christmas morning... ASK GAC to play Santas helper. ■oil IPnTl loans up to Roll KssEI 3100a GAC FINANCE CORPORATION PONTIAC 3444 W. Highland Road UNION LAKE 8260 Cooley Lake Rood J The plane touched down short of the Renton Airport Saturday, knocking loose one set of landing gear, part of a wing flap R,Z r’v "f n'r/jTi Z (a" infectivwous marsupial).! No.one was injured when the °S Measurement of the super-|Plane skidded 2,500 feet down Mrs. Altha' Meyers, Mrs. Jennyl AVON TOWNSHIP'— Service Crandall, Mrs. B irden a for Mrs. Joseph (Theresa) Ja-Jaworskl and Mrs. D.onn a conette, 67, of 525 Great Oaks McCurdy, all Of Pontiac; 13 will be 10 a.m. Wednesday at grandchildren; and orie great- St. Vincent de Paul Church, grandchild. Pontiac, with burial by Donel-,— ------ — Measurement of the suner- son-Johns Funeral Home, Pon-j Mabel Bagley of Signal Hills, n . focgjii7P*'be P^ane was 0,J a two-mile size of today’s bandicoot fleas. | flight .from Seattle’s Boeing I The fossilized flea was™, when thef landing gear unearthed at Coonwarra, east of a “ank at tae end °* the 5,000-foot runway. 'Pontiac. I grandchildren; and eight great- Service for former Clarkston a Rosary service will be 8 grandchildren, resident Mrs. John P. (Emma p.m. Tuesday at the funeral B.) McNeil, 87, of Rogers City (home. j Fred A. Skibowski wffl be 1 p.m. Wednesday at the Mrs Jaconette died Saturday. . .. . Lewis E Wint Funeral HomeJ ShewasamemberofStVin- OXFORD - Service for Fred (Melbourne, by a umvmitystu-Qarkston, with burial in Ot-(cent de Paul Catholic Church. A- Skibowski, 78, of 555 Pontiac dent and proved that fleas tawa Park Cemetery. Mrs. Jaconette, with her hus-iwas scheduled for this afternoon Mrs. McNeil died Saturday, jband, founded and operated Joe Bossardet FHineral Home She was the former owner of & Sons Market at 469 Orchard |w‘tb burial in Paint Creek Cem-McNeil’s Market, Clarkston. iLake in Pontiac. |etery, Goodison. Surviving are two sons, Rus-! Surviving are five sons, Or-sell D. of Presque Isle and lando of Waterford Township, Percy W. of Pompano Beach, iMario G. of Pontiac, Paul A. of (Charles of Birmingham and Fla.; a daughter, Mrs. Harry (Los Angeles, Calif., Rudolph A. peorge of Lake Odessa. Mehars of Rogers City; a sis-jof Rochester and Dr. Joseph R. y r , p l ter; a brother; four grandchil- of Birmingham; two brothers; 'jeor9e oun7 dren; and 14 great-grandchil- a sister; and 10 grandchildren. ra0Y — Service for Mrs. dren- t u , . . :George J. (Helen L.) Suhy, 67, I ii-. u— i.entsius iof Bradley wU1 be 9.3o CLARKSTQN — Service for|a.m. Wednesday to Guardian Service 392 Orchard i evolved from something like > mosquitos, said Riek. He said . the fossil was nearly perfect ID,____________ because the superflea probably Mr. Skibowski died Saturday, died of old age. Surviving are two brothers, 7 Dead, 34 Hurt as Bus Topples in Pennsylvania | GAP, Pa. (Jfi — A bus car-! The accident occurred only i two hours after Pan American World Airways accepted! delivery of the first 747 turned over to an airline. | There was no estimate of the I i damage to the plane, which was i {being flown to Renton to j remove test gear and to be j refurbished for delivery to Pan! Am. Leon Noble ____________________________________________ __________ _________ for Leon Nnhlp As Mrs. Hans Tida) Lentsius, 80, | Angel Catholic ^Church, Claw- j 40 Eastern Star lodge IT Z’of 6103 Middle Lake will be'son, with burial by Price Fun-1 members and guests with ljaKe WIU De u „ _ _______* 10„,i« >_i Christmas gifts for residents of home for the aged skidded on ruthers Funeral Home, with E. Wint Funeral Home with Memorial Cemetery, Trby. Yule-Tree Seller Robbed in City 1 Walter Bowling, proprietor at a Christmas tree sales lot, was burial to Ottawa Park Ceme-| Mrs. Suhy died yesterday. M snowy highway Sunday, hit a . .. . j t _d robbed Survivors include her hus- power pole^'and toppled on its of $54 Saturday morning, according to police. burial to Oak Hill Cemetery. Ue ? af?r 2 Mrs. Lentsius died yesterday, band; a son, Ronald Porter of side in a field, killing seven and A fT'!y She was a member of the Es- Flat Rock; a sister; 10 grand- injuring 34. „ „ | p£ mde9dpm y Cen tonian Lutheran Churc*1- „ . . c|“|dren: and four great-grand- The bus was bound from Bowli sald that two men p.m. ana »p.m. Surviving are a son, Hetod children. Philadelphia to the Masonic «, T , t 60» orchard ^Mr. Nobel died Friday o{ Barrie, Ont.; a daughter, , , _ Home of Pennsylvania in !! h d hir^ on the A&H Retired, he-was a member of Mrs. Raymond Suurna of Mrs. Ronald E. Trlley Elizabethtown. i!?L bstensiblv to look over T plan ^d at Crofoot clarkston; another; and two Curry J. Tilley The injured were taken to |£k ’^rchandise One man Elementary School and was a granddaughters. J Lancaster General, Lancaster _hnvwl what Bowline said was PTA crossing guard. ( I COMMERCE TOWNSHIP - Osteopathic and Coatesville f ^^aijber smib-noseri revolv- Surviving are his wife, Erma Fred Moore iServices for Mrs. Ronald E hospitals. Twenty four remained er into his chest and the other, Lee; one daughter, Erma Jean I PONTIAC TOWNSHIP —| (Patricia L.) Tilley, 20, and her! h o s p i t a 1 i z e d . They were lifted his wallet and $54 of sales ofipontlae; five sons, James H. I Fred Moore, 66, of 3455 Primary son Curry J., 2 months, of 1362 reported in fair to poor con-|money from his back pocket, of Indiana Harbor, Ind., Eddie died today. His body is at! Ladd, will b 11 a.m. Wednes-dition. Bowling told police. L. of Seattle, Wash'., and I Harold *• have ticket stamped at cashier's j office. C-r-12 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, DECEMBER 13, 1969 House of / Herod and Jesus—1 Bold Gambit Turns Peril to Power (Editor’s note — This is the horror of the hounds struck 1first in \ time. But its impact was world-I His fist slammed against the wide, its implications were pen- railing, and he turned and eral, not provincial, and it I strode back toward his cabin in therefore should be seen against the stern, the steady, growling its total background in humanr umble of the oars history. The series, beginning reverberating through the thrcfe-with this first part, ‘“The Paum|decked trireme, manned by a of Rome," seeks to offer that,crew of 200 mariners and royal toider perspective.) | guards. ■...I j it it it By GEORGE W. CORNELL I So far, in 15 bloodstained AP Religion Writer Carved figures of the skygod, Zeus, and his offspring god of war, Ares, decorated the prow, of the ship that headed north from Joppa along the coastal: route and then west toward the Isle of Rhodes. King Herod stood at a forward gunnel, pondering his fate. By every omen, he faced summary execution. He had! sided with the wrong Roman in: the struggle for imperial domi-| nion. Yet he had - survived desperate predicaments before, . now he welched the years ot fi8htinS for Power ln SssS —arwra* present plight. ^ ^ (skillfully shifted his alliances Apprehensive, grim-browed, fro"! one “ "***"£JP° his eyes like fiery dart-points in reins °f the wind, he sailed to confront chta.nled. a .OHth _t.Awn the new master of the Roman » * Empire, the lord of the world, jtrai1 for the.m and for him-the emperor Gaius Octavius,'METHODS OF FATHER later titled the revered one,! He had drawn his methods Augustus. from his crafty father, “Divi Filius,” read ln-iAntipater, who himself had scriptions on coins bearing his switched allegiances from name and image. "Son °f p0mpey, the Roman conqueror Gods." And many a temple 0f east, including Jerusalem shrine and crossroads altar, jn gj $£., t0 the rival who called "lares," were dedicated overpowered him, Jufius to the emperor’s worshipped Caesar, under whom Herod first genius. 'was named governor of Galilee ERA OF CULTS and Samaria. The time was the 186th olym* •' With a troop of 200 horsemen piad-an era of many deities and three companies of 2,000 and mystic cults, of the Roman armed footmen, Herod had pantheon of Jupiter, Mars, roved the territory, wiping out Bacchus, Juno, Diana and resistance, terrorizing towns, Venus; and of their Grecian!wreaking carnage on the counterparts, Zeus, A r e s .'rebellious Galilean village of Dionysus, Hera, Artemis and Cana, near Nazreth, home of Aphrodite. Joseph and Mary, where Jesus It also was the age in which would grow to manhood. Jesus was born in Bethlehem of I- ★ * * Judea, under the rule of Herod, j jjerod captured and executed styled “the Great.” the rebel guerrillas led by, * * * Hezekias, and at one point, Herod had set forth across the iowered soldiers in chests to the j sea the year after the forces of outhg o{ mountain caves* us-his confederate, Mark Antony, uag grappling hooks and fire to were crushed by Octavius at thelbrin_ the holdouts into the^pen. HI .. (m 41 UP Hriv-1 ° members—300 of them including i smoke from their tripods andiried Antigonus’ niece, Mlramne, file famed prqtor Cicero—had1 vapors from the c a v e r n s !in the midst of the seige. been'slain by Octavius' troops beneath the temple of \Apollo, muttered their ambiguous in solidifying his control. EQUESTRIANS KILLED The bloodbath Octavius Imposed in shoring up his power also had included 2,000 equestrains, next In rank to. senators, slaughtered by file future emperor, whose later decreee for a tax census brought Mary and Joseph to chants of advice to troubled pilgrims. HEROD SCHEMED In this ancient atmosphere, Herod had .schemed, killed and battled for supremacy over the vital Jewish peninsula, which linked three continents, although he was not Jewish Bethlehem. j himself, but an Idumean from Both Octavius and Antony iArabian areas to the east, feasted Herod in Rome, and] After he had gained ap- joined him in offering sacrifices I POintment as Judean king by Antony and Octavius in Rome, he had returned, marching through Galilee, then southward, pausing to capture Joppa, and then with added] So.Herod determined to play troops supplied by Antony, to R on a straightforward basis of attack Jerusalem. political pracficAlities. * * * j After the (hip docked in the It was a two-year seige, [ great harbor of Rhodes, its en-broken off intermittantly for . trance stiU marked by v : ! V ^ % "j} f ^ W ' • It Whs six, years later that, Antony himself and his Egyp-: tian paramour were driven to! death by Octavius,, the new] emperor, whose unlikely favor King Herod now needed |n order to keep his crown, or even his head. Brooding through the days and nights of his Mediterranean voyage, he had decided on his method. It would have to be bold, Impressive. He would get-nowhere by self-accusing repentance and fawning pleas, after aiding an enemy of the victor. , STRAIGHTFORWARD Mil l HHI'OX Les Hudson’s Christmas Gift to You I COUPON SPECIAL I Regular 59c | | TRUCK-A-BURGER | j WITH THIS COUPON ONLY ^ lOnyQQC | Leslie H. Hudson TRUOK-R-BUltGER on wheels. 14-lb. all beef freshly ground __jer on a 5" toasted bun with mayonnaise, tomato, pickle,1 catsup, onion and Oi m special seasoning. You’ll get all the energy you need for the Holidays with these Delicious Truek-A-Burgert... No Limit.. . Bring Your Friondtl Coupon Expires Wed. Dec. 24,1969 ROCKET RESTAURANTS, Inc. UTS Baldwin Ave., Near Walton farmtriy Winky’t-HOURS,!» A.R. ts IB P.M. in the Temple of Jupiter on the Capitoline hill. forays on neighboring towns, pressed with catapults, battering rams, trenches and towers for bowmen. Altogether, Herod had 11 legions totalling 66,000 foot soldiers and 6,000 cavalrymen in the long struggle- The city put up a stubborn, furious defense. As the ancient historian Josephus puts 11. Judaism’s “whole nation was gathered together" and fought with heroic zeal, its defenders at times striking out in hand-to-hand combat to destroy the bay of Actium in 31 B.C^BP^ . .... . them big Antony and ^"^ women and children. Egypt’s Queen Cleopatra, to ggj ^ Caesar wag *UHerod spat fingering the murdered on the Ides of March, knife at hlsbdt. He once had 44 B.C., Herod had thrown his considered killing Cleopatra lot with the assassins Brutus himself, when she sought to: and Cassius, who named him cajole him to her bed to in- governor of aU Syria, furiate Antony against him. FORCES AUGMENTED He should have slain her, for He bad swept through Antony’s good and his own, or gamarja| his forces augmented better still, set the hounds oniby two legiong of 6 000 men her. ’ [each and 1,000 horsemen sup- SUPPORTED ANTONY [plied by the Romans. Subsequently, however, when Octavius turned against the carousing Antony who was moonstruck by the voluptuous Cleopatra in Egypt, Herod supported his close patron, Antony—only to see Antony’s and Cleopatra’s sluggish fleet weapons, defeated at Actium by the swift, ROMANS CRASH GATES small warships of Octavius. i gut the Romans rebuilt them, I Now, Herod’s crown—and his i and finally crashed into the life—hung In the balance. , ! city, ravaging it, unleaching a All depended on yesterday’s: rampage of killing in streets, foe, Octavius, the new Augustus houses and crowds. “No pity Caesar, who was still in Greece was taken ejth€r 0n infants or at Rhodes from whence his | aged, nor the weaker sex/* j victory celebrations echoes! Josephus says, through the empire. j .