The Weather • / U. S. WMtlur SurMu Furtcail Chance of Flurries Riga S) , THE PONTIAC PRESS Home Edition VQJi. 127 — NO. 256 ★ ★ ★ ★ PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1969 -60 PAGES First LetterDraw Sept. 14 No.1 in Draft Lottery BY THE NUMBERS — John C. Marienau, representing Nebraska in the Selective Service’s Youth Advisory Committee, takes his turn last night in picking a birthdate number for the 1970 draft lottery.' Several young advisers refused to participate in the drawing, and about a score of demonstrators protested peacefully outside. * ; , WASHINGTON (AP) - Men from 19 to 26 years old born on Sept. 14 who have last names starting with the lettefJ will be the first ones drafted next month under the nation’s first Selective Service lottery in a generation. In less than an hour and a half Monday night, all 365 days of the year plus Leap Year’s Feb. 29 were drawn at random from a big glass laboratory jar at Selective Service headquarters here. The order in which they emerged, rolled up in blue plastic capsules, determines the order in which men with matching birthdays will be called for the< draft next year—or, for those now deferred or exempt—in any future year whop they become “1A." . Rep. Alexander Pirnie of New York, ranking Republican on a House subcommittee on the draft, drew the first date from the jar shortly after 8 p.m. UNOFFICIAL ADVISERS Then a succession of young men and women—representatives of state, youth committees created earlier this year as unofficial advisers to the Selective Sendee System—tqok turns drawing the rest of the dates. The second one drawn was April 24; then came Dec. 30; then Feb. 14, Oct. 18, Sept. 6, Oct. 26, Sept. 7, Nov. 22, Dec. 6. Three youth advisers had refused to help in the drawing and a fourth balked when his turn came; four others helped in the drawing but only after making unscheduled statements—one reading a mild protest signed by 14 participants, and three others more or less supporting the proceedings. LETTER DRAWING Following the drawing of the dates, another drawing was held in which letters of the alphabet were scrambled and pulled out. This will be used by local boards to decide the order in which to draft the eligible men. x. First out in the second drawiiig was the letter J. The new lottery system was signed into law by the President last week. Every man who reaches at least 19 years of age but not 26 by the end of this year now has his place in line' for the draft in whatever year he becomes 1A —“Available for military service”—or 1-A-O—“conscientious objector available for noncombatant military service only.” Some 500,000 men will begin 1970 in one of these classifications, fully exposed to the .draft that year. * * ★ Another 350,000 now deferred or/Sfc empt will lose that status - many Jy$ graduating from college, for example—and become 1A or 1-A-O during the year.; That makes ' 1970 their “priority” exposure year too. > Of this 850,000 total, about 290,000 will probably enlist voluntarily in the armed forces, officials anticipate. But another 260,000 must be drafted. And generally speaking, they will be those whose birthdays appeared in about the first half of the list drawn last night. Just how high up the list the draft will Order of Call, Page A-T4; Related Story, Page A-2 reach may vary considerably from one local draft board to another. But men whpse birthdays lie in the first one-third of the dates as drawn are almost certain to be drafted. Those drawn in the middle one-third may be uncertain for up to a year — until they receive a draft notice, or until the year ends without one. Those in the last one-third are now virtually certain they will not be called in 1970. . t In 1971, the “priority exposure” will focus on a new group of men who have turned 19 — and had their birthdays scrambled in a new lottery — in 1970. Men who are deferred or exempt face “priority exposure” in any year when they become 1-A or 1-A-O; and they step into that year’s lineup at exactly the pace they were given originally — that is, either Monday night, or in a lottery the year they turn 19. ★ ★ * Some 25 youths stood outside Selective Service Headquarters during the drawing as a protest against the lottery. They distributed a statement calling it “a masterful practical joke on the American people.” Youth From Holly Is First —and Hes Not Thrilled by It County 'Crib Deaths' Rise Sharply By JEAN SABLE Three apparently healthy infants, all under the age of 6 months, were found dead lh their beds over the weekend in OaklandCounty. The new deaths brought to 10 the number of “crib deaths” examined by Dr. Richard E. Olsen, county pathologist, during the .month of November. • < ★ ★ "I’ve never seen anything like it (the number of deaths) before," said the pathologist. He reports that in his 35 years of pathology record-keeping the number of such deaths has generally averaged about three per year. Olsen calls Jris autopsy report on; the mysterious deaths "a confession of. ignorance.” But while the cause of death is listed as unknown, the pathologist believes the seemingly healthy baby fatalities are tied to. an increase in up* per respiratory illnesses among the general population. Specimens from the victims have been sent te the Michigan Health Department for analysis, but Dr. Olsen isn’t too hopeful. Since assuming the county pathologist duties last July 3, Olsen has performed autopsies on about 20 “crib death” infants. It’s the most he’s, ever encountered, says the nationally known doctor who was for 34 years chief of the department of pathology at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital, Pontiac. While records in surrounding counties do not reflect a rise in “crib deaths,” Olsen feels this may be due to a system of record keeping. Several of the counties do not have a central pathologist, he notes. In Wayne County, which does, all such deaths are, attributed to natural causes. He beligves attention hasn’t been fully focused an file “crib death" problem. While stressing that nobody knows for sure, Dr. Olsen said he is inclined to believe that such deaths occur more often among bottle-lid babies. Ho said the unknown jirus strikes equally among girls and boys and is no selector of race. Noting that' the significant increase in such deaths occurred last month when sore throats and influenza are most prevalent, he discounts the theory of some that such deaths are caused by suffocation. * Many guilt-ridden parents are inclined to believe- the death is due to their neglect. "This is the tragedy of it,” he said. » The victims are characteristically healthy Infants, usually under a year in age but some as old as 19 months. They are put to bed well, and in the morning they are found dead in” their cribs. The homes are located in all parts of the county. Richard Jones has placed first and he’s not too thrilled. Jones, a 20-year-old Michigan State University civil engineering junior, is No. 1 in consideration for a job with Uncle Sam. ★ ★ 4r He was born Sept. 14 and his last hame begins with the letter J. He “won” last night's draft lottery. * * * , “I really didn’t believe it when I saw the birthdate drawn,’’ said Jones, the son of Mr. and Mrs. -Allen Jones of 115 Clarence, Holly. GOING FOR SURE “I’m going for sure, I guess,” Jones said. Jones is near the top of the list of 850,000 men eligible for induction. He is to graduate from MSU in June 1971. But Jones had one consolation: ‘T only-have one year to wait for the decision instead of seven years under the old system,” he said. * ★ * Meanwhile, at Jones’ draft board in the big office at Pontiac’s Federal Building, Selective Service, personnel are Blaze in Quebec Kills 50 From Our News Wires NOTRE DAME DU LAC, Que —More than 50 elderly bedridden patients were killed early today when fire raced through ah old wood-frame nursing home. Twenty others were injured. “Most of them were trapped in their beds and didn’t have a chance," a provincial police spokesman said._“It’s^ going fo be some time before we can get the bodies out of there." Two other buildings in addition to the nursing home the Repas du Vuellard, were destroyed in the blaze. In Today's Press , College Basketball Michigan-U. of D. game pits two former prep stars in area - PAGE P-1. , Grenade Removed Surgeon takes live explosive from Cong prisoner’s head — PAGE A-13. My Lai Incident \ Laird doesn’t feel case will hurt Nixon politically - PAGE A-19. Area 'News'"'..., A-J . Astrology .1. Bridge ........... m Crossword Puzzle ... D-15 ’Camlet ..D-4 Editorials A-6 High School . B-l.B-2 Markets 04 I Obituaries .......... . ... A-12 • Sports; D-l-D-3 Theaters .... D*$ TV and Radio Programs . IMS Vietnam War News . , .... A-7 ■ Wilson, Earl ......... D-5 Women’s Pages .. ,.C*I—C4 Yale Cartoon ........ A-13 The injured were taken to a nearby hospital in this small , paper-mill community of 4,000 'about '59- miles south of Riviere du Loup on the south shore of the St. Lawrence River. - TRAPPED ON UPPER LEVELS . The town is about 250 miles northeast of Montreal. MOST of the dead were trapped on the’ upper two levels of the three-story structure and died before the town’s 30-man volunteer fire-fighting force could' be mustered. ★ ★ ★ The upper two floors were reserved-for the elderly patients, who were cared for by “one or two doctors and a couple of nuns,” police said. Provincial police from, nearby communities were called in to help the town’s 10-man police force begin their search for victims among the smouldering ruins. The flames from the old rest home spread quickly to engulf two nearby buildings, a residence and a general store. They were razed before a regular . fire-fighting force arrived from Cabano, Que., sty miles away. Home Explodes; 3 Are Saved . The children in the Ernest Colling family of Shelby Township are lucky to be alive today. All they have is the clothing on their backs, two pet dogs and their parents. The Colling youngsters — Patrick, 17, Joseph, 4, and Cathy, 13, were home at Related Picture, Page A-3 46801 Van Dyke yesterday at 11:80 a.m. when an explosion ripped through the two - story dwelling. Two deliverymen — Eddie Griffin, 50, of Mount Clemens and Everett Morrison, 37, of Detroit — who had stopped nearby, heard the explosion and ran to the house. HOUSE COLLAPSED griffin entered the residence and handed Cathy out to Morrison, then assisted the boys out of the house; The walls, and- roof of the house collapsed shortly after the occupants fled. The dwelling was reduced to rubble in a half-hour as fire swept through the house.. Mrs. Colling was en route home from a dental appointment at the time of the (Continued on Page A-2, Col. 6) CHARLES WATSON , PATRICIA KRENWINKEL Nine Suspects Held in Tate Killing Case “tearing our hair out, if you warit to know the truth,” as Board 65 Executive Secretary Mrs. Linda Martin put it. ★ ★ ★ “We’ve been bugged by the phone since we stepped in this morning," a secretary at Board 331 complained. “We don’t have any count of available men. If you find a board that has made a count, let us know.” - ★ ★ ★ A Board 67 worker said no procedural instructions have been received from the state board, and the local board could not yet establish a new office operation. CAN’T ANSWER “Without guidance for uniformity, we , can’t even answer the questions of the men who call us," said' a Board 67 * employe. Draft board workers envision putting in long hours to reschedule call-up procedures for the next few weeks, ill the while having to meet the same draft quotas as under the old system. ★ ★ * Old system or new, the draft boards must be ready to respond to quotas with sincere “Greetings.” Bribe Charges Face Ex-Senator WASHINGTON (JPI - Former Sen. Daniel B, Brewster, a millionaire Maryland Democrat, has been charged by a federal grand jury with accepting $24,500 in bribes in exchange for votes on postal rate legislation. ' The indictment, returned here yesterday after a long investigation, said Brewster accepted the money in five payments over a three-year period from Spiegel Inc., a huge Chicago mail order house. Spiegel and its Washington lobbyist, Cyrus T. Anderson, were also indicted, but no corporate officers of Spiegel were named. Brewster, 46, unseated last year by Republican Charles M. Mathias, was reported at his wife’s estate in Ireland -where he has spent much of his time since leaving the Senate in January. In Chicago, Spiegel issued a statement emphatically denying “any wrongdoing or impropriety.” LOS ANGELES (UPI) - At least nine members of a pseudo-religious cult, including the leader known as “Jesus,” were in custody today as suspects in the bloody slayings of actress Sharon Tate .and at leat six other persons. Hie suspects are reportedly members Compromise on Tax Cut Eyed WASHINGTON (AP) - Senate Republican leaders sought today to shape a compromise income tox cut proposal which can win both write House approval and Democratic support. Ills expected to include a limited increase in the personal exemption and sonie ether changes for inclusion in the tax reform bill. * ★ ★ A out fo 28 per cent in the oil depletion allowance was written into the bill yesterday. . ★ * e The Republican compromise propqsal, to be sophsored by Sen. Charles H. Percy, R-ill., would be proposed as a substitute for the amendment of Sen. Albert Gore, D-Tenn., to raise the personal income tax exemption from $600 to $1,000 for each dependent in four yearly steps. < /The Gore measure Is backed by Democratic leaders, but faces, Stiff administration opposition on grounds it would' cost the Treasury too much revenue. Sen. Hugh Scott, R-Pa., the GOP leader, said Republicans hope the Percy plan — still being drafted as the Senate resumed its tax debate —- will win administration endorsement. i*; A'. ★ '' . , He said it would involve an increase to $700 or $750'in the personal exemption, with adjustment in income tax rates as well. . ; Scott said tiie White House has tak$n no position on the GOP plan, but it is obvious the administration would prefer it to the Gore measure. “We hope to persuade them that it is better to do this than to take an up and down chance on a $1,006 exemption,? < he said,. - ' V- \ ' Ik ;' % -*■ ' :' The Republican leader had said earlier he was inclined to support the Gore proposal. - : ★ ★ * - In accepting the 23 per cent Oil and depletion allowance Monday, the Senate went along vyith its own Finance Committee. . •' \ \ •k ’ ★ ■ ■■ ■ . ■ y ; A House version of the bill cuts the depletion allowance from the present 27l/t per cent to 20 per cent. lie final reduction now will have to be worked out in the Senate-House conference. of “The Family,’’ a hippie band that roved through Death Valley. . ★ ★ k The leader, Charles Manson, 34, has a lengthy record. - At least five women are being held in Sybil Brand Institute here as material witnesses and another woman, Susan Atkins, 21, is in custody on ''suspicion of another murder. In custody at McKinney, Tex., where he surrendered Sunday night was Charles D. (Tex) Watson, 24. Patricia Krenwinkel, 21, was arrested Monday near the home of her aunt in Mobile, Aja. , Another suspfect, Linda Kasabian, 19, was sought in New Mexico- and police are believed to know her whereabouts. McCarthy Poem Wins WASHINGTON CAP) - Sen. Eugene McCarthy may not have won last year’s Indiana Democratic presidential primary election, but a poem he finished writing during that campaign has wop ;him a $500 prize. The Minnesota Democrat, according to the* Washington Post, has been given the award by the National Endowment for the Arts. Sixty-three other writers ofv prose and poetry were similarly honored. Clouds Carrying In a Chance of Snow Clouds drifting in from the northwest may bring a few snow flurries late tonight and tomorrow. Skies will be mostly cloudy. Temperatures are expected to drop into the high 20s tonight and reach the mid-30s tomorrow. ■ * * • * Partly cloudy and continued cold is the prediction for Thursday. Probabilities of precipitation ih percentage are 10( today, 20 tonight and $9, tomorrow.' A frigid 18 was the low temperature;, before 8 a.m. in downtown Pontiac. By 2 p.m. the mercury had climbed to 30. Birmingham THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1969 Sen. Craig Files Lawsuit to Block Parochiaid Bill LANSING (AP) — State Sen. Roger Craig today asked for an injunction in Ingham County Circuit Court in an attempt to Block House of Representatives consideration of. the Senate-approved bill creating parochiaid. House Cleric T. Thomas Thatcher said he had never heard of such an action^ “Most of the time the courts are very reluctant to deal with legislative matters,” said a spokesman for Atty. Gen. Frank Kelley. The sipokesman would nof elaborate bn the outcome of the legal move. ‘ The Senate passed the $l-bUlioh-plus ■ school aid bill, including $25 million for aid to nonpublic schools on Nov. 13. A reconsideration vote was planned after the Legislature reconvened today. THEN TO HOUSE Should the reconsideration motion fail Massive War on Hunger Is Called For by President WASHINGTON (AP) — President Nixon called today for a massive national commitment to end hunger and malnutrition and said, “The plain fact is that a great many Americans are not eating well enough to sustain health.” 2 Men Sought in Coed Killing UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. (UPI) -State Police said yesterday they were seeking two unidentified men in connection with their investigation in the stabbing death of a coed in the library of the Pennsylvania State University. The victim, Betsy Aardsma, 22, a graduate student from Holland, Mich., was found about S p.m. Friday by another female student who heard her cry for help. ★ ★ Ht The student who answered the call for help told State Police she saw two men, who told her Miss Aardsma needed aid and thenleft the scene. She said she did not know the men and did not know if they were students. Lt. William Kimmel, who led a team of 18 state policemen in the investigation ; of the “homicide," declined to reveal the name of the girl who found Miss Aardsma. In an address prepared for a White House Conference on Food, Nutrition and Health, Nixon urged support lor three measures pending in Congress which, he said, “should virtually eliminate the problem of poverty as a cause of malnutrition.” ★ * * One measure would put a floor under the income of every American family, supplementing or providing incomes for 25 million persons. Nixon promised full consideration of any recommendations the conference produces and said he expected “a lively difference of opinions.” The temper of many of the 3,000 people chosen to participate — a cross section of America from the very poor to top businessman and professionals — was crystallized during the taping yesterday of a panel discussion on National Educational Television entitled; “Hunger: A National Disgrace.” : * * i In the audience participation program, one Negro woman. told the panelists “We’ve been hungry a long, long time.” Another woman from Cleveland shouted at the panel, “We eat to survive. Give people food and they will work.” ‘GUARANTEED STARVATION’ And the Rev. Jesse Jackson, director of Operation Breadbasket of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference and a member of the panel, declared, “Welfare guarantees starvation at 23 cents a day.” Absentee Ballots Available Absentee voter ballots for the special Dec. 18 city election on a City of Pontiao*. charter amendment afe*now available at the city clerk’s office. Anyone presently registered-in the City of Pontiac who cannot go to the polls may obtain an absentee ballot if application in writing is made before 2 p.m. Saturday, Dec. 13. This applies to anyone who expects to be out of the 'city'Dec. 18; who is physically unable to go to the polls; who The Weather uquarqv* 54 30 15 S Cincinnati 39 14 Denver 30 23 Duluth 36 15 Houston 35 17 Jacksonville 28 19 Kansas City c. 26 9 Los Angelas 36 16 Louisville'. 35 17 Miami Bead. m 28 23 Milwaukee 39 19 34 17 f “ - Tgj 27 12 I 25 a ( ao ia i a 20 13 I 30 23 ! 54 30 I 60 31 J New Orleans 72 35 ‘ New York 40 23 Omaha 56 33 Phoenix 73 49 Pittsburgh 35 17 St. Louis 51 20 S. Lake City 40 8 S. Francisco 66 50 —or pass and the bill be passed again— the measure then would go to the House }f Representatives for action. Leaders, continued bipartisan negotiations on Gov. William G. Milliken’s reform proposals, but there was disagreement on what had been accomplished or might still be accomplished in more closed - door talks. Recognition of the slow pace led Milliken last week to hint he might call a Christmas session if the Legislature should go home by mid - December without passing much of his package. He also indicated he might consider vetoing some bills if they were not part of a balanced reform plan. “We’ve kind of dissipated the notion of any pressing ’ need for reform,” said Senate Minority Leader Sander Levin, D-Berkley. “I think the governor has to reactivate the spark of interest in long -term reform.” ‘NOT A WASTE’ “I wouldn’t call it a waste,” insisted House Speaker William A. Ryan, D-Detroit. “It was never our aim to arrive at ironclad agreement, only at the highest possible degree of consensus.” But Rep. Robert Waldron, GOP minority leader in the House, agreed with. Levin, his Senate counterpart and political foe: “This has not been a very efficient way to go about reform,” Waldron said of the negotiating sessions. NO SANTA CLAUS — Firemen haul and fog to free Roy Booker from the chimney of a Los Angeles restaurant where he became stuck yesterday. The rescuers were summoned by a nearby gas station attendant, who said'Boo&er’s 16-year-old son was seeking equipment to free hiq father from a chimney. Booker was booked for investigation of burglary. | N. Korea to Free 3 Yank Captives SEOUL. (JR - U. S. Military headquarters announced today that three American helicopter crewmen downed in North Korea Aug. 17 will be released tomorrow at the Panmunjom truce village. • They are expected to be sent to the U.S. Army’s 121st Evacuation Hospital 20 miles west of Seoul for a medical checkup before being flown back to the United States. Tb* three men are Capt. David H. Crawford of Pooler, Ga., Sfciec. 4 Herman E. Hofstatter of Lowpoint, 111., and WO Malcolm V. Loepke of Richmond, Ind. They were mot down in A small helicopter while on a training flight. Informed sources reported that the United States would give the North Koreans a letter of apology in exchange for the men. , Vietnam Resolution Backers Slam Door on Amendments Fact-Finding Decision Seen by Fr iday BIRMINGHAM - A decision on the Birmingham Education Association’s (BEA) request for fact-finding in its contract fonts with the board of education is affected, from the Michigan Employment Relations Commission Friday, according to a BEA source. Meanwhile, the Michigan Employment Relations Commission has requested that the two negotiating teams meet with the mediator today to continue the mediation process. Today’s session was expected to deal primarily with financial matters. ★ it. ★ The board.of education asked last week that the mediation process con-| tinue. BEA President John Sala explained that one of the association’s reasons for requesting fact-finding is that issues “need to be brought more dearly into the open — notably in the areas of remaining working conditions and financial “Things that we have been asserting across the bargaining table should be confirmed publicly by a fact-finder,” Sala added. He also commented that the Board of Education’s latest salary Offer was several hundred thousand dollars under the tentative agreement readied just before school- started in September. “That offer can hardly be considered a reasonable offer,” Sala said. cannot go to the polls because of the tenets of his religion; or who'is 70 years of age or older. The amendment to Chapter III, Section 3, of the city charter would provide for the election by single member districts at both the primary and general elections of dty commissioners Who must be at least 25 years of age and residents of the dty and district in which they are candidates for at least one year prior to taking office. WASHINGTON UR - Backers of a House resolution supporting President Nixon’s “efforts to negotiate a just peace in Vietnam” have slammed the door'on amendments and latched it tight in preparations for passage of the measure today. Critics of a procedure under which no amendments are allowed on certain measures were beaten 225-132 in their effort to open up the resolution yesterday. Then the House voted 251-100 to approve the dosed rule permitting four hours of debate before passage of the resolution, which is sponsored by 316 of the 434 House members. “Tlie time has come to show that the vast majority of us do support the President in his negotiating efforts,” said R|p. Jim Wright, D-Tex., a chief sponsor of the1 proposal which Nixon hailed in an extraordinary personal appearance hi the House Nov. 6. ‘2nd TONKIN RESOLUTION' Rep. Don Edwards, D-Calif., however, suggested the vehicle amounts to a “second Gull of Tonkin resolution.” , The Tonkin resolution, rushed through Congress in August 1964 after the Johnson administration told of North Vietnamese attacks on .two U.S. destroyers, was the basis for America’s full-scale entry into the Vietnam war. Thr6e Are Saved as Hohne Explodes (Continued From Page One) explosion. Her husband was at work in a tool and die firm in Warren. Township firemen attributed the blast to a natural gas leak from a pipe in the basement. The gas apparently leaked into the kitchen, where it exploded. 1 i ♦ ■ w ★ Cathy was treated at Crittenton Hospital, Avon Township, for facial cuts and bruises. The boys were uninjured.' The Fire Department set preliminary damage estimates at about $18,000. The Codings had rented the house for the past five months. Full U.S. Weather Bnreau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Fair to partly cloudy becoming windy and warmer today, high in the mid to upper 40s. Mostly cloudy and windy tonight and Wednesday with chance of snow flurries late tonight or Wednesday. Low tonight 26 to'31. Colder Wednesday, high in mid 30s. Thursday outlook: Partly cloudy and cold, winds southwesterly increasing to 20 to 30 miles per hour this afternoon becoming northwesterly 15 to 28 miles tonight mid Wednesday. Probabilities of precipitation are 10 per cent today, 20 per cent tonight, 30 per cent Wednesday. | He Orders Draft, Then Gets News Washington (AP) - Scott | Jenkins, 20, bellied up to the bar, j ordered a draft beer, then asked | the man next to him how the tele-! vised national Selective Service lottery-had gone. “I thought he was kidding,” said Jenkins,'who was born Sept. 14, 1949. “At first I wouldn’t believe him.” . ★ ★ ★ But a friend of the American University junior from Blossburg, Pa., confirmed Jenkins’ birthdate was the first to be drawn in the lottery. And he thoughtfully added that first to be called Will be those whose names begin with a “J.” . > “At which time,” Jenkins said, “I took a very‘long, deep pull on the mug in front Of me.” PSH Fund Bid: $13.4 Million By DICK ROBINSON Staff shortages remain critical at Pontiac State Hospital, says hospital chief Dr. Donald W. Martin. Hospital authorities are looking to the state for some help. “We are about 300 people short — nursing and maintenance personnel — of ' what we should have to operate at basic ' minimal standards,” Dr. Martin said yesterday. . * * ", * Martin said the hospital has asked the state for $950,000 to hire some 115 additional employes “as a first step” to reduce the employe shortage. The request is included in a proposed $13.4 - million 1970-71 budget, up about $1,4 million over the current fiscal year’s appropriation, according to Martin, MILUKEN RECOMMENDATIONS Martin said he expects Gov. William City School Budget Will Be Discussed MiUiken to make his own budget recommendations to the Legislature soon, possibly this month. Legislator decide the actual appropriations. One of the most pressing needs, Martin said, is the hiring of nurses for the chronically ill adult wards. These wards normally have oiie purse per 40 patients and sometimes only a part • time nurse. “Our hospital, which serves p larger and faster - growing population (about 1V» million) than any of „ the other Michigan state hospitals, continues to suffer acutely from deficiencies of materials, facilities and staffing, ” Martin said. » Pontiac State Hospital serves residents from 10 counties in southeastern Michigan. FUNDS REQUESTED More money has been requested to replace windows and continue electrical wiring repairs and heating improvements. But hospital officials aren’t optimistic about getting it. Presently freezing cold air leaks through the win- dows, and ihany of .the rooms are without heat or electricity. ★ ★ ★ It would take $600,000 — spread over a few years — to replace 748 windows, according to Martin. About $200,000 is being asked for electrical repairs and another $50,000 for heating improvements in the next fiscal year. * “Hopefully these 91 - year - old bliildings will be replaced within the next few years with modem ones of proper design,” Martin said. ' ★ ■; ★ One of the major requests for facilities includes the building of an adolescent* children’s crater for 12 to 17 - year - old youths. It would be built next to the new Fairlawn Center. DRUG ABUSE CENTER The center would include a 20 - bed drug abuse crater, Martin explained. Martin is also appealing for $735,000 to complete the new $3 - million food service and storage building, scheduled far initial u& in January and completion in October. NATION*1 - WEATHER — Snow is forecast overnight for much of the Great t .1,^ area> wgh colder temperatures in the Midwest. Warmer weather is predicted •hmg the Gulf Coast and in the southern Rookies. . . The proposed $20.1-million operating budget of the Pontiac School District for 1969-70 will be discussed at a public hearing tonight at 7:30 in the board offices, 350 E . Wide Track. The proposed budget, which Will come before the Pontiac School Board for approval Thursday night, is $2.4 million higher than last year’s final budget and about $1.7, million higher than the preliminary budget approved by the board April 3. , " * School Business.Manager Vernon L. Schiller calls the proposed budget an “interim final budget,” because some salaiy negotiations have not yet been completed, or were not ' completed iif time to be included in the budget. The largest, increase —> $2.1 million — in this year’s proposed operating budget over last year’s is* Hi instruction, including teacher salaries. ‘ 86.8 PCT. OF TOTAL All salaries represent about 86.8 per cent of the district’s total proposed expenditures. Although the salary figures include several new positions, such as a third assistant superintendent, Schiller said most of the salary increase is due to negotiated raises. Another large increase over last year’s budget comes under plant operation’ in the amount of about $128,000. Schiller said this is due to salary increases, rising fuel costs, and operation of the LincoUTElemehtary School. Total estimated funds available in 1969-70 for operation is 21.3. million, including an unappropriated 'fund balance from last’ year of $1.2 million. ESTIMATED REVENUES ' The total estimated revenues available from local sources amounts to about $13.2 million, or 65.5 per cent of all revenues. State'Sources of revenue for 1969-70 are estimated at about $6-5 million, and from' federal sources, about $45,400. The remainder of estimated revenue from other distipcte (county intermediate district) is about $370,000, for special and vocational education. p i State High Court Rules Against ' WIXOM — The city has lost the latest, and what may be its Anal, round against Detroit Edison Co. in a bid to block the Utility’s! high-tension power line. “Well, we fought it a long time,” said Wixom Mayor Wesley E. McAtee. "We just don’t have the great lobby in Lane-tag that Detroit Edison has,” he added, commenting on a decision by the Michigan Supreme Court. ★. * * * 'The court ruled Wixom may not use its zoning ordinance to block the power line. Chief Justice Thomas E. Brennan, in an opipioq : and decision released yesterday, called the issue “one facet of the late 20th-century dilemma: How to balance the demands of vast new urbanization and the demands of people for local determination of their own environment.” A ★ i ★ it .' , Whether.the city will appeal to the U.S. Supreme fcourt is doUbtful, McAtee said. “Council will have to tall^ about it,” he said. Brennan and Justice Thomas M. KaVanagh, in a separate opinion, both' noted •'die ■fifte . distinction between a wide-reaching public .utility’' pnd the rights Of a single community. a- • ' Wixom, which cameNijato being in 1957 as a separate part of .Novi and Commerce townships,', quickly expanded into a corporate city but then experienced little further development. I _ ** * fjf Edison, meanwhile, was planning and buying land for construction of a high voltage system to connect with other lines in Canada, Ohio and Indiana. ★ it: it When the utility’s plans to put up 132-foot high tension towers were revOaled suddenly, the Wixorn city .council amended its zoning Ordinces to outlaw most such towers. Wixom limited the towers to 90 feet. * * * ' The aim of the city, which the court found “legitimate though narrow” was to in Power Line Fight* protect real estate values in its ‘ only residential subdivision. ★ ★ ★ ’But, the court said, “an ordinance^ although valid on its face, may be constitutionally inform as it applies to specific land.’A ■; The fact that the -utility’s line was to stretch from Monroe in die south to St. Clair north of Detroit, bypassing Detroit, made it “analogous to the occupancy of the.first floor of a multi-floor apartment which is under construction,” Chief Justice Brennan wrote. ! 'VI * ★ Kavanagh, in' a concurring opinion, said the “reasonableness” of Edison’l plans to provide the only source of electricity for a wide area sustained its right of way. He added, though, “we are not* insensitive to the disruptive and-' unsightly effect with the proposed towers . and lines may have.” Holly. School Path Unclear After Defeat the press Area News PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 2,/1969 HOLLY — The board of education has not decided on a course of action following a recent lopsided defeat of a $2.9-miilion bond issue proposal. Voters rejected the proposal, which would have provided a 1,200-student capacity junior high school building by a 806-to-579 count. ★ it "it S’ A hoard of education discussion following the defeat has ranged from the possibility of instituting double sessions, enlarging class size, extending the school day to putting the bond issue proposal before the voters again next June. -it 'it it, A school administration official said the district could get through the remainder of the present school term and part of next year with present facilities, , Definite crowding problems will occur , If a junior high building is not ready for occupancy by the opening of the 1971-72 school term, the official said. Lapeer County 4-f-Ters 5th in Stock Judging Lapeer Schools Mourn Defeat Millage Loss a Blow to Retarded' By TIM McNULTY LAPEER — “I don’t think it was a revolt against the retarded,” said Dale W. Abke, on Lapeer County’s recent special education millage defeat, “I imagine it was just in opposition to. general taxation.” Abke, superintendent of Lapeer Intermediate School District, ponder,ed what the loss of that needed %-mill would mean to the county’s retarded children. * it * * The county’s proposal was on the ballot last Monday withrthe much-opposed building bond issues of the Lapeer and Imlay City school districts. All three bids were defeated. DEAD UNTIL JUNE “If we had been on.the ballot alone, I’m sure we would have carried it,” Abke said, “now it looks as though we definitely won’t do anything until June.” The problems of the mentally and emotionally handicapped are myraid, for both the family and the school. “Some 'Some emotionally disturbed children never laugh or cry . . and to be frank, some come from pretty base homes . . . where they have no reason to laugh. Life is pretty serious to them/ Dale W. Abke emotionally disturbed children never laugh or .cry,” said Abke, “and, to be frank, some come from pretty base homes, where they have no reason to laugb. Life Is pretty serious to them.” * if * Many advocate placing all “special” children in a state institution. “They say just put them in a state home," Abke said, “but you can’t make that decision for someone else. I wouldn’t want it made for me.” it it . it Abke said the current trend is not to institutionalize children, if only for economic reasons: “I’ve heard, unofficially, that it cost $4,600 a year to keep these children in institutions and only $2,100 a year to stay in the home,” URGENT NEEDS • The Lapeer District with 12,7 00 students is a relatively poor and rural area compared to Wayne and Oakland Counties. It already has 327 students, in special education programs; “We; have an immediate need to bring in 105 additional students who are not getting the attention they need,” Abke said, “and to accommodate them and’ the children we already have, we should hire 12 additional special personnel.” The district' works on a Vi-mill levy. v The election would have given them mill and an additional $70,000. V * Abke charged the state for “not keep-, ing up on Its obligationfor funding”* special education. “The state is supposed to reimburse 75 per cent of the program,” he said. “But it is really only,, paying 60 per cent and. the district mustH make up the difference. We just can’t keep up. ★ it it “If the concept of special education is correct and right,” he said, “we should; have an ongoing program through all the. educational levels. I think Lapeer could,, have this type of program if we could-get that Mt-mill and if the State Board of Education would pay its tall share,” - “Until that happens or we get some , new legislation, I don’t see any relief < and we’ll just have to go on as we have s been,’’ Abke said. i . No Action Due This Month on Independence Zor/e Plea LAPEER — A Lapeer County judging team representing Michigan has placed fifth in the Northeast Regional 4-H Livestock Judging Exposition held at East Lansing. „ * ★ * Marvin Daglow, 16, of Camden had the second-high individual score in. the contest. Joining him on the team were George Simmons, 17, Susan Moore, 16, and Carolyn Myers, 15, all of North Branch. Team coacb is Allan VanDyke of Almont. Crittenton Nurses OK Talks Agent INDEPENDENCE TOWNSHIP - No action is due this month on a petition to rezone 17 acres on Walden1 adjacent to Clarkston Gardens subdivision, from suburban farms t o multiple-family housing, township sources said. it it it The rezoning is being sought by developer Gerald Anderson of Clarkston. Anderson’s plans call for establishment of a 168-unit town house-condominium complex priced in the $25,000-$26,000 range. , it it it If the petition is granted, Anderson said, development would be timed to sewer construction hi the township. it it ★ Anderson’s plans are being opposed by the subdivision property owners association, headed by Keith Humbert, 6440 Snow Apple. Yule Light Rite Is Set WALLED LAKE — Mayor Wendel G. Kellogg will light the city’s Christmas lights at 7:30 p.m. .today. The Walled Lake Western* High School Concert Choir will lead community caroling. Humbert had said the property owners plan to fight establishment of the com-, plex on the premise that it would attract considerably more traffic and children to the area and downgrade property values ! in the subdivision. Legislator Cites Ed-Reform Lack MILFORD - Hurori Valley School District residents were told last night that there was no provision in the proposed state education reform package for capital outlays. , it it it State Rep. Clifford Smart, R-Walled Lake, explained that anv attempt had ben made to introduce a bill for capital improvements but the additional money, needed apparently could not be found at*, this time.' * * ★ . Huron Valley voters go to the polls,-Feb. 20, 1970, to vote on a proposed $16.5-1 million bond issue to build a new high school, a hew 'junior high and two elementary schools along with paying for remodeling of other schools and site acquisitions. to save a lot on room and board during the fall and winter terms. III., student is camping out several miles from Ann Arbor — and he plans to keep it up all during the fall and winter terms. Although bad weather never will persuade him to take a room in town, David says a poor midterm test grade might. AVON TOWNSHIP — After meeting with the State Employment Relations Commission, Crittenton Hospital.nurses have voted, 71-11, in favor of union representation through the Michigan Nurses Economic Security Organization (MNESO). Earlier, hospital administrators had refused to approve -the election until the commission assured them that MNESO was a valid bargaining agent. The Crittenton election marks the first time in Oakland County that nurses have won representation through their own society, according to Miss Eleanor Tramp, executive director of MNESO. Contract negotiations are to begin immediately, she said. Tobacco Heir Gains Control of Big Inheritance SAN FRANCISCO County Dqms to Hold Theater Fund-Raiser AVON TOWNSHIP - The Oakland County Democrat!* Committee w ilt sponsor a performance of George Bernard Shaw’s ‘Pygmalian” a t Oakland University’s Meadow Brook Theatre at 8 p.m. Dec. 18. The annual theater party Is the committee’s major fund-raising event of the year. Tickets are available from Democratic headquarters, 1700 S. Telegraph, Pontiac. • SUPT. DALE W. ABKE ^Christmas till 10 p.m. Penneys Toy Annex is open now thru BOYS1 FOREMOST*3 SPEED ‘SWINGER!’ TW» b’lhe 7Xf\bikeof the ysaf—wHh the exciting MW “Mark 11" frame. Exclusive flam* design drain and sprocket guard. 3 speed stick Shift. Flamboyant (due with magenta overspray. 54.98 ennetff c CACwinw di Art TUESDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1339 BLOOMFIELD MLRflclf TELEGRAPH RD. AT SQUARE LAKE RD. THE PONTIAC ] Entire Selection Girl’s DRESS COATS Yzoff Sizes 3 to 6x and 7 to 14 All wool and wool blend fabrics In the latest styles J&t FABULOUS CHRISTMAS SALE! MEN’S SUITS and WOOL TOPCOATS Famous makes, Worsted-Tex, Clipper Craft, Hendrix Square and other standard brands. The original price tags remain. You deduct a big 15%. ALL CUSTOM ALTERATIONS INCLUDED We welcome Master Charge, Michigan Bankard, Security Charge, Diners Club and American Express. Store Honrs Daily 10:00 a.m. to 9:10 p.m. Mofinhdt MEN'S WEAR SeelwyoictL NEW SOLID STATE MODULAR RECEIVERS 119* 210* 233* 255* 277* Telegraph and Square Lake Road Free Parking for 5,000 Cars In Our WelHighted Lot JUST IN TIME FOR CHRISTMAS Save *95.85 MICHIGAN BANKARD MASTER CHARGE Complete travel, service with a smile Phone 332-8318 ORDER PHOTO CHRISTMAS CARDS NOW! MIRACLE CAMERA SHOP '"Th. Fritndlr Camvra Shop Around Thm Corner” HANSEN TRAVEL Skip the Washday Alterations, Dressmaking, Restyling 30 Years Experience Phono 338-8528 SABRA9S Custom Teuton Afliri-Garrurd Stereo System SspenMy S244J5. Topvalus system with AlUad ■tMw FMAMncelversiKl tMtatcsMi Gsmnl « IT'S HERE! A MEN. ON A BUR ENCORE DELIGHT ' Blues! $149 A QumlitjComraHj.fLTV. UmgAU»c,lnc. A grilled ham and cheese DiSTC served on a large onion roll. y sW Cole slaw and kosher dill. Enoore RESTAURANT Far All Your Washing and Cleaning Needs Wigland Fashion Show Dee. 14, 7:30 p.m. — Waterford CAI Building Tickets at Any, Wigland Store Allied Econ-O-Wash WIGLAND 1 335-2953 A SHOPPING CENTER WITHIN A SHOPPING CENTER DRESSES 400 * values to 26.00 Padded Rayon Satin Floral Design Cover Decorative Photo Album Tan 11x10" gummed acetate sheets ' protect pictures of memorable occasions. No messy glue or pastel . 2*7 KRESGE S 4 THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1969 A—f QUALITY REPAIRS ON ALL MAKE hearing aids Loanare Available \ Supervisors to Attend Confab k HEARING AID DEALER Oakland County supervisors ill be in Lansing four days next week to atfoiod the 71st annual,meeting of foe Michigan Association of Counties at tpe Jack Tar Hotel. V Sent there at county expense, they are expected to participate in the adoption of new bylaws accommodating the one-man, one-vote concept of county supervisors. ★ W i * Until this year county boards were made ! up of supervisors appointed by city mayors and elected township supervisors. Beginning in January, foe board was made up solely of elected representatives. * Bylaw changes are expected to exclude township supervisors from positions of importance with the organisation, according Barry McGuire, executive secretary of the organization. WELL BE ALTERED ! The board of directors, of which Delos Hamlin, ^-Farmington Township, is currently a member, will be altered to limit terms to six years and to provide equal representation from all parts of foe state. > ★ ' * Charles B. Edwards Jr.,| Oakland County supervisor j board chairman, will serve as chairman of the credentials cmnmittee and William L, Mainland, D-Milford Township,! Drill serve as a member of the! resolutions committee. * * * The conference which begins! Monday will explore such items as solid-waste disposal, compulsory‘'arbitration, for county employes, foe impact of President Nixon’s welfare program on social services, medical-care i facilities, parks and recreation and foe state bonding fund, and operation of the district court] system. v Simms Bros.-98 N. Saginaw St.-Downtown Pontiac OREM DAILY 9 am to 9 pm Why Let Tension Make You III — And Rob You of Precious Sleep? Do ovorday tension* build up to tho point where you could find it hard to do your work? Whoro you have difficulty potting along with your friend*. J. froquantly “toko it out on your family" ... ovon fool raady to explode, It'* trua Ton*ion can actually maka you iU. Don't lot thi* happen. First, too what B.T. Tablet* can do for you. B.T. I* to tafe that you don't eVen need doctor's proscription. Yet oach tablet contain* totted ingredients that.help you to relax during the day — help you got tho rottful *leop‘you need at night. Try thi* trailed way to more peaceful living. Atk your druggist tor B.T.,Tablet* — and Relax. , INTRODUCTORY OFFER $1.50 Cut out thi* ad— take to store listed. Purchase one pack of B.T, Tablet* and Receive on* Pack free. SIMMs - 98 N. Saginaw - DRUG DEPT. 1 CHARGE IT AT SIMMS WITH Not until the fifth paragraph did the sport fan of 1869 learn who won the game and by what spore. Only one player’s name was mentioned, that of the Rutgers captain, and not until the next-to-the-last paragraph. Oh, incidentally, Rutgera won, 6 to 4. SPRINGFIELD, III. v The liveliest thing happening in "State government these days may well be. BARTLETT This is not a personality breakthrough. At a Ogilvie’s stocky figure, hoarse voice anil * stem- expression still gW* him the look of a small town hanker. But he is showing ability to talk and to lead In a compact, gutty way which conveys a shrewd sensitivity to the jumbled currents of modern politics, ★. ★ ★ - He is standing close to President Nixon on all the issues from Haynsworth to Vietnam but he seems somehow to have, been more clever than Mr. Nixon in steering clear of Republican factionalism and in avoiding the appearance of a politician preoccupied with maximizing his outlook for reelection in 1972. In fact Ogilvie’s diffidence toward 1972, or “fatalism” as he himself terms it, is what Bob Considine Flying Seats for Navy Pilots? In 1908, the Wright Brothers won a $25,000 contract from the U.S. Signal Corps to build a heavier-than-air machine that could ■ carry two passengers and fly for one hour at 40 miles an hour. ★ ★ ★ In 1969, the U.S. Navy awarded a $100,000 contract for the development of an ejection seat that a pilot could fly go far as 50 miles after abandoning an airplane. This would modernize, pilots’ old instinct of “flying by the seat of your pants.” SRO Crowd Says Adieu to Late Comic Waldron Ray Cromley Bullets Alone Can't Win Viet-Type War WASHINGTON (NEA)-An army captain, adviser to the district chief in Due Pho, not too many miles away from the reported massacre at My Lai (Song My), rides in his jeep talk- , ing to an associate. He a-c c ident-1 ally’ runs “CRCMLEY down a chicken. Immediately he turns around, drives back to the hamlet he has just pgssed through, finds the chicken’s owner and apologizes in Vietnamese. He offers to pay. But die farmer says: “No, that’s all right,” and thanks the captain profusely for caring. The captain says he won’t give him money fen* the chicken, then, but perhaps he can give him a little toward buying a pig. ^ At the other end of South Vietnam, down toward Ca Mau, an Army truck stalls in the mud and, in getting out, «Hm It i> $34.00 • yoorj « 2nd dm m* at FmfMc, M runs off the road and destroys a part of a rice field. A major gets out of his vehicle, finds put who owns the field and says, since he is responsible for the damage, "it is his responsibility to reimburse the farmer for the loss. From then on, wherever this unit goes, the word spreads out ahead ttiat “the unit With a heart " for the people” is coming. BIG DIFFERENCE The contrast between those incidents and what reportedly occurred at My Lai (or Song My) is not only the difference between decency and savagery, it is the difference between winning and losing a war as well. For the military logic of Vietnam-type wars is that they are not won primarily by bullets (though bullets may be very necessary at times). They are won primarily by incidents such as the episodes above. ' Sri* ★ . ",l; They are lost 4>y massacres, by calling native people “gooks” or “slopes? or “dinks” and by other acts that show disdain for the dignity and lives of the people living there. . ^ In this type of a -war, an army cannot win if it loses sight. Of its main objective-preserving the people it. is there to defend. BASIC ELEMENT Civic action at its best (as the defeat of,Che Guevarra in Bolivia proves) is pot an incidental goodwill gesture. It is a basic element of ^victory. It may mean the difference between a local government that can standon its own feet as a viable, democratic entity able to handle subversive totalitarian insurgencies and a country so divided it will crumble regardless of how many U. S. troops are deployed. . . * ★ Respect for Vietnamese^, is not a matter only of good Will- It may mean, for example, being Informed beforehand by the local citizenry of enemy ambushes ... or not being informed and falling into VC traps. ; This friendship with the people (by both Americans and Vietnamese officials) can destroy the very will of the Vietcong to fight. For a guerrilla cannot/operate In a community united again s t: hlib. ■ ,* A it ’ it But disdain for local people can make new converts tor the Vietcong faster than bullets can kill VC troops. Verbal Orchids Mr. and Mrs. Earl Brobst \ 601 Old Oak; 55th wedefing anniversary. Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Sherwood of Oxford Township; 55th wedding anniversary. NEW YORK—Jack Waldron, the Shepherd of the Lambs, drew an SRO crowd at his funeral services. He had had many like that during his long years in the theater, vaudeville erid the nightclubs. Maybe;, Waldron had a premonition, though he never looked better or came off . better than he did at the Lambs dinner for Pat O’Brien,« few nights before Jack simply upped said died. At Pat’s night he rollicked the packed house when he said, “If I should die tonight,, as I often have at these parties, call Judson 24515.” That’s the Lambs’ number. : ★ ■ ★ i| Jack hadn’t worked too regularly at his chosen criaft in recent years, but a lot of his old material, was still heavily employed by younger stand-up monologists. What the burglars couldn’t steal was Jack’s ability to overcome a flat, by inflating it. If one of his lines expired upon utterance, Jack could recoup nobly by saying something like, “I know there’s an audience outAhere; I can hear you breathing.” Laughter would explod*, through the house like shrapnel. NOTABLEEXCEPTION One exception was a time he asked the late great Bugs Baer to writ* him a line that would absolutely crush and demolish any heckler. Bugs caul* UP with it. ★ ★ ★ “Just say |q the bum* ‘How much would you charge to haunt a house?’ ” Bugs suggested. Shortly thereafter, Waldron was playing a nightclub when he wte nailed by a most pernicious heckler. It was a she. And bombed. Moreover she was sitting in the front row, and had a voice that could carry for miles. STUNNING REPLY * “How much would you charge to haunt a house?” Jade, the picture of a gentleman, triumphantly demanded of her. fhe audience, which had resented her interruptions of his act, laughed «nd applauded loudly. When the ovation died down, Jack was ready to resume his routine. But just before he opened his mouth there cahle a stunning reply from the lady souse. /j t' % - “How many rooms?” she asked, killing everybody L. including Jack. And also Bugs, who was never able to supply Jack with a. topper for that topper. Jade was part of Chicago in the rough days. It must haye been tough The prime gunner in the St. Valentine’s Day daughter phoned him. shortly after that grisly crime and ordered him to appear immediately at his hotel hideout Jack appeared; Tfie murderer said, “I feel bad. Make me laugh.” ASSASSIN LAUGHS . Jack went into a routine and the assassin laughed, after a time. The assassin laughed for an odd reason. He was sadistically squirting seltzer water to Jack’s face while Jack told his stories. /; i> ' ■ Hell of a mho, Jade Waldron. He gave us half a century of laughs. There haven't been many who did. How lucky we are to have caught his wondrous act! I :1| (Kino Future*) ' ' . '■■■ ' permitted him to take the jump which has lent his performance its spec! a 1 luster. NO HERO’S CREDIT He does not claim a hero’s credit for proposing a state income tax. He prints out that the stage was set by the deficit which loomed, by Illinois’ lag in many aspects of state finance, and by the distinguished citizens w h o backed the income tax. But Ogilvie took a risk at which earlier g o v e r n o r s balked, and if it has left some doubts as to where he stands to the hearts of the voters, it has put him on the side of those who believe that the future belongs to the problem-solvers. It has shaken up the stale pattern of Illinois government,- made local governments less reliant on the property tax, and balanced the budget at a higher level of expenditure. Above all it has dramatized Ogilvie’s intention to be an aggressive governor. TENDER RELATIONSHIP An imminent and overdue cons titutional convention, which Republican fears of an income tax have previously served to block, may acerbate an already tender relationship between Ogilvie and Mayor Richard Daley of Chicago. The two men, much alike to hard-headed pragmatism, are already at odds on money issues, and if Daley attempts to secure constitutional authority to levy a . city income tak, Ogilvie. is certain to oppose him. However, the governor is sanguine on the future of his dealings with the forceful mayor. Having coexisted with Daley to- Cook County throughout his rise In politics and having witnessed the bitterness between Gov. Nelson Rockefeller and Mayor John Lindsay to New York, he observes that it may be ' fortunate that he and Daley are in different parties. ‘Has News Media Kept Amendment Quiet?’ Repeal the income tax? Get the Federal Government back to the Constitution? Is this for real? If so, why has the news media kept the Liberty Amendment so (jjuiet? HAROLD A. DAVIDSON JR. 11121 S. VASSAR, HOLLY Serviceman Believes in Fighting fpr Peace I wonder if the people involved-to moratoriums, c^itbn-strations, etc., regarding the war realize that pulling out of Vietnam is hurting the men who are fighting, themselves and the pride our Country’s forefathers fought to win. Has our Country come to the point where its people believe that “turn-, tog tail” and running is a solution for peace? It isn’t? Fighting for peace would be most apropos,,being as things are to our world today. j ★ ★ ★ \ ' ' If our people don’t know it, we men over here are willing to lose our lives to give the Vietnamese people a chance to better their country. We’ve taken a lot off other countries When we haven't had to and now is a good time to quit. Turning tail is going to mean sons, husbands and other relatives have died in vain for a purpose never fulfilled. Is that what they wanted their lives to represent? Is that what you want? V SERVICEMAN IN VIETNAM ‘Hate to Pay Tax for Disrespectful Students’ An article to The Press stated that each pupil in Waterford was allowed about $670 yearly fof an education. I would gladly pay $700 yearly per child for my children to get an education, but to pay such outrageous taxes to maintain schools for hoodlums and demonstrators, I can’t swallow. i* ■ ★ - It’s discouraging to sice children so disrespectful of other people, so destructive and belligerent and acting like they already know all there is to learn.' If they know so much why don’t they get out of school and give the students who aren’t as smart a chance to learn? MRS. LETHA TTLSON 4035 WOODMERE, DRAYTON PLAINS Grateful for Kindness in Bad Weather Recently at the Waterford Secretary of State’s office, a gentleman saved a group of us from waiting to the cold for several hours by taking our names and letttog us go sit to our cars. When it got near opening time, he advised us to take our places to line. ' ★ ' ★ Jr I’d sure like him to know we appreciate his saving us from cold hands and feet! GEORGE BURNHAM CLARKSTON, MICH. (Editor’s Note: AU, 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.) / BERRY’S WORLD-By Jim Berry **© HU W MIA, “Somebody said I don’t have 'Chutzpah.’ Find out what it. is, and let me know if l should gethonte!’’ Questions and Answers (Q) I can’t get my birth certificate straightened out, I was baptised Violet . Vacherot, my birth certificate says Mary Catherine Violet Vachereau, my marriage license says Violet VashrOw, my father’s marriage license says Joins Vashaw had his birth certificate says Julius Vashaw. How can I make en*'*f these names legal so I can make out my will and sign other legal papers? MRS. CHARLES LEE (A) If yqu want to use aname other than the one on your birth certificate, go to Probate, C15 \ publication fee for publishing it in the Legal News. Tde procedure calls for a coyrt appearance and takes from 2 to 3 months. If you want to use your birth certificate . name, you may do . so, but then yotfll have to sign that name, along unth “also known as and in* elude all the other spellings you’ve W) D® hair stralghteners and permanents taka the hair ont or cause dantag* to the hah- or scalp? J. L. H.. ’ (A) Used properly, feputgple permanent and hair straightening products should not damage Ad&F or scalp. However, there cdn be individual allergic reactions to etieh the bestir oducts, so if it impifit-tive, the directions pe-j followed oorefuuy to pre test for such possibilities. It is always advisable to get prof essional advice on which products are best for your hair. ] THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1969 A—T Old Farm's a Busy Place By BARBARA GRIBBON Old Farm, a seven-year-old subdivision near Orchard Lake and West Maple roads in West Bloomfield Township, is ful of activity all year lon& but especially now that the holidays are approaching. Its homeowners association and women’s club provide all sorts of entertainment during the year, including parties at the neighborhood swimming pool, Easter egg hunts and dances for adults. The women’s club meets monthly with a variety of programs for its members; this month a display of Christmas decorations and a demonstration of gift wraps. THE THOMAS LEES The Thomas Lee family came here four years ago from Akron, Ohio. Hie children are Melissa, 8, and Brian, 7. . Lee, a tire engineer for General,Tire A Rubber Co., is president of the homeowners association and his Wife is president of the womens’ club. The family enjoys sports, including swimming, bowling and golf. Mrs. Lee, a nursery school teacher, says the women in the subdivision often pool their crafts knowledge and share ideas on making things for the holidays, often out of throwaway items. The Lees belong to the Fifst United Methodist Church of Birmingham. , THE WILLIAM REPPENS Mr. and Mrs. William Reppen came from Birmingham three years ago. Their children are Jennifer, 3, and David, 17 months. Reppen is an engineer at Chrysler Carp. Golf, hupthig, and woodworking are his main hobbies. He and his wife bowl and bicycle with the family. Mrs. Reppen sews fpr her home and says the whole family has enjoyed the community pool this -year., They are member^ of the Episcopal church. THE WILLIAM MIXERS Detroit is the former home of Dr. and Mrs. William Mixer who came four years ago. They have two sons, Kevin, 4, and Keith, 1% years old. Dr. Mixer is a dentist with offices in Detroit. He enjoys'building things for his home including a new stereo cabinet and bookcases. . Mrs. Mixer is secretary of a new co-op babysitting pool in the neighborhood. A gourmet cook, she enjoys doing any kind of crafts. She plans to bring some special Christmas cookies to an exchange to be held by the women’s club this month. She also will demonstrate how to make an unusual candle holder. Mrs. Mixer is active in the Bloomfield Welcome Wagon Club and the Oakland County Dental Auxiliary. The family belongs to St. Coleman’s Church. THE JOHN EVANSES The John Evans family came four years ago front Dayton, Ohio. Their children are John, 13, Maureen, 12, Julie, 7, Patricia, 5, and Annette, 3. Johnka starting at 8 a.m. Fur Auction Set A big ad in the Yellow Pages keeps Rene’s Hair Fashions in Eaton Rapids set for .business. Get yourself a permanent stream of customers. To be big this year, make it big now . . . in the Yellow Pages, obviously. I CHRISTMAS COOKIES — Mrs, William Mixer, who has batch of Yule goodies tor sons Keith, 1V4, and Kevin, 4. I neighborhood reputation as a gourmet cook, whips up a candle two red candles only 10( with every $3.00 gasoline purchase Your Ashland dealer says “Happy Holiday Decorating” with these hand-dipped red candles. They are smokeless, dripless, colorfast and handsomely packaged. You get two 12" tapered candles ... a 45* value, for only 10* with every $3.00 gasoline purchase at a participating Ashland Service Station, while the supply lasts. Look for the “TWIN CANDLE” sign and drive in soon. Ashland ASHLAND Oil & REFINING COMPANY EXTRA HOURS TO GIFT SHOP AT HUDSON’S PONTIAC Now Hudson’* Pontiac i* opeft 6 night* a week, Monday through Saturday for your convenience. Shop from 9:30 a.m. to 9:30 p.m. use your charge Gift shop the easy way, with a convenient Hudson’s Cnarge Account with option terms. Or, use our, Extended Payment Plan for *U major purchases. See Hudson’s Christmas Trim and Wrap Shops Trees and trimmings, wraps and ribbons . . . find everything you’ll need. Pontiac, 2nd floiir. Let Hudson’s deliver it for you why carry . . . when Hudson’s •delivers to 19 Michigan counties - and Toledo, Ohio at no charge for purchase of $5 or more. Add 50* for purchases under $5. Add 50* for C.O.D. under $30. Giftarama has gift ideas for everyone It’s the jusUwhal-they.wanlcd place to shop for gifts for cvcryono. for $20 and under. Come browse here. Pontiac, 1st. Toyland’s open at Hudson’s ” Pontiac Find ail their favorites right now in our spanking new seiec* tion- 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-choose-for names 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 Canter 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 gifty ideas for kids, all with Zodiac themes. Pontiac, 1st. Stop by the Snoopy Shop . for.pillows, banners, sweat shirts . featuring the famous Peanuts line-up. of characters. And also a stuffed Peanuts dolls in lots . of sixes. Pontiac, 1st floor. 6 convenient locations ' / / Downtown, on Woodward Avenue; Northland, 8 Mi.-Northwestern; Eastland, 8 Ml.-Kelly Road; Westland, Warren-Wayne Road; Pontiac, Elia. Lake-Telegraph; Oakland, 1-75-14 Ml. Road. THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1969 medees the hostess cm IntMoottcmed Specialties expert as she serves Interesting and exotic new-dishes. Completely automatic to maintain constant heat, Teflon* interior, circular plate and rack * for party foods. 2 qt. size. 29.95 IntermaHc Tirae-AU-Tlmer runs In 24 hour cycles to turn on lights or electric appliances, and then turn them off again. Far protection while away from Proctor SUox Lifelong Toaster In popular 2-sllce size. It'e lifelong because the Inner Unit 1« so easily replaceable there's no need for shop repair service. Automatic color control toasts afl breads perfectly. 12.95 Lady Schick Hedr Dryer not only dries hair, It has a gentle mist to moisturize and prevent apUfflng hair. Hem a remote control and fixe large bonnet fits over Jumbo sized curiam. 89Jt . Osier Steam Wand quickly lifts wrinkles from cotton, wool, and synthetic fabrics. Trigger control lets you spray the lust-right amount of steam. Compact and light weight for easy packing and traveling. 19.87 West Bend Party Pereulator easily handles large holiday entertaining with It's 12 to 30 cup capacity. The faucet spout makes It just as easy to pour a pitcher full, as one cup. Satin finished stainless steel. 24.99 Scdton Hot Tray keeps food serving warm at Holiday parties, and at dinner time all year around. Elegant satin silver finish with walnut handles and shatter proof glass. Temperature control. Heated area 14Vkx8l4". 16.95 Clairol Kindness Hedrsetter with 20 popular jriasd zollere > for new hair styles In minutes. Handy carrying can* loves to travel and it's only 2 Vi" high lor easy packing... even has a built In mirror 23.88 A—9 Special for the children’s gifts Visit our Zodiac Shop at , Hudson's Pontiac and just see all the gifty ideas lor kids, all with Zodiac themes. Pontiac, 1st. Stop by the Snoopy Shop for pillows, banners, sweat shirts featuring the famous Peanuts linkup of characters. AM also stuffed Peanuts dolls in lots of eises. Pontiac, * let floor. YOUR CHOICE 19.99 SPECIALLY PRICED Lloyds AM/FM portable or table radio ■ Portable radio plays on house current or batteries (included). Comes in leatherette case with handle, die-cast front. 1 'v. : ' m Cylinder band and station selector. ■ Telescopic antenna and earphone. s JIFC on FM, automatic gain control on AM. a Table model has twin speakers, AC/DC all solid state. Ji Die-cast front, brushed aluminum speaker grille. b In contemporary walrlut wood cabinet, a Slide-rule tuning, tone control, AFC'ori FM. Hudson's Music Store, Pontiac—2nd floor; also Downtown, Northland, Eastland, Westland, Oakland. Also at Lincoln Park, Dearbotb Budget Stores. Itls curtstixxsis time at HCJ3DSQITS THE PONTIAC TRESS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1969 "Find all their favorite* right now in our spanking new selec* tion of Chrigtmaa toy* fpy aH good girls and boys,^Pontiac,L 2. Give Hudson’s Gift Certificates A Hudson’s Gift Certificate ia just the ticket for those hard* to-choose-for names on your list. Pick them up now at the Cashier’s Office at Hudson's Pontiac. , jfre’lt even Giftarama has gift ideas for everyone It's the just-what-t^iyi^knted place to shop for gifts everyone for 120 and under. Come browse here. Pontiac, 1st. Toyhmd% open at Hudson*& Pontiac wrap „ it for you Loolc for the Gift Wrap Center at Hudson’s Pontiac, 1st, for 'the perfect all of PONTIAC Now .Hudson’s Pontiac is open 6 nights a week, Monday through Saturday for your convenience. Shop from 9:30 a.m..to 9:30 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 and ribbons . ., find everything you’ll need. Pontiac, 2nd floor. Let Hudson’s deliver it for you why carry . . . whcn'Hudson’s delivers to 19 Michigan counties and Toledo, Ohio .at no charge for purchase of 95 or more. Add 50' for purchases under $5. Add 50' for C.Q.D. Under 930. PRICED 49.99 Deluxe 5-band portable radio b AM/FM short wave, high and low police band, (hear sheriff & police calls) a AC/DC all solid state Lloyds. b Telescoping antenna. b Heavy magnet speaker, brushed aluminum grille. a Batteries and earphone included, a Handsome leather-look cabinet; chrome trim. iTRA HOURS TO GIFT SHOP AT HUDSON’S kitchell, remains on duty at Ft,i Col. WiUiwn J. McNalley, in-Hood, Tex.,pending results of affirmation office at Ft. Hood, preliminary investigation. said, “He’s on duty md it under Mitchell has been charged no restraint.” He said the Inves-with assault with intent to com- tigation might be finished next mit murder. ' *. week/ , - ^ - j WI BIG COLOR NAMESI THE IOTT INSTANT CREDIT • EASY TERMS OAKLAND MALL IN TROY 1-75 at 14 MILE R0. OPEN DAILY 10 to 9 PHONE 585-5743 A—10 THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 2, I960 Laird Doesh't Feel My Lai Case Will Hurt Nixon By the Associated Press Secretary of Defense Melvin R, Laird says he doesn’t think the My Lai incident, in which an Army lieutenant has beenj charged with nfiurdering ,109 South Vietnamese civilians, will cost President Nixon any public support. 1 “I don’t think it will hurt the President’s program,” Laird said Monday at the Pentagon. “But I don’t want to say that this helps.” Laird said he thought Americans stood behind Nixon’s plan “to remove the American involvement in ground combat rapidly|as possible.” Meanwhile, the prosecution I and defense in the court-martial of Lt. William L. Calley Jr., on charges of premeditated murder of 109 Vietnamese men, women and children, asked the! U.S. Court of Military Appeals to ban further accounts in newspapers or magazines or on radio or television about the My Lai incident of March 16, 1968. UNDER ADVISEMENT The court took the petition for an injunction under advisement. During the court session, Cal-ley’s military defense counsel, Capt. Aubrey M. Daniel III, said the court-martial would not be ready to begin until March. Sen. Sam J. Ervin, D-N.C., introduced a bill in thd Senate to permit U. S. district courts to try discharged servicemen for crimes they may have committed while in the service. Many of the veterans of the My Lai action who have told their stories in public have left the service. Military courts have no jurisdiction once the men are discharged, and civil 19 Saw Blades Are Found at Wayne Jail DETROIT (UPI) — A search through a maximum security area of the Wayne County Jail following a foiled jailbreak has yielded 19 hacksaw blades hidden under toilets, officials said yesterday. Deputy Inspector Richard Page theorized that 13 prisoners in the section may have used another 24 blades, but broken them up and flushed then down the toilet. Page said two of the prisoners Involved in the attempted break last Friday were involved in a shooting incident with federal marshals here in July as they tried to escape as they were being transported to court. Their names were not immediately available. SAWED THROUGH —Jailers -discovered the at-1 tempted break when they found that one portion of a heavy metal bar had been sawed through, and another was halfway sawed through. Hie subsequent search netted the 19 blades. | Courts have no jurisdiction for crimes committed in service overseas. This rule was handed down by the Supremo Court in the 1955 case of Robert W. Toth, who was charged with murder| “It is within the Congess’ consti-i i ‘‘There can be no valid argu-and conspiracy to murder injtutional powers to provide for ment therefore that an ex-serv-Korea five months after his I federal district court trials of iceman can be tried by court-discharge. - discharged soldiers accused of,martial or not at all. If that is Justice Hugo L. Black, with offenses’^ while in die armed!so, it is only because Congress five justices concurring, wrote:!forces. 1 has hot seep fit to subject them to trial in federal district pourt.”/ ' * •* : : * The only other soldier charged in connection with the My . Lai incident, S. Sgt. David intPhite Opal Oecanter Bonded Beam 100 Proof Kentucky Straight Bourbon Whiskey Distilled end Bottled by the James B.Beam Distilling CovClermont, Beam, Ky. (AdvwtlMmwit) Doctors quit smoking CHICAGO — According to i recent survey, 52% of AmerU cen doctors do not smoke. Many gulf recently due, according t< the Anti-Tobacco Center o America, .to the conclusive evidence Unking cigarettes and lung cancer, .', fAeny doctors gave up smok-ln§' without straining their will power Nuihks to a new tablet whlth helps to progressively ellon1|ieTS' the nded for nicotine end, as a result, the desjre to smoke., Less than 2%' of- the 150,000; people 4who tried ‘ this tablet reported they still smoke! 5rtmk*fs:- interested in receiving Inf(ktnatlon,.(free) about this new teWet arev Invited to contact directly -she Arltl-Tobacco Center of , America, Dept. 740-S, 276 Pafk Avenue South, New York City, fOOlO. It is Efficient, to send your nerp* end address: Just a post- Arms Talks Excitement Dies ssj THE PONTIAC PRESSl TUESDAY, DECEMBER Helsinki Returns to Normal RENT, SELL, TRADE ... USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS HELSINKI, Finland (AP) -A television show popular these days with Helsinki’s hall-million populace is the made-ta-U,S. program “Peytoh Place." Downtown < a major movie house draws crowds for "Midnight Cowboy/* - I’, ★. * A smash hit at a small theater Is "Kropp Body.” The curtain' lifts on the opening scene to dis-j play three men standing naked. Sports fans flock to International hockey, soccer and basketball games. Long-haired teen-agers do their thing at ear-splitting discotheques. BACK TO NORMAL During the few gray hours of midday daylight youngsters romp on playing fields while their elders lunch, shop and about their business. 'It’s pretty much back-to-nor-j needed for success of the talks, mal these days, after the Fin- nish capital’s debut as the site for what were then the world’s most , talkeil-about talks—the l)|S.-^oviet discussions on curbing the superpower nuclear arms race. •J ★ if To the five million Finns the great-power choice of for launching the Strategic Arms Limitation Talks (SALT) vaulted this1 country into the big time in international conferences and crowned a diligent pursuit of a neutrality policy in the Cold War. Finnish national pride basked . ly reserved for the press down-spokesman refuse to 'qay\anyA toim. had played havoc With thing about what is going on. ^■interested in the conference,” a newsboy observed. "But why don’t the delegates ever say anything?” PLAY HAVOC car-owning businessman! said 20Q parking spaces special- Man Split in Two in Saw Fatality _____________| I________| HARDWOOD (AP) A Hardin the glObal spotlight as the wood man was killed when a world press descended on the Power saw broke away from its city for the ceremonial opening mounting and split him in two “ Yellow Pages advertising has consistently produced 60% to 10% of our business," says. John Taylor of Capital-Florist in Battle Creek . Watch your sales grow with a big ad in the Yellow Pages. To Be -big this year, make it big now .'.. in the Yellow Pages, obviously. pieces from his head through his pelvis, State Police said. Killed was William G. Morris, 51, who was sawing wood at his commuters. “I’m happy that number ofj reserved spaces is now down to 20,” he added. The downtowii Hotel Marskl, which converted to a headquarters for some 230 foreign jour-‘nfelists at the peak, is fast re-1 turning to routine as the newsmen depart. A basement press j center accommodates the few, remaining, ! _ So the’talk has turned to politics—an election is due in March—and the weather. WINTER COMING Snow has yet to blanket Hel-; sinki this year. A central Euro-pean-styie city with zig-zag boulevards, trolley cars, scenic harbor views and a dockside mar-| ket place, the capital is- on a peninsula jutting into the Gulf of; of SALT in a government banquet hall. Finnish TV broadcast the proceedings live while newspapers vtted with,layouts. • --------» • . .. .. home with the tractor mounted Finland, The sea tempers its cli-, orr rnuNT falks jSaw, authorities said. A fitting mate though it lies about as fan But that was two weeks ago. apparently worked loose freeing Inorth ®s Anchorage, Alaska. Now the story is off the front [the whirling blade. The accident! But the long, dark winter is Now the stoVy is off the front;happened Sunday. .coming on and the skies are us- pages and few Finns, are paying much attention to the talks as U.S, and Soviet negotiators confer quietly in the embassy section of town, about 15 minutes walk from the city’s commercial center. A main reason is the news blackout which the U.S. and Soviet envoys, by agreement, draped over their discussions. On grounds that secrecy is ually overcast. * a * With the thermometer hovering in the 20s now and heading! lower as the winter deepens,! almost everybody bundles up . for even short outdoor excur-| chemistry department has been sions. Indoors the citizens live named a corresponding mem-[behind double-pane insulated ber of the Greek Academy of windows, and, for warmth and Athens for his contributions to relaxation, pay periodic visits basic research in chemistry, [to Finland’s famed sauna baths, j Cited by Greeks EAST LANSING (AP) - Dr. Gerasimos H. Karabatsos of the Michigan State University Michigan’s #1 U.S. battled Scotch. IllcHlasterS At Michigan^ #1 price. *4&8 4/5 QUART^ Blended Scotch Whisky, 80 Proof, McMaster'sTmpor^oT SCOTCH WHISKt \ t> . \ Y BLEND ' \ EKJHTr r#oof PRODUCT OF SCOTLAND Save on Delta’s ‘Owly Birds’ to Memphis and Gulf Coast Chies Delta is ready when you are! \ . ''' BUY! SELL! TRADE! USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT AbS! Leave' Arrive Arrive Arrive Detroit Memphis New Orleans Houston 8:00a ' — 10:30a ll:13at ' 8:00a 9:13a 11:19a IlilOa* ? 10:50a 11:27a NS — Ttl5p 12:20p — 1:33p NS _ . l:50p — 4:25pt 5.04pt * 3:35p 4:12p NS 5:37p 7:G0p* 6:02p — 8:30pt _ . 6:23p 7:36p ... 9:48p* — 6:35p ■ — — 8:02p NS 9:30p 10:07p NS 11:36p* — ■ 10:00p 'OB' ‘ 12:25at l:03at 12:20a'OB' 1:33a 3:53a* 4:03a tVla Atlanta, *Via Memphis, NS—Non-stop. 'OB—'OwlyBIrti' Jetourist fares: Merrtphis-Day $46; 'Owly Bird' $3& New Orleans-Day $63; 'Owly Bird' $51. Houston-Day $72; 'Owly Bird' $57. Add tax to fares. AEDEELTTA. It's the Good Housekeeping Family Christmas Book and it's yours FREE when you open your 1970 Christmas Club at any office of Pontiac State Bank. A book loaded with Holiday articles and ideas, nearly 200 pages of exciting ideas on Christmas Decorations, Gifts, Holiday Entortain* It's a book you'll refer to dozens of timos throughout the Holiday Season so get your copy your 1970 Christmas Club far $1 or more. Only Delta offers you low-fare "Owly Bird" service to Memphis, New Orleans and Houston. You can save as much as $15 over regular Day Jetourist. Non-stop, Memphis is just 97 minutes away. And Delta has three non-stops there every day. Or, Delta can put you in New Orleans on ten jet services a day. Just over two hours on the mid-day non-stop. Also take your choice of eight choice services a day to Houston. One's an ideal end-of-th>e-day non-stop with a delightful Delta dinner en route. Delta honors all major general-purpose credit cards. For reservations on the only non-stops to Memphis and the Gulf, call Delta or see your Travel Agent. Also the only non-stops to Memphis A-—12 THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1969 NEW OLDSTER CLUB - Mrs. Leuna Sims of the Pearl Wright Senior Citizens Club in Royal Oak Township took part in yesterday’s first gathering at the new Oakland County Retirees and Senior Citizens Drop-In Center in downtown Pontiac at 1 Lafayette. Space for the center was provided by the Qty of Pontiac and the Oakland County Board of Supervisors in cooperation with the Oakland County Commission on Economic Opportunity. Student Caught 'Red-Headed' Monday Events in State Capital jJ Avon Township Police Officer Jerodne Eby says be has his riot helmet back. Yesterday morning Eby reported that he caught a 16-year-old Rochester High School student red-handed, as the student wore the $40 riot helmet in the hall of the school. The student told Eby that he got the helmet from another student. Eby then retraced the helmet’s travels: the second student got the helmet from a third student who got it from a fourth who found it. * Eby reported the helmet, missing from his squad car in September. Service for Joe A. Seamoft Jr., 38, of 512 Arthur will he 1 p.m. Thursday at Frank Car-ruthers Funeral Home with burial in Oak Hill Cemetery at 7 p.m. Joe A. Seamon Jr. Mr. Mulanax died Friday. He was a self-employed blacksmith and welder. Surviving am Ida wife, Dora, and one brother. v Maurice A. Palmer 78, and his wife, Mildred, 52, of 2292 Horseshoe were yesterday with burial in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy. Mr. Puddington died Saturday. His wife died Friday. Hfe was a retired general sales manager with Dplta-Macon Seamon, a member of Service for Maurice A. Palmer, Brick and Tile Co. and active in Hatford Baptist Church I n 87, of 1975 Hill will be 1 p.m. the Boy Scouts of-America. Detroit, died Saturday. He was Thursday' at Richardson-Bird Surviving is a son, George of engaged in the construction in- Funeral Home, Milford, with Birmingham, dustry. ‘ burial in Highland Cemetery, . , ... ... . Surviving are his mother, Highland Township. . Memorial contributions may Mrs. Della Tyler of Pontiac; Mr. Palmer died yesterday. ** sent to the Amencan Cancer WHITE LAKE TOWNSHIP - dlsciiMlons ”o» education reform logifi*-Greefed former .One, 0. Menng"*0* .H*CTfo^;“Com^l«, C employe fired two daughters, Shelia of Detroit He was a member of White Society. and Karon; and a sister. Union Stops Picketing at GMC Truck Anthony W. Zanoni Service for Anthony W. Zanoni, 11-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. William J. Zanoni of 826 Blaine, will be 1:30 p.m. I tomorrow at the Church of God, 'Walton and Joslyn, with burial in Ottawa Park Cemetery, Independence Township by, ,**«. - withdrawn from GMC Truck Elementary School, died Sun-, BIRMINGHAM - Joint Odessa and Mrs. Madelon and Coach Division after, ,. . .. I , ... service tor George Puddington,!Kristek of Flint. Lake Presbyterian Church and a retired machinist. Surviving are his wife, Agnes; a daughter, Mrs. Arthur Buell Jr. of Webberville; Richard in the Air Force at Albrook AFB, Panama Canal Zone; nine grandchildren; great-grandchild; and a sister. Katherine E. Torrey WATERFORD TOWNSHIP -Graveside service for Katherine E., 3-month-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Norman Torrey of 2018 Denby, were yesterday in brother!'Ottawa Park Cemetery. * Katharine died Sunday. George Puddington Surviving besides her parents (are a In-other, Norman C. at Waterford Purchase Hits Procedure Snag Surviving are his parents; a brother and two sisters, David,! Robin and Kellie, all at borne;! and grandparents Mrs. Gladys L. Roehl, Mrs. Grace M. Zanoni and William J. Zanoni Sr., all of! Pontiac. grievances of the union were partially resolved, according , to Joseph Bane, president oi Teamster Local 614 in Pontiac. Truck traffic was stopped from entering the plant for six hours yesterday, from 6 a.m. to noon, when pickets from the local appeared at the company’s receiving gate o n Opdyke between Square Lake,Mrs. Phillip (Cheryl) Keelin, 20, Walerford Township officials board by .vehicle MmnJtteo, aoUiorto the purchase, and te'Sthe ph*ete m"a and beard member, couldetinu.de up of depa-tuien,head.. Ihee the vehicle committee lMve a(ttr meeting with topbed, I, at the Price Funeral Fr^Mri i.#* Mrs. Phillip Kaolin PONTIAC TOWNSHIP Judge Rules oh Magazine »y »«ttciated conflmwV tlons of education reform leglflo-- ‘ THE STATE SUPREME wr* Of • 11 Oakland Univ. STUDIO COMPANY' presents ^3 One-Act Plays” by Ionesco, Wilder, and Schaffer« Dec. 3,4 A 8 Curtain Time—$:15 Adults |2, Students |1 MEADOW BROOK theatre agree last night on the pro- ^ TIGHT YEAR cedure for authorizing purchase! , °fA°dS^^ was t0Uched|;?°k \th.f budgets before AGREED TO TABLE off When Supervisor ElmtfN . ^ recommendations |g Oakland County Circuit Judge the : on sale and heads Johnson balked- at approving for purchases,” Johnson com- the specifications and setting mented. “We’re not sure of this the bid date for the purchase of 18 township vehicles in 1970. Although the purchases were approved by the board when they recently okayed the 1970 township’s budget, Johnson said year’s year-end balance in the budget but it looks tike 1970 is going to be a tight budget year. “I want the chance to decide if we’ll have to eliminate some items.” Some department heads 1 the board fin i- unanimously agreed to table the s specifications for study uptil e Monday upon the motion of s Trustee Frank A. Lane. “None of this having depart-e ment heads come in to make e the request,” he remarked immediately after making the s motion. he preferred that the depart-! present said they already had In other business, the board: j ment heads submit official gone over their budgets and • Passed two running repurchase recommendations to made the purchase recom- quests without any difficulty, him. mendations to the vehicle com- one permits a gas station on The specifications and mittee. I Dixie Highway at Ledgestone recommendations to buy the Township Clerk Arthur Salley Q(gt to the post office. The! vehicles were submitted to the contended the board should first'0g,er would allow ^ - ^ ^ automobile dealership on M59 should set specifications Jar management officials to discuss Home, should |bld8, ’ j problems.' "I.. _ , He said it was agreed that the Mrs. Don A. I ] y switching of carrier trucks 3 inside the plant would be done by Teamsters, and not by UAW members. According to Bane, negotiations will continue to allow a Teamster representative inside the plant. Presently, he said, Teamster agent is not allowed on the property. He also said that the girl looks her age, rejecting Barr’s contention that she appears to be over 18, the legal age for buying the material. Morgan WHITE LAKE TOWNSHIP -Service for Mrs. Don A. (Vivian) Morgan, 52, of 4186 Jackson will be 11 a.m. Friday at Donelson-Johns Funeral Heme with burial in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, 1Toy. , Mrs. Morgan died yesterday, ___________She was a member of the ■y " American Legion Auxilary Post Theft at Laundry 377' 'te teted before Ziem magazine was obscene. <, * Surviving are her husband; a without a jury on a charge of day that a magazine sold to a 15-year-old girl was obscene, and now must decide if the clerk who sold K knew the girl was a minor. The ruling was made after the prosecution rested its case against George M. Williamson. His attorney xharles Barr had moved to dismiss the action on the basis that file magazine was not obscene. Williamson, 25, of 784 Auburn j into the ,store and buyi Williamson was expected to take.the witness staqd today. Ziem also is to case reportedly reversing an earlier decision on which he based his ruling that the CAR WASH (jJttiu <901 Exterior Car Wash 14 gals. Free 12 gals. 25“ 9 gals. 50° .6 gals. 75° KUHN Auto Wash 149 W. Huron St. Pontiac in City Reported s°n< Michael Harmes of Pon- selling obscene material to a tiac; a daughter, Linda Harmes : minor. Charles Welsh, owner of at home; two brothers; two Area Stores Extend Yule Shopping Hours Chuck’s Norge Village laundry,!818*° d 1105 Joslyn, reported the theft grandchildren. The girl was working with Downtown Pontiac and area shopping center; have extended store hours until Christmas. Santa is available in three different locations. Most stores in downtown Pontiac are open 9:30 a.m. to 9 p.m. Monday through Saturday. Sears & Roebuck will open at 9 a.m. and close at 9 p.m. In addition to 9:30 a.m. to 9 p.m. daily during the week, Kresge’s will be open from noon to 5 p.m. on Sundays. near Cass Lake Road next to the Pied Piper restaurant. , • Tabled a lot-split request for property on M59 near Cass Lake ffoad for the second week in a row because revised plans showed onelot was still short of the 12,000-square-foot minimum. • Decided to hold a public hearing and take action Monday 4 h f e e Pontiac police when she purchased, the magazine last of 1224 cash and 120 In cheeks Wo|t#r W. Mulanax HIGHLAND TOWNSHIP — CASES STILL PENDING $600 Missing at Cleaners G A M & ELLIS Sine* 1945 CEMENT WORK • PATIOS CARAGES • ADDITIONS COMPLETE BUILDING SERVICE FE 2-1211 US N. Saginaw TERMS yesterday afternoon. Welsh said the money was removed from a desk in the laundry’s office when he left the room for 10 minutes., ... ■ OEO Gets Cash Service forWatier W. Mulanax, 62, of 3172 Oakridge w|B b* II »m tomorrow at RicharAscn-Bird Euneral Home, Milford, with burial in Oakland County Cemetery. A $415,129 grant has been jon a proposed ordinance pro- awarded to the Oakland County I viding for the connection of Commission on Economic Op-; Waterford lilies to the Clinton- portunity to operate its program Oakland Sewer Interceptor. for the first six months of 1970. j Most stores in the Miracle Mile Shopping Center* Bloomfield Township, will be open from 9:30 a.m. to 10 pin. Monday -through Saturday with many stores opening on Sunday. Topps Department Store, open daily at 9:30 a.m., will remain open until 11 p.m. Monday through Saturday and, Sunday 11 a.m. to. 8 p.m, New CNBD Unit Opens at Pontiac Mall 31 Americans Killed in Viet Clerks .in two other stores were arrested and charged with the same offense after the teenager, now' a 11th grader at Pontiac Northern High School, bought what police claim to be lewd literature. Their cases are still pending. Weekend cash receipts of $600 were reported missing yesterday afternoon by Harold Red-daway, owner of Reddaway Cleaners, 737 Auburn. Reddaway told police that he left the store in the charge of a woman while he tok a vacation. He Instructed her to place the cash receipts in a hiding SANTA’S HOURS Santa’s hours at Miracle Mile are Monday through Friday, 2-8 p.m., and Saturday, 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. New store hours for the Pontiac Mall, Telegraph and Elizabeth Lake roads, in Waterford Township, are Monday through Saturday, 9:30 a.m. to 9:30 p.m., with some stores open on Sunday. i Children may visit Santa at the Mall daily except Sunday from 10 a.m. until closing. i The Tel-Huron Shopping Center will be open from 9:30 a.m. to 9 p.m. Monday through Saturday. Santa’s visiting hours are noon to 6 p.m. Monday through Thursday and noon to 0 p.m. Friday and Saturday. Community National’s new I one teller to service three drive-in bank opened yesterday customers at once. WASHINGTON (AP) - The names of 31 men killed in action are on the latest casualty list from the war in Vietnam. Included were four men from the Midwest. Idled in action: "Waterford Township. * CpI. Miller E ! MICHIGAN — HC. George E. M !Jackson. at the Pontiac Mall, Telegraph j The building is designed witi^•l'loSV^'pik,HEhsr IHK!mMatihai! and Elizabeth T.air^ roails, three drive-up stations on both; ^ marine core* the east and west sides for a VnV'ISSi stT louS total of six drive-up stations. i Died while captured: , , j. ' • * A i ILLINOIS — Pie. Francis E. Cannen; The new facility, including _______________. , ...., East Alton, I four Tel-Air units, is an extension of the Community Na- contends that place. Williamson was set up by police j * * * * to commit a crime. When Reddhway returned, k ★ * A there was no money in the Judge Ziem disagreed, saying hiding place, although the that it was his opinion that en- employe said she had placed it trapment was not involved since | there. ’ AUTEN FURNITURE 6605 Dixie Hw Clarkston 625-2022 ► FURNITURE ► CARPET ► DRAPERY tional Bank'branch office at the Mall. The Tel-Air units, by use of a pneumatic tube system, enable Teller windows are located in the first lane with Tel-Air units, in lanes two and three. . Hours for the new drive-in bank are 9:30 a.m. to 7 p.m. Monday through Friday and Saturday 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Missing as a result of hostile action: AIR FORCE Lt. Cel. Waller A. Renelt, lnd Lt. John R. Baldridge Jr. Missing not as a result of hostile action: ARMY » Lt. i TAKE YOUR CHOICE , i IN OAKLAND COUNTY • SINCE 1928 • ALL CREDIT TERMS » BURNER SERVICE FAST MOTOR BANKING - Warren H. Eierman, president ,of Community National Bank, fries out the Tel-Air' motor banking • unit at the hew drive-in banking facility at Pontiac Mall, which opened yesterday. CLARKE-GEE FUEL OIL imestiiM now available booklets Capital Gains and Losses for 1969 your portMM for possible TAX SAVINGS. Capital Gains A >me Tax Rat Stocks on the Big Board tains Long-time dividend payers, Institutional favi Ites, 5 year growth rates In earnings per share groupsd by Industries, etc. T Phone or maQ coupon now! First of Michigan t •cation! s First of Michigan Corporation 742 N. Woodward, Brot-H Birmingham^ Mich^an 4801T □ Sand «• a tree copy of “Capital Gains & Losses for 1969“ □ Sand me sfrss copy of VStocks on Uio Big Board"' TtlE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1969 A—18 Public School* Units Together on Reform LA N81NG (AP) As plans as a constitutional n HOW WYN SOCK SAVED CHRISTMAS DONMEELQL YlV$6Ar THES eUPPyjFW#) PEER CON-ABB YOU < VENTION IN DOING HERE?i FLORIDA- lawmakers struggle for even -liipitod consensus on Gov. William Miiliken’s education package, public school groups representing a host of educators report agreement on die basic elf^nentp of reform. Li an open letter to Michigan legislators, the groups nounced parochiaid and called for “a shift of emphasis from property taxes to income taxes for. the support of public schools.” m The letter was signed by top officials of 14 education -oriented bodies, including the Michigan Education Association, the Michigan Federation of TOacbers and the State Congress of Parents and Teachers. “We remain unalterably opposed to parochiaid,” the groups said. “We do, however, support shared time - dual enrollment Doctor OXs This Hemorrhoid Treatment ;ForN.J. Couple's Son % Treatment Shrinks Flies, Relieves Fain In Host Cases iThartotN. J. Ur. and Mrs. C. M. weffersreport: “Our son suffered fromhemorrhoids. I asked the doctor about Preparation H and ha gave ns the O.K. Our son is now fine, thanks to Preparation HI' 4> (Note: Doctors nave proved in. cases -r Preparation H® ao> case, the for aiding private schools.” ' ' ' k' -k,\‘ ' ■ The letter said taxation reform should incorporate: increased income tax earmarked for education; a limited property tax; equity in the tax burden between ^business concerns and individuals; and a limited local option property tax with guaranteed yield. * * * The groups also supported: • A 7-0 member State Board of Education to be appointed by the governor; the board would name a superintendent on contractual basi. ★ A k Reorganization o f termediate school districts into 10-25 regional districts, with regional board members named by local boards. Consolidation of K-6 and K-8 districts with neighboring K-12 districts. ★ * Educational assessment based on the goals of education, ‘not narrowly based on reading and mathematics skills,1*' establishment of an advisory committee of educators to help state board fig methods of assessment. By Paul Gringlo NOTGllRE VET, EhUT^l I THINK SANTAS IN/ From Cong Prisoner's Head Surgeon Removes Grenade jSAIGON (AP) - Using a pocket knife for a scalpel, a U.S. Army surgeon removed a live grenade from the head of a Vietcong prisoner while a demolitions expert steadied the patient’s head, the U.S. Air Force reported today. ★ * - * The operation was performed several weeks ago, and the is now “in good condition -----up and walking around,” the Afr Force said. •k , it k The operating room was a from pain, burning and Itching,’ Then swelling is gently reduced. There’s no other formula for fhe treatment of hemorrhoids Uke doctor-tested Preparation H. It also lubricates to make bowel movements more comfortable, soothes irritated tissues and helps prevent further infection.' In ointment o§ suppository form.) Bob Yaklin Mobilit Homes in Flint reports real pull-thousands of dollars a month—with big ads in the YeBow Pages. To bo big We year, make it big now.,, in the Yellow Pages, obcionsly. __ enclosure hastily thrown up on the helicopter pad of an Army hospital at Qui Nhon. It was considered too risky to carry the wounded man inside. 'And as if we didn't have enough trouble already, i t * _ to rain,” said the surgeon, Lt. Col. Thomas H. Witschi of Wading River, N.Y. 3 SUCH OPERATIONS At least three such operations have been performed by American military doctors daring the Vietnam war. All have been successful. In each the grenade has been a U.S.-made M79 which must travel a certain distance through the air before it arms itself to explode. The Air Force gave this account: ★ ★ ★ The wounded Vietcong prisoner was put aboard an Army medical evacuation helicopter which took him to the Tuy Hoa Air Base, 240 miles northeast of. Saigon. There- X-ray technicians discovered the grenade imbedded in the left maxillary sinus and concealed by facial wounds. “Explosive ordnance disposal personnel were called immediately to look at the X-rays sss the danger,” said the Air Force. ‘They assumed the grenade to be armed and ready to detonate." FLOWN UP COAST The clinic at Tuy Hoa had no surgeon skilled enough to remove the grenade. Accompanied by Maj. Alfred Q. Watson Jr. of Keystone Heights, Fla., the commander of the clinic, the .prisoner was flown up. the coast to the Army hospital at Qui Nhon, 3 0 minutes away. ‘We took every possible precaution during the flight," said Watson. “We knew that at PH minute a bit of turbulence, a seizure of pain or any one of a number of things could put pressure on the toe and blow us all up. My prime concern was keeping the patient quiet and the tracheotomy (a breathing incision in the throat) dean and effective:” ★ ★ k At the Qui Nhon helicopter pad, Witschi and M. Sgt. Lee R. Miller of Healdton, Okla., demolition man, took over. ★ ; * ★ Miller held the wounde man’s head and warned Witschi that his surgical froceps n Remarkable New Hearing Help! & i / HEARING*| A I D S I N I • E detonate the grenade, surgeon enlarged the hole in the cheek with his knife, then gingerly reached into the man’s mouth with his other hand and pushed the grenade out. A FEW MINUTES In a few minutes, the job was done. All the time, Witschi said, the patient was “alert, conscious and extremely cooperative," while Miller was “rocksteady” during the operation. ★ k The inddent was not disdosed until today for security reasons, an Air Force spokesman said. And although an Army man performed, to operation at an Army hospital, the Air Force made the announcement because its X-ray technicians discovered the grenade. The New' England and California coasts are among the est regions in the United States. MAVERICK . . THE SIMPLE MACHINE Maverick SHI $1995: The best small car value in the work). ITS A FACT: Our small car has scored a big success. And the reason Is simple —solid value. FACT: Maverldk rivals the Imports In gas mileage. FACT: Maverick gives you lots of legroom, hiproom and headroom ... plus 10.4 cu. ft. of trunk space. FACT: Maverick is easier and less expensive to maintain than an economy import. FACT" “ ““ ing about rising c $1995*. •Ford** euegested retell price ... will llrcc an not Included; the* n daalar preparation cMi#n (H For the same kind of value inalargersize- yourbestbuyis Torino Lowest-priced hardtop in its class. ITS A FACT: Nothing can equal Torino—not In appearance, features or price. FACT: This hardtop has the same sleek aerodynamic styling of the more expensive Torino models. FACT: It has the same 117-inch wheelbase for a smoother ride, FACT: It has the same 60-inch track for better road holding. FACT: It has the same roomy interior that seats six I._CANT. U .MimilMPAACn/i 4ka4 late In perfect comfort. PACT: It has new soundproofing that lets everyone,enjoy a quiet, more relaxing ride. FACT: It gives you 16.2 Cu. ft. of trunk space. Look over Torino and Maverick at yOur Ford Dealer's soon. Pick the car that measures up *p your needs. THE FACTS FAVOR FORD. . H ___• information about that* cars, taa your Ford Daalar or wrlta: Maverick Catalog. Dept N-12 or Torino Catalog, Dapt. N-13, P.O. Box 1603, Dearborn, Michigan 48121. AUDI GmohcX Great New Behind-The-Ear Aid by MAICOl 0 Automatic Volume Control Automatically softens loud sounds, prevents distortion, protects sensitive ears. & 0 MAICO Name In Hearing" 1012 W. HURON ST., PONTIAC—681-1811 Now 7 Convenient Locations to Serve You PONTIAC BIRMINGHAM 29 E. Cornell 31815 Southfield Phone 332-1225 Phone 644-2175 DEARBORN—CROSSE PTE.—DETROIT—MADISON HGTS. Send Secret jar Information to: NAME .... .......ADDRESS.......... CITY.................STATE......... Forward Microphone Better localization of sounds means more natural hearing, better speech understanding. Telephone Switch Shuts out room noises, helps you hear tele* phone conversation better. See it... HEAR IT I Today,; at YOUNG MEN! Ages 21 to 35 Let's Get Involved Ig Our Community Come Find Oqt About Tho Many Youth, Mental Health and Community Development Projects Sponsored by THE PONTIAC JAYCEES Wednesday, December 3 FORTINO’S STEAK HOUSE 1250 Wide Track at Huron Street **YOV CAN HELP IW PONTIAC” Everyone Welcome 'Dick EU/tM President PONTIAC JAYCEES Only % more days to win Still hundreds of thousands of prizes to be won in Sunoco’s Great New Landmarks of America Coin Game. But time is getting short and this is the game you can’t afford to miss...the game where every winner is an instant winner. The game you play with attractive metal coins depicting famous American landmarks. It’s easy to collect all 20. And it’s* easy to win. Stop at Sunoco—and start playing now. The more you play, the better your chances of winning. LANDMARKS OF AMERICA (prizes and odds as of Start of game) PRIZES NUMBER AVAILABLE ODDS $20 5,000 1-4600 $5 10,000 1-2300 $1 200,000 1-115 Bronze Sets 100,000 1-230 Totals 315,000 1-73 In Ohio, Michigan, Kentucky, Indiana. At least 2,500 participating dealers. 23,000,000 coins. Game ends 2/14/70. Licensed driver* only. Void whoro prohibited. Landmarks of America Coin Game Yxir Fiord Dealer fights the price rise SUNOCO/ tton” and “limitation o f - allowable capital losses” and* “short-term capital loss carry-; over” and “dividend exclusions” and “nontabable distributions” . . . Boggles the mind? •KEEPING UP’ No, no taxpayers! It Is only keeping up with the "increased i complexity.” * w rural iuw dividual income t • Schedule A deductions ., • Schedule B - 'W.J7.4JI • Schedule D — sides or ex-J changes of property l; • Schedule E — supplemental and miscellaneous i income .. i • Schedule R — retirement income credit • Schedule T — tax computation. r It is wonderful, in a way, that* the IRS has brought us together under the “building block IMP umbrella. A—14 THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1960 Future Doctors Sharpen Skills Show-Biz Style (EDITOR’S NOTE—These are aming room just like dozens of actors whose performances -of- others in the hospital. tenmake themselves sick. But) Dr. Barrows spends long it’s ail for science and the advancement of medicine. A group of professional actors are simulating various illnesses to help train, future physicians unique project at the University of California.) By RALPH DIGHTON AP Science Writer LOS ANGELES — Television actor Harlan Warde plays some of his toughest roles hours coaching the actors to simulate the symptoms o f various neurological diseases such as stroke and brain tumor. When he feels they are properly programmed, he asks third-year medical* students to examine them and diagnose the illness they are portraying. THEY FORGET Although the students are told! ACTING IT OtiT - Medical student BUI Caton (left) watchfully attempts to diagnose the neurological disease being simulated by actor Harlan Wade (right). Observing in the rear room are Dr. Howard Barrows and Margo Makee, who train the actprs. brightly lighted room fitted with|their “patients” are actors, the!simulate ailments seven years a peep-show mirror. j simulation is, so perfect the| ago. Only one other person is in students frequently forget. I “i realized that we had no the room with him. Sometimes it’s a young woman, more often a young man. Warde is clad in a short white gown. ★ ★ ★ What they say and do is watched Closely by others hidden behind the one-way glass window, and recorded on tape “He w a s n ’ t cooperative,” medical student Christina West, 24, Redlands, Calif., complained to Dr. Barrows after her first experience with a simulated patient. “He’s a tough case.” She was talking about John Talt, 29, a lean, 6-foot tool for evaluating a physician’s skill in diagnosis, which sometimes can be as vital as his skill in surgery,” says Dr. Barrows. “Traditionally, medical student: teU 'Go examine graduate of a Holly wood Mrs. Jones and tell us what is for viewing later by a limited! workshop who has just finished wrong with her.’ The trouble is, to us and ask to go through the experience.” Dr. Barrows’ troupe of medjpal mimes ranges in age from 20 to 75, most with a long list of stage, screen and television credits: Chief of the corps is 29-year-old Margo Makee, New York stage actress who joined Dr. Barrows four years ago and now can portray 17 different illnesses. She still acts' professionally ‘but sp about half her time at the center, helping to train recruits. 'We had to advertise for actors at first,” says Dr. Barrows, ’’now they come to us. It seems that acton enjoy this type of work. Simulating symptoms down the the last ouch, is a challenge. It polishes their acting and I suppose there is a sense of. gratification, too. Certainly, they don't do it for the pay we can give them.” audience. Warde knows this and does not mind. Neither does he mind that the work is hard, the hours long and the pay small compared with what he gets . for other acting jobs. REWARDING JOB “I find it fascinating,” he says, “one of the most rewarding assignments I’ve ever undertaken. If I could afford the time away from other work, I’d do it for nothing.” Warde is one of a small his first movie role. IMrs. Jones does not feel the! “He wasn’t supposed to be! same every day, and she reacts cooperative,” Dr. B a r r o w s differently to different doctors. ] consoled her. “Real patients of * > * “We needed a better way to train medical students how to handle themselves in examining While In training, actors earn 16.25 an hour, about a third of the going rate for speaking roles in films. After they become proficient, they are paid |25 to $50 for a four-hour session with students. * ★ Dr. Barrows says some colleagues were critical of his project at first but that now the idea is spreading to other institutions. Last year he helped establish a similar program at McMaster University, Ontario, Canada. “Here, our use of simulated patients has been limited so far to training in neruology,” says Dr. Barrows., “hi Canada, the university has extended it to general medicine. They start with the first history-taking interview and go bn through physical examinations. They have a complete doctor's office set up, even to distracting phone calls coming in from pregnant women.” Dr. Barrows says the experiments «in Canada a n d elsewhere show it is n ’ t necessary to have a Hollywood nearby as a source of acting talent. “Every city has drama guilds and acting schools and many of them have excellent actori,” he said. ! this type seldom are.” EMPATHY LACKING? Medical student William Caton, 24, Rolling Hills, Calif., said in an interview just before his first attempt to diagonose an actor-patient: “I’m sure this is a great- way to evaluate a doctor’s performance, but I doubt there can be any of the[ Muscovites Are Enjoying a Balmy Fall MOSCOW (AP) — “There are still late mushrooms to be found Do-It-Yourself Druggists a Peruvian FI UMA, Peru (UPI) - They stand behind their counters in shite coats and hand out instant diagnoses on everything from heart disease to im-potency, always accompanied rooms, how to . relate to patients, how to get at the cause of symptoms quiykly. INSTANT REPLAY “With trained actors, all students are presented with exactly the same problems, all _____ r„ , empathy necessary %> gain a [based on actual cases. The autumn here, the first of its These men technically are troupe of professional actors,(real understanding of the pa-J student’s performance is kind In the last 90 years.”. pharmacists, but they’ve got actresses and tec hni clan sjtient.” monitored by experts, and later ^us Tass, the official Soviet Peruvian doctors worried sick. news agency, took time Satur-)The neighborhood pharmacist Is j fold him I didn't waHt to ... day to report on the world ef the man most Peruvians turn to him again, if hi was going to do nature instead of its usual in the woods near Moscow, a,with a prescription for instant of an unusually long relief. recruited by Dr. Howard Bar-| Then he met Harlan Warde. rowS, professor of .neurology at, * ★ *- the University of Southern Afterward, he came out of the California, to make training examining room shaking his films for future physicians. Their studio is on the fifth floor of the USC-Los Angeles County Medical Center, just down, the hall from an emergency ward. It is equipped with television cameras, fUin-editing apparatus—and an ex- head. “I’m convinced,” Caton said. “I had no problem at all relating to the patient. I found myself forgetting ,lt. waif a simulation—and that’s acting.” Dr. BarroWs originated the idea of coaching actors he can see himself on tape. * A ★ “We have never flunked a “ student for failing to perform well in such tests, but we have kept a number from failing by going over the films with them. “We have put more than 300 students through this test and almost without exception they have been enthusiastic. We even have residents and interns come tient went to the pharmacist and the pharmacist looked* at the prescription and said, ‘Well, this is no good. You should take penicillin toe your add.’ ” Gamboa said the man returned to him complaining that he felt no better after three shots. “I told him I didn’t prescribe penicillin,” Gpmboa said. “I Here's Draft-Call Order for 70 preoccupation with the world of political developemtns. The Tass writer went on: “According to the folk calendar, long-past should have been the days when first biting frosts cover windowglass v" sorts of fancy patterns. first when they are sick. Consider the experience ol Lima physician Raul Gamboa, a cardiologist ahd pediatrician who has taught at the Southeastern Medical School in Dallas and George town University Medical School in Washington, D.C. Gamboa, one of Peru’s most highly regarded doctors, treated this because he was playing with his life.”; Gamboa said the patient, a middle-aged man, told him he decided to take the shots in the drugstore because “my uncle does the same thing, and Fve a friend who got better with penicillin.” NARCOTICS CONTROLLED Although there are strict controls on narcotics, antibiotics of all types can be had for the asking. WASHINGTON (AP) - Here 47. Nov. 27 97, Nbv. 8 215. Jan. 4. is the order of call for the 1970! 48. Aug. 8 . 98. July 17 216. Feb: 10 military draft as determined by 49. Sept. 3 99. Nov. 29 217, March 30 the lottery drawing held Mon-|50. July 7 100. Dec. 3l|218. Aprlllo day night. 101 TO 200 [219. April 9 1101. Jan. 5 B102. Aug. 15 s 103, May 30 p 104. June 19 i 105. Dec. 8 * 106. Aug. 9 B 107. Nov. 16 108. March 1 109. June 23 Men now classified "l-A" or 110. June 6 “1-A-O” may be called in this 111. Aug. 1 order in 1970; men now exempt 112. May 17 or deferred will keep the same, 113. Sept, 15 this list applies to every man who is at least 19 but not yet 26 as of Dec. 31, 1969. Each man’s place in the order of call is the number next to his birthday; the order of call will be applied by each local draft board to the men registered in its files. night if they should become l-A 115. July 3 or l-A-0 at any time in the future. The order of call:-1 TO 100 [116. Aug. 23 117. Oct. 22 118. Jan. 23 1119. Sept. 23 , 1. Sept. 14 51. Nov. 7 )120. July 16 2. April 24 52. Jan. 25 12LJan. 16 3. Dec. 30 53. Dec. 22 122. March 7 4. Feb. 14 54. Aug. 5 123. Dec. 28 5. Oct. 18 55. May 16 124. April 13 6. Sept. 6 56. Dec. 5 125, Get. 2. 7. Oct. 26 57. Feb. 23 126. Nov. 13 8. Sept. 7 58. Jan. 19 127. Nov. 14 9. Nov. 22 59. Jan. 24 128. Dec. 18 10. Dec. 6 60. June 21 129. Dec. 1 11. Aug. 31 61. Aug. 29 130. May 15 12. Dec. 7 62. April 2lj 131. Nov. 15 13. July 8 63. Sept. 20 132. Nov. 25 J4. April 11 64. June 27)133. May 18 15. JUly 12 65. May 10 134. June 11 1 16. Dec. 29 66. Nov. 12; 135. Dec. 20 17. Jan. 15 67. July 25)135. March 11 18. Sept. 26 68. Feb. 12 137. June 25 19. Nov. 1 69. June 13 138. Oct. 13 20. June 4 70. Dec. 21 j 139. March 6 21: Aug. 10 71. Sept. 10,140. Jan. 18 22. June 26 72. Oct. 12 141, Aug. 18 23. July 24 73. June 17 142. Aug. 12 24. Oct. 5 74. April 27,143. Nov. 17 25. Feb. 19 75. May 19 144. Feb 2 26. Dec. 14 76. Nov. 6 145. Aug. 4 27. July 21 77. Jan. 28,146. Nov. 18 2& June 3 , / 78. Dee. 27 147. April 7 29. Nfarch 2 :, / 79. Oct. 31 148. April 16 30.! March'31, 80.|(Nov. 9 149,-Sept. 25 ' 31. May 24 81. April i4! 160. Feb. 11 32. April 1 82. Sept 5 201 TO . 33. March 17 ; 83. April 3 201. Oct. 23 34. Nov. 2 i 84. Dec. 25 202. Oct. 4 35. May 7 85. Jut)e 7 203. Nov. 19 36. AUg. 24 • 86. Fpb. 1 204. Sept. 21 37. May 11 87. Oct. 6 205. Feb. 27 \ 38. Oct 30 ' 88 July 28 206. June 10 39. Dec. 11 • 89. Feb. 15 207. Sept-10 40.'May 3 90. April 18 208. April 30 41. Dec. 10 91. Feb. 7 209. June 30 42. July 13 92. Jan. 26 210. Feb. 4 43. Dec. 9 93. July 1 21i: Jan. 31 44. Aug. 16 94. Oct. 28 212. Feb. 16 45. Aug. 2 95. Dec. 24 213. March 8 46. Nov. 11 96. Dec. 16 214. Feb. 5 285. Feb. 29 286. Aug. 25 287. July 30 288. Oct. 17 289. July 27 290. Feb. 22 151. Sept. 29;220. Oct. 10 152. Feb. 13)221. Jan. 12 153. July 22i222. June 28 154. Aug. 17! 223. March 28 155. May 6 224. Jan. 6 156. Nov, 21 225. Sept. 1 157. Dec. 3 226. May 29 158. Sept. J1 227. July 19 159. Jan. 2 228. June 2 160. Sept. 22 229. Oct. 29 161. Sept. 2 230. Nov. 24 162. Dec. 23 231. April 14 163. Dec. 13 232. Sept. 4 164. Jan.'30 233. Sept.- 27 165. Dec. 4 234. Oct. 7 166. March 16 235. Jan. 17 167. Aug. 28;238. Feb. 24 168. Aug. 7 237. Oct. 11 169. March 15 238. Jan. 14 170. March 26 239. March 20 171. Oct. 15 240. Dec. 19 172. July 231241. Oct. 19’ 173. Dec. 26 242. Sept. 12 174. Nov. 30 243. Oct. 21 175. Sept. 13 244. Oct. 3 176. Oct. 25 245. Aug. 26 177. Sept. 19 246. Sept. 18 178. May 14 247. June 22 . 1?9. Feb. 25 248. July 11 180. June 15 249. JuneJ mI___________ ^ 181. Feb. 8 250. May 21 300. March 12 -MOSCOW (AP) — U.S. indus- 182 Nov. 23 301 TO 366 trialist Cyrus Eaton left Moscow 183. May 20 301. June 3 334. March 21 for Hanoi today after two days ----- ~ ' 335. June 9 conferring with Soviet friends 336. April 19 and other officials. 337. Jan. 22 Accompanied by his invalid 338. Feb. 9 wife, the 85-year-old millionaire 339. Aug. 22 was driven to the plane in 340. April 26 Kremlin limousine. 341. June 18 He is-scheduled to arrive 342: Oct. 9 Hanoi Friday. He will stay 343. March 25 there about a week. 344. Aug. 20 Eaton said earlier in Paris he 345. April 20 would find out North Viet-, 346. April 12 namese terms for an endato the 347. Feb. 6 war and determine whether , 348 N0V 3 their position was “reasonable,” 349. Jan. 29 350- July 2 351. April 25 352. Aug - 27 353. June 29 354. March 14 355. Jatl. 27 356,. June 14 IRS Drops the Form “Today was the first day when the temperature fell below a ” patient recently suffering (32 degrees Fahrenheit), from a cold and fever, but many of the jroung .“£ gave a prescription for a Muscovites are in no hurry to cold,” Gamboa said. “This pa- change over into warm clothes. — —-—*-»—--------------......— 265. March 22 WARMER FRIDAY v „ SJrt&ZZ'SX'lS.'Z Responds to Complexity' Mrt*-** F- Acc°rdin8 fo —?—"11! mm 1E129reports of weathermen, first) * 11 freezing temperatures are ex- 271. Apru pected only in mid-December. 272. June 12r i if it | 273. April 15 “L0verg of Russian winter In) 27l4Mrc^4SSfJst"*J00k“g forwardto How does the Internali What else but more paper 276. May 4 , ' * ’ .. 'Revenue Service (IRS) respond work. The IRS has cancelled 277. July 9 “®reen 8rass is still there In *0 what r terms “the increased the 1040A card form and com- 278 May 18 Moscow’s courtyards and parks, complexity in the financial bined all 1040 tax return types 279. July 4 whereas skates .. . and skis are statUs of Americans’’? I. ■ . - inn tan on sold in sports' stores . . . Z Z 28 An*lers keen on Ashing in N ' 1ft winter are also looking forward ww nil « ‘0 ^ time when the Moskva m July 10 foe-hound. - an. juiy m . 11040 m Deportment of tn« Treasury / Internal ItovtniM Strvlc* Individual Income Tax Return a D69 Industrialist Leaves Moscow for Hanoi 184: Sept. 8 302. Feb. 20 , 185. Nov. 20 303. July 26 188. Jan. 21 304. Dec. 17 187. July 20 305. Jan. 1 -188. July 5 306. Jan. 7 189. Feb. 17 307. Aug. 13 190. July 18 308. May 28 191. April 29 309. Nov. 26 192. Oct. 20 310. Nov. 5 193. JUly 31 311. Aug. 19 194. Jan. 9 312. April 8 195. Sept. 24 313. May 31 - 196. Ocj. 24 314. Dec. 12 >197. May 9.315. Sept. 30 198. Aug. 14 316. April 22 199! Jan: 8)317. March 9 200. March 19 318. Jan. 13 -« 300 319. May 23 251. Jan. 3 320. Dec. 15 252. April 23 321. May.8 253. April 6 322. July 15 1 254. Oct. 16 323. March 10 i255, Sepl 17 324. Aug. 11 256. March 23 325. Jan. 10 257. Sept. 28 326. May 22 258, March 24 327. July 6 359; March 13 328. Dec. 2 260. April 17 329. Jan. 11 * 261. Aug. 3 330. May 1 V 263. April 38.331. July 14 263. Sept. 9 332. March 18 264. Oct. 271338. AUg. 30 MMng block 1040” tacill‘ Iroduccd in 1T54 as a simplified: form for the lower-income wage’ earner and it precluded* itemization of deductions. IRS' hastens to point put that', the old 1040A card has been) built into/the new form. It Is; now one page of a 32-page “building block 1040” that is, in format, very much like the old card form. -V The advantage tfAfie $5,000 or thereabouts wage earner, you see, is that he is now offered the miasma of tax terms such, as “alternative computation” and “accumulated deprOcia-“limitation 0 f and carry-end ex- Birds' Takeoff Shorts Out Line REDWOOD CITY, Calif. (AP) • A flock of birds took off sud- 357. May 26 denly from a 12,000-volt power 358. June 24 line and the line went twang like 359. Oct. 1 a bow, touched another line be- 360. June 20 low and shorted out, Pacific Gas 361. May 25 & Electric CO. officials report 362. March 29 ed. 363. Feb. 21 The Monday morning incident 364. May 5 blacked out about 24,000’homes, 365. Feb. 26! a hospital and the Hall* of Jus* 366. June 8 ttoe for about 45 minutes. THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY^ DECEMBER 2, 1969 A—16 Candles, Parties Dispel Gloom of Northern Norway TROMSOE, Norway (AP) Electricity ft plentiful and cheap in Norway, but housewives here, are stocking up on candles anyhow— red ones and green ones, tall and short, round and square, plain and fancy. The land of the midnight sun is'also the' land of the noontime darkness. The dark days are coining, and Candles help dispel the gloom. • It’,, -Jr Here in the northern third of Norway, the sun will mi rise above tha horizon foe 63 days. Even in the south, the night will be 17% hours long. It can be morbidly depressing, but the 3.8 million Norwegians have learned to take comfort from the warmth and light of the open flame. . CANDLE CULr , Hence, the candle cult* No Norwegian hostess would think of serving even coffee and cookies without a fmtjlyb candle on tha table. Candlelight dinners are routine, an$ patty call# for a blag*# candles. Arriving guests are guided by torches at the garden gate, and often they bring brightly decorated candles for Hie hostess. ' -i y ★' ★ * •• Even though most Norwegian homes have electric or oil central heating, they also have open fires on the hearth, not SO much for physical WHAT’S THERE TO DO? What is there to do during the seemingly endless winter ? Spanish Leader Turns 77 Thursday Age, Demands Cut Franco's Influence the titular leader, accused him of betraying the Falange by this action. The prestige of the Falangists had been declining for years, and Franco dealt the organization a serious blow when he shuffled the cabinet recently, giving the balance of power to technocrats who favor a more progressive economic policy. To contest the new technocrat government and try to regain lost prestige, the Falangists are trying to form a new nationwide “association." NO PARTIES Spain has no political parties, MADRID (AP) - Generalissimo Francisco Franco turns 77 Thursday, still as firmly in control as he wants to be after running Spain for threw decades. But both age and demands for modernization are chipping away at the diminutive general’s influence. For one thing, a whole generation of teen-agers is striding toward what they hope will be a more mature Spain, free Of the hates and divisions that resulted ih bloody conflict and brought . Franco to power, jfhey don?t know about the aanish Civil War and they don’t care,’’ says a Madrid University instructor. “They see what’s going mi in the rest of Western Europe and they want to be a part of it.” 'Franco has slowly loosened Ms grip on power, Obviously looking to the day when he Won’t be around to call Hie shots. ACCUSED OF BETRAYAL In July he provided for restoring the monarchy by naming Prince Juan Carlos de Bourbon to succeed him as head of state. Juan Carlos, to be crowned after Franco’s death, will be Spain’s first king since Ms grandfather, Alfonso XIIJ, was driven from the country in 1931. Hard-line Falagists, members of the rightist nationalist organization of wMch Franco is still GEN. FRANCESCO FRANCO but “associations" with political trends are permitted—providing they adhere to the rules of the National Movement. The Move- him recently describe him as most Indefatigable, a good shot who can still go to either side, although he is slower than he ment, created by Franco, rigid-used to be at swinging around. Jy regulates'all political acUvity in the country. Franco has apparently given the technocrat government wide license to implement reforms as long as they stick to Ms cardinal principal of putting God and Country first, This means, says one government source, new tactics but no- fundamental change in policy.: ■ ■ ★ *' One U.S. expert'on Spain describes the cabinet shuffle modernization, not. liberalization. Franco still leads an active life. He presides at Cabinet meetings, receives hundreds in official audiences «at El Pardo . Palace on the outsorts of Madrid, and shows up Whenever protocol calls for his presence. His photograph appears almost dal-dy in the Spanish press. INDEFATIGABLE It is a remarkable experience for a foreigner to travel in perthem Norway in the winter. Doors fly’ open and hands are stretched out In welcome by people you have never met and are ' unlikely to meet again. Your new face Is enough to en-sure a hearty welcome. Children practice for their school bands. Families form their own orchestras. Boys build models, and girls make their own clothes. Dad is apt to be n do-it- yourseifer, and mother probably bake's her own bread. Most Norwegians actually look forward to winter because of its sports, at which they People start work early and cpl. Even the smallest commu- rush home for the main meal at 5 p.m. After a short nap, the evening begins. Family games and hobbies help fill the time. Norwegians are voracious read-and even the smallest 1 have bookstores crammed with Norwegian and foreign books. •k . k k Centuries of living in isolated communities has taught Norwegians to entertain themselves. nities have floodlit skating arenas, and lights are strung through the forest to illuminate cross-country ski courses. When, in the new year, the sun again shimmers off the crisp WMte snow, a million Norwegians will be joined by a half-million foreigners as they head for ski resorts to bask in the restorative rays of the new sun and celebrate the end of gloom. AUTEN FURNITURE 6605 Dixie Hwy Clarkston ► FURNITURE ► CARPET ► DRAPERY NEWSPAPERS 40c per 100 lbs. delivered Royal Oak Waste Paper & Metal Co. Those who have hunted with I century. He is also a fisherman and a golfer. Palace insiders report Franco still devotes considerable time to Ms seven grandchildren. The two oldest, both girls, are now teen-agers. Just as he has for years, he lives .quietly in El Paido with Ms wife Carmen. He t’t smoke, drinks wine only, occasionally, and goes to early. * ' 4 * Since he is said to keep closely abreast of developments in the country, he is surely aware of .the widespread impatience with Spain’s painfully slow Social and economic progress. This anxiety dominates the thinking of Spalnfe priests, students and business executives. He must also sense the apathy of many ordinary Spaniards toward Juan Carlos and the scorn with wMch many of the young i view a monarchy in the 20th RENT, SELL, TRADE... USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! 1: A—16 THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1069 Hudson’s Gift Wraps I are r Super! 6 Hudson’s stores Downtown, Woodward Avenue} Northland, 8 Mi.-Northweslern; Eastland, 8 Mi. and Kelly Road; Westland, Warren-Wayno Road; Pontiac, Eliz. Lake and telegraph; Oakland, I-7S and 14 Mi. Road NOW EVEN MORE EVENING HOURS TO SHOP Starling Friday, November. 28,, Hudson's Downtown will be open Monday through Friday till 8:30; Saturdays till 6. Northland, Eastland, Westland, Pontiac and Oakland now open Monday through Saturday til 9:30 p.m.‘ use your charge Cift shop the easy way, with a convenient* Hudson’s Charge Account with option terms. Or, use our Extended Payment Plan (or *!I your major purchases. 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This 5-pc, Howell dinette set has a table ihat can be used 3 different ways SPECIALLY ■ Use it without leaves for a cozy 36” round table setting ■ Use ft with one of the two 12” leaves Included fen* a Practical medium size t&lssetting a Use it withbothfcfthe 12’* leaves lor a large oval table setting, especially how for holiday gatherings ~ ■ Laminated plastic table top is heat* stain, mar resistant ■ V-brAced legs make table sturdy,, strong and durable ■ Cloth-backed vinyl is tear resistant'and easy to clean e Molded plastfo’ chair backs lodk like expensive wood carving ■ Self-leveling floor glides won’t mar floors ■ 4 chairs have moss paisley or white paisley ■ Table top has rich woodgrain Textured Convenient credit terms available Pontiac, 2nd’, alt branches Everyone Appreciates Getting a Hudson’s . Gift Certificate! Come see Santa That’s right! After Thankagiv* ing Day you can meet him in person at Hudson’s Toylaod. You’ll also meet Elmo the Elf, and receive a free coloring book, Hudson’s Downtown, 12. Visit our Trim the Home Shop Find everything from festive table and room decorations to holiday adornments Jor your door and fireplace. Downtown, -3; Northland, Eastland, West, land, Pontiae and Oakland. ^ Gather ideas in Hudson’s Linen Boutique THE PONTIAC PRESS .~ ^p6NTfACr MIGlnGA^N7 TUESDAYrDECEMBEir2ri969 Candy Drive Starts By MARGO GRAVES Pontiac Central’s only moneymaking schoolwide project is under way. The first' candy drive turn-in was last Wednesday, and over (1,700 was collected the first day. All profits will go for badly-needed school equipment and supplies. The sale will last until Dec. 10. Incentives in the campaign are many. The top senior salesman wins a free trip to the Bahamas with the senior class. The top junior and sophomore each win a stereo. In each class, the next four highest salesmen will receive AC-DC transistor radios. There is also a daily drawing, a .high homeroom award, a 100 per cent participation award, pizza parties for the dally "Big Tdn,” a $24 club, a $100 club and a talent show for those who sell their quota of $8 worth of candy bars. In the recently completed Thanksgiving food drive for needy families, 1400 pounds of food was turned in for distribution in the area. Chester Bowling’s homeroom was the most' generous, donating 270 pounds, particularly considering that there are only nine students in this homeroom. k k ★ In addition, $55 was collected as a Thanksgiving fund. Eleanor Byrnes’ homeroom sponsored the drive. Pontiac Central’s band and cheerleaders performed in the J. L. Hudson Thanksgiving Day Parade Which was televised Thursday. National Honor Society members for this year have been announced. The are; Joan Appleton, David Batts, Jan Baumkel, Bruce Bedford, Beverly Bletstein, Ronald Bryant, Clifford Buffett, Janet Christian, Ralph Claus and Wayne Coleman, Barbara Cook, John Cox, Barbara Crossman, Jill Curran, Constance Cuthrell, Donald Davis, Linda Davis, Richard Dudas, Linda Emsley, Mary Ewalt, Kim Fox and Cheryl Freeman. Other new members are Wyatt Gee, Russell Glasgow, Gayle Godsell, Melba Goines, Margo Graves, Stephen Greenhalgh, Jacqueline Guajardo, Ray Henry, Eartha Holley, Regina Hunt, Rickey Hurst, Robert Hutchinson, Jerome Jacobs, Norde James, Chris Karaguleff, William nedy, Stanley Koechig * * k k Concluding the list are Pamela Leczel, Patricia Lewis, Rozanne McGraw, Kathy Mclnnis, Thomas McKelvey, Margaret Mangum, Susan Mom, Constance Morris, Mary Nichols, Gayle Palm, Betsy Parker, Kathleen Petersen, Evan Piercey, Thomas Putnani, Susan Ramin, Anne Louise Reynolds, James Robinette, Jessie Robles, Christian Runyan, Nancy Schmitz, Mark Scott, Douglas Sempere, Anita Shelton, Marcia Skeljey, Gail Vine, Nicholas Vitinaros, Marilyn Walker, Raymond Wiggins and Ellen Wine. They join the following two-year members in honors: Carol Haanes, Lauri Mallonen, Bruce Markham, Margaret Price and Jeff Rosner. Profits will go toward purchase of school equipment and supplies. A Big Hit at Brother Rice Visits to Washington, New York Set Seniors at Seaholm Planning Class Trip By MIKE FOX Almost 200 seniors from Seaholm High School are planning the traditional class trip to Washington, D.C., and New York. Seaholmites share the trip with seniors at Groves, with Seaholm English , instructor Charles Buell, head adviser. Over 300 students from the Birmingham area .will go this year. # . . ★ k k Departing March 26 by bus, the seniors will arrive in Washington the next morning on the first leg of their $180 trip. Following breakfast at the National Wax Museum, there will be tours of Alexandria and Mount Vernon. A drive that afternoon will put them in Williamsburg for the night, followed by a complete .tour of the restored town. A special showing of the film “The Patriot” is scheduled. EASTER SERVICES The National Cathedral and the Shrine of the Immaculate Conception will be available for the students’ Easter services. ^ k k k Additional tours include Smithsonian Institution, the National Art Gallery, the Washington Monument, the Lincoln and Jefferson memorials, and tj»e Library of Congress. ★ * * * # • Students will also visit Arlington Na- Officers Elected tional Cemetery, the Capitol, the Supreme Court and the National Archives. * ★ * A meal in Georgetown and another bus ride will take the students to New York, where they will stay at Statler-Hilton. Free time will be provided for the students. Trips in New York include Upper Manhattan, the Cathedral of St. John the Divine, Lincoln Center,’ Chinatown, the Bowery, Lower Manhattan, the United Nations, and the famous Radio City Music Hall. A Broadway play, as yet undecided, will be seen. * * * Dinner out and a last look at Manhattan from a ferry then it’s back home to the routine. TO BE RUN LIKE CLUB This year, National Honor Society will be run like a club with a dues collection for a scholarship, activities including the tutoring program and officers. Petitions for office were turned in Wednesday. ★ * * Members will elect this year’s officers and activities will soon begin. This group is the last senior society that will be chosen. Next year, members will be selected in the spring of the junior year to lessen the complication of the selection and initiation process. Origins, Pontiac Central’s creative arts magazine, is being composed under the .direction of coeditors Maureen Coulert -and Margaret Batts. Teacher sponsor is Diane McBride. , The publication recognizes outstanding talent at PCH in the area of art, writing and photography. Students submit their work to be judged by a committee. The best works are selected and the publication is made available to the student body. Cage Intramurals to Begin Chapel Stressed at Country Day By PAUL McGILL With the end of the intramural football season and the coming of the cold winter months, Brother Rice High School has moved its intramural program indoors. Beginning Thursday, intramural basketball games will be played every week Monday, Thursday and Sunday nights in the Brother Rice gymnasium. * ★ ★ Originally it was planned that’competition would be between individual homerooms. This plan was discarded because * it was realized that, some homerooms,would be ‘stacked’ with good players while others would have very few players at all. Thus a second plan was drawn up which would feature a draft system by volunteer captains. There was such a tremendous response By SANDY IRISH The Art Club at Rochester High School Christmas Art Sale, rear’s sale will be combined with Rochester Adams’ Art Club. The fourth-year art classes are also participating. Art students will decorate the halls surrounding the art rooms to create the atmosphere. Arts and crafts such as stationery, ceramics and other art projects will be sold. SET FOR TOMORROW The sale will take place tomorrow. The Art Club sponsor is Mrs. C. A. Weaver who is in charge of the sale. Officers of the Art Club are: Jeff Ayres, president; Jan Lemke, vice president; Karen Stieve, treasurer; and Nancy Jpnik, secretary. Rochester will play' Rochester Adams basketball Friday. At a pep assembly that morning, coaches of varsity and junior varsity basketball, wrestling and swimming will introduce their teams. The cheerleaders will introduce new cheers.- HE DUNKS rT-rJphn Mpthews shows how to shoot baskets the easy way while referee Mike Prudhomme looks on. John is getting support from Greg Collins (left) and Steve Nogengast. Basketball is in the spotlight at Brother Rice High School. By BEVERLY SAPEllSTEIN Chapel plays a very important p#rt at Bloomfield Country Day School. Each , morning is started off with the religious Ceremony. A hymn is sung and a prayer is said.. Headmistress Marjorie Sadie shares some of her thoughts with the ,;irls, Jr, On .special occasions the girls take over chapel. . At the Thanksgiving, observance the girls read papers on “What Thanksgiving Means to Me." Tuesday, the Rev. William Brewster-talked to the girls about reverence. The Rev. Mr. Brewsetr is chaplain at Oakland University. He. is a former student Of Miss Sallie. to this second plan that it was decided to incorporate senior, junior and freshman, sophomore’leagues. The sepior league drew about 75 participants, while the junior and freshman-sophomore leagues drew about 60 students apiece. ★ * k Brother G. T. Smyth, faculty moderator of intramural basketball, explained the widespread student interest. "This year, students have shown the greatest interest in an intramural sport in Brother Rice history. This interest is a result of the organization of the sport and the feeling of the students that they will receive some sort of recognition for their achievements.” players hope to receive is in the intramural newspaper, the Competitor. This two-page paper which comes out once a week contains team standings arid highlights of that week’s games. The feeling among most of the students was that the Competitor was a success during the intramural football season guaranteeing its continuance during intramural basketball. Each intramural team is- slated for seven regularly scheduled games. At the end of the year, playoff games will be held to determine the league champions. The three league champions will then play a “round-robin” tournament to determine the over-all champions of intramural basketball. NEWSPAPER CUPPINGS i Most of the recognition that the . Art Sale Near in Rochester by Freshmen at Marian High By MARCIA FERRAND \ After a week of active campaigning, Marian High School’s freshman class elected officers: Jody Johnson, president; Val Oben, vice president; Mary Ann Norton, secretary; and Molly Crane, treasurer: "You have a lot to live; and Jody has a lot to give,” was the president’s campaign theme. During the election, Jody emphasized the qualities for the freshman class. ★ k k "We have energy, enthusiasm and talent,” Jody stated. "I want to pull all the talents of the freshman class together and make it the best class “Valiant Val for vice” was the slogan which helped Val win the vice presidency. DISCUSSES RESPONSIBILITIES Val feels it is necessary for a vice president to work with the freshmen who are helping to shape the school. "I want to get all the freshmen involved in the school so we can make a place at Marian,” Val said. k * k "Norton's sporton” was the theme which helped Mary Ann win her quest for the office of secretary. Working well with both students and faculty, team spirit, and a desire for the job, are qualities Mary Ann feels make a capable secretary. ‘MOLLY’S A DOLLY’ “Molly’s a dolly” led the way to the treasurer’s podt for Molly. "It is important for me to be able to represent the class, get along with the other officers and be easy to talk to,” said Molly. ★ * * “We want to work as a team to make this a fantastic year,” Jody summarized. "A time for keeping old and wonderful memories; a time for throwing away bad memories,” were the /words attached to each golden rose Marian High School seniors gave juniors at a Mass ang ring blessing ceremony last week in St. Regis Churjch. ‘YOU ARE A* ROSE’ • "You are a rose. You can be very fragrant and beautiful,” emphasized the Rev. Dayton Gnau in his homily. “You are also thorns. You can inflict pain.” “You are what life is. all about; youth,” continued Father Gnau. ★ ★ ★ "Allelu,” “Rise Up,/ My Brothers,"' "Sing to God a Brand New Canticle,” arid “Kumbaya” were among the songs students sang at the ceremony. “We held the ceremony to welcome juniors to the upper school,” explained Kitty Swarlout, senior. “Class rings make you feel important and we wanted the juniors to know how the seniors felt” Mercy Is Readying Its Fall Production By VERONICA McCANN Lady of Mercy High School’s production of “Mr8. McThing” will be presented Friday and Saturday at 8 p.m. The play is directed by drama teacher Mrs. Frank Vedock. Student director is senior. Roseanne O’Malley. Stage manager is senior Sue Piercecchi. * * * How a witch, her foster daughter, three gangsters and a chef change the lives of a rich woman and her son is the major theme of the tWo-act comedy written by Mary Chase in 1952. University of Detroit High sophomore Louis Malone is cast as Howay, the son of rich and aloof Mrs. Howard V. Larue, who is played by senior Pam Armstrong. Miml (senior Karen Thibodeau),*the foster daughter, wanted to play with Howay but Mrs. Larue wouldn’t permit her son to play with a ragged little girl.” k k k As punishment, Mrs. McThing (played as a good witch by senior Debbie Panek and as a bad witch by junior Gretchen Smith) transfers Howay to a restaurant in the poor section of the city, landing him in the midst of an apparently well-known mobster element. k k k' !, The gangsters, led by Poison Eddie Schellenbach, played by Catholic Central junior Joe Kolinski, befriend and eventually draw Howay into the gang. Cast as the other two members, Dirty Joe and Stinker, are Catholic Central seniors Tom Blaine and B r 1 an MacKenzie, respectively. SELECTIVE COOK As part of the restaurant cast, Ellsworth (Catholic Central senior John McFawn) cooks, but only for those customers whose name and hometown he likes the sound of. He also sympathizes with Mrs. Larue, whom Mrs* McThing sends to join her son as an extension of her spell. Catholic Central senior Tom Brennan as Virgil waits on tables. * * k Serving Mrs. Larue as part of her household staff at the mansion are Carrie, a nursemaid, (senior Candy Matelic); Sybil, a parlor maid, (junior Denise Weber); and Hdway’s bodyguard, Nelson (Catholic Central - senior Bob Warhus). Playing Mrs. Larue's friends are juniors Pam 'Wisne and Rita Bulllnger, and senior Jacki Flannery. Also appearing are junior Barb Demshuk and Catholic Central seniors Frank Porretta and Dan Hathaway. Tickets are $1. for students and $1.50 for adults. | Additional School NeWs I §;■ ' 'Found on "Page B-2 | PERSONALITY PLUS — Rehearsing for Our Lady of Mercy’s fall production of “Mrs. McThing” are (from left) Pam Armstrong, RHa Bullinger, Jacki 'Flanery, Louis Malone (a sophomore at University of Detroit. High Schooll and Pal Wisne. The play will be presented Friday and Saturday ft 8 p.m. Tickets are $1 for students and $1.50 for adults. , B—2 THE PONTTAC PRESS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1969 'Charley's Aunt' Is at Milford .By MARTHA SIMON i Love and comedy will be iri’the gj|r tonight as Charley’s Aunt? comes to Milford High. The play,' by Brandon Thomas, takes ' place in England in 1892.' ★ * ★ ★ Two college boys, Jack Chesney (played by Ric Slotnick) and Charley-Wykeham (Brian Wood), invite their girl friends out for lunch. The girls, Kitty Verdun, and Amy Spettigue, are played by Elaine Fraser and Anne Hildreth. Jack and Charley promise the girls that Charley’s aunt will be there as a chaperone. But the aunt (from Brazil “where the nuts come from”) sepds a message saying she cannot come. IN A BIND The boys ifi a bind without a chaperone, get a fellow student, Lord Fancourt Babberly (Jeff Hickmott) ’ to dress as air old lady and be Charley’s aunt*' . ’ ' Babberly (also called Finny Babbs) taifcei advantage of the situation, and, disguised as foe matronly aunt, makes passes at the unsuspecting girls. > The boys know, of course, that Babberly, so overly kind and motherly, isn’t the aunt; and they try to get him to cut out the funny business. To make jnatters worse, two men come on the scene end-take a fancy to Charles?* “aunt.” explications occur when m real aunt shows up. (miBftS IN CAST Other members of the cast, are Lyn Austerberry, tChuck Coggins, Ric Compton, Bob, Delay and Peggy Sparks. All lO cast members are practicing their English accents. The jplay opens at 8 tonight and wil) run tomorrow, Thursday and Saturday nights. It will not be givenFriday night . because there is a home basketball game with Bloomfield Hills Andover. \ * N Donna Osborne and her mother, Mrs'. Walter Osborne, hunted up props such as a plaster bust of Plato, wooden champagne bottltes and a clover-shaped ottoman. Linda Simon, costume chairman, designed and sewed six dresses from the fashions of the 1890s. Kathy Palmer designed the pasters. Don Burton is in charge of lighting! and Jerry Truit is responsible for the set. - ★ * Grace Lepalla, drama dub sponsor, says “Flowers for Algernon” will he the next production. The story is better known as “Charly." .. -, $ New curtains were purchased for the Little Theater this year, as a result of the visit from the fire marshall. The flameproof curtains are. gold. a—©SCHOOL NEWS 1 i“ WOLF IN SHEEP’S CLOTHING - Imposter Jeff Hickmott rnpnWpnBW (left) makes a pass at Brian Wood’s date Anne Hildreth in Mil- ' will rise at 8 p.m. with performances tonight through Saturday, ford High School’s production “Charley’s Aunt.” The curtain Tickets are $1 for students and $1.50 for adults.. Sacred Heart Sets Award 'By MANDY MENGDEN The Academy of the Sacred Heart will hold its trimester awards assembly tomorrow. These awards are divided into two groups, the first of which are the awards given by each teacher for each class. Thqse include: an award for the highest scholastic? record, the award for initiative, the award for improvement, and the award for independent work. .’ * Hb * The second division of .awards are those given by the faculty as a whole. They include: the award for performance in Quest Work (the equivalent of an independent study program supervised by the faculty for students with exceptional talent info given field), the award for good citizenship, -the award for showing concern for people in the school and the award for showing concern for people outside of schpoi. HONOR SOCIETY MEMBERS A single student is only allowed to receive a specific award once during the year. * * K' New members of the National Honor Society wi(l also be announced. Present members include seniors Susan Tindall, Mary Kay Riccardo, Julie Kitcher, Joan Colombo and Mary Ann MacKenzie. To be considered for this society you must have a B plus average. Then, you are judged on the basis of character, leadership, scholarship, and service. Cranbrook By HOWDY JONES jCranbrook’s Thanksgiving vacation began last Wednesday morning. The normal Wednesday school day consisting of 10 class periods, was cut to the first four periods. Students finishing their class requirements before that time were allowed to leave. Clarkston By ELLEN FELLOWS Boyne Highlands is the location for this year’s Clarkston High School, ski trip. This will be the first' year that the trip will include students from the junior high as well as senior high. Thirty-six people will enjoy the snow and skiing Jan. 9 to 11. ★ ★ ★ Chaperofhes for the trip will be Mr. And Mrs. Howard Webster, special education and sponsor of the Ski’Club; Larry Rosso, U.S. government 'teacher and Carol Burdette, social science teacher at the junior high. The Fall Guidance Conference of the Engineering Society of Detroit was held Nov. 25 at the Rackham Building in Detroit. Attending with Bud McGrath, boys’ counselor, were Harold Ballough, Steve Kratt, Dick Ruelle, Dana Carlson and Ted Karbownik. The first production by the dramatics department has been, postponed. The play, “Charley’s Aunt,”'will now be seen on Jan. 8, 9 and 10. King$wood By MELISSA FREY Everyone should have, a turkey dinner on Thanksgiving. This was the thought behind the tradition of “White Gifts” at Kingswood School Cranbrook. Each class, plus the faculty, supplies a- designated family with food for a Thanksgiving dinner. The seven needy . families, from-the Oakland County area, arb composed of 10 members on an average. If not for "White gifts,” they could not have a Thanksgiving dinner. The boarding students at Kingswood contribute money to buy the turkeys for the families. The day students bring in canned goods food staples from home. The “White Gifts” tradition originated when the students wraped their contributions in white tissue paer, but this is no longer the cake. ( St. Lawrence By ELAINE LEDWON , The Mustines (St. Lawrence High’s, girl basketball squad) is studying a new defense technique to be used ih the tournament game at St. Ladislaus. Pep Club, brainstorm of varsity cheerleading captain.Peggy Hillard, is the newest spirit-raising innovation. Officers will be elected, and thr constitution approved within;.the next few weeks. Members will attend all home games and receive membership .sweaters. By CYNTHIA WOOD A Yearbook Assembly will he held Friday at Dryden High to show a moyie, iTA New Look for 79.” The coming annual will be discussed. ' Trying something neto at Dryden, the Yearbook will cover the complete school year. ^ ,* ,★ •+ Leland Moffat is the head of a yearbook staff composed oHuniors and seniors. Henry Tebben, a junior, will take pictures. Richard Everest is preparing the band for its annual Christmas Concert to be held Dec. 22. | " * Jr The sophomore dance will be held on \ Dec. 13 from 8 p.m. until midnight. Admission will be $1 per person. Starting December 15, don’t get up early. Take your time, and get to Detroit on time for Braniff’s 1:15 pm (sharp) non-stop jet to Kansas City. It’s a fast, on-time flight, but the Braniff girls find plenty of time to serve you refreshments. Try your first Pisco Sour, or Margarita, or Mai Tai. And there you are, in Kansas City. And we’ll be happy to jetyou baokto Detroit when you’re ready. (Non-stop, of course.) Your Travel Agent will handle everything. Braniff International Good news! Braniff non-stop to Kansas City! A quality company of Ung-Tamco-Vought, Inc. JLV’V' THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1969 3____B—8 "f > mm ARE YOU UP TO YOUR NECK IN HOUSEHOLD BILLS? LET OUR WANT Ap DEPARTMENT HELP BAIL YOU OUT. EVERYONE - YES, EVERYONE - HAS SOME THINGS OF VALUE THAT AREN'T USED OR NEEDED ANYMORE. MAKE A LIST AND TURN ’EM INTO CASH WITH OUR WANT ADS!!!!! THE PONTI AC PRESS To Pla,ce Your Want Ad Dial 334-4981 or 332-8181. $v-jA#VU> I /-.•v-,:Y*S v M \ \. v m .* Ski | THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1900 HNEMSCO IHONEY-MCK GUM 3000 ITEMS IN STOCK? raaiajf WHERE ELSE BUT AT WE STOCK IT ALL AT A WAREHOUSE NEAR YOU SPECIALS SHOWN—3 DAYS ONLY Keystone Molded BOWLING I BAG Vanillin molded af j COMPARI AT <9.9B *5» CHAIRSIDE ASHTRAY Perfect moktr'i companion. Chalrtlde height. Rich maple finish, accented with 1 gold bands. With glais ath trojr. COMPARI AT $9.91 I444 Ack far Number 87-23K BOYS’ HI-RISER BICYCLE Lighted Electric SCISSORS fuwi wnr mom-projector . // f o ' Peboloue new .b/> TandWtS ctvre platters. COMPARI AT SUM 9g9S AAfgH-mbw HOT SUPER WHEELS with SUPER CHARGER SETH THOMAS i CORDLESS CLOCK 11 ir amazingly and thee the enr Into full --------(j, zpMd to zpg,, f,,, th, n with two epeed care. 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OPEN SUNBAYS UNTIL CMISTHAS NOON TO fcUO P.H. nirinv nr cncc DADlflllfH w* easy to find our new, larger store rLcNIY Ur Hitt rAKIVINu: just follow this map —» m Gold spray paint is, an essential for holiday decorators, from left, Mrs. 'Wallace G. Lee and Mrs. Richard A. Fuller, both of Oxford. Members of the Oxford Junior Women’s Club, these women are preparing for the club*s annual Christmas dance on Saturday. The Lake Orion Knights of Columbus Hall will accommodate club members and their spouses as they dance from 10 p.pi. until 2 a.m. for charity. Sex Education Opposition Brakes Local Efforts (EDITORS NOTE - This is the third and concluding article in cur Meries on sex education in Michigan.) „ . At WatervUet, IS miles from Benton Harbor, Superintendent Jack Riegle says , his system has no classes in sex and “We’re not going to do anything locally/’ ' A similar reaction comes from Dairrell Crosse, assistant superintendent at Paw Paw, 35 miles from Benton Harbor. “We’re sitting tight and waiting for state guidelines,’’ Crosse said. One reason for their reluctance, perhaps is a strong pocket of opposition to sex education in, southern Berrien County. ~ A Committee for Christian Action, formed last January by the Rev. Elvin Nyhius, pastor of the Glendora Hills Corners Bible Church, has ranged about the state opposing sex education. It works closely with “Motorede” through a 15-member board of directors that has not solicited outside members. Sex education makes children “distrusting, disrespectful, deceitful” and “creates major disturbances in the home where parental jurisdiction should not be jeopardized,” says one committee statement on the subject; Nyhius has said.he personally favors some form of sex education guidelines if set by state'and local boards; “But* teachers should not teach sex education. They have no right to teach children right from wrong. i “I think, doctors would apply a moral standard in teaching children about sex,”’ Nyhius adds. j r Nyhius’ group, meanwhile, has not limited its activities to classroom concerns. Its protests led a Benton Harbor theater to censor afternoon showings of die film, “Romeo and Juliet” in which actors'appear nude. And “Motorede” last summer set up a booth at the Berrien County Youth Fair where it issued literature against sex education. “Since they’ve taken the Bible, and prayers opt of schools, they can’t expect to teach sex education without morals/’ said Mrs. Warren Edihborough, one member'of the group. Educators, however, have sought to meet that criticism. “Sex education should be a much broader program than just a concern with genital sex, which some still regard as something basically dirty and shameful,” said the report of the State Board’s advisory committee on sex education. Dora Partington, Muskegon County’s instructional services director commented: “If anything is wrong with the state guidelines, it's that they’ve stressed the phrase ‘sex education.’ It should be ‘growth and development.’ That starts with kindergarten and goes right on.” * ; ,# ★ At Grand Rapids, “We don’t even refer to it as sex ed,” says Elmer Vruggink, assistant schools superintendent. “We call it health education.” Grand Rapids children study it as part of other courses as long as they’re in school there. But just a few miles outside the city, the defeat of a Comstock Park nyllage. proposal last June is blamed on a sex ed program. When the Comstock Park school board dropped , a • “health and family living program,” the 19-mill school tax levy was approved at a second election later in the month. Opposition to sex education is strong in some areas of Western Michigan. “We’re trying to get a concerned parents group set up in every district in the stater” said Mrs. James K. Shumake, a Grandville sex ed opponent. “We want to get back to basic education” OPPOSITION A retired military man, Lt. Col. Jack Mohr of Kalamazoo, has spoken at several hearings across the state where the proposed guidelines were reviewed. Mohr, a spokesman for “Motorede,” claims to have visited some 300 communities to stump against sex ed. The wide-ranging activities of such groups often confuse and distort impressions of local attitudes. One reporter in Grand Rapids said opposition seemed to be stronger in Muskegon than his own area.. But while the B’nai B.’rith Antidefamation League turned up a handbill quoting a Muskegort man who said he intended to start “a national effort to expose the practices of local schools relating to sex education,” Muskegon Chronicle reporters said there wa's no evidence of any local Activity by the man. While the war of words goes on and Atty; Gen. Kelley reviews the law on the subject, what do students thinks Very much like their respective parents, it turns out. One girl, a Lansing senior, agreed with many Of her elders that parents should teach it in the home. But she added : “I think you’re, expecting too much of parents to expect them to discuss sex honestly with their children.” Another Lansing youth said, “religion is linked up with God and sex is God’s business. I think if you try to separate anything as beautiful as sex from God, then you’re in trouble.” ■ 1 1 * 1 1 \ . J' Population Unit Aided by Miss Concepcion GENEVA, Switz. ( W M N S ) *r Evidently, the United Nations Population Commission is hot superstitious. Despite gloomy predictions that the future world population explosion will be even more horrendous than predicted, the Commission recently elected as its chairman *Jhe most inappropriately-named Miss Mercedes B.. Conception of the Philippines. ♦ ■ Difference in Age Problem Facing Couple in Love By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN . DEAR ABBY: I am very much in love with a man who is old enough to be my father. We want very much to get married, but my parents disapprove of Trim because of the difference in our ages. Abby, we have been in love for over a year now and if this isn’t “love,” I will be satisified with whatever it is for the rest of my life. IN LOVE DEAR IN LOVE: Age IS important, but it’s not ALL IMPORTANT. You don't say'how "jRTung” you are — or how Despite Tragedies “old” he is. Neither do you give me a clue concerning how rtTature, experienced, independent and self-sufficient you are. Have you dated many men? Have you ever been out in the business world? What’s his track record? Past marriages? Children? Grandchildren, maybe? (Could you — and WOULD you be willing to support him if you had to?) These are all very important factors. an answer. + * * DEAR ABBY: I would like to comment on the woman who wanted to breastfeed her adopted child. When I was a young girl I had a female cocker spaniel who was getting on in years. Then someone gave me a kitten which was two days old. I placed the kitten in the same box with the cocker spaniel and I thought it was “cute" the way the kitten kept trying to “nurse” on the cocker spaniel. ★ k k After three days, the milk came in! I could hardly believe it because that cocker spaniel had not had pups for a long time. Besides, I never knew a dog could nurse a cat! * Abby, "that kitten was nursed by the dog until he was a full grown cat. ★ ★ * I witnessed this with my own eyes, but when I told my husband (who is a medical doctor of many years practice), he laughed at me. , After he read that item in your column pertaining to humans, he said in a much more humble tone, “If it could happen with humans, I suppose it could happen with animals.” Thank you, Abby. “VINDICATED” IN SANTA ANA Mrs. Kennedy's Spirit Still Strong We enjoy the same things, and have beautiful fun together. He is kind, loving, unselfish, and I KNOW we could be happy. So how important is age? Clue me in, and 111 be able to give you NEW YORK — The widow of Joseph P. Kennedy and mother of three sons and a daughter who met violent deaths, declares, “I will never allow myself to be vanquished or annihilated.” Mrs. Rose Kennedy celled on women everywhere “not to think of what might have been, but to devote yoUr time, efforts and energies to the living, and to the immediate challenges.” Writing in the December issue of “Ladies’ Home Journal,” she stated that in “this way we turn our heartaches into constructive efforts to lighten the sorrow of others. And if you can transmit the same attitude to your children, that, too, will be a precious gift all their lives, whatever may be their destiny.” ★ ★ ★ Mrs. Kennedy said, “Tragedies have come to a lot of other people who haven’t had my compensations ... I still consider myself very lucky.” She wrote in her article, “I have been ideally happy with my children. My sons, I felt, were all destined for outstanding achievement, and they fulfilled their promises.” According to Mrs. Kennedy, “Some people collapse under strain, discouragement, problems. Others res-, pond to challenges and difficulties and are excited by them. This has always been a Kennedy philosophy,” she stated. “God has bequeathed us pleasures as well as sorrows, laughter as well as tears," stated Mrs. Kennedy. “May He give us the capacity to enjoy all these gifts and to share them.” Mrs. Kennedy also called on parents to use reasoning to combat the drug problem in youth, p , “I think it Is stupid for the young to experiment with drugs. Youthful people need their best brains and their most acute reactions for their fight for a better world, and to damage their mental capacities for the sake of a few thrills is ridiculous,” stated Mrs. Kennedy. DRUGS NOT ANSWER The mother of a U S. President and two U.S. Senators wrote that “the young must guard against childish collapse or destructive *rage in the face of disap- pointment. This kind of resilience of spirit cannot come from drugs,” she stated. “It still can come, in a great measure, from the inspiration and philosophy instilled in the early years by parents.” ★ ★ Mrs. Kennedy, asserted in her “Journal” article: “If the children have been properly motivated, they will have a strong will power, and if they know something may be dangerous to their health, they will have been so disciplined in their youth that they will be able to resist new temptations; they will take pride and have confidence in their own independent judgments, and they will have zest enough to climb mountains or seek the stars without the help of questionable stimulants.” Nun's New Direction Leads to Beauty School From Women’s Wear Daily Sister Jacqueline Jungers; B.V.M., a, veteran nun now serving as manager of the student bookstore at Xavier High School In St. Louis, has juft graduated from the Career Beauty School. Why should a nun be so interested to hair styling? ■ k k ■ Mt “Many of the sisters are now to contemporary dress,” she says, explaining that most nuns cannot afford prices charged to modern beauty salons and yet modern dressers cannot ignore their coiffures. Real Life Contradicts Fairy Tale as Steven Rockefellers Separate NEW YORK (AP)—When a Norwegian maid married a Rockefeller heir 10 years ago, the world thought a storybook romance had ended "happily ever after.” But now court separation papers have been filed. A memorandum of separation was filed Friday with the county clerk of Westchester County for Steven C.* Rockefeller, 33, son of Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller, and his 31 - year - old wife, the former Anne • Marie Rasmussen, daughter of a retired Norwegian grocer and fish merchant. ★ ★ * A family spokesman said there were no plans for divorce and the cSuple and their three children would continue to reside in houses on the vast family estate at Pocantico Hills, N.Y. The family has lived near Gov. Rockefeller on the suburban .family estate' while Steveh completed research on a doctoral thesis in the philosophy of religion at Columbia University. A cum laude graduate of Princeton University and Union Theological Seminary, he was said to have given up plans to enter the ministry and be planning a teaching career instead. NORWEGIAN WEDDING The marriage was held in a white church in the village of Soegne, Norway, on Nov. 22, 1959. It was attended by 200, including the governor and most members of both families, while a crowd of 5,000 stood outside. Anne - Marie’s family had Sent her to live and work with an American family as an “au pair,” a traditional arrangement under which girls are taught the languages and traditions of foreign countries in return for household services. k k k Sponsored by her uncle, a New York mounted policeman, Anne - Marie found employment in the New York apartment of Gov. Rockefeller. The romance with Steven followed and they were married in her hometown Lutheran Church. Steven is a Baptist, but his studies have been nondenominatiohal. The couple’s children are Steven Jr., 9, Ingrid, 6, and Jennifer, 5. Mrs: Ji A: Quatto, Bldomfield Township (left} and Mrs. Leslie Howey, Waterford, ready items for the annual holiday, bazaar of jthe Pontiac Osteopathic Hospital Guild. The event, scheduled for the hospital lobby from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. Friday will feature boutique kerns, flower arrangements, candles and a bake sale. Proceeds Will be used to buy special hospital equipment. Mrs. Frank Burrell is chairman of the sale. Mrs. Howey is president of the Guild. . ' f [ . >. THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 2,1969 Jacquard, woven worsted Photos by Home Furnishings Daily Jack Larsen at Work Fabrics Tell Irish Story Beautiful fabrics Just don’t happen. It takes the skill of a creative designer, good materials and a market for the finished product. When the Irish wanted to manufacture fabric exports they asked Jack Lenor Larsen to help them out. The leading American home furnishings' and textile designer accepted the job. The results of his work are the variety of designs pictured here. Take a close look. Threads of Ireland’s history, countryside and personality are incorporated in these striking fabrics, now available to manufacturers. Home Furnishings Daily reporter, Susan Grant, has written a more detailed account of Jack Larsen’s recent association with the Irish. drew upon Ireland’s rich past and exciting present... and, of course, on the country’s wealth of natural resources. JOIN FORCES Larsen and his design studio have worked with the V:r$ative minds of the KilKenny Workshops to make contemporary statements about Irish design, even when the point of reference was 18th century Georgian Dublin, or Medieval illuminated manuscripts or Pre-Christian architecture. Of course,-there are the timeles tweeds and baw-neens, the silky worsteds and donegal ■cloths. Larsen has never lost sight of what Ireland has to offer, Not only fine wools but also small, custom factories pro-, during high quality fabrics almost exclusively for the apparel trades. Perhaps most important of all, was the ability of the Irish to ask for advice and then listen. "The Irish are so opeh..They see themselves at the beginning of a road. They are very eager. The^ have lots of ability and very practical minds. They know that America is potentially their biggest market,’’ Larsen explained. The clever Irish have chosen Larsen with a keen sense of what he has to offer as well. Larsen is famous for having more than an unerring eye. He is a master of maintaining a custom look on production facilities. And he knows that having the right designs in the proper quality is only the beginning. Larsen understands how to promote design to the sophisticated architectural and decorative trade. Mainly an upholstery collection, there are a few casements and prints, it is all of wool. ; , ★ <*'. * Textures range from the expected nubby tweeds and fluffier fleece to the unexpected satin smooth worsted wools. Colors go from the murky, boggy greens and browns to super bright red-pink-purple to flaxen neutrals. Jack Lenor Larsen and Ireland make a remarkable combination ... Larsen, one of the most important forces in the furnishings fabric field today and Ireland, a young vital country seriously in search of a design point of view. In short, it was a perfect match. When Larsen officially introduced the collection of 35 new fabrics (750 when counting by colorways), the Irish export Board’s original invitation to the designer over two years ago was confirmed as a stroke of genius. Larsen has made the most of what Ireland has had to offer. Unlike the Scandinavians who were originally assigned the job of guiding Ireland’s design development via the KilKenny Design Workshops, Larsen has not chosen to push Ireland into paths he has already established here. Instead, he Upholstered in a fabric that could easily be associated with the work of Jack Larsen, this chair comes to life through cloth texture and design. Waterford, worsted and metallic ijCasement Celtic Fret, brawneen weave Calicut, border design A-roomful of textures^ colors and fabrics can arid green insets repeated in the rug coordinates produce excitement and an interesting change of the grouping. Lawrence Paabody designed this pace area. Sofa, and chairs are bright with blue and furnishings collection which is available locally, green stripes while the cooling white ioith blue Durrow, printed worsted Typically Irish: a high cross c—a THE PONTIAC PflESS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1969 : Si | Mr. and Mrs. Arthur W. Uroton of Westfield, New Jersey, announced the engagement of their daughter, Cynthia, to Theo- ' dore James Bunt, at a dinner / party'Saturday in their home. The Floyd W. Bunts of Meta-morajparents of the bridegroom-to-bw attended. .The bride-elect is a senior at Case-Western Reserve University, of which institution her fiance is a 1969 graduate.' He is now a freshman medical student at tfte University of Michigan. The Couple are members of Delta UpsUan fraternity and Delta Phi Upsilon sorority. row Old ? good health habits ^ C.I.T. Financial Corporation don’t worry. A child can think .house for'a party.” will help. Exercise which stirs ."Jjg! sensitive to some tood sM the children of i t s!of a11 kinds ot ways f°r Santa to • “He sits in hisf trailer and up circulation is of great value. miU I or _ employees to tell what they deliver those gifts. . He can rests.’* Also take short rest periods knew about Santa for the “sprinkle hihrself with magic • “He just rides his rein-with your feet higher than your dust,” “buy bricks and build adeer.” head. This increases circula- fireplace,” or even ‘‘cornel • “He goes back to the North tion in the face.' through the front door.” Pole and plays with Mrs. I * * * One perplexed little onelClaus.” I There are various ap- ---- --------------—— --------------s--------——-------------—-------------LANSING (AP) - The State Civil Service Commission has Lines Still Are Drawn When Need MRS£3g , - [and Training School, for wear-! By BETTY CANARY |much for a nice time/’ when; If grandfather asks, “What r*n®s w^e on dut^‘ Pontiac Pro»« Photo hffiseon 49th Street. -Who says so? “The rettl expert — a child. knew about Santa for the December issue of the company newspaper. The answers were as varied as the children themselves. One-year-old Kenneth Marsh is oblivious to his surroundings and naps contentedly while Mom shops. Mom. in this instance Mrs. Ellis Marsh of Walled Lake, is getting a head start on Christmas shopping. Famous Chorus \ Sings Messiah j . With Symphony The -Detroit Symphony Orchestra will perform Handel’s “Messiah” with the Worcester (Mass.) Festival Chorus and a quartet of guest soloists Sunday afternoon , at ^ 3:30 in Ford Auditorium. Alfred Nash Patterson, director of the Chorus, will conduct. The soloists are soprano Susan Belling, contralto Joan Caplan, tenor Kenneth Riegel, land baritone David Iciatworthy. ★ * * | The ‘‘Messiah,” first performed in 1742, has always , been considered Handel’s 'greatest oratorio. It was while I directing a performance of ; “The Messiah” at C o v e n t .Garden that Handel, already I blind, collapsed with his last, fatal illness. | The oratorio is most often : performed at Christmas and -Easter in tribute to the story of l Christ, which it follows from j birth to death. I W JEWEL^T^l PONTIAC SINCE 1924 Where was Santa born? You can take your pick of Gibson’s Department Store, a grocery store; North Pole Hospital and “where my little Mother was born.” His helpers haven’t been with hfm forever; he met them in Manitoba, where they work Round Two Ends in Ring Battle NEA Writer lyou wanted to go home five Idid you think of that book employes were fired and No matter how objective and minutes after you got to Mar-1lent you?” Ms grandson luSiitlj conscientious we are, it is dif-garet Mary’s J stupid birthday; say with unabashed honesty, attneirospitai U-. or «rt» T. .t-t'-to-O,,. I tinoot It oijra construction job, at Dad-'ficuit jor parents to get dy’s office * . . or he got their offspring all the little pfape numbers in the book. jdishonesties. garet Mary brings you a purse; This is only one step away u"n I^VE AT FIRST SIGHT Of course, I teach my chtt-jg?* y°ur hirtMa* ~ giving the crudest an-j ’ mm asked where'Santa metdren, as all good mothers do, I ^e one you carry to school swers ojf all. They will Mthel^™^ gg Mrs. Claus, one romantic that if they tell lies their noses jev®[y daY- , truth when the person asking!^. at oth gtat Jnsti. youngster answered. “He just!will grow long and their tongues OjK. We’re talking about ly-ithe question really wants a tution saw her and loved her.’’ MOTej turn black. But we’re not talk-ing. • little white lie. * * * pfacUcal small^ty explanations ing aboutJies. ; * * * *',*■* I The commission decision, ranged from kindergarten to a; >* * * But, just the White lie, or, Grandmother will say, How.bowevar left a way open for a movie, from Uncle Mike’s house' We’re talking about not yawn-1sometimes, the gray one. (Per-|about it? Isn’t my coconut cake|return t„ work by the two fjred to the elevator. , ing in Uncle Herbert’s face .sonally, I think cMldren would .the best You ever ate?” and employes_Mrs G|oria Martin, One ehild said Santa was when he tells those World War never tell black lies if they' Johnny will say. “No, what | nrnclHont f\f tho iininn lnpnl nnH <$» <*»• * Offspring all the little social what ^wanted!” when Mar-dumbest'thing I ever read!” “about 6 or 8 — or maybe 80 years old.” Another summed up Santa’s age when he said, “He’ not very old or else he couldn’t lift the bag.” pr learning to say, “Yes, it’s very s good,” instead of gagging t staggering into the bathroom when mother’s, best friend [brings over that terrible lemon (The jolly.old man makes his pie. ojyn Christmas presents from* Or saying, “Thank you very [ • Accept a suspension without initial three-day-suspensions by. pay from the day they were the hospital of the dismissed' severed from the payroll last employed, and six others. It was I January. found the hospital failed to abide * * * by the grievance time limits The commission upheld a rul-1 imposed on management in pro* | ing by a hearing officer not to I cessing the suspensions. | accept “late” appeals of two support MANAGEMENT other dismissed union members, . . . ... William Watkihs and Karen Ten-day suspensions for six Craig. They were offered the other employes involved in the same opportunity to apply for ring dispute were upheld Anoth-reinstatement. er six employes suspended did The commission reversed the not a^a[ to the commission. — +------------------ — The commission said the em- ployes “deliberately failed to j comply with hygiene and safety' Dishes Are Done regulations of the hospital” ’• ; “The suspensions were a ne-jp Ten Minutes cessary and reasonable exercise of discipline,” the commission! ruling said. “Employes must; An all-plastic dishwasher is f0]inw directives subject to the j portable. This fully-automatic grievance procedure and wild-appliance washes, rinses and cat refusals to work cannot be dries a full service of dishes for condoned.” six in only 10 minutes, the [manufacturer says. EXPERT UUfitciu . SERVICE FOR ALL NATIONALLY FAMOUS JEWELED MAKESI 'PEARCE Floral Co .« i w y a • CIIl|JlUjC&~~ivii b, VJiu* ia lYiai mi, , i • ,. . .. they | johnny will say* “No, what [president of the union local, and If stories. We’re talking about werent taught or forced into it. they serve in the school lunch Mrs Esther Scholl Mrs Mar- I believe if adulte displayed a r0om is much better.” A sister! sSciS m ™ora humanity and under- wm say, “You can really tell Mrs. gchoji had been employed standing, they d most likely get I’ve lost five pounds can’t by the Caro home for 10 years. that raw, unvarnished 1 truth you?” and her brother will an- ™ , . c. . ■ ■ . . . . they always Say they want. Ler “No I don’t Slink you ™6 commission asked State Since here s no hand rinsing. However that’s another suh ’ ku >» ^ Personnel Director Franklin K. or scraping of dishes, you never However, thats another sub- look a bit different. DeWald to negotiate a return to have to put your hands in J . ’ I * * * !work provided the employes: water. The unit connects to a Complete truth is encountered! Mother will remark, “This • Request a return and certi- faucet and stores in most sink in small children. They have hairstyle takes 10 years off me, fy willingness to comply with cabinets; . not yet learned the amenities, doesn’t it?” and her daughter rules concerning the wearing of ------------- They point at Mother’s new win jook aj ber appraisingly and jewelry and other hospital regu- Last year some 300,000 tourist dress and laugh. They climb sayt "No, I don’t tiiink so. Why lations subject to normal griev- came to visit South Africa, a up on grandmother’s lap and don’t you get your face lifted?” ance rights. record, ask innocently, “When arp you To Remind You We ore closed on Wednesdays. Please, plan your visits and phone calls with this In mind. Phone FE 2-0l27 \ going to do the white glove test mummy said you’d do when you came to visit? Can I do it with you?” They happily confide to a visit-, ing college-age cousin that they! want to look at his hair because1 daddy said it was a rat’s nest! land I never saw a rat’s nest, I [do you haye a real rat living in there? A sensible parent curbs this kind.of veracity. If not, then,! before you know It, a child is answering questions with complete truthfulness. ★ ■ ' 1i ★ If Auiit Edith asks, “How was the dress I bought you?” her nieCe will answer. “Daddy said it was tiie Craziest thing he ever saw and made mother, take it back to the store.” Funds Withheld | The rubella vaccination pro-' gram is. lagging. Why? Largely because the federal government is holding back funds,, to get it going, .reports Dr. Russell Teague, 1988 president of the Association of State and Ter-1 ritoriai Health -Officers. And this in the face of an expected outbreak of German Measles during 1971. Hence 'most of the burden; falls dn the states, says Dr. Teague. x ■ - TYPEWRITERS ALL MAKES LAYAWAY FOR CHRISTMAS I; MOUNT PRICES w~« c“rrr °ur owi? 123 North Siqlniw SI How do you pick the hearing eld that*s right for you? Beltone offers you the broadest range of hearing correction in the world... to fit any hearing loss that can be corrected. But with this wide range of choice, how do we select the aid for your individual loss? Let us show you how easy—and how accurate—-it is with -the Beltone Audio Selectometer, a remarkable electronic device that lets you hear for yourself the fitting that’s right for you. . There's no cost or obligation to “hear what you've been missing." So drop in soon or call-Tor an appointment in your own home. Earl H. Glaspie '* Hearinff Service Earl H. Glaspie, Certified Hearing Aid Audiologist 450 W. Huron St. &&&P 334-7711 Pictures show three 'of designer Donald Brooks’ spring 1970 fashions which were shown Monday in New York at the American Designer Showings. At left is a four-piece suit in two of Brooks’ favorite colors- this year, stone and black. In center is a “traveler” dress in white wool crepe with long sle,eves and pleats in front. At right is a two-piece pants ensemble in green, black and white in a floral pattern and stripes. * , MODEL OPEN WEDNESDAY, 3 to 6 P.M. 4150 ENGLAND BEACH ... O'Neil Building Co. Brick and aluminum exterior, three' bedrooms, lYa baths, full basement, 2-car garage. 'DIRECTIONS: West on iyi-59 to right on Ormond Road to left oh England Beach. RAY O’NEIL REALTY, 3520 Pontiac Lk. Rd. 674-2222 HUTTENLOCHERS, KERNS, NORVELL, INC. 1007 W. HURON ST. 681-2100 f \ Hospit^lj girl sue-! i cardiac1 MPl THE POffTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1069 NYC Furrier Ha? Conservation Plans From WOMEN'S WEAR DAILY NEW YORK - Strjpt self policing by the fur industry to avoid a clash wHu. a grass . roots conservationist mbv'ement that could have serious consequences Is called by Fifth Avenufe furrier Jacques Kaplan.,. Alarmed by Increasing reports of new organizations and wider boycotts against the consumption of certain furs, Kaplan issued, a plea for the 'taktl a stand as an industry immediately. We must un^ derstand no# that ',#» dan and should become self- regulatory' without pressure from outside groups. We, more than private people, rdal)ze that proper, ecological balance Is to our advantage — without it, we soon would have nothing left to sell. “The .furriers don't realize4 how serious this thing really is. This new movement on the coast, for example, is ih the “Groovy” while pile coat.. . looks just like the very expensive fur that luxury-minded fashionables love. Sumptuously deep Orion acrylic pile with grooved cross-rippled softness . , . dramatic in its beautiful whiteness. Front-belted, and with a big swooping-size collar . . . the length, reflecting the new upward direction in coats. Misses’ sizes 8 to 18. Available locally. Make it ,a real CKrjstmas with a fake fur fof your man, says the Men’s Fashion Association. This brown model in the currently popular belted style is worn well above the knee. To keep the took casual, team ft up with an all-wool turtleneck and herringbone fibred pants. | Polly's Pointers | Easy Method Told DEAR POLLY — My Pointer I Since they have either a gold-is for making a “quickie" but- or silver-look, they are much tonhole for some jilace that does!more attractive-looking than the not merit a lot of time being usually used chicken wire. — , spent on It. Press ovals of iron- MRS. J.C.S. on mending tape on the right) * * * and wrong sides of the fabric ' DEAR POLLY -«* Ruth prob-where the hole is to be. Stretch'ably can take the shine out of this part taut over a drinking'her black crepe blouse by going glass and slit to the desired over it with a sponge wrung out width of the buttonhole with a [of hot vinegar water and then razor blade. Can be done in a iron on the WRONG side. — jiffy. Thanks for all the Pointers, as I read them all and use quite a few. — MRS. N.J. MRS. C.L.. • * DEAR GIRLS — Always test the effect of any remedy cm an inconspicuous bpot before plunging in. Modem fabrics can be tricky and are not always what we think they are. When necessary to press things like this blouse on the right side, ALWAYS use a pressing cloth. -POLLY DEAR GIRLS - This would be a great idea for beach robes or costumes children need for holiday parties or school plays. -POLLY POLLWS PROBLEM DEAR POLLY - After all the perfume in my atomizer was| used, I could not get rid Of that particular odor and o t h e r j perfume put in it smells . strange. I have tried soaking' the atomizer but that does not) help. Is there any way to get! rid of this odor? - JULIE B. I DEAR POLLY - It is! furnace-filter changing time and! Today’s most appealing eyes I have a great use for the metal require highly individualized | portion that is on both sides of make-up attention. Start by Eyes Require a Variety of Makeup Infant Girl Treated Ca BOSTON (AP) &e Massachusetts General say a one month old cessfully underwent a operation in which a heart lung, machine was used. Ann Maty Flanders is at home in Waltham now, weighs 14 pounds and doctors feel she is safely through her illness. Hospital officials said the sur* jgery was performed last March when Ann Mary weighed five pounds, two ounces. ★ * In an announcement in the latest NGH News, the official hospital publication, doctors said she was the smallest pa-| tiqnt ever reported to have undergone a cardiac operation in which a heart lung machine was used. 'She was in profound heart failure" before the surgery, said Dr. Allan Goldblatt, chief of pediatric cardiology at the hospital. DELICATE SURGERY - The machine was used for'56 minutes. During that time doctors used small instruments to move a wall in Ann Mary’s heart that prevented blood from circulating properly. Residents and interns stood industry to take a stand “so we hands of some very prominent can disarpi these movements and influential people. And it before they can do real harm." will spread." - ★ ★ ★ He noted the recent formation" Last year, Kaplan ruffled of Friends of the Earth on the some of his ‘colleagues' fur West Coast by a controversial when he took tfie initiative with conservationist. A number of a large ad in the New York socially prominent women there,Times declaring Georges have signed pledges not to buy (Kaplan had stopped offering coats or other articles made leopard and cheetah coats and from the skins of wild animals, j calling on American women This, according to Kaplan,'to purchase them. “could so easily become a The ad said: “If you respect cause celebre. It’s such a life, wait 20 years for your next simple, middle road thing for leopard coat ... if these people to join ... and a terribjy animals flourish again, your chic one in' this era of causes daughters will wear them." and protests. And for up to have At_ the time, some furriers to fight them, It would be -like accused Kaplan of running the fighting against apple pie and ad purely as a publicity gim-motherhood.” .. * mick. He ridiculed this. “We must," he declared, “But the point M this shotlld hot be just a Georges Kaplan (jOOCI \~ltizens campaign; It should transcend us and be picked ^up by the General Rlchardaon chapteri whole industry. We mustD hterg of ^ American declare publicly - and mean-Rev*luti ^ honor aenior that we wm not handle the^j «good citizens.. Thursday ^ins-of any threatened species,*t 7:3Jp m at the YWCA. The Thin ctill loovoa tie ia mom; . i Wolf is not on the “no-no1 Reverse Gear lines a poplin coat natural wolf to make a rich, warm ai outer wrap. Coat colors are navy, or brawn. DAR to Honor Vows Spoken by N. W. Sopers Ruth Becker creates a Celanese Amel triacetate and nylon fleece leopard-printed burnoose for the lazy lounger — the lady who wants to curl up in a comfy, easy-care cover up that goes from the top of her head to the tip of her toes. Marlene Joy Popour and 'Neil Winfield Soper Jr.. exchanged wedding vows recently in Howarth United JM e t hod i > t , a.„ j ■I - ■ a, ,.uv p.iu. a, btn, ,T,w... »«.v ChUTCh. '* This still leaves us so many honorees are selected for[ Lillian Gilbert and Gary furs to work with. character and- leadership Workman assisted thp couple as If we d o n t, these qUanties by a committee head- maid of honor and best man. movements could spread to the ^ by Mrs. John A. Collins. i Parents of the newlyweds are point that these peopte can Guest speaiter win be Mrs. Mr: and Mrs. Alfred E. Popour make"811 furs unfashionable to j^y garnes 0f Royai Oak, a of Emerson Stredt, and Mr. and wear. former State Regent of DAR. Mrs. Nell W. Soper Sr. of Social chairman Margaret Bellevue Road, Orion In addition to his advertised steward will be assisted by a Township. stand, Kaplan has put Mrs. committee of 16. -----------------: George Plimptpn in charge of a _______________________ i \i/ special campaign o n con- ! .... . ,, Bottle Warmer servation. Her main duties are' FrGyinQ Material liaison with conservationist ’ , | Try warming baby’s bottle to groups “and to make sure we' To make a dress from an electric coffee percolator, use only those furs proper to material that frays badly, Since the percolator is deep, consume." . always allow a little extra for water comes up high around the Currently on his no-no list are each seam. Machine stitch each bottle and warms the milk more leopard, cheetah, tiger and side of the seam near the edge, quickly and evenly than a pan. snow leopard. “But if the World Wildlife Fund or any other responsible agency brings us statistical proof of any other endangered species, we’U drop them too.” 1 I Prevent Slipping | You will have no trouble with | the food chopper slipping if you] ' put a piece of sandpaper [ - between the clamp and the j underside of the table. AFRICAN IMPORTS BOOKS, RECORDS, COMPLETE SELECTION , AFRO AMERICAN HISTORY AND MUSIC AFRO MOD CLOTHING FOR THE ENTIRE FAMILY SLAVE BELTS, IMPORTED EARRINGS AFRO NAYURAL WIGS FROM 19.95 JUST ARRIVED ORIENTAL WICKER FURNITURE MON., TUES., THURS. 10-9 P.M.jWED, FBI., SAT. 10-10 P.M. 492 S. SAGINAW ST 336-3620 'Blue Babies' Doing Okay BALTIMORE (WMNS) -'Having helped devise a life- for “blue-babies,” Dr. H e 1 e i least 52 were in such professional occupations as law, medicine, the ministry, teaching or nursing while 32 others were: Modifications on_the machine[TaU8Sjg hag now laid to resFsemi-professionals. ErSirf' Jr»Srrt!'1?*l8tfllt teal?. ""H MGH and a graduate of the Pe”nanent| professor emeritus at Johns the discarded filters. They are easily removed, washed in suds, then crushed to use for' flower anchors in vases. THE CHRISTMAS FLOWER When Dr. Joel »' Poinsett brought a lovely flower to the United States from Mexico, he had no idea it would become the Christmas flower and be named after him. It baa the Christmas color red leaves surrounding its tiny flowers, making it very beautiful. This flower has come to be known as the Christmas Poin-sett a. We grow it in our Southern garden* to heights of two to 10 feet. It represents Christmas because of Its beautiful red and green colors. der your flpweVs for Christ-s now while you can get one the best Check our large action of Chriatmas flow-pod arrangements. We will liver them to your home. 832-0127 PEARCE FLORAL CO. 159 Orchard Laite Ave. assembling a variety of shadow colors — including highlighters and contourers, eye-liner and a pair of fashion lashes from Max Factor. * * ★ To apply the eye shadows correctly, tilt your chin high and look down Into your mirror so that the upper lids are fully exposed. Use two or even three shades to color, contour and highlight eyes to new drama. * ★ * To line your upper lid, tilt your chin up, look down into your mirror again and stretch your eyelid slightly outward with a finger. Then draw the eyeline as close to the roots of j your lashes as possible. The most cunning way of j combining the real with fashion lashes is to mascara natural lashes before adding the fakes. Then use a clean brush to blend the two together for a very fluffy and natural thick-fringed look. Massachusetts Institute of Technology Most lnfints with similar heart conditions , die quickly, doctors said. _ *i ★ ★ The hospital said it was leaking details of.' the operation known because doctors feel successful use of« heart lung machine on infants can be duplicated. “No baby is too small for our. machine,” Dr. Goldblatt said. bom brain damage. Since blue babies with a heart defect that prevents proper oxygenation of the blood, thus giving a blue cast to their skin, depriving the brain of enough oxygen could have caused soma mental retardation. However, when Dr. Taussig and her associates checked out 685 . survivors of the early operations, they found that at Pullovers Simplify Buying for Boys Hopkins University . IRREGULARO hiir Yfh ■ bm Mr riiAia m BRAN BUDS Fill Bottom of Pot For healthier house plants, avoid water-logged or sour soil by filling the bottom of your From tots to teten-agers, boys p^s with charcoal bits, small like cotton ,knit. pullovers. So, to pebbles or bits of broken china make your Christmas shopping or pottery, easy, plan on a pullover for every boy on your list. Styles |bome in vivid stripes or solid cplors as well as with screen-printed novelty designs. Cotton • knit pullovers are treated to insure minimum shrinkage. They are machine-washable and need only a little ironing. iSSTsAYsi ■ Look to Tony*m for BEAUTY BARGAINS MON., TUES. and WED. ONLY Plain Haircut, Shampoo and Styling, $5.00 Permanent and Wave $10.00 Complete Come In a -Ueffo.,,' I’m DICK FRYE Come to my studio for your , Family Group Pictures 518 Wo huron”* 334-1561 Bldg., FE 3-7186 YES, You May Have YOUR CUSTOM MADE UPHOLSTERED - CHAIR op SOFA in time for the | HOLIDAYS If you order right now• "Fine Furniture and Quality Carpeting Since MW Q&otti OFVA1TERFORD - 334-0981 S400Dixie Highway Select A Gift From Wiggs .. a For Every One In The Family # a. For The Boss ,. # For TheHard-to-Please. • THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 2, I960 C-4 ^•URS. NECK MRS. JOANtipm MRS. MATTESON V^pkend Rifes Three Couples Are Wed ,L«® Beecbum and i Presbyterian Church, Livonia. |Mr. and Mrs. Howard J. Androl Larry Ottp Rieck were married Saturday in Dixie Baptist Church. Their candlelight ceremony was followed by a reception in the Waterford QAI Building. - ' OU Studio Company Offers Three Plays The Studio Company o f, Oakland University’s Academy of Dramatic Art will open Hs second four-day run id Meadqw Brook Theatre tomorrow night with a triple bill of one-act plays. They are Ionesco’s "The Bald Soprano,’’ (directed by Christopher Ross - Smith). Wilder’s "The Happy Journey’’ (directed by Terence Kllburn), and Shaffer’s "White Lies,” (directed by Peter Stephens). Ross-Stnith is a native of Johannesburg, South Africa and an accomplished repertory company actor with experience in his own country and England before coming here. Kilburn hr a former Hollywood child star, probably best known for his portrayal of Tiny Tim in "A Christmas Carol.”*' i . - \ Peter Stephens was bom in Ranchi, India, educated in England and was a stage director before coming t o America to be production manager for the Academy. Following the Meadow Brook run, the Academy troupe will take the triple bill on tour to Nominal admission Is charged for the Meadow Brook performances with a special rate for students upon presentation of identification cards. All seats are unreserved. Curtain time is 8:15 p.m. She’s being endorsed for the high court. North Carolina’s U. S. Senators Sam J. Ervin Jr. and B. Everett Jordan have urged Presi- ap Wlrophoto dent Nycon to appoint Associate Justice Susie Sharp of the Notth Carolina Supreme Court to the vacancy on the U.S. Supreme Court. A reception in the Somersetlof Mlkewood Street. Barents of Community House, Troy, the bridegroom are,Mr. and followed the rites. |Mrs. William Matteson Georgia McKee and Michael’Elizabeth Lake Road. Joannides attended their! Th® couple is honeymooning! respective sister awl brother aajto Canada. The daughter of Mr. and Mrs.;maid of honor and best man. George N. Beecbum of Dixie ...... Parents of the newlyweds are Mr. m>d Mrs. George McKee of Redford Township, Mjrsr Maurice Joannides of Livonia and the late Mr. Joannides. The newlyweds ana honey* mooning In Canada. Higlmy ■ chose a gown of ChaaflHy lace with beaded ac-centeV She carried a , bouquet of carnations, roses and lilys of the valtey.. Mrs. \johh Beal and the bridegroom's brother, Eugene, Tim son of Mr. and Mrs. Douglas E.'Rieck of Jeyceii Drive is honeymooning with his bride ht New York City. Joorrnidet-McKee Gowned hi satin with Alencon lace, Sheila Jean McKee of West Washington 'Street, Independence Towiis hi p, became the bride of John M. Joannides of Spokane Drive on Sattbrdhy. The couple exchanged wedding vows In Saint Paul’s Matteson-Androl A candlelight service in St. Perpetua’s Catholic Church was chosen by Diana Lynn Androl and Dale Elwin Matteson for their marriage-Friday. A reception in'the Sveden House followed the rites. Gowned in satin with lace appliques, the bride carried a cascade bouquet of roses.: <* * * Linda Matteson and Richard Coe assisted the couple as honor attendants. The bride is the daughter of (/ffxukbfytii Contest Set for Soloists Applications fqr the annual Battle Creek Symphony Soloist Competition are now being accepted. Deadline for entry la Jan. 11,1870. One. winner may be chosen from each of the following groups: piano; orchestra instruments (strings, winds brass); and voice. The winning contestants will be presented as guest solists with the orchestra in May, Previous .competitors who have not been first place winners may enter again. m* • ★- >.v Michigan residents and-or college students may apply to Mrs. Roger Parkes, Chairman, Battle Creek Symphony Soloist Competition, 384 Main Street, Battle Creek, 48017, for additional information regarding compositions, audition t lm e limitation, nominal entry fee, music, accompanist, etc. Auditions will be held Saturday afternoon and evening, Jan. 24, in the W. K. Kellogg Auditorium, Battle Creek. Farm Group Tours Facility The Oakland County Farm; Bureau Women's Committee will tour the Oakland County Medical Care Facility Wednesday at 10 a.m. Members will bring gifts to be distributed to the patients at Christmas. ♦ * w Mrs. Margaret E v a n s , volunteer coordinator, will -conduct the tour and explain the therapy provided. Mrs. Edward Bourns of New Hudson is chairman. Mrs. B. C. Brondige of Holly is in charge of the program. Tots' Handprints on Terry Towel Personalized Gift It’s all bias and all beautiful. That's what they say about this subtle bit of elegance from Irene Gilbert. With the trimming downward darts of the jacket, ye shall have magic whoever ye go. Toss the jacket aside, and the jewel of a collar stays with you. Make it in satin or phau de soie for gala events, or try it in wool for an understatement that cannot be over- rat6Other fabric suggestions; silk and worsted, brocade, crepe, raw silk, pique or linen. For the long version use only 50” fabric or wider to avoid piecing. 62239 is cut in Misses’ sizes 10*18. Size 12 requires approximately 3% yards of 54” fabric for the long version with % yard of 54” contrast and 1% yards of 54”. fabric for the jacket V* yard of 54” contrast. Size 12, short version requires approximately 2% yards of ,54” fabric for dress and % •yard of 54” contrast. To order 6223B; state size, Include name, address and zip code. Send 52.00 postpaid for each pattern. Send orders for books and patterns to SPADEA, Box N, Dept. PXr6, Milford, N.J. 08048. This pre-cut, prqperforated Spadea Designer Pattern comes hi ready-to-wear sizes that produce a better fit and are to make. Order normal ready-to-wear size and allow one week for delivery. NEW BOOK 34-Collection of latest dp-signs in all categories — $1.00 postpaid. NEW BOOK — Pants and Tops Wardobe styled for day and evening wear complete with figure fitting sewing tips on how to make “Perfect Pants” — $1.00 postpaid. NEW IDEA: First time designers have published sewing It’s not how mpeh, but what secrets. Booklets 1, 2, 3, >4 and 5 — 75c postpaid for each. Hard. you wear that counts. Layers of Cover Edition $5.00. Pattern books by classification; Evening, bulky clothing impede move-Coats arid Suits; Ensembles. Each book $1.00 plus 25 ment and cause sweating. Recommended for emost sports | are lightweight quilted jackets; vests, or parkas lined with 100 j per cent pure Arctic, down. Be sure .youT jacket has a zipper pocket to accommodate tissues and an ointment to relieve 'From nape of neck to waist > chapping. Here's a personalized gift item that’s guaranteed to please (Grandmother, says the National Cotton Council. Give her a white cotton terry hand towel with an original - a grandchild’s handprints applied with textile paint. The paint is permanent on the towel, that Is — and Grandmother can keep the towel for years, long after little hands have grown big. * . * * ’hand-paint” the towel, first spread it out o n newspapers. Pour a little textile paint in a shallow pan. Have the child dip his hand in the paint and let the !excess drip oft. Then place his hand with fingers spread apart firmly down on the towel. Wash his hand immediately with soap and water to remove paint. Light and Warm cents postage and handling. SIZES BUST WAIST HIPS •LENGTH 18 33 24 ’ 35 ' 16% 12 34 25 38 l$% ft , 36 26% 3t% . \ ‘17 18 38 28 38 X 17% 18 49 .30 41 , 17% GEORGE TUSON’S BIGELOW 501 NYLON CARPET GEORGE TUSON "If you don't know your carpet... know your carpet dealer." REG. *6.96 NOW ALL WOOL WEDGEWOOD BLUE RANDOM SHEARED CARPET *8.95-- REG. *12.95 LIMITED OFFER WHILE OUR CURRENT SUPPLY LASTS !!! 169 YARDS IN STOCK... ROLLENDS - UP TO 90% OFF CARPET HER KITCHEN FOR CHRISTMAS a. *2.99 INDOOR-OUTDOOR CARPETING TUSON CARPET 4494 DIXIE HIGHWAY j ; DRAYTON PLAINS 674-3159 674-3150 Across from Burk* Lumber Tin? PONTIAC PRESS, TUfegPAY: EIW1SSF•. jf\ W 'A Christmas memories are made of twinkling lights, jingling bells, the yeasty warmth of tradi- . tional coffee cakes and the wonderful aroma of ' cookies baking. Here are recipes to add to your own family album of happy holiday memories. s 1 ■ All three of the spectacular Yuletide coffee cakes shown start with basic oatmeal yeast dough. A Festive Fruit Wreath is a colorful ornament for the table; jewel-bright pieces of candied fruit peek through the glaze and roiled oats add nutty-sweet goodness inside. The same recipe will make both the Noel Oatmeal Braid and Frosty Bubble Bing. Butter and hot coffee or tea accompany warm coffee cake. *Tis the season for decorative cookies, too. Served with creamy eggnog they offer a special touch of holiday hospitality. Let the recipes below announce "Season’s Greetings” to your guests. The recipe for Versatile Butter Cookies makes four delectably | different kinds of cookies. Cut-outs—rolled cookies, as you might guess—are as much a part or the Christmas festivities as Santa Claus. Tender, buttery Cherry Pecan Jewels sparkle with candied cherry ( centers, and peppermint candy flavors sugar-coated Peppermint Balls. Vanilla, chocolate and peppermint are combined in Three Color Bars —dainty cookie twists. A butterscotch-oatmeal crumb mixture layers with orange accented date filling in rich, delicipus Date Dreams. And the youngsters will love Candyland Christmas Trees, puffed rice confections hat might double as holiday centerpieces. FESTIVE FRUIT WREATH Doughs 2 cakes compressed or 2 pkg. dtp yeast 2 eggs, beaten 1/2 cup lukewarm water 1 1/2 cups milk, scalded 1/2 cup sugar 2 1/2 teaspoons salt 1/2 cup (1 stick) butter 61/2 to 7 cups sifted allpurpose flour 2 cups rotted oats (quick or eld fashioned, uncooked) Fillings 2 tablespoons butter, soft 1/4 cup firmly packed brown sugar 2 cups diced mixed candied fruits For dough, soften yeast in lukewarm water. (Use warm water for dry yeast.) Pour scalded milk over sugar, salt and butter. Cool to lukewarm. Stir in 1 cup flour and eggs. Add softened yeast and oats. Stir in enough more flour to make a soft dough. Turn out on lightly floured board or canvas: knead until smooth and satiny, about 10. minutes. Hound dough into ball; place in buttered bowl; brush lightly with melted butter. Cover; let rise in warm place until double in size, about 1 hour. Fundi down; cover; let rest 10 minutes. Divide in half. Boll each part to form 17x9-hteb rectangle. Brush each with 1 tablespoon butter; sprinkle with half of the sugar and half Of the fruits. Vk Starting with long side, roll each up as for felly roll. Form each Into circle on cookie sheet. With scissors, start at outside of ring and cut about 2/3 way through ring at 1-inch high intervals. Turn one section to left and next to light Repeat around ring. Brush lightly with mettedbutter. Cover: let rise In warm place until nearly double in size, about 45 minutes. Bake in preheated moderate oven (375*F.)-ebout 25 minutes. Drirale with confectioners’ sugar frosting while still warm. Makes 2 large coffee cakes. Noel Oatmeal Braid and Frosty Bubble Bing: Add 1 cup diced mixed candied fruits and 1 cu^ raisins with the oats in above recipe. Prepan dough end let rise as directed. Divide dough Heserve one half for bubble ring. Use otter half for braid. To make braid, divide one half into 4 equal parts. Boll 3 of the parts to form 15-inch "ropes." Place on lightly buttered cookie sheet Braid loosely, tucking ends under. Divide remaining part of dough into thirds. Boll each part to form 12-inch "rope.'' Braid loosely, tucking ends under. Place on top of larger braid. Brush lightly with melted butter. Cover; let rise until dearly double in size, about 45 minutes. To make bubble ring, use remaining balf of dough. Pinch off small pieces of dbugh; shape to form balls. Dip into melted butter, then into a mixture of 3/4 cup granulated sugar and 11/2 teaspoons cinnamon. Arrange balk of dough in 10x4-inch tube pan. Cover;let rise In warm place until nearly double in size, about 45 minutes. Bake in preheated moderate oven (375*F.) 30 to 35 minutes. Cool ring about 10 minutes, remove from pan. Drizzle confectioners’ sugar frosting over ring and braid While still warm. If desired, decorate with red and green candied cherries. Makes 1 braid and 1 bubble ring. 4 Tori. Oatmeal Braid (center) and fruit-jeweled Festive Fruit Wreath. AU three tie, buttery-rich oatmeal yeast dough recipe. , BATE BREAMS i’illingi 1 lb. pitted dates 1/4 cup granulated sugar 12 cup water Grated peel of 1 orange /2 cup orange juice /4 teaspoon salt 1 cup chopped nut meats A festive trick or two produces four kinds of butter cookies from a single recipe; more holiday recipe magfc yields tempting c bars and tiny puffed rice Christmas trees. Eggnog accompanies these sweet Christinas treats. Crumb Baser T 3/4 cups sifted allpurpose flour I teaspoon soda 9/4 teaspoon salt 1 1/4 cUps firmly packed brown sugar 1 cup (2 sticks) butter 2 1/2 cups rotted oats (quick or old fashioned, uncooked) for Ailing, combine dates, sugar, water, orange •eel, orange Juke and salt irt saucepan. Cook iver low heat until thick, stirring frequently. ]ooI. Stir in nubneats. Tor base, sift together flour, soda and salt Into •owl. Stir in sugar. Cut in butter until mixture esembles coarse crumbs. Stir in oats. Firmly tack balf of oats mixture into buttered 13x9-neb baking pan. Carefully spread Ailing over >ase. Iprinkle with remainingbats mixture; pack [ghtly. Bake in preheated moderate oven 375’F.),about 35 minutes. Cool; cut in ban. lakes 4 dozen ban. CANDYLAND • CHRISTMAjS TREES € cups puffed rice 3 cups miniature marshmallows 3 tablespoons butter' 1 teaspoon vanilla . • _„ , 1/4 teaspoon green 8 large gumdrops food coloring 8 small gumdrops , Heat puffed dee in 'shallow baking pan in pre-seated moderate oven (350*F.) about 10 inin-ites. Pour Into large buttered howl; Melt narshmalloWS and butter in saudepan over low seat, stirring occasionally^' Add vanilla and food xdoring, stirring until smooth. .. . pour over cereal, stirring, to coat evenly. 'With suffered hands, shape to form 8 cone-shaped trees. (If mixture hardens before shaping, is tfmplete, place in moderate oven e few minutes to soften.) Let trees set about 1 hour. Starting at top of each tree, pipe frosting to form a spiral rope. Press red cinnamon candies jr silver dragees into frosting. Attach a large gumdrrib to bottom of each trte With frosting to fonri. trunk." Attach a small gumdrop to top of tree with frosting. Makes 8 trees.. Thick green confettionerf sugar frosting Bed cinnamon candies VERSATILE BUTTER COOKIES 1 cup (2 sticks) butter , 8/4 cup sugar 1 egg 1/2 teaspoon vanilla 21/2 cups sifted all-purpose flour 1 teaspoon baking powder 1/4 teaspoon salt Cream butter; gradually addsugar, beating until light and fluffy. Blend in egg ana vanilla. Sift together flour, baking powder and salt; Gradually add to creamed mixture; blend well. Chill dough several hours or overnight. Shape dough according to following variations. Cut-~Outs:Roll out do floured board or canvas to__ ness. Cut into desired shapes with flouted assorted cookie cutters, place on cookie sheets. Bake in preheated moderate oven (375*F.) 8 to 8 minutes. Cool and decorate. Makes about 8 dozen cookies. Cherry Pecan Jewels: Shape dough to form 3/4-inch balls. Roll in l cup finely .chopped pecans. Place on cookie sheets. Press finger into center of dough tq make indentation. Place candied cherry in indentation. Bake in preheated moderate oven (375°F.) 8 to 10 minutes. Makes about 7 dozen cookies. Peppermint Balls: Substitute 1 /4 teaspoon peppermint extract and 1/4 tt nilla for the vanilla in above recipe. Add 6-8 drops red food coloring and 2 table- spoons crushed peppermint candy to dough. Shape to form 1-inch balk. Boll in Colored sugar. Place on cookie sheets. Balm in preheated moderate oven (375*F,j 6 to 8 minutes. Cool. Makes about 6 dozen cookies.\ ” Three Color Ban: Divide basic dough In half. Leave one half plain.' Add, I ox. (1' sq.) unsweetened chocolate, melted end coded, to other half. Prepate Pepper* mint Balls recipe; divide dough in half. . Chill, (Use one half to make Peppermint Balls.) Bolt, out each dough between waked paper to form 13 x 11-inch rectangles. Chill again. Remove waxed paper inverting doughs on top of each Other. Boll lightly together. Chit in 2 x 1/2-inch skips. Pull strips slightiy and twist once. Place on cookie sheets. Bake In preheated moderate oven (375*F.) 8 to 8 minutes. Makes about 10 dozen cookies. I Ex-Local Preps Duel in Michigan Victory Russell Scores 22; Fife Sends Michigan Ahead By 9RUNO L. KEARNS Sports Editor, Pontiac Press ANN ARBOR — A head to head scrap between two former local prep cagefs proved to be a big factor in the University of Michigan’s 85-75 victory over the University of Detroit last night., It. was the season opener for both basketball teams and ex-Pontiac Central eager Frank Russell was matched man for man against ex-Clarks ton high star Dan Fife. . pj% * Russell, who spent one year at Oakland Community College, connected for seven big points early in the second half to bring the titans into a 54-54 and then 58-58 deadlock. But then Fife took over and broke the tie with a driving layup that netted him a three point play as he was fouled to give Michigan' a 61-58 lead which the Wolverines tiever lost, V"' 'dr Russell had the offensive edge as he and center A1 Peake tied for U. of D. . scoring honors with 22 points each: Fife'contributed 16 points for Michigan but was more outstanding on defense. . “Frank is a good offensive player,” said new Titan head coach Jim Harding, “he is a sophomore and has a lot to learn on defense.” BATTLE OF THE BOARD — ^arry Moore (25) of U.of D. has rebounding position on Michigan’s Rod Ford (43) in their game lest night in Ann Arbor where the Wolverines won an 85-75 basketball opener against the Titans. The game featured iwo former local cagers, Frank Russell former Pontiac Central player at U. of D., and Dan Fife ex-Clarkston ace at Michigan. Texas, Arkansas Are 12 in APRatings By the Associated Press Including 31 first : 8 " , __ , I. Louisiana Staff . 9-T 272 , Tigerfown Growing & SsS0,m* . • t® ™ DETROIT (AP) - The Detroit Tigers ii ' announced today construction has be^un it gSaffT. U si on a (425,000 deluxe dormitory far its » minor league training base, Tigertown, . j}; 7.".rti “ at Lakeland, Fla. U THE PONTIAC PRESS TUESDAY- DECEMBER 2, 1969 Simpson Leads MSU Triumph FRANK RUSSELL Scored 22 Poiats for Titans For, the Titims, who started three sophomores, the game was lost at the free throw line. • “We did a good job defensively,” added Harding, “but we missed five easy' layups and made only two of 10 free throws in the Second and this killed us." ^4* \ * * Actually, the Titans made only seven of 21 far the game and at the time when the score Whs 58-58 they missed a two shot foul and three 1-i situations which if converted means eight points. Rudy Tomjanovich was Michigan’s big offense weapon with 26 points, but U. of D. bad the edge in most of the statistics. The Titans had five more field goals, 34-29, had better shooting percentage with 47 per cent to 43 per cent and controlled the boards, $5 to 44. ★ ★ ★ But U. of D. also made more mistakes with 23 turnovers to 13 and only 33 per cent at the line compared to 27 of 36 or 75 per cent far U> of M. EARLY LEAD Detroit took a 41 lead to start the game but then Tomjanovich caught fire, and as he was throwing in 17 first half points, Michigan led 22-12 for its biggest DAN FIFE Triggered Wolverines’ Rally EAST LANSING (AP) - Perhaps It’s a little soon, but Ralph Simpson has at least one fan pushing him for All-American basketball honors. Guy Strong, basketball coach at Eastern Kentucky University, put It this way: “Simpson is a tremendous ball player.-A certain All-American. Strong speaks with some authority since Simpson’s 36 points were instrumental in Michigan State University’s victory over Strong’s team Monday night. The final score was 89-85. ★ * * “Our sophomores gave us a big lift,” commented MSU’s rookie coach, Gus Ganakas. One of the sophomores is Simpson, a product of Detroit Pershing High School which also graduated Spencer Haywood who put the University . of Detroit on the basketball map again last year. Haywood has since then signed a pro contract with Denver. SPARTAN RALLY “It was a good team effort in the second half,” Ganakas said. “Jim Gibbons and Ron Gutitawski’s gutty play was a real factor in our comeback. “Lloyd Ward’s' defense inspired us. .The team started .playing together in the second half.” Eastern’s Strong said foul trouble in the first half put the damper on Colonels’ game. We didn’t play together as a unit well enough. We just haven’t put it all together yet.” ★ ★ * “When we went to Simpson we didn’t get on him,” Strong observed. The Colonels held leads through the middle portion of the game, but caved in to Simpson and the Spartans near the ’end. Simpson scored his final two points with game-clinching free throws with just four seconds left. Gibbons was second high scorer in the game for the Spartans with 20 points. Boyd Lynch led Eastern with 32. Simpson’s 36 points gave him a tie with Bill Curtis for fourth place in the all-time MSU scoring lists behind Julius McCoy. McCoy holds the top three spots with his best effort of 45 points coming during the 1955-56 season. Curtis scored his 36 points in the 1964-65 season. It was the season opener for both teams. MSU plays again Saturday night at East Lansing against Toledo. .Batltm. Kanlucky Michigan flat* -mi j- i/-ji la . Tovaia 32 25*: Eastern Kanlucky 45 « MSU 39 5C Fouled out: Eaatefn Kentucky—Ly Burton. MSU—Gutkowakl. Total fouls: Eaatarn Kentucky 24. I Detroit narrowed the margin to 38-33. with 1:10 left in the half, and when sophomore Mike Funnel! of Mt. Pleasant missed the first of a 1*1 situation, Michigan’s Richard Carter got the ball and was fouled. He sunk both free throws for a 40-33 halftime lead. For the first 12 minutes of the second half it was Russell and Fife who put the game on a see-saw basis until the 3-point play gave Michigan the 61-58 lead. ★ ★ '. ★ Russell sat out most of the laht eight minutes along with starter Larry Moore because of four fouls. “When I had to pull Russell and Moore in the last eight minutes, it hurt us,” said coach Harding. . Michigan coach John Orr lauded Fife noting, “he has great desire and although we don’t consider him a great shooter he is a real competitor and does a big job cm defense.” < LAUD EACH OTHER Fife, who started last year as a sophomore, commented on his head to head clash with Russell. “I played against him in the high school tournament, but this time we had to guard each other. He sure has improved since then.” Russell offered almost an identical comment about Fife.' ‘T remember him in the tournaments, he sure is a much better player now.” . w -w it “We’re gonna comeback,” said Russell. “Sure we miss Spencer (Haywood) and we might have whipped them with Spencer* but this is a good balanced team. We’re going to get better. We lost it at the free throw line.” (Continued on Page D-2, Col. 4) ■ Michigan F8 FT Rib PF TF Tomlanovlch ...............:..2A’IO M 11 4 24 Carter ................. 114 14.11 7 2 17 Henry ................. ;»«• Al 4 I I FN* .......;......:.......11-7 14 4 4 14 Hayward M M f 0 0 Bloodworttl 2-1 44 0 1 4 Fraumann ................. 44 4-2.4 1 4 Totals ................. 4429 14-27 44 t* 15 Detroit FO FT Rah PF TF Moore ....... ............ 4-2 44 4 S' 7 Funnell ............:....'14 54 3 5 4 Peak* .......a......*....Mt 14 la 3 22 Ruasall...................1*4 44. 9 4 21 Jeckaon ...........loi : 04 4 i ia K lessen... ....; . i-1 14,30 2 Rucker .4-2 Mil 4 Bw isilva ™"*l ...... .7244 M 55 24 75 ...........48 41-41 ..........33 41-71 Trade Winds Stirring Again at Annual Baseball Meetings Western Near Point Record in First Tilt KALAMAZOO (A P) — Western Michigan got its second highest point total in history in smothering Whitewater State of Wisconsin, 122-90, in a nonconference basketball game Monday night. In winning its season’s opener, Western Michigan built up a 56-42 halftime lead and then soared to victory. Bill VanderWoude led the victors with 24 points. ★ ★ ★ Western Michigan’s highest point total for a single game came in 1955, when they defeated Western Ontario, 124-66. The game Monday, however, did set a school field goal record of 51, three more than in the Western Ontario joust. Don Ppulsen had 30 points for Whitewater, which now has a 1-1 season’s mark. FORT LAUDERDALE; Fla. (AP) -The trade winds stirred anew today—^with Mike Epstein, Felipe Alou and Rick Reichardt among the name players in the speculative vanguard—after a becalmed opening session of Baseball’s annual winter meetings. The trade mart was at a standstill Monday as club officials fenced far bargaining position after breezing through toe major league draft in 35 minutes—without turning up so much as a Bo Belinsky in the hopper. But action was expected to pick up briskly today, with most of toe 24 teams admittedly seeking help before the Dec. •15. deadline for inter-league swapping. And' Epstein, Alou and Reichardt reportedly were on the block. The Washington Senators, hopeful of returning slugger Frank Howard from the outfield to first base in 1970, possibly would part with incumbent first baseman Epstein, a 30-home run man in his own right last season, Ih a package deal for a second baseman and catcher. READY FOR DEAL Manager Ted Williams has served advance notice that the Senators might make a major trade “just to liven things up.” The New York Yankees, among others, are ready Id do business — for Epstein and at the right price. “We’ve always had a hankering for Epstein," said Yanks’ General Manager Lee MacPhail, “but we haven’t been' able to put anything together. Whenever we talk trade with anybody, they want our No. 1 and 2 pitchers-” Alou, a topflight outfielder, plagued by injuries in recent years, has been men-tioned as a possible showcase attraction in toe Atlanta Braves’ swapping bag. The Braves are looking far pitching help, particularly the southpaw variety. Hie Angels are among several clubs who have expressed interest in Alou. Many teams, including Baltimore’s American League champs, Covet California ' r 1 g h t hander Andy Messersmith. But Reichardt. the former (200,000 bonus baby, appears the Angel most available. . There were 10 players selected—15 in. tye first found—at a cost of $25,300' apiece in the major league phase of the draft. In contrast to last year’s draft, when Briinsky—picked by Sjt.'Louis—was among several journeymen tabbed, the club apparently went for youth this time around. Pitcher Jack DiLauro, plucked off the roster of toe Nqw York Mets’ Tidewater, Va., club in the International League by Houston, was possibly the most familiar „ name:' 7 * * ★ Pitcher Jose Pena, picked by Los Angeles from the Cincinnati organiza-. tion, catcher Don Bryant, chosen by Seattle, from Houston, and outfielder Tom 1 Shopay!, selected by Baltimore, from toe Yarikees, were the only other drafties who spent appreciable time in the majors dunng the 1969 season. *1 •* * DiLauro and two others on the Tidewater list-4-outfielder Roy Foster and pitcher JimjCosman — were lost by the Mets. Boston lost four players from its Louisville farm—second baseman Chris Krebs (Washington), catcher Hal King (Atlanta), and pitchers Ken Wright (Kansas City) land Mike Whitson (Washington). Seven-Foot Center Towers Over EMU BOWLING GREEN, Ky. (AP)—Seven-foot Jim McDaniels scored 28 points to lead Western Kentucky jfo an impressive season-opening basketball victory over Eastern Michigan Monday night, 95-70.. The Michigan team, dogged by foul troubles, trailed 42-31 at the half. High for EMU was Harvey Marlatt with 16. • Marlatt and two other starters — Larry Mazola and Earle Higgins — fouled out during the final 10 minutes of toe game. It was the season opener far both teams. TIREP OF LAYOFFS SHORT WEEKS - LOW INCOME! FINANCIAL SECURITY with unlimited income can be youfs as an independent businessman in a modern SUNOCO Service Station in the Pontiac Area. SUNOCO {SUNOCO} OFFERS • Paid Training: • High Profit • Merchandising Program If you are an aggressive man looking for a secure future with an unlimited income potential, call today for a confidential interview. ^ Mr. Fisher, TR 2-8100 or Mr. Pascoe, 646-6674, 8 A.M. to 4 P.M. Evenings, Mr. Bonoro, 4044141 D—8 THE PQNTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1860 A code of conduct outlining the coach’s relationship to athletes has been spelled out at Holly High School, and if one of the provisions of the code were followed by all schools, it might put a lot of coaches out of work. “This is not a new policy,” explained high school principal Norm D. Jones. “It has always applied but it was not in writing,” he added. WWW “After a complaint lodged by a parent, however, we thought It would be important to have the code spelled out... committed to writing so all coaches and parents would understand it" Jones wrote the code and the Holly Board of Education recently approved it. The code calls for: 1. Since a so-called “spirit of coaching” sometimes is misinterpreted, coaches are advised not to physically handle a player, except in announced demonstration. f 2. Physically mishandling a player during motional stress i? forbidden at any time or any place. 3. Hie conduct of coaches during stress of a game is important to both players and spectators. It is not acceptable behavior for a coach to shout personally embarrassing remarks about or to a player, to show fits of anger, or otherwise exhibit bad personal control. TRIGGERED CODE “The complaint we had wasn’t a valid one,1’ said Jones. But It did trigger adoption of written rules. What they’re seeking to avoid, says Jones, “... is personally humiliating a kid in front of a crowd.” WWW' That part of No. 3 pertaining to “fits of anger” is noteworthy. There’s no intention here to belittle the code or any particular! part of it, but application of it could prove interesting. And how about applying that “fits of anger” phrase to all of the area high schools. Or even a step or two further, say the colleges and professionals. If violation meant removal, likely, there’d be many vacancies hereabout.. For certain, officials would shout a hearty amen to the rule. Is the code too restrictive? “No, we don’t think so," says Jones. “Coaches can still coach," he added. Jones emphasized the code points at no particular coach coaches at Holly. It was just merely time that an unwritten rule should be put in writing, he said. TAKE TEAM LEAD — The Pontiac Open tournament goes into its final weekend of qualifying Saturday and Sunday at nine sites in the area and the Billy G. Bowl team of Walled Lake has taken the team feature lead with a total of 3,208 pins. Left to right (bade) are John Carr and Elmer Dixon, hi the front row, left to right are Ken Riepen, Don Law-son and Billy G. Nearly 300 bowlers have already qualified and this is just 50 less than the ovfr-all total of qualifiers last year. BOWLING Keglers over at BiQy “G* Bowl enjoyed another top night of competition last Friday as evidenced by'Abe high panea and series posted by deeretitry Phyllis Hicks. Vince Spencer currently holds the men’s high game.and series honors with a 28M63. Shirley Riepen rolled to the top women’s spot with a high game and series of 214-525. . „ Ken Riepen won the men’s high game and series accord «SX S‘2*wur SS5B! - _JI*l AH Star Hjoh OahM and sarlaa — Millie Leake, ► 2Mk41s! flBfe ‘individual Game and sSrS*! Pat Dormer, 234-62*. High S«-IM — ■I SSTp25i% Welkin*. RENTACAR $490: 1969 Chevy Nova RENT A TRUCK Hue lo tier siiie ' fir®*7X£ Stir. Pint Place T**ro-Th* Stroker*. with a 235 game and 588 series M'Sft last week. Over at Flrehird Lanes, Dave Rensel, bowling with the Ftabpr Body Office league, hit a high aeiries of 610 followed by Lynn Pfokerman with a 5j)l. Theron Williams (543) Andy Heimbring (610) were another pair of high series bowlers out of the Pontiac r Tempest, along with; Mike Nagel (655), Elias Vela, (618), Bemie Wyzgoski (60S) and Frank Doll (603) from the K of C league. t-urwr sooy umc* •Hm — Dav» Hental, <10; Lynn w;, 591. HI* .Oama* — Wally 54; Dave Hamel 233; Raul Ochoa Mfflaf, '2117 SIB LeicMy. *11; ■HM "° M»yis LANes High series — Sue WIdIng, 54}; Mary Pierce, Slf; Sharon Richmond, 506; Vera Krawa, SW, HlgljL«jma* - Vara ICraw*" Pffl Linda . > ’ . . , I HUNTING INSURANCE AN UNUSUAL HUNTINQ ACCIDENT COULD SPELL DISASTER FOIt YOUR FAMILY Gamecocks, Purdue Also Win UCLA Still Cage Contender By the Associated Press The newly top-ranked South Carolina Gamecocks opened the 1969-70 college basketball cam- Coach Mike Lane of Bloomfield Hills Andover will again______. ... , .__ compile a weekly list of the top individual swimming times for P®*8® Wltuh _fn awesome victoiy members of area high school squads. Jut shadow of defending na- Coaches will pass along names of their top swimmers plus ? champion UCLA k6*ned __ -»----- the times to Lane who will to turn compile it and pass it aloi£ to “ *e hackgoundas thefeuy, Arizona after only 10 minutes Mountaineers. UCLA’s new-look Bruins, running more with the graduation of three-time All-American Al-cindor, the 7-foot-l 3-4 indu£iant who led the West Coasters to three straight national titles, opened up a 19-point margin fere storming back behind Mike Pratt and Dan Issel to put it out of reach; Issel finished witii 34 points and Pratt had 28. Larry Steele added 21 for the Wildcats while Dick Symons had 21 for the HOWS'* U. High MS; Lorrl* >**wo, 539; PM Brink*, <13. High Gam* Pwraon, 210. Split Conversion — Bushman Gear and Madim*. WESTSIDB LANES Wntslda Ladlaa Doublet High Oamea and sarlaa _ _____ Myar*. 221-624; Eula Vick, M3-577; Ella Irwan. 576; Helen Fry, jocfSh; Joanna Tompkins, 543. Spilt ConMnMM — Joanna Tompfclnt, 4-7-6-9; Iva Poore, 5-10. tHjjh Taam Sari** — Vanda Moeratalli, High Games and sarlaa .- I ■Ml __________ ____ ________ Dorothy' Warner, 209-525; Erma Larson, 190-502. Split Convarilora — Edeltraud Grach, 6-7-' , J Graham, 3-7-10; Nancy Coakiay, i OIMt NEW HUNTER'S POLICY 5 Covers Accidents inroute To 1. and From, As Well As Hunt-U ing . .. Chock Todayl : H. R. NICH0LIE ■ AGENCY, INC. B for Complete Carefree Protection ■ 51 UNIVERSITY DR. Place the Sports Department. ■ A list of the top 10 or so individuals in each swimming event will be published each week. i ; The first list will be published the week before Christmas and then weekly after the first of the year. In the rush of preparing last week’s edition of pre-season basketball, disgorged from the files was a copy of local cage standings for 1967-68. Unfortunately, those wound up in the section. Below are those for last season. I rolled to another easy triumph. The Gamecocks, ranked No. ‘ in The Associated Press preseason poll, took to the road Monday night and t tnced a tough Auburn squad >64 while the Lew Alcindor-less Bruins, ranked No. 4, opened at home and toyed witii outmanned Arizona 9065. Flint Central ... Saginaw Arthur H Pontiac Central . GREATER THUMB ' W ill LaagutOvarAll *• * Millington ..........is 1 * North Branch ...........13 1 ? Birch Run ...............I 6 NORTHWEST SUBURBAN Laagua Ovar-AII W L W L North Farmington .......10 0 15 2 Oik Park ......... ......<4 .7 0 Livonia Franklin ....... 5 5 I 9 Brown City .......... 1 13 NORTHWEST PAROCHIAL unc Orchard Lak* St. Mary ... IS 1 Pontiac Catholic . . u£] 1st. Francis da Sales Royal Oak St. Mary S M Farmington Our Lady * w Walarfnrri Our I . 0 I League ov WAYNE-OAKLAND ilNorthvllle .... , Clarkston .... i Clorencevlll, ’Brighton ...... Kettering .... SOUTHERN THUMB Kentucky, No. 2, opened In Adolph Rupp’s favorite backyard, at home in Lexington, where the Wildcats are virtually untouchable, and pulled away to a 10667 victory over West Virginia. Rick Mount End No. 3 Purdue had a little tougher time, just squeezing by Tulsa 77-74 as Mount hit for two late field goals to settle the affair. All of the eight teams in the Top 10 won, while Davison, No. 5 and No. 8 Marquette were 'i! idle, New Mexico State, No. 6, i n 3| topped Oklahoma Christian, 93-| * 158, North Carolina, No. 7, | l ’(swamped Florida Southern, 414 11247, Villanova, No. 9, just 4 nbarelv edged Philadelphia Tex-over, ah tile, 57-52 and Colorado, No. 10, • y7 gripped Air Force, 81-58. and jt was all over. UCLA got 21 points from junior cornerman Sid Wicks and 15 from sophomore .guard Henry Bibb. Steve Patterson, Alcin-dor’s replacement, dropped in 12 but chipped in with a game-high 18 rebounds. Four field goals by Wicks helped UCLA to their 30-11 early margin. A ★ ,★ ] Kentucky, leading by 16 points midway In the second half, saw the margin reduced to nine, be- QUICK BASKETS With 3:30 left to play, sophomore Bob Ford dropped In a free throw to snap a 70-70 tie and Mount quickly followed with two baskets to wrap up the victory for Purdue. Mount had 29 points, hitting 13 of 26 from the field and three bW* straight foul Shots. Boilermaker w^zgwki,. turn> |ranK pwi, ^l603; ai George Faerber grabbed 21 re- ^ ® w bounds while Tulsa’s Ron Car-son was the game’s leading scorer with 31 points. Sophomore-Laden Titans Throw Scare Into U-M EASTERN MICHIOAH League^Ov Mount Clamant .............10 0 East Detroit............... 7 3 Roseville ............... < 4 Port Huron Northern .......5 5 Port Huron Control ....... 1 9 '.Richmond . ii < Memphis I* Dryden NAIA Game Set for Texas Bowl football game will be a HOT SHOTS 9 South Carolina, paced by jun-| is ior. Tom Owens, a 6-foot-10 for-" ward, who hit for 27 points and grabbed 17 rebounds, hit on 59 per cent of their shots and out-rebounded Auburn 47-25. Die Gamecocks took control early and led by nine points most of the way expect for a brief spell early In the second half when Auburn got to within 4944. Junior backcourt ace John ' - (Continued from Page D-l) “This is much tougher than playing junior college ball,” he added. “Mistakes hurt more.” * ★. * Watching his brother play was Pontiac Central’s Campy Russell who could be one of the state’s best players this year as a junior. I “I think Frank did well,” said Central Chips in Final of 11 AC Tourney NORMAL, 111. (AP)—Central ikuuiui* acc «>unn. *s*i___* i. Roche added 25 points and Bob^S*® meets Illinois State to Cremins had 15 to the Carolina1^® 1A^pionsWp game tonight: Campy. “It’s too bad he got into foul trouble when the score was »close.” ' ★ * * The Spencer-less Titans offered coach Harding some reason for optimism. Harding used- five sophomores in the game and he commented that “they made their sophomore mistakes.” * a n “They were nervous at first as could be expected, and I substituted early‘because I’m still not set on the right combination,” he said. ‘Over-all our defense wasn’t too good," said Michigan’s Orr. “I didn’t know anything about them (U-D) but it’s apparent Jim has done a good job Witii them.” Avon Wrestlers Whip Cousino Avondale’s wrestling team dropped the first match and then won all the rest to recording a 43-3 opening meet victory over Warren Cousino yesterday. dac. Praia, 24; 137—Mutter (A) Binned Losickl, :55; MS—D. ■ Sutherland (At ptnnad Van Overbarka, :431 155—\ Bloomfield Hlllt Lahser Bloomfield Him Roepar Country Day ............ Cranbrook Fenton ................. Flint Northwaatarn ..... | played Dec. 13 at 1:‘30 p.m., attack. Bill Alexander had 26 °? ^ toterstate Intercollegiate | Michigan travels to Notre j< s CST, to Kingsville, Tex., the for Auburn. j Athletic Conference preseason Dgjjjg, Wednesday while U. of Ortonvlll*6randon ! t2 NAIA office announced Monday. ii! * * * | ,j! Matched to the title game are * 'JiConcordia College of Moorhead, 114 Minn., and Texas A&I of Kings-it 3 ville, who won NAIA semifinal itt'games last Saturday. Shrinking MAC Plans to Disband Next July, NORMAL, 111. (UPI) - The shrinking Interstate Intercollegiate Athletic Conference, cut to three members by the resignation Monday of Illinois State University has voted to disband as of July 1. -x •k if w Faculty representatives of remaining Central Michigan University, Eastern Illiooto University and Western Illinois University voted unanimously here to accept ISU’s withdrawal “with regret” and then voted fo d‘ * Bing Is Ready to Play Again -jtournament, after both won op-jening round victories Monday. Central -Michigan defeated Eastern Illinois, 72 - 69, to overtime, as junior guard Paul Botts of Grand Rapids scored five points in .the last two mtoutes of overtime. DETROIT (AP) - Piston guard Dave Bing has fooled his doctors for the second time this i at home Saturday night against Eastern Michigan. Pick Carswell Toledo Manager FORT LAUDERDALE, (AP) — Frank Carswell, a veteran manager to the Detroit farm system, has been Eppoint- Botts had 25 points for the -night to lead,the victors. MB | the other game, Illinois ^ of the Tigers’ Inter j When he injured his knee to ™ upended Western Blmois, tional league club at Toledo. mid-September, doctors said he 8 *' ‘ . , ^ _ .* .. . * would be lost for at least six * . Carswell, who has managed weeks after surgery. But he! Eastern Illinois had a chance for the last three seasons at, 5-ilo ' Lounge. AIRWAY LAN1S Airway First High Gamas and Sarlaa — Whetstone, 216444; Sarah Hall, 21; Barbara Pickett, 201-520; Charlc Bishop. 193-501. AIRWAY Kings and Queans High S—- UP 574;Wajm*^Smlt Sarjes — Theron IML ^27-643; Andy — Frank Richmond, 221-591; Rlchai —-------- Wilson, 221; John han?’B Irltz, Si! H—Barker (A) pinned Spend a minute on a Merc snow vehicle at... KAR'S BOATS & MOTORS MY 3-1600 405 W. Clarkston Rd., Lak* Orion see. mERCURY SNOW VEHICLES at.. CUFF DREYER S SPORTS CENTER, Inc. 15210 N. Holly Rd., Holly 634-6771 or 634-8300 THEY’RE HERE! NHt Directors Meet NEW YORK (AP) -4s The National Hockey League’s board of directors met here today to consider expansion for the 1979-71 season. % ' healed quickly and was ready to go at the beginning of the regular season. Then, when the speedy back Court man cracked a bone to his right foot Nov. 21, the Pistons were told he . would be lost for at least a month. Bing, however, had other plans. Stitches ware removed] from his foot Monday and later in the day, he worked out witii the team. Btog says he will be ready to play when the'Pistons take on Los Angeles this weekend, and Pistons general manager Ed Coil says he sees no reason why] Bing should not play against the Lakers. > % to win with the score tied with Montgomery of the Class AA eight seconds to go, but Jim Southern League, replaced Jack Kitchen, who had 16 points forlTighe who has been named a the night, missed two 1 r e e special assignment scout by the throws. Tigers. ' v 'Are Your Hair Cuts Just Hair Cuts JL ry Kingsley Inn Barber Shop a - Phone 644-1400, Ext. 185 Serving You: JOHN EULIGA SNOW VEHICLES . . with Parma • Gap spark plugs, that should navar noad raplacing! SHIM AT... CRUISE-OUT Inc. , Open Daily 9 *• 9 63 E. Walton, Pontiac FE8-4402 ■H5SP Sodding • Grading • Shrabs 13 Yrs. Exp. • Free Estimates . Phil’s Lawn Service 10550rchardLakeRd|jF^ Spend a minute on a Merc and you'll discover' sure sub-zero starting power Only Mercury has Thunderbolt Ignition, the exclusive solid-state ignition system that delivers the fastest,* hottest spark in the industry.... up fo 40.000 volts for dependable sub-zero starting. See your Mercury Snow Vehicle dealer for a test ride, and Spend a minute on • Merc. You’ll be convinced it’s the best Show vehicle Over built. m&meumr The winter fun vehicle THE PONTIAC PRESS, tUESDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1969 Heavy Prep Card on Agenda Tonight A big ' schedule of prep basketball games, 24 contests, is on tap in die .area tonight with many teams initiating their seasons. Pontiac Northern travels to Garkston ip the season opener for both teams and the ~ ' ‘ the Inter-Lakes League,' led by Charlie Moncrief, a 19 point per game average last year, will be favored over the Wolves. ' ★ ★ ★ PNH along with Livonia Stevenson, )s one of .the favorites in the Inter-Lakes, while Garkston is figured a middle-of-the pack team in the Wayne-Oaklami League. Other top'games locally Include the Bloomfield Hills rivalry between Andover and Lahser; Lapeer at Milford at Waterford; South Lyon at Northville; OL St Mary at St. Florian; Easl Catholic at Pontiac Catholic; Walled Lake Western . a I Rochester; Rochester Adams at Utica Stevenson; Waterford Our Lady at Farmington Our Lady; Ortonville at Oxford; Avondale at Holly: and Opk\ Park at Haitel^Park. < early showdown The parochial teams will have early showdowns. Waterford Our Lady and Farmington Our Lady, are both 2-9 in the Northwest Parochial League, while OL St. Mary also 241 may have trouble at Hamtramck St. Florian which is 1*1. \ Milford, with only three let* termen returning and not figured to be a strong contender in, ,the Wayne-Oaldand League will cross i n t o Inter-Lakes league territory in the visit to Waterford. f\ The Skippers also have only three lettermen back with Craig Whetstone., Steve Kressbach and Larry Mahrle as the nucleus. Lahser, a victim of Pontiac Central in last Friday’s opener, expected to offer a stronger challenge for Andover, but the Barons will be favored. v * Dick Souther, all-conference player is black to lead the Andover scoring attack from team which was 14-4 overall UNITED TIRE, INC. EARLY BIRD SPECIAL HEAVY DUTY SMO-GAPS St MONTH ROAD HAZARD GUARANTEE! rull 4 My 8.25x14—$10.88* Retread Fed, Tax 18c to lie T CREDIT - NO MONEY DOWN T UNITED TIRE TODAY... AND SAVE a FRI. 8-9, SAT. M> CLOSED SUNDAY UNITED TIRE, INC "WHERE PRICES ARE diicOUNTEb - NOT QUALITY* 1007 Baldwin Ave. 3 MINUTES FROM DOWNTOWN PONTIAC Near FtBher Daily. i. S» Oaya a* Pishi When in Doubt See Hanoute And Ask for George Harold, one of the tonlor saloimon at At Hanouta's. Garage hat baon Al Hanoute's Chevrolet-Buick-Opel 209 N. Park Blvd., Lain Orion 693-8344 .HONDA 1 MINITRAIL Great Christmas Gift • Battery lights e | Month warranty e Light weight e Easy to ride e 2 Wheal brakes - AmIMImt A tall and experienced Romeo team will get its first test from Flint Metro member, Lapeer. Romeo has big Dan Burzynski at 6-7, Jerry Richie, 6-5, Randy Ranksen, 64, Dave Olson, 6-2 as its. big front line men with Tom •Lerchen 5-9 at guard. TOP PLAYER Lapeer is led by the most valuable player Adams, who a game and ........is the new heai at Lapeer. ‘ Once beaten Roches loser to Lake Orion last plays host to Walled Western, The Falcons’ offense focused around 6 Harrison who scored 23 points! in the opener . Western will counter with Marvin Gross, who is a transfer from Walled Lake Central, who has a strong outside shot and who also is a strong rebounder for his size, 6-feet. Rick McClelland at 6-3 and Bob Zaebst are also transfers from WL Central. Rochester Adams, with only one lettettnan, Greg Holmes a transfer, from Rochester, will make its debut at Utica Stevenson, which has Bill Tack, at 6-6 and Bryce Hanson at 6-2. I A sophomore, Dan Jelek at 6-2, could break into Stevenson's starting lineup. Avondale,, looking to improve on its 2-15 mark of last season, takes seven lettermen to Holly, including Randy Folasek, a 19-point average shooter a year P>. He is a 5-11 forward and will have Todd Holmes a 5-9 senior •at guard and Dennis Hill a 6-0 forward in the starting lineup With him. Troy, one of. the favorites ini le Oakland-A, is host to Berkley of the Southeast Michigan Conference. Ortonville will be the favorite in its invasion of Oxford. BASKETBALL SCOKES Roanoke 115, ________ Morgan Slate 55, Hampton I LSU 71. Athlatai In Action <1 MMw.it Purdue 77, Tull. 74 Ohio Unlv. M, Northwestern ; Kent State it, Akron y66 Michigan stato S9, Bait. Ky. I Toledo 13, Vo. Tech 73 Wisconsin II, Ball Stato 74 Baldwln-Wallaca 91, Walsh 64 Thomas More 15, Xavlsr, Ohio Wittenberg 86, Findlay 41 Miami, Ohio 93, Marietta 43 ankato 44, Mornlngslde 57 Kansas, State .9 Washburn, uiim iuo, nil. St. Plattfeviue Bemldil 88, Superior St. 57 SSattle 101, Portland St. it Colorado 81, Air Force SB ^MMNw|U|4~t9rn St., Colo..49 93,' Portland*^? Pontiac Press Photo by Ron I REACHING HIGH — Dan Burzynski, Romeo’s 6-7 senior • center, grabs the ball off the rim during a practice session. He will see action tonight when the Bulldogs open their basketball season at home against Lapeer. By Tlw Associated Prats Horse Race Results Dich J\p Dare gift Canadian Celebratel Canadian R & R has richly rewarding flavor. Mellow bouquet Each impressive bottle is individually registered * at the distillery. ■ handsomely packaged for holiday gifting. " Imported • ssv From Canadas • . Oldest Distiller Windsor Results NHL Standings 3rd—$900 Cond. t C.rto^Song^ 4tiw5»ooacIaimlng Pace; 1 Lone Warrior Black Orchid Rosa Seneca 5m—SUM Cond. Paco; 1 h Dancin' Dusty Morlorla't Duka —- Chuck linallai (1-1) Paid $14.3 -S12M claiming Paco; y Direct id Ted Volo ____ntain Roxy 7th—S14M cond. Paco; 1 4 NBA Standings Windsor Entries ‘s Rhythm Olynne Jack tor I9M Claiming Paco; 1 Mila: r Noll Bill Dolly 't Filly Niki N. ir Yates Patty's Ensign 1 Diamond W. D. Baron 900 cond. Pact; 1 Mila: Dud's Pridt Tammy Chips Andy's Harold Prdmot Pick Shlela Elaine Seattle t 14 3ft Monday's Results No games scheduled. Today's Oames Cincinnati at Baltimore Seattle at New York Milwaukee jt Philadelphia Chicago vs. Phoenix at Salt Laka City Detroit at son Francisco Wtdnatday's Camas Baltimore at Boston Washington'* Dallas vs, Kentucky at Indianapolis Miami at Indiana New York afLos Angelas Denver at Washington ' 7th—tIOM Cend. Trot; t A r Bars 9th—MM Cend. Pace; 1 Mile: Bonny Pence 15.(0 Guy Direct l Busty Fitzgerald -Oth—$700 Claiming Pact; 1 Mil Mighty Grady 33.60 1 Peggie's Sister ^Perfect *:°y(5-l> Paid $144.10 *Er“J.........,810; total handle Northville Results Tech Victor HOUGHTON (AP) - Behind by one point at halftime, Michigan Tech turned on the steam to romp to a 105-75 ~ ketball win over Lake Superior State College Monday night. Lake Superior boasted a 46-45 win at intermission. Automatic Shifting SANTA MONICA, Calif (UPI) — Andy Granatelli, one of auto racing’s most active innovators, says two of the STP racing team’s entries in the Rex Mays 309-mile race at Riverside Dec. 7 will have automatic Vote of Confidence NASHVILLE, Tenn. (UPI) -Vanderbilt University, expressing confidence with the job done by head football Coach Bill Pace, gave the coach a' new contract extending, the pact through the 1976 season. Consider yourself a crate of eggs. Aq a crate of eggs, there’s the danger of becoming an omelet. But in a Renault 16 you wouldn’t have to worry. It has a unique 4-wheel independent suspension system that has caused Road Test Magazine to write: "the ride of the Renault 16 can be compared only with that of the Rolls Royce, Mercedes, or Citroen.” Which should be of great comfort to any crate of eggs, let alone a human being. $2395 P.O.E R& M. MOTORS We Try Harder to SATISFY! 17T W. Walton Blvd. Call 334-4738 Just West of Baldwin Winter Fun from PINTER'S PINTER'S MARINE Opdyke at University Dr., Pontiac Open 9 to 6 - Sat. 9 to 5 373-0224 (1-75 at Unfvanity Exit) GET YOUR HEATING OIL AT CHURCH S THIS YEAR SUNOCO All winter, this winter.,. Turn On The Warm Just set your thermostat ...we do alt the rest! ■ Worry-free automatic oil deliveries ■ Convenient budget plans at no extra cost ■ Sunoco heating oils—none better x HEATING SERVICE We're W«m and Friendly Especially since we have a special Way of helping you keep the pleasant warmth of "Summertime" in your 'home all winter., long. We do it with Sunoco .Heating Oil, the best quality blended heating oil your money can buy ... and by giving the most dependable and trusted heating services in town. We'll automatically keep your tank filled, and help you to keep your budget in balance with easy-to-meet equal monthly payment jslans. r: LUMBER & BUILDING SUPPLIES SINCE 1890 (tywtefa. AUBURN HIIGHTS 107 SQUIRREL RD. UL 2-4000 WE WILL KEEP YOUR TANK FILLED 8 PREVENT CONDENSATION 1 jp—i THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1069 Bridge Tricks From Jacobys Trumps broike 3-1 so none of e this mattered. What did mat-e ter was that the student con- diamonds and proceeded tolls no way to handle four trumps fmasse^ East'^abbed draw tramps correctly by lead-|in the West hand. * ■ P0*? ..*** grabbed By OSWALD aad JAMES ting to the queen in dummy. This ' JACOBY jplay guards against the chance The took his ace of |East might hold ail four. There rA Junior Editors Quiz About- ALGAE the trick with his king and led a club, whereupon West cashed his ace and queen of dubs and then took the setting trick with the queen of diamonds. ★ ★ * The student turned to the professor, “I don’t think that I’ve worked a finesse in the last month. Maybe I should quit bridge and take tip gin rummy." “You were playing gin rummy or some strange game," replied the Professor. “You started out fine with the trumps but once trumps were drawn you QUESTION: What are algae and how do they live?” ★ , ★ * ANSWER: Algae are very primitive plants. Imagine plants without flowers or roots or steams or leaves and you’ll get a good idea of them. Algae live in water, some in fresh, some in salt water, and they vary enormously in sine. You would have to. look through a microscope to see the smallest one, yet the strand of a large piece of the algae called kelp might be 200 feet long. like the land plants, the algae live by riianghig substances they take in to plant food snch as sugar and starch. They do this through the action of the green material called chlorophyll (in algae, this green is often masked by other colors). Algae can take materials needed in their little food factories directly from the water. Fish and other animals which eat algae get these useful materials, too, and we get them by eating the fish. Someday, perhaps, the use of large amounts of algae will help to solve the world’s food problems.. As it is, seaweed, a kind of algae, is eaten in many parts of the world. (You can win $10 cash plus AP's handsome World Year-1 book if your question, mailed on a postcard to Junior Editors in care of this newspaper, is selected for q prize.) EAST 4J V K862 ♦ 7532 ♦ 10965 NORTH 4Q872 VAQJ9 . ♦ J94 *J3 WEST ♦ 1064 ¥753 ♦ KQ108 ♦ AQ8 SOUTH (D) ♦ AK953 ¥104 ♦ A6 ♦ K742 Both vulnerable West North East South 14 Pass 3 4 Pass 44 Pass Pass Pass Opening lead—♦ K had a cinch line of play. Just lead a diamond toward dummy. , "West would have nothing better to do than to take Ms queen of diamonds and lead d heart. Then you would go up with the ace, discard the four of hearts on the jack of diamonds, and lead the queen of hearts for a ruffing finesse.” * ★. “With my hick I would have found the king of heqrts in the West hand,” replied the student 'So what!” the professor interjected “You would have shed one club on that queen. West would have been on lead and unable to lead through your king of dubs. He could take his ace of clubs then or lateron, after you had shed two more dubs on the jack-nine of hearts but he wouldn’t have beaten you.” WCHRD Sendee Q—The bidding has been: West North East Sooth Pass Pass Pass 1¥ Dble Pass 1N.T. Pass Pass 2¥ 24 3 ¥ ? You, South, hold: 4A864 ¥2 4KJ93 ♦Q1075 What do you do now? A—Pass. Your partner can’t be enthusiastic about Ms spades. TODAY’S QUESTION You pass «i does West Your partner doubles and East passes. What do you do now? Answer Tomorrow CAMPUS PUATIER WHITT DO YOU MEAN, \ AU. IXNOW it RMS *Y0U R> MWWA* \ INVITED M» TO BB stpptn onovura i a host in hMk,/ HOET'Y you most / By Lany Lewis PLAIN JANE By SYDNEY OMARR Far Wednesday OROOMINO Is of apodal Importance Accent la on harmony. Much could t~ dlvlduela, keep this In mind. i Cycle h “cancei • ARIES (March 21-Aprll been higher; lie low. Do than talking. Ona connei— ........ profession could play prominent re Mats or partner needs reassurance. Gl ^TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Know II you can be of service. Know your e VfitM. Than others will follow suit. Y gain something of beauty today. Adm and appreciate; but also malnh GEMINI (May ll-Juno 20): Your das to create, express can be, rallied. Mi -s >iui M>n.r. \ | OUT OUR WAY By Howie Sdiaeider T -me Williams lunched with some la Mancha: a „By DON BRAUNAGEL , example of inspired casting. His i Quixote ses as Lady Duldnea.i There are other factors in the — - • ..... J smooth baritone, his lanky j Miss Wedge showed us, too, show’s success. Director Amfcrt “Magic moments of the the-1. ... ... -, - —. —,-----------------—»»». ater’’ is a hackneyed phrase. I build, his face, — everything that the fiery Aldonza could be | Marre has made sure there are Yet there’s no better way to describe “Man of La Mancha” when Don Quixote turns to the audience and S begins to sing, 1 “To dream the i m p ossible dream . . .” And when Quixote is played seems perfectly suited to, the!the cool Dulcinea. role.1 He’s particularly good in j * , * * making the transformation fromj Quixote’s faithful squire Cervantes to his tragicomic Rancho, gammy Smith pro^ded alter ego, Quixote. {mirth and capable singing. He Dale Wasserman’s play has | reminded me of a young Ed Cervantes and Quixote as one, Wynn ln 16th-century baggy with the jailed author acting pants. Unfortunately, like a out, aided by the other inmates, j baggy-pants comedian, h e his familiar story of Don Quix-!sometimes played ^ funny me- .. I scenes too broadly, An incurable idealist, Quixote no dead spots in the ,i terrnissiop production. The costumes, with their authentic 16th-century Spanish look, are by Howard Bay and Patton Campbell. Bay also gets credit for the sparse but effective jail set, with its drawbridge staircase being the only link to the outside. _________ __________ .. , , Marvin Brody as the tolerant However overall lifting BRAUNAGEL | is called a lunatfe He Replies ti j innkeeper end DaleMalone as a (play above the near-great, is Maura K. Wedge And Bob Wright 40 Pemocratic friends. But he gracefully ducked questions on whether he would once again run for public office. Williams has been suggested as a State Supreme Court candidate. “I'm leaving all my options! ’ was all he would say. The present governor said he thought,it was significant that Williams {declared education is, the key to the future of Africa. “I believe the future of this! state lies with education too," said Milliken, who Currently is wrestling with legislators trying to get through Ms education reform package. Molly, Top Plaque Collector, Runs Out of Plaque Room By EARL WILSON NEW YORK—-Molly Picon, bouncy at 71, is a Joy to listen . . H TT _ mjm,iviuiue. 9DWHI to, an uplifter of your spirits. She’s taking a few weeks off f°r ' U S' Williams said he now is think-from her Plaque-collecting to do the Helen Hayes role in “The ■ tag of a series of lectures and Front PaSe>” every newspaperman’s favorite WARM GREETINGS perhaps a book on the Philli-pIay‘ _ .. ■ £ -j He had warm greetings for pines. He served as ambassa- ™ Israelis call New York ‘Plaquestan, : some of the capitol survivors dor there through appointment great little Jewish star told me at the .Rus-||| from Ms long administration, by former President Johnson. sian.Team Room> where> appropriately, she was® These included executive office. The former governor told ^av*a8 a glass of tea. secretary Isabelle Saxton and Milliken: “I believe education jtajjju A perbiy as Bob Wright did last !? ,ife 11,81 is ,mad and he c°n'j cherubic padre also provided! that Magic Moment, night at the Fisher Theatre in|lmues Pursuin8 a r®manl}c pleasant acting and singing. b e,“!^ ~£Stvr r“ERS i ! fighting for pure womanhood. Ben Vargas and Kenneth j The musical, one of theaters: jjjs relatives convince him Novarro, costumed as a horse I youngest old favorites (i t that he is being unreal, but he i and mule, respectively, supplied I opened in Connecticut in 190»T,,finds that he helped a prostitute laughs and some excellent is back for its third stay at fee think of herself as a lady, so he hoofing in one of choreographer Fisher. It will play through dles happUy. Then Cervantes is Jack Cole’s better numbers. Saturday. I called to face ^ inquiSition. Although “The Quest (official; For me, the performance last title of “The Impossible night was a resurrection. , DELICATE BALANCE Dream”) overshadows all the , With high expectations, I saw! , Wright’s rolq, is pivotal. He j other songs, composer JVIltch the first Fisher production, ‘ * ~ ' His last run for office was an T prnmir cvmvc ».w r„. TTe LECTURE SERIES starring Jose Ferrer, in early 1967. I was greatly disappointed. Apparently I had caught Ferrer and company on a bad night, but my enthusiasm for “La Mancha" had died. INSPIRED CASTING It’s now alive and well, thanks mainly to, Wright, an should be funny — unscrewing | Leigh and lyricist'Joe Darion from his belt his corkscrew!have written a highly1 sword, twisted in his joust with Serviceable score, a windmill — but we should j laugh with a lump in the throat. I Wright achieves this delicate' balance. Maura K. Wedge, who was | one of the bright spots in the! cast with Ferrer, again shone! as the harlot Aldonza whom DINNER Cole Slaw PONTIAC LAKE INN : 1890 Highland Road mmSm? it JUUUt g.g uuumuumt ______________ I u ^ ^ “We’re always doing appearances for wMch! man clerk”Cariyle" CroWeU~ iTtiie key to toe"future*oTali 78-?ays ‘We don’t need any more plaques. Wej who has served under six gov-1 of us, whether in Africa Ar hi»r*'^®'~"cays ‘We don’t need any mor plaques. We; ernors. in MicMgan." here YB“ cays ‘We don’t need any mor plaques, need more closet space for the plaques we got.* "j I She’ll play the prospective mother-in-law! Irole in “The Front Page” without Yiddishisms she used for years in the Jewish theater. What's the Reason? Moon's Shook Up! By DICK WEST WASHINGTON (UPI)-Space scientists, and a lot of us confused laymen as well, are greatly excited by the discoveries being made with the instruments left cm the moon by the Apollo 12 crew. “Yonkel and I retired to a Connecticut 12-acre farm 21 years ago. We were going to do nothing. One day I brought Yonkel a big tomato and said, ‘I raised that.’ He said, ‘The trouble |with that tomato is, it doesn’t applaud.’ We stayed retired for ithree weeks. To me, the most intriguing ! “We have the only Jewish swimming pool. At three feet {finding thus far was the discov-there’s a sign that says ‘Ah,’ at 5 feet ‘Oy,’ at 10 feet, ‘Gevaldnery that when you give the SOS!” , moon a sharp rap, it seems to * * ★ I go “boinnnnng." With “Milk and Honey,” “How to Be a Jewish Mother,” and when the lunar module others, Molly’s been called “the Jewish Helen Hayes" and Miss Hayes calls herself “the goyisher Molly Picon." Molly was born on Broome Street, fourth floor back. She claims that people address her husband respectfully as “Mr. Kalich," but to her they shout, “Hey, Molly!" THE MlbNIGHT EARL . . . crashed on the moon, it did much more than cause a brief tremor, or m o o n q u ake. The i n s t r u -ments showed that the moon continued to vibrate, or quiver, for about 30 minutes after the impact. As yet, scientists assigned to the project are not exactly certain what that means. So I Cassius Clay and fellow actors are going to the Apollo in Harlem to sing a number from “Buck WMte," titled, “Mighty WMtey, It’s All Over Now” . . . Secret Stuff: A Vegas Mitel discovered $1,000,000 missing from its gambling funds. The Big | * very upset ... Is Jack Paar interested in returning to nighttime talking? Ann Corio, auditioning girls for her “That Was Burlesque” at Westbury Music Fair, rages that today’s young girls are all flat-chested: she’s also irate at what “CRi! Calcutta!" etc. “get {away with,” adding, “I now have just a family show." turned to my own scientific ad-!you foresee?” viser, Dr. Leider von Kranz, for “I was thinking in terms of strongly suggest it may have gelatinous characteristic. “I am now convinced that the surface rocks were merely chunks of meteorites that had hit the moon and that the moon itself has a different com-{position. vie BL * “It is my feeing that we must now go back to the original green cheese theory." I said, “That sounds reasonable. What else does the vibrating mean?” GROWING OPPOSITION “After the first moon landing, many of us doubted such a desolate place would ever be of much benefit to mankind Consequently, there is growing opposition to spending huge for further space exploration. ‘The *’ vibrations may help overcome that opposition by giving us a practical way to use the moon." I said, “what practical use do YOURSELF ROYALLY. You're the king. So, why compromise? Get Royal Canadian, the Imported Canadian whisky that tastes as royal as its name. Treat yourself royally. JNil winadifl11 WISH I’D SAID THAT: Modern technoloy can send men to the moon—but can’t teach kids to walk around a puddle. REMEMBERED QUOTE: “The voter has one consolation. Not every candidate running for office can be elected." EARL’S PEARLS: Larry Mathews hears that Liberace’s home had a power failure: “He plugged in the toaster—and Ms Jacket went out.” At comic Jack Waldron's funeral a mourner recalled -that Jack’s father had wanted him to be a tailor, like himself. “But I can make people laugh," Jack protested. “Maybe," said his father sadly, “—but you’re making me cry.” . , . That’s earl; brother. (Publiihwfi Hall Syndicate) AUTOGRAPHS BOOK—Former Gov. G. Mennen Williams autographs a copy of Ms recent book “Africa for the Africans" for Goy. Milliken at the State Capitol yesterday. Daily Almanac By United Press International Today is Tuesday, Dec. 2, the 336th day of 1969 with 29 to follow. The moon is between its last quarter and new phase. The morning stars are Venus and Jupiter. The evening stars are Mercury, Mars and Saturn. -★ , ★ • ★ On this day in history: In 1804, Napoleon Bonaparte crowned himself Emperor of France at ceremonies ln Paris. In 1851, Napoleon’s nephew, Louis Napoleon, overthrew the French republic and proclaimed himself Emperor Napoleon III. In 1964, 2.5 million persons greeted Pope Paul VI -as he visited Bombay, India. horseback opinion. INTERESTING THEORIES Dr. Von Kranz is an amateur selenologist and storm door salesman. He has many interesting theories both about the formation of the moon and about the origin of noodle soup. “Sir,” I said, “what is the significance of the moon’s prolonged vibrations? ” DIFFERENT COMPOSITION “It means we must revise our tiiinking about the moon’s inner composition. The interior of the moon obviously is not like we had “Would you elaborate on that a bit?” 'Glad to. For years, men have argued over whether the moon was animal, vegetable or mineral. The rocks, dust and other material found on the lunar surface caused us to assume the moon was mineral. Those vibrations, however, using the moon for a tuning fork.” EE8KEEGO 3&s» Starts WEDNESDAY! ARIA GUTHRIE EESmUMNF COLOR by DeLuxe United Artist* [£| Of Information 6*2-1900 (Handed Canadian Whisky-80 Proof • Imported by Ju. Barclay Importers, Ootrott. Hkhllie TONtTE LIMITED ENGAGEMENT! HURON Starts WEDNESDAY T DAYS ONLY!_ WINNER OF g ACADEMY AWARDSI METR0-G0LDWYN MAYER S A CAR10 PONTIPR0DUCII0N DAVID LEAN'S FILM of ammum* 1)0(1011 ZlliWOO Wednesday at liSd - 5:00 - 0:00 !> NORTH SABI HAW IN DOWNTOWN F0NT1A0 Open 11 dill Wed. Nuu Set. and 2:00 pm Sun., Mon^Tues. You Must Bo 18 - Proof It Ri DESPERATELY SHB RAN. TRYINQ TO ESCAPE THU BURNING DESIRE nSHE KNEW WOULD SOON DESTROY HER INNOCENCE. Plus 2nd BIQ HIT PURSUIT • Nmsm to Bngin Seen at Community Aofivities, Inc. 5640 Williams Lake Road Drayton Plains YOGA ART - I Wndnesday, Jan. 14 18tM AJk ana Tilt P.M. ' |l . _____i ■ lilt P.M. WamaSiyt “ JUDO WedeeadafcPee. > 8:80 and 8:08 P.M. . Ladies’Self-Defense Wed., See. 1,1:88 P.M. NOVELTY CRAFTS Wednesday, Sm.X 9:88 A.M. and 7:88 P.M. PIANO Saturday, Jaa*1l For Rassihfittions, Call OR 3-9102 LADIES’ EXERCISE Reservations Tuesday, Jan. 8 Fi 5-4500 f • p&miM PRIVI-IN THIAUQ DRIVE IN First Runt JohnW&yne Rock Hudson Undefeated ■ptosis ( ■”"J' a W.UXE & PAUL Establishment NIWMAN ACADEMY AWARD CUUL GEOKCE “ KENNEDY HIKE mm For Relaxed Dining While Back-to-School Shopping in THE PONTIAC MALL Invites You and Your Family Wed. & Thun. Evenings 4i3S to 8 P.M. JSitfoy Tender, Golden, Deep-Fried COMPLETE CHICKEN DINNERS My- 120 Children Under 10 95' CHOICE OF POTATOES OR VEGiTAILi DINNER SALAD OR DESSERT Rolls and butter COFFEE, TEA OR MILK BOX OFFICE OPENS 6:30 P.M SERVED EVERY WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY NIGHTS $ PONTIAC MALL CAFETERIA ONLY - 4:30 to 8 p.m. l>-e THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, DECEMBER 2,1969 . W mBm pwppiiw f! lllllp 11W# I If Awl P%j»k; i Az f%J 11W , /^T\ ;% g|g v* | mL' (5* I % jg MARKETS The Mowing are top prices covering kales of locally grown produce by growers and sold by them in Wholesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets as of Monday. Produce Dow Jones Beldw Closing Low Stock Mart Tum Lower ApRlM. McIntosh, bu............... 3.50 Applos, Northern Spy, bu.... yj cider, Apple, *gal. case ... Pears, Bose, St bu.......... VEGETABLES Beets, Topped, bu. ......... Cabape, Curly, bu........... Cabbage, Rad, bu............ —i, Standard | Carrot*! Topped*bu! Calory, Rost, Fennel, dz. ....... Horseradish, pk. bskt Leeks, dz. ben. . Onions, Dry, MM Parsnips, Vi bu. Parsnips, Cello Pak, Potatoes, 50-lb. bag Potatoes, 30-lb. *•--Radishes, Blocs Squash, Acorn, LETTUCE ANO GREENS Cabbage, b-Celery, Cat Collard, 32-34; heavy type young toms DETROIT BOOS DETROIT (AP) —(USDA) —Egg prices J*Jd J»er^Monday, by first recelv- . Grade A lumbo 4&4S; extr- --B "• large 0044; medium 5442; CHICAGO BUTTER .CHICAGO (API - (USDA) Monday wholesale selling prlc 2J4 higher) W score AA 68M-M; 02 A 40W; oo B 47M-48V1. Eggs: prices bald delivered to Chicago Vi lower WW higher; 00 Per cent or better grade A whites 61 Vi-63 Vi; mediums white extras 57-5?Vi; \ NEW YORK (AP) - The| stock market-tumbled lower on a broad front early this after* noon, with the Dow Jones aver-| age of 30 industrials below its, closing low for the year. Analysts said the market la-| bored under the influence ofi yearend tax loss selling and predictions today by a noted U.S. economist that corporate profits' would drop 13 to 20 per cent; The moderate trading pace in-| dicated investor uncertainty,' | one analyst id, noting Rome gSj billion in institutional money was waiting on the sidelines. | At noon file Dow, a barometer! of blue chip stoats, was off 4.09 at 800.95, below the closing for the year of 801.96 set July 29. Declining stocks outnumbered , advances by .861 to 286. The Associated Press 60-stock Overage at noon Was off 2.3 at 1276.4, with Industrials off 3.0, rails off 1.5, and utilities off .9. On Monday, the AP 60 stock av. jerage bit a new yearly closing 'low of 278.7. | ★ * * | Gripped by the decline were steels, mail order-retail, air-' | crafts, electronics, utilities, I chemicals, rails, oils, airlines, tonaccos, and building materials. W , -k W Among the 20 most active issues traded on the American Stock Exchange, 10 advanced, 7 declined, and 3 were unchanged. AMC Agrees to Buy Kaiser $75-Million Purchase Subject to Gbnditions 'Orgy Mrriosp * Helps fo SellShoes 24.75-2175; slaughter heifers choice 750-900 pounds, 24.75-27.75; good, 25.00-24.75. Veoiers 250, high choice —1 — 42.00-44.00l choice, 38.00-42.00; 38.00; standard, 30.0034.00. CHICAGO LIVESTOCK CHICAGO (AP) — (USDA) 5,000; butchers steady g “ decline on weights ovt. _____.... IMP ately active; 1-2 200-225 lb butchers 2»30-28.50; around 200 head sorted at 20.50; | * 200-240 IbS OMfr&n; 2-3 230-250 ... 24.50-27.25; 2-4 210210 Ibe 25.50-24.50; 34 280-300 lbs 24.5025.50; 3- ” -- 23.75-24.50; SOWr -----L Ig Soderately actlv.. I. ___________________ -50; 1-3 350400 lbs 22JM3.00; 1-3 400450 lbs 2240-22.50; 2-3 450500 lbs 21.25-22.00; 2-3 500400 IbS 20.5021.50; boars 20.00 20.50. Cattle 0,500; calves none; trading or high choice and prime slaughter sloori moderately active, steady; average choice and below active, i‘—--- ■- ------ Instances 25 higher early slaughter h ...SMoToo'wIth'four.’ ioads'at'30.00,r . t.300 n» yield grade 4 and 5 29.25; high cholca and prime 1,1001,350 lbs 29.25-29.75; cholca 9501450 lbs yield grade 2 |g 4 28.5029.50; mixed good — )8.50; good 24.7S-M.MTit.,________—. ■ good 2545-24.75; high choice and prim 900-1450 lb iieugMgrftata’i yield grade . and 4 28.25-28.50; ItVae loads at thi letter price; cholca 85014725 lbs yield grade 2 to i 273028.25; mixed good - end cho Ice DETROIT (UPI) — American Motors Corp., today announced signing of an agreement with Kaiser Industries for purchase of Kaiser-Jeep Corp. in an 675-million transaction. Roy D. Chapin Jr., chairman of AMC, said the agreement was subject to certain conditions including approval by American Motors stockholders at the corporation’s stockholder meeting Feb. 4. ■ ★ ★ Completion of the deal, scheduled immediately after that meeting if it is approved, would put AMC into the light truck and utility vehicle field: and- give the nation’s fourth largest automobile company a $570-million backlog of defense orders from the government. Chapin said AMC had no plans to. move any of the Kaiser-Jeep operations out of its main plant in Toledo, Ohio, or its other plants in Indiana. VALUED AT 860-MILLION He estimated that the Kaiser-Jeep facilities being bought by AMC had a net book value of approximately 890 million, and said AMC was buying it for a figure “substantially below The purchase price as outlined oy Chapin provided for payment to Kaiser Industries of 810 million in cash, 5.5 million shares of AMC capital stock, $9.5 million in negotiable five-year notes and about $500,000 in other assets. Based bn an approximate $10 per share of stock, the total price would be $75 million. Acquisition of the stock could make Kaiser Industries the largest single stockholder in AMC. But Chapin said part of the agreement was that Kaiser Industries reserved file right to its AMC stock “in orderly manner’’ over a period of Mutual Stock Quotations BjrWHAYNE EISENMAN AP Badness Writer NEW YORK - Carl J. Haas tweaks his block mustache' ahd describes With pleasure how scantily clad harem girls win entice male customers into bis new shop. “We think the more skin that’s showing, the more sales ’ll get,”' he says. “We’fe toying to create an orgy atmosphere.” ★ ★ ' ★ ‘In fact,” promises an ad for the store, “-we may just add topless salesgirls to worship at your feet. . .” The recently opened shop in mid-Manhattan is selling, by the t’s shoes. GIRLS ARE THERE So far, the harem costumes and the topless look are absent, but the girls are there. Haasi Adler Shoe Shops vice president, says the harem costumes are ordered and the topless look is a very real possibility. ★ ★ | ★' Haas is not alone in his desire to use feminine flesh to sell merchandise, There is evidence that the nude look may be moving out of the ivory tower of high fashion into the rough and tumble of sales promotion.' PRODUCT PITCH ‘We’ve had some very high-caliber drug firms ask us for topless and nude girls to promote products at medical seminars,” said Stuart Golden, president of Trade Show Pro-International. bikinis if they’re nob ritfit for the product. THEY INSISTED ren bo, a large electrical-products company recen11 y Insisted on a model in l bikini to introduce a new computer to an audience of engineers. ★ ★ V. ★ “Girls attract attention," explained a spokesman for BP OS, which is chill November weather had pretty girls in pretty skimpy costumes giving commuters ban d b 111 something as sexless as home heating oil. > '•* v ★ * As Americans become more and. more accustomed to the nude look via films, fashion, topless — and now in California bottomless —• nightclub entertainment, sex and the shigle salesgirl might become American as apple pie. But some say hard-sell sex* His firm employes between-job actresses who ~ a recent advertisement says “are specially trained to stimulate Interest in your product or services.” ★ ★ * Women seem, by far, tip most desirable sales promoters,” he said. His clients in three countries like,the girls to wear miniskirts and bikinis as welj as more conservative uniforms. He refuses the requests for nude and topless girls, be said, and often advises against Fid Fund 17.2918.90 — *6.00 28.42 S°6l' 7.24 4.15 4.54 4.38 4.98 inverting ; iif y» « Fit moth 10.14 ugMgfiritaOAMiBR 9.47-10.82 ....... 7.57 1.29 Fit Slera 45.39 49.77 Flat Cap Plot Fnd Nat Secur Ser: Baton 10.4811.45 530 4.01 447 4.67 949.10.15 Newton Noreast Ocngph FRANCIS E. MAPLEY Sylvan Lake Man Gets Promotion at Pontiac DiV. The promotion of Francis E. Mapley to budget managers! Pontiac Motor Division was announced today by Thomas L. King, general sales manager. The appointment is effective immediately. The assistant budget manager since 1955, Mapley replaces Corliss E. Armstrong who retired yesterday. ★ Hf ■ Mapley joined Pontiac in 1936 s a timekeeper in the accounting, department. In 1948 he was named senior statistician-analyst in the budget department, a position he held until becoming assistant budget manager. A 1936 graduate of Michigan State University, Mapley of 2448 Ren Frew, Sylvan Lake, Renfrew, Sylvan Lake, is married and the father of 15.13 16.58 >.79 10.70 7.03 8.44 10.7110.71 FligrMn Pilot Pina St “Ion Em Plon Fnd Plan Inv Price Fun Grwth N Era N iter Pro Fund 10.541034 Provdnt 4.45 5.08 FGhttOn . 9.9210.84 26.07 24.07 9.83 9.83 Investing yvX Rosenth 7.53 Satan Fd 6.43 Sctiurtr 16.121 Sigma unavail Slg Inv unavatl Sigma Tr unavall . Smith B »7 9.97 Swn Inv 1.45 9.14 Swlnv Ot 8.07 8.71 SovOr Inv 14,1415.48 StFrm Gt 535 5.55 state St |t.00 52.80 Steadman Funds: Am Ind 11.2312.31 Fiduc 7.39 8.10 Sctal 441 5.16 Stain Rea Fds: Bal 20.65 20.65 Cap OP 15.4415.64 Stock 14341434 Sup InGt 7.43 0.14 SupInSt 0.941039 Syner Ot 11301235 8.18 _7,44 ».ll ml . Toachrs Tochncl Tochvst Tech not Temp Or 1.... ___ Towr MR •■( TB Tran Cap 7.75 6.42 Trav Eq 10.1411.08 '■mm-Wf 15-7418.30 r IBB Ot 431 mM. . Tone Jnc 435 sis 14*0*23 Unlfd 63 LM 1815.(0 0 Lint Fd: 1 Lin 7.92 * Spl Sit 7.43 (.34 VncaS spl 0.15 8.91 -Investing ye Vandrbt 835 830 Vongd 5.61 Var IndP 4.94 S,|7 Viking , 7.03 7.44 iwiaJtaf 10^11.15 WallSt In 11.9512.95 Wash Mu 12.251332 Wellgtn unavall Wert Ind 7.75 5:47 nflsld 5.78 432 ualify Is far from an established trend. « ' . “We have no specific incidents where a client gays, ‘Let’s get sexy,’^ said Wallace Clayton, a vice president at J. Walter Thompson Co., the world's largest ad agency. “Fifteen or 20 years ago, there was a strong emphasis on sex ahd Cheesec a ke , particularity in trade paper ads. “But the emerging trend now is humor, he adds. “Now advertising is humorous.” Previewflight for Jumbo Jet SEATTLE (AP) - The age of the jumbo jetliner was previewed today as a Boeing 747, designed to carry almost 500 passengers, took off ‘for New York with 110 persons aboard. Later today, another of the $20 million planes will take off for Honolulu, marking acceptance by Pan American World Airways of its first747. Pan Am as ordered 33 of the 355-ton aircraft. Another five are scheduled for delivery by the end of the year. ♦ ★ ★ . With the ability to carry up to 500 passengers, the 747 and the follow-up DC10 and L1011 air are expected to revolutionize air traveL The eastbound plane carrying HO newsmen was the same big Boeing bird that flew, 5,1(0 miles nonstop in June -to become the hit of the Paris Air show. With chief 747 test pilot Jack Waddell at the; controls, the plane, which is 231 feet 4 inches long, took off from Boeing Field here at 7:25 toward Mt. Rainier, etched on the horizon by the rising sun. $7,000 in Goods Gone From Store Pontiac detectives investigating a burglary reported yesterday at Yankee Department Store, 1125 N. Perry, say they have found no sign of forced entry. Missing tire three rif 1 es, valued at $260, a television set, $154, an AM-FM radio and stereo console, $600, and a dock radio, $45. News in Brief A $179 stereo tape player was stolen, yesterday from Mrs. ! Mary Ann Olszewski's unlocked car, parked in fromt of her home at 134 Ridgemont, ac-sons. cording to police. County Enforcement of Bias Act Aired No action was taken duringjforceable and in some, areas discussion yesterday by theillegal. He qlaimed it would Oakland County Board Supervisors Planning, Zoning and Building Committee In regard to r e q u e s t e d enforcement of state E qu a 1 E m p 1 o yment Opportunities Act.(No. 251 of 1955). A resolution presented earlier to the full board had asked the county to either provide its own enforcement or seek Michigan I amount to forcing people into jobs they , are riot equipped to maintain. ; I l He agreed the industry Is at fault in that until recently it had done little to seek out minorities employes, but he stated the unions had also reluctantly opened the doors to nfemberships. “This, too, is partly the fault Civil Rights Commission en- of the employer because he ab-forcement in regard to fair dibated tile job of providing employment practices as men to the union,” Steward followed by contractors doing admitted. work for foe county, Lawrence Per nick, D-Southfield, and James Mathews, D-Pontiac, authors of the resolution, had contended that contractors are more interested in the act prior to contract award than they are later. Their contentions were answered by < William E. Stewart, executive director of ’FAULTY PROGRAM’ He did say the building trades apprenticeship program * s faulty, “When work is down, the trade’ Isn’t hiring people not already in the industry. New apprentices aren’t taken on consistently.” . “The county already has the machinery to correct any metropolitan areagscri?nati“ Associated General Contractors, jfegf/ ft ^ aJi i i against any self-enforcement HIS CONTENTION {program and charged that a Stewart claimed contractors similar program in Detroit is are moving in the area of hiring not working, more minority race employes. ★ # it He cited 100 blacks accepted Pernick, commented, “More last year as journeymen elec- people are now aware of the tricians, the breaking of the situation. Through the educa-racial barrier in the reinforced tional process the county; will steel trades, and the industry’s take some action. The problem involveinent in training pro- cant be hidden under the com-grams. ment that progress is being Stewart charged the Michigan-made. That’s not specific Civil Rights Commission codejenough to those who don’t have on equal employment is unen-1 jobs.” THE PONTlAc PRESS, TUESDAY; DECEMBER 2, 1969 j>r-T |l Death Noticei §| sister of Norman C. Torrey. § Graveside service was held *-at Ottawa Park Cemetery Monday afternoon. Arrangements by the Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home. I ZANONI, ANTHONY W. J ; November 30, 1969; 826 Blaine i St.; age 11; beloved son of Mr. apd Mrs. Wityaih J. Zanoni; beloved grandson of Mrs. Gladys L. Roehl, Mrs. Grace M. Zanonl and Mr. William J. Zanoni Sr.; dear brother of David, Robin Mid Kellie Zanoni. Funeral service will be held Wednesday, December 3, at 1:30 p.m. at the Church of God, Walton and Joslyn Ave. Interment in . Ottawa Park Cemetery. ' Anthony will lie in state at die Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home. until Wednesday morning. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 and 7 to 9.) PLAYFUL BIRD — A mockingbird takes a liking to the windshield of an automojbile on a Harrisburg, Pa., street, using it as its playground. The bird stands at the bottom of the windshield, then walks up the glass peering at its reflection, and—with the aid of its wings (because of the slippery surface)— finally reaches the roof of the car. 12 Orphaned . in State Car Crash Today COLOMA (UPI) - Twelve children ranging in age from 5 to 22 were orphaned today when their parents died in a predawn j Nixon administration is four automobile* crash near ^ieir|words away from finally mar-home (n this southwest!ry*n8 a man of its choice to the Michigan coiqmunity. , trouble-ridden directorship of + * * j the nation’s auto safety pro- Rfchwdson,, The words Douglas Toms is 47, his wife, Martha, *2, were awaiting in Olympia, Wash., are pinned in the wreckage of their these: “We accept your recom-cfJ f* “-“JW wh^ mentations.” struck broadside at m ter section. WASHINGTON (AP) — The Cause I STATE OF MICHIGAN—I.........I ourt for the County of Oakland, juv lie Division. In the matter of the petition cortcer id Deborah t - • . To Wilbur minor, child. Petition having been filed Judge of Probate MARJORIE SMITH, Deputy Probate Register, Nixon Near Filling Auto-Safety Post t the hearing < —1 -t the ONirM a Center, ... . d County, on tl Ralph Nader and Sen. Abraham A. Ribicoff, D-Conn., contend the bureau is suffering for manpower, morale, money and authority because of subservience to the parent highway administration—an entity they say is devoted to road construction rather than vehicle safety. RESPONSIBILITIES William Haddon last February, I (£tehai{1' is the last major policy job un-j(# ,ru filled in the Nixon administra-j tion. A number of candidates re-1 portedly turned the job down because of its subordination to the highway administration. Still j OFFICIAL NOTICE OF SALE (HURON-ROUGE SYSTEM-11, WALLED LAKE ARM) ,, , . ', Sealed bids for the purchase of Oak- Other prospects were rejected land County Sewage Disposal Bonds - r - - in-Rouge System — walled Lake , nl ... . | _____ to be Issued by the County of Oak- J i The bureau is charged with-ofclosetlestotheindustry- l^moSo'wi?*be ’rece’.v'ed pyr thVund.?! Toms made the recommenda-; to fet sfandards I Haddon thinks the administra-; gjg*' wa0,rk,sheof °"‘id* fcoUv' nS?85b s' * * * Itions recently to Transportation ® . / . ,!!’ tion may have found an ideal I Telegraph Road, in the city of Ponjiac, Preliminary Invention l>y,Secr«tary Jeta A. Volp. for up-^ man in Tome. the Berrien County sheriff’s grading and strengthening the[!“& “He’s superbly qualified, department indicated that National Highway Safety Bu-; |well-balanced, and one of thelop^ff Each bid shall i danced by one coupon only ------ —|(H) Bonds maturln i Issue. Accrued Interest to date. lach^year — ___________ -$ 85,000 1990-8155,000 j DAVIS, MARY; November 30,1 1969; 4120 Lotus Drive,] Waterford Twp.; age 75; dear mother of Mrs. Lois Cole, Mrs. Ilah Havens, Mrs. Jessie Kelch, Mrs. Dorina Isbell and Murry Davis; dear sister of Mrs. Olive Mercer, Mrs. Ann Patrix and Lyle Barber; also survived by 21 grandchildren and .32 great-grandchildren. Funeral service will be held Wednesday, December 3, at 2 p.m. at the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home. Interment in Perry Mount Park Cemetery. Mrs. Davis will lie in state at the funeral home. (Suggested, visiting hours "3 to 5 and 7, to 9.) 1972— 50,000 1982- 95,000 1992— 155,000 1973- 55,000 1983- 105,000 '.993- jj----- 1974- 55,000 1984- 110,000 1994- 1975— 85,000 1985— 115,000 1995- 1978— 70,000 1988— 125,000 1998- 1977— 75,000 1987— 130,000 1997- redemptlon prior , day of December, 1 be publicly e face amount thereof the following schedule: 1,* 1983,B*bu?<' prior t< Richardson did not halt at a [ream stop sign. Driver of the other car, Diane Mary Beardy, also of Coloma, was n seriously injured. The bureau directorship, va- The Richardsons’ oldest child Is 22 and married. A 21-year-old daughter works and lives in nearby Benton Harbor. But the remaining 10 children — IRREGULARO DUE TO LACK OF FOOD ■ Storm Rips U S. Station In the Pacific Toms indicated in an inter-t view his acceptance of the long-vacant post of director of the Safety Bureau is conditional on I Volpe’s acceptance of the rec-j ommendations. Toms, now di-1 rector of the Washington State! , Department of Motor Vehicles,! ^ H > | Volpe’s acknowledged first through 19 - were stUl living at:choice for the Job- ’ HONOLULU (AP)-A 19-man home with their parents. VERBAL NOTICf Coast Guard crew sat out the “While I can’t speak for the night on rooftops after huge secretary, I feel he will accept storm waves destroyed their them,” Toms said. tiny island lookout post 500 In fact, Toms said he already miles northwest of Hawaii, has served verbal notice he will A Navy ship carrying two he leaving his state job soon. helicopters from Hickman Air While Toms won’t discuss de- Force Base was expected to tails of the report he made as a]reach flooded Tern Island by . special federal consultant, he'mid-morning today, confirmed they contained this j_Planes_ circling the island in new breed who rejects the safe- !of"Uwoco»»ch? Ity nonsense handed out for *lv?!y " “■* ’ years," said the former director, a hardline' advocate of tough auto safety enforcement. _____RH _xceeding 6% per a____________ able on November 1, 1969# and thereafter lually on May 1 and November j pir ALL-BRAN® HEARING AID CENTER Vfoon B Qualitone A All Leading Instruments THOMAS 0. APPLETON 21W. Huron- Main Floor 332-3052 Biker Oldg. key recommendation: The ty Bureau director should be freed from his present subordination to the head of the Federal Highway Administration and French Frigate shoals, made st part of Hawaii in 1895, said he stranded men told them by walkie-talkie radio they were wet and cold, but unharmed. expressed li I/20th of 19 on eny me bond shall be at —ond shall be evidenced by............... sly for each coupon period. Bonds me of delivery. Said bends will mature November 1 In each year a 1973—$120,000 1982—8240,000 1 “■ 130,000 1983— 280,000 1 ... 140,000 1984— 280,000 1 1978— 150,000 1985- 300,000 1 1977— 180,000 1988— 320,000 1 978- 170,000 1987— 340,000 I 979- 180,000 1988 - 360,000 1 redemption, at I , notices of Ihe sale redemption^ shah n hiring prior to the year 1984 shall be subject to redemption prior to r turlty. All bonds shall have proi coupons attached thereto evidencing iugjUfc their respective dates of r •Incipal and Interest will purchaser of I itooo HAUK, JOHN C.; November 30, 1969 ; 4180 Navarra, White Lake Twp.; age 42; beloved husband of Margaret Hauk;, dear father of Betty Trombley, Robert, Timmy, Peggy Ann, Janet and AFC John R. Hauk; dear brother Of .Mrs. Catherine Marberg, Andrew and Frank Hauk; also survived by five grandchildren. Parisn| Rosary will be tonight, at 4 p.m. at the Elton Black! Funeral Home, Union Lake.| Funeral service will be held Wednesday, December 3, at 10 a.m. from the funeral home to St. Rita Catholic Church, Holly at 11 a.m. Interment in Highland Cemetery, Highland. M r. Hauk will lie in state at the funeral home. Such purchaser : I 1998— 475,000 after November 1, 1988 shall redemption prior to matui ......... ------- ‘ the option of RALPH J. FRANKLIN I report directly to the secretary I lost EARLIER of transportation. _______ | All other communication with {the island station, which had ,000 in navigational "We find our big ad in the Yellow Pages indispensable,” says Ronald A. Cruse, owner of East Ann Arbor Hardware. Build higher profits. for your business. To be big this year, make itbig now. in theYmots Pages, obviously. was lost more than 24 hours earlier when monster waves swamped the flat, manmade is- Film on Egypt j s I Is Tonight at Northern Highly deemed by publication of such n______ IHl than thirty (30) days prior t fixed fr,r redemption, at least newspaper or publication dret e City of Detroit, Michigan, dempution, provided funds ar< ime. Bonds maturing prior t< | ^ 86 sanll not be subject to r Planes dropped life rafts, [proper coupons attached there! biankets, food and water. | xhe Pontiac Kiwanis Club! maturity. f® • • pec * Tern Island, hal^ay between I ^6! and Adventure Series ] oaBy?bh,.« be^ JS/T NBMB Hawaii and Midway Isand,]will host Ralph j Franklin^'fTSSAII5 ^ * houses a vttal Coast Guard long-!tonight at „ at the PonUac ^.r^'^srgn^o8 tV t! range navigational station The Northern High School^C/SKJ island, originally a sandbar, | Auditorium. |paying agent so cuaii?jed/_ The designs- was built up with coral inl952.* wiU t the film ^V'silSf. Pb#.yl,nuBh,e8cB*enio X SS&S From the air, the 3,000-by- stri < be Issued i amended. I ipation County under a cert MHw 1. 1988, betJHMHRPmilHPMR i and the City of Bloomfield ^^^^s amended as of ■ •**“ whereby said City agrees .. m .. said County the capital cost of acquiring the system. Such capltr' la — fee paid by tho City In ann tha yaars 1969 through 199...... ual to tha bond maturities for t me years. The City Is also requlr paid Contract to pay interest on t ...paid balance of such capital Cost October i, 1969 and semi-annually the’ after In amounts sufficient in each s months to pay the. Interest maturing amounts e payable as to 9,) MORGAN, VIVIAN (Vickie); December 1, 1969; 4166 Jackson Road, White Lake! Twp.; age 52; beloved wife of! Don A. Morgan; beloved! daughter of Cora Dubuque; | dear mother of Linda and Michael Harms; dear sister of Mrs. Pauline Lundine, Clare Conneron, Raymond and Richard Dubuque; also survived by three grandchildren. Funeral service will be held Friday, December 5, at 11 a m. at the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home. Interment in White Chapel Cemetery. Mrs. chapel . Cemetery. Mrs. Morgan will lie in state at the] funeral .home after 3 p.m.! Wednesday. (Suggested! visiting hours 3 to 5 and 7 to ich bid I The funeral is a ceremony that recognizes that intricate worth and dignity of man. It is not only a sociological, stqtement that? Q death has occurred, hut also a 'declaration *fhat been lived. life has SPARKS ** GRIFFIN / FUNERAL HOME 46 Williams St. Phone FE 8-9288 set No. 185 of the Michigan !°0),h*dPrint1e?estp8onn8th °b« he receded oil film the Cbrt- to prbvldre ^e^i^ssary^hds demned temples and treasures^operty”i8*thecountyyvitnou^riimita in the basin of the New High "Fo°r miy^Tawarding tn. bo, T)bm [the Intarest test of each niff will Icomputtd by detarmlnlng, at the rati r cashier's check I of good ?altli to bo forfeited! 5 checks of the unsuccessful blddei 1 be prompMy' returned ^tc ».!d8Bte conditioner | of DICk Turn plain towels into gala gifts with brig h t < stitchery. Tempting treats for towels or dinette cloth! Delight a bride or hostess on Christmas with charming handmades. Pattern 665: transfer 6 motifs 6x8” each, color schemes. Fifty cents lit coins for each pattern — add 15 cents for each pattern for 1st-class mailing and special handling. Send to Laura Wheeler, The Pontiac Press, 124 Needlecraft Dept, Box 161, Old Chelsea Station, New York, N.Y. 1001. Print Pattern Number, Name, Address, Zip. PRINTED PATTERN ;tj PALMER, MAURICE AUSTIN; s! December 1, 1969; 1975 Hill! y Rd., White Lake Twp.; age1 2; 67;.beloved husband of Agnesi •j E. Palmer; beloved father of v Richard L. Palmer and Mrs. 8 Arthur Buell Jr.; dear brother !i of Miss Lillian and Carl a Palmer; also survived by nine * grandchildren and one great-J grandchild. Funeral service 11 will be held Thursday,! li December 4, at 1 p.m. at the [ *. Richardson-Bird Funeral' |t[ Home, Milford. Interment In Jj Highland Cemetery, Highland. •j Mr. Palmer will lie in state at ill the funeral home. dsEAMON JR., JOE ARTHUR; I November 29, 1969 ; 512 Arthur] St.; age 38; beloved son of Della Tyler; dear father of Karon and Shelia Seamon; dear brother of Mrs. Margaret Hicks. Funeral service! will be held Thursday,] December 4, at 1p.m. at the Frank Carruthers F u n e r a 1 Home. Interment in Oak Hill Cemetery. Mr. Seamon Jr. will lie in state at the funeral home after 7 tonight, 4942 SIZES IO/2.2O/2 Envelopes contalr Secretary of Board e DELOS HAMLIN, TORREY, KATHERINE; ELIZABETH; November 30,1 , 19§9; 2018 Denby Dr., Drayton; Plains; beloved i n f a n ti daughter of Mr. \and Mrs.] . Norman Torrey; bejoved' itt-i 1 fant granddaughter of Mr.[ York, N.Y. 16611. Print and Mrs. Cecil Torrey find Name, Address, with Zip, Mrs. Madelon Kristek; dear) Size and Style Number. Wearing a special dress is part, of toe pleasure of gooing places. Rere, the V-shaped neckline creates a beautiful harmony of line all theway. , printed Pattern 4942: New Half Sizes 10%, 12%, 14%, 16%, 18%, 20%. Size 14% (bust‘37) takes 2% yards 39-inch. Sixty-five cents in coins for each pattern r* add 15 cents for each pattern for' first-class mailing and special handling. Send to Anne Adams, care of The Pontiac Press, 137 Pattern Debt. 243 West 17th St., New X D—8 THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 8, 1969 For Want Adi Dial 3344981 To Buy, Rent, Soil or fradi Use Pontiac Press WANT ADS Office Houm B a.m. to 5 p.m. Cancellation Deadline 9 a.m. Day Following First Insertion BOX NUMBERS At 10 a.m. today there were replies at The Press Office la the following boxost 7, 8, 17, *7, 40, 49, 05. Mr. and Mrs. Homeowner Ym* vou can ott a lit or 2nd Call Mr. tn your h -3267. • Htlp Wcmttd Mate . or port timo, Body Man SM* Chrysiv-Plyrriouth, * Oakland Avt. (Apply In P. Ja you want a "white collar |obt" Would you Ilk* to, ha trained tor promotional advertising Hold at out oxpanao. National Corp. Is accepting application, or trainaoa to nn *Vtl~ ‘‘ — ’ “ ■ *“ in ChrMmas aalai Call faK _ at 642-5S6S. e™- SaOY SITTBt d In.popular Birmingham Dm •lor., trine# benefits .and ■ntlal wages being offered. Lost end Found Kern Rd. near ClarlMton R (COLLECTOR PQR MORTOAl ---1 department of Land company, l 5 month, plud. Phono >23-1333. a vfit. LOVERBOY: Large black A whits mala cat, long haired, mixing Thanksgiving day, vicinity of Lake Angeiu. Rd. i Morgen Lake. Handicapped chlld'a pat. Reward. LOST: APRICOt POO&Li, Icon Lake area, epileptic need, medication. Reward, 6734343. LOTti ' Ladla. watch, name on LOST: 7 MONTHS, black Labrador with choke chain, vie. of Auburn Height., reward. I52-4S4I. I "act e1,,r i ceor " "He.i»U1"" oi! ; CABLE (SPLICER v No ekoarience necessary L Are needed pt Michigan bell TELEPHONE COMPANY To Work In PONTIAC. ROYAL QAK, if Interested call 962-1033 Area Code 311 telllgenlly Salary: to convarM my -■ mhw jgi Jive In, Rot. WalladUk* area. BAKERY-SALESWOMANly PulTlima, Ch.W'w8^ Mill!; Birmingham. mi 4-7H4. . WUfit Welcome guests to your kitchen with this gay sampler. Brighten your kitchen with the vivid colors and merry message of this sampler. Easy stitchery, charming framed. Pattern 978: transfer 11x21”, color chart, directions. Fifty cents in coins for each pattern — add 15 cents for each pattern for 1st-class mailing and special handling. Send to Laura Wheeler, Hie Pontiac Press, 124 Needlecraft Dept., Box 161, Old Chelsea Station, New York, N.Y. 10011. Print Pattern , Number/ Name, Address, Zip. Curd of Thanks WISH to extend ........... •honk. and .pproclotlon .voryopo for tho many ac Hadi— manages of —- Shofwoll. WE WISH TO’ THANK publicly oil our frltnds, neighbor., and rolatlvo. for tho many act. pf kindness and sympathy they sx-i tendsd so graciously during our rocont bereavement through the d.o‘h of our son, Oonni. Dowdy: and gratefully acknowledge ----'er service. ———d r Police Emergency family of Mr. and I - \ CLARK OIL AND Refining Corpora- nl linn I* look inn Inr men IW—iaAad equipment eno leern umer were. Could moon doubling your previous Income, aarnings, opportunity, S175 to 1200 per wk. Call for poraonel BARMAID noodad nights, excellent working conditions. Aibsts Inn In Lokt Orion, coll tor Interview. 4*3-9931, ' ’ . ' r BEAUTY OPERATORS," fiill or part ■ aSSten ................... Pontiac Police Dept, and rontiec General Emergency etaff. The for, ^Buying, Selling or portunlty to make above earnings, cell Mr. Btdori George, 674-4101. _______ AUTO PARTS COUNTER Interesting lob wir ■ , be a hustler to tsstost moving ___________ wholesaler. See _Mr. Casey loin Michigan's "Mr.*oT Electric In Mumorium N LOVING MEMORY OF Albert Francisco, who passed away Ii ylars ago Doc. 2, 1965. The world changes year Is year, Ind friends from day to day, DR. RICARDO RIVAS M.D., r off lea hours, Mon. through I 8:00-10:15 In tha marnino, and 1 to 0:00 In tho avtnlng. Sat. 2:U 4:30. 682-0020. LOSE WEIGHT SAFELY with C Fumrul Dirtctors "WHERE THE ACTION IS" AUTO PORTER l Staady dependabls man for full tl work, for naw car claan-up < ; general building malntenaiu.. r Must be tl years old end have good drlvara license. Good pay, uniforms. Blue Cross, group Insurance, pension and paid vacation. Saa Mr. Ceaser. Hutchinson Lincoln AAOrcury, 221 N. Main St. I Royal Oak. a ALERT, AMBITIOUS PERSON to * I troln In personnel Interviewing. This Is a career position ' DIE TRYOUT PUNCH FINISHER DAYS BORING MILL VERTICAL MILL HYDROTEL NIGHTS UNION SHOP Y TOOL AND ENG 2250 W. MAPLE I WALLED LAKE, MICH. t ____________624-1571 4 EXPERIENCED GAS STATION '• I HELP. Glsn's Marathon, M-S7 and •I Airport Rd.___ '• Experienced work RTdEWS, thoroughbred race. horses, „ permanent employment, *100 par week plus quarters, 40 hrs. max. weight 125 lbs., Transportation advanced fo ,bo rofurnod, no union. Contact Mr. James Lllley, "“.C.C. office. Pontiac, Michigan. T- ONCE, t mmmm Iwlpor*, nr_______ * hand tools, full company band see GILL at NO Oakland A POntlac._______ Oil Burner Servico Man We will employ o qualified'In-; dividual to service oil furnaces In tha Pdntlac and suburban areas. Good starting rate. Overtime. Transportation furnished. Mobil Oil Corp. 521 S. Telegraph, Pontiac. 334-9538. • | Adams A Adams _______ 6474SS0 • I AUTO DEALER NEEDS experienced 5 mechanic, S day weak, fringe btneflts include Blue Cross and pension plan. Call' 'ngjub 1 EXPERIENCED MISCELLANEOUS machine ' operators. C r o s s n I Machlns Co., 2501 Williams Drive, r l m previous loft unfit. In a Tim* or anger ana disappointment t lashed out of you without regards to your feelings. i am sorry and upset that the children are on a reduced schedule at school, however I was wrong In taking out my anger on you. 1 am sorry and hope you will accept my apology. Jack Han------it, S5SS H AUTO MECHANICS Mechanics with experience a Will to work excellent wages, a .ii «.!—, benefits. Our buaj- EARN $200 Pert time between now and Christmas. No soiling required. .FULL TIME CUSTODIAN, mus Ji have references, apply Standar Electric Co., .175 8. Sagtns ** ORDERLIES rull time and part time pi ■vailabla on day and aft shifts.. Must be High iraduate. Apply 9 a.m. to 1L____ Personnel Dept., St. Joseph Mercy Hospital, NO Woodward, Pontiac, ircall 33MIU —* **5 PRODUCTION WELDERS la Rd, SAU|i MANAGER — To head direct builder sates. Experience In appliance sales to builders desirable, must be capable of setting up sales force to cover Mid-Western Statu. 6 year old company with 624-4010, ask ft r. Hickman. excellent and wa need good people DOMESTIC House man experienced, , to help us grow. Apply to Bill' cleaning) serving, highest salary. Pei Borland. Franklin.area, Musi have rtf. MA[ frit Grimaldi i I- BUICK OPEL INC. . *_____ 210 Orchard Ut. __ I ASSISTANT fo~ASSi$T manager Ii outside order department, must b *■ is neat and available t rk Immediately, CALL Mr COATS FUNERAL HOME DRAYTON PLAINS___________ 674-04611 y Store, 45N Elizabeth Lake D0NELS0N-J0HNS FUNERAL HOME f. Huron Pontiac 33 Huntoon i BORON SERVICE nation need* 1 i experienced manager 4 lull time; I men and 2 part time man. 363-7294; • bat. 10 a.m. end s p.m. ____| BOOKKEEPER—FOl SMALL shop1 ------------ . cprtjla of r» Oakland Avo.______fe 2-oiw! SPARKS-GRIFFIN j FUNERAL HOME '■ThoughNuPSorvIco" FE S-928»l VoorheesSiple Camattry Lots CHRISTIAN MEMORIAL ESTATES, Rochostor, Garden of His Greet, Estate 153, 2 sites. S495. coll 4*3- FOR SALE CEMETERY LOTS, graves. In Oakland Hills Mamorl: Gordon. Must tall to softie estah write to Pontiac Prott, Box C-: PERRY MT. PARK, 4 Caff Don't try If yourtslf Como in and tu Ralph “ontlac Mall Barber Shop perience, wages desire. Reply to Pontlec Press P.O. Box C-S.____ BENCH HELPERS . - j Tool making and m aching’ building experience, day shift,! Jared Industries Inc. 1300 S. Coolidge. Irmlngham, Michigan, 647-12P* s license, apply Blrm-1 Birmingham. An Equal Opportunity Employer. BOYS-MEN 18 OR OVER i, 1625. Salary par it GAS STATION Attendant, ax-lerlenced, mechanically Inclined, Pontiac Press Want Ads For Action M TEN GREAT LOOKS - a year ’round wardrobe in one pattern! Seven shapely skimmers plus vest, Jacket, ! Mi Nehru coat to top then) off. Printed Pattern 4660: NEW Misses’ Sizes 8, 10, 12, 14, 16. Half Sixes 1216, 1416, 1616, 1816, 2016, 2216. SIXTY-FIVE CENTS in coins for each pattern—add 15 cents for each pattern for first-class mailing and special handling. Send to Anne Adams, care of The Pontiac Press, 137 Pattern Dept., 243 West 17th St, New York, N.Y. 10011. Print NAME, ADDRESS with ZIP, SIZE and STYLE NUMBER. Help Wanted Male 6Help Wanted Mai* EX-MILITARY MEN ELECTRONIC OR ELECTRICAL TECHNICIAN RATING ..NILE IN THE SERVICE CAN BUILD A WORTHWHILE CAREER MICH. BELL SWITCHMAN TO WORK IN PONTIAC SOUTHFIELD ROYAL OAK FARMINGTON IF INTERESTED CALL 962-1033 AREA CODE 312 CALL COLLECT For a telephone interview An Equal Opportunity Employer AS STATION Attendants, full and part time, new station, -ooanlna soon. 152-1404 4 SHOE FITTER straight salary plus: fit* for orthopedic! uld^ have ^ COUNTER GIRLS FOR DRY CLEANING PLANT Prefer experienced, mature lady Full time, permanent poiltkx Apply Drayton Mdrtinlllng. 471 Walton Btvd. 474HI0I1. ' _ IMMEDIATE OPENING Registered 'Nurses and . Licensed Practical Nurses TOP SAURY REGISTERED NURSES 1650 PER MO. — S7S7 PER MO. LICENSED PRACTICAL JNURSES 1494 PER MO. - *607 PER MO. SHIFT DIFFERENTIALS REGISTERED NURSES ' S P.M. - 11: j0 P M. 53.00 PER DAY 11 P.M. -r 7:30 A.M. *4.50 PER DAY . LICENSED PRACTICAL NURSES 3 P.M. - 11:30 P.M. 32.50 PER DAY 11 P.M. — 7:30 A.M.' 53.00 PER DAY Preferably HR HW . ■'ApptyV-mignifc,.-»4l sueoato. l[ili|OAKLANO UNIVERSITY Excellent typing raqylrad and wort hand poMrtod,'Thata .peit, avawabia. Can natty*! . N. Ssplnaw, PonHae. call* plows. _ WJun»T PE Woman for counter a inapoe- ~-*“its ■ Claanqr, afl ., RodkXtar, 651-753S. '/CARE itMran. rIIw Apply The Personnel Office Walton a. Squirrel Road Rochaitor, Michigan 43063 . n equal opportunity amploytr pAfcf TIME. CAU, op « polntmonta, 4 hr*, dolly tram • office 11.35. PE SPm. PERMANENT POSITION AVallamo In Oxford area for women with good typing skills, ’profor shorthand but would, conalder dictaphi— S.S.S. Paraonnal, 6514031. PRESSER FOR* MODERN cleaners, experience preferred, aras-Sfe?" * *** RESPONSIBLE PERSON with office itHH' ' chajlenfling WAITRESSES Night shift full or .part trc—....— bail ywn of agaar oidar, t) JI an hoar plus all trlnga benetlts. Apply In fNMW Elina Bros. H Boy Rutaurant, Tatogroph and lENT MANAGER Naadad, a pleasant and gbla ta daai ha public Apartment and husband may by working necessary. Apply to Pontiac Prou It Cell 424-4010, a REGISTERED NuRjE FOR TH-SERVICE INSTRUCTOR ter Jllta shift, tt:M p.m. to 7:00 a.m. Full time, permanent position. Exoallant '•tamnfe salary, assured Incraasm, generous trlnga bsnatlti Including Ratlranignt Program, C e n t.a ct Personnel Director, S a g I r General Hospital, 1447 N. Han Saginaw, Michigan. Phone .7* BLOOD DONORS URGENTLY NEEDED AH RH Positive 57.50 "ag. with puttlvt tic- ping STOCK CLERK la opening for ate receiving clerk, si Restaurant Manager opportunity ,..jn Interested assistant nr Ml In Pontlec^ CHRISTMAS HELP 16-14 / - rt now and be surd of g JO ______ . days. to Mr. Clyde, 3»4U4. people^ now/*i«.50 fare ito^sfc'aH 5 COOK, EXPERIENCED “ order, tap wages, night -■ after 11 a.m.jtoosn. Can You Sell? ability to supervise, Top salary; and banaflts, no Sunday or Holiday i work. If you hove a good boot-. MEALf EST^ir^u^Sicrotory, -l fiffi bookkeeping, and general office | pjjM Partridge? PartMdg? Real Esnfte, CARETAICkR COUP^, 7Ukt .R|S - Huron SL Pontiac Ph.| ------------- 6S1-2111. R. I logist. 9-5, Saturday A.M. i. Hospital hounv. No holl-inlng or weekend. Call 335- R.N.'s & LP.N.'s for large apartment prelect at 957 N. Parry. WHO to clean, husband -o minor mabitdr-"— landscaping, sin Free apartment AVAILABLE »ola Hills Nursing Home, 532 Ordtiwl Lk. Ave. EMPLOYMENT Sospita“IVSi Administrator. Hubbard Hospital, fe"?™1'..5?fTm,*1?ur.d>.* OFFICE manager tor largo rati i company. Exparlancp nacusary, -S?lLd?f! handling ■—■ with shift worked. Excellent oppoiiunitTaiTTor i advancement. Plaasr --*■ 0345. Miss McAlpIns. i functions. Invoice Gulf, Talagraph ai GENERAL SHOP HELP Wide variety unskilled factory and WANT ADS ARE THE MARKET-• PLACE WHERE BUYERS AND , SELLERS GET TOGETHER TO DO BUSINESS AT ONCE, . JUST CALL; 334-4981 •PLANNING FOR A FUTURE d benefits Include: I OPENINGS FOR: EXPERIENCED • TOOLMAKERS • JIG AND FIXTURE BUILDERS • BORING MILL • VERT.-HOR. MILLS • LATHE • BENCH HANDS • WELDERS AND FITTERS 58 Hour Week Loiig Range Program Make Applications at Our Employment Office /, 8/ to 5t30 Mon.-Fri. — Sat. 8 to 12 Noon / / INTERVIEWS TUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT ONLY! USI-Artco, Inc. MACHINE AND TOOL DIV. SUBSIDIARY OF U.S. INDUSTRIES, INC. 3020 TNDIANWOOD RD. LAKE ORIQN PHONE 693-8388 An Bquel Opportunity FREE TRANSPORTATION IN OUR WORK WAGON TO AND FROM PONTIAC Call 585*1990 lor WORK WAGON schedule ■ndj’outt • EMPLOYERS ’ Temporary Service, Inc. FERNDALE 2320 Hilton Rd. REDFORD 25U5 Grand River CLAWSON 65 S. Main CENTER LINE 1561 E. 10 Mila NOT AN EMPLOYMENT AGENCY ALL JOBS ARE FREE dAi^tATlbfil' Unions,** background preferred, lory and working coh-ipply Birmingham Bloom-tieia Bank, 1025 E. Maple, Blrm. An Equal Opportunity Employer, TELEPHONE INSTALLER No Experience Necessary MICHIGAN BELL TELEPHONE COMPANY PONTIAC ROYAL OAK, SOUTHFIELD If Interdsted call 962-1033 Area Coda 313 Call Collect For a telephone interview Ah Equal Opportunity Employer_I’ TELEGRAPH AND NUCpTE Standard Gas pumpers, part time A full time._________________| TOOL maker FOR bench and; • 1'----- SO hrs. weakly, monthly sharing, Blue Cross) Iaid indiviDuit? EMPLOY^ I short J**"? J3B»»rtdt gsiary bas< USI ARTC0 INC. BLUE CROSS AFTER 1 YEAR. 2 WEEKS PAID VACATION AFTER; 1 YEAR, 3 WEEKS PAID VACATION AFTER S YEARS. Additional Benefits TWO 20 MINUTE BREAKS PER DAY, MEALS AT COST, FREE GARAGE PARKING, PLUS MA OTHER PRINCE BENEFITS. Our hospital has many el benefits for eur employees. Wa proud of our ataff end feel that l*.Vi.,L.t>’*-frJ*nd!.y .,tm°5p!18r.l> ,h»l SALES CLERK «... .pp.y m Stenos - Secretaries Typists-Key Punch General Office Work Profitable, Temporary Assignment! ! Available now—PONTIAC AREA 1 CALL MANPOWER_______________332-8306 t 0 people. Very *•*- ______I .’on1 ■ C-33, Pontiac, Mich. RlTIRED MAN OR WOMAN to dishwasher frdm 12-2 p.m. M Frl. Pleas* contact Jim Howe Mr. Steak, 2299 Elizabeth Lak* PONTIAC OSTEOPATHIC i, profit s Exceller machinery, Glbraltor LUSTY LIFE tlm*. modern rugged Individualist become ^ legend —- ' everyday existence. *Forhthe Virile tiger — between IS and 25 with ambition to b* financially Independent before ag* 40. Ebl an opportunity limited oi Imagination. No experience needed In UMMjmr of young ladles. . HAMILTON 334-9427 COSMETICIAN, EXPERIENCED) excellent conditions end salary. Call Java-On Drugs, V by pis CALL MR. 1 TV TECHNICIAN. EXPERIENCED. SWEETS RADIO AND APPLIANCES TV REPAIRMAN Experienced in color, top pi -------- —i, FE 5-2632, USED CAR PORTER Must havt drivers lietnss and P*rlane* P0AKLAND chrysler-plymouTh 724 Oakland Ava. ' PE 54 WANTED ARC WELDERS and s CASHIER TELE-TRAY OPERATOR CURB GIRLS KITCHEN HELP Per evening shift. All bsnsfl trn A Sltvtr'Lk. Rd. CAN YOU QUALIFY? ed someone to assist me In my nislnsss. Hours flexible. For In-arvlaw appointment. Call 3314374, — ~.m.-13:3D P.m., AMh.-Prl. IS BACK - IT'S NOT I I The ruggad Individualist can legend on her own time.; Ing and her determination ixisttnct. For the tigs ......... IbltTe i 25 with amlbltlei > offer :* necessary ton 3344427 Schodl Crossing Guards ($3.00 PER HOUR) . At various locations and school* In th* City of Birmingham. Approximately tab hours per weak. An equal opportunity employer. Call 644-1600, Personnel Dapart- TELLER TRAINEES 1 AFTERNOON SHIFT — Position* ; Ar* Now Avotlablo of Our Pon-I tiac Mall Office for, Persons 'nterested In Challenging Work Itallng With Paopla. Experience lot Nacusary but AppM—“‘ ihould Be Mature and Hava arithmetic Aptitude. Please n Parson at Community Natianal Intarutlng work. Call U Good opportunity ti NG LADIES, DAY WORK, S1S0. OW Bloomfield, 4S2-Q554. car background helpful. 11........1 H part time, no Saturdays. Oakland Community Nawsr-------- - ’ Swetland, 363-7141. TYPIST U COMPOSER EXPERIENCE DENTAL ASSISTANT hJS2w?rk KS Experienced for large Dental1 Saturdays. 646-3253. practice. 10 f.m. till 7 p.m. 5 days TEMPORARY Htip wa Including Saturday. Exc* llent office from Dac. 15th 'fertlMIOV ” 9th,-for Information, or FOR FASTER SERVICE NOW A DIRECT UNI FOR PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED ADS ,, .. I WANTED: Exparlant_______ DOCTORS ASSISTANT, experienced *PPly Mitchell Clean*: Miu null •only, fe 4-5529 Orchard Lk. Rd.. at M p.m. only. . PE 1-9571. FULL EXPERIENCED ms, nights, go< AI EXPERIENCED restaurant h alp S~! wrl wanted ter nlpht shift, tops In pay, —BM.!!?.:,..-. paid Blue - Cron, hospitalization, WOOL PRES rite Drayton Plains, I HAMBURGER, , Rd. 334-7437. EXPERIENCED DRAPER' b*dsprswdH|||UHMgta (EFFECTIVE JAN. 1, 1*7 Excallaqt (ring* benefits, ir dition to salary. Including: full-paid Family Blue cross. Blue Shield, 101 to 20 annual leave days par year with unlimited accumulation, lo legal holidays per year. Group Ilf* "-aral retirement plan eom-i icurlty, tuition. worldng conditions. equivalent), 2 years full tins*, paid typing experience within tha last 5 ■■— — * months full ft? iGuttiji "Dllcatlon, pi UiPIliPHriiNMilML. ... commercial collaga With ,» dsgru or certificate requiring * **■"- of commercial college (Oakland County Merit System GOOD AMBITIOUS MAN for work in small shop, good pay, all fringe benefits. Call 332-0)69 bet. S:30 a.m. A 5:30 p.m, GAS STATION^attendants, part time, new station, soon. 052-1404 after 5 p.m. GRINDERS, for production ..MPBH wages, benefits. 4520 Farnlu, Royal j mechanics helpers, must hand tools, full company call GILL at FE 5-9421. « WANTED _ „ PRESSER, lull or pert time, vacation with pay, apply PAUL'S Birmingham Cleaiurt. Ml 4-4528. Talagraph WAITRESS EVENINGS, no experience nacesaery, ovtr IS. Pull Sor part tlm*. Rocco't, 5171 Dixie HwyTApply 5 to I. , WAITRESS WANTED TO work pert .*FP,le*n* untact: wooowarq, sirmingnam, tIm#, Evas,, In rastaurant and ____-lounge, hourly rat* plus tips, foi days further Information, call UL 2-3410. ■IK*' WOMAN FOR GENERAL k, Mich. TRUCK MECHANICS GAS STATION ATTENDANTS, full ftl^r/a^e™ 4Q*pKA?n(l Gos or diesel. Liberal pay, GAS STATION HELP insurance furnished, retfre- tra v.s"i/ntrand0fu" SM service station, 701 s.jMr. Coe, 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Saginaw—5385 Hlghland-or «*•! ’ ■ --- r Dixit Hwy. GAS PUMPER, PART TIAAfe fi parlance nacusary, Is and c Beverly Hills Service Ce Birmingham. 647-2124. GRINDER HANDS-SURFACE A I. D. O. D„ for. progressive din, study JI hr. wk., all fringes. Cartel Corporation, 334-4523, janitor. Foij tlfna, parmanient. Fringe benefits. United Hebrew Schools, Southfield. PI 1-3407. JANITORS. Part time, mornings, work 2-3 hrs. psr day, 6-7 days P*r wk. Good starting pay artd fringe banaflts. Apply *t.,K-Mart, 7 S, Glenwood bat, S-10 s.~ Monday thru Friday. GMC Truck Center Oakland at Cass FE -5-9485 An equal opportunity employ LOOKING FOR A Smo MILL BRIDGEPORT HAND$ Experienced In tool end die wot INTERSTATE TOOL CO. MACHINE AND n AUTOMATION DESIGNERS DETAILERS ASSEMBLERS MACHINIST Verticil Mlll'Oatall Specialist Excellent opportunltiu In a SOU fast moving company with a lot range program of growth and ns products. Substantial fr I n g benefits and qpportunltlas for.a vencement. Good’ pay an oyarttme. An equal opportunl ^"'P'cLYpI CORPORATION Subsidary at Chicago Pneumatic Tool ^ to** ,Troy «4»320P hANlVAfEriD operation. Apply: pw«n «.«, Frank's Raatauraht, Kaags Harbor. EXPERT DRESSMAKER, SEWER conganlal paopla. Typing' ro^---------R •- "ne alteration department. Call Writ* Post Offtco Box 65, Pantloc. A M Jorgenson batwun 9:30 A 5,|- giving Compfota Information. . THE PERSONNEL DIV. OAKLAND COUNTY COURTHOUSB 1200 N. TELEGRAPH RD. PONTIAC, MICHIGAN 41053 t Wonted M. or F. 8 Htlp Wanted M. or f. B National Corp., la accepting application* or trllnou to fill vacandu created by promotions. Qaullflcatlons: 1 — High Sch: 2 — B* at talllgantl^ to converse in- Salary: S1U.5S i For personal In Call Mr. Burch! willing to relocate. For polntmont phone collect or wi stating qualifications to Mr. A WAITRESS, F IS or over, api Spaghetti Hous irtment. Caff Ml’s. HoppSTi I Bbt., 1-S p.m. wafkaays. Attention Youn^ Women GIRLS—WOMEN 18 OR OLDER INTERVIEW WORK NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY - HOUSEKEEPER. Experienced HOUSEKEEPER, live In, own roo: bath, TV. S daw a wk. IM. Ri required. Rochestef. 451-1150 ISbivipItAt wne * SrIcing. Previous I*. Call 62)4-4010, •Local national ' firm now hiring 11'---r—r.t young woman for plusant, parson KITCHEN HELP, day or evening, 18 or over. Rocco’t, 5171 Dixie Hwy. Apply ^AS - - nit. Must have jtlsstlhe onallty and be able to start ...edlate employment. Excellent taming tor theta who qualify. No BMf— required. For mttrvlaji* call W'.% ALERT AMBITIOUS parson to tl ■ ill personnel Interviewing. This career position with unusual ei Ing potential. Adams A Adams ■ i * TELEPHONE GIRL BIRMINGHAM AREA Part-tlm* Si .75 to *2JO per he.. .. stort. 44 hour* psr day. Call Barbara, lilt to 10:00 a.m. I baby sitter i LAOY WANTED FOR good position In shirt laundry. Top pay, plus paid holidays and vacations, end other fringe benefits. Witt train, if Interested call 3n-ll22. _____ j MATURE WOMAN Hr cashiering and disk work In dethlnp stort. Cm Wi, ~ ’ :l BABYSITTER, L* Cali . «n«r •y QM-asiM. . .. ‘i NURSE AIDES, WILL traM, 08U far! I appointment, between 1:30 t.MI. and J p.m. 651-4421, > MEN1 WOMENI The Beautiful New, Ultramodern SGHRAFFT'S' Restaurant in Troy ' AT THE SOMERSET MAlt IS OPENING IN 2 WEEKS EXPERIENCE PREFERRED - BUT NOT ESSENTIAL WE WILL TRAIN YOU ASt • WAITRESSES • WAITERS. • HOSTESSES • CASHIERS '• POOD CHECKERS • COOKS • SHORT ORDER COOKS • BARTENDERS • KITCHEN HELPERS • PORTERS l A ~ LUNCH AND DINNER HOURS AVAILABLE — ,'/ , THESE ARE CAREER OPPORTUNITIES WITH EXCELLENT CHANCE FOR ApyANCEMENT ^ Interviews wilt be held, Wed. thru Sat. * DEC. 3rd thru DEC. 6th between. 10 a.m. & 6 p.m. ~ See Mr. Jack Hillman SCHRAFFT'S ; RESTAURANT 2745 West Big Beaver Road SOMERSET MALL TROY, MICHIGAN An Equal Opportunity Employer HAL 334-4901 We Repeat DIM. 334-4981 For Wont Ads Dial 3344981 **» Mltu-Fontalo l-ASoht Help, Male-Female 8-A , ★ DO YOU HAVE A NEED FOR EXTRA MONEY NOW THAT CHRISTMAS TIME IS NEAR? WHY NOT WORK PART-TIME FOR US AS A SALESPERSON, CATALOG CLERK, ' CAFETERIA HELP OR IN THE STOCK ROOM. WE CAN SCHEDULE YOU FOUR HOURS OR MORE ON DAYS, EVENINGS OR WEEKENDS IMMEDIATE EMPLOYEE * DISCOUNT APPLY NOW PERSONNEL DEPT. MONTGOMERY WARD * THE PONTIAC MALL Help Wanted M. or f. t PART T!ME Kitchen help, gv... Good working conditions. Apply In person, Terry's Country Squire, MIS w. Mania. Troy, wtui 5CH60L*CR05siNG GUARD," corner PPP —__________ ______ Wide k Drive E. •••») Opportunity Employer WANTED: Welled Le.. ...... ■ commission. FB 2-792). Salts H>lp, Malt-Fomala8-A JOCKEY MENSWEAR Is felt moving Industry. Reftremenl Pie Life Insuronco Hospitalization . L. Maas, Ml Detrol i THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1060 il Eitots 36 Dr-*8 Salts Htlp, Male-Female 14 $15,934.87 AVERAGE EARNINGS Work Wow»»d Mato A PROFESSIONAL BAR te tenders for privets p e i reesoneMe rites, I73-4774. Co., Sox 8N, Peyton,.Ohio 4340). FREE CUSSES Men or women wanted. Earn whl.. you learn. We heve 11 offices end 300. salespeople who can't I wrong. Call today. Millar Bros. Realty 333-7156 PLASTER PATCHING It preferred, starting a Call Mr. L_. appointment. JMr*. V$chram*for Tvan w. schram. Ream types of auto, repairs. 343-0992. REE CUTTING, S3 YEARS perlence, free estimates. JOQr-334-eue. RoVs-OR 3-4767 ANTED: Part time work for 14, 15 ■nd M year old boys end girls. * work and school program, 15 h«j in school, 33 ho— go ~ ■ txperlence. Jobs ______ _____ _____ ..j ..j.... ....... „ang(n|S> call year, Snelllng A Snelllng. Call Work Wanted Female WOMEN FOR babysitting anltor work. Call FE 4-7174 or 4091. A-1 IRONING. 1 DAY sarvlct. N McCowan. 3....... BUY! SELL! TRADE! USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! UUINGER REALTY Naads real estate men and won 1. Your ambition rulae. 2. Yd“ — your a.._.... 3. The presture It nl A Advertl«inn Im entlful. AT 4744319 assistant. Opt ambition for sharp spot? Gal who wants golden i— $320. Call Sharrl rooks*. 33 Snelllng A Snelllng. L JOHN LAUINGER ^Apfmrel--Ladits FENNY RICH GRAB, custom fitted by appointment. FE 2-5044, aft. 5. Dressmaking, Tailoring i l-A ALTERATIONS. SUITS, COATS,' - dresses. 335-4207, Mrs. Sebaske. | Ahwlnem Bldg. Items A-1 ALTERATION G Dressmaking. All Types. 9a.m.-7 p.m. 332-64361 SIDING ALUM. VINYL AND ASBESTOS AWNING-PATIOS SCREEN-IN OR GLASS ENCLOSED EAVESTROUGHING ALTERATIONS, Oil types, knlu dresses, leather coats. 682-9533. j bRESSMAKING — TAILORING BONNIE KAY'S WOMENS alterations. 474-4475. Driver's Training | ACADEMY OP DRIVER Training. Free home pickup. FE 8-9444. i We bring factory to you.' FAST SERVICE—QUALITY WORK TERMS Gall now—day or night 401-2500 DEALER—ASK FOR BOB OR RED Antenna Service • BIRCHETT A SON ANTENNA Sorvlco. Also repair. 330-3274. \ Asphalt Paving ASPHALT SEAL Coating, 3 cents to 6 cants a sq. ft. Top grads of. saalar used. Satisfaction guarantaad. 476-5579. Drywall | A-1^ DRYWALL^OF ALL^types, and DftYWALL NEW or Rapa lx homes. FE 4-6682. PONTIAC DRY WALL SERVICE, new and remodeling, guaranteed, 335-1039 or 332-8013, Eavestroughing M & S GUTTER CO. HI LICENSED-BONDED Complatt aavastrougnlng service Fret Estimates 673-5044, 673-5462 j ASPHALT DISCOUNT, paving, recap, free estlfnatas. FE 5-745f. Brick Block & Stone _ Electrical Services 1 BRICK VENIRIN6, fireplaces, block toying, 693-1055 after S. ASTRO ELECTRICAL Sarvlco, Industrial, commercial, residential.! 425-2933. . j KOLON ELECTRIC CO. Commerciil' and Industrial, control work,; machine move end hook up, electric heat, new work, free estimates. Phone I64-4200 ir 334-3704 evenings 334-3704. FIREPLACES, WRITTEN guarantee,! state wide service. 353-6179 call after 5 p.m. Building Modernization A-l INTERIOR AND EXTERIOR. Family rgome, rough at finished dormer*>RBron*$> recreation McKORMICK ELECTRIC ’ Residential Wiring-Service 157 Baldwin FE 4-9191; E DIRECTORY ZOUIPMWT Restaurants I i BOY DRIVE-IN Dlxh ^^^Roolling »- D A Ntw roof? Call GHI — l‘ 7. 674-3!a0. as”for jlmyscoft. « Est.Call after 5 ACCOUNTING CLERK Good moth aptitude, some billing or posting experience, light typing. Northwest area. Pat paid. INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL *** S. Woodward, B"~— j — IRONINGS, hand mada Barbie! j EXPERIENCED-DAY WORK, naad 1 LARGE BEbROOfo.kltchan^ap'art. transportation, 335-4151.______i man). Apply 154 N. Parry. TYPING DONE on iBM In home. 3 AND 3 ROOM apartmonts, from —'--i. can 642-0268 ACCURACY PERSONNEL Specializes in female placement the suburban area. Our employers pay the fee and are always looking tor gale who have the ability to advance lo executive positions. Coma In today and put your applications In tor (A bettor posl- 1500 N. WOODWARD BETWEEN IS A 1$ MILE 642;3050 ADJUSTER-TRAINEE Positions open for aggros young man. In an exciting car as staff representative. Corns CLERK. Get e professional < on lift! Got $340. Call King, 334-1471, Snelllng A Sm EX-SERVICEMEN Personnel, OSHIOO,' ENCiNEElT T A H ROOFING. Free estimates. Hot tar and shingles. NO JOB TOO SMALL. 425-S674. Sand-Gravel-Dirt * sand GRAVEL, dirt reasonable, 333-1201 or 574-1439, ANOTGRAVEL, till dirt-and top soil, 403-1655 otter 5._______ fg:___ Scrap MBtal LB.-l TON, copper, brass, alum., radiators, batteries, free pick-up. 1 AM-fPM, 7 dayt. 473-8659. jy,____Snow Plowing -1 SNOW PLOWING, 24 hour service. FE 5-4989. Jerry Miracle. ILARKSTON ROOFING snowplow Ing, 473-1227. min. mn Get this really hot onel S14,000. Call Dev-Lee, 3^2471,Jne!llnB A Snelllng. FIGURE GAL for flit gal wh countsl Gol $324. Call Mary Brldgaa, 334-2471, Snelllng A Snell-Jng.______ GENERAL OFFICE. Good general skills, ability to deal with people gats It I $320. Call Ann Carter, 334-2471, Sntlllng A Snelllng. GENERAL OFFICE $300-$425 Varied Interesting duties for high school grad who con type 40-50 words per mlnuto with • fast growing corp. Call International Personnel, 401-1100, 1010 W. r- INDUSTRIAL SALES FEE PAID t applications being t Is soaking axp. Insulation, weilboard____________I furnaces Installed. $5 per hour. 4: t CARPENTER, flooring. - need ktfs. Cash ... lots or acroage to support larging building program, £. rls A Son Realtors. 474-0324. Apartmonts, Unfurnithed 38 OOMS, full bath, 1 come, wo pats. 343-3649. ram. Call Dor- 5 hqurs it WCW Want to Sell? Wb Hava buyers galore Financing No Problem J. A. Taylor Agency, Inc. 7722 Highland Rtf, (M-St), . Dally OR 4-0304 _ Evbs. EM\3-7S44 WANTED LISTINGS': Wo haYe clients for Income and single dwelling homes, we will be glad — Lincoln Jr. High _______ . Gaorpa Gary, Coordinator. 0 DOWN $400 om, basement, l1 1 1377 Charrylaw $109 PER MONTH WALTON PARK MANOR 35 Min.- to Dowi Dally knd Sun Except Thurj. thinking df°selHngl>*cell’ uslV*U ,f* JOHNSON 12 1704 S. Telegraph_FE 4-2533 fe AParfmen^f' Furnished 37 — 1 BEDROOM, UPSTAIRS, DULTS ONLY, 1 bedroom, b living rooms dining <8$ kitehtn ai 2 private entrances. Heat stovi refrigerator furnlshad, Watt il s pm, r American Heritage APARTMENTS rtment living at its best, lo t location. Clean alac. ti Rent Roomi 4 ROOM With cooklne prlvllegi “ I anti, ~ ROOM, 2 MEN, twin beds,- prlva entrance, parking, 140 State St. SLEEPING Ofoom, man, .Pontiac. 852-4959 SLEEPING ROOMS FOR RENT. ______ _ 14IV1 N. Saginaw____ SLEEPING ROOM AND garajj Mjl'r Mall. FE S-5704,________‘ SEVILLE MOTEL, air conditioned, carpeted, TV, telephone, mar service, $40 per week, WOodwan and Mile._____________________ SLEEPING' Room lit private home" FE 2-9841 l _______1 SLEEPING Room for ma'h near St BEDROOMS. NEAR MOTT tchopl. Alum, aided, double let. New iw, newly ddcarated. immediate possession. City water. Located j| 1730 Mott St, 013,910, $1W0 down. 3 AND 4 BEDROOMS IN WATERFORD .. IMMEDIATE POSSESSION , Variety of floor giant, mortgages available far qualified buytrs. 3 BEDROOMS, m b. rsq.i Pontiac, 332-1666. __ 1 BEDROOM, UTILITIES fl - SIOO dap. 363-1044. BLOOMFIELD MANOR •hurtI 1 & 2 BEDROOM APTS. c, dap. carpttlng,r°rdrapes!>Yr»7pi?ances ■nishad,! ° *2246 WOOROW WILSON ------- Mlddlebelt off Orchard Lake I Cali FE 5-7407. Business Service :OR ALL AROUND JANITORIAL /ORK AND LANDSCAPING CALL INTERNATIONAL JANITOR SERVICE 1 8-4410 after 5. 1C 2 AND 3 ROOM i decorated. BVF baby lartmant. Newly hing furnished, ___ 3-9724 after 2. ROOMS ON BUS . line, close to Drtsimaking 6 Tailoring17j ALTERATIONS AND TAILORING' e.,jfap. rag. 335-0293. avarythli ». $130 p " mY home. 051-1135. 3 LARGE ROOMS, adults 01 Moving and Trucking LIGHT HAULING,„ >, FE 0-3150, 22 * . entrance, furniture In excellen condition, utilities furnished, nd children welcome. Dep. req. Fror _____________________________ 132.60 per wk. 334-1002._ Painting and Decorating apartmen^call after ; custom painting, reas. rates. I FlaRgB" Rooms' and“bath, carpeted, rlsfaction guaranteed.J35-2003. | ROOMS AND BATH, CUSTOM PAINTING Deer Procuring 27 COMPLETE DEER PROCESSING, children niddle-age< tors, FB 5 ____ ..... 2 AND 3 ROOMS with bath, utilltlee. OR 3-2954. I urns, adults only. Call 335-0904. ROOM BASEMENT APARTMENT, everything furnished, suitable for 1 or 2 working man, private an- 2140. . Princeton. 134-1134 c •A COMPLETE PROCESSING OP DEER. Bear and moose. CALL 373-6155 Wanted Household Goods 29 MADISON HEIGHTS 32448 DOLLY MADISON DR. PH0NME J85T-1125 EFFICIENCY. " DISCOUNT T reliable person. Near Ponti General. 482-0871 aftar S._ EMBASSY WEST l APARTMENTS^ Sec, dapealt. FE 5-4442. ! ROOM AND BATH, Small Cl Welcome, 130 per week. $75 d req. Inquire at 273 Baldwin A< 3 ROOMS AND BATH, p Wanted Miscellaneous 30 COPPER, BRASS, RADIATORS, ■ starters and generators. C. Dlxsdn, OR 3-5849. ' ____________ TOP PRICES paid for all used furniture and unwanted articles.) 373-0382. WANTED TRIUMPH BONNEVILLE,1 recked, or needing work. Make offer. FE J-3116. __________, Wanted to Rent 32 MAN WITH LARGE family and dog needs immediately house unfurnished, 20 ml. radius cf Pan. Has good ref. lived In same house 7 yrs. Good steady |ob, landlord sold home. 343-8905 or 338-9445. SHOP FOR CONSTRUCTION Scenery needed. Minimum IS foot calling, 2466 sq. foot floor space, 226 electric wiring, hot and cold running water. Heat, lavatory, loading door and ample parking I ROOMS. Everything private, cou- ple only, raf. FE 4-705L_ I ROOMS,, NICELY FURNISHED, near Crescent Lake, mt Lake, prefer wor ir single, $100 dap., S per weak. 481-2504. AND 4 ROOM APARTMENTS' Auburn Haights, S35 and $40 a wW ADC and Welvare welcomed, $106 dep. FE 2-4935.____ 3 ROOMS A Bath, nicely furnished, clean, near General Hospital, $95 mo. with 850 dep. Adults mbs *•“ 6944.____________________________ ROOMS, BATH, Mtrrlod couple rnlshad. Children welcome fro -------- c- deposit. 335-2134. year lease...Fljasali ROOMS, S3S PER' WEEK, 575 •» 377-2000. Ext. deposit. 673-5491. deposit. 673-5491.___ f-'/Tttt:... t ------------- -li ROOM PRIVATE BATH s Shars Living Quarters 33 trance, isswoss._____________________. negotiable. S.S.S. Canterbury Apatlments Opposite St. Joseph Hospital And the New CK——- New She: balcony, pool, carpet, hi dltiona. Sorry, no children Rooms with Board !PRIVATE ROOM IN LOVI i; with good Southern coo Tel»Huron, for gentlema | 1828. gjj ! RETIRED Elds I try home> got ■ Rent Okfittf 1575 SQUARE F basement, extra tHI .... i eu±r*Whfr*i«w brick, basement, qarpetlng and NELSON BLDG. CO. WE WILL TELL IT LIKE IT IS CALL ANY TIME- OR 34191 _ 3 BEDROOM. Partial basement, aluminum siding, garaga, lot 150x350, $6,000 down. 625-3045. 3 BEDROOM, 1^ BATHS, large kit, by owner, 624-54ji0.______ 7 ~ROOM FURNISHED^ with ^exN* W ~'*37 SOOTH JESSIE ^ 5 BEDROOM-VACANT SELLER PAYING COSTS Exceptional B room colonial, nawly • con. | APPROXIMATELY 3,066 SQ. — Waterford Twp. High traftk .m. i Showroom and offices. Ideal lor caroatlno store or the Ilka. Will __- ranting a portion. Call'$100 Oft Dixie Highway . . . 473-9669 DOLLY MADISON APARTMENTS | From $145 ioI mo> _________|______ basement, oil heet. FHA appraised, , — •— J|^n^}Jyn“n • 342-8400 ^RJHURJI. KING_ WILL MOVyou into” tRTs ly Income, full basement, gas L excellent Investment, 814,000. ... CalIJReyJoday. 674-4101. Sir; 1317 HOPKINS — 3 BlEDROOM," DUimina R ’ ’' i BRICK RANCH, NEAR TRANS- -------------- PORTATION AND SCHOOLS. 35S- Rent Business Property 47-m[ Q77o, 562-6264. .. . I X 50' BUILDING FOR $109 PER MONTH lice, perking W. Huron" FE 3*7968.1 WALTON PARK MANOR >00 SQUARE FT. S T 6 BUILDING 3n M-59. Exce 62^41^0/ 673-6533."___ “OFFICE SPACE FOiTREfiT'* OFFICE FOR RENT, R TUN IT Y—FOR FAMILIES HAYDEN REALTY "BRICK STORE BUILDING” $uo per mo.. Call Dick DIXIE and~ Holly Rds7 30 I 2546^ ^ C°mm>rC * » UNION LAKE, 3200 sq. fiinhnum one hildren, no pe._. . _ ....... el-Huron Shopping Cental llghland Rd., Apt. "" ' firs. Schultz, betwM x 70' and, ALUMINUM BUNGALOW, I Idgs. 625-1 bedrooms, large kitchen, dinette iebUphone! attiSfhed9' garage, 'l06x200' lot te. _kinone , .L# pr|WTleges. Vacant, 11461 i electric neat, 5 O'NEIL utilltfes furnished no drinkers, ref._ PRESIDENT MADISON APARTMENTS From $145 E? 31950 WHITCOMB EAST OF JOHN R BETWEEN 13 8. 14 PHONE 588-6300 UPPER APARTMENT, WHY NOT TRADE? light). diip. 42M664.' 2300 SQUARE FEET . GMG I 4, 14 MILE plantings and tons of rock terraces, ^ -j—« «■ i3op______te Winisiiv V 4 roomi AI Very teitetully decanted ana T V J n IX te entrance,{carpeted, basement fully.tiled, 2-car, X X/1 LX lx ____ __,j. Pay awn utilities. Apply ------------- .... 38 Carter off Wlda Track after 833.906. 3:30. Responsible couple only, must1 ih reference.____________________I WALLED UKE AREA ?I,WE BUY 10 474-0363 WALTON SQUARE dm b.ths.n Apartments kitchen 1675 Perry Rd. North ^kTenciThSm”^'! 373-1400 or 338-1606 SgSSjB'ffite ' ipartments being built In the^area. | Siljf0' '* t,'oul<, b* ® p Comfort, and beauty are combined, WclLsneY.1,0" convenience V'!nd A LITTLE PRIVATE .Ivata^belconles, KINGDOM Dining room! e office. - ' AUBURN-EAST BLVD. AREA 3 bedroom ranch with garage. Can be yeura for approximately $466> Monthly payments under 1106, UUINGER 4744)319_________________474-0166 l-l ALUMINUM SIDED : a basement, complete on your ioz I. only 816,500. TIMES REALTY, 623-v 6606. Fogtlsangar 6 Put rail A SALE IS ONLY S GOOD AS YOUR FINANCING. • sailing your_ heme?^ L«t ut ■ 332-4395. '_„l PIANO TUNING - REPAIRING ‘"CLINIC WAR^HOUSITHBIO OSCAR SCHMIDT . FE 2-5217 ■8 carpet- 423-1694.^^^^^^— Ctrpgt Cleaning CARPETS AND U P H O L S T ALL BRICK REPAIRS, . jgflg.fa y.——•— —— pointing, t 1-A RELIABLE PAINTING, Inter | exterior. Free »st. 334-4594. jA-j PAINTING - WORK GUARAN-■I TEED. Free-----'a ““ LIGHT TRUCIGNG, reasonable rates, 336-3392 or 332-2151._ LIGHT AND HEAVY TRUCKING ' blsh, fill dirt, grading and vel and fcont-and loading. F A-1 QUALITY PAINTING • l washing, rngaggablMMigll 426-4423. Painting, plaster repair, Free Est. y, Work guarantaad. Reasonable :k CALL ANYTIME ___________452-5763 Ml&W PAINTING and remodeling, - j free estimates. 493-8775 or 693-6672. ^PAINTING, WALLPAPERING, com-i' ——& residential. CaH 482- EBKINT: BLOCK, BRICK repair. 673-7271 or UL 2-4751. CEMENT FLOORS, raaidihtlel A ____________________________________________ commercial, new 8, repair, work pajntiNG, PAPER REMOVAL, that cannot be excelled. Bert: wa|| cleaning, Sandusky Brothers, 1 C6fftft)lli». 391-2*00. _ - I $$4-$54$ UL 2-1196. ' bOMMtkdlAU INDUSTRIAL ANO QUALITY Work assured. Painting, residential brtck_and,cemwit work. | papering, well washing. 673-2672. SPRAY PAINTING GUINN’S CONST. CO. 391-2S71 FLOORS, DRIVEWAYS, PATIOS. jfC. T. W. BIVMCd, 4S2-3373. hoUREO BASEMENTS AND FOUN-ditwnS, will jrtvo 1 tnmedlota service, 336-4991 er 1-4348044. DAN'S CERAMIC TILE, Slat# t marble sills. Install In horn.. — Old or now. Frai est. 474-4341, 425- .. ■ ■. "'KATE-MARBLE NEW AND REMODEL WORK ADVANCE 674-641 32 YEARS axperlence, ^ papering __ 52-2940 Plntering Service :ONDRA PLUMBING l> HEATING. Sewer/water lines - Fa $4)443. to * Heating. \ ■746177. ■ ml SCHULTZ PLUMBING 4 Heating, Sales & Rentals Used Bobcat Loaders ! "'iicenaid maitw piumbar. Burton Equipment Co. I !i?g,*lr v^olatlans"1 corrJSfad". "* “ —-*•- 152-3553 between 9 li 11 3JS4I427. Truck Rental Trucks to Rent VS-Ton Pickups IW-Ton Stake TRUCKS-TRACTORS AND EQUIPMENT Sami Trailers Pontiac Farm, and Industrial Tractor CoC 825 S. WOODWARD FE 4-0461 , FE 4-14 Open Dally Including Sunday ______ _____ Flit this . future! (300. Call Sharrl Brookt 3342471. Snelllng 4 Snelllng. d PEOPLE GREETERS $70—UP Fun |ob with typing, and publ contact. A busy spot witty* t< company. Call lnt*rnatleiti Personnel, 681-1100, 1080 W. Hurg rnPUBLIC RELATIONS ... 2 Yrs. College and degree peopl 2-j many Interesting positions. Mo — I (*NTEl?NATIONAL PERSONNEL 180 S. Woodward, B'.ham 442-8248 ECE FTf O N 1ST.! B vancamant In tharp ________ ... career type gall S446. Call Mary Brldgas, 1342471, SMiling * —" GET CASH AND Avoid f_______________ for appraisal call agent 674-1445. GET MORE CASH for your equity if behind In payments. CALL MV AGENT 681-0374 ^ top1 INVESTOR WANTS HOME - | * condition, eny lo ■ Bfi| agent, 674-2876, after S, 338-___________| ^ red■ * Ffe’s-2642?^ °f 2 BE DROOM Home" DM. Basement, north tide,! BY“OWNER ON LINCOLA$FlfSi74- 45, before 6, 674^4123. j{22» T5S ah thVt'. nWrtPd k iwon bedroom brick, living room, dln- 3M HOUbewment,I then**sft^back ^end* en^oy^ this*3? b?semen?m2 cer^oarago^paved INVESTORS BUYING houiei need repairs. CALL MY AGENT ________ *332-0126 _____dap., raq. FE 5-4442. EFFECIENCY APARTMENTS now! dap. ------.. .... --- ----- 1300 chile kitchen, dining full bgsgment. isas on quiet resident si 674 Stirling. Occupancy Dc 1150.00 per month. Requlr end last month's rent plus ■ Swner ___Jlnance. 616-947-1489. CLARKSTON,' 5149 STEVENS I 681-0374; Opdyke*Rd., at University' KiNI?ETHP*G?**H., 625-2020. living Call now, 674-2222. X'l 1969 MODEL CLOSE OUT let- MANY TO CHOOSE FROM :ur!ty REALTOR Som* • RAY O'NEIL REALTY AD,1 3520 PONTIAC LAKE ROAD i Any lim*. coneti._______ 1 214 ------—Smfy Choice West Side location lifior "0" DOWN Lotus Lake schools, BBg(ggagjSeg| bedroom home, al landscaped, amy in yrs!, eld. Near phone Sima Realty, Michigan, 517-/99-3341. oearoom aium. ranen with |CALLflMARK 332-0124 -A ALUMINUM Sided, 2 bedroom,) largo family washing 3005. arage, paved REAGAN REAL ESTATE . > L Opdyka_________373-0114 . i CHRISTMAS . ———!$ ROOMS AND BATH. $30 w _ 332-2858.____ - 5 ROOM HOUSE, basement/ garage.' Petroll a. 261-7396 -3 BEDROOM,! NICE .APARTMENT, S35 _ S50_dep^edunsjinlyM:E 4-008 TWO AND THREE ROOMS/ " irnlture, private entrance, bath, i lundproofad, washing facilities, 2 illdren welcome. Ptom $32.50.: „ D ., , „ . „ , „ ■■■■ ec. deposit. All utilities Included.! TRANSPORTATION AND ^SCHOOLS. 353-0770, 562-4244. , APPLY AT -4015 EDMORE, Dreyton! -Woods, Drayton Plains. Apartments, Unfurnished 381 Birmingham, 1257 davis - u ----------------...... ..... -nd woodward. 3 bedroom,. 2-BEOROOM, BY OWNER, furnish-) PE $-7176 OR 4-0343 SPOT CASH FOR YOUR EttUITY - pPB|i OR OTHER, FOR QUICK ACTION CALL NOW. HAOSTROV REALTOR, OR 4-0351 OR EVE- NINGS FE 4-7005.________ TRANSFERRED, NEAT 2 OR ! BEDROOM HOUSE. CALL MY AGENT_________4S1-0374 TRANSFERRED '■edroom home i.... f Pontiac. Priced around $ I minutes WE! WILL! BUY! 1 AND 2 pats, references, 9 BEDROOM APARTMENT Auburn and Crooks area, working adults, sac. dap, 473-3929 er 673-5443 -"jj BEDROOM $145, fully carpatad, swimming — stove. Ilf bedroom $1 i, air condition ■i, rafrlgarator < Your equity — cash direct as soon as title work Is < end deal Is closod. No gin Call now and ^ anyone^ < Remember, a ouleker sale may' make you tomorrow! WHEN YOU SEEK OUR SERVICE "JOIN THE.MARCH TO TIMES" Times Realty ' I 5890 DIXIE HIGHWAY 623-0600 Riaftor^ . Ogon 9-9 Dally 2GEDROOM, COM utilities. 363-0604. NICE ROOMS, ?742l: furniture, tingle, :ker sale today 2 BEDROOM, NEWLY Dacaratad. batter purchase »l*c- range, rtfrig., fine neighborhood. $145, a mo. Sea 4$M&* If ROOMS first floor. ID BATH, near t-iinar Gody, rat. req. aep. *100, $35 par wk„ utilities, furrl., limit 1 chlld. 373-1185. V- 4E0qM4fc'-BAtH' ' i tnqulra 240t Qpdykt, Apt, 12 \ I ’ ROOM UNFURNIBHED \ FLAT, partly carpatad, close in, adults only, working ,134-3370. condition. HOUSES ON 2 ACRES, 2 Gene Good, 620-1963. truly gracious baths, family ..........I I and door wall, a 21 toot kitchen ' and dining area, plus full basement and attached 2 car garage. Sealed glass windows and marble silJ-tCalf,O'Nall Realty, 674-2222. !~ CLARKSTON”M-V5, *165 MONTHLY FHA. Naw lake front, 3 bad room brick, bullt-lns, expanding attic. ' Realty. 427-3840, 627-3825, 253-0770. s'Apartments, Unfurnished 38 Apartments, Unfurnished 38 SAM WARWICK HAS — In Sylvan! ‘ aka, 4 bedrooms, naw brick trl-i\, air condltioningy I a k a alleges. $400 mo. Rent Rooms EMPLOYED YOUNG rivlleoes '332-4782, CLEAN WARM ROGM. '• •japlnaw. F E 2-0709. CARPETED ROOM FC quiet young man. 338-288 LOVELY ROOM FOR 1, 543 V NICE ROOM FOR 2-8120. . FE 3-7111. __ j lVlna NICE ROOM WITH Sit chan privileges ter single girl 11-25, located haar Northern High Ichool; W2-7484.__________________ ftlFlTJlD GENTLEMAN, prlvtrfa entrance, west .side. FE 2-3517. ROOM FOR MIDOLE-AGED nan, near North and plants.'.FE 2-1127, ROOM- AND KITCHEN prlvllagas, nice quiet homa. 482-4854. RIDGEMONT TOWNHOUSE APARTMENTS i • One. two and Three Bedrooms / •Roper Gos Ranges Hotppint Refrigerators • Carpet and Drapes • All Utilities Except Electric • Air-Conditioning by Hotpoint • Swiming Pool and Pool House NO Fits ALLOWED CHILDREN O.K. Between East Boulevard and Madison-2 blocks from Main gate of Pontiac Motors, ^57 N> Perry St. \ Phone 332-3322 ’ \ A Open Dally. 10 A M. axcopt Wednesday - * Xfr—10 THB PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1069 For Wont Ad«,t Dial 3344981 Cash for Your Equity HACKETT 363-6703 BCAKRtfON ROAD AREA, brick bedrooms, Ivy cor garage. CALL MARK 332-0124 491 Sait Homo* closing coots, CALL MARK , 332-0124, week days OPEN CUTE S BEDROOM RANCH inw*!i& —fl*--n "“UnMETt, : JflR Clarkston School Area NEW MOO SQ. FT. brick trl-lov “ * MM' site, 1 if— — Hagstrom ENJOY The Festive Season N A NEW HOME THAT WILL MAKE EVERY DAY A DAY OF FESTIVITY. Featuring the moderh specious kitchen end s dining ores, built tor Sunday . dinners. 3 good sized bedrooms with ample closets, full bsse- ecrl*" corns?" »ltl5 Union Lk. Rd. 343-7o0l. ^ \ \ Re^tv/With Option to Buy' RANCH, fun ERICK At ALUMINUM — 0; $2500 I yob need to taN over, an 2-bedroom home on i > of Ponflac, then Tow1 payments on existing j 021,400 - 3 BEDROOM BRICK TRI- brick A ALUMINUM - 3 LEVEL. ItA bathe. 9 rmr narano PiHS5._~____________Si LEVEL, iff decorating. [fed IS Highland Rd. (M-S0) sxt to Franks Nursery 674-3175 o enswer call FE 5-3240 carpeted, lake privileges Waiter's Lake. Reduced $35,000.00 for IMMEDIATE OC- ■ CUPANCY. r 4734400 Sylvan 402-2300 , CLOSE TO GENERAL MOTORS, good 2 bedroom house with 1V4 bath, dining room A full basement, only RAY »47W!* RAY $100 KELLER II now Homo prices art plus wi I ld “HAYDEN REALTY 13434404 10735 Highland Rd. (M49) ..........is Wssf of Oxbow Lake ' LEACH NORTH SIDE: 3 bedroom home full besentent. Land contract terms. Immediate possession. CLARKSTON SCHOOLS: 3 bedroom ranch, walk out basomtnt, hr* water host,' many other extras. 5925 HIGHLAND RD. (M-59) PB 84018 674-2142 673-M69 Into a 2 oi excellent conditl 874-4101 large lo raised. CALL 611-0370. GMC home in Pontiac,_____ ____ . Ray Today) 474-4101. SHARP 3 BEDROOM RANCH thatj ^ma'ln'c'lt! features full basement, paved , Keltwr street, fenced yard, and only Huror $18,000 FHA. Call Ray today, 474- JEJ'- 1SH2B 4101VP41. _____LAPEER | SYLVAN LAKE FRONT : ldMl for I 4 BEDROOMS, IV* baths, ga* heat,! £"£*dream with 2 extra Iota on street behind. ---Vacor iAR MALL - TEL-HURON: rge 4 room homo with lull sement, family siza dining im, new gas neat, new roof,! rpetlng, breakfast nook, garage, II trade tor small 2 bedroom 2 FE 8-4018 474-2142 673-91 OPEN KINZLKR AERO North suburban 2 bedroom brick and frame ranc In excellent condition, o r I c „ fireplace In living roam, large, rear porch, 2 car gsrhge. Underg— 500 gallon fuel tank. Fruit 1 IpockM lot, pertly fenced, cellent neighborhood with privilege*. Call for deteiis. 61 OR FHA TERMS 1 lym 're IRWIN TRI-LEVEL MODELS tufTbe garage. 682-2211 MARGARET MCCULLOUGH, Realtor 4143 Cass-Ellzabeth Lk. Rd. Open 2-7 MLS Closed Sun. HEARTHSIDE DELUXE CUSTOM Lovely S b m bathi fireplace, family ropi ..itercom *y carpeting and garbage LOOKING FOR SOMETHING DIFFERENT? SinjlpV baths, parte lad ...... ............. watt te wall fireplace, large wooded lot with lake privileges on Blmbetn Like. 221 West Walton TIMES $140 PER MONTH* 3 Large Bedrooms Lake Privileges. Welled .Lake Schools, dr1"1® storms. t closets, spacious iy Payment Open For Inspection pally (except Wed.) A4 PM Sat.-Sun., neon-SPM or by AppY. Direction: Take Commerce RC. West to Cerroll Lake Rd„ Ned Comfort Homes, Inc. >AYS , MODEL . EVES. 4224550 i 3434476 3230274 51-1533 or 473-07221 SUBURBAN RANCH Custom built and In nice wooded I custom area west of city. 5 extra spedous| 3 bad RANCH-on - lot. This I throughout oi JOSEPH SINGLETON REALTOR 42f Orchard Lk. _______335-811 LAKE PRIVILEGES Elizabeth Lake Estates Is tt location of this charming » on street behind, or good offer, orj good - incoi— — amily or h. m e garage. 17,900. < 24, approximately 2 EXCELLENT BUY ! hava • beautiful completely! I 2 bedroom bungalow, witn o separate dining room, end well to wall carpeting throughout. 3 for lust 5500 down and payments of 5)25 0 month. Located on Pon- -tiac's North side. NEED ROOM? WARDEN REALTY YORK SNYDER, KINNEY & BENNETT 1 Roadj right ” Also ranches and colonials as low as 514,220 plus lot. GIROUX REAL ESTATE 5331 HIGHLAND ROAD 173-7537_______4734200 HOWARD T. KEATING ■mm_________I 1V» baths. 24' room with fireplace and farm kitchen, Naw carpeting, drape ' and txtras. 2 car garage an lots vacant for I m m • d 11 possession. PHAor Gl forms. RANCH—FHA OR Gl Daljghtrul 24'^x ejj/Sb**i ir recreation. I oak FHA commltmant. Gas heat, dose 1 shopping. Wo hava 1 ..Itment. We also hat homes to salad from. 2W c fireplace, formal dining nicely planned kitchan with Ins and table space. Full 21 attached garage, *32,200. Possible Land Contract an this brick ranch situated or well landscaped corner lot * circular . drive. Thero ere bedrooms end 2 bet carpeted "attached room, and separate paneled dining room, for Just 5500 down and payments of $145 per month. CARTER & ASSOCIATES I 4744127________ ' 4743121 LAKE PRIVILEGES -young, 3 bedroom ran gas heat, full basement, garage, 120* lot. Onlf batter hurry on this ona TIMES REALTY Otfsi bedrooms, basement, siding, complete on y HIITER to havo take properties COSWAY REALTORS 681-0760 ! SNOOPY SAYS- LOOKI We have 4 new, 3 bedrooms and Nth, aluminum sldng, Nice lot. 517,500. gi or fha.'Take your “Everyone should start the day with 30 push-ups, but Basement; LergS hA“' ggg 4| Multple "PHOTO" Listing; Service JOHN KINZLER, Realtor $212 Dixie Hwy. _______423-0335 GILES” LAKE FRONT 1W acres, with 150 foot frontage, < PUng Lake, Nautlfol 7 room, brii drapes end corner fireplace, finished basen—* —■> *«' garage. *35,500. .aka privilege^ lot with treo*. $4600. luslnai* frontage on busy highway, 5150 par ft. REALTOR • 2147 ORCHARD LAKE RD. 334-3523 334-3524 Eves. 482,3054 Of 482-2524 | LAZENBYI fireplace. Attached 2 car ga..... Paved street and fenced Nat yard. Offered at 520,400 on ' ' 2yetl-U-Way “LOOK! i purchase of tha Biwiiiiiiviii bungalow Buhb near Oakland University. Include 3_ bedrooms, p o end *more for *21,250.°) appointment today! SUPERIOR QUALITY Iff Nth materiel* end con Our new model priced „ . .. *16,950 on yotir lot. Offers more for your hard---— i *" i Include: 3________ formica kitchan. J, L. Hudson talking m AND PONTIAC A aturaf fireplaot'and CLARKSTON AREA !>• '"roughout, much ™™n*nd FOR THE LARGE FAMILY, ! heat, m car attached garege. Minted Inside end out. vacant, 11450 down FHA. CALL 5114370. GMC FARRELL NORTH PONTIAC Nlco 3 bedroom, 2 story, FHA provod homo with full basen garage, fenced yard, gas t NEAR NORTHERN HIGH ours. ART DANIELS RAY possession. See this or MODEL CLOS^-OUf; located Ml White Lake Township, 1200 ft. of spacious living am, fully carpatod, I Vi baths, priced for nulck salt. FHA terms available., Cali 551-2726 attar 6 p.m. 674-4101 OH O' 6, ___Bllmheth La 619,500 on land contract tarm*. ORION TOWNSHIP - sharpy 3 siding, gas Usaboard heat ane 2 car attached garage, fenced yard. Thb home la In good condition and can N purchased on FHA term* at only 616,200. VETERANS, zero down, 2 bedrooms, 17' living room, 17' kltchon, gas heat, 46 x 147' lot, Waterford. Only 611,900. Hurry 11 CALL 4614376. GMC Webster-Curtis / KING-PHIPPS AGENCY FARRELL REALTY 1027 i lapeer 421-2545 1405 N. OPDYKE RD. Pontiac * PARENTS SUITE 3734552 I Consisting of family room with I GOOD NEWS 1 Just listed this lovely lakefront. home. Upper level consists of 3 homo on Lokland Lake. Three' bedrooms,, lVi baths, formal living Ndrooms, basement, family roopt : room, dining In kitchen, on a with fireplace, 1 Vi car garage and beautiful Sllvar Lake Estates l ‘ quick possession. Assumo the ox- with privileges i Istlng land contract with the equity Extras. Extras. Vr,or ^.n^1 W WATERFORD REALTY 'Nall Realty, 474-2222.No. 2-: Call 5 a.m. to 11 p.m. 473-1273 625-2451 673-6 DeMassellis Bldg. Consultants, Inc. "Birmingham Area" J FHA TERMS 3384325 $23,950.00 Immaculate home in City of Bin Ingham;' featuring «*r< bedrooms, ceramic tiled bal n r carpeting, draws, flnlshad bas Oxford - Orion ment, rear garage and locah Lake privileges tot 91 *50 on paved an e paved street. « di street, near Oxford, 44000. 51000 , poMeUtan, ____. down ; Yau have to be shown through th Lake'front lot, on Tan Lake'with > beauty. Call now. access, by Nat to 4 adjoining lakes, SALES BY —,500,„*2500 down. DeMASSELLIS REALTY (formerly A&G Realty) Highland Rd. (M40) Nth carpeted, large vestibule entrance closet, and much ■ Call for how can you do push-. j wrai..'Qiick wh85„your nos# flets in th» SMALL EQUITY OUT wa” r For this lovely 2 bedroom Baldwin, new carpeting throughi _ ‘ ", „ Including bathroom and kifch ms. . So fust follow your not#,to ' — ............ ' i'^RO. 6824080.' Attar these fin# offerings! I *14,io6 don't miss out cell today! Horses ‘N' Houses 2.9 acres west of DavliNrg. New barn. 4 Nx stalls. 10, If. x 19 ft. with a 16 • ft. aisle. Zoned agricultural. May keep hortea. 326 ft- on asphalt road; The house Is a 3 bedroom colonial, I Vi baths. UjHMIllhMl "It of attic atorage. mace. Hot el r ireplace and fixtures. Extra arpttlng. Plumbing, saptlc rater supply adequate for family | Multiple Listing Service f 7. 68 ft. well. Good pump, 200 ----------E-------------------- : 0* nw septic field drainage 1 Including bath New cupboards vanity In Ntt 814,160 don't m MR. CLEAN Will N out of a fob basement and 1-car garage, I6'x20' living room ■*--bedrooms art Hardwood an< and scrNns, i__ ___ ... __ ____ Claude McGruder Realtor 3710 EjlzaNth Life Rd. 482-87201 SEEK OUR SERVICE YOU ft ' i -f SUBURBAN AREA . "join the march to timeS" real family home j Times Realty This 3 bedroom alum, qnd brick *****'•»*' • ranch has 6 rooms, newly carpeted 5890 DIXIE HIGHWAY living and dining room, ihe bright 4234400 jjajjj * * **-— — ■ 'tcWn hr' ‘—idfo boards, lVi baths, garage t tra storage bullt-on, large Id landscape and fences rea Can N purchased on FHA with low down payment. nicely ■ yerd. m Sunday 14 Von-Hall RANCHER /Excellent condition goes with i juSSfir hnnea " I xrnp rarnfttftd liv-l & ASSOCIATES, INC. CLARKSTON AREA — mini ranch, —-------it and lot. Prlcad at -HA terms. Call early OA 8-2515 WILLIS M. BREWER REAL ESTATE 423-83431 Farmhouse on 80 Acres ANNETT OFFERS /GAYLORD Good out Wlldnngs. Fences. House rented at present j > COWBOYS & COWGIRLS Your horses are w»l«m» on this property. Nice lot 19,500. Immediate LET'S TRADE i country * CALL ’RAY TODAY AVON GREEN'S LAKE Large ranch with 119 ft. ot lake frontage. 3 Ndrooms, living room, extra large kitchen, oak floors throughout, gas forced air * Newly decorated Inside and SEMINOLE HILLS - * LOTS Beauflfol home! Immediate possession on ■'•I Plus guesr or caretaker's house. brick Colonial, spacious. LR ........ Good out buildings. Fsncos. House flrepfoce,^ .formal DR. larga K °' ared *°r rWlnB- U,,Bd **, lavatory '“on "W ‘flror,*"* I Ndrooms. Basement, roc. room. 2 car garagt. <24,500, forma. !WE WILL TRADE I Realtors 28 E. Huron St. house* and Sew barn' W'4o”icros". owl“ * I I location : ACRE OF r’buHd* o?nselL‘ main blacktop t| $13,950 GAYLORD !NckE 0R10M More Horses! scHRAM'itfv; 338-0466 , 1 Va C FHA TERMS This 4 bedroom family home Is located on the North end of Ron-, tlac. has carpeted entrance hall, large formal dining room S> living remodeled,! carpet!— Sale Homes 49 Sale Hornet 49 y/E WILL GUARANTEE THE SALE OF YOUR HOME THREE BEDROOM raised ranch off beautiful White Lake. Exposed walkout basa- Bxti’a large tot. possession. *28,50( NOW I #52 JUST $21,500 I decor. Bull! I A MESSI It NEEDS FAINT, II needs scrubbing l But—It has 2 units, It has a Nsement, It Wto 4 FUTURE I It I*/a i good Investment fir a rZroFat, qt Inst <12.900 with lass than for rozofflng, and for a1 price 52,000 down. CALL NOWl *15 EXTRA BUILDING SITE INCLUDED with tt your next home. Than ra model this home and sail a a profit. Available on Con I basement. City « n. good condition. CALL T DISTINCTIVE homo with Named ceilings In ENGLISH TUDOR: 9-room living and dining rooms, o custom fireplace in family room, 3 bln, bedrooms,/ 2'/a Nths, dressing rbom oft ttia master bedroom. Near Oakland University. Owner leav-stata. Prlcad to SELL! #77 NEW MODEL OPEN SAT. AND SUN. 2-5 P.M. or by appt. s y, and attached . garage. SEE THIS TODAYJ! REALTOR PONTIAC CLARKSTON ROCHESTER UNION LK. 83*7161 625-244T 651-8518 3634171 TUCKER VACANT 2 STORY FAMILY HOME, Southside Pontiac, 3 bedrooms, full Nsement, oil Nat, ni cer garage. $50 down. ST. JOE AREA ATTRACTIVE 2 BEDROOMS with expansion attic, Bassett Street. Full Nsement, auto, boat, nice TUCKER REALTY 703 Pontiac State Bank Bldg. ' 334-1545 BACKUS NORTH SIDE IVAN W. SCHRAM LIST WITH SCHRAM AND CALL THB VAN . till Joslyn - FH 3-947 REALTOR MLI Wideman IT'S CENTS'ABLE - TO BUY INSTEAD OF RENT. You con movi right Into this 3-Ndroom rancher situated on a large lot. Good nortl side location. FHA TERMS -CALL TODAY. WATERFORD AREA Farmhouse, newly aluminum siding, goi Paneling. 4 Ndrooms, Plus unfinished apartmenr i rooms good size. Spacious room. Fireplace. Second partly completed. Needs outside stairway from upper apartment. Gas. Electric, hoi water heater, liood corner location. House and extra lot. $26,500. House and entire corner, 130.600. Cash to land contract of ST6,000. Fine Investment potential would N good corm clinic, restaurant, offices or commercial. Zoned realdi_____ agricultural at present. Clarkston School district. Must N appreciated. 313-625-3298 or 634-9825 C. NELSEY Sales' Agent Davtsburp, Mich. Evening calls welcome CLARK FAMILY HOME S H A Carpeted living and dining r ledgtrock flroplaca, large bright kitcNn, remodeIN 1V4 Nths, -garage. Sea this today) I FE 5-8183 MILFORD. ,S bedroom brick 8, tram* ranch with full basement,' Nat, available for quick oc- NOTHING DOWN Closing costs move y STOUT'S Best Buys Today LARGE FAMILY?— Plenty of room for tho larger family In this big 2-story 7-room bedrooms, Nsomi larage, nestled last of all. a «i„„„ i existing full Nsement, i roxlm iittm ulck possession. SMALL FARM House and Nm located on 40 acres of rolling land, comer Jot. neturel —*— -n proNrty. MOtamor a 1. This Is called "Roaming LIZ 8. RICH _ TN Burtlns art moving fo fjwwrdr "S3SCR33 comfort In this 3 WwmWck Call today! icTheni ATTENTION G.l/s rFSKSfi Close In 4-room ai cupancy. Newer" home ln ’’excellent! vl’cant Abolt lVi1 basement with condition. 2 cor aorooo Pull nrico Newly decoroiea. vacani. rswui lv^-cor garage. La $rO^ *35Mdor,Sm O n tPh“'.1 m^"rYe0U ■ Only St 4*200. payment* include TBI, no closing CLOSING COSTS V,'B!5SS5 ........ Move you In this thro# Ndroom SEMINOLE HILLS-env i Ak-p front rnmmprr, ,w8 ,,ory °l2*r ffnill Freshly, ptlnfod 4-bedroom Capo caCT CIHF .CoH2T.*1c® dining HAKNM^Vacant! i Cod In excellent corner locatlorT fcA->1 3lut .th with CANAL FRONT furnace. Bl-level Colonial with tamtly r rlvlleges. fireplace, walkout basement, kit with NIlMnsi attaqiqd 1 I garage. Tastatully 6y»ratad sq. ft. a Nrgaln at *22,200. Nsement recreation red In JjMtlo, *506.00 moves you I terms. $1000.00 Down plus closing costs movo you In this two Ndroonr ranch home. Located on If* North side near Kennedy Jr. High. Gas HA heat. Garage. Newly decorated. E«Cacal'l MR. ALTON FE 4-5381 Nicholie & Harger^Co. 5SWW. ' Full basement LOWER STRAITS LAKE- Prlvlteges Included with thli 4-room and Nth Nngalow enclosed and Insulated porch. Gas heat, m ■ * • construction. Walled L CLARK REAL ESTATE ,1342 W. HURON ST. 482-8850 Open 94 MLS EASTHAM location, 511,750: FHA dining, a gleaming oak floors, •*- md tile features, . ONLY 117,500. ____IHI ......_ ______| _..■ a, glean: paneled family room.” Encfostdl bath ha* vanity ar back Nrch with patio, 2 car community ^ watar. garagt. Quick occupancy. Can N CALL TODAY, purchased with low down payment. | w ^ REALTOR BACKUS REALTY U12 w. huron it. ngu 32-1323 335-16251 EVE. CALL ___________ ”a-^90 49 Salt Houses "IT'S TRADING TIME" srpet, kitchen wl‘ ____sd In Nek porch. schools and shopping fc RANGED. NORTHSIDE—FHA PRICED TO SELLI Im Nsement. this attractive well kept three, Ndroom hs. Three nice bedrooms, living room 1 large eating area, family room and All this In an excellent _area ctose to • only 824,500. TERMS CAN BE AR- Immaculate foree Ndroom ^ranch^wlth ftjjW. I Features Slarge kitcNn, carpeted living room with fireplace. Seller's moving north and can give feat possession I IMMEDIATE POSSESSION FIVE BEDROOMS . . This lovely quad-level awaits your InsNCtlon. From the foyer vou see a carpeted living room with custom made drapes. The dinette Is convenient to the kitchen which hae all Ntlf-hN.W Nth. Upttairs are tl» carpeted bad- / bedroom has a balcony; on the lov basement™!* tllN^and has,'wJlk-out" door* and a complete bath; air of this on a sodded lot. ASSUME a 6 per cent annual Interest rate. Priced at 841,950.00. TRADE-IN YOUR OLD 'HOMEI IMMEDIATE POSSESSION WATERFRONT. BI-LEVEL Over 2,400 sq. ft. of living area In our NEW ENGLANDER. Three bedrooms, ceramic tile Nths, carpeted kitchen and dining area with Bar-B-Q, Formica cabinet*, dishwasher and selfcleaning oven. Completely finished lower leval wlth walkout door to canal. Two car garage, paved _drlve_Ypu CAN HOME FOR THE HOLIDAYS—CALL FOR || TODAYI WE ARE A CUSTOM BUILDER and Nth, master ire two more bv» ng fireplace. The 4 APPOINTMENT H OME I area, recently, chances are it's a KAMPSEN BUILT Our diversified building ‘ program Is de*l(inN to suit arson and every pocketbook—we have plans, prints— know*Nw that comes from years of experience. Call reality. . , . :1 1071 W. Huron St. LAPEER—42140, I perty. 103 acres and modern 8560, EVES. 724-0270. 644-1540 EVE. 444-8549. -TRAILER . LOTS, excellent location, taka privileges on Barnes, Lake. 3 lots. 11350 terms. Call 444-8540 avoo.,444-4117. METAMORA, ORYDEN AREA, 20 acre horse form, 2 Nrns end gralnery, elec, and water in barn, beautiful 2 bedroom home, formal dining room, largo couhtry kitchen, full b a t e m e n t, glassed-in porch, l car garage, 16 x 22' living room, natural atone fireplace, with Heat-o-Later carpeting, wonderful snowmoblllng country, more land available. 834,500 with IRWIN 5. SONS WILLIAMS LAKE P.L 2 bedrooms, living room an kitchen on one floor, oyer crew, space'. Perfect for retiree or anyone wN wants little main-.tenance. Full price only *10,900. INCOME: Good location, alum, exterior. 2 apt. 4-room and —' " Separata heat Hardwood f I o o modernized. PHJ *22,900. Call to LAPEER 42702, home on 1IA acri ment, 2 porches, 2 Ndroom stone front , 8560 EVES. 7234244, HADLEY home, on sra acres, large kitchen, living room, dining room, glassed-in proch. This Nmo is erchltoctural sound, Nt needs redecorating. Horse Nrn, an excellent Ny, CUtOO. CALL 444-S566, EVES. 444-4117. LAPEER AREA 42480, J 1 acres of land, live stream, trees on back, 2> bedroom home, kitchen with dlfflng area, living room and Nse-ment, 9X12' Shill, soma, equipment. Only 811360. FOR APPOINTMENT CALL 444- ' 8546, EVES. 727-4742. JOHN A. ROWLING, Inc. ■ i REALTOR 122 W. GENESEE, LAPEER ialB Houses BUYING OR SELLING CALL JOHN K. IRWIN & SONS REALTORS 313 West Huron—Since 1925 FE 5-9444 after 5 p.m. 625-4045 COZY AND CLEAN LAKE ORION IS THIS 2-BEDROOM COMPLETELY carpeted homo, l er-garage, nice size lot, Best of 4 [AND CONTRACT. Priced 114,500. LAND CONTRACT brick, duplex, llvlr log room, Kitchen, ft it, tdto of living with IIH Priced $12,900. room, nlco kltchon, : lull Nsement, enclose; yard. A lovely hom FHa terms available. 343-5303 FI 5-7906 5620 Highland I Sals Homes LISTING - SELLING - APPRAISING - BUILDING LOVELY BRICK RANCH With fireplace, recreation room with Nr one 130x245- lot In Weler-ford Twp. This home has many features too numerous tp trwntlon so call today and lit us show you th)* fine home. Let's talk; trade. *28,900. Z M ,/ ZL ' , ' A y; NEAT 2-BEDROOM I , 1 Just off North Perry St. Large tot. Lot* of possIMilflM. Reel flood starter home. J I. Call for land contract details. large kitcNn, full Nsement, i Carpeting, drapes and loads of — Mbuntjn# OMylwb FRUSH0UR REALTY REALTORS - MLS 5730 Williams Lake I FHA SWEETIE!! , See this cute Nngalpw with Vlarga Ndrooms, located In IN Pontiac Northern School District. Featuring mi, aluminum storms end screens, SH carpeting, 2Wcar ga/age, city water -plu? >10 sewer, paved, street and drive, jdget priced at *14,200. McCullough R#alty, Inc. ■ u*o highland rd. plotely furnished. 674-2236 62441400 WARREN STOUT, Realtor Pontiac Walled taka 450 N. Opdyke Rd. 373-11111 REALTOR MLS REALTOR 49 Sale Hemes OXFORD OFFICE STARTER HOME—NOTHING DOWN BETTER HURRY! Near Lake Orion, new get furnace, tone 3 BEDROOMS, FHA TERMS Spacious carpetad living room, axe ment, Immediate possession, ask for I OXFORD LAKE* FRONT The view is briiathtaking, t with finished rec room, t“ tached 2Vh car garege, r #381-E. LET'S TRAOE” BUILDERS MODELS AVAILABLE lUALITY A(ND DtSl..—.......... JSTOMER'S SPECIFICATIONS, - 825 S. Lapeer Rd., Oxford 628-2573-628-2548 GOODRICH OFFICE^ VILLAGE OF OXFORD Nice 2 bedroom ranch in good ntighborhoN, large let, > car t Steve, refrigerator, water softener, drapes, land centred Immediate ^possession. G-131-E. ORTONVILLE i MdrHxm ranch home N double lot, lib car garbgt, ne assume 69* contract, er will sell « 9037 S. State St., Goodrich 436-2211 NEW PONTIAC PHONE NUMBER 3384114 for Want Ads Dial 334-4981 THE PONTIAC PRESS, jTlJESDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1969 D—11 Salt Houses UNO CONTRACT TERMS ■4»Y TERMS AVAILABLE arii ' Wta excellent home located In a very nice North > Pontiac mtree, fitting oh < wie Mt. Null price *13,. KO on lend contract termt, country living COMPLETELY REV-MODELED country farm Ming lairiscape, alto having 2 bams. large 4 per garage, fireplef* •'«■■“*— kltcnan : WATERFORD TWP. EASY- TERMS on thlf excellent s bedroom ranch, carpeting and drapes, platter welli and liardwoed floors, ' fitting on large comer lot. 1 Having plenty o» shade trees. Available on land contract termt. Full price 120,500. LAKE FRONT * ACRES, Clarkston area, near 1-75, IS?8**™,™1 I°"Infc naw home cash or terms. Sheldon. To-Acni river and stream acreage. Wooded and rolling. figgS", Realty, 2634322, 615-1402, 38 LOTS NEAR ROCHESTER - i “vwt home subdivision .... ’ed streets, gat, underground CURKSTON 1 ACRE. CLOSE TO 1-75, SPRAWLING BRICK RANCH, FHA. WATKINS UKE AREA NAME OWN TERMS BEAUTIFUL PRESTIGE 3 BEDROOM BRICK RANCH. CROSS , n Realty and Invastmant Co., ’ “ 674^3105 _ land contract. CARTER & ASSOCIATES . 474-3127_____________ 474-317Q HALLMARK ZONED MULTIPLE 100 ft. frontage on paved street --“.-“HI Lake, ready f-- j| units, SIS 474-4123 4021 Highland R OXFORD. 2 family Income, 5 heated oarage, gas heat, a| -l screens, large *26,ooo w , 474*4101. tached Oarage. • Price, »3i 1 contract. HAfeOLD R. FRANKS, Realty EVERETT CUMMINGS, BROKER 2503 Union Lake Road. EM.3-3208 ________363-7101 -BUD H rambling ranch home*, beautiful setting on 135 feet of lake front, with 3 bedrooms, ceramic tile bath, large living1 room, fireplace, full dining room, 24 ft. kitchen and , fwricfiSia, cii lit. SiAnft Terms it Sale lusIntssProperty 13Vh -ACRES agent. Office In Milton Weavei 110 W. University Build anytime. Exclusive eluding X-Ray and surgical facilities. Includes paved off-street parking, end detached. 3 bedroom brick residence. Land contract farms with quick possession. OXFORD Commercial building — Wall built. Main Intersection. Growing area. Many possibilities. APARTMENT SITE Pontine North Slds. BATEMAN INVESTMENT A COMMERCIAL C 377 S. Telegraph Rd. 338-9641 Attar 5 p,m, & Sunday r.i i is*.i'll* 623-1400, OR 34)455, OR 3-2391. CORNER LOT, Pina Knob •nt, si775. Call KMl, 473-3400. 165 ACRES. BETWEEN Detroit “■• • • • Box 230, ACRE BUILDING SI rolling Qi Springfield Townst A large $12,200. Lake Oakland, 115 ACRES — MACOMB COUNTY 14 room term house, near ne Ford plant, Level land, nearly Other Acreage Parcels Annett Inc. Realtors E. Huron St. 3300466 rtf tee Open Evenings A Sunday ' IUILDER NEEDS VAC-lots — Hlghland-Commeree-Milford-area. Fast closing jsso*.-* Full price $7,500. Torms available. Sislock & Kent, Inc. 1302 Pontiac State Bank Bldg. By Kate Osami Sale HowsehoM Goads 65 «« _________ multiple dwellings, trattar park aetatas, 450 Met trontaga bv lllO ft. deep with rbwh 'housed iwecS^SwlL BltOO. ideal tnvaatmants, terms, 363-7323. |ARE FEET, LARGE CORNER LOT on Baldwin Ave. with goad office building. Ee»y term*; Consider renting. Cell Partridge fext to a busy s This is .an excel.__________ ■roperty In a fast-growing , rhe existing building can Be----- or offices and there Is plenty of ■oom for additional buildings and Mrklng. See today. No. 14-65354"* COMMERCIAL PROPERTY 14*. x 474' zoned M-t. Working ipaco 4,241 sq. ft. Including rtodern office. Phis 260 additional >. 14-6523-CP. K FOR FREE CATALOG 7TRIDGE REAL ESTATE 0 West Huron St., Pontiac WO 5-0752 SINGER . AUTOMATIC ZIG ZAG 1 Sewing machine — sews slngL .. f double needle, designs, overcasts. Button holti, etc. — Modern cabinet. Take over payments of: $7 Per Month for 8 Mos. or $56 Cash Balance Still Under Guarantee UNIVERSAL SEWING .CENTER 2615 Dlklo Hwy. ' 65-f ANTIQUE or modern' furniture -Hoped and or refinished, fast vice, reasonable rates. 4253339 ANTIQUE SHI “Irmlngham, i Merrill, USED GAS DRYER. $40. 6*2-7513 after 5 P.m, -1 . CREDIT — ■ BUI HOUSEHOLD SPECIALS ROOMS. OF FURNITURE , — | ^ VjSCawu- Q19»W NM, ha TJ4. a*. ml la - “I suppose I’D want to go to the moon someday, too, but first I’d like to see America!” Swaps 63 Sale Household Goods 65 Roofing >r cash, or anything of vi 1- DAMAGED MATTRESSES ANl springs, most - sizes at t< bargain*. Joe’s A p p 111.. _ . Warehouse. 567 E. Walton. 373-5568. DRYER, $35; REFRIGERATOR *25; Side Clothing BARGAIN BOX 465 S. Woodward (Just south of bus station) WHITE TAG SALE 3 DAYS ONLY * ELECTRIC STOVE, I *35; Refrigerator w $49; Wringer washe rls, FE 5-2766. GE PUSH BUTTON stove, timer, good condition. 828, I52-S5W. GE WASHER 8,' gat dryer, 335-5848 Business Opportunities 59 j • returns. 335-7068. HANDMADE BARBIE DOLL clothes 1 Tr sale. 335-1765.________________________________________ HOUSEHOLD GOODS TUES.—WEDS.—THURS. Bedroom suite, lovely v HI-FI, TV and Radios; 66;For Sola Miscellaneous 67 ' 4, -entrance e. a mru Dec. 13, 8:30 P.m. No Id- Antique Christmas Show 81 Sale illdey inn of Pontiac, 1801 legraph Rd., (lustNorth WIMH, _ —excellent condition, 338-3081, PRB CHRISTMAS SALE ■' STEREO , Vi OFF 1 CABINET MODELS, COMPONENTS, TAPE DECKS, ETC. ALL 1270 MODELS auxiliary Gaa tanka (i 700x13" snow tires, Uk< 5342, LARGE CASHMilR 0 AUTO LIABILITY ’ UNIVERSAL Dally 18:150 . 2415 Dixie Hwy. i 4-0205 ' J Tues.. Set: 10:15-6 ANTIQUE CLOCKS. 333-7288 CUSTOM ANTIQUlr Antiques repaired and restor>-. 391-1571 ~_____Harold Richardson SPINNING WHEEL, ROLL top i brass bed and other antiques, Hatchery.__________________________ d Zvanjty H.......W. $399. Your _ jood at Wyman's. WYMAN FURNITURE CO. E. HURON___________FE 51581 SINGER DELUXE MODEL-PORTABLE Zlg Zagger In sturdy carrying case Repossessed. Pay off: $38 CASH or Payments of $5 Per Mo. 5 Year Gauarantee UNIVERSAL SEWING CENTER 2615 Dixie Hwy. Hi-Fi, TV and Radios I TRACK STEREO, USED. REPOSSESSED COLOR TV'S* BEAUTY SHOP EQTTiFMiST. rsatoneWe.^ejso camper In lead 8 wafkerf WhidexMheartng aid* all 'in exc. condition. OR' 3-5*23, after 4 STEREO, BESTOFFER. 632-7346 USED COLOR TV SETS $125 SWEETS RADIO. AND APPLIANCES INC. J2 W. HURON_____________334-5677 66 ZENITH CONSUL STEREO, akers, must sell, 673-0220. For Sale Miscellaneous Iton TV, FE 2-2257 Open 9-6 JN5 E* Walton, corner of Joslyn SILVERTONE CONSOLE, In-tant on, black and white, $125. lel, $85. Portable s >, $25. 3: TAPPAN GAS RANGE, $25, 620 Third St., Pontiac.________________ 1 A-1 COLOR TV SERVICE lohnson's TV FE I 45 E. Walton near Baldwin COLOR TELEVISION Direct factory shipment lua rived, new 1270 color TVs, Z Philco, RCA, Admiral, etc. *287 our warehouse prices \ lowest In Michigan. Terms. ABC APPLIANCE 48825 Van Dyke 1 blk. S. 22 Mile COPPER water ^pip Thompson 8* Son, 7005 M-59 W 1 LB.-1 TON, • -I PLASTIC DRAIN p i paint I DRAWER FILING CABINET $31.50, 4 drawer file cabinet $49.5“ Typewriter tables $15. Secretary shaped desk. $12| c*“"~ fUf list ar-i $16.95. Coat tret Zenith, I 7748 Auburn Rd., HOT WATER OR steam i. Beverly': Radiah 2,750,000 BTU. Ser. I mediate Possession. < terson's Pharmacy Oxford., ASEMBNI Thursday, .. M Drayton Plains. baki Stlfe PwlfrW p.m., By Oxtord-Orfon . — L lying, P SI- BASEMENT SALE: old roll (M children's desk, curio shelf, shoe roller skates, boy's 7V4; girl's' Sr, portable TV & stand, IW AAA shoes end mlsc. 496 S. Squirrel, Auburn Haights. BASEMENT: PICTURE AND bowls. S18, 25 lamps, dolls, toys, old dish. , as, occupied Japan etc. Thun. Dee. < 5, thru Sunday. 2855 N. Opdykfe i BRIDES — BUY YOUR WlOOlNO . Weekdays t)t 1 flat. 6 CUSTOM U PHOLSTERINO, Antiques 65-Ai \ COLLECTOR-INVESTOR HOBBY Jlm Beam Bottles r°Bott?e' guide -T.v.^ w. IBB .or fiSsaa on tx>ttles. Start 3101 LECTRO-VOICE FOUR Aj speakers. Fantastic, $125 ea. Pontiac Music & Sound | __________682-3350 OUR STREETS TORN UP M.M.'wrltror eelMoftlstlng“^51 WE'RE STUCK WITH 400 .“‘“BIiWBP BIG NAME COLOR TV'S ^«rk,£2nfi,'-37«J,,Ln.nk.sC' Selling-Cost Plus Freight pr.»; ***** ----- r-»rv. |*y| Phone. cu, ft. Upright freezer. 887-9282. ANCHOR FENCES .. ______ _____________ .... MONEY, DOWN FE 5-7471 Pontiac, Mich. 48055. 335-9012 EASY TERMS AND FINE SERVICE aNtTQUE~BARN " Wood' W hewn 4 AIR CONDITIONED C lavender and white, 3 vanities, i shampoo bowls, 1 manicuring table, 1 desk, .4 welting chairs. Sacriflc price of S750. 391-2500. a 4 FOOT STEEL BOX trailer, good with hookup, $50. 394-0007. 10x12 OUTSIDE FRAME, hip- roof. CHRISTMAS CARD ^SPECIALS OF Porbes Printing and Office Supplies, 4500 Dixie, OR 3-9767. Week I daV* til 9 PM, Sat., til 6 PM._ CYPRESS PRIVACY FBN€ir“T TALBOTT LUMBER 1025 Oakland FE 4-4595 CARPfeT a. pa6i office desk; toys; ’ Pike St. CARPETS AND LIFE too can be beautiful if you use Blue Lustre. Rent electric shampooer 81. Hudsdn's Hardware, 41 ” — DIAMOND WEDDING RING. DOG HOUSES MOST DOG HOUSES, will deliver. FE 2-5541 ENCLOSE YOUR SHOWER aval IQUE TO P “ WHITE F In ST i. 682-3972. HURRY THESE WON'T LAST , 's Appliance Warehouse !a-i kitc Walton at Joslyn, 373-5560 i off, rei AND ranges, i Joe's Bargain Furniture Other eldwln at Walton, 332-4142 1 Roches >. A. Thompson, 7005 M _________ _____ _____ Paid Sale Household Goods training arid financing available. *' — ----- •For information call 341-5000 ext. W WHAT YOU'D EXPECT TO PAY ^ng’intTbusiness? 3 ROOMS JO you ncad a location tor vour naw ^ A L business venture? If I many excellent si' ' Colonial sofa with matching^ chair, scotchaard fabric with ii|--------J reversible cushions, regulki CONTACT BOB BARTLEBAUGH 674-2236 -McCullough Realty <4fl Highland Rd (M-5F) MLS 9-9 REALTOR 874-22351 HIGH GROSS LIQUOR BAR Local straight bar (no food) showing approx. Si 0,880 sales per month. First tlm* offered, owner retiring. This will sell fast s» hurry. Large enough and Ideal for partners: Real estate ind. In sale.1 Call lor appointment to set. WARDEN REALTY i 3434 W. Huron, Pontiac_682-3920, ‘ BRAND NEW FURNITURE $297 1 MAYTAG WASHER 1 G.E. Dryer 1 Used softener, semi-automatic COUNTRY LIVING > ACRES hilly view and 38 wlda road frontage, Clarkston area, (6,500. 5 ACRES good Ian S ACRES, 900' of road frontage C PANGUS INC., Realtor OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK CALL COLLECT 5856 5 CLARKSTON • 3 ACRE ESTATES ou may have a horse on the qre estates. Located larkston School district ai ) 1-75 with 200 ft. of ro Priced at $6,950 Bob White RIAL ESTATE recreetloneT|3‘?.•>* ‘"TES. AGED MAT__________ ____ SPRINGS AT TERRIFIC i A 'MS. E JOE'S BARG FURNITURE 1461 Baldwin at Wa^ Phone FE 2-6842 JOE'S^ APPLIANCE WAREHOUSE DeMassellis Bldg. Consultants Inc. INDIAN UKE PRIVILEGES Reedy to build? Now e springtime! See this beeutlfi building site, before you deck where you went to put that na dream of yours, and make reality. This lot ho* 220* fronts* on tho road and If StO* deop. Yi can satisfy your fishing ar boating needs near your doe Cash or land contract torms. I BS ACRES Ot 17900 SALES BY DeMASSELLIS REALTY (Formerly A&G Realty) . 3881 Highland.Rd. (M-59) 482-9088 HIGHLAND ACRES Homesltes, 2, 5, 10 acres, cleared & rolling. 6 ml. North Of Milford, DRY CLEANING 9x12 Linoleum Rugs $495 An established dry c I ea n Ing solid Vinyl Tile ---- operation In high traffic area, specializing In custom service, includes all tqulpmer' lures and bwjM|J yea ■ntly 1 volume. Shown by a THE ROLFS H. SMITH CO. Sheldon B. Smith, Realtor 244 S. TELEGRAPH 333-7848 TO BUV, SELL, A BUSINESS National Business — FE 3-7841 TAVERN IN Holly with living ..,l%985,tt................ B Jacobites 8. Schultz___673-1246 Salt Farms___________56 80 TO 800 ACRES In Lower Michigan. Dairy grain, beef or hogsl Name your farm needs, we have It at Qian's "Michigan's Farm Real ,E*tata Sale land Contracts 1 TO 50 LAND CONTRACTS Urgently needed. See us before Warren Stout, Realtor 1458 N. Opdyke Rd. 373-1111 Open Et— " | FARM HOME 3Vi ACRES 6room home surrounded with trees end next to state owed . Over 588 ft, of froad Iron- C. PANGUS INC., REALTOR OFENfOAYSAWEEK^ CALL COLLECT 527-2815 Wqnted Centracti-Mtg. 60-A 1 MILLI01SK Dollars has bean made available to us to purchase and assume land contracts, mortgages or ~ buy homes, lots or acreage outright. We will give you cdsn for your agility. Our appraiser It awaiting I your call at 674-2236 Mc.CUU.OUGH REALTY 5440 Highland Rd. (M-59) MLS Ranch Home On 4 Acres Moderns year old ranch w,lth 3 t permit, kitchen license, alto beer **• i ... p, EM 3-7188 NEW CABIN. 10 X Si trailer on canol, Clair County, 01*o Florida, )0t*. 391-«78«t ,// 1 TYCOON IN CORNER | Must' have 8170,080 to .continue development protect- Heelthy casH It flow stertlnr vJ| *"“* ™ d PANGUS INC., REALTOR OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK *30 M-15 ' Ortonville i CALL COLLECT 427-2815 -- Salt Basinm Property 57 54 ACRES, OF M-1 In Drayton Plains, water, gas, end elec., at siti. Will split. AL PAULY *72-3801) . Evetl 473-4273 BAYVIEW REALTY 114 E. Front St. Treverse Clty, 494«4 416-944-3010 or 419947-4104 Ev- Pontiac Press " Want Ads. For Action wsr ;l Asbestos Tile ......... .......... .. 7e ee. Inlaid Tile, 9x9 ....... 7c ea. Floor Shop-2255 Elizabeth Lake "Across From the Mall" 22 CU. FT. FREEZER, like IronrltBdjMliiMMAailHilari 3681.__________________________ 1969 T0UCH-A-MATIC Nw sewing machine, does fancy stitching, makes buttonholes, etc. Sold for *124.50, balance only $29.50 or pey $1.10 per week. Cell day or night. 338-2544. Imperial. A PRICE WAR I Warehouie sale 1 TO 50 LAND CONTRACTS Urgently needed. See us before you deal. Warren Stout, Realtor - - Opdyke Rd. 373-1111 1450 CAlM pto LAWO C&NTfcACTi H; 4. Van Welt I Dixie Hwy.v-OR 3-1355 LARGE or SMALL land contracts, -quick closing. Reaonabla disc—* Earl Garrels, MA 4-5400 or I Money to Loan LOANS S25 to $1,000 b«Mne ... -_ FE 4-1538-9 pi, Every ,llliPIII|HNH reas. offer refused, sale today and; tomorrow 10-9, Hilt Appliance, 2414: 14 Ml. between CooUdge-Qrooks. A 1969 USED SINGER TOUCH AND SEW Features, hems, butte designs etc. Lessons ah included. $40.27 CASH Terms available. Call N Appliance. 336-3312. AMAZING GOLDEN TOUCH AND SEW 196* USED SINGER MODEL 640 SINGERS FINEST INCLUDES C A S I N E T AN LESSONS $149.88 Terms available. Call Midwest Appliance. 334-33)2. A HOUSEHOLD BARGAIN I pc. living rm. group (sofa, chair: 3 beautiful tables, 2 lamps); 8 pc bedroom (double dresser, chesi bed, mattress, springs, lamps); piece bunk, bed — 5 piece dinette. Any Item^Sold Separately AKXYTuRN1TUREh'y Glenwood Cen HOCKEY STICKS 1 Skis, guns, archery, fishing and hunting goods Snowmobile suits & boots MARINE AND SPORTING GOODS | FOR THE ENTIRE FAMILY MERCURY — MER CRUISER; DEALER J CRUISE-OUT INC. - 63 W. Walton FE 8-44021 | Tues.,'Wed., Frl. 9-6, Mon. & Thurs. 9-8 1 Pontiac Only. Set. 'til 5 Closed Sun.l. Cliff Dreyer's Gun and Sports Center 15210 Holly Rd. Holly, MB 4-4771 Open Dally and Sundays SNOWMOBILE SNOWSUIT SALE—NOW! BIRMINGHAM BOAT CENTER 1265 S. Woodward at Adams Rd. 1 HAPPY DAYS! j For years to come in a home of' your own. Let us help you make j your dream come truel ' - the staff of - 1 fl^flilFTS FOR ALL Lauinger ALL-PURPOSE CARPET Specially made for family roor porches or any heavy traffic an Cornel In DuPont 501 nylon as I as 14,99 yd. Installation avallat For free home estimate call Ri IX SPRINGS i. MATTRESSES, tew, $19.90 each I Also dinette sets, 139.95. Countryside Living, 444-1509- E 19" portabl. .. condition, UHF 8, qua lamp 8, ' BUNK BEDS . Choice of J5 styles, trui^cne beds, m|cH|GA'N ■ triple trundle beds and bunk bedsjcgriiRiTY CHARGE complete, W.50 and uP/iP«»rton's 5SCTdpltol SeWlng Credlt Dept, Furniture, <40 Abbum, FE 4-7881. I-—-----—--------------- bronTe or CrtROMi 6inet¥1 sale, BRAND NEW. Large and small size (round; drop-leat, rec-I fangular). tables .In 3-, 5- and 7 pc. ,, I 3e|t, «4^5 Up. ciidmitiidc 1 quality carpetIi^"money/can buy. NEED UP TO $5,000? ^ s -mi! luL'Lta'h^mw^ You may be surprised how, cheaply cOUiNIAL HUTCH, excellenrcon- 7595 Clement Rd. you can add new room repair, or dltlon *80. 363-6630. _ ____i 625-5676 Wn^d,iouVr<>UorwnPw“rk Kstt‘c%g5,T.l^STn.^ ~ RED TWEED aur money for materials. Whatever; caffalter l^M. 6733*48. ' Commercial carpeting y0VosfXnBuckner, Inc. COBO HALL BUILDER, SHOW • Prae^e»tlmatei!>*tn*^i 1488 P^ffac Strta Bank Bldg. UNCRATED APPLIANCES . 334-3267 ■■ color TV's, refrigerator, ranges, Instructions Avaliabla Capitol Sewing Credit Depi. NATIONALLY ADVERTISED YR. •- PARTS & L A B ( GUARANTEE 1970 SEWING MACHINE NEW ZIG-ZAG ABSOLUTELY 4o attachments necessary tons, make buttonholes, overc< bFULL' Pr!'cE8$39.C90 • TAX INCLUDED Enioy It now, pay later. Cash pay deferred balance, with St... down and 6 Interest free payments BUY NOW And receive a NEW CABINET at NO CHARGE, for free home demo. PHONE 729-4610 9 A.M. 9 P.M. MON-SAT. if toll call collect. WE ACCEPT ‘ MASTERCHARGE MICHIGAN BANKARD COMFORT YOUR HOME tth a new "gas furnace, installed iwer humidifier and aiectro-alre saner. Beautify your home V" Installation avaliabla. Call Ron, lamps. Michigan Orchard Lk„ FE 62 REMNANT MARKET rards It yards ol “ sold immediately Beautiful decorative i WHY SETTLE FOR LESS GET OUR BEST SOLID VINYL SIDING SHERIFF POSLIN 1 332-5 Santa stop 1968 Oldsm98i,Coupe OFFICE OPEN 474-0319__________ 673-2168 HAVE YOU TRIED THE excitement m racing? AKC-CKC ilamutes. Standard or ages, special Christmas prices. $100 to *250. Terms. Shots. Wormed. Guaranteed, puppies ' winning show stock, r Christmas. Also dog sled: Oak Ranch, 1-6344040. HOWARD T. KEATING - PUZZLED FOR A The perfect solution— Hudson's gift certificate HUDSON'S PONTIAC MALL 'THE GREATEST GTrT" IS A BIBLE , CHRISTIAN LITERATURE SALES 55 Oakland Avt, ______FE 4-9591 JOHNSON & CHRYSLER AAOTORS PAUL A. YOUNG, Inc. Dixie Hwy. at Loon Lake Open dally 9-6______OR 4-0411 sweaters, collars. et supplies. UL 2-2200. AN IDEAL "CHRISTMAS GIFT" A NEW OR USED CAR FROM FLANNERY FORD n Dixie, Waterford 423-0900 CHRISTMAS TREES -DECORATIONS BEAUTY? ECONOMY? PRICE? Give Them a Used Car From PONTIAC TEMPEST RUSS JOHNSON r» M-24, Lk. Orion MY 3-62< BUSr SHOPPING? . . COOK TONIGHT -CALL CHICKEN DELIGHT! ‘A Year Around Gift" of Happiness for the Whole Family GRIMALDI C ““BEAUTY?-iCONCWYfPRTCEsT Give Them A Used C*r From RUSS JOHNSON PONTIAC - TEMPEST Dn M24-Lk. Orion MY 3-6244 GUNS-GUNS-GUNS One of the largest selections In by, Winchester, Remtr uiITUi LaKe eraemar. vve “ nn-~ apply Rd^e builder.^ Oaj repair wor??'5 pistols^ C. NELSEY, SALES AGENT 13-634-9825 . 625-3298 Evening Calls vyalcome .LOVELAND/ Clarkston DON' 11302 Swaps s $m. ti warehouse in be Joe's Appllshee Warehouse ? UL 56? E. Walton et Joslyn 873-5560 Open Mpn.-Frl. till 8 Easy | -j wfeatHS-SFave blankets. f. | Jena Strlg^w,^ 7100^ Tucker Rd^, n SPRUCE AND SCbTCH FIN6, cut . labFe. Cail'Ron.' FE >5697. I your own or We’ll cut; 4121NWaldon REFRIGERATORS, DISHWASHERS, • Rd„ Clarkston. J, MARINE GIFTS SNOWMOBILES FROM PINTER'S Cliff Dreyer's Gun & Sports Center 15210 Holly Rd. Holly MB 4-1 accassorlas from Wtlr's-Ggedall Trailers, 3200 S. Rochester Rd., 852-4558. ______________________ IGIFTS FOR HER During the Busy xp^ristmasv Rush EAT AT\THE "BIG BOY" telegraph, 8> Huron Hill Hwy, & Silver Lake R4 i and choose your1 na all marina accessories. CALDERONE, 847 W. Huron, FE 2-7992.___ ■ 1 ... ’ ■ 1 - KIRBY SWEPlR EXCELLENT CONDITION—«5 FULL GUARANTEE "/ Kirby Service & Supply Co. 2617 DIXIE HWY. ^ 474-2234 Universal Sewing Center , s*M oi.ie Hwy. FE,4-6905 AAfi Tues. 8. Sat. 10:15-4 T*r CURT'S APPLIANCE <484 WILLIAMS LAKB RD. 674-11011" i D—13 for Dial 3344981 : PRESS, TUESDAY, Skiers! Skaters! Sledders! - BUY- SELL SWAP- NEW aid USED SNOW FEN EQUIPMENT With a Press CLASSIFIED AD 01 this special page ■EXCLUSIVELY FOR SKIS - POLES - BOOTS - SKI CARRIERS -SKI CLOTHING - ICE SKATES - SLEDS - TOBOGGANS - SNOWMOBILES - SNOWMOBILE TRAILERS. THERE ARE THOUSANDS WHO WILL SEE YOUR AD ON THIS SPECIAL PAGE SNO-JET THE SNOWMOBILE 23 MODELS THE RIGHT TIME THE RIGHT PRICE THE RIGHT PLACE ALSO: SUITS, HELMETS, BOOTS AND ALL ACCESSORIES. Combine the best machines With the Best Service 4 Men to Insure Your Winter Pleasure Formerly Evan's Equipment NOW EVAN'S TRAILER SALES 625-7111 Clarkston 625-2916 ». SEE IT TODAY. YAMAHA SNO-MOBILES s new models in stock PRICES From U95 K & W CYCLE Utica 731-0290 MICHIGAN'S OLDEST EXCLUSIVE YAMAHA DEALER SNOWMOBILE BIRMINGHAM BOAT CENTER YOUR LOCAL AUTHORIZED ' SKI DOO DEALER . BILL GOLLING SPORT CENTER 1121 Maplalawn Just off Maple Rd. (15 Mila Rd.) Between Crooks A Cool Woe Rd. Troy Motor Mell____Ml 2-9900 TURF & SURF FOR SNOWMOBILES AND ALL ACCESSORIES Lev away now for Christmas Scorpion Snowmobiles Price* start at $695 "See the Hottest One of All" SCO R PION^TING E R McClellan Travel Trailer 4820 Highland Rd. 674-3169 SKI-DOO'S 12 to 45 H.P. 15", it", and 20" tracks 20 Machines in stock nowl We have a complete line of accessories, Speedo, tech, sleds, suits, boots, helmets, stoves, custom colortd trailers, single and double I STOP OUT THIS WEEKEND I Cliff Dreyer's Gun and Sport Center 15210 Holly Rd. Holly. ME 4-4771 Open Dally and Sunday A HOLIDAY SPECIAL Why Go "One" Better Go the Best GO RUPP Snowmobile Snowmobile suits, helmets Boots, gloves, etc. ALSO SNOWMOBILE TRAILERS 2 locations to serve you i, 905 Orchard Lake A THE ALL NEW 1970 SKI-DOOS NOW IN STOCK—SHOP EARLY SPECIAL 23 H.P. SNO-JET ... 1099 USED SNOWMOBILE TOO CRUISE OUT, INC. 43 E. Walton FE 8-4402 Dally 9-4) Sat. 9-5) Closed Sun. ARCTIC CAT and MOTO-SKI now In stock. OUTDOORSMfN SPORT CSMfKR 4487 Highland Rd. (M-S9) 473-3400 SKI DOO, SCRAMBLER A Trail Boss. For tha finest servica a ‘ Sundays. 664-9412. ARCTIC CAT & YAMAHA . Over 50 machines In stock, ready for delivery or Lay-A-Way. Get the model you want, buyj early and Accessories, Parts, Service CLAYTS CYCLE CENTER 1 Mile E. of Lapeer on M-21, 464-9261 1970 EVINRUDE Skeeter and Bob-Cats. 1970 Yamaha snowmobiles, snowmobile clothing. Take M-59 to W. Highland, right to Hickory Ridge Rd., to Demode Rd., left and follow signs to DAWSON'S SALES, TIPSICO LAKE. Phone 1-629-2179. 1970 P.OLARIS CHARGER, 372 CC. THIS IS SKI-DOO COUNTRY! Come and See the Beautiful New 1970's SKI-DOO'S Come In and pick out tho modal you deslrt while the selection Is good. Prlcos start ot only 819S. KING BROS. 373-0734 PONTIAC RD. AT OPDYKE1 Fun Quip. Iric. Announces Winter Sports Sale Get Into the Snow of Things! $1795 30 MPH, S horsepower, wild cat mini-bike with front ski Includtd. $295.95 Bank Financing Available Salesmens demos available Open weekdays noon to 9:00 Saturdays and Sundays 9-9 Take A Free Ride "HOMELITE" SNOWMOBILES DAVIS MACH. CO. ORTONVILLE * NA 7-3292 POLARIS MASSEY-FERGUSON SKI-WHIZ Perry Lawn & Sports Equip 7405 Hlghslend M-59 473-4234 970 SKIROULE 949 ARCTIC Cat Panthar, 19 horss snowmobile, still under warranty, exc. condition. >634513. starts. 19-32 h.p. TRACK A WHEEL Evenings A 5 New 10 HP Snowmobile $549 Mercury snow vehicle In stock, also we carry all the clothes and accessaries. KAR'S BOATS A MOTORS 493-1400 Boa Ski Snowmobiles 5891 Westvlsw 330-3943 473-Mil 451-0457 DOUBLE Snowmobile trailer. 852- JOHNSON SKI HORSE MOTO SKI SNOWMOBILES Complete line of snowmobile 1970 RUPP, 10 hp. being transferred. Leu than 2 hrs. 4744261. SNOWMOBILES, ALLOUETTE and Fox Track. Snow cruisers, singles ch»ln|d°Ub,e*. Snowblow,rl tnd L-B Lawn & Equip Co. 1M N. Seglnew, Holly 4344441, • e.m.-5:30 p.m. Classified Ad Snow-Fun Page Ad-Visor P.0. Box 777 Pontiac, Michigan 48056 Please Put This Ad In Your Special Snow-Fun 4*4" HEAD Standard sklls, Cubco binding, S35. Sin f boots, $7. Sin S buckle boot Cell after 3. 4814377. I the excitement ot -jclngf AKC-CKC —i Malamufes. Standard or large sins, ell., colors, oil ages, special Christmas priced. SlOO to 1250. Terms, shots. Worm-ad. Guaranteed. Puppies from winning stock, hold for Christmas. Also dog slads. Rolling Oak Ranch, 1-6344040. I boots, JtaH LaDALOMITE BUCKLE SKI I dition—usea i season. 0533 bet. 4:30,'end 9 P MAN'S ITALIAN Made Ski boots, ■sin 1494. Cubco bindings, boat trie and carrying bag Included. S20. Phone PE 5-3253 after S p.m. SIZERS SKI boots and poles. 413-4' 3" HART PROFESSIONAL, Cubco boots; s [6-4819. WOMENS REIKER SKI 7, axe condition, SIO. 426-4811 NORDICA SKI-BOOTS, sin 10. I Call 4B-7S47. WOOD SKIIS WITH I Sleds Sid OeHihn -\A Name. .......... ...., .. .. Phone No........, Address....................f........Zip.. USE THE COUPON FOR YOUR AD OR DIAL 334-4981 or 332-8181 CLASSIFIED DEPT. THE PONTIAC PRESS l y For Want Ads Dial 3344981 THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1969 D—18 for Sab MkcofloireoBs 67 ELECTRIC: DOUBLE oven Move, MO. Clothes drver, 140. Fireplace S7. »»J. 1»« Yamaha, 175. Klfchen tablo and chain, its. can ttOMeS. ELECTRIC ADDING MACHINE M6. Portable typswrltsr $21. HjEtfafl typawrltar $35. Chock Protector fwT Frleden calculator $250. javerty's, 7740 Auburn Rd., Utica, 71 Kets-Huitflug Poff 79 livestock By Dick Turner Wanted Cars-Tnicks ngneCffiT^4** IH" "*» condition, $17J. 332-4148. ■ "FLAT CLARINET with cate. Ilka naaPftV. . coat*, SSSdco^iuln,TresM*7boohk •hoot and pants. Mon.-Tues.-Wod. 184 p.m. S. E. Rochester area, 51$ E. Avon, Rochester. ■ OARAGE OQOR OPENERS Discontinued models. " FlNbilt^JAoU/klt Puller and case. condition, 007-5754. guitar and AMPLIFIER, Fender - twin, reverb amp., Fondo-Coronado II puller. 673-3339. ’BERRY D Cart... $99.50 2 oarage doors MOR (Alls sm-iiw Of ■ Pit-0203 GARAGE SALE - SATURDAY and Sunday, 410 Granada, 334-4441, yirTf —— NC—1 * HEALTHY, trlakla Dachshunds, di-mo * ssfif'STi.'JrM: ning, vary reasH 752-3004. 1 CH IHUAHUOOPFlIir BLUE-SILVER Poodles, alj .sh rr Chrlstmas?r4a tKC BEAOLMI . ackground. 473-1._ , week oldroWf11 Shepherd puppies, tome wt Phono 485-11Of._____ AKC POODLES. BLACK, K 4 whs. $80, 473-M25. SCHNAUZER, Christmas. “ AKC* BlJkCK PEKINGESE mole, reasonable, must sail. 343-5747, NOVELTIES, Lay-a-way*. Liberal Bill's Outpost, 3345 Dixie Hwy. OR 344*4._____________________________ HOT WATER heater. 30 gal. gas. iMMlMrt approved, $89.50 value, MOM and $49.95, marred. Also alec, and butane heaters, terrific MtlUOO. Michigan Fluorescent, 393 IF YOUR CHILD can say har / Rom MVfc^am%nh!isT3U4 MORRIS MUSIC 34 S. Telegraph Rd., across fr TofHuron, FE 2-0547 LOWREY ORGAN, small spinet, IS foot pedals, good condition, $52-5177._________ dehorned, $3500. 7097 Tappon Dr., QJIAfcTiR horse S, .... _ STRAW, by ___________ 50 lb. wild bird good, pottl sleigh balls, cow balls, do Frol puppies. Btll'e Feed 3431 Gregory Rd, 39l-1490. : GERMAN SHEPHERD pupa i ready for Christmas. 373-0540. LLAMUTB PUP r for Christmas AKC YORKSHIRE Puppies,, proven J female, AKC poodle, puppies, 332- F%.,! SALE WHEAT straw, .. , ‘'-‘■—'"i, Mich. Phono 537- akc female oremen Shaphat 4734017. ARIENS AND TORO snowblowers o J' iley. Layaway i newt Tom' dwara, 905 Orchard Lake Avt IT TAKES A SPECIAL sharpen chain and hand s Hlitolsnd Rd., $87-57527 AKC DACHSHUNDS prop- rei's Tooi Rental. Op^i’Sun., 7110 JEWELRY'.oOd LOCKS, for pi Our Christmas Lav-A-Way GALLAGHER'S 1710 TELEGRAPH FE 44566 Open Mon. Through Frl. * Open Sun., 1-5 PM I tractors. Davis d Chain-Sow 0 . —d Jhon Deere ,___________ 0 RIDING TRACf8"R~~WlYfl TOP DOLLARS FOR SHARP, LOW _ MILAGE AUTOMOBILES. H. J, VAN WELT OR 3-1355 TOP $ PAID 1 All Cadillacs, Buick Electro 225s, Olds 98s Pontiacs and anything sharp, with air conditioning. WILSON 101 Forsigi Cors___________105 How and Used Cars : 1947 VW, EXCELLENT CONDITION Fischer Buick 515 S. Woodward Birmingham 1968 VW, $1495 * FE 8-3639 /W SEDAN A-l condition, 7,066 rt 1944 CHEVELLi WaaSn. 'W~~' Opdyks Hardware iitoMOS 1965 Corvair CORSA COUPE With dark turquoise finish, spatial 190 HP angina, buckets, ready ta CRISSMAN CADILLAC. $777 1968 Triumph Junk Cars-Trucks 101-Al Matthews-Hargreaves . Road | RT-6 FASTBACK jsoojtokJtf * LOt Ml 4-1930, Roadster, with 4 spaed, radio, wire If, - —1-----1 ......u“-—-------kllng rad n r. 335-9197 si V,-l JUNK CARS, I radiators, hi 9 AM-4, PM, $1995 Matthews-Horgreaves The Bia Lot II Oakland Avt. 1949 MUSIC CENTER — 0 NEW AND USED , PIANOS Priced From $399 r BEAUTIFUL AKC BOXER puppies, d 4W months, SI3-3I73. i. black POODLE female, 3 lbs. 5 condition. OR B start, excellent BEAUTIFUL PEDIGREE COlLiE WJsrvSmfim No money down—bank terms Use Our Christinas Loy-A-Wty Plan GALLAGHER'S 1710 TELEGRAPH FE 41-05 Open Mon. Through Frl. 'til 9 p.n Open Sun., 1-5 P.M. 'mkm%Ekrn?Km‘ C1" *"*' 4I NEW CONSOLE PIANO PLUMBING BARGAINS, F R E EI CONTEMPORARY WALNUT WITH’ standing toilet, $29.95; t 30-gallon! ..... heater, $49.95i 3-pioce bath sots', $09,911 Idundry troy, trim. SJJ.W; _______ shower stalls with trim, *39.93| 2- NEW VIOLIN, bowl sink, $3.95i lavs. $3.95t tubs, 0507. nd UD. Plot cut and threaded. I Sbt „ Roott. „„„ H dynasonlc snore and all ztldlan cymbals, pink champaign 343-1115, ££ & ul! £ loo: m R^iA»ic.o^rMio.,..G.A, pupplas, $15. No papers. 34 BEAUTIFUL BLACK and German Shepherd pupplas, e w*». old, pure brad, no papers, $25 each. coll 435-4436.____ • CHIHUAHUA*, TOY FOX Terriers, apricot Poodle pups, ^ registered. Pfflk TABLE. V UPRIGHTPIANO, $40. H. R. Si “-~-1 Co., 10 1 Jessie. USED ORGANS RUMMAGE SALE — Excellent merchandise. Proceeds go to Crippled Children'* Fund, wad., Dec. 3, 9 to 3:30. Royal Oak Women's Club, cor. Fourth and Pleasant St. RAYNOR OVERHEAD DOORS (Temcraft overhead Door Co.) Electric garage door . operators, $109, Installation available. 6295 HIGHLAND RD. (M-59) M5-335Q__________________473-3311 RUMMAGI SALE: CB radios,' books, TV, lawn mower and snd^snds. IN N. AxtOrd, RUMMAGE SALE: 4100 Carroll Office Equipment Lake Rd„ Union Lake, Wed. thru - ------—-—----- U .ft, fS®!"" r6dU<*d MUST JACRiFIfB I CUDDLY SIAMESE KIT+ENS, SIS 343-4541 otter 5 Phl. IERMAN PINCHERS, AKC pup-1 hamplon Hoo?"— HuUk 5. 1-724-5345 Q DALMATION PUPS, A Mod, sh * “* 1-3745.___________________ r FLUFFY KltTENS. free to a good h homo. FE MTU, attar 3. . • jmb. SNOW IS COMING COME IN AND SEE THE NEW AREINS SNOWBLOWERS FROM 4 H.P. TO 7 H.P. PRICED AS LOW AS: $249.95 WITH FREE TIRE CHAINS NEW TORO SNOW PUPS ONLY $109.95 ALSO WE HAVE A GOOD SELECTION OF USED SNOWBLOWERS. KING BROS. 373-0734 | Pontioc Rd. ot Opdyke ' Travel Trailirs 88 ' ‘‘Have you FORGOTTEN anything? ... How about a seeing-eye dog?” Travel Trailers 88 Mobile Homes 89 JUNK CARS, FREE TOW IUNK CARS HAULED away trie FE 4-5121. _________ Used Auto-Truck Ports 10! ENGINE, AUTO., $100. 281 quad manifold and quadi ime, engine, trans. and seat: beat offer, 378-0351. 1965 CHEVY IMPALA HARDTOP 2 door with 4 cyl. sutomatlc, solid white finish, radio, hsatsr. Only $595 BILL FOX CHEVROLET Id. 651-7000 NER steering and enlngs, LI 1-M29. 1945 CHEVY^SS, $450. 1969 Opel Wagon 1945 chevy biscayne, 4 door, vf, idlo, heater, white wall tires, stick, excellent condition, $445, iw mileage one owner trade In. Marvel Motors, 251 Oakland, FU *-ill prlca Tust I 4079. $1895 Fischer Buick . 194$ VOLKSWAGEN BUS. 23,000 " . Exc. condition. $-|^g|| IV SEDAN, STICK si OAKLAND COUNTYS largest lino motor homes, pickup camper covers, and toppers, FE S-10Q3, SLEEPER Steel frame pickup covtrs ii tops. Cab to camper boot. . SPORTCRAPT MFG. CO. 4140 Foley 40-0450 Wotortord SNO FOOLIN' - SNOWMOBILE OR TRAIL BIKE INSIDE ALL NEW 1970'S 14 Ft. Yukon Delta ELCAR, 8 X 35, nicely decorated, 1 lak. e a as, niceiy i •srpefed living room L— — tire* like new, 11775. Can be si at Ritter's Farm Mirkt Clerkston or Cell 425-4740. 1963 GRAND PRIX FOR ----', rally wheels, etc. I V TRANSAXLE, I Vl^-^oe4 J 47-3600 automatic. "aTURNER4F0RD i5 CHEVY IMPALA $795 " 1966 Chevy SSBS 283 1944 Ford engine, 352 ...........$1 - 1962 Studs., V8 engine (Hawk) 5 ' ------l Prlx, Chrome Rally i. 493-1010 nights. Volkswagen W. Auburn Rd., _____________L 2-3115. LIBERTY WILLIAMSBURG 1947 12' I ins., body ports, etc. . .. 40* skirted on lot, 2 bedroom1 I furnished, 15,500, SL 7-7R30. u [RneOrf«3«ti bR 3-StiO H AUT° SERVIC673-9344 and Vk home, furnished, 332-1457. ’ tf "ifmqtk inihiirri MARE ^Arabian filly end saddle, with adapters, aluminum, $175. FE ir other atorago pro--- Clerkston and -------I. 493-8444. Tires-Auto-Truck EXTRA TRACTION, 2-1 Ii d tires, 750-17, 8 ply, ci DO GOOb 1943 COMET, angina, end trans. 55c I 682-8171.________________________ WEIR-GOODELL Pulaneckl, OR 3-5594. _______ J ELECTRIC CHORD organ. Call after 5:30. 451-4791. Puns.Call aftoirdP. .. it GERMAN SHEPHERD “ Pups, 535 a each. 335-4954._______ GERMAN SHEPHERD - tied and bigger then ily females left, have I id been wormed by vet. It Christmas, 493-7191. * GERAAAN SHEPHERD PUPS, AkC - * " MMjf llL >»VM7. ■ s KITTENS FREE TO good home, ci I • M5-14C8. MIXED PUPPIES WANTED, we bi complete litters, good homes p> CAMPER, ___ WEIR-Cw 3200 Rochester Rd._______________ 1946 SHASTA IT1 TRAVEL trailer, full self-contained. Call after 12, 6744)014. VILLAGE TRAILER SALES ______________________________________ 4470 Dixie <25-2217 Clerkston REPAIR, MOUNT, and balance mag11954 FORD. **■ " SERVICE - REPAIR “- *' and ..sjd Trucks 103 Truck Caps Welr's-Goodell ...J chrome wheels. New end used ~ wheeli. Megs-Amerlcon ET. Croger, AP, Ansen. Trade old mags for new. Goodyear Polyglass tires. Cheater Yiro ■a CO. 2435 Orchard oir. Bill Going VW 1*49 CAMPER, Williams Croft, TVS x tOVh, self contained, now condition, original cost $2700, owner will tacrlflce for $1100 firm. 2271 Silver J Motor Scooters 1959 FORD C600, tl i APACHE CAMP trailer — Del F featuring the SwTnger. Motor 4 Home and Globestar trailer. PIONEER CAMPER SALES 481-0720____________ 95 1962 GMC 2 TON si . i New md Used Cars ____________106 j( _ 1962 BUICK. . Good transportation, ’ har*qu?ck' ROCKHOUNDS hove lots,of opoll and agates, Lortono Stumblors, Frontom sows and grinders, gamlap grinders and trlm saws. Elts and polishes,, rockhound welry, finished end unflnts - AffliSstA' typewriter, like now, cost o' $500, will take (250, 1 Mom calculator, cost $475, will toko $3 Call 373-1366._________________ Sporting Goods 74 iUBMERSIBLE AND upright UK'* 79 MASSIVE Swiss St. Bernard pi AKC, wormed, shots, cartlflcotO;Roos. 451-0241. 1 FREE LESSON WITH BOW SALE GENE'S ARCHERY 714 W. Huron X 8* SLATE POOL MM -------------- an 5-V GUNS Year and lnvontory_ dispose of oil guns. Doc. SI. Coll 334-1754. ________________ 17 FOOT ALUMINUM _ cellent condition, $175 „nt, 393 Orchard Lk. FE <■ _ Traverse Draperies, beige, basket ------ , io2" wide, l pair a L3- 1 pair 131" wide, all ■H complete. 1 guitar, . Girl's bike with hand u 125. 1 pair of ekl boots, • W. 335-5793, _______ UPRIGHT PIANO GOOD service sportcRaft. Lapeer on M-21. Apachi home town dtaltr. Open pickupITILTING TRAILER, ^751 ______i'.iv uunn GfO ■’ E. Sundays.! ■ 343-4372.__________ VACATION SPECIAL Ford F-356 good running condition. 375 Cass i HONDA 50, oxc. condition, M7- NORWEIGIAN Blkheund _ reasonable pries. 416-924-224 POODLES, STUD, SE POODLE AKCyW—.— or TR 1-3745.___ PET CAT: Kitten, N ■--*— '■-rlstmas. I Trailers All at close-out price TREANOR'S TRAILERS Polly 9-7 Sun 12-4 Peri :amper Storage 55 par month rry Lawn 8i Sports Equip. Highland Rd, M-59 473-4234 Check Our Deal SWISS COLONY LUXURY TRAILERS FROLIC TRAILERS AND TRUCK CAMPERS SKAMPER FOLD-DOWN CAMPERS 13 to 28 ft. on display at— online, auto, transmission, 1949, 340c HUSQVARNA, ■ Me —,------------ ~ _ stick# exceiiwu conauion# w* .CUSTOM BSA^WoHted on Morvol Motors, 251 Oakland, FE good, sor tubes. 57i BUICK RIVERIA, fl ________ ______ "6 cylinder, cilsnt condition, 482-i______ excellent^ condition, __$395, SHARP, 1944 RIVIERA, FUU p n OPDYKE HARDWARE__________________ 1944 CORVETTE, 127-300 convertible. ■ I 1 by. 692-4441. 1944 CHEVY BEL AIR, 8 cyl.. Stick shift, radio, hooter, f*** MS Tom Rademacher Chevy-Olds On US 10 at M-15 Clarkston MAS-5071 1944 CHEVY IMPALA Super Sport. Bucket soots, vinyl roof, pawor and automatic. $1285 full price. Coll Mr. Parks at Ml 4-7580. TURNER FORD 2400 Maple Rd.______Troy » 1966 CORVAIR. hardtop, sedsn, " utomatlc, radio, hsatar, 1398. NORTHWEST AUTO SALES 3 Dixie Hwy. FE 8-2128 1966 Chevy Bel-Air 4 Door «•»«. with V8, automatic. a finish, perfect 1969 HONDA 90 Trail B Jacks, Intercoms, teleacopin burners, sera tiro carriers, au lUar^ gaso'lne tanks, stobllzli *L0WRY CAMPER SALES 325 S. Hospital Rd. Union Lil EM 3-3681 mPJMHPbumers. 352 V-8 w overdrive, white envoi top o\ — -* —it. AAA 4-2042, AMF SKIDADDLER (l7VShp) W sr and Little Dudo trailer. N yer, $895. 363413S. ____ i t^WIRiSHAIR Terrier puppies. AKC 1 | registered, 2 melee. Champion — I bloodlines. 4 wks, old. 752-2533. new Mcrifle. Pickup earner cover for 8 ft. box. Factory —d* sacrifice price. 625-5676. WIREHAIRED Terrier puppies, A registered, bred for quality ■ disposition. Call Holly, 634-4833. Pet Supplies-Service 79-A vertlble top. 81250. 426-1019 or 642- THf SALVATION ARMY . RED SHIELD STORE IIS W. LAWRENCE ST. Everything to moot your ted: Clothing. Furniture. Appliance! Used rail road tits. Galloway Ct.__________________ Christmas Trees 67-A CHRISTMAS TREES CUT YOUR OWN Groat family fun — Wagon: Convenience 30X100 PINE-SPkUCE-FIR Oen Novombor » through December 24 ADEN THORNTON 1601 N. Gemer Road S Mile wet of MlHoMMldilgon OFF COWIMERCE ROAD EVINRUDE SKEETERS BOBCATS GOOD selection used" shotguns e rue* FRESHLY CUT, torucs snd Scotcn pIM, now on Mil behind Tenure's N”j*hnson. Follow too MmSe. M2 FE 8-468 GIFTS? . WE CARRY ALL •TYPES OF SPORTING GOODS Guns—Scopes—Ammo —Clothing Goods— ^ Ice Fishing Equipment Cliff Dreyers Gun and Sports Center 15210 Holly Rd. Holly ME 4-4771 1-A GROOMING <*•>.141' High Fashion broods, 7 day wssj 335-5259 CLOSE-OUT STARCRAFT 1969 TRAVEL TRAILERS 1969 CAMPERS SEE THE ALL NEW 1970 AUO'S AND STARCRAFTS CRUISE OUT, INC. 41 E. Walton FE 2441 ' * CWtod Sim. Pontio'c~Mobllo Park_754-1894 WINNEBAGO TW No. 1 In Motor Homos. 17'-18'-22’-23'-27' i Pries Start at 84455.00 i See the now 27' trailer. Reese & Drew-tlte Hitches, 1 Sold B Installed F. E. HOWLAND $ALES 3255 Dixie Hwy. __OR 3-U56 - WARNER AIRSTREAM 1970 HONDA, TRIUMPH, BSA NORTON. M‘“‘ HMli ANDERSON SAL 1645 S. Telegraph ________________ A-l Motorcycle Insurance | rup . FARMERS INSURANCE Agency otP™ 2 Pontiac across from Anderson's ---j. —— 3344597. jr * 0-125CC ....................$11.00 SIXMO. 673-8459, 126-200CC ..............014.00---------------- 201-360CC .............019X10 361-500CC ..............024.00 I501-750CC ...............030.00 A-l POODLE GROOMING Pickup 8. delivery, service. Man-day thru Friday, 0 a.m. to,3 p.m.,* Anytime Sat. 8< Sun., Clarkston 625-4415.__________________ 1-1 POODLE GROOMING. K 335-4329 or 332-5439, CENTURY YELLOWSTONE _ TRAVEL TRAILERS QUALITY AT ANY BUDGET STACHLER TRAILER SALES, INC. 3771 Highland (M-59) 482-9440 1XPL0RER MOTOR HOME 21'1 25', MODELS 14 USUAL DOWN PMTS.I Many homes In stock have bee reduced so that only VS of to regular cash down payment Is r< qulredl 4 used 8. 4. damaged horn available, drastically reduced. COUNTRYSIDE LIVING 1084 Oakland ____________334-1509 A HOLIDAY SPECIAL T20CC SUZUKI Trail Bike, 6 Speed REGULAR $485 Sale $375 12,000 ml. or 12 mo. warranty !G SUZUKI Ale Hwy. DRAYTON PLAINS 1967 Chevy El Cameno Pickuj With polo whlto finish# «i excellent condition, only • $1637 Matthews-Hargreaves The Big Lot II Oakland Avo._FE 4;4547 1946 SS CHEVELLE $1167 Matthews-Hargreaves Budget Lot E^.M 1967 Buick LeSabre door hardtop. Power steering, ower brakes, radio, heater, white rail tires. Sharp one own.- judo $1595 Fischer Buick 515 S. Woodward Birmingham 1967 Buick Electro 225 Convertible, full power, factory s AM-FM radio, whitewalls. $2295 Suburban Olds 860 S. Woodward __________________ ' Birmingham____Ml 7-5111 1947 impala Chevrolet, 1966 chevy IMPALA Convertible. ‘------ *nd_ oittamotto $1,070 full price. Calf into ot Ml 6-7100. TURNER FORD Tpor7, 1967 CAMARO, . RALLY, yellow with block vinyl top Interior, 01550. <726669. 1967 CHEVY CAPRICU ?.F 1967 CHEVROLET Vt ton, ( SUZUKI CYCLES. lS'kOr 2bi PSICO I CHEVROLET VS Ton, V-8 307 rlth stick, custom cob, stop lumper, heavy ■Bigg* -1------ ecor, group. III 1968 Electro 225 Convertible Fischer Buick 515 S. Woodward Birmingham good condition. power, 2S3 anoint 81300. UL 24071. L 17,000 ml. 1968 JEEP ...____, 4 wheel drlvo, hero Is ont that will raaly go In the snow. GRIMALDI CAR CO. ---H ‘ FE 5-9421 1968 FORD 100 V-0, whitewalls, AM-■m6fcW|greMldmJto^fflTII1ll ■ Beats-Accessories built-in unit ,..l Coll for appointment. 320-4235 solos. Prices start ot (9,995, ui >r 332-7810._____________________ STACHLER TRAILER 12'x44 '2-bedroom, $3695 Your authorized dealer for Holly) Park# Oxford# Parkwood and , —, —_________---— Danish King. Frea Delivery within 11# YELLOW FIBERGLASS# hydro, ioao ECONOLINE# 300 miles. Will trade for moati bucket teats, holds Up « bn i ----------------- «#*»« ^ BOO 1 yr. >. 087-4144. EXPERT POODLE Grooming, 7 I SALES, INC. 3771 Highland (f-- I . anything of valve. Open 9-9 p.m j MIDLAND TRAILER SALES 2257 Dixie Hwy.__________338X1772 P SHOPPING POODLE TRIMMING RBASONABLfe B & B AUCTION EVERY FRIDAY ....7:00 P.M. EVERY SATURDAY ...7:00 P.M. SLATE SALE POOL TABLES _________________ SfflSt’iA'i EV'^bSbuyv-S€ll-trade discount pneas. ciost^jui ana j Ratal! 7 Pays weakly | .CONiJONMENn^WELCOME. SPORT TEAILER, GEM DR CORSAIR TRAVEL TRAILER Coraalr and Gem pickup campers. Lots Avellible CLARKSTON MOBILE HOME ----L-^ 1 * 47441080 Pool tables, 904 S. in Royal Oak. Open 9, Sat. 104 p.m.. Sun. , Pick YOUR ChrittntM fro* VnTV^so^Xs^f'Prei _______________________________ m"'!VAMC!f'e|-7S0in- SK|.WHIZ^».5 hX». 372CC tersectlon. Cedar Lane Christmas 3. like now. STOS.Y tree Farm, 8970 Dixie Hwy. 425-TMQg, __________j Scotch pine trees, wholesale lore ot io or more. OR SCbTCH CHRISTMAS trimmed, cut you# _ -a Coulter's Tree Form. 7 ml. E. of CASH PRiZE EVERY AUCTION 1 09 Dixie Hwy.____OR 22717 B & B AUCTION Special Auction Weds., Dec. 3rd, 6:30 p.m. Sharp 1 AND ALL HAVE MODERN DECOR Early Amarlean-MadlterranMi. CAMBRIDGE DELTA _________________________LIBERTY i MONARCH HIINTFIK CPFflAI rambrandt rh'cL.coE Available Immodlatoly-park spa-4 sizes for Vi ton pickups. 0 ft. Colonial Mobile Homes camper, 8095. 8VS ft. camper for VS FE 2-1457 674-4444 ton pickup. Insulated Pickup Top- 25 Opdyke Rd. 2733 Dixie Hwyl pars. AObura Heights 1948 FORD Pickup ___I M ton, V8, custom, only $1595. 97! MCKENZIE FORD 1651-2505 Rochester 451-4003 fEl custom club wheelbase, big 6 ----------------------- 674-1344. '■ ***** suto., many extras. $2100. 4 d Motors — <921800, GLASSPAR, STEURY, Micro-craft ■Matt, Grum— Evinrude. D LAKE. Phono WINTER STORAGE CLEARANCE T969 Boats, Motors, trailers COHO SPECIALS bot some lust rloht for Coho V Glostron 1969 GT 160 Spor boat S129I n SALEI .. _5 1963 LIBERTY, Excellent condition. Furnished. 2 bedrooms : with washer, fall 682-7254. Ideal for up-North Cabin, tic.___ 24' DOUBLE WIDES. from 1970 GMC Vi ton—Long Box With V5, AMP and OIL GAUGES, VINYL TRIM, JR. WEST COAST MIRRORS, and HEATER. $2497 Merry Olds 1968 BUICK Convertible Automatic, radio, heetar, whitewalls, power steering, brakes, gleaming blue finish, matching Interior, white top, this Is toe right time to buy a convertible, too price It right. Sea this one t-- you buy any cor you ma, M paylng^hundrods too much. $1499 'call0’credit manager Mr. Bell for Low Payments »ET A "STAN” THE MAN DEAL STAN ELLIS OLDS power, cruise liras, 42750, 644- V$, ET mag whttlt, mint condition. Full price, (3695. P.S. We've Moved to Mila N. of Mirada Milo „ 1145 S. Telegraph Rd.__FE 5-4101 I960 CHEVROLET IMPALA, 2d00f, power steering, automatic, vinyl root, 01095. 482-2535. ______ 1988 CORVETTE CONVERTIBLE, bronza, 4 spaed, bait otfer. 476* 5352 conditioned, full $204. *_____________________________ 1969 BUICK Skylark custom convertible. low mileage, radio, poMtlve.troctlon, . oowor -g performance a wheels, priced" r. Romeo. 752-2965. 1949 BUICK GS-400, stage 1. 1 steering and brakas, 4 re____________ many extras, 143-4473 betore 7 1947 CADILLAC COUPE DeVIllo with vjnyl top, air conditioning. 37" 44j| 1968 Chevelle Malibu Coupe iHor^'v?! ^automatic,' radio# whitewalls# only - $2295 Matthews-Hargreaves The Big Lot Oakland A ~ **" UU XL HARDTOP. Vinyl ro power and automatic. 01140 f price. Call Mr. Porks Ot Ml 7500. McClellan travel trailers 4020 Highland Rd, Ph. 674-3163 Closeout prices on all Itams In stockl 41 17 thru 23 footers • Bonanza, Wood Lake, West 0 Wind B Wheel Camper .'HAUL YOUR Snowmobile or Trail Bike Ipside the NEW 1970 16 FT. GEM Self-Contained Travel Traitor COME OUT AND SEE IT Sot Upl Trades accepted ^■uoiB^LIvIno, 1007 jfi|U|| 334-1509 GMC TRUCK CENTER 1946 LIBERTY, 12 X 50 furnished. 1967 ESQUIRE 12 X 50, IIbj ! 1960 HOLLV PARK, 12X6J Skirted, i Central air conditioning. 335-7354. ; I960 RICHARDSON ADM0R_E7~52 X 12, like now, $2490, Coll 391-1584. SAVE to ON NEW BOAT2MOT0R2TRAILERS Harrington Boat Works “ Telegraph - •»*•* 675 Oakland Avenue 335-9731 uniy $j>zc5yo. ELLSWORTH Trailer Sales 6577'Dixie,Hwy. 425-4400 1969 HARTFORD v It X 40, 2 BEDROOM. CALL 394-0374, IF NO ANSWER CALL 425-9922 AFTER 5 P.M. AT TROY VILLA, 12x55, Vlndalo with 9x25 ittachod year around room, 7x9 utility* room, adult Motion, noad not be moved. 489-9234. JOHNSON'S TRAILER SUPPLIES ' E ACCESSORIES DEALER FOR: TROTWbOD WAG-N-MASTERS APO^OOM TO^ YOUR ^jnoblle DETROITER AMERICAN SUNRISE PARK ironoc Wanted Cars-Trucks 101 Mansfield AUTO SALES 300 . Sharp Codllloct, Pontioc, Olds and Bulcks for out-ot-stato market, top d°"*r .P*MANSFIELD AUTO SALES 1104 Baldwin AVO. COMPLETE LINE 1948 CADILLAC DEVILLE. has everything, like new, .22,00 CONVERTIBLES Some with air conditioning, 4-speed and Automatic transmission. I to choose from. Lew mileage dr---- trade-ins, AUDETTE PONTIAC 1S50 W. Mapla-rd. Troy 642-3289 JUST RECEIVED 5-1969 Plymouth.. Municipal cars Aw Can be pvr- LUCKY AUTO Pontiac Standard Auto ikland Ava. , FE 1-4033 New and Used Can 106Naw dad Used Can 106New and Used Cdrs 106 New and Used Can 106 BOB BORST j Suburban Olds Lincoln-Mercury Sales- | 860 S. Woodward 1950 w. Maple Rd. Trey M. « «op,Birrninghom Ml 7-5111 1962 MERCURY Good body ana ei good liras, 335-6012. 1964 MERCURY MAURADER, good SSBS.-42*48>1, 1965 COMET, 2DOOR, C 1966 MERCURY 4 door sedan. Metallic sliver with black vinyl Intarlor. v-8 automatic, powar steering, radio and haatar. Full price $795 BIRMINGHAM Chrysler-Plymouth 2100 Maple Rd. Troy 642-7000 1967 Mercury Cougor y air condition. Full pric 1969 Olds 98 4-door power and factory a dltlonlng. 4 to choose from. $.3395 Suburban Olds 860 S. Woodward Birmingham Ml 7-5111 TAKE A LOOK, era hove most from 1947 to 1969, such as: coins, Cadillacs, and v.v. m ECONOMY CAES, 2335 DIXIE 1944 PLYMOUTHConvartlbiaT^ good — new snow liras, 56,000 451-1343 Oftar S. clearance sale price, only, f price. Still under new o ranty- We've Movad ........1. of Mfracto M BONNEVILLE. Good driving New and Used Can 106New and Used Can 106 $1895 1947 MERCURY, V-S, f Ing, good condition, 4 S1154. FE 4-S712. 1967 COUGAR, XR7, power bra and steering, air, GT, White v black vinyl top. Rally wheels,'1 —$1795. 626-1039 or 642-17 1969 MERCURY, r sterlng. console. excellent condition. OR 3-2526. . 1966 OLDS Bright Red And Ready GRIMALDI CAR CO. 900 Oakland Ave. FE 5-9421 1967 Delta Custom 4-door, hardtop, factory p factory air, vlnyi top, Ilka net Suburban Olds 860 S. Woodward Birmingham ■ Ml 7-5111 1968 Olds 98 Luxury Sedan Full power, factory . air conditioning, 6 way seat, vinyl top. $279? Suburban Olds 860 S. Woodward Birmingham Ml 7-5111 New and Used Cars 106 New and Used Cars 106New and Usad Cars 106 . © HAHN 1 TODAY'S SPECIAL 1962 CHEVY II Hardtop . .$495 with automatic, 6 cyl. engine, radio, heater, new car trade, one owner, excellent mechanical condition.. 1966 CHEVY II Nova ....$119$ 2 door hardtop, with 4 cVl. automatic, low 'mlle-aga, Ilka naw condition. 1968 JEEPSTER Convertible ;...$27?5 with console, factory executive car, tow mileage, topi condition, 4 Wheel drive. . 1967 DODGE Pickdp $1395 Ilk ton, with sweepllne box, V-4, custom cab, A-1 condition! Raducad for Quick Sate. 1967 PLYMOUTH Fury III J..J. .$1595 2 door hardtop, with frtr. conditioning, full power, Immaculate condition, naw car trade. 1966 FORD Galaxie ... $ 995 "546" 4 door, with V-l, automatic, full power, must drive to appreciate it! Reduced for Quick 1969 PLYMOUTH Roodrunner ..$2395 2-door, hardtop; with 4-tpaad or automatic, new ear warranty. W# haw tour to choose from, prices 1964- IMPERIAL LaBoron^ ... $ave 1967 CHEVY Stake $ave Bright red finish, dual rear wheels, 4 speed transmission, excellent condition. A Reel Work Morsel ' Chiysler-Plymouth-Rambler-Jeep Clarkston, 6673 Dixie Hwy. MA 5-2635 \ I ’: Z - IT . ■■ ”. . v SAVE NEW 1969 Chryslers and Plymouths GIVE US A TRY COMPARE OUR PRICES BEFORE, YOU BUY OAKLAND Chrysler-Plymouth CHRISTMAS IS COMING!! Get him or her that used car nowl TojiQutillily .1965 Chrysler Newport 4 door, sedan, belgt thls^ car looks and runs real $995 1967 Buick Skylark GS 400, hardtop. This one Is a real \go'er. * $1595 1968 Plymouth Fpry III Look, a 4-door, hardtop, vinyl roof, powar steering, power brakes, and what a price. « ~r 11795 1968 Chrysler Newport $1995 1968 DODGE Coronet "540" 2-door, tap, a green car that look drives real good. $1795 $995 1968 MUSTANG oor hardtop, VI, eutomi re a reel buy for only $1595 1967 Dodge $1295 Fury III $1695 $4195 1969 Chrysler 2-door, hardtop, with double power, with saddle leather $2885 1968 Charger Ing, vinyl top, and : a i car only. ' /, 7 ' / ■ $2395 TODAY'S SPECIAL 1967 CHRYSLERS ...................From $1495 CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 724 Oakland Ave. FE 5-9436 New and Used Care New and Used Can •GO! HAUPT PONTIAC \ Save—Save-Save CLARKSTON . Mi SBr Pontiac b tfftifnviL convertible, automatic with doc__ power, excellent rumilno condition, $500 or bolt : oftar, Sfl-sm, 451- 1965 PONTIAC GRAND . CALL CREDIT. MANAGER Mr. eoll tar L “ GET A "STAN" THn MAN DEAL STAN ELLIS OLDS ctean; . stdwL________ 1N7 e.Y.6. Hordtap, vjnyT power and automatic. Full nHS $1505. Celt Mr. Parka at Ml " TURNER FORD mMIww_______________ ALINA, 1 DOOR hardtop, ...... 1041 LEAMNS, 2 DOOR hardtop, ,power staarWig, power brakes, .'automatic. ridB. Silk UL 2-2W2. I IMS CATALINA Wagon, radio and transmission, oowgr (tearing, brakes and tall Beta, olr conditioning, cor opoflita end still &ari^5.g,5 1968 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE «Wt wioon* B factory control, electric power v $2795 . 474-048T or 343- 766 2 DOOR rebuilt tronsmlnfon, got beautiful black Interior, ne — VEMPEST CUSTOM ..... wagon, 3800 ml., auto, executh. owner. $2400. Phone Eu$. 554-2290 or evenings. 442-4945. \ 196$ Catalina St. Wgn. ..... 1941, Catalina Mr. hrdt..... 1941 Catalina St. Wgn....... 1944 Ventura ................ 1968 Cotolino .............. 1942 Ambassador Wgn., air Bonneville 4 dr/ Galaxle hardtop ..-$1895 ...ItffS' ...$179$ ..11295 ...HUf automatic a beautiful tu-tana|i»S ota* 4 doar...... I.'"'! and Savei * 0W"*r’ Buy now'1*** Mercury convartibia -.!!....I SHELT0JI Pontiac-Buick I keem^harS* & SerVlSLoo 15 V Rochester Rd. 651-5500 w :U0° RAMBLER-JEEP, New aad Used Can »r Want 6 New a Ads DialI 3344981 id Used Can 106 | AvI SPECIALS 1968,FORD RANCHER Vi TON _th stick,. 390 Vi, radio, hooter, v,n. red buckets, srpl Only — $2095 , 1968 FORD XL CONVERTIBLE h v-$, automatic, power srlno, braka$, windows, tac-y official Araar or 50,000 $2195 1969 FORD • Galoxie Hardtop dot with 390 v-8, automatic, $2695 1967 Pontiac Tempte»t 4 Door tan, with Vt, automatic, $1395 M 19x66 FORD Galoxie Hardtop 2-door with Vta, automatic, power steering, candy''apple rod with roil fntarlor. Only - $1195 1969 FORDS 2 XL and 1-LTD Hardtop $2745 1968 FORD Galaxie Fastback 1 $2095 1968 FORD ; 6 passenger wagon Country Sedan, with STB V-l, automatic, power steering, brakes, balance of 5-yoer or 50,000 mllat Warranty. I now $2295 J FLANNERY FORD On U.S. 10 (Dixie Hwy.) —WATERFORD— 623-0900 BUY! SELLI TRADE! USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! 40% DISCOUNT' ON MANY ' 1969 EXECUTIVE MILEAGE CARS * FROM ORIGINAL FACTORY LIST PRICE - Example . .« 1969 PONTIAC Bonneville Hardtop 4-Door with cordovo top, AM FM radl turbo-hydramatlc dual axnoust, power ataa Ing, powar antenna, remote control mlrrc stereo typo. Ill tinted wnb I $ave 40% Nqwl Example . . . Example ... 1969 PONTIAC 1969 PONTIAC Catalina Hardtop Coupe Catalina Wagon With vinyl trim, decor group, turbo-hydrs- 4 j,, w(th ^ group, turbo-hydra- er, remote control minor, electric dock matte, push button radio, power steering. power steering, disc brakes, tinted glass, AIR CONDITIONING and whitewalls. whitewalls. $ove 40% Now! $ave 40% Now! 1969 PONTIAC Wide-Tracks! - BRAND NEW — 1969 PONTIAC Catalina 4-Door Sedan with decor group, hydramatic, push button radio, remote control mirror, power steering, power disc brakes, tinted windshield, whitewalls. Only — $2935 - BRAND NEW - 1969 FIREBIRD Hardtop Coupe with automatic, decor group, power steering, power brakes, tinted glass, cordova top, Firebird 350 engine, pushbutton rgdio, custom trim, whitewalls. We nave more 1969 Firebirds to choose from — $2768 We Will Meet or Beat Any Deal, We Will Not Be Undersold 1 ,Yes-Even on All 1970 Pontiacs , pontiagtempest Open , Daily Till 9 P.M. On M-24-Lake Orion Open gat. Till 6 P.M. MY 3-6266 THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1969 D—15 IS Sow* 13 Tropkad plant 14 City in 15Evergr**tt 16pXefr*ctive 48®el,f. tiir«i«Mi persistent 20CherSee.ua 53 Quechuan ehtaT Indian srnSd " vote* ■ 57 Napoleonic songs , 4 Swift Sg^gyoie. 7 Dress edge 8 Action of J2S3SSL fas- 11 Bryophytic 40 Choice part illeriahdktalw 27Carpanto’e JoSeS^for DOWN Iftaiw 1 Unharmed 8nflim - 2 Indigo SiSlHMlreaupM 3 Writers of «5XLT,'» words for 1 l 3 r“ 5 r- 7 8 6 10 11 12 13 *r - , lti 16 17 ik 18 2° 21 w\ 24 25 [27 28 28 36 31 34 38 |5F sn 4? ST 42 43 44 46 47 48l 48 50 61 82 53 64 56 56 57 2 People in the News By The Associated Press Duke Ellington and his 17-man band returned yesterday from a good-will tour of 12 European nations, and the bandleader said “I have a lot of wonderful impressions.” Ellington told newsmen in New York that in Prague, Czechoslovakia, “After the show, some young kids followed me to my hotel room where they gave me enameled animals and other gifts, sit was all done without words, so I asked them for their names and addresses so I could send them' vrs'iunivw Christmas greetings, and it turned out that KLX‘INUT0N they were all Russian musicians — it was wonderful. Apollo 12 Astronauts to Be Rose Parade Marshals The Apollo 12 astronauts will be grand marshals of the 81st Tournament of Roses Parade on New Year’s Day, nffleialji say. Charles Conrad Jr., Alan L. Bean and Richard F. Gordon Jr. accepted the invitation yesterday, a parade spokesman said. The parade precedes the Rose Bowl foot- Rep. Powell's Son Makes NY Social Register Adam Clayton Powell III, son of the Harlem congressman, has made the New York Social Register far 1970, but under his wife’s maiden name. Powell was listed as the husband of Beryl G. Slocum, 1960 debutante and Newport socialite, whom he married earlier this year. There was no listing in the Mr. and Mrs. section and no reference under “Married Maidens.” Sen. Mundt Partially Incapacitated by Stroke Sen. Karl E. Mundt, 69-year-old Republican from Sonth Dakota, has been partially incapacitated by a stroke, his office says. But the announcement, yesterday in Washington said Mundt’s life is not in danger and he has no plans to step down from the Senate. Mundt lost' partial use iff his right arm and has difficulty walking and speaking, an aide said. Doctors said he will be in Bethes-jmuinut da Naval Hospital for six to eight weeks. Toots' Honored on 40th Year as Saloonkeepei “Toots” Shor, drinking companion of sports and show business figures, was honored yesterday hi New York at a dinner marking his 40th year as a saloonkeeper here. “This has to be the greatest moment in a bum’s life,” Shor, told 1,400 well-wishers at the New York Hilton. The guests paid $75 each to help the USO and HAVEN, a reha-bilitory group for drug addicts. Gen. of the Army Omar Bradley, Jade Dempsey, Mickey Mantle, Bob Hope and Pat O’Brien were among the guests. -Television Programs- Programs furnished by stations listed in thie column are subject to change without noticel Channels! 2-WJBK-TV. 4-WWJ-TV. 7-WXYZ-TV. 9-CKLW-TV, 50-WKBD-TV, 36-WTVS-TV, 62-WXON-TV R— Rerun C — Color TUESDAY NIGHT 6:09 (2) (7) C - News,, Weather, Sports (9) R C — Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea (in progress) (50) R G — Flintstones (56) R — Americans from Africa . (62) R.—Ozzie and Harriet 6:10 (I) C - News -Cronkite (4) C — News—Huntley, Brinkley (9) R - Dick Van Dyke — Rob’s sense of humor backfires when he bases a skit on Laura’s penchant for opening his mail. (50) R — Munsters - A ' disc jockey hears a tape of Herman’s voice and detides he’ll be the new singing sensation. (58) Beyond the Earth — Dr. John A. Russell discusses astronomy. (62 C — Robin Seymour— The Coven guests. 1 7:00 (2)C — Truth or Consequences ,(4) C — News, Weather, , Sports (7) Cf — News — Reynolds, Smith (0) R — Movie: “I’ll See You in My Dreams” (1952) Musical biography of songwriter Gus Kahn. Doris Day, Danny Thomas (50) R —I Love Lucy (56) What’s New - The two Brave Boys explore a Chilean copper mine. 7:30(2) C — National Geographic Special — “Siberia: the Endless Horizon” is a picturesque study of the region which occupies more than one-tenth of the earth’s surface but is guarded by . an impenetrable circle of cold. Joseph Campanella narrates. i (A)C — 1 Dream of Jeannle — After hectic preparations, Tony and , Jeannie are married in a ceremony marked by frenzyl (7) C — Mod Squad — Pete, Line and Julie pose as 'college students to investigate a young man’s 1 mysterious death. (50) C — Beat the Clock (56) Joyce Chen Cooks.— “Shanghai Duck” (62) C — Of Lands and Seas — France is visited. 8:00 (4) C — (Special) The Night Before Christmas-Clement C. Moore’s famous poem is animated and narrated by the Norman Luboff Choir. (50) R C — Hazel (56) News Special — “Hunger: A National Disgrace” highlights the opening day of the White House conference on food, nutrition and health, including President Nixon’s address to the meeting. 8:30 (2) C — (Special) Billy Graham — Anaheim, Calif. Crusade (4) C — Julia — A charming, talented artist who refuses to take' a steady job is influencing Corey. (7) C — Moyle: “Three's a Crowd” (Premiere) A man suddenly finds himself married to two women. Larry Hagman, Jessica Walter, E. J: Peaker ' .(50) C — To Tell the Truth ' . (62) R — The Nelsons 9:00 (4) C — First Tuesday — Segments include an American girl’s trip to London to undergo an abortion, and James * Brown, black millionaire entertainer and businessman, talks about his favorite project of. encouraging young people to — Radio Programs— WJX7A0) WXYZ(1270) CKLW(8001 V 4:00—WWJ, N*Wt, Sport, .'WJR/'NeoMi ' , , 1 CKLW, Steve Hunter', ■—on, Netm W" t , Don Alcorn IMRMMPMt Lines, jeans • \t,. »-WWj. Today n Review i:4$—wwj. Review, im-.^jWHjeViK v i WJR, Lowell Thomat, Auto Devi WHFiTue Alan WCAff, Mjwt, Rick Stewart WJBK, Tom Dee" * WJR, world Ti 1:00—WPON, News, Lorry Dixon WJR, News, Sport* •til—WJR, Sunnytld* Encode •:30—WJR, Showcase, Cloae-UO 1:45—WJR, Showcase, .. • Minority Report ‘tiM -CKLW, Scon Renan. WJR, NOWt, ■j'otwjBk/-WXYZ, News, Jl CKLW, Tddd Wallace WCARji News, Wayne Phi whfl ire J. Cook WEDNESDAY MORNINO 4:00—WJR, MUtlC Hell wwj. New* WCAR, News, Blit 0*11*11 'leiohbor -wxkVz,0pnU1 t :,upwn nouee 10:00—WXYZ, Newt, johnny ■ Randall * • WCAR, Rod Milltr 11:00^-WJr7" News, kaleldo- WWJ, Nanir* CKLW, Hal Martin .WjBk, Hank O'Nell 11:15—WJR, POeut 1:W—WJR, Newt, Dear Abbv : 15—WJR, Arthur Godfrey ..,, Me Sherman Mike Wallace Mitchell wxr l, WJR, NnN, Mil . CKLW, EtfvMil 1:15—WJR, Muslv nni 1:10—WJR, Tim* for He* J:00 WCAR, News, Ron' . WJBK, Tom Shannon WHFI, Don Alcorn ditt-WWJ, Newstime 5:55—wpon. Stock Report TV Features NATIONAL GEO-GRAPHIC SPECIAL, 7:30 p.m. (2) THE NIGHT BEFORE CHRISTMAS, 8 p.m. (4) NEWS SPECIAL, 8 p.m. (56) MOVIE, 8:30 p,m. (7) FIRST TUESDAY, 9 I p.m. (4) NET FESTIVAL, 9 p.m. (56) 60 MINUTES, 10 p’m. (2) ENGLEBERT HUMPERDINCK, 10 p.m. (7) MAN AT THE CENTER, 10 p.m. (9) stay in sehool and make the most of their lives. (9) C - What’s My Line? (50) R — Perry Mason (56) NET Festival - The American premiere o f “From the House of the Dead,” a contemporary opera by Czech composer Leos Janacek. Based on Dostoevsky’s novel, the opera Is sung by John Reardoft, Robert Rounseville, David Lloyd and Frederick Jagel. (62) R - Movie: “Bottoms Up’* (Brjtish, 1960) Students at a buys’ school stage a rebellion and end up foiling a plot to kidnap a prince. .Jimmy Edwards, Martita Hunt. 9:30 (2) C — Governor and J.J. — J.J.’s intuition tells her Maggie is in love with, the governor. Gqv, David Cargo of New Mexico guest-stars. (9) C — Cesar’s WorlcJ — “Caribbean Pbrts of Call” 10:00 (2) C — 60 Minutes -Segments include a major investigation of whether South Vietnam, faced with the prospect of' an American military withdrawal, can continue to fight its battles against North Vietnam and the Vietcong. Interviews with South Vietnam President Thieu and members of his government are featured. (7)C — ( Specia 1) Engelbert Humperdinck — Tom Jones, Dionne Warwick, Barbara Eden and Jose Feliciano guest. (9) C — McQueen — Columnist investigates ti firm that promises a full head of hair to baldheaded men. (50) C — News, Weather, Sports 10:30 (9) C - Man at the Center—Society’s attitudes to the number and nature of permissible partnerships between males and . females are probed. (50) R - Ben Casey-A veteran nurse' u p ah t a Casey when she isolates patients and'feeds them plum pudding. (56) Segovia Master Class (62) R — Sea Hunt 11:60 (2) (4) (7) (9) C -News, Weather Sports < (62) R — Highway Patrol 11:30 (4) C — Johnny Carson — Shelley Winters and David Susskind guest. (7) C — Joey Bishop (9) R — Movie: “The Captain’s P a r a dJ s e ” (British, 1953) (50) C - Merv Griffin (62) R — Movie: “Sands School Official Leads Group Dr. Robert A. Williams, director of guidance and measurement for Oakland Schools, has been named chairman of the North Central Association of Counselor Education and Supervision. The organization, Composed of college professors of counselor education, state directors of guidance, and local guidance directors, met recently in Chi-Igor. Dr. Williams is past president of the Michigan Personnel and Guidance Association and a member of the Governor’s Commission ott Crime. of the Desert” (British. 1960) ■ 11:35 (2) R - Moyle: “Women Are Like That” (1960) , ' 1:00 (4) Beat the Champ (7) R —Texan (9) Viewpoint (50) R — Peter Gunn 1:05 (9) C — Perry’s Probe - “Fertility Pill, Hormones.and Endocrintiqgy” 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 WEDNESDAY MORNING 5:50 (2) TV Chapel 5:55 (2) C — On the Farm Scene 6:00 (2) C Sunrise 6:25 (7) C — Five Minutes to Live By .6:30 (2) C — Woodrow the Woodman (4) Classroom — “Some Heroic Spirits: First Discovery of the World” \ (7) C - TV College -“Nigeria: Failure o f Federalism, Bane o f Tribalism” 7:00 (4) C - Today (7) C,—Morning Show (56) R — Listen and Say 7:30 (2) C—News, Weather, Sports 7:55 (9) News 8:00 (2) C — Captain Kangaroo 8:05 (9) Mr. Dressup 8:30 (7) R — Movie: “Keeper of the Flame” (1943) Katharine Hepburn, Spencer Tracy (9) Friendly Giant 8:40 (56) R — Modern Supervision — “Performance Appraisals: Tool or Torture" 8:45 (9) Chez Helene 9:00 (2) R-Mr. Ed (4) C — Dennis Wholey (9) C — Bozo 9:15 (56) Children’s Hour 9:36 (2) R C — Beverly Hillbillies 9:45 (56) R — Science Is Searching 9:55 (4) C — Carol Duvall 10:66 (2) R C — Lucy Show (4) C-It Takes Two (9) Ontario Schools I (56) C — Sesame Street 10:25 (4) C — News 10:30 (2) C — Della Reese -Bob Darrin and Gisele MacKenzie guest. (4) C — Concentration (7) C — The His and Her (50) J^ck LaLanne (4) C — Sale of the 11:00 Century (50) C—Strange Paradise (56) Reason and Read 11:15 (56) Misterogers 11:20 (9) Ontario Schools II 11:30 (2) G-Love of Life (4) C — Hollywood Squares (7) C — Anniversary Game (50) C-Kimba 11:45 (9) C- News WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON 12:00 (2) C—News, Weather, Sports (4) C — Jeopardy (7) R C — 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 (56) R — Art Lesson 1:06 (2) C — Search for Tomorrow (4) C — Letters to Laugh-In (7) C — Dream House (9) R — Movie: "Andy” (1965) Norman A1 d e n, Tamara Daykarhonova (50) R — Movie: “Go Into Your Dance” (1935) A1 Jolson, Ruby Keeler 1:10 (56) Tell Me a Story 1:25 (56) Interlude 1:36 (2) C — As the World Turns (4) C — You’re Putting Me On (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 — Black Journal-Report on soul music record industry features Gladys Knight and the Pips, Srnokey Robinson and the Miracles and Isaac Hayes. 2:25. (2) C — News 2:30 (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) Consultation - “Wild Animals as Pets” (62) R - Movie: “Bail Out at 43,000” (1957) John Payne, Karen Steele ' 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) Memo to Teachers 4:60 (2) R C — Gomer Pyle (4) R C — Steve Allen — Jayne Meadows, S t u Gilliam and Johnny Greenwood guest. (7) C — Dark Shadows (9) C — Bozo (56) Sesame Street 4:30 (2) C — Mike Douglas —Gwen Verdon, Scaffold and Christopher Glenn guest. (7) R C - Movie: “Say One for Me” (1959) Bing Crosby, Debbie Reynolds (Part 2) (50) R — Little Rascals (62) C — Bugs, Cyrus and Friends 5:00 (4) C—George Pierrot — “Fairyland .of Austria” (9) R C — Flipper (50) ,RC — Lost in Space (56) Misterogers 5:30 (9)RC- Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea (56) Friendly Giant (62) R — Leave It to Beaver 5:45 (56) Merlin the Magician By CYNTHIA LOWRY AP Television-Radio Writer NEW YORK — CBS preempted a situation comedy N Monday night to report on tile first lottery drawing in the neW draft procedures. The special half-hour report in midevening showed the blue capsules being pulled, one by one, from the Plexiglas bowl but concentrated more on the results. ★ * ★ Essentially the special report served to end the ssupense of young Americans of draft age and their families by showing the order 'of birth dates in the lottery. NBC wrapped up the story by interrupting its feature movie broadcast later in the evening and ABC handled it in its late news program. A BUSY GUY On the entertainment front, it was a big Johnny Carson night. Carson popped up in some gags on NBC’s “Laugh-In,” and was the guest star on the rival CBS 'Here’s Lucy.” Johnny and -McMahon played themselves on Lucille Ball’s show, and they didn’t do it very well. Lucy and family attended a Carson broadcast and, of course, became involved with the stars. Miss Ball can give! I-Carson lessons in comedy. * The vastness, the cold, the wealth and the rugged pioneers of modern Siberia are the subjects of another fine CBS special in the National Geographic Society series to be broadcast tonight. ★ ★ . ★ The hourlong treatment is change of style the series-broad survey of the huge but little-known “booming new frontier” of the Soviet Union. Siberia still means, to most of us, an icebound place of exile. Cold it is—temperatures drop as low at 96 below zero above the Arctic Circle and to 50 below in of its growing cities. But despite the climate, it is attracting European Russians by the m AP Wli'epheto Map* LONG-RANGE FORECAST — The Pontiac area will be colder than usual during the next 30 days, according to* data provided by the U.S. Weather Bureau. However, the chart says precipitation will be near normal. ? V ' ;-"'v v ■ • > ' A Look at TV -h m Draft Draw Is Covered Party Hosts Safety Targets Auto Club Kicks Off Holiday Campaign LANSING (AP) - People who serve liquor to others who’ll drive after drinking are the targets of the 1969 holiday safe driving Campaign kicked off by the Automobile Club of Michigan. “First a friend, then a host” is the theme of the,pro-am, joined this year for the first time by the State Liquor Co» trol Commission and the Miclu-gan Licensed Beverage Association. ★. ★ - ★ Admonitions like those used in past years-“Drunk Drivers Go to JaU” and “Alcohol Kills’-—seem to be ignored by the general public, says James Moffat, assistant general manager of the automobile club. “Our program places the responsibility for motorists who drink and then drive on those persons who serve the alcohol-namely the holiday host,” he explains. Private party hosts are expected to serve more than 70 per cent of the alcohol consumed during the holidays. ★ ★ * In connection with their campaign, the agencies are distributing an “alcohol education center”—a one-by-two-foot, brightly colored poster that includes ah alcohol chart showing how! many drinks a person can consume before driving ability is' affected. It suggests: • Pouring double shots is no| favor to' guests. Two shots of 100-proof whisky double chances of an auto accident. • Allow one hour for every ounce of alcohol before driving. Stop all drinking an hour before the party ends and serve food. Before any drinking begins, eat food items^uch as mashed potatoes—“Eat ’Em Fashed .. . and You Won5t Get Smashed” beans since they act like a sponge in the stomach, retaining alcohol. The educational posters, along with plastic bottle sleeves “to cap bottles at' proper times,” are to be distributed before Christmas through almost every package liquor and liquor-by-the-glass outlet in Michigan, the agencies said.' millions to its manufacturing, Its hydroelectric power, its mineral wealth. . One portion Is dqvoted to the development of Irkutsk, a town of a half million that looks like a. ^tow-covered frontier town of the 1900s. Others show nomad tribes of the Far North with their herds of horses and reindeer. Essentially it is a story of the railroad—the trans-Siberian— which is the steel lifeline of the 5-million square miles expanse. ★ ★ ★ Rails between Moscow and Vladivostok have results in increasing the population from 6-million to 25 million. It not only moves supplies and people but brings medical and dental care, provides shops on wheels and even lectures on current events. It was brilliantly photographed—some of the northern Siberia scenes are so vivid one can almost feel the bitter cold —and had a commentary full of small human details. Unknown Tipster May Get $1,000 j A Pontiac area police tipster may have up to $1,000 coming — if he reads this article. Whoever the tipster Is, Police Chief William K. Hanger has a message: “On Nov. 3, wb received information through the Box 602 (an anonymous witness plan) program which was instrumental in the arrest of the persons responsible for the burglaries at Bethany Baptist Church, 15 Mark, a private home at 109 Osceola and Econ-O-Wash, 12 Newberry. ★ ★ * . “The writer of the note is asked to contact me so I may offer his name and letter for consideration by the board of control of Box 602.” The tipster foiled to follow one direction. .. He did not tear a corner off his letter. ★ ★ ★ » Chief Hanger cannot submit the letter for consideration until he Is assured that someone out there knows what eightdigit number he used as a signature on his letter. We buy, sell and trade PISTOLS, RIFLES and SHOTGUNS 2924 N. WOODWARD AVL Between 12 Vi and 13-Mile Daily 9, Sun. *•» 6 LI 9-0181 ^ INSURE NOwt^S fo Auto—Life—Home^S to Call Ken Mohlman S ■ 682-3490 J ■ 3401 W. Huron, Pontiac 9 g NATIONWIDE INSURANCE 9 S Nationwide Mutual Inwranee Co. to w Nationwide Mutual Fir* Ini. 0*. ^ Nationwide Ufa Insurance Ce. J Hon* Ofliee- Columbus, Ohio .Jto «e..eAVVt ARE YOU Seeking Peace of Mind in These Troublesome Times? If So, Dial 335-0700 “GET OUT OF DEBT” GARNISHMENTS! REPOSSESSED! BAD CREDIT! HARASSMENT! ET DEBT «ID, INC. help Wshg* Hi* prob- DEBT AID, INC. PentiMi It W. Huron St. FS 2-Ctlt U, D—16 THg PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 2, I960 OfcEN DAILY !MO; SUNDAY 12-7 Tuesdays Wednesday, Thursday V.V.V.%* Wkw.WAVAw.wAMA>.t..».»JJJ.. i. . ._ ■MAKCR'. Always the Leader on all Famous-Name TV-Advertised Toys SUZY HOMEMAKER* GRILL Discount Price . ML 3 Days Only Mommy hat a new helper when little girls learn to grill their own meals. Try serving hot dogs, hamburgers, sandwiches, eggs, English muffins. Electric, shockproof and safe. Easy-clean. • TremendoUs toy variety for all ages • Discount savings that defy comparison • Satisfaction always ... or your money refunded • Shop without cash, charge it at Kmart SHOP KMART FOR FAMOUS BRAND TV TOYS DUemmtPri— jp Amr sear. 0*0 7 Design your own jewelry a Ring* ’n Thing*®. Make b accessories. Bap ’n Things.® Discount Drica A Ofcar 3 Day Only O®0O Make Christmas goodies with Susy Homemaker® mixer. Has' boms, heaters. Easy-clean. GLENWOOD PLAZA CORNER NORTH PERRY AT GLENWOOD HOME APPLIANCES ■M «l®e Largest Color i too Can Bur Anrwherp 23-In. Diagonal Measure Picture TV in Choice of 3 Authentic Period Cabinet Styles OHAfSIl — Yon jest can’t, buy a brighter, sharper picture anywhere! Instant Start so there’s no apnoying wait, m picture, sound comes on in seconds. Automatic fine tuning lets yoivflick it from channel to channel without having to readjust it — you get the best picture electronically. Chromix® control for color realism. Automatic chroma control, keyeffgain control for steady picture. CABINET STYLES — Choose Contemporary (shown) of walnut veneer, rich Mediterranean cabinet of elm veneer, or warm Colonial cabinet of maple •veneer. All three approximately 45”x30’’xl7Vk” deep. 2-Year Color Picture Tube Guarantee You Can Buy Your TV or Stereo NOW . . . on Sears Deferred Easy Payment Plan ... And Defer Your First Paymeht ’til February, ’70. SALE! SSHL. Automatic Fin® Tuning TV CA| Cl i”Diagonally DALE! Msasursd Pietun . Consolette Color TV SALE! KSSL. Instant Start Color Consolette CA| El 1“ Dlsgonslly DALE! Msasursd Pisturs Chroma Color Portable TV Auto, color purifier, 'auto. Chroma Color, *f!a Prise l Keyed Gain control. *377 Color TV also has auto-piatic color' purifier, chroma control. ntg. I2S.M weighs just 38 lbs. Automatic Chroma Color $OCD keeps picture life-like. mldO Automatic fine tuning lalsfrlos and Chroma® Control. & In n Legs detach. ftfdftO *477 THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1989 ONE COLOR E-l Ends Saturday, Dec* 6 Open Monday through Saturday 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. SEARS, ROEBUCK AND CO. Downtown Pontiac • Phone FE 5-4171 E—2 THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1969 SALE! Save 40.95 Front-Load Automatic Kenmore Dishwasher SALE! Saye *30 All-Frostless 14 Cu. Ft. Refrigerator End dishwashing chores with a fully Automatic Kenmore dishwasher! Simply load all your soiled dishes, pots and pans ... and this modern-day; convenience will hygenically wash everything sparkling clean, without a drop of hot water on your hands! 239.95 Temperature in the refrigerator section can he conveniently ad-justed to yottr needs. Spacemaster shelves, crisper* plus moat keep* er allow you to adjuit interior. Convenient spacious storage on doors of both refrigerator and big freezer. Porcelain-finished interior is stain and scratch re- 289.99 259" 14.8 Cu* Ft* Frostless Refrigerator-Freezer Save *20... 5*2 Cu* Ft* Compact Refrigerator // Side-by-side styling. Temperature adjusts to your Sale Pdeed needs with''separate re-frigerstor-freeser controls. x, 7 7 Flush door hinges. Never ■■ needs defrosting. / Coppertone finish with melamine laminated / top. With' push button defrost and adjustable thermostat. Top , shelf . is adjustable. Fits any-where. Rag. HIM 9999 Buy Now on Sears February Deferred Easy Payment Plan t THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1969 E—8 SALE! SAVE *50 On Our 30-In. Kenmore Electric Stove with Self-Cleaning Oven Stove has an oven that cooks.and cleans autonfatically. Deluxe plug-in surface burners, 2 appliance outlets. See-through ovep door removes for easy cleaning. Oven light illuminates Ulterior. A joy to nsel Regular 349.99 299" Console Zig-Zag Sewing Machine Sale Prioe Kenmore. With it you can mend, make clothing, slipcovers, curtains. Sews forward, reverse, zig-zag, straight stitch. Front? mount bobbin winder. In cabinet. Better Zig-Zag Console Machine *109 Features include: built-in light, stitch length and width control, smooth rotpid bobbin sewing action. Sews forward and reverse. Built-in blind hemmer. Sewing Mochjnee SALE! SAVE*5(0 30-In. Classic 'Kenmore Gas Range Regular 129.99 279" Double oven gas stove has 2 automatic ovens. Features a clock with 1-hour timer and fluorescent work light. See-through upper oven door, removable lower oven door for easy cleaning. Smokeless 'broiler. Oven/ light. ■ (Hood extra). ■ r • I1'1' 329.99, Electric Stove ... 279.99 Kenmore Stove Dept. Canister Cleaner • • • Automatic Reel HP. Sealed suction 50-in. Long cord, automatic reel, tool storage. Vinyl bumpar protects furniture. Uses disposable dust bap. YOUR CHOICE Upright Vac with Revolving Brush 6-in. Sealed suction. One-speed, single fan. Dust bag in plastic housing on handle. 20-ft.. cord. Vinyl bumper. Sears! Downtown Open Monday through Saturday 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. SEARS, ROEBUCK AND CO. Pontiac • Phone FE 5-4171 Sears is OPEN EVERY NIGHT Monday through Saturday HOMEAFHilANCES Amazing Low Price Fabric Master. ends temperature ^ setting Guesswork JUll llt/dl« e • puts an end to baked-in wrinkles Wrinkle Guard., keeps permanent press clothes wrinkle-free An ideal dryermate! It’s specially designed to dry any fabric you wash in your washer. Wrinkle Guard caters to permanent press clothes and soft heat gently dries today's miracle fabrics as well as delicates. Fabric master turns off dryer when clothes are dry. 209.99 Gas Dryer................ 169.99 Lint Screen.. top-mounted, easy to reach and, clean • Interior dram light... full width Load-a-door makes workshelf • Easy-reach top-mount lint screen • Tumble action stops when dryer is opened ■ • Acrylic-finished top wipes clean End-of-Cyde signals you the moment ^^clothes are dry ^ Use Sears February Deferred Easy Payment Plan 5-Cycle, 3 Water Level Automatic Kenmore Washer Permanent Press Cycle Automatie Kenmore Washer 3 -Temperature Automatic with Adjustable Cycles • Self-dean filter • 3 temperature* • Softener diipenser • Safety lid twitch • Porcelain finish tub • Optional aoeond tint o Built-in lint filter o You control wash eyrie o You control temp. • 6-vane agitator • Safety lid twitch • 3 eyrie tetdngt 0 2 speed* • Safety lidtwitch • Built-in lint filter Sean Car* Service protect* the value of your Kenmore appliance. Sean. h»ghl>.trained technician, assure you eervice saiisfaction with iieraonalised. iirofrwional carp • .. I> sender what wf aril whwver yos live or may move in the I’Ai , , ‘ E—4 im COLOR THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1969 Open Monday through Saturday 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. Searsl Downtown Pontiac # Phone FE 5-4171 SEARS, ROEBUCK AND CO. THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 2, I960 f VM E Prti msjc f—i > 1 ■; " 1 * 1 [ " ‘ 1 W 1 1 m •t»1 uu Check Your List So That The Bright Glow of Christmas Will Reach Those That Are Sometimes Forgotten YOUR MILKMAN YOUR PAPER BOY YOUR CLERGYMAN YOUR MAILMAN A SHUT1N ELEVATOR OPERATOR' YOUR TEACHER * YOUR DELIVERY MAN Shop These Pages of Great Gift Ideas The merry sounds of Christmas are all around you. We’ve captured the holiday mood, made it easier than window shopping, to find exactly the gifts you want to pui your personal gift tag on. Santa himself could not have picked a better selection or a^more varied list of fine gifts. Only 19 Shopping Days ’til Christmas F—2 THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1969 This Christa, (Jive Her IN A NEW WAY TO PREPARE f\ i MEALS FOR YOUR FAMILY - THE AMAM ELECTRONIC “R microwave Ovett W& Specialize! In good comfortable chairs ana rockers. Modestly priced. One of the largest "selections in Oakland l ■ - County. Our lower over-W head saves you money! CASH or TERMS orLAY-AWAY Priced as Low ap • Save as much as 2 hours in preparing a roast beef dinner • Thaw and cook frozen foods in minutes • It cooks cooL No massive heat build-up. i SI years oftelling better 'qualityfor letst We also carry a complete line of accessories, such as helmets, jacket;, gloves and saddlebags, KING BROS. A Pontiac, Michigan via SsT Phone 373-0734 825 W. Huron' St., Pontiac 334-2525 144 OtAKLAND AVE. ORDER YOUR HOLIDAY FLOWERS NOW! POINSETTIAS $750-$1250-$15c Ws. - Sweater Gift Wu Buys Italian Knits I ■ Slipovers ' Cardigans jj" 1 no00 to$2500 COM’S MEN’S & BOYS’ WEAR. l Conveniently located in downtown Pontiao ^ 73 N. SAGINAW Favorite* Artist on 50 minutes df Happy, Holidays listening, $]00 Grown in our own Greenhouses# Four long lasting varieties including white and coral pink. PEACE FLORAL 559 Orchard Lake Ave. x FE 2-0127 * *!p ,:V \ - Deliveries twice daily to Birmingham, B loomfield, etc. An unheard of way „ to please a man Introduce him to a famous fragrance that is the most sought after line of men’s toiletries in Europe. TOBAG ORIGINAL . . . it’s husky, smoky fragrance that’s not at .all self-conscious. Everything a man needs to clean and groom and refresh himself is in the TOBAC ORIGINAL LINE. TAIBAC A^ ORIGINAL PERRY PHARMACY It 8 Great Stores' to Serve You ,pMcCULLOCH'%x Plenty of Power for any Woodcutting " Job.! As Low As $119.95 • Reboreable cylinder — long engine life. • 40:1 fuel mix — less smoke,-greater economy 1 Large, easy-cleaned air filter. * » Enclosed carburetory dirt fre'e,. * Flush-cut handlebar—convenient. KING BROS. Pontiac Road at Opdyke ‘ Pontiac, Michigan p, .Phone 373-0734 FOR THE HARD OF HEARING Inar gift than tlw Joy \ I truly a,Wt •» !.*« ; .Ultra Front Miks A naw davalopmem offarad by Quslitone. World Wide Hearing Service may make you or your loved one hear so naturally it will be • wondrous joy lor an Batter hearing is s gift that keeps oh giving, not only at Christmas but for years to come, for the parsen.-WhO • hart of hearing and for the others who share thdfrllfg. Big Spscisl Pre-Christmas discounts Investigate toi£iyl ” No Con oi Obligation. ttAY IIEFFRON, Certified Hearing Aid Audiologist Pontiac Consumers Co-op Optical Make An Appointment At Our Convenient Location! 1717 South Telegraph-Phone SSS-7871 * ■ If there is a woman on your Christmas list who is hard to please, let her suit herself! Give her a... A Gift Certificate from DIPLOMAT WIG SHOP for the girl with a mind of her own! DIPLOMAT WIG SHOP 69 N. Saginaw 334-0404 ..Worth Getting On Givo tha Vary Bast in SNOWMOBILIS MOTO-SKI and JOHNSON SKI HORSE TRACKER and BEAVER ALL-TERRAIN VEHICLES . SUITS - BOOTS - GOGGLES YOUNG’S MARINA , 4030 Dixie Hwy. on Loan Lake L OR 4-0411- REMINGTON Electric Shaver Custom Cordless Electric Knife $1 095 JLdod one year warranty e Elegant Brushed Chrome • Safety Blade Loader Sheath • Powerful rechangeable energy cell • Comfort wall er counter stand. While you wait service THE SHAVER SHOP 61 W, Huron Pontiac, Mich. 334-1411 6560 Cass Ave. taite the GM Bldg. THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1969 \ F—8 Press Presents iaily^siioippers BRUNSWICK BLACK BEAUTY "v* OR AMF BALL SHOES AND BAQ Man's, Woman's Right or Loft Hand • Combination Ball and Shoo Bag • Namo Engravad Fraa • Elk Laathar Shoos • Lifetime Guarantaa on Boll a Ball Custom Fitted and Drillod by Factory Trained Exports * *18" All 3 for $25.84 MICHIGAN BANKARD SECURITY 9 to 11 Pounds 1 CHARGE Weights 1 Give A Gift Certificate For Christmas! ACME SPORT SHOP i 48 All-Vinyl Reclining Rocker. Choice of Colon. Head-quarters for the Strato* Lounger Chairs. Phone orden accepted. Instant Credit—"We honor all Credit Cards. No Money Down. 338-0309 ¥■ KAY FURNITURE 37 South Glenwood — In The Kmart Shopping Center Open Sun. 12 to 6 Hours Daily 9:30-9 P.M. $ WIDE SELECTION NOW ON j DISPLAY * / RZMl 70 AC/BATTERY OPERATION K 4' *i\ 1108 W. HURON 681-2727^1^ ff |\ FRAYERS ... 4L • Pen Sets jtij* • Drafting Sets • Coin Supplies • Pencil Sharpeners battery & electric • Telephone Index • Stationery • Stamp Albums • Gift Items FINGER’S of the Mall HOURSr 9:30 to 9:$0 SUNDAY: 12 to 6 3HJ ■P FREE PARKING - 682-0411 i ML This year •.. Give Her the Sun — Give Her HAWAII — Lovelier than you dreamed, nearer than you think! 3 Islands — 16 Days OAHU - MAUI - HAWAII Fly United’s DC8 FAN-JET, party in the air! Choice of 1st class or deluxe hotels. Tour, cruise, explore — HAWAII FROM *549 HIRLin TRAM 338*4048 11 W. r«wn>ni*i i MEN’S or LADIES’ GOLF SET t Layaway, Michigan Bankard, Master Charge 90 Days Same As Cash CARL’S GOLFLAND 1976 S. Telegraph Open Mon. & Fi Tues., Wed., Thurs., Sat. 10 to 5>30 Human Hair Wiglets.... $9.95 Finest Synthetic Wigs... $19.95 r * alt colon Human Hair Wigs ...... $19.95 Complete Wig Sales and Service, Human and Synthetic Hair — Personalized Hair Styling, Hair Cutting, Permanent Waving. % MANOR SALON OF BEAUTY NORTH# . 3219 S. Blvd. at Squirrel Rd. Bloomfield Sq. Shopping Center 852*1060 f. Your Christmas M ^.TOBOGGAN IS ‘S here f°r y°U n°WS Imported Canadian 8-ft. 15M Children's SKIS • ICE SKATES. 1 We Buy, Sell and Trade ^ BARNES HARGRAVE HARDWARE. 742 W. Huron St. FE 5*9101 Park Free • ''iX Ou/c Ol/ulbiat Gi|t "To Yoiu... Our factor^ trained craftsmen , will beautifully reupholster / yonr favorite chair or LIVING ROOM SUITE in yonr choice of newest fabrics at our Christmas special money saving offer of EASY BUDGET TERMS OR 90 DAYS CASH WILLIAM WRIGHT Furniture Makers and Upholsterers 270 Orchard Lake nm.50% OFF •Jt£ M FE 4-0558 Ageless Gift...for allages. WORLD BIBLES KltiG JAMES' KING JAMES VERSION OR REVISED STANDARD VERSION Among all, gifts the Bible will remain an enduring reminder of the Christmaa spirit*You’ll find in onr selection World Bibles appropriate for anyone on your gift list. All are guaranteed for life. For Young Folks ... ' this sfriall sturdy Rgjnbow Bible features full-color illustrations, easy to read type, and a full-color cloth cover, from $2.95. Zipper binding, $3.95 CHRISTIAN LITERATURE SALES v, if-55 OAKLAND AVE. FE 4-9591 ;/ m \J/,. - A Gift to Please All Women rf m THE LADY REMINGTON HAIR CURLER Hair styling flexibility ot her select roller sizes to suit her particular hair style. Comes with 6 small, 8 large, and 6 s/iper-Jumbo rollers. Adjustable temperature contrail sets any. desired roller temperature. All, in- a stylish, elgh-Impact ledse wife miFror and egr-.r 19“ 7^ Bill Petrusha & Sons Tel-Huroi» Shopping Center 33$*7879 1550 Union Lake Road Union Lake 363*6286 F—4 THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1969 3m P*"ti<*r— PntmKH ,r3£Sai22«r ,™r iorly^JShoppers Portable Cassette Tape Recorder 2 Hour* Recording Time, remote control $^(C|50 mike, battery or AC power supply. OP 4T TIWN & COIffflf CUHHN1CA11SHS KRN-6423 \j0* Open tun. Neon M 3i30 -X ^ 4664 W. Walton Blvd., Drayton 674-1161 2 & The Sates Floater is shearling lined, so treat the Man in your life to 4i reside warmth. London Brown Shop — Spanish Moss Glove - Hook Glove . . Tel-Huron Shopping Center 333-7879 | 1550 Union Lake Road Union Lake- 363-6286 **5^ ALL NEW FOR 1970 Tem/th cassette tape RECORDER/PLAYER THE CLASSMATE* Model A608 s Records and plays orACI e Plays all size cassette tapes—up to 2 hours of listening pleasurel e Automatic record level control 49,s The quality goes in belore the name goes on• HOD’S TV-RADIO SERVICE 770 Orchard Lake Road 335-6112 |p|j WHITE is Sewing Machine ; j The Perfect GIFT No noad to rush around hunting all over for the PERFECT GIFT. It it yours to glvo in any amount. A Savings Passbook Account .That Will Grow FIRST FEDERAL SAVINGS t 761 Wo Huron St* Dreytoa Plains — Rochester — Walled Lake Lake Orion - Milford — Waterford Union Lake — Northeast Pondae Branch t o NIECE o NEPHEW o DAUGHTER • SON The Perfect Gift Issued In Any Amount |f FIRST FEDERAL SAVINGS Vi - : \ 761W. Huron St. Downto>ra Pontiac — Clartiston _ Drayton Plains — Rochester — WaUed Lake 1j0 ■ : Lake Orion — Milford — Waterford n Union lab* — Northeast Pontiac Branch M MOTO-SKI it.OUTDOORSMEN SPORTS CENTER LU/ Div. of Toyota of Pontiac 'V#^2 y^-6487 Highland Road - 675-5600 Send the Pontiac Press to a Man in Service No matter where he or she Is serving^ mail call always seems brighter when there's news from home. Nothing rates / higher with a lonely Gl than a letter from home —. the news from, home Is a dose second I - ■ , ' r4/r ^“IprlYaar *750 for 6 Months The Pontiac Press Circulation Department Dial 332-8181 THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1969 Press Presents F—5 idef Eorly^ShoppSri % istPli^il; ASSORTED CHOCOLATES Always a Christmas favorite... creams, nuts, fruits, caramels, nougats, toffee scotch, crunches and chewy centers, dipped in finest dark and milk chocolate. 1 lb. $1.95 2 lb.413.85 3 l£>. $5.75 5 lb- $9.5 Vi lb. $1.00 THRIFTY DRUGS • 140 N. Saginaw near Sears • Huron Street Corner Telegraph . • 4845 Dixie Highway, Drayton Plaint 4 & The Perfect Gift for All Ages • • Best Sellars • Children's • Educational • Cook Books • Paper Backs • Bibles • Dictionaries ip THE INK NOOK Phone 682-5920 . Next to the Vw’ Pontiac Mall Optical Center, 4 Start your Chirstmas shopping list right here, at Flora Mae’s. Just think of all the people who would be delighted with the gifts you select from our distinctive collection of Fashions in Good Taste. Boutique Gifts, Jewelry, Sportswear, Lingerie, Robes, Gift Cards and Wrappings. Each with a very merry Christmas in mind. FLORA MAE 700 W. HURON 9i30 to 9t00 p.m. 'f Add More ^ m Gifts for Family * % CONVERT Your BASEMENT# Everything in Modernisation Financing Available Mrmbrr Pontine Arta Chamhtr of Commtrcm In Pontiac Sine* 1931 Since 1931 into a FAMILY ROOM or RECREATION ROOM BASEMENT COMPLETELY FINISHED FieeEitlmatee* Planning tA eng •'Decorating Service T2rW9 ¥: BATHROOMS • BEDROOMS • REC. ROOMS • ATTICS • KITCHENS • DORMERS • GARAGES • FAMILY ROOMS • ROOFING C. WeedoiCeistrictioi Co. 1032 WEST HURON, PONTIAC vk' 681-2500 VV* 4 vV, SPECIALLY PRICED! § Switch from Bsttory to AC Operation Instantly— With thla RM/AM Portable Radio a ROYAL 75-2 —Switch Mm battery to AC opamtion blatantly with tha AC adaptor. included. Feature-packed with aeparate tone control; FM-AFO: tslaseop-ing FM antenna and built-in AM antenna. Earphone Jack. Operatae on 6 C-cell batterlee or AC ¥. SIMISH TV, Inc. The Incomparable Zenith TRANSOCEANIC* ROYAL 7000Y—World'a finest multi-band radio featuring outetanding recaption of International Short Wavs and Amateur Broadcasts, Marine end Weether Reports. FM end Standard AM Broadcaata. Long Wave FAA Weether Navigation. VH F Weather Bend. Operatae on either • *0" call battsnes or built-in AC power supply. 1157 W. HURON - 3 Block* West of Telegraph W.5SSSr 681-1515 4 Open Sundays . . 2 to 6 P.M. ul' It won't go 7^- down your chimney, BUT IT WILL F!T into your BUDGET! NOW! . . . whether you finance or pay cash for yourr OFF! your purchase ... yon can save as much as 2 ~”F List Price! GEROME MUSIC 5052 Highland Rd. . Waterford Plaza V/* Pontiac 674-2025^T 4 ^£" /ft all size and speed records - .What A Groat Valuol HOUSEKEEPING SHOF^ 1^.51 W. HURON FE 4-1555 ^^MASTERWORKS^I jn A PRODUCT OF COLUMBIA RECORDS DELUXE STEREO SOLID STATE COMPACT COMPONENT SYSTEM • GARRARD CHANGER V , with nickeling Magnetic i'; Cartridge and Diamond needle. ’ • 100 watts of Undistorted output. • 2-Speaker Enclosures with 10” woofer, 11” exponential horn, 3Vi” tweeter, sealed enclosures jk**359* vk . CUSTOMADE PRODUCTS CO. . f|v 4540W. Huron St. 673-9700^ OPEN Mon.,Thor,., Fri. ’HI 8:30 Tues., Wed., Set. 'til 5:30 Jrfw BEAUTY’S for vooife^ CTQ83 WITH •J-' free Stand Sere’s a greet value both for the teens nd-ns family. It incorporatM | fine stereo-phonic . sound from ' ‘twin , speakers from dettdi. Includes free stand — 45 RPM Spindle — dual jewel needle, attaches to your fireplace in seconds. POOLE-DICKIE LUMBER tit OAKLAND AVE. 334-1594 SUPPLEMENT TO: The itattiae Press TUESDAY, DECEMBER 2,^ 1969 PRICES EFFECTIVE TUESDAY, DECEMBER 2 THROUGH SUNDAY, DECEMBER 7 HOLIDAY CANDLE Glows with Christmas cheer! Ivory plastic candle with C714 dCl ■ orange flame bulb. UL listed. CHRISTMAS ORNAMENTS Box of 12 European and Amer-lean, glass ornaments. 216" and m. t ' ; .Vl, „ , JT SPRAY SNOW-16 OZ. CAN One swoosh and tree, window, jMM gifts sparkle with holiday gla- jg, cosy to fpiiuivE* POTTED YULE FLOWERS Velvet flecked posies, including dA traditional red pdnsettias in JKLft I****#- W™.— I—V Lamps bum Independently. Add-on plug, 2 extra bulbs. 2$*L1TE OUTDOOR SET1 Each C9V4 lamp boras, hide. MR j ii All radacaabla uuiu. With addkm and dip, UL laud. ISWVHQkVWREMM mil with wraths ■lylns tor wmoows. noon. ntc. 11050 count ICICLES Add a silvery glimmer that re- . RRfe SS5!i pretties for her FANTASTIC SAVINGS ON NYLON TRICOT GOWNS THREE COLORS Rowing overlays of petal-soft nylon tricot . . . pampered to perfection wim finest laces, embroideries and / costly appliques. Pastels. Sizes S-M-L KODEL® POLYESTER FILLED FLOCKED NYLON QUILT ROBES Robe Collarlass beauty takes the long way to at-home fashion. She'll love the empire waist, the delicious lace and satiny trims. Sizes S-M-L. Collared short robe — wide lace trimmed hem & cuff. Both available in pink, blue, white. 10M8. SAVE Vil GIFTY NYLON SATIN HALF SUPS Literally lavished with imported lace hems and rich embroideries. In white and yummy underfashion colors. Short dnd average lengths, sizes S, M and L Gift-Season Pleasers...and the price says S What a huge selection of holiday lovelies for today's woman! HAND-EMBROIDERED IMPORTED "CHANELS” S97 This is your day, Santal We discovered this delightful group in time for Yuletide gifting. All masterfully hand-embroidered by Oriental craftsmen in-a garden-full of colors. Choose white or pastels ... all in 100% wool or machine - washable, virgin acrylic. Small, medium, large. Women’s sizes 42 to 46 6.97 "WITH IT" BLOUSES IN CHIARA CREPE b91 vs Made of care-free, long-wearing 100% stretch nylon. They’re carefully proportioned for flawless fit in petite, average and tall sizes. An assortment of fashion - right beige tones. No - holds’- barred charmers all, in chain front, cross-over or shinny collar. They're “born" to blend with contemporary jumpers, skirts and the whole pants scene! In fluid acetate chiara crepe that has wonderful washability. Sizes 32-38. e White »Pink • Blue • Lilac • Orange • Maize stock vp during this special Sale! our own Linda Loo PANTY HOSE SPECIAL imported SWISS WATCHES • 4-SCENT VARIETY PACK KING'S MEN COLOGNE TRIO GILLETTE TECHMATK® each 1% oz. RAZOR WITH- RAND "ON THE WIND" OR "EVENING; IN PARIS" FOAMING BATH OIL IN DUSTING POWDER "CREME DE MENTHE" BOT1 6 oz. each yourcboice 26-oz. ONE'6WW" NEW REMINGTON ELECTRIC SHAVER Shaves as dose as a hand razorl New model cord shaver features disposable shaving blade. Buy now-get an extra set of blades. SAVE $1 NOW! MEN’S CUFF UNKS A "must" for today's top shirt fashions! Our design oriented collection includes tailored, stone-set, mesh styles. Gift boxed. CHRISTMAS PINS & EARRINGS YOM CHOICE GIFT Watches for the whole familyl Men's, women's, boys' and girls'! Wrist, pendant or ring styles all fully guaranteed. Gift boxed. Holiday inspired pins and earrings, so you can show your Christmas "spirit" everywhere! Choose from,our exciting designs. UP ON HOLIDAY SWEETS PEPPERMINT CANDY CANES 27* 54* Box of 6 Box of 12 17" CHRISTMAS STOCKING WITH CANDY A 7 TOYS DERAN MINIATURE CHOCOLATES 2 lb. box SANTA OR SNOWMAN JAR FILLED WITH HARD CANDY SOLID MILK CHOCOLATE CHRISTMAS BALLS OR BELLS 1 lb. bag ASSORTED HARD CANDY 2 lb. tin MMmmi \ mm m i GREAT GIFT IDEAS ONE COLOR MEN’S PILE-LINED JACKET VALUES MIN'S FASHION SWEATER SPECTACULAR Chill-chasing styles from top manufacturers! Staunch cotton corduroys, rayon-acetates, Fortrel® polyester-cotton twills. Blouse styles, more; all lined with acrylic pile. Green, brown, blue. Sizes 36-46. Super Values! NO-IRON DRESS OR SPORT SHIRTS Regular collar dress shirts of Permanent press 65% Polyester, 35% combed cotton broadcloth. White & new-look fashion colors. Sizes 14V4-17. Plaid & solid polyester / cotton sportsters in regular or button down collars. Sizes S-M-L-XL. Terrific selection I 100% Shetland wools! Easy-care Orion® acrylics! Wool-and-polyester blendsl Long sleeve cardigans and hi-crew neck & V-neck pullovers in solid colors and patterns. Sizes S-XL. MIN’S COLORFUL KNIT SHIRTS SHOE CARE KIT SEAT VALET 097 3 for 8-pc. battery-operated kit includes: power unit, brushes, daubers, polish, tray. Batteries not included. Moulded plastic with vinyl cushion seat, brass finished back. Change tray. Walnut finish hanger. Button-down collar sports in colors men go for . . .. navy, gold, green, white. 100% knit acrylic, they couldn't be more carefree. Scoop them up for Christmas giving. Sizes S-XL. 80,000 PAIR MEN'S HOSE FAMOUS MAKER BUYOUT! In time for holiday giving! Men's stretch nylon, Orion® acrylic-nylons, 100% nylon, more. Many colors. Fit sizes 10-13. MIN'S 65% DACRON® A 35% COTTON PERMANENT PRESS UNDERWEAR Men's Dacron® polyester-cottons. Full cut. Reinforced. T-shirts, S-XL sizes. Briefs, boxer shorts, 30-44. , compare at 3 for 3.39 A m ■ GIRLS’ ■P PATENT PARTY-GOER Alice - in - Wonderland T - strap classic in shiny black patent vinyl that always looks spankiftg new! Wipes clean in a (iffy. Girls’ 8%-12, 12VS-3. SAVE on the NEW E COLOR BOYS’ 4-PC. 10-WAV WARDROBE SUITS Wardrobe - stretching, dollar-saving niftiesl 2-trouser suits in handsome smooth finish 70% rayon, 30% acetate; Single breasted jacket, sleekly man-tailored, with flap .pockets, center vent back. Colorful check vest reverses to solid. 1 pr. solid slacks and 1 pr. contrast check slacks. Ivy-type belt loops. Blue, brown, green. 6-12. 2 favorite styles! Button down collar in 100% combed cotton Oxford doth. Regular collar in 65% Dacron®-polyester, 35% cotton. All tapered with tails, chest pocket. White, colors, 6-18. TODDLER BOYS 2-PC. SUITS JR. BOYS 4-PC. 10-WAY Outfit your little man in stylel "Big-boy -look" 2-button jacket has 2 flap pockets arid a fancy "dude" lining. Tops matching slacks. 70% acetate, 30% rayon. Blue or brown. Sizes 2 to 4. 2- button jacket with center vent, hanky pocket. Reversible vest. 1 pr. solid slacks, 1 pr. coordinated slacks. Great looks for your boy in brown, blue, green. 3- 7. SHOE SAVINGS FOR THE WHOLE FAMILY! TEENS’ HI-RISE PATENTS Leg-flattering hi-rise style, specially pretty in glossy black vinyl. Gilt studs add dashing decor. Imported. Sizes 5 to 10. WARDROBE SUITS MEN’S, ROYS’ FLEECY LINED SLIPPERS So soft —*inside and out! Manmade uppers are super flexible. Brown. Men’s sizes 6Vi* 12. BOYS’ SI2E8 10-3............1.66 Cowboy-style boot, colorfully decorated with stitching. Comfy round toe. Black, Infants’ 5-8. UTTLE GIRLS’ 8 Vi-12......3 JO Slip into plushy long-haired cosiness at cuddle-up time. Comes in colors designed for dieamsville. Misses’ 5-10, Girls’ 10-3. GIRLS’ HOLIDAY ..'Jr. f’ jp^pr;^• GIRLS' 3-PC. BONDED THREE COLORS TOTS' p TODDLERS' HOLIDAY KNIT SalMn (trip* voile bloose sport* the new elephant collar .. . teams up perfectly with parky plaid woven rayon pants; Lilac, pink, blue. 7*14. LITTLE GIRLS' 3-PC. SLACK SETS 397 Big red dots add dash to denim. U-neck top plus sailor-style flare-leg pants in blue cotton denim. Dotted voile long sleeve blouse. 3-6X. DRESSES YOUR CHOICE 3«* iw GIFT BOXED NO-IRON BLOUSES Just right for skirts or pantsl Favorite collar styles, % sleeves. Cotton or cotton polyester blends. All permanent press. Lace, Schiffli trims. 3-6X, 7-14. GIRLS' 2-PC SLACK SETS INFANTS' SLEEP 'N' PLAY SUITS GIFT-BOXED STRETCH SANTA SUIT with hat. Easy-diaper snap-crotch. Santa Red. Medium, Large. EMBROIDERED APPLIQUE STRETCH SUIT. GIFT BOXED. Cotton terry/ stretch nylon. Footed. 0-6 mos., 0-22 lbs. SHORTS SETS—MOD ACRYLIC for boys, girls, the newborn. Imported. Sizes 0-3 mos., 9-12-18 months. How do we give a girl "all-together" look? First, we choose bonded acrylic, for Hs wrinkle-free ways. Then we top the swingiest of skirts with a U-neck mock button overblouse. Final touch beneath, the wispiness of a long sleeve print blouse. Result: she steps forth completely, coordinated in lilac, pink or blue. Sizes 3 to 6X. GIRLS' SIZES 7-14. , 0.7/ You'll want to throw a party, fust to show her offl Pick from our Collection of rayon velvets, bonded acrylics and rayon jerseys, acetates. Styles go straight, flare or torso; some with bishop collars, balloon sleeves. Trims, colors galore. Sizes 1-3, 4-6X. r i thpff nm npQ 18” CRISSY DOLL WITH GROWING HAIR 7-HOUR RUN ELECTRIC CAR money • back guarantee. opps / Tdv < town .Industries TOPPERS TOPPER’S IAIY PEEK A PLAY IAIY-CATCH-A-RAU foK= 'Sljh — JS : I jBg ii P|« Uf&Bl ■■■ P® plsJI > m X fSSJfe i>%i3 |SpI [3W. J Santa-Sized SAVINGS on SPORTIlflRIfiCIttR !*»*« SAVE $2 COMPLETEDELUXE ARCHERY OUTFIT P Complete with 54" Fiberglass 30-35 lb. recurve bow; four 28" Port Orford Cedar arrows, 16" target face, ; finger tab, arm guard and easy-to-follow instruction booklet. Wear-resistant Naugalon® vinyl uppers are also water-resistant, easy to clean; High arena cut pattern. Black for boys; white for girls. Sizes 1 to 4. & LADIES SKATES 8" Selected split cowhide uppers with high cut arena pattern. Polished and brayed blades. Perfect insulation for warmth. Men's sizes 5 to 12, black. Women’s sizes 5 to .12, white. DELUXEMEN’S Boys’ & Girls Pro Skates FIGURE SKATE SPECTACULAR each. Reduces waist, builds body, relaxes the muscles, releases tension. Rolls easily; has soft vinyl hand grips, semipneumatic tires. Instructions. Exceptional gift buy at this price! Outfit comes complete with 4 sand-faced paddles (rugged hardwood handles), net and posts ... plus, 2 table tennis balls.________ Just look' at what you get! Wide aluminum closure with recessed locks. Colors to take you traveling! Blue! Greenl Melonl Red! A rich quilted lining. Deluxe handle. • TRAIN CASE • VANITY • 21" WEEKEND • 24" JR. PULLMAN • 26" PULLMAN DELUXE EXECUTIVE FLIGHT BAG! This vinyl flight bag with hangers has easy grip handle and sturdy zippers. Fits under seat of plane. TABLE (Ft D TENNIS A v 8” WONDER WHEEL MIRACLE EXERCISER 4-PLAYER TABLE TENNIS SET l NET TERRIFIC SAVINGS ON DELUXE MOLDED LUGGAGE 5*8 YOUR CHOICE 11 1 Treat yourself to gourmet delights —cheese and beef fondues, cafe diablel Heatproof handles, adjustable flame control. Beautifully gift-boxed. CHRISTMAS CENTERPIECES Deck your table and buffet with the fiery poinsettia, the gay-green holly or the ever-lovely JR rose. Hck from our 12"-17" high arrangements! SET OF 3 STAK-PAK DISHES Chips, nuts, candy stay eg fresfi indefinitely; Stak- HOO trio doubles as space- " saving sugar, flour, coffee storage. Hi-impact plastic, insulated wall. Gift boxed. ousehold Delights! Perfect'starter or replacement setl Teflon9 interior is the ultimate in non-stick cooking—metal spoons, spatulas are O.K. Dishwasher-safe 'hard-coat' Polymide finish cleans with a damp cloth. 1-qt., 2-qt. covered sauce pans, 10" fry pan, 6-qt. sauce pot (cover fits fry pan). Avocado, or pineapple finish. WHILE QUANTITIES LASTI 26-PC. CRYSTAL PUNCH BOWL SET TradHionarand ever-gracious holiday service, now specially priced. Set consists of 8V4-qt. punch bowl, twelve 5-oz. cups ana cup hooks, plastic ladle. Lovely fruit design. SPECIAL PURCHASE LAZY SUSANS! Lazy Suzans on holiday-parade—we've covered and uncovered styles in the very colors you've been looking fori All high fired California ceramic. A serving mustl • FIBERGLAS® KING SIZE T.V. TRAY-TABLE SET So easy to expand your entertaining spacel Self-storage serving tack with casters with 4 tables. Brass finished legs. 2-QT. STAINLESS STEEL FONDUE DISH WITH TRAY it utkbCQS. SENSATIONAL PURCHASE SAVES 24*34” 4 24»36” RAYON SanER RUGS Machine washable viscose rayon with non-skid Latex backing. Shag and cut 'n loop textures in exciting colors. REVERSIBLE TUBULAR BRAIDED am JE COLOR 4 AL NYLON RUGS 39s8 ALL 4 FOR THE PRICE OF JUST ONE FOR 39.88 YOU GET: 102x138" (9x12' area) usually sells for.......39.99 30 x 54" (3x5' area) usually sells for....... 4.99 (two) 20 x 32" (2 x 3' area) usually sell for........ 3.98 TOGETHER YOU WOULD HAVE PAID 48.96 CLAIROL KINDNESS® HAIR CURLER SET 20 Heat-at-once rollers. Perfect styles in less than 10 minutes. Thermostatically controlled. Includes clips, pads. Model K20 WEBC0R PORTABLE LIGHTED MAKE-UP MIRROR WATER PIK® ORAL HYGIENE APPLIANCE For healthful care of teeth and gums. Pulsating jets of water dean between teeth, under & around gums. Includes 4 jet tips. Model #39 Model W805CM Accurate unshadowed light. One side magnified. Smart carry case. SOLID STATE EM/AM CLOCK RADIO Model C2210 A winner of a wake-up team-solid state radio and dock with GE Telechron® movement. Vertical slide rule dial, AFC for drift free reception. MAGNUS ELECTRIC 12-CHORD ORGAN ENSEMBLE Play real music in 60 seconds. -Rich-tone 37-key organ with hardwood legs, music radc. Complete with padded bench, 3 EASY song books. 3988 Model 30iP (AGNUS PORTABLE CHORD ORGAN Model 300 25 ivory tones & treble keys, 6 chord keys. With music rack and bookl 13 SOLID STATE HOME BATTERY CHARGER No over charging- has built-in safety transformer) Recharge! "D” and “C" and penlite transistor batteries. Guaranteed! t money • buck gunrn n tee! ,opps -3/0 ELECTRIC DRILL Special purehasel Famous brand deluxe drill with powerful 2.5 amp. motor. 50% more torque than % " drill. Precision geared chuck and key. 4-PC. POWER TOOL ACESSORYKIT Handy kit to help.you tackle more. 2-speed right angle drive. ’A" chuck, ’A" chuck key and chuck key holder. Fits all %" drills. 20-PC. 1/4" AND 3/0' SOCKET WRENCH SET For home or auto repai Chromed alloy steel. 13/T6 spark plug . socket included. * Heavy duty metal box 15-PC. SOCKET SET....... 2.99 m WER TOOLS lifetime guarantee. Attache style carry case with fuel cylinder, burner head, blow torch head, spark lighter, snap-on-off solder tip. FAMOUS BRAND DELUXE 7" CIRCULAR SAW Powerful 9.0 amp., 1-1/3 HP motor cuts 2x4’s at 45°. Adjusts cuts to 0°. Overload dutch; rip guide. See blade through vis-a-port. Chrome combination blade. Mirror finish. UL listed. ME AND HOBBY STEEL WORKBENCH Big S' long, and smartly designed to fit in anywhere. Precision engi- I# OA neered for easy assembly. Has bot- I MOO tom storage shelf. Great Christmas gift for a “special" someonel Tidies your car in minutes! Easy-to-handle hi-suction vac plugs into cigarette lighter. Has crevice attachment. 14 fc choice RUFFLED OR FRINGED^ ¥/ EASY-CARE TIERS ' jj|W RUFFLED SHEERS lavished with flock and K print. 100% Fortrel® polyester. Stunning 9ft in the new deep tones of pink, blue, gold or greenl |JS TAILORED FRINGED TIERS in shining ray-■A on. Top with patching canopy for the BP "total look." Deep, deep gold, green, W melon or blue. Needs little or no ironing. your choice lengths or canopy TWIN OR FULL SIZES Schiffli Bordered BLANKETS £99 Tf 72" *9 :90" So pretty, you'll put ovr Schiffli adorned blanket on show day and night. Toasty-warm blend of 60% rayon, 30% polyester, 10% acrylic. 72"x90" fits twins, doubles. Colon galore. The bedspread that says "holiday" from its extra heavy weave to its thick ball fringe trim. 100% cotton drapes luxuriantly, yet machine washes and never needs ironing. Exciting in avocado, old gold, zesty blue, white or swinging pink. SAVE TO 50% TOSS PILLOWS ADD THE HOLIDAY-TOUCH! We've got the "last word" jn shapes, fabrics and trims in a collection that's a decorator's dream . certain to make your "at-home" buzz with pillow-talk! All super-plump with kapok filling. Great mix and matchables, great giftables! BROCADES, TAPESTRIES, DAMASKS your choice Truly lavish looks to pick fruml Both corded edge and center button stylesl Rayon acetates. NEW, RICHLY NAPPED VELOURS your choice Elegant in floral and striped patterns. Thickly fringed trims. 100% cottons. 1 VEL. 2 EASEE TV & LOUNGING BEDRESTS 4 MAKE THOUGHTFUL YULE GIFTS • Great for the read-in-bed set. Solid comfort and all prettied up in sparkling colors and striking prints. ,y.. ... mmm Heavyweight Woven BEDSPREADS m ♦ ovr owe "lady Carol” HOLIDAY WRAP-UPS yoar choke 8-ROLL GIFT PAPER JUMBO ROLL - Paper or Foil $ ROLLS - Deluxe solid or printed foils ^ CHRISTMAS GIFT JR BOXES Hundreds more MONEY-SAVING SPECIALS IN EVERY AISLE viva n tee Holiday Wrappin GO WILD SfliNTA /The Weather 1 If. I. WHilW tiirtmt For««t Chance of Flurries THE PONTIAC PR VOL. 127 — NO. 256 ***-** PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1969 J Is First Letter Drawn Sept. 14 No.1 in Draft Lottery BY THE NUMBERS — John C. Marienau, representing Nebraska in the Selective Service’s Youth Advisory Committee, takes his turn last night in picking a birthdate number for the 1970 draft lottery. Several young advisers refused to participate in the drawing, and about a score of demonstrators protested peacefully outside. WASHINGTON (AP) - Men from 19 to 26 years old born on §ept. 14 who have last names starting with the letter J will be the first ones drafted next month under the nation’s first Selective Service lottery in a generation. In less than an hour and a half Monday night, all 365 days of the year plus Leap Year’s Feb. 29 were drawn at random from a big glass laboratory jar at Selective Service headquarters here. The order in which they emerged, rolled up in bue plastic capsules, determines the order in which men with matching birthdays will be called for the draft next year—or, for those now deferred or exempt—in any fugure year when they become “1-A.” Rep. Alexander Pirnie of New York, ranking Republican on a House subcommittee on the draft, drew the first date from the jar shortly after 8 p.m. UNOFFICIAL ADVISERS Then a succession of young men and women—representatives of state youth committees created earlier this year as unofficial advisers to the Selective Service System—took turns drawing the rest of the dates. The second one drawn was April 24; then came Dec. 30; then Feb. 14, Oct. 18, Sept. 6, pet. 26, Sept. 7, Nov. 22, Dec. 6. Three youth advisers had refused to help in tne drawing and a fourth balked when his turn came; four others helped in the drawing but only after making unscheduled statements—one reading a mild protest signed by 14 participants, and three others more or less supporting the proceedings. Otherwise the drawing moved smoothly—so smoothly it was finished half an hour sooner than draft officials had anticipated. LETTER DRAWING Following the drawing of the dates, another drawing was held in which letters of the alphabet were scrambled and pulled out. This will be used by local boards to decide the order in which to draft the eligible men. First out in the second drawing was the letter J. The new lottery system was signed into law by the President last week and provides the first major reform in the draft since the Selective Service established a complicated form of induction during World War II. The previous system, which included a long list of deferments, was criticized because it left young men uncertain about their fate for as long as seven years, REDUCES UNCERTAINTY The new lottery system is designed to reduce this period of uncertainty to one year. The last time the draft was based on a lottery was in 1942. Every man who reaches at least 19 County 'Crib Deaths' Rise Sharply By JEAN SABLE Three apparently healthy infants, all under the age of 6 months, were found dead in their beds over the weekend in Oakland County. The new deaths brought to 10 the number, of “crib deaths” examined by Dr.. Richard E. Olsen, county pathologist, during the month o f. November. . *' W W . . , “I’ve never seen anything like it (the number of deaths) before,” said the pathologist. He reports that in his 35 years of pathology record-keeping the number of such deaths has generally averaged about three per year. Olsen calls his autopsy report on the mysterious deaths, “a confession of ignorance.” But while the cause of death is listed as unknown, the pathologist believes the seemingly healthy baby fatalities are tied to an increase in upper respiratory illnesses among the general population. Specimens from the victims have been sent to the Michigan Health Department for analysis, but Dr. Olsen isn’t too hopefuL i Since assuming the county pathologist duties last July 3, Olsen has performed autopsies on about 20 “crib death” infants. It’s the most ~h&& ever encountered, says the nationally known doctor who was for 34 years chief of the department of pathology at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital, Pontiac. While records in surrounding counties do not reflect a rise in “crib deaths,” Olsen feels this maybe due to a system of record keeping. Several of the counties do not have a central pathologist, he notes. In Wayne County, which does, all such deaths are attributed to natural causes. He believes attention hasn’t been fully focused on the “crib death” problem. While stressing that nobody knows for sure, Dr. Olsen said he is inclined to believe that such deaths occur more often among bottle-fed babies. He said the unknown virus strikes equally among girls and beys and is no selector of race. Noting that the significant increase in such deaths occurred last month when sore throats and influenza are most prevalent, he discounts the theory of some that such deaths are caused by suffocation. Many guilt-ridden parents are inclined to believe the death is due to their neglect. “This is the tragedy of it,” he aaid. The victims are characteristically healthy infants, usually under a year in age but some as old as 19 months. They are put to bed well, and in the morning they are found dead in their cribs. The homes are located in all parts of the county. years of age but not 26 by the end of this year now has his plaee in line for the draft in whatever year he becomes 1-A —“Available for military service”—or 1-. Order of Call, Page A-14; Related Story, Page A-2 A-O—“conscientious objector available for noncombantant military service only” Some 500,000 men will begin 1970 in one of these classifications, fully exposed to the draft that year. Another 350,000 now deferred or exempt will lose that status — many by graduating from college, for example—and become 1-A or 1-A-O during the year. That makes 1970 their “priority” exposure year too. Of this 850,000 total, about 290,000 will probably enlist voluntarily in the armed Local Boards by Questions In the big office at Pontiac’s Federal Building this morning, Selective Service personnel are “tearing our hair out, if you want to know the truth,” as Board 65 Executive Secretary. Linda Martin puts it. Not only are Boards 65, 67 and 331 receiving calls from newspapers asking the question of the day — “How many men do you have available who were born Sept. 14 whose names begin with the letter J?” — but “clients” as well are curious about the new system. “We’ve been bugged by the phone since we stepped in this morning,” a secretary at Board 331 complained. “We don’t have any count of available men. If you find a board that has made a count, let us know.” A Board 67 worker said no procedural instructions have been received from the state board, and the local board could not yet establish a new office operation. CAN’T ANSWER “Without guidance for uniformity, we can’t even answer the questions of the forces, officials anticipate. But another 260,000 must be drafted. ... And generally speaking, they will be those whose birthdays appeared in about the first half of the list drawn last night. * ★ ★ Just how high up the list the draft will reach may vary considerably from one local draft board to another. But men whose birthdays lie in the first one-third of the dates as drawn are almost certain to be drafted. Those drawn in the middle one-third may be uncertain for up to a year S| until they receive a draft notice, or until the year ends without one. Those in the last one-third are now virtually certain they will not be called in 1970. In 1971, the “priority exposure” will focus on a new group of men who have turned 19 — and had their birthdays scrambled in a new lottery — in 1970. Are Plagued From Callers men whd" call us,” said a Board 67 employe. Draft board workers envision putting in long hours to reschedule call-up procedures for the next few weeks, all the while having to meet the same draft quotas as under the old system, w w w Old system or new, the draft boards must be ready to respond to quotas with sincere “Greetings.” One area youth who might receive “greetings” from his harried draft board is Richard Jones of 115 Clarence, Holly, a 20-year-old Michigan State University junior. LUCK OF THE DRAW | Jones was born Sept. 14 and his name begins with a J. “I really didn’t believe it when I saw the date drawn,” Jones said. “I’m going for sure, I guess.” There is one consolation, Jones said: “I only have one year to wait for the decision, instead of seven under the old system.” 3 Saved as Home Explodes The children in the Ernest Colling family of Shelby Township are lucky to be alive today. All they have i§ the clothing on their backs, two pet dogs and their parents. W The Colling youngsters — Patrick, 17, Joseph, 4, and Cathy, 13, were home at 46801 Van Dyke yesterday at 11:30 a.m. when an explosion ripped through the two - story dwelling. Two deliverymen — Eddie Griffin, 50, of Mount Clemens and Everett Morrison, 37, of Detroit — who had stopped nearby, | In Today's j Press 1 . 1 J. College Basketball | I Michigan-U. of D. game pits 1 1 two former prep stars in area 1 I — PAGE D-l. | . Grenade Removed . I P Surgeon takes live explosive p & from Cong prisoner’s head — I PAGE A-13. My Lai Incident Laird doesn’t feel case will hurt Nixon politically — PAGE A-10. Arba News ..............y.. A-3 Astrology ............. t .D-4 Bridge .................. D-4 Crossword Puzzle ........ D-15 i Comics .................. D-4 Editorials .............. A-6 High School .........B-l, B-2 Markets ......... .......04 Obituaries ............. A-i2 Sports .............D-l—D4 Theaters .................D4 TV and Radio Programs . D-15 Vietnam War News .. ....A-7 Wilson, Earl .............D-5 Women’s Pages ......C-l—C-5 Yule Cartoon ........... A-13, heard the explosion and ran to the house. HOUSE COLLAPSED Griffin entered the residence and handed Cathy out to Morrison, then assisted the boys out of the house. The Related Picture, Page A-3 walls and roof of the house collapsed shortly after the occupants fled. The dwelling was reduced to rubble in a half-hour as fire swept through the house. Mrs. Colling was en route home from a dental appointment at the time of the explosion. Her husband was at work in a tool and the firm in Warren. Township firemen attributed the blast to a natural gas leak from a pipe in the basement. Die gas apparently leaked into the kitchen, where it exploded. Cathy ' was treated at Crittendon Hospital, Avon Township, for facial cuts and bruises. The boys were uninjured. The Fire Department set preliminary damage estimates at about 318,000. The Collingg had rented the house for the past five months. Blaze in Quebec Kills 50 Patients NOTRE DAME DU LAC, Que. (UPI) — More than 50 elderly bedridden patients were killed early today when fire raced through an old wood-frame nursing home. Twenty others were injured. “Most of them were trapped in their beds and didn’t have a chance,” a provincial police spokesman said. “It’s going to be some time before we can get the bodies out of there.” ★ * * Two other buildings in addition to the nursing home the Repas du Vuellard, were destroyed in the blaze. The injured were taken to a nearby hospital in this small paper-mill community of 4,000 about 50 miles south of Riviere du Loup on the south shore of the St. Lawrence River. Die town is about 250 miles northeast of Montreal. Most of the dead were trapped on the upper two levels of the three-story structure and died before the town’s 30-man volunteer fire-fighting force could be mustered. The flames from the old rest home spread quickly to engulf two nearby buildings, a residence and a general store. They were razed before a regular fire-fighting force arrived from Cabano, Que., six miles away. CHARLES WATSON PATRICIA KERNWINKEL 2 Held, 3rd Sought in Tate Killing Case LOS ANGELE$ (AP) - Two members of a wandering band of hippies were under arrest today and a third was being sought in the slaying of actress-Sharon Tate and six others here last August. Police said they would seek murder indictments against “four or five” other persons. Senate OKs Oil Allowance Cut WASHINGTON (AP) - After settling on a 23 per cent oil depletion allowance, the Senate today tackled the most controversial issue in the massive tax 1 reform bill—a proposal to boost the $600 personal income tax exemption. Sen. Albert Gore, D-Tenn., had the support of .Democratic leaders for his pending amendment to raise the exemption . to $1,000 in four successive annual steps starting next year. But President Nixon is strongly opposed to the increase and there have been indications he might veto the increase. The administration Spent a busy day yesterday working to scuttle the amendments. Edwin S. Cohen, assistant secretary of the Treasury, issued a warning that Gore’s amendment would cause a big additional net revenue loss & ^ - > to the government which “could not be countenanced.” INDICATION OF VETO? Sen: Russell B. Long said he in- ^ terpreted this to mean President Nixon would veto a bill with a $1,000 exemption in it. The Louisiana Democrat, who is Finance Committee chairman and floor manager of the bill, backs the administration in the fight. • t *’ a e In accepting the 23 per cent oil and depletion allowance Monday, the Senate went along with its own Finance Committee. • , A House version of the bill cuts the depletion allowance from the present • 27 M- -pear cent to 20 per cent. , The final reduction now will have to be worked out in the Senate-House conference. This was the first time the Senate had yotedi.to reduce the l o n!,g-d i s p u t e d allowance since the 27% per cent figure became laW in 1926. The allowance and personal exemption were the most bitterly disputed items in the bill. Gore’s tax reduction package with a $1,000 exemption would reduce taxes $14.8 billion in the long run compared with $9 billion of relief in the measure as approved by Einanee. - , The bill also would gain $6.7 billion to-revenue through various reform provisions, , Gore was backed by Democratic Leader Mike Mansfield and Democratic whip Edward M. Kennedy.' The honey-blonde actress and four others were murdered at Miss Tate's Bel Air mansion Aug. 9. The following day, several miles away, a wealthy merchant and his wife were killed in a so-called “copycat” slaying. * * * Under arrest were Charles D. Watson, 24, of Copeville, Tex., and Patricia Kernwinkel, 21, of Los Angeles, Being sought was Linda Louise Kasabian', 19, also of Los Angeles. ‘SUSPECTS IN 11 SLAYINGS’ The Los Angeles Times said members of a hate-oriented, occult band of hippies were suspected of the seven slayings, as well as at least four other “grotesque” murders in the Los Angeles area- , j .i■ ,i "* h <' ' The ‘only other killing ,listed by the' paper was that of a 34year-old music teacher, Gary Hinman, who was found stabbed Aug. 31 in his Topanga Canyon home somd eight miles from the Tate estate. WWW The Times said police believe the victims Were killed both to “punish” them for \ their affluent Ufit stylo and to “liberate” them from it. The paper said members of what it termed the mystical death-cult consider themselves the slaves of the leader of the group of 20th century nomads. Bribe Charges Face Ex-Senator WASHINGTON UP) — Former Sen. Daniel B. Brewster, a millionaire Maryland Democrat, has been charged by a federal grand jurry with accepting $24,500 in bribes in exchange for votes on postal rate legislation. The indictment, returned here yesterday after a long investigation, said Brewster accepted the money in five payments over a three-year period from Spiegel Inc., a huge Chicago mail order house. Spiegel and its Washington lobbyist, Cyrus T. Anderson, were also indicted, but no corporate officers of Spiegel were named. Brewster, 46, unseated last year by Republican Charles M. Mathias, was reported at nis wife’s estate in Ireland where he has spent much of his time since leaving the Senate iri January. In Chicago, Spiegel issued a statement emphatically denying “any wrongdoing or impropriety.” Clouds Carrying a Chance of Snow Clouds drifting in from the northwest may bring a feW snow flurries late to-night and tomorrow. Skies will be mostly cloudy. Temperatures are expected to drop into the high 20s tonight and reach the mid-30s tomorrow. Partly cloudy and continued cold is the prediction for Thursday. Probabilities of precipitation in percentage are 10 tpday, 20 tonight and 30 tomorrow. / j1 1 / 1 j< m A frigid 18 was the low temperature before 8 a.m. in downtoWn Pontiac. By 12:30 p.m. the mercury had climbed tq TUESDAY, DECEMBER Birmingham Birmingham Education Assoclatic (BEA) request for fact-finding in contract talks with the board of edu tion is expected from the Michij Employment Relations Commission ] day, according to a BEA source. Meanwhile, the Michigan Employm Relations Commission has requested t the two negotiating teams meet with mediator today to continue the medial process. Today’s session was expectec THE PONTIAC ! Seft^Crdig Planning to Block Parochiaid Bill LANSING (AP)—State Sen. Roger Craig said today he would file suit in Ingham County Circuit Court in an attempt to block House of Representatives consideration of the Senate-approved bill creating parochiaid. LANSING (AP) - The Michigan Legislature, returning from a more than two - week Thanksgiving and deer -hunting recess, found the education reform package little changed in' its absence. The Senate was to reconvene at 2 p.m. while the House scheduled an 8 p.m. session. Leaders continued bipartisan negotiations on Gov. William G. Milliken’s reform proposals, but there was disagreement on what had been accomplished or might still be accomplished in more closed - door talks. President Gets a Sample of Mood at Hunger Confab WASHINGTON OB — President Nixon got a view of the angry mood of many of the persons invited to a special White House conference on hunger even before his scheduled keynote address today. The temper of many of the 3,000 people 2 Men. Sought in Coed Killing UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. (UPI) -t. State Police said yesterday they were seeking two unidentified men in connection with their investigation in the stabbing death of a coed in the library of the Pennsylvania State University. The victim, Betsy Aardsma, 22, a graduate student from Holland, Mich., was found about 5 p.m. Friday by another female student who heard her cry for help. * ★ ★ The student who answered the call for help told State Police she saw two men, who told her Miss Aardsma needed aid an then l$ft the scene. She said she did not know the men and did not know if they were students. Lt. William Kimmel, who led a team of 18 state policemen in the investigation of the “homicide,” declined to reveal the name of the girl who found Miss . .Aardsma. Absentee Ballots Available Absentee voter ballots for the special Dec. 18 city election on a City of Pontiac charter amendment are now available at the city clerk’s office. Anyone presently registered in the City of Pontiac who cannot go to the polk may obtain an absentee ballot if application in writing is made before 2 p.m. Saturday, Dec. 13. This applies to anyone who expects to be out of the city Dec. 18; who is physically unable to go to the polls; who The Weather 25 8 Omaha 30 18 Phoenix _____ J Pittsburgh 3 _____ H 30 23 ,$t. Louis 5 Albuquerque 54 30 S. Lake City 4 31 5. Francisco f E£3 Snow FORECAST Flurries 1***1 Figure* Show lew Temperatures Until Wednesday Morning \ chosen to participate — a cross section of America from the very poor to top businessmen and professionals was crystallized during the taping yesterday of a panel discussion on National Educational Television entitled: “Hunger. A National Disgrace.” * * * In the audience participation program, one Negro woman told the panelists “We’ve been hungry a long, long time.” Another woman from Cleveland shouted at the panel, “We eat to survive. Give people food and they will work.” ‘GUARANTEED STARVATION’ And the Rev. Jesse Jackson, director of Operation Breadbasket of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference and a member of the panel, declared, “Welfare guarantees starvation at 23 cents a day.” Among the panelists with Jackson were Sen: George S. McGovern, D-S.D.; and Dr. Jean Mayer, consultant to the President and director of the three-day conference. * * * One thing appeared almost pertain:. The conference will recommend a gradual phasing out of food stamp and commodity welfare programs in favor of a guaranteed income for all Americans. * * * McGovern said, “We’re moving toward this concept” and predicted, “We can put an end to hunger in a year” if the/ administration and Congress have the will to do it. Recognition of the slow " ’ ’ Mflliken last week to hint he j Christmas session if ti should go home by mil without passing much of 1 . VETO THREAT He also indicated he might consider vetoing some bills if they were not part of a balanced reform plan. “We’ve kind of dissipated the notion of any pressing need for reform,” said Senate Minority Leader Sander Levin, D-Berkley. “I think the governor has to reactivate the spark of interest in long -term reform." “I wouldn’t call it a waste,” insisted House Speaker William A. Ryan, D-Detroit. “It was never our aim to arrive at ironclad agreement, only at the highest possible degree of consensus.” Ryan charged the “reluctance of certain members to participate” hampered discussion. But Rep. Robert Waldron, GOP minority leader in the House, agreed with Levin, his Senate counterpart and political foe: “This has not been a very efficient way to go about reform,” Waldron said of the negotiating sessions. “Speaker Ryan used half of the time telling his views. We weren’t elected to divide up four ways and decide what we were going to do, we were elected to consult the whole membership on the flow.” NO SANTA CLAUS — Firemen haul and tug to tree . chimney of a Los Angeles restaurant where he became rescuers were summoned by a nearby gas station attendai 16-year-old son was seeking equipment to free his father froi was booked for investigation of burglary. cannot go to the polls because of the tenets of his religion; or who is 70 years of age or older. The amendment to Chapter III, Section 3, of the city charter would provide for the election by single member districts at both the primary and general elections of city commissioners who must be at least 25 years of age and residents of the city and district in which they are candidates for at least one year prior to taking office. N. Korea to Free 3 Yahk Captives SEOUL (IB - U. S. Military headquarters announced today that three American helicopter crewmen downed in North Korea Aug. 17 will be released tomorrow at the Panmunjom truce village. They are expected to be sent to the U.S. Army’s 121st Evacuation Hospital 20 miles west of Seoul for a medical checkup before being flown back to the United States. The three men are Capt. David H. Crawford of Pooler, Ga., Spec. 4 Herman E. Hofstatter of Lowpoint, HI., and WO Malcolm V. Loepke of Richmond, Ind. They were shot down in a small helicopter while on a training flight. Informed sources reported that the United States would give the North Koreans a letter of apology in exchange for the men. Vietnam Resolution Backers Slam Door on Amendments i Seen By Friday I — A decision on the , _ ft ,_J educa-■ the Michigan Commission Fri- t t m ito ★ ★ ★ The board of education asked last week that the mediation process continue. BEA President John Sala explained that one of the association’s reasons for requesting fact-finding is that issues “need to be brought more clearly into the open — notably in the areas of remaining working conditions and financial items.” “Things that we have beeh asserting across the bargaining table should be confirmed publicly by a fact-finder,” Sala added. He also commented that the Board of Education’s latest salary offer was several hundred thousand dollars under the tentative agreement readied just before school started in September. “That offer can hardly be considered a reasonable offer,” Sala said. WASHINGTON Uf) — Backers of a House resolution supporting President Nixon’s “efforts to negotiate a just peace in Vietnam" have slammed the door on amendments and latched it tight in preparations for passage of the measure today. Critics of a procedure under which no amendments are allowed on certain measures were beaten 225-132 in their effort to open up the resolution yesterday. ★ ★ ★ Then the House voted 251-100 to approve the closed rule permitting four hours of debate before passage of the resolution, which is sponsored by 316 of the 434 House members. “The time has come to show that the vast majority of us do support the President in his negotiating efforts,” said Rep. Jim Wright, D-Tex., a chief sponsor of the proposal which Nixon hailed in an extraordinary personal appearance in the House Nov. 6. ‘2nd TONKIN RESOLUTION’ Rep. Don Edwards, D-Calif., however, suggested the vehicle amounts to a “second Gulf of Tonkin resolution.” Tonkin resolution, rushed through Congress in August 1964 after the Johnson administration told of North Vietnamese attacks on two U.S. destroyers, was the basis for America’s full-scale entry into the Vietnam war.” Arranging Spiro's Tour WASHINGTON (AP) - Advance men set out today to make arrangements for the three-week Asian tour of Vice President Spiro T. Agnew. The vice president’s mission, described by President Nixon who asked him to undertake the journey, is “to visit other countries in the area, to talk with their leaders and to observe and learn first hand of their achievements and their problems.” Gl-Family Bill Gains WASHINGTON (AP) - Families of U.S. servicemen missing or captured in Vietnam would be entitled to a $30-a-month family separation allowance under a bill passed yesterday by the House. Full U. S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Fair to partly cloudy becoming windy and warmer today, high in the mid to upper 40s. Mostly cloudy and windy tonight and Wednesday with chance of snow flurries late tonight or Wednesday. Low tonight 26 to 31. Colder Wednesday, high in mid 30s. Thursday outlook: Partly cloudy and cold, winds southwesterly increasing to 20 to 30 miles per hour this afternoon becoming northwesterly 15 to 28 miles tonight and Wednesday. Probabilities of precipitation are 10 per cent today, 20 per cent tonight, 30 per cent Wednesday. I He Orders Draft, I Then Gets News WASHINGTON (AP) - Scott Jenkins, 20, bellied up to the bar, ordered a draft beer, then asked the man next to him how the televised national Selective Service lottery had gone. “I thought he was kidding,” said Jenkins, who was bom Sept. 14, 1949. “At first I wouldn’t believe him.” But a friend of the American University junior from Blossburg, Pa., confirmed Jenkins’ birthdate was the first to be drawn in the j lottery. And he thoughtfully added j that first to be called will be those whose names begin with a ! “j.” “At which time,” Jenkins said, | “I took a very long, deep pull on i the mug in front of me.” PSH Fund Bid: $13.4 Million By DICK ROBINSON Staff shortages remain critical at Pontiac State Hospital, says hospital chief Dr. Donald W. Martin. Hospital authorities are looking to the state for some help. “We are about 300 people .short — nursing and maintenance personnel — of what we should have to operate at basic minimal standards,” Dr. Martin said yesterday. ★ ★ ★ Martin said the hospital has asked the state for 8950,000 to hire some 115 additional employes “as a first step” to reduce the employe shortage. The request is included in a proposed $13.4 - million 1970-71 budget, up about $1.4 million over the current fiscal year’s appropriation, according to Martin. MILLIKEN RECOMMENDATIONS Martin said he expects Gov. William City School Budget Will Be Discussed Milliken to make his own budget recommendations to the Legislature soon, possibly this month. Legislators decide the actual appropriations. One of the most pressing needs, Martin said, is the hiring of nurses for the chronically ill adult wards. These wards normally have one nurse per 40 patients and sometimes only a part - time nurse. “Our hospital, which serves a larger and faster -^growing population (about 2Ms million) than any of the other Michigan state hospitals, continues to suffer acutely from deficiencies of materials, facilities and staffing,” Martin said. * ★ ★ Pontiac State Hospital serves residents from 10 counties in southeastern Michigan. FUNDS REQUESTED More money has been requested to replace windows and continue electrical wiring repairs and heating improvements. But hospital officials aren’t optimistic about getting it. Presently freezing cold air leaks through the win- dows, and many of the rooms are without heat or electricity. ★ ★ ★ It would take 8600,000 — spread over a few years — to replace 748 windows, according to Martin. About 8200,000 is being asked for electrical repairs and another 850,000 for heating improvements in the next fiscal year. “Hopefully these 91 - year - old buildings will be replaced within the next few years with modem ones of proper design,” Martin said. ★ ★ ★ One of the major requests for facilities includes the building of an adolescent children’s center for 12 to 17 - year - old youths. It would be built next to the new Fairlawn Center. DRUG ABUSE CENTER The center would include a 20 - bed drug abuse center, Martin explained. Martin is also appealing for 8735,000 to complete the new 83 - million food service and storage building, scheduled for initial use in January and completion in October. NATIONAL WEATHER — Snow is forecast overnight for much of the Great , Lakes area, With colder temperatures in the Midwest. Warmer weather is predicted •long the Gulf Coast and in the southern Rockies. The proposed 820.1-million operating budget of the Pontiac School District for 1969-70 will be discussed at a public bearing tonight at 7:30 in the board offices, 350 E. Wide TTack. The proposed budget, which will come before the Pontiac School Board for approval Thursday night, is $2.4 million higher than last year’s final budget and about 81.7 million higher than the preliminary budget approved by the board April 3.' 'V • utm >. ‘ ; * ★ * '- j , School Business Manager Vernon L. Schiller calls the proposed budget an “interim final budget,” because some salary negotiations have not yet been completed, or were not completed in /time to be included, in the budget. The largest increase — 82-1 million — in this year’s proposed operating budget over last year’s is in instruction, including teacher salaries. 86.8 PCT. OF TOTAL All salaries represent about 86.8 per t of the district’s total proposal ex- Although the salary figures include several new positions, such as a third assistant superintendent, Schiller said most of the salary increase is due to negotiated increases. Another large increase over last year’s budget comes under plant operation in the amount of about 8128,000. Schiller said this is due to salary increases, rising fuel costs, and operation of the new Lincoln Elementary School. Total estimated funds availably in 1969-70 for operation is 2L3 million, including an unappropriated fund balance from last year of 81.2 million. ESTIMATED REVENUES The total estimated revenues available from local sources amounts to about 813.2 million, or 65.5 per cent of all revenues. . ( State sources of revenue for 1969-70, are estimated at about 86.5 million, and from federal sources, about 815,400. The remainder of estimated revalue from other districts (county intermediate district) is about 8370,000, for special and Vocational education. High Court Rules Against W in Power Line tight State WIXOM — The City has lost the latest, and what may be its final, round against Detroit Edison Co. in a bid to block a high-tension power line the utility is planning. “Well, we fought it a long time,” said Wixom Mayor Wesley E. McAtee. “We just don’t have the great lobby in Lansing that DetrCitl Edison has,” he added, commenting on a decision by the Michigan Supreme Court. The court ruled Wixom may not use its zoning ordinance to block the power line. Chief Justice Thomas.X. Brennan, in an opinion and decision released yesterday, called the issue “one facet of the late 20th-century dilemma:' How to balance the demands of vast new urbanization and the demands of people for local determihation of their own environment." ' , v ’' ^ k ★ ★ . Whether' the city will appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court is doubtful, McAtee said. “Council will have to talk about it," he said. Brennan and Justice Thomas M. Kavanagh, in a separate opinion,' both noted the1 fine distinction between a wide-reaching public utility and the rights of a single community. . * * * Wixom, which came into being in 1957 as a separate part of Novi and Commerce townships, quickly expanded info a corporate city but then experienced little further development. WWW Edison, meanwhile, was planning and buying land for construction of a high voltage system to connect with other lines in Canada, Ohio and Indiana, w w w When the utility’s plans to put up 132-foot high tension towers were revealed suddenly, the Wixom city council amended its zoning ordinces to outlaw most such tOwers. Wixom limited the towers to 90 feet. WWW The aim of the city, which the court found “legitimate though narrow” was to protect real estate values in its only residential subdivision. w w w But, the court said, “an ordinance, although valid on its face, may be constitutionally inform as it applies to specific land.” w w w The fact that the Utility’s line was to' stretch from Monroe In the south to St. Clair north of Detroit, bypassing Detroit, made it “analogous to the occupancy of the first fjoor of a multi-floor apartment which is , under construction,” Chief Justice Brennan wrote. WWW Kavanagh, in a concurring opinion, said the “reasonableness” of Edison’s plans to provide the only source of electricity for a wide area sustained its right of way. He added, though, “we are not* insensitive to the disruptive ana unsightly effect with the proposed towers and lines may have.” | Holly School | I Path Unclear J | After Defeat j the press Area News PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1969 A—3 , t** ft . V HOLLY — The board of education has not decided on a course of action following a recent lopsided defeat of a $2.9-million bond issue proposal. Voters rejected the proposal which would have provided a 1,200-student capacity junior high school building by a 806-to-579 count. www A board of education discussion following the defeat has ranged from the possibility of instituting double sessions, enlarging class size, extending the school day to putting the bond issue proposal before the voters again next June, w w w A school administration official said the district could get through the remainder of the present school term and part of next year with present facilities. Definite crowding problems will occur if a junior high building is not ready for occupancy by the opening of the 1971-72 school term, the official said. County Dems to Hold Theater Fund-Raiser AVON TOWNSHIP - The County Democratic Committee sponsor a performance of George Bernard Shaw’s ‘Pygmalian” at Oakland University’s Meadow Brook Theatre at 8 p.m. Dec. 16. The annual theater party is the committee’s major fund-raising event of the ■ year. Tickets are available from Democratic headquarters, 1700 R Telegraph, Pontiac. Lapeer County 4-H'er 5th in Stock Judging LAPEER — A Lapeer County judgi team representing Michigan has plac fifth - in the Northeast Regional 4 Livestock Judging Exposition held Lapeer Schools Mourn Defeat Marvin Daglow, 16, of Camden had t second-high individual score in the c< test. Joining him on the team w< George Simmons, 17, Susan Moore, and Carolyn Myers, 15, all of Noi Branch. Team coach is Allan VahDy of Almont. Crittenton Nurses OK Talks Agent AVON TOWNSHIP - After meeti with the State Employment Relatic Commission, Crittenton Hospital nurs have voted, 71-11, in favor of uni representation through the Michig Nurses Economic Security Organizati (MNESO). Earlier, hospital administrators h refused to approve the election until 1 commission assured them that MNESu was a valid bargaining agent. The Crittenton election marks the first time in Oakland County that nurses have won representation through their own society, according to Miss Eleanor Tramp, executive director of MNESO. Contract negotiations are to begin immediately, she said. Tobacco Heir Gains Control of Big Inheritance SUPT. DALE W. ABKE Millage Loss 'a Blow to Retarded' By TIM McNULTY LAPEER — “I don’t think it was a revolt against the retarded,” said Dale W. Abke, on Lapeer County’s recent special education millage defeat, “I imagine it was just in opposition to general taxation.” Abke, superintendent of Lapeer Intermediate School District, pondered what the loss of that needed Ms-mill would mean to the county’s retarded children. w w w The county’s proposal was on the ballot last Monday with the much-opposed building bond issues of the Lapeer and Imlay City school districts. All three bids were defeated. DEAD UNTIL JUNE “If we had been on the ballot alone, I’m sure we would have carried it," Abke said, “now it looks as though we definitely won’t do anything until June.” The problems of the mentally and emotionally handicapped are myraid, for both the family and the school. “Some 'Some emotionally disturbed children never laugh or cry . . . and to be frank, some come from pretty base homes . . . where they have no reason to laugh. Life is pretty serious to them.' emotionally disturbed children never laugh or cry,” said Abke, “and, to be frank, some come from pretty base homes, where they have no reason to laugh. Life is pretty serious to them." ★ k k Many advocate placing all “special” children in a state institution. “They say just put them in a state home,” Abke said, “but you can’t make that decision for someone else. I wouldn’t want it made for me." k k k Abke said the current trend is not to institutionalize children, if only for Dale W. Abke economic reasons: “I’ve heard, unofficially, that it cost $4,600 a year to keep these children in institutions and only $2,106 a year to stay in the home.” URGENT NEEDS The Lapeer District with 12,7 00 students is a relatively poor and rural area compared to Wayne and Oakland Counties. It already has 327 students in special education programs. “We have an immediate need to bring in 105 additional students who are not getting the attention they need,” Abke said, “and to accommodate them and the children we already have, We should hire 12 additional special personnel.” The district works on a Mi-mill levy.--The election would have given them lv mill and an additional $70,000. k .* * Abke charged the state for “not keep-. *a ing up on its obligation for funding” * special education. “The state is supposed to reimburse 75 per cent of the program,” he ’said.' “But it is really onlg,.-paying 60 per cent and the district must -make up the difference. We just can’t-. keep up. k k k w “If the concept of special education is correct and right,” he said, “we should ’ have an ongoing program through all the " educational levels. I think Lapeer could ' • have this type of program if we could' get that Mt-mill and if the State Board of Education would pay its full share.” “Until that happens or we get some new legislation, I don’t see any relief ' and we’ll just have to go on as we have v been,” Abke said. No Action Due This Month on Independence Zone Plea INDEPENDENCE TOWNSHIP - No action is due this month on a petition to rezone 17 "acres on Waldon adjacent to Clarkston Gardens subdivision, from suburban farms t o multiple-family housing, township sources said. ★ ★ ★ The rezoning is being sought by developer Gerald Anderson of Clarkston. Anderson’s plans call for establishment of a 168-unit town house-condominium complex priced in the $25,000-$26,000 range. k k k If the petition is granted, Anderson said, development would be timed to sewer construction in the township. Anderson’s plans are being opposed by the subdivision property owners, association, headed by Keith Humbert, 6440 Snow Apple. Humbert had said the property owners plan to fight establishment of the complex on the premise that it would attract considerably more traffic and children to the area and downgrade property values in the subdivision. BLAST SHATTERS HOME — Firemen extinguish smoldering ruins of the Ernest Colling home in Shelby Township yesterday after an explosion leveled the home. Two men led the three Colling children to safety. Firemen said the blast was caused by gas which seeped from a broken line in the basement. Yule Light Rite Is Set WALLED LAKE - Mayor Wendel G. Kellogg will light the city’s Christmas lights at 7:30 p.m.'today; The Walled Lake Western High School Concert Choir will lead community caroling. Legislator Cites Ed-Reform Lack MILFORD — Huron Valley School District residents were told last night that there was no provision in the proposed state education reform package for capital outlays., * ★ ★ State Rep. Clifford Smart, R-Walled Lake, explained that an attempt had ben made to introduce a bill for capital improvements but the additional money • needed apparently could not be found at.. this time. ★ ★ * - Huron Valley voters go to the polls - Feb. 20,1970, to vote on a proposed $16.5-million bond issue to build a new high school,* a new junior high and two elementary schools along with paying for remodeling of other schools and site acquisitions. t ACLU Exec Challenges Sterling Aide SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — Patrick Reynolds turns 21 today, gaining direct control of a $2.5 million inheritance from his grandfather, R. J. Reynolds, founder of the tobacco fortune. Reynolds, a junior at the University of California’s Berkeley campus, said he expects to con- , tinue living at the Tau Kappa Epsilon house at Berkeley.'He said he plans to transfer to UCLA next quarter, for study id movies and film making. ★ *• * Reynolds shares in the Reynolds estate with a brother, a sister and four half-brothers. His father, R. J. Reynolds Jr., died in 1964.' His mother, Marianne O’Brien, was the younger Reynolds’ second wife and resumed her maiden name after divorce. She lives at Miami Beach, Fla. UTICA -7 Ernest Mazey, executive director of the Michigan Civil Liberties Union, has invited William F: Schuchard, executive secretary of the Shelby-Utica-Sterling Chamber of Commerce, to discuss the activities and purposes of the ACLU publicly when Mazey speaks here iq February. \ Schuchard reportedly has sent a response po Mazey. Hpwever, ttye contents of that' response .could not' be learned. Schuchard had circulated a memo to Chamber of Commerce members and area governmental officials several weeks ago, when he learned that Mazey was scheduled to appear as part of the local Human Relations Council lecture series, •, '■JsAjk it ' stv 1 In. it, he said the merit of Mazey’s appearance was questionable. Schuchard said he wanted “to alert people that the ACLU is defending people who are rebellious and who are causing a lot of dissension and disturbance.” Schuchard added that he didn’t think it wise to bring an ACLU representative into tiie community before a blanket endorsement of the series 'was made by the Chamber of Commerce. The chamber has since elected not to take any action regarding an endorsement of the lecture series, which began with an /appearance by Wayne /County Circuit Judge John jJ.'Swaiiteon, Other speakers already booked in addition to Mazey include tile Rt. Rev. Richard S. Emrich, Episcopal Bishop of Michigan, and Victor Riesel, syndicated labor columnist. ...■ V k k k Mazey noted in his invitation that “Schuchard’s quote in the memo: ‘Our view of the ACLU is that they seem to be quite expert at confusing liberty with license and in, support and defending people who expect qll the rights and privileges of our American Constitution while failing to act in compliance therewith,’ is an expression either of an evil man or of one terribly uninformed.” Mazey added that he hopes the latter is the case. “Believing, as I do, that your intemperate remarks in reference to the ACLU reflect lack of information rather than evil design, I have enclosed materials that may assist you in becoming knowledgeable about what you speak,” Mazey wrote. ,i He mailed Schuchard^ a .packet of newspaper and magazine reprints explain the activities of the ACLU. “The ACLU has long held that the antidote for expression of false views is the expression of counterviews,” said Mazey. “To this end, and hopefully with the concurrence of the Utica Human Relations Council, I invite' you to share the platform with me on Monday, Feb. 9 so that the audience , itself may judge wherein the truth lies/’ Mazey‘ffeid. Schuchard previously .had called the Mazey situation a closed matter, indicating he would not accept Mazey’s challenge. »t t CAMPUS CAMPER — University of Michigan to save a lot on room and board,during the fall 111., student is camping out several miles from and he plans jo keep sr never will per'' him to take a room in town, David says a poor midterm test grade might. it upall during the fall and winter terms. Although bad weather never will ........... ■ ■■ “ " “ ad&r"* re 310 W'H At—12 THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1969 FAST MOTOR BANKING — Warren H. Eierman, president of Community National Bank, tries out the Tel-Air motor banking unit at the new drive-in banking facility at Pontiac Mall, which opened yesterday. Student Caught 'Red-Headed' Avon Township Police Officer Jerome Eby says he has his riot helmet back. Yesterday morning Eby reported that he caught a 16-year-old Rochester High School student red-handed, as the student wore the $40 riot helmet in the hall of the school. The student told Eby that he got the helmet from another student. Eby then retraced the helmet’s travels: the second student got the helmet from a third student who got it from a fourth who found it. Eby reported the helmet missing from* his squad car in September. Deaths in Pontiac, Nearby Areas Waterford Purchase Hits Procedure Snag Waterford Township officiate and board members couldn’t agree last night on the procedure for authorizing purchase of township vehicles. A disagreement was touched off when Supervisor riHBB Johnson balked at approving the specifications and setting the bid date for the purchase of 16 township vehicles in 1970. ★ ★ Although the purchases were, approved by the board whenj they recently okayed the 1970 township’s budget, Johnson said! he preferred that the department heads submit official purchase recommendations to him. The spec ifications and recommendations to buy the vehicles were submitted to the board by a vehicle committee, made up of department heads. A TIGHT YEAR “Department heads should look at their budgets before they submit recommendations for purchases,” Johnson commented. “We’re not sure of this year’s year-end balance in the budget but it looks like 1970 is going to be a tight budget year. “I want the chance to decide if we’ll have to eliminate some items.” Some department heads present said they already had gone over their budgets and made the purchase recommendations to the vehicle committee. Area Stores Extend Y ule Shopping Hours Downtown Pontiac and area shopping centers have extended store hours until Christmas. Santa is available in three different locations. Most stores in downtown Pontiac are open 9:30 a.m. to 9 p.m. Monday through Saturday. Sears & Roebuck will open at 9 a.m. and close at 9 p.m. In addition to 9:30 a.m. to 9 p.m. daily during the week, Kresge’s will be open from noon to 5 p.m. on Sundays. * ★ ★ Most stores in the Miracle Mile Shopping Center, Bloomfield Township, will be open from 9:30 a.m. to 10 p.m. Monday through Saturday with many stores opening on Sunday. Topps Department Store, open daily at 9:30 a.m., will remain open until 11 p.m. Monday through Saturday and, Sunday 11 a.m. to 8 p.m. , SANTA’S HOURS Santa’s hours at Miracle Mile are Monday through Friday, 2-8 p.m., and Saturday, 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. New store hours for the Pontiac Mall, Telegraph and Elizabeth Lake roads, in Waterford Township, are Monday through Saturday, 9:30 a.m. to 9:30 p.m., with some stores open on Sunday. ★ * ★ Children may visit Santa at the Mall daily except Sunday from 10 a.m. untilclosing. The Tel-Huron Shopping Center will be open from 9:30 a.m. to 9 p.m. Monday through Saturday. Santa’s visiting hours are noon to 6 p.m. Monday through Thursday and noon to 9 p.m. Friday and Saturday. Township Clerk Arthur Salley contended the board should first authorize the purchases and then the vehicle committee should set specifications for bids. AGREED TO TABLE But the board finally unanimously agreed to table the specifications for study until Monday upon the motion of Trustee Frank A. Lane. “None of this having depart-★ * ★ ment heads come in to make the request,” he remarked immediately after making the motion. In other business, the board: • Passed two rezoning requests without any difficulty. One permits a gas station on Dixie Highway at Ledgestone next to the post office. The other would allow automobile dealership on M59 near Cass Lake Road next to the Pied Piper restaurant. • Tabled a lot-split request for property on MS9 near Cass Lake Road for the second week in a row because revised plans showed one lot was still short of the 12,000-square-foot minimum. • Decided to hold a public hearing and take action Monday proposed ordinance providing for the connection of Waterford lines to the Clinton-Oakland Sewer Interceptor. Union Stops Picketing at GMC Truck 1 Teamster pickets have been withdrawn from GMC Truck and Coach Division after grievances of the union were partially resolved, according to Joseph Bdbe, president of Teamster Local 614 in Pontiac. Truck traffic was stepped from entering the plant for six hours yesterday, from 6 a.m. to noon, when pickets from the local appeared at the company’s receiving gate o n Opdyke between Square Lake and Smith Boulevard. Bane said he had the pickets leave after meeting with top management officials to discuss problems. He said it was agreed that the switching of carrier trucks inside the plant would be done by Teamsters, and not by UAW members. According to Bane, negotiations will continue to allow a Teamster representative inside the plant. Presently, he said, a Teamster agent is not allowed on the property. Theft at Laundry in City Reported Charles Welsh, owner o f Chuck’s Norge Village laundry, 1105 Joslyn, reported the theft of $224 cash and $20 in checks yesterday afternoon. Welsh said the money was removed from a desk in the laundry’s office when he left the room for 10 minutes. OEO Gets Cash A $415,129 grant has been awarded to the Oakland County Commission on Economic Opportunity to operate its program for the first six months of 1970. Joe A. Seamon Jr. Service for, Joe A. Seamon Jr., 38, of 512 Arthur will be p.m. Thursday at Frank Car-ruthefs Funeral Home burial in Oak Hill Cemetery at 7 p.m. , Mr. Seamon, a member of Hatford Baptist Church 1 n Detroit, died Saturday. He was engaged in the construction industry. Surviving are his mother, Mrs. Della Tyler of Pontiac; two daughters, Shelia of Detroit and Karon; and a sister. ! Anthony W. Zononi i Service for Anthony W. Zanoni, 11-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. William J. Zanoni of 826 Blaine, will be 1:30 p.m. tomorrow at the Church of God, Walton and Joslyn, with burial in Ottawa Park Cemetery, Independence Township b y Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home. Anthony, a student at Lincoln Elementary School, died Sunday. Surviving are his parents; a brother and two sisters, David, Robin and Kellie, all at home; and grandparents Mrs. Gladys L. Roehl, Mrs. Grace M. Zanoni and William J. Zanoni Sr., all of Pontiac. Mrs. Phillip Keelin PONTIAC TOWNSHIP -Mrs. Phillip (Cheryl) Keelin, 20, of 91 Purdue died yesterday in automobile accident. Her body is at the Price Funeral Home. Mrs. Don A. Morgan WHITE LAKE, TOWNSHIP -Service for Mrs. Don A. (Vivian) Morgan, 52, of .4166 Jackson will be 11 a.m. Friday at Donelson-Johns Funeral Home with burial in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy. Mrs. Morgan died yesterday. She was a member of the American Legion Auxilary Post $77. Surviving are her husband; a son, Michael Harmes of Pontiac; a daughter, Linda Harmes at home; two brothers; two sisters; and three grandchildren. Walter W. Mulanax HIGHLAND TOWNSHIP -Service for Walter W. Mulanax, 62, of 3172 Oakridge will be 11 a.m. tomorrow at Richardson-Bird Funeral Home, Milford, with burial in Oakland County Cemetery. ______________ Mr. Mulanax died Friday. He was a self-employed blacksmith and welder.' ■ > 1 . 47 0 ' Surviving are his wife, Dora, and one brother. Maurice A. Palmer WHITE LAKE TOWNSHIP — Service for Maurice A. Palmer, 67, of 1975 Hill will be 1 p.m. Thursday at Richardson-Bird Funeral Home, Milford, with burial in Highland Cemetery, Highland Township. Mr. Palmer died yesterday. He was a member of White' Lake Presbyterian Church and' a retired machinist. Surviving are his wife, Agnes; a daughter, Mrs. Arthur Buell Jr. of Webbervllle; a son, Richard in the Air Force at Albrook AFB, Panama Canal Zone; nine grandchildren; a great-grandchild; a brother; and a sister. Georg? Puddington Mrs. George Puddington BIRMINGHAM - Joint service for George Puddington, New CNB Drive-In Unit Opens at Pontiac Mall Community National’s new drive-in bank opened yesterday at the Pontiac Mall, Telegraph and Elizabeth Lake roads, Waterford Township. ★ ★ ★ The new facility, including four Tel-Air units, is an extension of the Community National Bank branch office at the Mall. The Tel-Air units, by use of a pneumatic tube system, enable one teller to service three customers at once. The building is designed with three drive-up stations on both the east and west sides for a total of six drive-up stations. ★ ★ ★ Teller windows are located in the first lane with Tel-Air units in lanes two and three. Hours for the new drive-in bank are 9:30 a.m. to 7 p.m. Monday through Friday and Saturday 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. 78, and his wife, Mildred, 52, of 2292 Horseshoe were yesterday with burial lit White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy. Mr. Puddlhgton died Saturday. His wife died Friday. He was a retired general sales manager with Delta-Macon Brick and Tile Co. and active in the Boy Scouts of America. Surviving is a son, George of Birmingham. Memorial contributions may be sent to the American Cancer Society. Katherine E. Torrey WATERFORD TOWNSHIP r-Graveside service for Katherine E., 3-month-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Norman TOrrey of 2018 Denby, were yesterday in Ottawa Park Cemetery. Katherine died Sunday. Surviving besides her parents are a brother, Norman C. at home, aifil grandparents, Mr.! and Mrs. Cecil Torrey of Lake Odessa and Mrs. Madelon Kristek of Flint. 1 M6nday Events in State Capital By Tbe Associated Press THE GOVERNOR Met with legislators In continued discussions of education reform legisla- Greeted termer Gov. G. Merman WII- THE ITATB SUPREME ' v », COURT \ . . Ordered a mlrtel of a 10-year dispute ever a Benton Harbor synagogue building Ordered the overturn of a Ing ordmair- — * — high-tension Edison Co. Upheld col Inmate for .... fallow convict. Upheld a workmen's compenu...... award to a former Coming Glass Co, Judge Rules on Magazine Oakland Univ. STUDIO COMPANY presents “3 One-Act Plays” by Ionesco, Wilder, and S Dec. 3,4 ,5,8 Curtain Time— 8:15 Adults $2, Students $1 MEADOW BROOK THEATRE 31 Americans Killed in Viet Oakland County Circuit Judge Frederick C. Zeim ruled yesterday that a magazine sold to a 15-year-old girl was obscene, and now must decide if the dark who sold it knew the girl was a minor. The ruling was made after the prosecution resfod its case against George M. Williamson. His attorney Charles Barr had moved- to dismiss the action on the basis that the magazine was not obscene. ★ ★ dr Williamson, 25, of 784 Auburn is being tried before Ziem without a jury on a charge of selling obscene material to a minor. The girl was working with Pontiac police when she purchased the magazine last April in the Adults Only Bookstore at 12 N. Saginaw. CASES STILL PENDING Clerks in two other stores were arrested and charged with the same offense after the teenager, now a llth grader at Pontiac Northern High School, bought what police claim to be iewd literature. Their cases are still pending. Barr contends that Williamson was set up by police to commit a crime. ★ ★ ★. Judge Ziem disagreed, saying' that it was his opinion that entrapment was not involved since the magazine was on sale and that the only thing the girl did into the store and buy one. He also said that the girl looks her age, rejecting Barr’s contention that she appears to be over 18, the legal age for buying the material. ■' ★ ★ * I Williamson was expected to take the witness stand today. Ziem also is to case reportedly reversing an earlier decision on which he based his ruling that the WASHINGTON (AP) - The names of 31 men killed in action are on the latest casualty list from tiie war in Vietnam. Included were four men from the Midwest. Killed in action: «y‘ :. George E. Miller, A. Duncan, Matthel, St. ’”7 MARINE CORPS ILLINOIS — Lance CpI. Millar E. Morgan, East St. LOUIS. Died while captured: ARMY ILLINOIS — Pfc. French E. Cannon, East Alton. Missing as a result of hostile action: AIR FORCE Lt. Col. Walter A. Remit, 2nd U. ihn R. Baldridge Jr. Missing not as a result of hostile action: ARMY Lt. Robert T. Wl NEW OLDSTER CLUB — Mrs. Leuna Sims of the Pearl Wright Senior Citizens Club in Royal Oak Township took part in yesterday’s first gathering at the new Oakland County Retirees and Senior Citizens Drop-In Colter, in downtown Pontiac at 1 TAKE YOUR CHOICE. .. • IN OAKLAND COUNTY • SINCE 1928 • ALL CREDIT TERMS • BURNER SERVICE Lafayette. Space |for the center was provided by the City of Pontiac and the Oakland County Board of Supervisors in .cooperation with ' the Oakland County Commission on Economic Opportunity. ClARKE-GEE FUEL OIL CAR WASH UJtiLGoi. Exterior Car Wash 14 gals. Free 12 gals. 25“ 9 gals. 50“ 6 gals. 75“ KUHN Auto Wash 149 W. Huron St. Pontiac $600 Missing at Cleaners Weekend cash receipts of $600 were reported missing yesterday afternoon by Harold Red-daway, owner of Reddaway Cleaners, 737 Auburn. Reddaway told police that he left the store in the charge of a woman while he tok a vacation. He instructed her to place the cash receipts in a hiding placfc. ★ ★ ★ When Reddaway returned, there was no money in the hiding place, although the employe said she had placed it there. 6 & M A ELLIS Since 1945 CEMENT WORK • PATIOS GARAGES • ADDITIONS COMPLETE BUILDING SERVICE TERMS FE 2-1211 115 N. Saginaw AUTEN FURNITURE 6605 Dixie Hwy. • Clarkston • FURNITURE • CARPET • DRAPERY 2tvewand informative investment booklets now ^ available Capital Gains and losses for 1969 you In reviewing your holdings, Yaar and la a traditional time to examine your portfolio for possible TAX SAVINGS. It contains (pacific Capital Gains A Lossat Provision*, 1969 Federal Income Tax Rata* lor individual* plus handy worksheets. Stocks on the Big Board stocks on tha Naw York Stock Exchange arranged comparisons. Contain* Long-tlmo dividend payers. Itas, 5 year growth rate* In earning* p*rsh*r*group*rt from the warmth and light of the open flame. ' CANDLE CULT •Hence, the candle cult No Norwegian hostess would think of serving even coffee and cookies without a festive candle on the table. Candlelight dinners are routine, and a party calls for a blaze of candles. Arriving guests are guided by torches at the garden gate, and often they bring brightly decorated can-, dies for, the hostess. \' v ' ★ . .★. ★ Even though most Norwegian homes have electric or oil central heating, they also have open fires on the hearth, not so much for physical warmth as for psychological warmth. The Norwegians have a word for it—koselig. It means cozy or snug. CELEBRATE ^UL J lie pre-Christian Vikings celebrated Jul—hence the English word Yule for Christmas—to mark the passing of the year’s longest night on Dec. 21. They held feasts called skaalte, and one theory holds that the modem Norwegian toast “skaal”— Spanish Leader Turns 77 Thursday Age, Demands Cut Franco's Influence the titular leader, accused him of betraying the Falange by this action. The prestige of the Falangists had been declining for years, and Franco dealt the organization a serious blow when he shuffled the cabinet recently, giving the balance of power to technocrats who favor a more progressive economic policy. To contest the new technocrat government and try to regain lost prestige, the Falangists are trying to form a new nationwide “association.” NO PARTIES has no political parties, MADRID (AP) - Generalissimo Francisco Franco turns 77 Thursday, still as firmly in cobtrol as he wants to be after running Spain for three decades. But both age and demands for modernization are chipping away at the diminutive general’s influence. For one thing, a whole generation of teen-agers is striding toward what they hope will be more mature Spain, free of the hates and divisions that resulted in bloody conflict and brought Franco to power. They don’t know about the Spanish Civil War and they don’t care,” says a Madrid University instructor. “They see what’s going on in the rest of Western Europe and they want to be a part of it.” Franco has slowly loosened his grip on power, obviously locking to the day when he won’t be around to call the shots. ACCUSED OF BETRAYAL In July he provided for restoring the monarchy by naming Prince Juan Carlos de Bourbon to succeed him as head of state. Juan Carlos^ to be crowned after Franco’s death, will be Spain’s first king since his grandfather, Alfonso XIII, was driven from the country in 1931. Hard-line Falagists, members of the rightist nationalist organization of which Franco is still GEN. FRANCISCO FRANCO but “associations” with political trends are permitted—providing they adhere to the rules of the National Movement. The Movement, created by Franco, rigidly regulates all political activity in the country. Franco has apparently given tiie technocrat government wide license to implement reforms as long as they stick to his cardinal principal of putting God and Country first, This means, says one government source, new tactics but no fundamental change in policy. him recently describe him as almost indefatigable, a good shot who can still go to either side, although he is slower than he used to be at swinging around. He is also a fisherman and a golfer. Palace insiders report Franco still devotes considerable time to his seven grandchildren. The two oldest, both girls, are now teen-agers. Just as he has for years, he lives quietly in El Pardo with his wife Carmen. He doesn’t smoke, drinks wine only occasionally, and goes to bed early. sometimes anglicized to “skol” —comes from the Viking word. Northerners behave in much the same way now. They love to give cheerful parties to counter the gloom. Most are held at home. Thera are no style pubs because of the liquor laws, and the cafe life southern Europeans enjoy so much is missing here. American-style cocktail lounges are located only in luxury hotels and restaurants. ★ ★ ★ It is a remarkable experience for a foreigner to travel in northern Norway in the winter. Doors fly open and hands are stretched out in welcome by people you have never met and are unlikely to meet again. Your new face is enough to ensure^ hearty welcome. Dr. Karl Evang, chief of thei Children practice for their Norwegian health services, says school bands. Families form nature seems to have compen- gg|§ own orchestras. Boys build sated northerners by making modelSf and girls make thelr them more outgoing and much own clothes. Dad is apt to boa less reserved thany those ,of do.it. yourselfer, and mother ||teU probably bakes her owh bread: southern climes. WHAT’S THERE TO DO? What is there to do during the seemingly endless winter? People start work early and rush home for the main meal at 5 p.m. After a short nap, the evening begins. Family games and hobbies help fill the time. Norwegians are voracious read-and even the smallest towns have bookstores crammed with Norwegian and foreign books. ★ Centuries of living in isolated communities has taught Norwegians to entertain themselves. Most \ Norwegians' actually look forward to winter because of its sports, at which they excel. Even the smallest communities have floodlit skating are-and lights are strung through the forest to illuminate cross-country ski courses. When, in the new year, the sun again shimmers off the crisp white snow, a million Norwegians will be joined by a half-million foreigners as they head for ski resorts; to bask in the restorative rays of the new sun and celebrate the end of| gloom. AUTEN FURNITURE 6605 Dixie Hwy. Clarkston • FURNITURE • CARPET • DRAPERY NEWSPAPERS 40c per 100 Ibi. delivered Royal Oak Waste Paper * Metal Co. 414 E. Hudson, Royal Oak LI 1-4030 ip your living area... and the out-of-sight] Aprilaire Humidifier automatically furnishes the humidity your home j end family need., KAST HEATING and COOLING 580 Telegraph Rd. (at Orchard Lake Rd.) 338-9255 RENT, SELL, TRADE... USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS I 'MB 1WH THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1969 MARKETS Trade Moderately Active The following are top prices covering sales of locally grown produce by growers and sold by them in wholesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets as of Friday. Produce FRUITS Applet. Delicious, Golden, bu..... Applet, Delicious. Red, bu........ Applet, Jonathan, bu.............. Applet, McIntosh, bu. ............ Applet, Northern Spy, bu.......... Cider, Apple, 4-gal. cate ........ Peart, Bote, at bu. .............. VEGETABLES Beats, Topped, bu................. Cabage. Curly, bu................. Cabbage, Rad, bu.................. Cabbage, Standard Variety, bu. ... Carrots, Cello Pah, 2-dz.......... Carrots, Topped, bu............... Celery, Root, VWm................. Fennel, di........ ............... Horseradish, pk. bskt. ........... Leeks, di. bch. .................. Onions, Dry, 50-1 h. bag ......... Parsnips, U bu. .................. Parsnips, Cello Pek, dz. ......... Potatoes, 50-lb. bag ............. Potatoes, 20-lb. bag ............. Radishes, Sleek, VS bu............ Squash, Buttercup, bu............. Squash, Butternut, bu............ Squash, Delicious, bu.............HM Squash, Hubbard, bu. ............. 2-50 Turnips, Topped, bu............... LETTUCE AND GREENS Cabbage, bu....................... Celery. Cabbage, dz............... Col lard, bu...................... Kale. bu. ' ...................... Spinach, bu....................... Swim Chard, bu. .................. Poultry and Eggs DETROIT POULTRY DETROIT (AP) — (USDA) — Prices paid per pound for No. l live poultry. Hens heavy type 22-24; roasters heavy type 25-27; broilers and fryers whites 21-22; heavy type young hen turkeys 32-34; heavy type young toms 29-32; geese DETROIT EOGS DETROIT (AP) —(USDA) —Egg paid per dozen, Monday, by first -ers. (including U4-): Grade A (umbo 42-45; extra larrn large 4044; medium 54-42; small CHICAGO (AP) — (USDA) --------------- Monday wholesale selling prices 2 to 2M higher; .' 93 score AA 4OTM4; 92 A 48'/;; 90 B 6714-48 Vi. Eggs; prices paid delivered to Chicago Vi lower to Vi higher; SO. per cent or better grade A whites 41Vh-4JVi: mediums white M—— Stock Market Moves Lower NEW YORK (UPI) — Stocks opened lower today moderately active trading on the New York Stock Exchange. The 800 level of the Dow Jones industrial average could come in for another test today if the factors which have pushed stock prices down recently continue to weigh on the market. Tax selling, the outlook for corporate profits and concern over tight money have been widely regarded as the chief culprits in the market's recent decline. Shortly'after the opening the UPI indicator was off 0.57 with 318 shares crossing the tape. Declines outnumbered advances 142 to 77. The Dow Jones average of 30 blue chip industrials was off more than two points. U.S. Steel toll % to 35. Bethlehem lost y« to 27%. Republic was unchanged at 35%. Standard (Ml of New Jersey 01%. Texas Instruments fell 1% to 00% on 7,800 shares. Gulf 1< % to 20%, Occidental % to 24%, Mobil % to 46%. W # * In the chemicals, Du Pont gave up % to 107% and Dow was off to 68%; Allied Chemical eased % to 27%. Union Carbide was steady at 38%. In the motors, American Motors dipped % to 9%. Ford and Chrysler were steady at 42% and 36, respectively. Reuther Offers Economic Plan Defense Firms Would Pay for Conversion 1Orgy Atmosphe $^ Helps toSell Shoes By EISENMAN The New York Stock Exchange Livestock DETROIT LIVESTOCK 0-2-3, 1-3, 1225 pounds, 29.00-21 mixed good and chc 9M7ipouncls,S^26$5-27.75'good. ~25JB4f') Vealers 250, High choice and prln.. 42.00-44.00; choice, 38.00-42.00; good, 34.00-30.00; standard, 30.00-34.00. Sheep 400, choice and prime 90-11 woo led slaughter lambs, 27.50-29.00; to good slaughter ewes, 4.00-10.00. CHICAGO LIVESTOCK CHICAGO (AP) — (USDA) — 5,000; butchers steady - I 230-250 lbs 24.50- 27.25; 2-4 250-200 lbs 25.50-24.50; I 280-300 lbs 24.50-25.50 ; 3- 300-350 23.75- 24JO; sows weak to Me moderately active; 1-3 gOfrSSO^^^MW 23.50; 1-3 350-400 lbs 22.25-23.00; 1-3 400-450 lbs 22.00-22.50; 2-3 450-500 lbs 21.25-224)0; 2-3 500-400 lbs 20.50-21 JO; boars 204)0-20.50. Cattle 8J00; calves none; tradl ----- —i —’me slaughter choice and below active, steady to strong, Instances 25 higher early on weights der 1.100 lbs; slaughter heifers fairly „ five, steady to 25 higher than late Friday; cows and bulls steady; prime 1,200-1,450 lb slaughter steers yield grade * "_J 29.50- 30.00 with four loads at X . ■ 1,300 Ibs^ yield 4^^ 294B; ^hlg 29.75?choice 950-1J50 ibs yield grade 2 ' 4 28.50-29JO; mixed good MBMNlmtfl 18.50; good 24.75-28.00;»1-------- ------ good 25.25-26.75; high choice and prim, 900-1,050 lb slaughter heifers yield grade j and 4 20.25-20JO; three loads at the latt* price; choice 050-14125 Ibo yield grade 2, 4 27.50-20.25; mixed ppr- —I 24.75- 27.50; good 2S4M-24. .. commercial cows lO.00-19.7; dressing utility 20.00-20.25; cutters 14JO-10.75; utility a bulls 244XM4J0. . Sheep 400; slough WASHINGTON (AP) - The nation’s defense contractors should be compelled to pay most of the cost of converting the economy to peacetime production, United Auto Workers President Walter P. Reuther proposed Monday. . Reuther told a panel of senators the defense industries should be ordered to place 25 per cent of their after-taxes profit into a special, federally managed trust fund which he said would help finance conversion, pay worker’s retraining costs and compensate employes during the transition period. Saying he was drawing on 30 years of experience at the bargaining table, the labor leader said a built-in set of powerful economic incentives are the key to a successful program to convert the economy at the end of the Vietnam war. Reuther made the proposal in testimony before the Senate Labor and Public Welfare Committee which is considering legislation to ease the conversion of the economy to a peace-time tooting. He said his plan is the only practical means to “overcome foot-dragging resistance to conversion by defense contractors who prefer the easy profits of military business-as-usual, derived from their relationship with the Pentagon, to the rigors of the civilian market.” “Impounded profits released to the contractor by the trust fund for physical conversion of his facilities and for retraining of his workers would be no different, in principle, from profits voluntarily set aside and later reinvested by a civilian production corporation to reequip and retrain for manufacture of new product when the market for an Old one dried up,” Reuther said. Mutual Stock Quotations NEW YORK - Carl J. Haas tweaks his blade mustache and desolbee with pleasure how scantily^ clad harem girls will entice male customers into his new shop. 'We think the more skin that’s showing, the more sales T| get,” he says. “We’re trying to create an orgy atmosphere.” ■a • ★ a “In fact,” promises an ad for the store, “we may just add topless salesgirls to worship at your feet...” The recently opened shop in mid-Manhattan is selling, by the way, men’s shoes. GIRLS ARE THERE So far, the harem costumes and the topless look are absent, but the girls are there. Haas, Adler Shpe Shops vice president, says the harem costumes are ordered and the topless look is a very real possibility. ★ ★ ★ Haas is not alone in his desire to use feminine flesh to sell merchandise. There is evidence that the nude look may be moving out of the ivory tower of high fashion into the rough and tumble of sales promotion. PRODUCT PITCH 'We’ve had some very high-caliber drug firms ask us for topless and nude girls to promote products at medical seminars,” said Stuart Golden, president of Trade Show Promotions International. ★ ★ ★ His firm employes between-job actresses who — a-recent advertisement says — "are specially trained to stimulate interest in your product or bikinu if they’re, not right tor the product. ' THEY INSISTED Even so, a large eleetrical-oroducts company recently insisted on a model in a bikini Introduce a new computer to an audience of engineers. ★ .★ Girls attract attention,’ plained a spokesman for BP Oil, which is chill November weather had pretty girls in pretty skimpy costumes giving commuters handbills something as sexless as home heating oil. ★ ★ * As Americans become more and more accustomed to the nude look via films, fashion, topless — and now in California bottomless — nightclub entertainment, sex and the single salesgirl might become American as apple pie. But some say hard-sell sex- “Women seem, by far, the most desirable sales promoters,” he said. His clients in three countries like the girls to wear miniskirts and bikinis weU as more conservative uniforms. He refuses the requests for nude and topless girls, he said, and often advises a g a i n s ' Nat Invft 1.45 9.14 Nat Sacur Sar: Balan 10.4511.45 Bond 5.50 4 01 Dlvld 4.27 4:47 Grwth 9.2910.15 Pf Stk 4.74 7.37 Incom 5.31 5J0 Stock 8.24 9.03 Nat weat 7.04 7.72 Nal Grth 9.5010.45 Nauwth 25.20 25.20 New Wld 13.4914.74 NY Vent 19.25214)5 Newton 15.4518.51 Noreast 15.0415.04 Ocngph 8.05 0.50 Omega 8.24 8.35 100 Fd 14.1015.41 101 Fd 9.59 ioj) One WmS 10.59)4.39 Pin* st 10.7110.71 “Ion Ent 7.97 8.71 Plon Fnd 12.4013.77 Plan Inv 11.7112.80 Price Funds: Grwth 24.07 24.07 Pro Fund ,»JO 10 J6 Putnam Funds: Invest 7,07 8 Rap Tech 5.03 5:50 Revere 13.2frl0.23 Investing vvx Rosenth 7.53 8.23 Salem Fd 043 7.25 phustr 10.131704 Scudder Funds: int Inv uhavan Spcl 340734.27 Bal 15.3315.33 Com St 11.3911.39 Sec DIV 10.8111.49 Sec Eqult 3.78 4.13 Sec Inv 7.77 8.49 Selec Am 10.351U0 Sal SpecS 10.4217.95 Smith B 1 |wn Inv^ 1 14 15.48 StFrm Gt 5.55 5.55 State St 514» 52.00 Steadman Funds: Am tnd 11.2312.31 Piduc 7.39 8.10 Scion 4.71 5.10 Stain Roe Fds: Bat 20.05 20.05 Cap Op 15.0415.64 Stock 14J614.54 Sup InGt 7.43 8.14 ■> SuptnSt 9.9410.89 Syncr Gt 11.30 12.35, TMR Ap 20.1722.04 Teachrs 10.2310.66 Tachncl 0.48 7.00 Techvst 8.18 Technol 7,04 8.11 Temp Gt 24.4 V 56,90 TOW MR 0.90 7.54 Tran Cap 7.75 8.42 Trav Eq 10.1411.08 Tudor Fd 10J0l8.fi TwnC Gt 431 4.93 Twnc Inc 4.65 5.00 Unlfd 9 J010.23 Vncas spl Investing Vsndrbt vgar HR 4.94 5.37 Ing 7.03 7.64 mdltj 10.2011.15 Milt 10.7711.93 WBM) 10.0410.85 11.1* if.is y*r vikit vw.wmm WallSt In 11.9512.95 WM Mil 1*3313 J7 Wellgtn unavall West fnd 7,75 1.47 Whltehll 14.8216.20 WtnCP Fd l.i K# Windsor fjfildl Winfield 8.78 6.32 Wise Fd 7J4 8.04 ■V Worth 2.90 3.28 uality is far from an established trend, ,, . \ “We have no specific Incidents where a client says, 'Let’s get sexy,’ ” said Wallace Clayton, a vice president at J. Walter Thompson Co-, the world’s largest ad agency. ‘Fifteen or 20 years ago, there was a strong emphasis on and cheesecake, particularity in trade paper ads. “But the emerging trend now i humor, he adds. “Now advertising is humorous.” FRANCIS E. MAPLEY Sylvan Lake Man Gets Promotion at Pontiac Div. The promotion of Francis E. Mapley to budget manager of Pontiac Motor Division was announced today by Thomas L. King, general sales manager. The appointment is effective immediately. The assistant budget manager since 1955, Mapley replaces Corliss E. Armstrong who retired yesterday. ★ it ★ Mapley joined Pontiac in 1936 j a timekeeper in the accounting department. In 1948 he was named senior statistician-analyst in the budget department, a position he held until becoming assistant budge1 manager. A 1936 graduate of Michigan State University, Mapley of 2448 Ren Frew, Sylvan Lake, is Renfrew, Sylvan Lake, is married and the father of two sons. Probe Clears State Doctor DETROIT (UPI) - Michigan Blue afield said yesterday that 8169,000 has not yet been returned to Dr. Sanford /, Benton Harbor, although an investigation of Medicare payments made to him revealed “no pattern of impropriety.” Polansky returned the money to Blue Shield Jiity 22 when legislators questioned how one physician could be paid so much money for treating Medicare patients. TVro weeks ago, Blue Shield reported that Polansky had been working six or seven days a week, up to 15 hours a day, and that “QUr evaluation of Dr. Polansky’s practice indicates no pattern of impropriety.” In fact Blue afield said Pllaflsky’s fees were below the state average. When Polansky returned the money, Blue Shield said it immediately placed it in an escrow account. Bernard Houston, director of the Michigan Department of Social Services, said he ordered the money held until legislative auditors had completed their investigation.’* $7,000 in Goods Gone From Store Pontiac detectives investigating a burglary reported yesterday at Yankee Department Store, 1125 N. Perry, say they have found no sign of forced entry. Missing are three rifles, valued at $260, a television set, $154, an AM-FM radio and stereo console, $600, and a clock radio, $45. News in Brief A $179 stereo tape player was stolen yesterday from Mrs. Mary Ann Olszewski’s unlocked car, - parked in- fromt of her home at 134 Ridgemont, according to police. County Enforcement of Bias Act Aired illegal. He claimed it would amount to forcing people into jobs they are not equipped to maintain. . ★ ★. ★ He agreed the industry is at fault in that until recently it had done little to seek out minorities employes, but he stated the unions had also, reluctantly opened the doors to such memberships. “This, too, is partly the tfaAt of the employer because he abdicated the job of providing men to the union,’’ Steward admitted. ‘FAULTY PROGRAM’ He-did say the building trades apprenticeship program Is faulty. “When work is down, the trade isn’t hiring people not 1 already in the industry. New apprentices aren’t taken on consistently.” ‘The county already has the machinery to correct any discrimination existing,’ ’ Stewart said. He advised ; against any self-enforcement program and charged^ that a similar program in Detroit is not working. ft ft•••■• ft Peraick, commented, “More .......|HRJ|H|H . people are now aware of the racial barrier in the reinforced situation. Through the educa-steel trades, and the industry’s tional process toe county will involvement in training pro-take some action. The problem grams. i can’t be hidden under toe com- Stewart charged the Michigan ment that progress is being Civil Rights Commission code made. That’s not specific 1 on equal employment is unen- enough to those who don’t have forceable and to some areasljobs.” , k No action was taken during discussion yesterday by the Oakland County Board o f Supervisors Planning, Zoning and Building Committee | regard to requested enforcement of state Equal m p 1 o yment Opportunities Act.(No. 251 of 1955). A resolution presented earlier to the full board had asked the county to either provide its own enforcement or seek Michigan Civil Rights Commission enforcement in regard to fair employment practices as followed by contractors doing work for the county. Lawrence Pernick, D-Southfield, and James Mathews, resolution, had contended that contractors are more interested in toe act prior to contract award than they are later. Their contentions were answered by, William Stewart, executive/ director of the metropolitan area Associated General Contractors. HIS CONTENTION Stewart claimed contractors are moving in toe area of hiring more minority race employes. He cited 100 blacks accepted last year as journeymen electricians, the breaking of the' *1 THE FONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1969 Aanwr tohnbn Nnl* 1 2 3 * 5 6 7 8 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 US 15 19 20 H 24 25 28 29 30 w 34 36 137" 138 39 40 r 42 43 44 46 47 48* 49 50 bl 52 53 64 55 56 57 2 People in the News By The Associated Press Duke Ellington and his 17-man band returned yesterday from a good-will tour of 12 European nations, and the bandleader said “I have a lot of wonderful impressions.” Ellington told newsmen in New York that in Prague, Chechoslovakia, “After the show, some young kids followed me to my hotel room where they gave me enameled animals and other gifts. It was all done without words, so I asked them for their names and addresses se I could send them Christmas greetings, and it turned out that they were Si Russian musicians — it was wonderful. Apollo 12 Astronauts to Be Rose Parade Marshals The Apollo 12 astronauts will be grand marshals of the 81st Tournament of Roses Parade on New Year’s Day, officials say. Charles Conrad Jr., Alan L. Bean and Richard F. Gordon Jr. accepted the invitation yesterday, a parade spokesman said. The parade precedes the Rose Bowl football game. Rep. Powell's Son Makes NY Social Register Adam Clayton Powell III, son of the Harlem congressman, has made the New York Social Register for 1970, but under his wife’s maiden name. Powell was listed as the husband of Beryl G. Slwnm, 1960 debutante and Newport socialite, whom he married earlier this year. There was no listing in the Mr. and Mrs. section and no reference under “Married Maidens.” Sen. Mundt Partially Incapacitated by Stroke Sen. Karl E. Mundt, 69-year-old Republican from South Dakota, has been partially incapacitated by a stroke, his office says. But the announcement yesterday in Washington said Mundt’s life is not in danger and he has no plans to step down from the Senate. • - • Mundt lost partial use of his right arm and has difficulty walking and speaking, an aide said. Doctors said he will be in Bethes-MUNDT da Naval Hospital for six to eight weeks. 'Toots' Honored on 40th Year as Saloonkeeper “Toots” Shor, drinking companion of sports and show >iness figures, was honored yesterday in New York at a dinner marking his 40th year as a saloonkeeper here. “This has to be the greatest moment in a bum’s life,” Shor, told 1,400 well-wishers at the New York Hilton. The guests paid $75 each to help the USO and HAVEN, a reha-bilitory group for drug addicts. Gen. of the Army Omar Bradley, Jack Dempsey, Mickey Mantle, Bob Hope and Pat O’Brien were among the guests. * -Television programs- Pregrams furnished by stations listed in this column are subject/to change without/notice! Channel*! 2—WJBK-TV. 4-WWJ-TV. 7-WXYZ-TV. 9-CKLW-TV, 50-WKBD-TV, 56-WTVS-TV, 62-WXON-TV R — Rerun C — Color TUESDAY NIGHT 6:0d (2) U) (7) C - News, Weather, Sports (9) R C — Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea (in progress) (SO) R C — Flintstones (56) R — Americans from Africa (62) R — Ozzie and Harriet 6:30 (2) C - News — Cronkite (4) C — News — Huntley, Brinkley (9) R — Dick Van Dyke — Rob’s sense of humor backfires when he bases a skit on Laura’s penchant for opening his mail. (SO) R — Ministers — A disc jockey hears a tape of Herman’s voice and he’ll be the new sensation. (56) Beyond the Earth — Dr. John A. Russell discusses astronomy. (62 C — Robin Seymour— The Coven guests. 7:00 (2) C - Truth o r Consequences (4) C — News, Weather, Sports (7) C — News —• Reynolds, &nith (9) R — Movie: “I’ll See You in My Dreams” (1952) Musical biography of songwriter Gus Kahn. Doris Day, Danny Thomas (50) R — I Love Lucy (56) What’s New — The two Brave Boys explore a Chilean copper mine. 7:30 (|) C - National Geographic Special — “Siberia: the Endless Horizon” is a picturesque study of the region which occupies more than one-tenth'of the earth’s surface but is guarded by an impenetrable circle of cold. Joseph Campanella narrates. (4) C — I Dream of Jeaimie — After hectic preparations, Tony and Jeannie lure married in a ceremony marked - by frenzy. . (7) C — Mod Squad — Pete, line and Julie pose 1 as college students to investigate a young man’s mysterious death. (50) C — Beat the Clock (56) Joyce Chen Cooks — “Shanghai Duck” (62) C — Of Lands and Seas — France is visited. 8:00 (4) C — (Special) The Night Before Christmas-Clement C. Moore’s famous poem is animated and narrated by the Norman Luboff Choir. (50) R C — Hazel (56) News Special Jpg “Hunger: A National Disgrace” highlights the opening day of the White House conference on food, nutrition and health, including President Nixon’s address to the meeting. 8:30 (2) C-(Special) Billy Graham — Anaheim, Calif. Crusade (4) C g!| Julia — A charming, talented artist who refuses to take a steady job is influencing Corey. (7) C — Movie: “Three's a Crowd” p< (Premiere) .A man suddenly finds himself married to two women. Larry Hagman, Jessica Walter, E. J. Peaker (50) C To Tell the Truth , (62) R— The Nelsons 9:00 (4) C — First Tuesday — Segments include an American girl’s trip to London to undergo an abortion, and Janies Brown, black millionaire entertainer and businessman, talks about his favorite project of encouraging young people to Radio Programs- WJR(760) WXYZQ 270) CKLW(800) WWJ(950) WCAR(1130) WPONQ 460) WJBKd 500) WHFI-FM(94.7) !:**—WWJ, News, Sport! 4 WJR, Now* CKLW, Steve Hunter WPON, NOW! WHFI, Don Alcorn wcar. Now*, Ron Roto WXYlI Nowscopo wjbk, Tom Shannon !:1S—WJR, Sport* WPON, MwoM the Lines, <:30—wwjf Today in Review WPON, Rap Session Wife lpM**, Tima Traveler _ 6:45—wwj. Review, Em-jmM* \ o WJR, Lowell Thornes, Auto 7:00—WWJ, N Builder* WHFI, Leo: wt^jRMMRPlIlRI WJBK, Tom Doan WJR, World Tonight 7:1$—WWJ, SportsLIne WJR,. Bushiest, Sports t, Reasoner Report,.; MP-WPON, News, Larry Obion WJR, Newt, Sports •ill-WJR, Sunnyslda Encore *:**—WJR, Showcase, Close- 1:45—WJR, Showcase, .. Minority Report *»**-CKLW„ Stott Regen WJR, News, Kaleidoscope 10:00—WJR, Newt \ 10:1*—wjr. Focus Encore \ 11:00—WJR, Nows WWJ, NOWS UilS-WJR, Sports , WWJ, Overnight tliSBHWJR. Music Till Dai H:00—WJBK, Jim Hampton WXYZ, News, Jli.i Davit whfi, Ira J. cook WEDNESDAY MORNING 6:00—WJR. Musi* Hall WCaA,News, Bill Delia 11 WXYZ. News, Dick Purtan cklw, jam Edwards WJBK, Jerry Baxter WPON, News, Chuck War- WHFI, Marc Avery 6:30—wwj, Mome Carlson (if*—WJR, Newt ItlS-WJR, Sunnyslde. Music Neighbor ii;S®z.0pa Randall WCAR, Rod Ml WWPC 'PON, News, Gary Purece . WHFI, Dim Zee IliM-WJR, Newt, KgMgm ItlS-WJR, Arthur Godfrey 1:45—WJR, Sunnyslde J:*0—WPON, News, Den 'Milham WXYZ, Newt, Mike Shtrma WJR. News, MIWW4iJlt*CO, CKLW, is Mitchell \ . 1:15—WJR, Mitfc Halt 2:30—WJR, Time for Health 3:4*—WCAR, News, Ron Rot , WJBK, Tom Shannon WHFI, bpn Alcorn , .4:00—WWJ, Newstime 5:55—WPON, Stock Report TV Features /NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC SPECIAL, 7:30 p.m. (2) THE NIGHT BEFORE CHRISTMAS, 8 p.m. (4) NEWS SPECIAL, 8 p.m. (56) MOVIE, 8:30 p.m. (7) FIRST TUESDAY, 9 P-m. (4) NET FESTIVAL, 9 p.m. (56) 60 MINUTES, 10 p.m. (2) ENGLEBERT HUMP- | ERDINCK, 10 p.m. (7) | MAN AT THE CENTER, 10 p.m. (9) stay in school and make the most of their lives. (9) C - What’s- My Line? (50) R —Perry Mason (56) NET Festival - The American premiere? o f “From the House of the Dead,” a contemporary opera by Czech composer Leos Janacek. Based on Dostoevsky’s novel, the opera is sung by John Reardon, Robert Rounseville, David Lloyd and Frederick Jagel. (62) R — Movie: “Bottoms Up” (British, 1960) Students at a boys’ school stage a rebellion and end up foiling a plot to kidnap a prince. Jimmy Edwards, Martita Hunt. 9:30 (2) C — Governor and J.J. — J.J.’s intuition tells her Maggie is in love with the governor. Gov. David Cargo of New Mexico guest-stars. (9) C — Cesar’s World — “Caribbean Ports of Call” 10:00 (2) C — 60 Minutes -Segments include a major investigation of whether South Vietnam, faced with the prospect of an American military withdrawal, can continue to fight its battles against North Vietnam and the Vietcong. Interviews with South Vietnam President Thieu and members of his government are featured. (7) C — (Special) Engelbert Humperdinck — Tom Jones, Dionne Warwick, Barbara Eden and Jose Feliciano guest. (9) C — McQueen — Columnist investigates a firm that promises a full head of hair to baldheaded men. (50) C — News, Weather, Sports 10:30 (9) C — Man at the Center—Society’s attitudes to the number and nature of ^permissible partnerships between males and females are probed. (50) R — Ben Casey — A veteran nurse upsets Casey when she isolates patients and feeds them plum pudding. (56) Segovia Master Gass (62) R — Sea Hunt 11:00 (2) (4) (7) (9) C -News, Weather Sports (62) R — Highway Patrol 11:30 (4) C — Johnny Carson — Shelley Winters and David Susskind guest. (7) C — Joey Bishop (9) R - Movie: “The Captain’s Paradise” (British, 1953) (50) C — Merv Griffin (62) R — Movie: “Sands of the Desert” (British, 1$:35 (2) R - M o He : “Women Are Like That” 'if1960) 1:00 (4) Beat the Champ (7) R — Texan (9) Viewpoint (50) R — Peter Gunn 1:05 (9) C — Perry’s Probe — “Fertility Pill, Hormones and Endocrinology” 1:30 (2) R — Naked City (4) (7) C — News, Weather „ 1:40 (7) C —'Five Minutes to live By 2 : 3 0 (2) C — News, Weather 2:35 (2) TV Chapel WEDNESDAY MORNING 5:50 (2) TV Chapel 5:55 (2) C — On the Farm Scene 6:00 (2) C — Sunrise School Official Leads Group Dr. Robert A. Williams, director of guidance and measurement for Oakland Schools,' has been named chairman of tiie North Central Association of Counselor Education and Supervision. The organization, comp____ of college professors of counselor education, state directors of'guidance, and local guidance directors, met recently in Chi-cago. Dr, Williams is past president of the Michigan Personnel and Guidance Association and a member of the Governor’s | Commission on Crime. 6:25 (7) C — Five Minutes to Live By 6:30 (2) C — Woodrow the Woodsman (4) Classroom — “Some Heroic Spirits: First Discovery of the World” (7) C — TV College — “Nigeria: Failure o f Federalism, Bane o f Tribalism” 7:60 (4) C - Today (7) C — Morning Show (56) R — listen and Say 7:30 (2) C—News, Weather, Sports 7:55 (9) News 8:00 (2) C — Captain Kangaroo 8:05 (9) Mr. Dressup 8:30 (7) R — Movie: “Keeper of the Flame” (1943) Katharine Hepburn, Spencer Tracy (9) Friendly Giant 8:40 (56) R — Modern Supervision — “Performance Appraisals: Tool or Torture” 8:45 (9) Chez Helene 9:00 (2) R — Mr. Ed (4) C — Dennis Wholey (9) C — Bozo 9:15 (56) Children’s Hour 9:30 (2) R C — Beverly Hillbillies 9:45 (56) R — Science Is Searching 9:55 (4) C — Carol Duvall 10:00 (2) R C — Lucy Show (4) C —It Takes Two (9) Ontario Schools I (56) C — Sesame Street 10:25 (4) C — News 10:30 (2) C — Della Reese — Bob Darrin and Gisele MacKenzie 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 (7) C -* Anniversary Game (50) C — Kimba 11:45 (9) C — News WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON 12:00 (2) C—News, Weather, Sports (4) C — Jeopardy (7) R C — Bewitched (9) Take 30 (50) CAlvin ‘ 12:05 (56) Americans From ' Africa'1' !, 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 (56) R — Art Lesson 1:00 (2) C — Search for Tomorrow (4) C»— Letters to Laugh-In (7) C — Dream House (9) R — Movie: “Andy” (1965) Norman Alden, Tamara Daykarhonova (50) R — Movie: “Go Into Your Dance” (1935) A1 Jolson, Ruby Keeler 1:10 (56) Tell Me a Story 1:25 (56) Interlude 1:30 (2) C — As the World Turns (4) C — You’re Putting Me On (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 — Black Journal-Report on soul music record industry features Gladys Knight and the Pips, Smokey Robinson and the Miracles and Isaac Hayes. 2:25. (2) C-News 2:30 (2) C — Guiding Light (4) C — Doctors (7y C — Dating Game 3:00 (2) C — Secret Storm (4) C - Another World (7) C — General Hospital (9) R — Candid Camera (56) Consultation — “Wild Animals as Pets” (62) R Movie: “Bail Out at 43,000” (1957) John Payne, Karen Steele 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) Memo to Teachers 4:00 (2) RC —GomerPyle (4) R C — Steve Allen —| Jayne Meadows, Stu Gilliam and Johnny Greenwood guest. (7) C — Dark Shadows (9) C — Bozo (56) Sesame Street 4:30 (2) C — Mike Douglas —Gwen Verdon, Scaffold and Christopher Glenn guest, (7) R C — Movie: “Say One for Me” (1959) Bing Crosby, Debbie Reynolds (Part 2) (50) R — Little Rascals (62) C — Bugs, Cyrus and Friends 5:00 (4) C—George Pierrot — “Fairyland of Austria” (9) R C — Flipper (50) R 6 — Lost in Space (56) Misterogers 5:30 (9) R C — Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea (56) Friendly Giant (62) R — Leave It to Beaver 5:45 (56) Merlin the Magician Draft Draw Is Covered By CYNTHIA LOWRY millions to its manufacturing, its hydroelectric power, its mineral wealth. One portion is devoted to the development of Irkutsk, a town of a, half njiilliop that looks like a snow-edvereti frontier town i of the 1900s. Others show nomad tribes of the Far North with their herds of horses and reindeer. Essentially it is a story of the railroad—the trans-Siberian— which is the steel lifeline of the 5-million square miles expanse. AP Television-Radio Writer NEW YORK — CBS preempted a situation comedy Monday night to report on the first lottery drawing in the new draft procedures. The special half-hour report in midevening showed the blue capsules being pulled, one by one, from the Plexiglas bowl but concentrated more on the Essentially the special report served to end the ssupense of young Americans of draft age and their families by showing the order of birth dates in the lottery. NBC wrapped up the story by interrupting its feature movie broadcast later in the evening and ABC handled it in its late news program. A BUSY GUY On the entertainment front, it was a big Johnny Carson night. Carson popped up in some gags on NBC’s “Laugh-In,” and was the guest star on the rival CBS I “Here’s Lucy.” Johnny and Ed I McMahon played themselves on | Lucille Ball’s show, and they j didn’t do it very well. Lucy and family attended a 1 Carson broadcast and, of I* course, became involved with | the stars. Miss Ball can give 1 Carson lessons in comedy. If Rails between Moscow and Vladivostok have results in increasing the population from 6-million to 25 million. It not qnly moves, supplies and people but brings medical and dental care, provides shops on wheels and even lectures on current events. was brilliantly photographed—some of the northern Siberia scenes are so vivid one can almost feel the latter cold —and had a commentary full of small human details. Unknown Tipster May Get $1000 The vastness, the cold, the wealth and the rugged pioneers of modem Siberia are the subjects of another fine CBS special MIHHm in the National Geographic So- § Poliw” Chief " Wiiilam K ciety series to be broadcast to-1 Hanger has a message: night. f8 — - - A Pontiac area police I I tipster may have up to | 81,000 coming — if he j reads this article. Whoever the tipster is, The hourlong treatment is a change of style the series—a broad survey of the huge but little-known “booming new frontier” of the Soviet Union. Siberia still means, to most of us, an icebound place of exile. Cold it is—temperatures drop as low at 96 below zero above the Arctic Circle and to 50 below in some of its growing cities. But despite the climate, it is attracting European Russians by the It suggests: • Pouring double shots is no favor to guests. Two shots of 100-proof whisky double chances of an auto accident. Allow one hour for every ounce of alcohol before driving. Stop all drinking an hour before the party ends and serve food. • Before any drinking begins, eat food items such as mashed potatoes—“Eat ’Em Fashed .. . and You Won5t Get Smashed” beans since they act like a sponge in the stomach, retaining alcohol. * The educational posters, along with plastic bottle sleeves “ti cap bottles at proper times,’ to be distributed before Christmas through almost every package liquor and liquor-by-the-glass outlet in Michigan, the agencies said. AP Wirsphota Maps • LONG-RANGE FORECAST — The Pontiac area will be colder than usual during the next 30 days, according to data provided by the U.S: Weather Bureau. However, the chart says precipitation will be near normal. “On Nov. 3, we received j I information through the j I Box 602 (an anonymous i I witness plan) program I I which was instrumental in ! I the arrest of the persons | I responsible for the I burglaries at Bethany | 1 Baptist Church, 15 Mark, 1 I a private home at 109 f | Osceola and E con-O- 1 Wash, 12 Newberry. ★ ★ ★ . | “The writer of the note \ is asked to contact me so ] ^ I may offer his name and I I letter for consideration by i the board of control of ! | Box 602.” The tipster failed to 1 follow one direction ... He did not tear ] a corner off his letter. ] ★ ★ ★ . Chief Hanger cannot ] submit the letter for con- j sideration until he is assured that someone out there knows what eightdigit number he used as a ] signature on his letter. j Party Hosts Safety Targets Auto Club Kicks Off > Holiday Campaign ^/tone Sfrolvy the prob-/ Comolidate Your Debt, Into Weekly Payments You Can Afford Horn* Appointment Gladly Arranged at Any Tim* io 6 P.M 6 1 P.M DEBT AID, INC.