Th» Waother U' *. Wtallwr BurMu Baracait , farmer ' ' (Dtnili Pat« I) THE PONTIAC PRESS Home Edition VOL. 125 — NO. 299* ★ ★ ♦ PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, MONDAY, rANCARY 22, i 9«8 -64 PAGF.S ASSOCIATED PRESS JT avjXjO united press international loe AP Wlrtphti* LIVING-ROOM HEADQUARTERS—Gov. Romney opened his campaign in the Wisconsin presidential primary Saturday and visited the living room of the Milwaukee home of Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Luckman. Romney is shown shaking hands with Mrs. Luckman, one of 500 housewives in the state who js opening her home as a Romney headquarters. Romney May Ignore Any Early Defeats From Our News Wires WASHINGTON — The prospect that Michigan Gov. George Romney will continue his fight for the GOP presidential nomination evert, if he loses early primaries has raised the specter of 1964 for Republican moderates. Romney sounded like a man determined to stay in the contest no matter what reverses he may encounter when he said the race is between him and former Vice President Richard M. Nixon. The latest poll showed Rockefeller had nearly doubM his support with Republican voters since November but was still trailing Nixon. Romney’s views were voiced oh ABC’s “Issues and Answers’’ television program broadcast yesterday. A Gallup Poll released yesterday In-dicate^ President Johnson could beat any of the four top prospective Republican presidential candidates if an election were held today. POLL SHOWS LBJ BOOST Results showed a dramatic gain in Cooking School Is Tonight The ninth annual Pontiac Press cooking school opens tonight at 7; 30 in the Pontiac Central High School auditorium. In connection with the school, The Press Is running its yearly recipe section in today’s paper. Pontiac Press food editor Janet Odell has selected hundreds of new recipes for this cookbook. son. Both are home economists with the Consumers Power Co. Those who attend the sessions at the high school will receive cookbooks containing all recipes demonstrated on stage by Sara Bayard and Harriet Stin- In addition to the preparation of food, there will be fashion shows during four of the six sessions. The RB Shops, Alvin’s of Pontiac and Bloomfield Fashion Shop are participants. Grand prizes will be awarded throughout the week. These include three gas ranges, water heater, gas incinerator, water conditioner, dishwasher, portable TV, vacuum cleaner and sewing machine. Fair-Housing Law Suspended O'THER PRIZES in Birmingham In addition, there are many smaller prizes, plus some of the food prepared on stage and bags of groceries. No employes of The Pontiac Press or their families are eligible for prizes, and winners must be 18 years of age. Birmingham’s fair-housing ordinance has been suspended. At 11 a.m. today, Frank H. Mitchell, 1124 Smith, a member of the Birmingham Referendum Committee, filed with City Clerk Irene Hanley petitions calling Members of Oakland County Extension Study Clubs will serve as ushers, a job they have performed for the past eight years. Related Story, Page A-2 lor reconsideration of the recently enacted law. ' KHE,SANH, Vietnam (AP) — About 2,000 South Vietnamese civilians fled Khe Sanh town today under threat of seizure by the North Vietnamese army, "nie panicky exodus came after the town’s two dozen U. S. Marine and 40 Vietnamese defenders were ordered to abandon their positions. ★ ★ ★ The town came under attack over the weekend by elements of a North Vietnamese force of about 600 regulars. 'began their drive against the U S. Marines’ McNamara Line Friday. U. S. losses were reported to be 17 killed and 82 seriously wounded. ★ ★ ★ The Khe Sanh exodus startedxMith a handful of families who follows the Marines and militarmen to the Leatherneck combat outposts two miles outside town in the threatened Khe Sanh Valley. Word spread fast and others began flocking into the valley. for the aircraft to begin flying again tomorrow. The town of Khe Sanh is a collection of a half dozen mountain villages with a total population of about 10,000. ‘PRELUDE’ Three North Vietnamese divisions have been reported in the area just above the demilitarized zone. So far all North Vietnamese ground attacks have been beaten back. The refugees steamed into the combat base north of the town, where a hastily organized shuttle of helicopters and cargo planes carried, them, south to. Da Nang. ' Col. David Lownds, 47, of Plantation, Fla., commander of the 26th Marine Regiment holding the combat base, said he believed the attacks that began Saturday were a “kickoff” to the enemy’s winter-spring offensive along the demilitarized zone and ‘Tm not sure that the primary attack has been made yet.” Unofficial battlefield reports said at least 450 North Vietnamese have been killed since units of the three divisions As darkness halted the airlift, about 1,000 civilians had been evacuated and at least that many more were waiting It was the range of the North Vietnamese attacks on eight separate targets, however, that convinced U.S. commanders that heavier fightings is yet to come. Johnson Aides Pressing Surtax, Cite Deficit Cut the President’s popularity since October when a Galjup Poll had Johnson trailing all four of the possible GOP candidates. At that time New York Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller made the best showing against Johnson. WASHINGTON (JO — President Johnson’s administration told Congress today his 10 per cent income tax surcharge is urgently needed — even though federal spending has been cut to reduce the prospective deficit below this year’s level. Secretary of the Treasury Henry H. Fowler urged prompt action by the House Ways and Means Committee whose leaders have indicated they are not satisfied with a budget for the year beginning next July 1 forecasting $10.4 billion more spending than during the current fiscal year. Romney and Gov. Ronald Reagan of California ranked third and fourth. Romney got 12 per cent, a 2 per cent decline from November, while Reagan received 8 per cent, a 5 per cent dip. ★ ★ ★ For moderates, a Romney who persisted in his bid for nomination after early primary defeats would present the same situation as existed in 1964. Then, Rockefeller kept up the battle against Barry Goldwater until he lost the June primary in California. Fowler argned the Increase is for defense and nncoBinrilable expenditures. Moreover, he said, the normal increase in tax receipts as the economy grows more than covers the higher outlays so that ‘‘even if no changes were to be made in existing income and excise tax rates, the budget deficit would thus be lower in fiscal year 1969 than in fiscal year 1968.” But Fowler tojd^the tax-writing committee the deficit would not be reduced “to a point consistent with the stability and security of the United States economy” without a tax increase. AP Wlrask*!* DEFICIT REDUCTION LUNAR BUG—Lunar Module 1 was to be launched into earth orbit today to lest if its engines are capable of landing men on the moon and lifting them off. The test vehicle will not have the four lunar landing legs that are shown in this artist’s concept of the moon ferry. With the increase, which the administration wants to apply effective April 1 for individuals and retroactive to Jan. 1 for corporations, Fowler said the budget deficit for the current year would be reduced from 122.8 billion to $19.8 billion. In the following year the prospective deficit would be cut from $20.9 billion to $8 billion, he said. It is not realistic from a standpoint of timing or amounts to expect to achieve this scale of deficit reduction by cutting expenditures—as long as military activities at their present level persist in South Vietnam,’’ Fowler said. He disputed the argument that stricter economies could avert a tax increase. Fowler said some government activities will have budget cuts totaling almost $3 billion from the current level. CAPE KENNEDY, Fla. (AP) - The countdown for the launching of America’s first Lunar Module hit a technical snag today, delaying the target time for the blast-off of the Saturn 1 booster rocket. * ★ A • The launching had been scheduled for 2 p.m. But with the countdown at 2M hours, trouble developed with a freon gas system designed to cool the Lunar Module’s life support equipment. JA Centers Saluted Parking for those attending the cooking school is available in the lot west of Crofoot School and behind the First Church of the Nazarene on State Street. Doors at the east end of the high .school will be open at 6:30 p.m. each evening and ^ 12:30 p.m. for the day sessions. t Four area Junior Achievement Business centers receive a picture salute on Page B-16 to launch national JA Week (today—Feb. 2). ★ ★ ★ WaterforeJ Fire Kills Woman, 69 Featured are the Rochester, Utica, North Woodward and Pontiac centers. All will hold public trade fair-open house programs In connection with JA Week’s activities. Check the page for information on your area’s center. A 69-year-old Waterford Township woman was killed and her grandson hospitalized when a fire broke out early yesterday while they were sleeping in their cottage bedroom. ★ A A Mrs. Oliver D. Fluke, 6.320 Elmwood, FIRST MODEL Hie ordinance is suspended immediately upon filing, although the suspension may be lifted if the petitions are later found invalid. Chamber Speaker Set Picture, Page A-2 Committee* member George W. Davis, 1030 Pilgrim, said the committee has collected about 3,000 signatures, “comfortably over” the required 1,984 (15 per cent of the city’s registered voters). If the petitions are certified by the clerk, the City Commission must vote on the ordinance’s repeal. ON PUBLIC BALLOT If the commission votes against repeal, the law must be placed on a public ballot In not less than 30 days nor moi^ than a year. Meanwhile, the suspension remains In force. Davis said petition workers “had no trouble” in getting signatures. Other members of the referendum committee, which initiated the drive shortly after the ordinance was passed Nov. 27, InclMde Dr. Francis LeVeque, Benjamin ^Phelps and Janet tlodd. • “'The Privilege of Pursuit” is the lecture topic for Willard D. CSieek at the 58th annual Pontiac Area ChambeiL.of Commerce meeting, Feb.' 14. ' A A A The 6:30 banquet will be at the Elks Lodge, 114 Orchard Lake. apparently died of smoke inhalation, firemen reported. Roger Kellogg, 5, is in satisfactory condition at Pontiac General Hospital. Asst. Fire Chief Russell See said the cause of the $10,000 9re is being investi-gated, ' ' On a lunar landing mission, three astronauts will ride into orbit about the moon in the main Apollo spacecraft. Two of the spacemen then will transfer to an attached Lunar Module, detach it and fly down to the moon’s surface. Cheek is a scientist. Inventor, teacher and business consultant. He keeps Gen-, eral Motors corporate management informed of educational trends in science, engineering, and business administration and represents the corporation in various educational liaisons. He said it started in the living room of the IVi-story converted cottage, po.s.sibly because of faulty wiring. AAA Firemen Richard Poorman and .lohn Latimer entered the hou.se through a broken window shortly after midnight and found the two lying unconscious on the floor. The boy was revived at the scene. Tax Series Is Offered V' WH.t,ARD D. CHEEK Cheek of Warren will be introduced by F. J. McDonald, works manager of Pontiac Motor Division. A ★ . A , Tickets at $6.50 each are available at the Chamber office In the Rlker Building. TRIED TO ESCAPE r The two tried to escape, according to See, but were overcome by heavy smoke. Most of the house was gutted by the fire. Parents of the boy, Mr. and Mrs. Roger Kellogg, were not at home. The decision to pull out of Kha Sanh town followed. The Marines dug in at their airstrip-combat base and the hlU positions they had wrested from North Vietnamese troops in a week of bloody battles last spring. The South Vietnamese government announced yesterday it was cutting 12 hours off the 48-hour truce it had ordered next week for Tet, the lunar new year festival. The allied truce will be the shortest cease-fire of the war for Tet. Military officials always have opposed the truces on the ground that the Com-muni^s invariably use the pause in the fighting — and especially the halt in the aerial bombing — to shove more men, arms and supplies onto the supply trails to South Vietnam. AF 652 Crashes Near Thule Base WASHINGTON - A B52 bomber carrying nuclear weapons crashed in Greenland yesterday, the Pentagon an* noupced today. A Defense Department statement said the atomic devices were unarmed “so that there is no danger of a nuclear explosion at the crash site.” Seven crewmen were aboard the Air Force B52, and five are known to have survived. One body has been found. Search and rescue operutions are under way for $|||teeventh crew member. The Pentagon said the plane crashed about 3:40 p.m. EST yesterday „pn the ice of North Star Bay some seven miles southwest of Uw runway at the 'Aule defense area. A A * The Pentagon said the plane was attempting an eniergency landing but did not indicate the difficulty. FIVE BAIL OUT The five known survivors parachuted from the plane. The craft was assigned to the 380th Bomb Wing at Plattsburgh Air Force Base, N. Y. Countdown Holding for Lunar Module Weather Gives Spring Preview A hold was called in the countdown while two specialists went to the launch pad from the blockhouse to troubleshoot the problem. Temperatures climbed Into the 40s over the weekend, turning last week’s accumulation of snow into slush and giving Oakland County residents a preview of spring. The mercury did not come close, however, to the 62-degree record set Jan. 22,1906. A slight haze covered the area this morning but not enough to hinder commuters and children as they traveled to work and school. Nearly an hour later, the National Aeronautics and Space Administration said the trouble had not been solved and that it did not know when the countdown could be resumed. '" AAA An announcement said the difficulty appeared to be in the freon gas system located at the base of the launch pad. The freon gas flows into a water boiler in the,Lunar Module to maintain an even temperature. It is used only during prelaunch activity. Temperatures will slump into the 26s tonight with a chance of snow flurries. More cold weather ponctnated by snow flurries is predicted for tomorrow. Precipitation probabilities in per cent are: May 10, tonight and tomorrow 30. AAA Low thermometer reading in downtown Pontiac prior to 8 a.m. was 27. By 2 p.m., the temperature wanned to 31. The Lunar Module is the first model of the craft that next year may ferry American astronauts to the moon. The unmanned 16-ton vehicle is to undertake a series of exacting tests to determine whether it is designed properly for the critical job of landing astronauts on the moon and lifting them off. AAA In Today's Press “This Is the year to itemize deductions.” Those are the words of Ray De Crane, tax expert and veteran newspaperman, whose 14-part series, “Cut You Qwn 'Faxes,” begins tod.ay In ’The Pontiac Press. A A ' A The author, business editor of the Cleveland Press, has aimed his advice at people with average incomes, not big businessmen or stock market tycoons. An expanded version of the series will he available in book form. (See the coupon accompanying today’s artlelo on Page B-IS). . Lapeer Schools March election scheduled on 6.5 mills - PAGE A4. Ford's Theater Historic building rededicated for stage performances—PAGE C-8. Israel Last of Egyptian POWs being freed - PAGE B-l. i — Area News ................A-4 Astrology ...............B-IS Bridge ..................B-ll Crossword Puzzle..........C-7 Comics ..................B-ll Cowboy Story .............A-7 Editorials ................A4 Markets .......... .....B-81 Obituaries ............ B-14 Picture Pago .....^......B-ll SporW B-l»-B-tl Theaters .,............ B-tl TV and Radio Prograhu ...C-7 Wilson, Eari..............(VT Women’s Pagae .......B-l-M 1' A—2 THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, JANUARY 22, 19(18 N. Korean Terrorists Raid Seoul; 12 Die SEOUL (AP) — About 30 side the capital since the 1953 killing three civilians and injur-l North Koreans invaded Seoul Korean armistice. ing two others. Two more civil- Sunday night in a bold attempt The fighting began when the ians were killed in subsequent to break into the presidential Communists, in civilian garb, shootings, palace and assassinate high fatally machine-gunned Policej Police quickly deployed in the government officials. Six Reds Chief Choi Kyoo-shik when he general area, killed five Com-and six South Koreans were challenged them less than a munists and captured one. An-killed by noon today. mile from the mansion of Presi- other Communist who was cap- Police searched for more than dent Chung Hee Park. tured was killed when a grenade 20 North Koreans still at large, j. The Reds then hurled gre-he was carrying went off during It was the first major clash in- nades at four passenger buses, interrogation at police head- .......... _. quarters 'One-Wing' Test Cited in Crash WASHINGTON (AP) - A federal requirement that pilots rehearse emergency landings with Kosygin, U. S. Envoy Meet Three South Korean Army divisions and the 2nd U.S. Infantry Division guarding the western sector of the Korean front were alerted to help hunt the Communists in mountainous areas north of Seoul. Message Believed Delivered A dusk-to-dawn curfew was From LBJ ‘'i three counties and the city of Uijongbu, north of Seoul, to help block e.scapei routes.*’ Seoul’s midnight-to-4 * a m. curfew was extended two Iicaisc ciuc.gci.L:;y lanuiLBc «.iii MOSCOW (AP) — U.S. Am-houis to start at 10 p.m. power out in both engines on bassador Llewellyn E. Thomp- U.S. Army helicopters were' one wing is blamed by a con- son delivered a secret message mobiled to help the search DEATH SCENE — A hpuse at 6320 Elmwood, Waterford Township, is boarded up following a fire early yesterday which killed PontUc PrMi Photo Birmingham Area News Fair-Housing Petitions Ma/ Block Amendment Mrs. Oliver D. Fluke, 69, and sent her grandson to the hospital. VTlilg Ao k/ldlAlC-VI, K/J a gressman for the March 1967 ■~P*'obably ----------- , . . , crash of a jet airliner that •Johnson—to Soviet Premier Al-tions headquarters was quickly^ from President A joint antiespionage opera- Safety Board said in a report is-[®f''y that Thompson had sued today that the two left en- l^°sygin at the ambassador’i knifed into a luxury motel, kill- Kosygin in the Kremlin activated to direct the search. It ing 19 persons. today. said the infiltrators were North The National Transportation An official anhout\cement said'Korean Army officers led by” a only that Thompson had met captain. s request ★ ★ Neither Soviet officials nor the U.S. Embassy would elaborate. But the ambassador’s request for a meeting meant he had a message to deliver, and the fact that he delivered it to Kosygin rather than to the Foreign Ministry indicated it came from President Johnson. ...c HMwia » It was Thompson’s first for-i„ey n dangerous position and calledp"®* meeting with Kosygin since'South Korea, the training maneuver absurd. Feb. 18, when the ambaksa- ★ » ir The Federal Aviation Adminis-Mor conveyed President John- The United Nations command, tration has temporarily lifted s p^posal for Soviet-Ameri-!which exercises operational con-the training requirement, talks to lirnit development trol over South Korean forces, Thompson says he will battlej"' antimissile system. The called a meeting Tuesday of the 8Dy rCriGWSl iSnviPf llninn u/milAT nr\f 18,100 Workers Hearf Recipient Dies Are Idled at GM gines on the DC8 jet were muz zled as it approached the New Orleans, La., airport. The board blamed the pilots for allowing the huge jet to slow down too soon to reach the runway on the remaining engines. ★ ★ ★ ‘T can’t accept that,” said R6p. Fletcher Thompson, R-Ga. He said the single-wing landing procedure put the pilots in a ASSASSINA-nON PLOT It added that captured arti cles confirmed they were as signed to assassinate South Ko rean government leaders and attack major government agen cies. The headquarters said U.S aidl South Korean troops about 20 miles north of Seoul began searching for the band Friday evening when it was discovered that they had infiltrated into i Soviet Union would’ not enter into such talks. * 3k Thompson’s meeting with Ko-1 sygin lasted 30 minutes. It came I shortly before the arrival of ■ British Prime Minister Harold 'Wilson, who planned to sound Thompson, a pilot in two,out Kosygin’s views'on Vietnam wars, said double engine failure]so he could relay them to John-had never occurred in a com-1 son when the British leader mercial crash, yet the practice meets him in Washington Feb. landings had taken more than a score of lives. •OP UTTLE VALUE’ Thomas A. Basidght Jr. of the Air Line Pilots Association said In another Interview that the maneuvers were “rehlly of little value—or no value.” ★ ★ * “It’s absurd to endanger the crew and the people on the ground,” he said. “It just isn’t necessary.” Nine Juda, Wis., schoolgirls staying in the motel dn their senior class trip died in an in Peril for LBJ in Detroit Seen LANSING (UPI) - Zolton Ferency, former state Democratic chairman, said today Joint Military Armistice Commission at Panmunjom to protest the attack. The South Korean National Assembly hurriedly convened its national defense and home affairs committees to discuss the situation. EMERGENCY SESSION The full assembly was expected to be called into an emergency session. Temporary checkpoints were erected along major routes leading to the capital and extra guards were placed around key Strike Deadline Nears for Chrysler of Canada After Complications STANFORD, Calif. (AP) -^a.m. Sunday following kidney Although Mike Kasperak died failure, liver failure and other on the 15th day after his dis-! complications. rM^'Toni'T O replaced, his! "We think that we are in the DEI KOI MAP) Some 18,100 doctor feels transplant opera-'process of making observations General Motors workers remain-|lions ^ill be continued. of tremendous importance to u S 1 f * * :other possible (heart) recipients United Auto Workers at three^ “There was no evidence of re-jand to the medical community GM foundries forced the autO|jection of the heart,” Dr. Nor-as well,’’Dr. Shumway said, producing giant to lay off work-,man E. Shumway told newsmen pijNrTIONFn WFII ers at other facilities. jSunday at Stanford University The union has predicted a na-|Medical Center. “If the findings Kasperak’s substitute heart, tionwide shutdown of the coun- of the post-mortem bear this from the body of Mrs. try's No. 1 auto makei^ by pext|out, then we feel we have every!^*^Smia White, 43, after she week unless the strikes at the basis on which to plan another ®“'^^“"’bed to a stroke, appar-three foundries are settled. | clinical attempt.” ently functioned well to the time k * k i Kasperak, 54, died at 1:43 I’*® Dr. Shumway, who headed the BIRMINGHAM - Action by the City Commission on a pro-ppsed amendment to this city’s fair-housing ordinance may have to be postponed or-dropped. The commission was scheduled to discuss amending the 'living quarters to share” section of the law at tonight’s meeting at 8. However, filing of the Birmingham Referendum Committee’s petitions for a public vote on the ordinance, with its attendant suspension of the ordinance, may make amendment impossible. City Attorney Dean G. Bei-er, in response to a question of the commission regard-iqg amendment, offered the o^im that the ordinance could be cnaiiged “at any time up until thV referendum petitions are filed wifb the clerk.” k 'k k In a communication to Assistant City Manager John Saefke, Beier suggested! the ordinance be amended to exclude rental of living quarters when tenant and landlord use the same space. OTHER LAWS CITED Beier said state statutes regarding open housing all have “rnuch broader” exceptions than the city ordinance. “Most a private home when it is the only home belonging to the person selling or renting it.” Also on tonights agenda is disposition of city property on Collidge Road, where a rubbish transfer station has been proposed by the South Oakland Incinerator Authority. * ★ ★ The authority stated two weeks ago that it is “prepared to make an offer” for the property. However, consideration of the matter was postponed at request of Sheffield Estates and Pembroke Manor Civic Associations. The board of education will hold a special meeting tonight at 7 to consider ratification of a tentative contract with the Birmineham Education Association (BEA). , k k k The tentative contract, reached Wednesday by negotiating teams representing the two parties, was ratified Friday by BEA members by a 576-110 vote. BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP -The public library board has accepted the resignation of library director Rose Vainstein, effective July 1. Miss Vainstein will become a member of the University of Michigan faculty, specializing in the public library field. ★ ★ '★ She came to the township li-of these statutes,” he explained, ^nd was its “exclude the rental or sale of ^rst director. No successor has been named. Affocking Jef Police Report Crime Calls Up MeanwhHe, negotiators for the UAW and Chrysler Canada Ltd. bargained against a strike deadline of noon Wednesday in an effort to write a pattern-setting contract in Canadian negotiations. ★ ★ ★ Strikes at the GM’s Central Division foundry in Defiance, Ohio, and at Chevrolet foundries in Saginaw, Mich., and Tona-wanda, N.Y., have idled 11,200 union workers. SHORTAGE OF CASTINGS A shortage of castings from the Saginaw foundry has ^ucii ud wci e piaeeu aiuuiiu Key j government buildings. But citi- UM to lay off 1,100 zens of Seoul did not appear dis- workers at its Saginaw trans-turbed by the incident. mission plant and another 5,800 * * * at two Chevrolet plants in F'lint, Antiespionage headquarters! ^'*•'1’ said the Communists had re patients, but never in such pro- plane which reportedly fired a fusion. round at the U.S. Special Forces ★ * * Camp at Lang Vei last Friday “We think that because of his was “probably American,” normal cardiac action, he was U S. Leonard Woodcock. UAW vice ferno of jet fuelas the airliner'President Johnson mav be ‘ in v-ommunisis naa re- —j-- ..vv exploded and washed their Jeopardv” if he tries to cam-espionage training for bead of the union ■■ ' two vears in North Korea and ^M Department, told a news MIKE KASPERAK transplant team, said that “what should be emphasized is that during this time he sur- q / / C vived a fantastic galaxy of com-1 w • w • • I Li 11 w plica,tions which we have seen! before in other kinds of cardiac] SAIGON (AP) — A jet fighter Newly released statistics com-_t I , i n 'piled by Pontiac police show the I hOUOhf fO nP'^P^Ument responded to 758 ^ more calls involving involving criminal complaints in 1967 than in 1966. * ★ ★ Officers were called to investigate 5,766 complaints last year involving offenses ranging from simple misdemeanors to major felonies. able to survive first of all renal (kidney) failure, then hepatic or liver failure and then following this three major operations, all of which were done, of course, during the time that his circula- «mcuLci.i, a ^ offenses military spokesman said '“duded in the crime index the catalog of serious crimes which Increased by 30.8 per cent in the city in 1967 over the previous year. Included in the crime Index murder and nonnegligent rooms with flame. Four otherlpaign in DeiroiT this"year „ ...... persons, including a child asleep] “l think that there could very familiar with geographical in his bed, died in the plane’s well be demonstrations at around the presidential path. key issue in all three foundries ' mansion is the question of six minutes off aboard the Delta I violence with'^resMcrto The ^ Ught the job for wash-up purposes be- ii/nrch trillArl in ____-At iTiarhinP tnin a ^pvnlv^'^ nnH Q lOre lunch. All six men aooara me ueiia I violence with re.spect to the ...........,.s», - Air Lines jet were killed in thelpeace question with respect to ^ •’evolver and a '‘"'e 1 the racial crisis and thn«Pnfhor """'’I>er of hand grenades, i * * * South Korean forces repotted ‘ If this is not resolved,” he about 70 Wilson in Moscow for Kosygin Talks today. Two men in a foxhole at the Lang Vei camp reported the plane had a white underside, was painted with green and ........g .....c i..ai ...o brown camouflage and had del- ...u*uci anu noiuicgiigeni tion was moved by a transplant-]ta wings. The description close- manslaughter, rape, robbery, ed heart.” Dr. Shumway said. lly f'ts the U S. F4 Phantom, but aggravated assault, burglary! “We feel that any one of these] there was some speculation that | larceny over $50 and auto theft.' complications I mentioned i the plane was a Communist k k k would have been lethal had it j The numerical and percentage not been for the cardiac trans- ★ * * increase of each of these in 1967 plant.” A single round from the plane] from 1966 was: -possibly a rocket-reportedly • Murder and nonnegligent fell just beyond the perimeter of manslaughter, up from nine to ‘NOT SURPRISIM night-time crash last March 30. i the racial crisis and those other Among them was an FAA in- great issues of our time,” Fer-■pector. ency said. One of Britain s leading heart the camp, and no casualties or specialists Dr. Donald Ross, damage resulted, commented in London: ‘It is An Air Force investigation not Surprising that Mr. Kasper- team went to the camp and ^ak died. But I am amazed that showed the soldiers who had MOSCOW (AP) — Prime Min-1 they have been able to keep him'seen the plane pictures of MIGs ister Harold Wilson began alive so long.” as well as American aircraft in Vietnam. The Weather by the Communists. Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY-Partly cloudy and continued nUd and becoming windy this afternoon. High 34 (o 44. Chance of snow flurries and cold tomorrow. Wednesday outlook; partly sunny and warmer. Southwesterly winds 10 to 20 miles and gusty today, becoming west to northwest tonight and tomorrow. Precipitation probabilities in per cent; today 10, tonight and tomorrow 30. T«d«y In Pontiac Lowoit temporaturo preceding 9 a.m. 27, At • §.m,: Wind Velocity, lD-20 m.p.h, Diroction: Southwesterly. tun tots today at 5:35 p.n Sun riles tpmororw at 7:55 a i Moon lets tomorrow at fl:59 a m. Moon rites today at 1;4S a.m. Weehendi in Pontiac (at recorded downtowni Highest temperature Lowest temperature Mean temperature Weather: Fair and locating about 70 hand gre-added, “and these foundries stay Harold Wilson began nades, radio transmilters, radio struck, the corporation will be Kremlin talks with Soviet Pre- Ross, chief surgeon at the Na-batteries and a number of other essentially paralyzed with some Alexei N. Kosygin lessjtional Heart Hospital, said corn-items believed to have been left'300.000 workers on the streets inin plications of internal bleeding a, week to 10 days.” from London torlay. alone would account for Kasper- * ★ * ★ k k k ak’s death—as for many other Woodcock also reiterated a' Among the main topics of‘•'“^‘bs following open heart surcharge made last summer that meetings during Wilson’s e^ry-Chevrolet Division of General are expected to be * ★ ★ Motor had told its local mana- Cambodia, the Middle Mrs. Feme Kasperak, herself ger "Don’t .settle until the last ^‘^st and trade. a heart patient, received seda- minute.” * ★ * tion after Dr. Shumway told her I / 1 m,'i *v ni?Kiii.-iA “I *besc subjects did of her hu.sband’s death. She wag SASETO, Japan lAP)-Calm I)KLAV DENIED diplomatic observers here see -secluded on her own doctor’s or- prevailed around the Sasebo Na-, a union spokesman said Sun- enough signs of nexibility in the ders. val Base today after four bloody day. only 25 of 76 Chevrolet lo- Soviet position to produce-any The heart donor’s husband cla.shes between radical stu-cal.s had settled compared to 63 new agreements, but Wilson has Charles W. “Bill” White, ex-dents and police since the arnv- out of the 92 otl^fr GM locals, taken the attitude that talks are pressed sympathy for Mrs Kasai Friday of the nuclear-pow- v,..o :< i. j. ..___________________________________........................... Japan Base Calm Following Clashes The troops said the plane that flew over was “most likely” American, although they could not pinpoint the type. L4, or 55.6 per cent. • Rape, up from eight to 24, or 200 per cent. • Robbery, up from 232 to 258, or 11.2 per cent. • Assault, up from 287 to 408, or 42.2 per cent. • Burglary, up from 1,059 to 1,444, or 36.4, per cent. • Larcency, up from 838 to 995, or 18.7 per cent. • Auto theft, up from 260 to 380, or 46.2 per cent. U. of M. Surgeons Ready for Heart, Lung Switches '« "■>’ "-“-an heart, and y . . — .........V C14C lui mis. I\as-| rtfiDUn —surgeons reariv fn frv Viii ,4TTc' • f* has denied it is de-worthwhile just for common un-perak in a statement read at the at the University of Mirhii7»n i * „ ered us. a,rcrah earner hater, laying i„ ,„.„a„d|„g. Sunday new, contereace. ‘Medical Cen J aV , , ..., 36 prise. Downtown Tcmptraturti 7 s.m. I a.m. 9 a.m. 10 a.m. Aipen/i EiiCAnAba 36 28 Flint 36 31 34|Crcl Rapids 42 28 55 27. In it it it the only demonstration of 28 On# Yaar Aga in Pontiac Highest temparaluro Lowest temperature Mean temperature Weather': Heavy (og. Highatt and Lowest Temperatures This Data in 95 Years a In 1906 32' Houghton 31 Hought'n Lk Jackson Lansing MarquriMe Muskegon 50 Osroda 31 Pellston <1.5 Traw, City Albuquerque Atainta Bismarck Boston Chicago •9 in 1924 Cincinnati 37 34 35 32 33 29 39 28 37 30 the day, some 3,000 persons af-Dem- Detroit Dututh Kans8^^“city 56 jL butt’d witli fhc modcrali M?am"C'ch §2 Socialist Party marched Milwaukee at quietly through the streets of New York*"* 50 3i Sa.scbo to protest the visit of the phien'x 70 37 VS.OtXitoii Carrier, a. 30 sr'L’oJif 52 27 I' •‘I officials said ttic E 25 M s'"Vr^''ncf,'c'X M ^ould Icavc Tucsday. « V, **'*’''* is on route from Hawaii to Viet- 38 29 Seattle 56 46 1 , , 42 37 Washington 57 28 nam With the nuclear-powered frigate Truxton. Public Heart Forum Scheduled for PNH iy on the outcome of current re-j search and on the willingness of doctors to venture in a risky field where odds of .success are largely unknown. ★ ♦ * 35 2» 35 It 37 35 Machines Worth $1,490 Stolen From Area School Recent advances in heart surgery, including heart transplants, will be among the topics covered by a panel of experts at a public heart forum scheduled for 8 p.m. op Feb 16 in the Pontiac Northern High School auditorium. 'Fhe heart forum is cosponsored by the Michigan Heart As.sociation’s Oakland County Heart Information Center and The Pontiac Press. and currently president-elect of the Michigan Heart Association. I * * * Dr. Levin, a specialist in internal medicine on the ktaff at Pontiac General Hospital, will explain 'how aqd''why people have heart attacks and outline preventative measures. When the surgeons do attempt their first heart transplant, they 1968 Theme of the heart forum is “Heart Attack — Survival OTHER PARTICIPANTS NATIONAL WEATHER—Rain is forecast tonight from the Ohio Valley into the lower Mississippi Valley and the eastern Gulf states. Snow flurries are expected in the central Lakes region tnto the New England states with a small r^D area due in eastern New York. It will be colder- over tig^thmgwtf .of the naUon. About $1,490 worth of office equipment was reported stolen from Crescent Lake School, 1021 Airport, Waterford Town.ship, on Saturday, police said. ★ * ♦ Burglars broke a window to enter the building then made off ;with electric typewriters and I dictaphone, mimeograph and 'adding machines, j The principal’.s desk drawers were rifled, but nothing was re ported missing. Featured speakers will be Dr. Allen Silbergleit, Dr. Michael C. Kozonis and Dr. Murray B. Levin. ★ ★ * Dr. Silbergleit, a cardiovascular surgeon on the staff at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital, wilt speak on*heart transplants and other advances in surgical techniques which are helping heart patients. Also parUcipating in the program will be Dr. Donald G. Albert, president of the Oakland County Heart Unit; Harry J. Reed, program chairman and managing editor of The Pontiac Presst'and Dick Saunders, assistant to the managing editor at The Press.' 'The audience will also be invited to play a game called “Risko.” It if designed to show people how they rale as far as heart attack risk factors are concerned. PO.STGRADUATE WORK Dr. Silbergleit took postgraduate work with Dr. Christiaan Barnard and Dr. Norman Shumway, who recently gained, world attention with heart transplants in South Africa and California. Dr. Kozonis, a prominent Pontiac area cardiologist also on the St. Jose|di Mercy Hospital staff, will speak on special cardiac care units and other recent advances in hospital care and treatment of heart patients. ..A. He is a past president of the Oakland County Heart Unit Tickets for the event are free and may be obtained in Pontiac in the main lobbies of The Pontiac Press St Joseph Mercy Hospital and Pontiac General Hospital or at the Pontiac Area United Fund, 132 Franklin Blvd. rk k k - Rochester area residenta can pick up tickets at Critten-s, ton Ho.spital in Avon Township. They are also available at the Heart InformaUon Center, 277 Pierce, Birminghjirt. Perrons wishing to-obtain tickets through the mail should send orders to the Heart Information Center in Birmingham. no "ne will be turned away, but those with tickets Will be seated first. ■ / will concentrate on infants born with faulty hearts and virtually no chance to survive beyond a few weeks. Before this will be done, however, they want to know whether the transplanted heart will grow. To check this, they have been replacing hearts id calves for about a month. About three more months are needed to get a preliminary answer. LUNG TRANSPLANT ' On lungs, surgeons indicated it is extremely difficult to tell with certainty when a person with lung problems will die. Only a handful of human lung tran.splants have been tried in the world and none of the patients has survived. * ★ ★ “The surgical techniques In-volvied in both heart and lung transplants are not particularly difficult," said t)r. Herbert E. Sloan Jr., professor of surgery at University of Michigan. THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, .JANUARY 22, 1968 A—8 Stars Hold Benefit for Antiwar Congressmen Simms, 98 N. Saginaw St. NEW YORK (AP) - Holly- persons, who paid from JIO to Morse told the gathering it was He said the only thing more Dow and William F. Ryan, bothi Minnesota Sen Eueene I ' wood and Broadway ^rformers $250 to show they were against the obligation of the voters “to honorable than staying in Viet- New York, and Rep John McCarthy, staging a primary ,make the government s policy “getting out.” Conyers of Michigan, who are battle to wrest the Democratic Also in Attendance were Reps. nomination from President TONITE ’til -MS. & WEDS. DamtoDpm appeared at a benefit Sunday the war in Vietnam, night to raise funds for Demo- i, * cratic senators and congress- xhe total men opposed to the Johnson ad- was not disclosed. ministration policy in Vietnam. Sens Ernest (^nienino of ■ i Pliilharmonic Hall in Lincoln Alaska and Wayne Morse pf aggressor in Vietnam.,all of California; Reps Center was packed with 2,800 Oregon drew standing ovations.; * right when it is wrong.” amount coliected AMONG BENEFICIARIES Gruening, 81, said America John G.' LOOMS m TODAVI GOING CRAZY on your BOTH INCOME TAX ‘5 Avoid your Waterloo by bringing your tax problems *to H&R BLOCK. You'll get FEDERAL every tax break that's coming AND to you, plus our guarantee of accuracy. STATE P.S.: A trip to BLOCK is mmm a lot cheaper than a [WYjj psychiatrist, too. UP GUAtANTU We guorontee accurate preparotion of every tax return. If we make Ony errors that cost you ony penalty or interest, we will pay the penolty or interest. America's Largest Tax Service with Over 2000 Offices 20 E. HURON PONTIAC 4410 DIXIE HWY. DRAYTON PLAINS Weekdays: 9 a.m.-9 p.in.-Sat. and Sun. 9-5-FE 4-9225 INO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY | George E. Brown Jr., Phillip Johrcson, drew a roar of approv-j B u r 10 n and Donald Edwards, , . al when his telegram of support ’i The performers used songs, was read to the crowd, one of al vignettes, comedy and speeches number that was sent to the to get their peace message peace group. "7arry Belafonte opened the show with a 20-minute selection Wallach and his wife, of folk and musical ballads, Jackson, read bits of anti- then stopped and said: “We Broadway ac- should be here to celebrate tor-singer Joel Grey sang some something else.” songs, did a soft shoe, then STREISAND SINGS the*^wa^ ^tol^’^ Barbara Streisand sang a song Alan Arkin read an antiwar; WASHINGTOr^ (UPI) — Sen.;and willing to persuade bemoaned the results of message and folk singer Phil J. William Fulbright says that President to a change, which The tnusic was wriUen by Ochs did some antiwar ballads.| Carl Reiner acted as master! personal^^ Comden. iof ceremonies. Among others! i Paul Newman and his wife,'who entertained were Robert! Joanne Woodward, were cohosts Ryan, Tommy Smothers and UstB i§ SIK\M5 CMAER^ Dept- Clifford Might Sway L^J on Viet—Senator Once-A-Year January CLEWE Simms, 98 N. Saginaw St. SIMMS DISCOUNT ANNEX 144 N. Saginaw St. newly designated as secretary of hope he may be, that he can Bernstein and the defense, Clark Clifford, may be lt without embarrassment.” and Bet- the man to persuade President I termed Clifford “a Johnson to change U. S. policy friend.” in Vietnarn. I Fulbright of the affair. iTony Randall. The Arkansas D e m o c r a t, g^ded, “I feel I can speak with! ★ ★ ★ i rhp hpnpm wac rird in o a leading critic of the Presi-!|,|m and have at least an on-i ..... u j • ^ benefit wasahe first in a dent’s Dolicv said vesterdavl ^ ® weren’t senes of scheduled fund-raising fhai riifS “if hi ic ahu^^ ^ •““ gathered here'^in 1961,” New- events to fill the campaign chest ’ ■ ■ ■ ^ think he would p^gn said referring to the begin-;of the peace candidates. ••*•*"■” !ning of the American buildup in A second affair is scheduled By becoming a member of Vietnam. March 17 in Los Angeles. Johnson’s Cabinet, he said,! . ... ' Clifford sacrifices his indepen-J dence “but that doesn’t mean he is not free to use his capa-j city for argument and persuasion.” j Though he has seldom ex-! pressed a public opinion about the war, Clifford is generally regarded as being more of a hawk than a dove by observers in the capital. Fulbright said he had seen no significant change in the fTesi-dent’s policy in recent days “but still there is time.” He said it would take only a “matter of weeks” for the President to reverse his stand. “I still have hopes that he will do so,” the senator added in a broadcast interview. Absolutely your lost chance to save on Simms once-Q-year January clearance latest models, some demonstrators. But, all carry full guarantees. Prices good for today, Tues. and Weds. SIMMS CAMERA DEPT. DISCOUNT You’ll Find These Tremendous Buys In Warm Clothing In SIMMS Discount Basement Prieos Good Monday, Tuos. and Wodnosday SIMMS DiSGOiJNT BASEMENT SEN. FULBRIGHT Full Lace Waterproof Boys' Insulated Boots save 50% and more on wanted closet and household accessories - sale for today ~ tues. and wed. open tonite to Spin - tues & wed. 9am to 5:30pm 12-poeket shoe bag • holds and protects 6 pain of ihoa. • 18x36 hoovy vinyl with gold print • hanging eyelets. • regulor $2.70 catalog seller jumbo suit bag 6 heavy gauge vinyl with full length zipper * holds 16 luht * 16x20x42 inches * gold print. • $3.80 catalog seller jumbo dress bag • heavy gauge vinyl bag holds 16 dresses • full length zipper opening • gold print • $3.98 catalog seller. over-the-door shoe rack • holds 16 poirs of shoes • 12 ladies' and 4 pairs of men's shoes * triple chrome plated tubular Irome with wire loop holders * easy to assemble * $6.68 catalog seller. KUCHEL URGES TALKS Sen. Thomas H. Kuchel, Calif.,! No. 2 man in the Senate Repub-1 lican leadership today urged the President to expand U. S. diplo-! matic efforts with the view of achieving “a new Geneva.” It was the Geneva Conference of] 1954 that parceled out the form-' er French Indochinese possessions. Kuchel, who is Senate Repub-, lican whip, said “a favorable outcome can only result from negotiations on a broad inter-' national scale bringing to bearj the real weight for give and take by rational peoples who recognize that global survival is at stake when hot conflict enflames a region... “Our diplomatic effort must | be expanded to achieve the ob-. jective of a new Geneva. Prolonged bilateral talks with North Vietnam would be unlikely to serve the cause of free nations,” Kuchel said in a speech prepared for Senate delivery. “I think the administration may build dangerously false hopes, if it suggests that they will. “A true spirit of negotiation will require that all persons with an interest in the outcome be represented,” he said. $6.98 Value Only Fresh Stock Genuine 'SYLVANIA’ Flashcubes or M3 Flashbulbs Your Choice 94 Choice of pock 3 cubes for 12 flash shots or pock of 12 M3 bulbs for Polaroid cameras. Limit 3 packs of each. ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• POLAROID Color Pack 108 Film Get 8 pictures per roll with fresh 108 film. Limit 10 rolls per customer. 374 Fully guaronteed rubbei bools with ileel arcn and rugged soles. Waterproof full lace style In sizes 12 and 13 for youths, 3-4-5 and 6 for boys. Brown color. Men's Insulated Boots Waterproof rubber booh Insulated and lersey Hied wMi ihonk support. 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Main Floor CLOTHING Dept. • lubutar steel frame with wire top shelf anckshoe-bar bottom • 2* plodlc costers for moving It araund • 66x22x48 Inches • $ 10.88 catolog seller 4-pc. plastic pail set * 2.49 set Includes covered plastic trash barrel * mop pall and point utility pot • all with spring steel rims * limit I set stacking vegetable bins C $) 29 unbreakable poly pladicbint itockto save space e oll-porpose bibs for vegetobles, toys, and other imalt objects that need handy storage. 3 fcr 99' 47' free can ef rug detergent with ‘Wagner’ rug shampooer *Feley’ felding dust pan • unbreakable plastic • pours without spilling — |ust fold and pour with squeeze handle • regular* 9Bc seller • $14.96 value * rug applicator cleaner for deep down cleaning action of rugs and carpets • trigger releases correct amount of shampoo * limit t TUCSON, Ariz. UB — House Minority Leader Gerald Ford, says President Johnson is; wrong in saying, as Ford put it, “We have no choice but an income tax increase. We have no choice but to spend more and ; tax more.” ] The Grand Rapids Republican; told the Republican Trunk ’n’! Tusk Club of Tucson Saturday night that there is a better way. “It is the Republipan way of putting first things first, whit-| tling problems dhwn to size with the aid of private enterprise and Tnoving " toward desirable national goals without the great leap forward that falls short and gives rise to riots and revolution,” said Ford. Ford said the Johnson-Hum-phrey Administration was resorting to direct controls over the dollar in a desperate attempt to at least narrow the balance of payments gap. Your Choice of These Demestics for Only at Simms |00 Cotton Yardgoods-6 Yds. 100% cotton yardgoodt for quilti, dreiMi^ curtains, etc. Kitchan prints, floral prints, fuvpnil. prints, plaids ond checks. All fast colors. Regular 49c values. visit our rtoord ind gittwartt dipt, whili thoppinc for tnoso tpicials SIMMS DISCOUNT ANNEX 144 N. 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Signal Call Walkie-Talkie $89.50 Value Push-button system on this unit wtth silence controlled ond battery RF Indicator. Extro long range, looded coil. Channel #11 furnished. Only 10 units left at this price. Separate Speaker Syttam STEREO RADIO FM-AM-FM STEREO Stations World Famous You'll find just the color to hormonfzw wfth your decor. Bath rug and stool cover to match in white, piniC blue, yellow, gold, etc. Values to $2.98. 3-Pc. Chenille Tank Set Heavy cotton chenille lank set Includes tank cover, tank lid cover and seat covef. Regular $3.98 values and all fully washable. Colors Include gold ond green. MNerth laginaw I SIMMSIS. $99.95 Value As, shown —FM/AM/fM Stareo rodio with separate ipeaker tyiiem, two 5" dynamic speakers dte liver lull range sound. Continuous tone control, vertical slide rule tuning, block-out dial Idee. Automatic switching circuit, phono joclu AFC on FM, FM stereo eye. $1 holds or charge It on o nui|or credit cord Pleen SIMMS.™, WhiteLakeTwp. Taxpayers Get Compidint Time THE PONTIAC PRESS :SIOXI)AV. .lAXl AUV Mtc.s Killed Hift n WHITE LAKE TOWNSHIP -Taxpayers here will have a chance tb complain before it’s too late. Being sent out to residents are notices of property assessments for 1968 tax bills and dates when questions and dissatisfaction can be registered. Township Supervisor James Reid reports that some property valuations are up and some are down. The special sessions to voice complaints will be held by Reid and Township Assessor Donald Fish. * ★ ★ Residents of B r e n d e 1 Heights and Houlcrest subdivisions will have their say at the first session tomorrow from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. at the Township Hall. FURTHER APPEALS Other areas will be scheduled for later, said Reid.“Taxpayers can make further appeals of their assessments at the public sessions of the Township Board of Review, which meets from March 5 to April 1. BV THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A gir\was fatally injured when the horse she^^as riding apparently panicked and gallop^ into the path of a car in Ottawa County. WWW The death wa^one of 11 traffic deaths during the weekend in Michigan. The toll was the highe^ for any weekend so far this year. The reason for the change in assessments from last year is that the town- SCOUTS HONORED — Daniel Rott (left) and Paul Kruger scoutmaster is Daniel's father, George Rott. The boys are accept Eagle Scout awards at a recent Court of Honor. The members of Troop 60. ship is following a state law requiring taxes to be levied on 50 per cent of the cash value of property. Taxes for 1967 were assessed on 20 per cent to 70 per cent of cash values, reported Rei(S He added that township properties were last assessed in 1958 and are being reassessed for 1968 taxes, w ★ ★ Reassessing on the 50 per cent cash value basis must be done by March 5, explained Reid. Farmington Twp. Board May Vote on Study Tonight ^ Rochester Boys Get Eagle Honor West Bloomfield to Vote on Levy WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP -A millage request will be aired at a special meeting tonight of the Township Board at 7:30 at the Township Hall, 4460 Orchard Lake. w w w FARMINGTON TOWNSHIP - The Township Board tonight may take a deciding vote in its participation in a future Farmington area study. The board meets at 8 p.m. at the Township Hall, 31555 11 Mile. The other municipalities in the area — Farmington city and the villages of Woodcreek Farms and Quakertown — have already agreed to share the cost of the $5,000 study proposed by Michigan State University’s Institute for Community Development and Services. The Future Farmington Area Study Committee recommended that the institute conduct the study after the institute’s representatives made their proposal late last year. The township share is listed as $3,500. Details on the amount and use of the millage will be disclosed at tonight’s meeting. Township residents now pay 1.4 mills general township tax and 1 mill voted township tax. Supervisor John N. Doherty indicated the possibility of a millage election at the mid-November board meeting. At that meeting, residents on Inkster Road from 15 Mile to 14 Mile were told that the township has no funds to pay its 25 per cent share of the paving costs of that portion of Inkster. WWW Consideration of the nriilage election will follow other business. The meeting opens with a public hearing on the assessment roll for the Bel-Aire sewer project. The board will also consider setting a date for a public hearing on the assessment roll for the Sylvan Manor water project. Final Tally Shows Change in the Avon Charter Commission The Township Board, which had few representatives at the meeting last year, recently had its own session with the institute and with Donald M. Oakes public management firm of Grand Rapids. Oakes proposed a $2,500 study just for the township. A former city manager of Berkley and Grand Rapids, Oakes’ firm has made studies for about 20 Michigan cities and townships, w * w ROCHESTER - Eagle Scout awards have been presented to Daniel Rott, son of Mr. pd Mrs. George Rott, 514 Seventh, and Paul Kruger, son of Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Kruger, 219 S. Alice. The boys are members of Boy Scout Troop 60, under the leadership of the senior Rott. * * * Daniel has served his troop as senior OTHER FATAUTIES Also killed: • Henry Moran, about 75, of Detroit, Friday night when hit by a car in Detroit. WWW Charles Angelich, 48, of (Varren, Friday night when his car hit a curb and flipped over on him in Warren. • Ekiward Morales, 3, of Toledo, Ohio, Saturday when the car in which he was riding collided with one going the wrong way on 1-75 near Flint. WWW • Henry J. Grindall. 75, of Jack.son, Ahe driver, and Edwin H, Waite, 82, also patrol leader, instructor and junior as- jackson, a passenger, when their car sistant scoutmaster. For the past two years, he has been a swimming merit badge instructor at Oakland University. Paul has served as patrol leader, senior patrol leader, instructor and troop scribe. Both boys are members of the Order of the Arrow. The board also will hold a public hearing at 7:.30 tonight on a sewer project for Supervisor’s Middle Belt 10 Mile plat no. 2. AVON TOWNSHIP — An increase to a 50-vote margin and a change of One of the elected charter commissioners has been reported by the Oakland County Board of Canvassers in a review of last week’s incorporation vote. Three additional “yes” votes were tabulated and George Schutte, Oakland County Department of Public Works project engineer, replaced Herman Lamb, 3783 Mildred, an employe of White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy, on the charter commission. In the original count, only two votes had separated Lamb and Schutte, with Lamb given the greater count. The review, which included .several absentee ballots, gave Schutte a three-vote lead, according to Township Clerk 'I’helma Spencer. Police Report to Be Reviewed Group to Seek More Business for White Lake Commerce Okays 2 Road Projects COMMERCE TOWNSHIP-Two street improvement projects here totaling about $176,200 have been given the go-ahead. The Township Board has entered an agreement with the Oakland CoiTnty Road Commission to prepare for future blacktopping of about one mile of Newton from Oakley Park to Commerce Road. The township and county will split the estimated $120,000 cost of the work. Commerce’s share will come form revenue from the 2 mills voted for roads. LAKE ORION — Forty-three people sustained injury in traffic accidents occurring within the village last year, but there wqre no fatalities reported. The annual police department report, prepared by Chief Neil Leonard and due for consideration by the Village Council tonight, reveals 125 property damage accidents for the same period. Police arrested J.463 persons, 991 of them for traffic offenses. Officers investigated a total of 2,400 complaints. Holly School Board to Mull Millage, Bond Need Tonight Blacktopping of the mile of Newton will come next year, allowing time for the road to settle after pre-paration, explained Town.ship Supervisor Robert H. Long. HOLLY — Two elections may face voters this spring in this school district, as a result of the special meeting scheduled by the board of education tonight. * ★ ★ The board is scheduled to discuss the possibility of a new operating millage request and a bonding election for new construction. If present facilities are not increased, Haddon warned, temporary classrooms or a reduced schedule for some students may be necessary by 1970-71. The other agreement is for the preparation and blacktopping of Canal and Oak-side The half-mile project will cost the lownhsip and county about $28,000 each. There were 741 traffic violation tickets issued of which 166 remain unpaid, Leonard reported. Parking meter tiekeLs totaled 1,936 and other parking tickets 405. ★ ★ W There were 10 garbage tickets and 10 dog tickets issued in connection with improper handling of both. Residents caught in illegal procedure paid a total of $28,249.16 in fines of which $17,085 involved traffic and drunk driving charges. Both projects are expected to be completed this summer, said Township Supervisor Robert H. Long.- Ortonville Banquet to Fete 2 for Service In Double Eagle Scout Ceremony The district’s voters have dealt setbacks to both bonding and millage proposals in recent months, defeating a $5 million bond issue request in October and turning down a three-mill hike last spring. Two Milford Brothers to Be Honored According to Supt. of .Schools Ru.s.sell Haddon, the current millage total in the district for operating expenses is 20 6, of which 12 mills has been voted. ^ “Our big problem now,’’ Haddon said, “is that we’re just about out of space in our secondary schools.” MILE'ORD — Two brothers will mark the first double Elagle Scout award ceremony here tomorrow at 7 p.m. at Milford Presbyterian Church. TThe Scouts, Michael and David Wallace, will be given a reception afterwards by their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Wallace, 1755 Martindale. MINIMUM REQUIREMENTS On tonight’s agenda will be such questions as minimum space and facility requirements for new schools and the possibility of splitting building needs into two ballots, with 9 junior high proposed this year and a high school in 1970. , The brothers, who joined Troop I7I in Milford in December 1965, reached the rank of Eagle last December.' Mike, 14, a ninth grader at Muir Junior High, is junior assistant scoutmaster and troop bugler. He is also a member of the Civil Air Patrol and his school’s pep band. * * ,* David, 13 and in the seventh grade at Muir, serves his troop as quartermaster He holds the first chair for saxophones in the Muir Concert band. ORTONVILLE — A civic appreciation banquet will be held here Wednesday honoring two long-time area residents. Sponsored by the Jaycees, Lions Club and Rotary Club, the dinner will honor Edna Profrock, former assistant vice president of the Genesee Merchants Bank and Trust Co., ' and Frances U*ese, who served the village for 40 years as po.stmistress. w ★ * The affair will begin at 7 p.m. In the Brandon Schools Cafeteria. WHITE LAKE TOWNSHIP-'The few businessmen in this largely bedroom community are forming a group to attract more commerce to the area. , Township Supervisor James Reid sketched at a recent board meeting his plans for the township’s Economic Development Council. The group, to work closely with the Township Planning Commission^ will get started in March, said the supervisor. 3'he ultimate goal of the council is to build up for the area a diversified tax base of residences, busines.ses and light industry. ★ ★ ★ Two appointments have been made to the Planning Commission: Clarence Reading of 3565 Ormond who has previously served on the commission and Kenneth Ormandy of 9833 Coledale, a Detroit Insurance Agency employe working with industry and commercial establishments. BOARD APPOINTMENT Last month, the board appointed Leland Orr to complete t h e nine- member board. Leaving are secretary Jack Rose, Edward 'Ja-nuseko and James Cunningham. Review Board Adds 2 WEST BOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP -Two appointments have been made to the board of review. With terms until 1971 are Paul Ra-baut, who came on the board last year to fill a vacancy, and Charles Murray, new to the board 6.5 Mills at Stake swerved to miss another vel^le and hit the end of a bridge on U.S. 127 Saturday neqr Hudson in Lenawee County. Grin-vdall died Sturday and Waite died yesterday. • Henry Harris, 59, of Detroit, Saturday when hit by a car as he walked along a road in Westland, a Detroit suburb. * ★ ★ Miss Joyce E. Alien, 19, of Nunica died yesterday from a nactured skull in Butterworth Hospital at Crand Rapids. She was injured Saturday while riding her horse on a road in Coopersviile. Sheriff’s men said the horse apparently panicked and crashed into the auto, even though the driver swefved in an attempt to avoid the horse and rider. Two men were killed last night in a crash between a car and a semitrailer truck on U.S. 2 near Epoufette in Mackinac County in Upper Michigan. ★ ★ ★ The victims, both riding in the auto, were Raymond Morrow, 24, of Lansing and Francis Shananquet, 36, of Petoskey. Police said the car veered over a center line and collided with the truck. • Mrs. Carl Mears, 46, of Fennville, Saturday when a car driven by her husband collided with another at Holland, throwing her out and saturating her with gasoline, which ignited and burned her to death. • Hany William Whysall, 23, of Cass City, whose car ran off Cemetery Road Saturday night in Tuscola County’s Novesta Township. Avon Woman Injured in Fire AVON TOWNSHIP - A 40-year-old woman suffered first- and second-degree burns of the hand and arm in one of two weekend home fires here. Mrs. George F, Stoops, 461 Cherry-blossom, was treated at Crittenton Hospital after she attempted to remove a pan of blazing grease from the kitchen range, said firemen. Rochester firemen who answered the call ai 2:41 p.m. yesterday, estimated damage to the room at between $500 and $750. A fire Saturday reportedly caused $8,000 to $10,000 damage, much of it in smoke, to the Robert Skibowski home, 475 S. Livernois. ★ ★ ★ The blaze reportedly started In the lower level garage of the bilevel home home when Skibowski attempted to start a small bulldozer. BACKFIRE REPORTED Fire Chief Lyle Buchanan said Skl--bowski reported the bulldozer backfired, igniting some gasoline. He attempted to douse the blaze with a garden hose, but flames short-circuited the electrical wiring causing a pump failure. "• The call was received at 12:08 p.m. Saturday. Five CAP Cadets in State Screening CLARKSTON — Five cadets from the Clarkston Composite Squadron of the Civil Air Patrol are among 54 chosen statewide for special activities screening. John Bu.shart, Gary Klann, Timothy Morris. Cathy Witherup and Simon Worden have been interviewed and tested for possible participation in the Interleadership school and cadet flying encampment. * ★ ★ Other acitivites they may become eligible for are the Aerospace Age Orientation course, jet familiarization course and spiritual life activities as various Air Force bases throughout the United States. First Ll. Kathleen Hawkins of the Clarkston squadron was among those assisting .screening personnel at Selfridge Air E’orce Base. Administrator to Quit Huron Valley Position Ttie Iluron Valley Board of Education will receive the resignation of the district’s director of instruction William Force, at tonight’s meeting at 8:30 at Milford High School, 2380 S. Milford, Milford. The board will also consider changing the mileage reimbursement rate for administrators. The intention is to reduce the present rate of 10 cents per mile when an admini.strator drives his own car on school business. W. Bloomfield LWV Will Meet Tomorrow WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP -State issues will be discussed at the meeting tomorrow of the West Bloomfield League of Women Voters at 12:.30 p.m. at the main library, 50.30 Orchard Lake. * * ♦ Mrs. Dodie Weil, state board member : of the League, will talk on the proposed •it,. ■ jMtttcial election and tenure amendment EHifclfci Hite OMwUtuttB'u.-------- Lapeer Schools Set Tax Vote I^APEER — The board of education has slated an election March 12 on renewing a, 3-mill tax levy which expired Dec. 31 and asking for 3.5 additional ills for one year for operating expenses. * it * 'The total of 6.5, according to Business Manager W Gordon Hall, will bring the over all operating millage to 19:08. behind enrollment growth, too. Hall said. “Valuation of the district has been rising at about three per cent annually.” 344 INCREASE mills, and we are at 15.58 right now,” Hall said. ‘By next year, when the additional 3.5 mills go into effect, the average will probably have gone up." By contrast, the number of students in the district’s schools has been increasing by 300-plus. This year, enrollment is 5,389—344 more than last year. The board recently heard a prot from several Elba Township reside regarding the size of its transportat cut off. “Our budget for this year is $2,691,-587,” Hail reported, “up 19.6 per cent from last year.” Previous opr^'ating millage requests In the district. Hall said, have always been approved. jt... ..I-..-. ft' Hi ^MOVING UP — David (left) and Michael Wallace, who advanced together irt the ranks of the Milford Scout Troop No. 171, will become Eagle Scouts tomorrow. They are the .sons of Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Wallace. I7.S5 Martindale, Milford Township. ^ the ■V C-' Over the pa.sl 11 years, he said, the average increa.se has been 12 per cent. He attributed the rise to “much same problems as in other districts more students, higher cost of operations, better .salaries.” Equalized valuation has been "falling The new levy, if approved, would bring in approximately $336,400 irt additional revenue. Students presently residing within IW miles of Lapeer High School must provide their own transportation. The new figure of 19.08 for total millage, the business manager noted, is not exceptional for, state school districts, “The state average this year is 18 Administrative Assistant Ron Warner pointed out that state bus transportation aid is based on a code established by the state board of education. If the cut off were smaller, Warner said, state aid would be lost, and the dislrict> would have to foot the $100,000 cost for all students Itself. V i t THE rONTIAC TRESS. MOXDAV, .TAXUAHV 22, 19fi8 A-^: BE HERE WHEN DOORS OPEN AT 5 P.M. Because we'll be taking our storewide inventory and preparing for this great event! Waite's wTlI be CLOSED TOMORROW 'TIL 5 P.M. Just 4 Value-Packed Hours to REALLY Save! Don't Miss Out! OPEN TOMORROW 5 'TIL 9 P.M. Sorry-No Mail, No Phone, No C.O.D.'s, No Holds, No Returns -ALL SALES WILL BE FINAL - On Soma Items Intermediate Mark-Downs Have Been Taken f >p.. 4 # V i" ' -fj ^ ^i". m i Closed Tuesday 'til 5 P.M. Preparing for This Great Event-Shop 5 to 9 P.M. Limited Quantities • Hundreds of Mark-Downs • Tremendous Savings • On All 6 Big Floors • No Need to Carry Cash . . Charge Yours ■* X * TJ, -K#. t I DOOR BUSTER SPECIALS . . . BE HERE AT 5 P.M. . . . VERY LIMITED QUANTITIES GIRLS' PAJAMAS BRAS and GIRDLES MEN'S SLACKS DRAPERY SAMPLES JET-X CAR WASHER SWIM CAPS WOMEN'S APRONS li 5'(?) *2 Reg, 1.50 to 4,00 OU . To% n cI°o^ 25' Reg $099 6.95 Reg 2.00 $-|09 to 7.00 ^ 1 Reg. 1 89 $109 to 4.00 1 i' Second Floor Second Floor Street Floor Fourth Floor Lower Level Third F,loor Third Floor SHOES and HOUSESLIPPERS Yo.ur Choice *1 Street Floor I DRESSES, SPORTSWEAR—Third Floor Orion Sweater Coots, Reg. 9.00 .............................5 99 New Spring Jumpers, Reg. 14.00.............................10.00 New Spring Skirts, Reg. 10.00......... .................... 7.99 Women's Nylon Shells, Reg. 4.00........ ....................21.99 Misses' Corduroy Slocks, Reg. 4.00 .........................2.99 Women's Sweaters, Reg. 4-00-8.00 ...........................2.99 Women's Sweaters, Reg. 9.00-12.00 ....................... . .4.99 Women's Sweaters, Reg. 10.00-15.00 .........................5,44 Famous Moke Dacron Blouses, Reg. 7.00.......................2.00 Fisherman Knit Cardigans, Reg. 15.00.......................10,00 Bulky Cardigans, Reg. 9.00 .................................6.99 Long Sleeve Shirt Shifts, Reg. 10.00........................6.00 Pure Silk Slock Tops, Reg. 25.00 ..........................14.00 Junior Melton Jackets, Reg. 19.00..........................15.90 Misses' Car Coats, Reg. 25.00-30.00 .......................19.90 Misses' Cor Coats, Reg. 30.00-45.00 .......................23.90 Misses' Cr Half Sire Winter Coots, Reg. 50.00-55.00 .......30.00 Famous Moke Women's Coots, Reg. 85.00-95.00 ...............66.00 Leather and Suede Coats, Reg. 89.00-1 10.00 ...............66.00 MISSES' and JUNIORS' HALF SIZE DRESSES Cocktail, business, and afternoon crepes, Reg. 8.00 t CT *kO 1 ^ wools, acetates, and laces. One and two jg qq ^ I ^ piece styles. JUNIORS' and MISSES' WOOL SKIRTS Solids, plaids, and checks. Sizes 5 to 15 and 6 to 18. Reg. 10.00 to 15.00 FASHION ACCESSORIES—Street Floor Fomous Moke Women's Hosiery, Reg. 1.55 .......................1 04 Women's Slippers, Reg. 6.00 ................................4,67 Women's Famous Moke Slippers, Reg. 7.00 .......................4.67 Ladies' Wallets, Reg. 6.00 ....................................2.67 Ladies' Wallets, Reg. 8.00-9.00 ..............................3.56 Accessory Scarves, Rig. 3.00-4.00 ...........................2.50 Accessory Scarves, Reg. 5.00-6.00 .........................._3.50 Women's Knit Hots, Reg. 3.50..................................*2.88 Knit Heod Bands, Reg, 1.50 to 2.00.......................... .1.00 Knit Gloves and Mittens, Reg. 3.00-3.50 ......................1.67 Knit Gloves and Mittens, Reg. 5.00-6.00 ......................3.34 Ladies' Jewelry, Reg. 1.00 and 2.00 ...........................33c Lodies' Jewelry, Reg. 1.00 .....................................12c Boudoir Boxes, Reg, 1.29 ......................................86c Sewing Boxes, Reg. 9.00 .......................................6.00 Windshield Covers, Reg. 1.98 ...................................45c Air Freshner, Reg. 6.00 ......................................'W.OO Girdles, Reg. 4.00 ...........................................2.00 Women's Girdles, Reg. 5.00 ...................................2.00 Wooden Hair Brushes, Reg. 2.00 ................................99c Perfume Troy, Reg. 5.00 ......................................3.29 Bottle Milk Both, Reg, 1.99 ..................................1.33 Skin Freshener, Reg. 99c .......................................44c Candle Holders, Reg. 1.00 ......................................67c Paper Swim Suits, Reg. 5.00...................................1.34 P^per Hots, Reg. 1.50 .........................................44c MEN'S WEAR—Street Floor Men's Leather Gloves, Lined & Unlined, Reg. 8.00-10.00 . .. .4.99 Men's Leather Palm Gloves, Reg. 4.00 ........................2.99 Men's Leather Gloves, Lined and Unliped, Reg. 5.00-7.00 . . 3.99 Men's Flannel Nite Shirts, Reg. 5.00....... .................3.99 Men's Silk Tie & Hankie Set, Reg. 4.00.......................2.49 Men's Silk Neckwear, Reg. 2.50 ..............................1.25 Men's L.S.'Sport Shirt, Slight Irregs., Reg. 4.00 if perfect . .. .1.50 Men's Soft Touch Flannel Sprart Shirts, Reg. 5.00............3.99 Men's Fomous Brand Sport Shirts, Reg. 6.00-8.00 .............4.99 Men's, Famous Brand Knit Shirts, Reg. 5.00-8.00 ......■ • . 'A Price Men's Fomous Brond Jackets, 4 only, Reigv^i^.OO........... . • H-99 Men's Famous Brond Jockets, 3 only, Reg. 35.00 .............29.99 Men's Blouse Style Winter Jockets, 4 only, Reg. 15.00-18.00 12.99 Men's Famous Brond Sport Shirts, Reg. 6.00-7.00 ........... . .3.50 Men's Permanent Press Cosuol Slocks,.,Reg. 7.00-8.00 . . . „. ,4.49 Men's Permanent Press Casual Slocks, Reg. 9.00-11.00 ........ 6.49 Men's Cordigon or Pullover Sweaters, Reg. 10.95-15.00 .... . .7.99 Men's Cotton Knit Thermol Underweor, Reg. 3.00.............2/5.00 , ' ■ ■ , ' • '*v.'' -V FOUNDATIONS, LINGERIE—Second Floor Women's Women's Women's Women's Women's Women's Women's Women's Women's Women's Women's Women's Women's Women's Flannel Gowns & Pajamas, Reg. 5.00 ...........3,99 Slight Irregs. Flannel Pajamas, Reg. 4.00-5.00 . . . 2.99 Flannel Gowns & Pajamas, Reg. 6.00 ...............4.99 Famous Brand Flonnel Pajamas, Reg. 4.50 ..........2.99 Famous Brand Pegnoir Set, Reg. 17.95-35.00, 15.99-26.00 Assorted Robes, Reg. 20.00-22,00 .................15.99 Assorted Robes, Reg. 13.00-20.00 ................10.88 Assorted Robes, Reg. 11.00-12.00 ................>^8.99 Assorted Robes, Reg. 8.00 . ....................v.5.99 Famous Brand Girdles & Bros, Reg. 2.00-5.95 .....1.00 Famous Brand Girdles & Bros, Reg. 4.00-8,95 .....2,00 Famous Brand Girdles & Bras, Reg. 5.00-8.95 ....3.00 Famous Brand Girdles Gr Bras, Reg. 6.00-9.00 ....4,00 Famous Brand Girdles Cr Bros, Reg. 8.00-14.00 . . . .6.00 CHILDREN'S VALUES—Second Floor Children's 3-6X 2 Pc. Snow Suits, Reg. 10.00.........................4.49 Children's Gloves, Hots & Mittens, Reg. 1.25-4.00 . . . 99c to 2.99 Children's Dress & Casual Handbags, Reg. 2.00-4.00 99c to 2.99 Girls' 3 to 6X Stretch Slacks, Slight Irregs., Reg. 4.00............1.99 Boys' 4 to 6 Flannel Pajamas, Reg. 3.00........................... 1.29 Girls' Knit Tops, Reg. 2.00 ....................................... 99c Infants' Prom Suits, Reg. 10.00 ...............................6.99 CURTAINS, DRAPERIES, ETC.—Fourth Floo Solid Color Twin Acetate Bedspreads, Reg. 13.00 ..............9.00 Solid Color Full Acetate Bedspreads, Reg. 13.00 . ............9.00 Solid Color Dual Acetate Bedspreads, Reg. 20.00 "T...........15.00 Crawford Decorator Pillows, Reg. 2.50-3.50 ..................1.99 Early American Chair Pads, Reg. 2.5t)-3.00 .................1.99 Corduroy Choir Pods, Reg. 2.00 .............................. 99c Print Rocker Cushions, Reg. 7.00 .......................... 4.99 Print Rocker Cushions, Reg. 8.00 ...........................5-99 Print Rocker Cushions, Reg. 1 1.00 . . . . ;................7.99 Foam Backed Furniture Throws, 72x60, Reg. 6,00 ...............2.99 ?oam Backed Furniture Throws, 72x90, Reg. 8.40 ............. .4.19 Foam Backed Furniture Throws, 72x108, Reg. 10.80 ...... .5.19 Foam Backed Furniture Throws, 72x126, Reg. 13.20 .............6.19 Shower Curtains, Reg. 12.00 ..................................8.49 Shower Drapes, Reg. 12,00..........................^..........8.49 Shower Curtains, Reg. 7.0d ...................... . ............5.49 Shower Drapes, Reg, 7,00 .......................................5.49 Infants' 2 piece Bun “Infants' Stigtrr Trregs. Infonts' Slight Irregs Girls' Winter Dresses Girls' Winter Dresses Boys' Girls' Girls' Girls' ings, Reg. 6.00 .......................2.29 . Underslwts, Reg.-69c ------- . . .2 for 69c Sleepers, Reg. 2.00-3.00 .......2 for 3.00 Reg. 4.00-5.00 ........................2.00 , Reg. 5.00-6,00 .......................3.00 Girls' Winter Dresses, Reg. 6.00-8.00 .......................4,00 Girls' Winter Coats, Reg. 14.00-18.00 ......................11.88 Girls' Winter Jackets, Reg. 9.00-10.00 ......................7.88 3 to 6 Winter Jackets, Reg. 9,00 ......................5.99 7 to 14 Skirts, Reg. 7.00-8.00 .......................5.60 7 to 14 Sweaters, Reg. 5.00-6.00 .....................3.99 7 to 14 Sweaters, Reg. 7.00-8.00 .................... 4.99 Boys' 8 to 18 Sweaters, Reg. 8.00 ..........................5.99 Boys' 8 to 18 Sweaters, Reg. 9.00-10.00 .. !................6.99 Boys' Permanent Press Sport Shirts, Reg. 3.50-4,00 .........2.89 Boys' Acrilan Knit Shirts, Reg. 3.00....................... 1.79 Boys' Permanent Press Sport Shirts, Reg. 4.00.............. . 2,99 Boys' Cotton Knit Shirts, Reg. 3.00..........................2.50 Boys' Flannel & Knit Pajamas, Reg. 3.50-4.50 ...............2.88 Boys' Corduroy Robes, Reg. 8.00 ............................5.99 Boys' Corduroy Pants, Reg. 5.00 ............................2.99 Boys' Knit Gloves and Mittens, Reg. 2.25-3.00 ..............1.99 Boys' Winter Cops, Reg. 3.00.............................. 1.99 Boys' Permanent Press Casual Slacks, Reg. 5.00-6.00 ........2 99 Boys' Corduroy Slocks, Reg. 7.00-10.00 .....................5.99 Boys' Winter Jackets & Parkas, Reg. 13.00-15.00 ...........12.99 FABRICS, LINENS-Fourth Floor 36" Wide Check Gingham, Reg. 79c yd............................64c 45" Wide Bonded Print Wool, Reg. 4.50 yd......................2.99 Springmoid 36" Print Broadcloth, Reg. 69c yd...................57c Solid Color 36" Wide Broadcloth, Reg. 69c yd...................57c Quilted Printed Fabric, Reg. 2.00 yd..........................1.19 Velvet Chiffon Fobric, Reg. 3.00 yd...........................I 99 36" Wide Printed Terry Cloth, Reg. 1.49 .....................99c Woshoble Weaved Place Mots, Reg. 1.00 eo...................69c AbOco Hemp Place Mots, Reg. 2.00 .............................1 49 Mortex Gift Towel Set, Reg. 2.00 ............................. T49 Mortex Gift Towel Set, Reg. 3.00 ............................2 49 Mortex Gift Towel Set, Reg. 4.00 .............................3r49 Mortex Gift Towel Set, Reg. 5.00 ....... .....................4 49 Mortex Gift Towel Set, Reg. 6.00...............................4.99 Stevens Acrilan Blonket, 80x90, Reg. 13.99.................. .10.97 Stevens Wools Blonket, 80x90, Reg. 24.99 ...................17.97 Forstmonn Thermal Wool Blanket, Reg. 18.99 ..................14.99 Belleoir Acrilan Blanket, 72x90, Reg. 11.00 ..................7 99 Belleoir Thermal Blanket, Reg. 8.00 ..........................6.49 Be;Jleair Thermal Blanket, 90x108, Reg. 14.00 .......... 11.49 Docron Filled Floral Sotin Comforters, Reg. 24.00 . . .'.....18.00 Bates India Paisley Spread, Twin Size, Reg. 22.50 ...........17.00 Bates India Paisley Spread, Full Size, Reg. 25.00 ...........18.00 Durable Press Floral Tablecloth, 52x52, Reg. 4.00.............2.99 Durable Press Floral Tablecloth, 52x70, Reg. 5.00 ............3.99 Durable Press Floral Tablecloth, 68" Rd., Reg. 8.00 . .........6.49 Durable Press Floral Tablecloth, 60x84, Reg. 8.00 ....... . 6.49 Irregular Terry Cottop Hand Towels, Reg. 50c ..................20c Pure Linen Tablecloths,, 52x68, Regi 8.00 .....................6.49 Pure Linen Toblecloths, ^2x82, Reg. 12.00 ....................9 49 Pure Linen Tablecloth Napkins, Reg. 80c \........ ........... 59c Vinyl Tablecloths,'52x70, Ri|g. 4.50......... ................3.29 Vinyl Toblecloths, 60" Rd., Rtg. 5.00 ........................4 29 Vinyl Toblecloths; Reg. 2.99, 52x52 . .................. .2.29 Dr. Doolittle Ensemble . , . Drapes, $ifdspreads. Rugs, Quilts and. Pillows .................Vs OFF Women's Shoes ... Street Floor Not. Adv. Women's Dress Shoes, Reg. to 16.00 ..4.90 & 6.90 Not. Adv. Women's Dress Shoes, Reg. to 18.00 .8.90 & 12.90 Entire Stock of Patio Loafers, Reg. 8.00 .............6.90 Entire Stock of Town Square Loafers, Reg. 11.00-12.00 .8.90 Entire Stock of Frolics, Reg. 10.00-1 1.00 ...........8.90 Children's Shoes ... Second Floor Boys' Shoes, Reg. to 11.00........................... .4.97 Children's Shoes, Reg. to 9.00......... ........... .2.97 HOUSEWARES, LAMPS, ETC.—Lower Level West Bend Polished Aluminum Bun Warmer, Reg. 3.99...............2.99 6-9 Cup West Bend Electric Percolator, Reg. 6.99................4.59 Deluxe Eureka Upright Sweeper, Reg. 129.95 .................. .99.00 30" Toppan Gas Range, Full Width Oven, Reg. 269.95 .... 199.00 RCA MiniKin Jr. Personal T.V., Reg. 1 19.95 ...................95.00 19" Portable T V. with Stand, Reg. 129.00 ...................104.00 , 295 sq. in. Viewing RCA Color T V., Reg. 625.00 ..............549.00 RCA Solid State Stereo Console, Reg. 199.00 .................169,00 All Table Model Rodios (Clock & Plain), Reg. ..............15% Off G.E. Portoi-Fi Receover Speoke|', Reg. 79.95 ..................65.00 30" Hi Level Gas Range, Reg. 309.95 .........................225.00 Double Dr. Frost Free Refrig Cr Freezer, Reg. 529.00 ........377.(X) 19 Cu. Ft. Upright Freezer, Reg. 259.00 .......................194.00 16 Cu. Ft. Upright Freezer, Reg. 219.00 .......................177.00 Stainless Steel 2 pc. Qrovy Server, Reg. 4 98 ...................3.49 Stainless Steel 2 pc. Butter Dish, Reg. 4.99 ................. .3.49 36" Metol Wardrobe, Reg. 19.95 ................................16.99 30" Metal Utility Cabinet, Reg, 19.95 .................,.......16.99 24" Metal Bose Cabinet, Reg. 19.95 ............................16.99 Deluxe Wood Carving Set with Holder, Reg. 10.98...........V ■ • .7.79 Teflon Coated Buffet Server, Reg. 15.88 .......................13.49 Deluxe 2 Speed Blender, Reg. 21.95 ............................19.49 3 6 Electric Percolator, Reg. 11.99 ..............'.............9.49 Miniature Picture Reproduction, Reg. 1.25 . . .'.................88c Popular Electric Bun Warmer, Reg. 9.95 .........................7.49 RUGS, TOYS, ETC.—Fifth Floor 6x9 Oval Braid Reversigle Rug, Reg. 19.95.................. 17.88 9x12 Nylon Area Rug, Reg. 69.95 .,..........................55.00 9x12 Full Size Nylon Pile Rug, Reg. 28.00 ..............* . .22.00 27x6 Striped Nylon Runner, Reg. 5 00 ...V....................3.79 27x12 Striped Nylon Runner, Reg. 10.00 ......................8.7,9 27x36 100% Rayon Washable Scatter Rug, Reg. 3.50........2.79 27x28 100% Rayon Washable Scatter Rug, Reg. 5.00........3.79 36x60 100% Rayon Washable Scatter Rug, Reg. 8.00........6,79 Boys' or Girls' Tigercot Bicycles, Reg.,33.00 .............26,00 Boys' or Girls' Middleweight Bicycles, Reg. 44.90 ..........34.00 5x8 Woll to Wall Bathroom Carpeting, Reg. 24 00 ...........16.99 5x6 Woll to Wall Bathroom Corpeting, Reg. 18 00 ...........13.99 3 Speed Deluxe Tigercot Bicycles, Reg, 39 95 ...............33.CX) Deluxe 5 Speed Tigercot Bicycles, Reg. 55.00 ...............42.00 Girls' Weaved Bicycle Basket, Reg. 3.99........ V.88 THE PONTIAC PRESS 48 West Huron Street Pontiac, Michigan 48056 MONDAY, JANUARY 22, 1968 John W. Pitecmaid Executive Vice President and Editor JOHN A. RrL»r Sfcrptary and Advertising Director It Seenis to Me Oakland County Must Adapt to Potential of the Air Age This newspaper believes Oakland County is a logical point for big airport activities. The future of air travel is incredible. No one can accurately predict what lies ahead. Chicago was so under-e|uipped in spite of its fine Midway Airport that it constructed the gigantic O’Hare. This was destined to “care for future needs indefinitely.’’ But see what happens. Already, it’s insufficient. Private flying is expanding at the same or an even greater rate right now. ★ ★ ★ Hence, the “Windy City” has just reactivated Midway. O’Hare had become “the busiest airport in the world.” Preparations for reopening Midway cost eleven million dollars but Cliicago says she will get it all back in landing fees, terminal spaces, hangars, etc. And the end is not yet. Chicago still plans ahead. A third airport of gigantic proportions is projected there for the 1980’s. Personally, 1 rather favored enlarging the existing Oakland-Pontiac Airport with a big runway extension, plus ^ new one going north-south that ran 7,500 to 10,000 feet. But 1 defer easily to a committee that has been named to study the problem. If this group unites in the belief that relief north of the City will serve a greater need, we back them wholeheartedly. But we need action. “Time and tide wait for no man.” And neither does the airplane. Southeastern Michigan is approch-ing thg^ same predicament. Metro is rapidly becoming inadequate. Detroit City Airport is probably the most dangerous airport of appreciable size in the world. Hence, airdromes are an absolute necessity in this general arba. Consider these amazing statistics; In 1961, airlines carried 54 million passengers. In 1967, the total approximates 120 million. Five years hence, the experts project 200 million and ten years from now it will be 450 million. Further, Insider’s Newsletter quotes an airline executive as saying: “Freight is less fragile, doesn’t have to be fed, doesn’t need in-flight movies and does not bother the stewardesses.” What’s really ahead? Who knows? Oakland County must keep abreast. Pontiac Motor Performance .... With the complete automobile good year — the third best in all figures at hand for 1967, Pontiac history — but it slipped some over Motor’s sensational performance is 1966. even more noteworthy. And yet Pontiac gained! Here are the final and official 1967 All of General Motors dropped and 1966 statistics: 4.5%, considerably less than the in- 1967 1966 dustry as a whole, but Ford was General Motors 4,138.620 4,336,704 sharply handicapped by the long ford ............ 1,834,743 2,370,lU strike b Chrysler 1,353,766 1,399,741 * * American Motors 241,404 266,288 ,,, . , . Total ......... 7,568,533 8,372,844 salute the Pontiac Motor ir if if Division again. We enjoyed this ' . terrific sales period and then be- he entire industry lost 10.4% came “car of the year” as one to over the previous year. 1967 was a grow on. Expensive Cover . . , . / Michigan is honestly perplexed and unhappy with the projected costs of a dome over our athletic stadium if, as and when one is built on the Fair Grounds site. And she should be. It takes heavy sugar. Yet Wilmington, Delaware, is currently shadowboxing with the idea of a dome over the entire city. This should provoke a world’s record “hrrumph” from Major Hoople. Dr. Celina P. Urgarte tells officials that domes can now be extended ten miles. The device would give Wilmington almost complete control over local weather. What’s next? And in Conclusion Jottings from the well-thumbed notebook of your peripatetic reporter: Edward L. Sorenson calls my attention to the patriotic work currently done by the Young Americans for Freedom who are an enthusiastic group that really pitches into the Communists. More power to ’em. ........Overheard: “If a lamb followed Mary to school today, he’d have to do better than 50 mile^ an ” • I..........Vardon trophy standings show Arnold Palmer averaging 70.18 in tournament play this year. Julius Boros was next with 70.78, followed by Sykes, Brewer and Casper, all of whom were jittt under 71. Nicklaus is In-cliKible. Personal nomination for one of the attractive young ladies in the area: ^M a r i 1 y Rae Mercer, Incidentally, she’s my most favorite thrush. . . . ..........Overheard: “A cen- /i MARILY tury ago it took two sheep to clothe one woman. Today a silk worm can do it on his day off.” .............The Weather Bureau says wind has a very appreciable effect on you personally out in the cold. A temperature of 20 degrees and a ten>mile-an-hour wind has a chilling effect equal to 2 degrees with no wind.^ Voice of the People: ‘Servicemen Are United in Fight for Our Safety’ My son who is serving with the air cavalry in Vietnam recently sent home some movie film. In the film were both colored and white%o|’king together. If these boys go through what they do and are still together for the safety of our country, why can’t people here do the .same and forget all this nonsense of riots, etc. ★ ★ ★ How can we expect our boys to have the heart to fight for our country if people here are destroying it? ★ ★ ★ I have the newspaper sent to my son but I’m getting ashamed of some of the things 1 know he will read in it about how people act here. MRS. MARIE JACKSON 4350 BUDD, WATERFORD Questions Wallace’s Qualifications to Lead So Grarge Wallace will stand behind his convictions and beliefs. Big deal! So did Adolf Hitler. Six million dead Jews are a bitter testimony to that fact. Since when does having a loud mouth and lack 6f reason qualify a man for leadership? The twentieth ceptury has had its share of self-appointed gods. Spare me another one. MRS. CAROL PAMBID 3256 VanZANDT, DRAYTON PLAINS ‘Interested Citizens to Help Replace Sign’ Hanoi Peace Feeler David Lawrence Says: And — airlines are right now convinced that the future of qir freight may even exceed passenger travel if you can comprehend this amazing declaration. For the past indefinite time, air freight has risen more than tioice the rate of passenger business. Further, the airlines are even more interested in this tremendous upsurge in freight. They say it’s more profitable. Thgt could be. Selection of Clifford Significant The driver of the car which destroyed the children’s road sign near Silver Lake School remains unidentified. Offerings to replace the sign were received from Mr. Stephenson of the City Sign Company, Jeff Taylor, a part-time sign maker from Auburn Heights and from Oakland County Road Commissioner Paul Van Roekel. ★ ★ ★ Because of their interest and concern, a new sign will be installed for our boys and girls. JAMES JENNINGS, PRINCIPAL SILVER LAKE SCHOOL WASHINGTON - President Johnson, in appointing Clark Clifford to be secretary of defense, didn’t pick a specialist in military matters but a man with a certain type of mind capable of serving as a top counsellor in the Cabinet — someone he LAWRENCE has known a long time, too. Actually, the tei^mination of Robert McNamara’s duty as secretary of defense and the selection of Clifford in his place is far more significant than a mere change in personalities. There was, of course, much said originally in favor of the choice of McNamara as secretary of defense. He had been a top executive in the Ford Motor Co. He was expected fo give the huge department of the armed services the benefit of his talent — efficiency in organization. He was accustomed to handling large sums and determining the best way to get the most for the money on a business basis. point to the President and express a layman’s judgment as to what should be done, but Mr. Johnson will have to assess for himself the consequences of his decision. Where McNamara made his error was in assuming, as too many people mistakenly do nowadays, that military men are obsessed with certain prejudices in favor of more and more battles and the escalation of a war such as is going on in Vietnam. force in fighting the enemy, the problem is not one of politics or penny-saving but of effectuating the military strategy most likely to attain the desired objective. A ★ ★ Reader Gives View on Firearm Restrictions When given orders to repel aggression or to opefate, effectively along with an allied Again and again, military men have come up with big budgets deemed necessary for national defense. These have often been regarded as too large. But back of the recommendations has always basically been the military concept of how to protect national security. (Copyright, ttu, Publithtro-H«ll Syndicate) Air rifles were invented around 1779 and Austria equipped troops with this noiseless weapon for use against the Turks and the French. Napoleon issued an order than any Austrian captured with one of these guns ‘ would be executed without trial. We know that we do not have statesmen in Washington with Napoleon’s I.Q. and we will not execute our teens, so all we can do is ban the sale of air rifles. ★ A ★ Why not let the gentleman taxpayer and sportsman buy firearms without too much red tape? The criminal will get guns. All he has to do is break into a government or state armory and he is in business. We may need our personal firearms in a “Vietnam” here in the U.S. to protect our loved ones and property and we have no use for air rifles in time of need. We will need 30-30 caliber and up. ROLAND SCHWEITZER 582 LAKE ANGELUS RD. Bob Considine Says: ‘School Section Tells Gooil News of Teens’ Our Contacts With Hanoi Are Pretty Good, at That But this is not always feasible in government. For in the Department of Defense, while handling of large business contracts is an important part of the job, how can a secretary measure efficiency in evaluating the purpose of weapons or strategy when lives are at stake? I NEW YORK — The United States can get in touch with Hanoi without any great trouble, night or day. C 0 m m u -nication is not as direct as the vhot line” from Washington to Moscow but it is pretty good when one considers the tra- d i t i 0 n a 1 CONSIDINE siveness in the US. and uncommitted world sympathy. The word “will” therefore is being handled like an egg. While it is, the administration continues to be pommeled at home for “disdaining” an honest peace feeler and on the other hand criticized by South Vietnamese President Thieu for presuming to consider itself a principal party involved in any peacemaking. I commend The Pontiac Press for the interest you take in the senior high school students and their activities. You are publishing in your section of senior high school news the better behavior of teen-agers. Other newspapers are placing the emphasis on the activities of the few who ruin it for the majority of our age group. The younger generation should be recognized for some better things, such as the time spent in sports, the work the honor students (jo, collecting money for charities, etc. BARBARA BONNING LAKE ORION HIGH SCHOOL Question aiul Answer How much does it cost each time to dean the new electric self-cieaning oven? C. HALL REPLY Mr. Freshour at Consumers Power tells us it would probably be between 21 and 25 cents each time. He says to call him if you have any other questions. Many a general or admiral might prefer to spend millibns of dollars in preparedness that might seem to others to be wasteful. For if there is a chance to cut down the potential list of casualties in a given operation or piece of strategy, this is considered more important for the future than economizing. ‘ Clark Clifford is a good lawyer, He understands the art of reconciling differences of opinion and making compromises, as happens in out-of-court settlements which are frequently as difficult to handle as cases in court. LAYMAN’S JUIKiMENT Clifford is not the sort of official who will regard admirals or generals as mere champions of an unoopular philos(^ phy. He will reflect their view- Sign posted on a tree in city park; “Help keep your city clean. Have a pigeon for lunch.”.............. The largest thermometer in the world is probably the ten-story instrument on the Allied Chemical Building in New York. ............The average baseball player that makes it in the big leagues lasts five years............... Dept, of Cheers and Jeers; the C’s—^that new saying: "None for the road”; the .I s — Ye.sterday’s saying: “One for the road.” -'^Harold A. Fitzgerald communications problems between elephant and mouse. We are using what is called the “contact” to ask Ho Chi Minh’s people to give us a fill-in on just what is meant by “will” instead of “could.” We have forwarded through the “contact” a query as to just when talks would begin if we stopped bombing. The impression we have gained is that Hanoi would like four to six weeks before it sends forth someone empowered to talk peace. We’ve asked “contact” to say to North Vietnam, “Why not start talks within two or three days after we stop bombing?” This is a counterproposal worthy of America’s stature and it also represents wishful thinking on |jur part. AAA After all, there are 25 North Vietnamese regiments inside South Vietnam today. It took them excruciating weeks to get there. They could not be uprooted and returned in a matter of a few days. But talks of any serious nature would require that they be gone from South Vietnam before the first gavel falls, just as the talks must not be drowned out by our bombing of tlie North. STILI. NOT CONVINCED 'The Johnson administration is still not convinced 4hat the latest flutter of dove’s wings in the North is anything more than a propaganda pitch calculated to elicit further divi- Reviewing Other Editorial Pages Sunken Barge Des Moines l^gistcr When a barge loaded with 2,200,000 pounds of liiguid chlorine sank in the lower Mississippi river in 1961, owners of the barge abandoned the vessel and turned a deaf ear to United States government demands that the barge be removed. The government then employed divers and spent more than 3 million dollars raising the barge and its deadly cargo Taxpayers ''will be relieved to know that the government now is entitled to collect the cost of its salvage operation from the owners. negligence is implicit in the law. The court said that to deny the government this remedy “would permit the result, extraordinary in our jurisprudence, of a wrongdoer shifting responsibility for the consequences of his negligence onto his victim.” post office expenses, especially in view of the increase in the first class mail rate to six cents. A, A A Postmarks . .. Providence Journal The Post Office Department wasn't very responsive in its arguments against the GAO proposal. A post office official made the enlightening comment that “we can see no purpose In elinlinating the name of the post office from the postmark.” We sympathize with t h e General Accounting Office in its attempt to cut down U.S. Post Office cost by eliminating city_ names from postmarks. We are all for reducing Doubt about the government’s legal right to be reimbursed arose because of a curious omission in f e d e r a 1 law. The rivers and harbors act requires owners to mark and remove sunken craft from navigable rivers and authorizes the United States government to do the removing when owners refuse, but the law .says nothing about whb pays for the removal. Verbal Orchids The United States Supreme court has cleared the way for the government to collect by holding that the right to be reimbursed in cases involving Mrs. Thomas Harland of 157 W. Howard; 90th birthday. Mr. and Mrs. Frank A. Schmidt of 65 E. Fairmount; 51st wedding anniversary. Mrs. Daniel Kinney of 39 N. Ardmore; 89th birthday. Mrs. Adah Hunt of 3315 Lexington; 89th birthday. Mrs. Ruth Dunning ■— of 76 Mechanic, Y 82hd birthday. The GAO was thinking t eliminating the town na would break down opposil to eliminating .small post fices. A A A Maybe it would, althoi the Post Office Departm doesn’t think so. At any rate, we have I quently f6und it useful to hi the town indicated. Otherw one would never be sure wh a letter came from. P( marks, town included, hi often c I e a r e d up myster about misdirected mail. Thg AsiocIgtM Artn h antH #Kclu»lwg|y to tho UM (Of rtpu Mtlon o( oil locol nowi prlnlM iwt iwwtpspor at wall aa all , nawa dlipatchaa. tha Pontiac Praia la dallvarad I carriar for 5o canta a araaki aaha jnalW St OaklaiHl, Ganalifc LI Inoaton# AAocomb, Lapaar ai Waahttnaw Countlaa It It SISM 'n Michigan" p.’rhaa'’tSl;-p.i"M‘f'2 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JANUARY 22, 1968 A—7 CliH Farreir« n«w W«tf«rn thrHUr From the Doubledty k. Co. novel; OMyrltht C 1967, by Cliff Ferrell. Distributed by Kin* rMt", Syndicate. U S. Rejected Chance for 3 U.N. Seats CHAPTER 11 WHAT HAS HAPPENED Dan Briscos wsnted to ctcspe hit repuiailon as a lawman who hod sent a deputy Into ambush Intended for Briscoe alone. John Cass, Mayor ot Yellow Lance, advised Briscoe go farther west, to where a friend of his. Bill Royal, might give him a lob. Arriving at the town named Flag, his attention was attracted to an older woman. He found that the, Lavinia Shannon, was In trouble. He saw Alex Emafont at the train tol ... ■ ri . » cu meet Kate Royal, and when he over- W8S Silent for 8 time. She heard poolroom gossip ot antagonism be-lfi-allv tween the two women. Shop Sand, rec , “*“fv flrew 8 long, quiVerlng to have it out with that man,ifor « day'or two. Heading (or Tom Smith. "Maybe,” Dan said. “I still don’t understand why you stopped him. Mr. Driscoll California.’' "What happened?” "I sort of got mixed in by ac cident,” Dan said. “I* don’t UNITED Nations, N.^Y. (^v-j Some high American officials sought to enlarge its U.N. mem-1 instruction to Secretary of A primer on voting strength atjinvolved in the agreement had bership, jsiate Edward R Stettinius, Tru- the United Nations might goj^^^*'^ doubts about support for ]„ asking for the admission ofjnian said: the U S, part of the deal. They' the Ukraine and Byelorussia, I “The decision as to the admis-feared that presentation of a soviet Premier Joseph Stalin or-isioh of these two republics as in-proposal for three U S. votp iginally suggested that the Lith-|itial members in the proposed might result in a rejection of the uanian republic also be given a international organization is of seat, but he never pressed;course a matter for the confer- ‘-klTorexaSty S'all this ii^ young 10 aie. j ognlieP by Brisco* as a professional hrA; gunman, sought to provok* Emmons. Kata Royal aveiied a fight there. That night Emmons sought out Sand and Old Marko In a gambling house. Briscoe's Intervention kept Emmons from clashing with them. i|iy ath. Yes,” she said huAldly. “Oh, yes.” can tell you better than I can. Kate Reyal returned at that moment. "Alex will be all right," sht said. “Not even a “How come you showed up ■*ro*'«* J**'-You probably saved there at that moment? asked. ★ ★ ★ “After the trouble at the de- night. Xi uu'his life, Mr. Driscoll. GOOD NIGHT “I’ll be saying good then,” Dan said. “Are you looking for a riding job?” she asked quickly. “I reckon not,” Dan said. I “I’m moving farther west in the Alex Emmons began to mumble and stir. Dan Briscoe sat him in a dark corner and hov- ,______________j • . ered over him. What he feared ^ was that Shep Sand or Markolf^*"® " !!! might come out of the saloon! and become inquisitive. SS if i ......... A top buggy pulled up. It was fr f h ‘T" "h** ™>orning.” driven by Kate Royal. ^ “W* could offer you . steady supper, and I had believed he 1®**'” *•** remov- had cooled off. After he left, Il‘“« dangling earrings. She became afraid he’d do exactly I'®'’ ***■• what he tried to do. Bill Davis “* ***®®*^ wear had hitched up his buggy, fori“'®** They’re brutally he was to attend his lodge meet-•>®®''y- they’re beautiful, ing tonight. I didn’t have time to explain. I borrowed it and| she added, “My father owns “I’m staying with friends at their home on the edge of town,” she breathed, alighting from the rig. “This is their carriage. We’ll take Alex there.” Dan lifted Alex Emmons onto the seat of the buggy. Kate Royal helped stuff his limp legs into place. She squeezed herself into headed for town. I saw Alex a ranch down in the Springwa- the driver’s seat. ★ ★ ★ “Glad to be of help,” said, standing back, “Oh, but you’ve got to come with me!” she exclaimed. “You'me to it Dan walking toward the Big Chance ter. That’s south of here. Some and saw yoq slug him.” Lf the range is rough country, HER INTENTION no question about thht. We pay She added, “I was going to f®rty a month to a rider who do just what you did. You beat afraid of popping cattle in must. I can’t handle him alone. What if he wakes up?” More pedestrians were ap- “What? You were going slug him? With what?” “Well, not with a fist, to the brush and on the slants. Fifty a month for roundup work. We’re not bothered much with fence scars nor heel-fly ®Vdown there. Some ticks, of reluctantly. He crowded into the'tended to use that on his stub- carriage, with the dazed Alex bom skull.” Emmons between them. Elm-| . mens was groaning and begin- • ^ ‘»®P- ning to fight hi. way back to the'Pt"®** around,” Dan said, surface i He’s coming around already. You might have laid him out The buggy lurched into motion for quite a spell. The barrel of as Kate Royal flicked the whip. As they passed the door of the Rig Chance, Dan glimpsed Shep Sand in the parted swing portals, peering up and down the sidewalk. Kate Royal saw this also. “The fool!” she said, and choked up a trifle. “Who? The one back there?” A TENDER VOICE “No. This one here with uis. Conceit is a terrible thing.” She looked down at Alex Emmons. “And sometimes it’s wonderful too.” She Rooked at Dan. “Alex might not appreciate what you did for him, but I do. I want to thank you, Mr.—Mr.—was the name Driscoll?” “That’s it,’’ Dan said. “Daniel Driscoll.” ‘ ‘ People in these parts usually turned to leave. a six-gun can do a lot of damage.” mer. We mount our men on good horseflesh. Quarterhorse stock. We furnish good grub. Fact is, I do most of the cooking myself. I know you’d like the country.” ★ ★ ★ “Sorry,” Dan said. “It sounds something like this: What' power has three votes in the United Nations? "nie Soviet Union. What nation spurned a chance to have the same? The United States. Does it matter? Not disceraibly. The vote of a tiny member of the United Nations is equal to that of a major power in the General Assembly. This is frequently discussed, pro and con but diplomats here have all but forgotten a deal 23 years ago which could have given the United States multiple votes. The agreement reach«l at Yalta in February 1945 in effect gave the Soviet Union three seats in the projected United Nations and pledged an equal number of votes to the United States—if desired. Part of the pact was put into effect when the Soviet Ukraine and Byeloruissia were invited without opposition to become founding members along with the Soviet Union. The provision for three U S votes was kept secret at the time by President Franklin D. Roosevelt and was never put into effect. No details were ever worked out as to how the United States would cast the three votes. Although the U.N. membership of the Ukraine and Byelorussia was approved without objection, there is no certainty that the San Francisco conference would have endorsed multiple votes for the United States, if such a proposal had been presented. The Ukraine and Byelorussia were proposed as indepeiident countries which had played a leading role in the Allied victory over Germany. Even though in used car whole Yalta agreement On the basis of U.N. voting over the past two decades, it is doubtful whether two extra votes for the United States would have made any difference. A search of the records fails to disclose a single instance in which the votes of the U.N. for it. lence itself to decide. In the loyal Roosevelt sent Stalin a letter execution at the conference of formally asking Whether he the obligation assumed on this. question by President Roosevelt on behalf of the United States government, I direct you to cast the vote of the United States in' ^ favor of the Ukrainian and ’ would support a proposal for voting parity for the United States if it became necessary in order to obtain “wholehearted acceptance by the Congress and,_______ __________ ____ Ukraine, and B y e 1 o r u s s 1 a people of the United States of White Russian republics as ini-changed the outcome of a U.N.jour participation in the worldjtial members of the internation-decision. 'organization." |al organization.” ★ W ★ j following day, according! The letter made no reference In the first years of the United to James F. Byrnes, presiden-jto the agreement for three U S. Nations, the presence of the two tial assistant and later secre-'votes. There has never been a Soviet republics did give the tary of State Byrnes, Stalin ad- formal move since then to im- Kremlin some moral support vised Roosevelt that he agreed plement the agreement, because they were the main f^jght gj^o have three votes and part of the Soviet bloc, which added: “If it is necessary 1------------------------------ consisted only of them and Po-iam prepared, officially to sup-land. Their presence lost some port this proposal.” of its significance when the So-| Viet bloc expanded to 10 mem- ^^^^^ the r e t u r n to . 'Washington, by B y r n e s’ ac- The last important post held count, the President decided not by a representative ot these re- to ask the founding meeting at VUUE at ■ ■ . Pilot Completes 32-Year Career CHICAGO (API — Capt. Joe publics was in 1948-49 when the san Francisco to comply with career and 32 years with Ameri-Ukraine held one of the nonper- part of the agreement. He can Airlines Sunday with a cere-manent seats on the Security {jjrected that the whole subject mony at O’Hare International ^ ' ' Airport Council. j be kept secret* Since then the Soviet bloc has | In the end President Harry S been represented on the council,Truman had to act on the Yalta by other Eastern European. agreement because Roosevelt countries which—although vot- died just before the San Fran- like a cowpuncher’s dream of in‘‘®P®"d®n®® may have “Better a broken head than a the ranch *in the sky. But I’m questioned by many coun ■ ........... ' •' tnoc thoro uiqc an emotioual grave,” she said. “Well, here pulling out tomorrow.” we are, Mr. Driscoll.” | «i can’t bjame you,” she said She had swung the buggy intoitiredly. the driveway of a modest dwell- He said again, “I’m sorry. I’ll ing. Windows were lighted. Alex'say good night now.” Emmons’ eyes were opened, the pupils- rolling weakly, oan alighted. I ^tie extended a hand. “Good . . . 'night, Mr. Df-iscoll. And thanks The door was opened by a ^^at you did. I’U al- tries, there was factor in their favor. ing with the bloc—at least appeared to be more independent of Moscow. The bloc itself seemed to have made the distinction in presenting its candidates for the Security Council and other U.N. posts. Rarely has any country referred publicly to the fact that the Ukraine and Byelorussia may not be independent countries in the usually accepted sense. The Ukraine, with a population of 45 million, is larger than most U.N. members, ,and Byelgrussia has a population of 8% million. There are other So viet republics even larger, but the Soviet Union has never cico conference. In a letter , of 60.' Anderson said as he draped his arms around four stewardesses for the benefit of plioto-graphers: “1 sure don’t feel like (Advertleement) (AdvertlsemenI) WHY DO NEARLY ALL USERS OF O-JIB-WA PRAISE IT SO HIGHLY? FOR ONE REASON ONLY —lECAUSE IT HELPED THEM ■ ' ............ So If yoo bovo booo o comltfoof loeor lo your botflo for bottor booltb, ood oro dUoppoiiifdd. dii-ceoragod aad diifoefod oftor frylay vorlooi Modicinos, troofmoRti . Md polo hlllioq drag*' wltbeol good rotolfs, try fooiood O-JII-WA UTTERS, fb# powerful bet lofo Miedicioe nado oofiroly from God’t berbt. FEATURED AT ALL DRUG STORES YOUR CENTER lUTQBIIHIi. MOTORS We give you a written 100% guarantee on the used car you buy from Autobahn. It covers every major mechanical part in the car. Come in and check our selection now. Volkswagen or domestic, your satisfaction is assured. YOUR CENTER AUTOBAHN MOTORS We’re so nice to come back to TELEGRAPH ROAD just north of Square Lake Road 338-4531 Try o jib-wa bitters comely young matron. “Good heavens!” she exclaimed. “Where did you go, Kathleen? What happened?” “Nothing too serious, Ann,” Kate Royal said. “Alex got punched in the jaw. This is his day to lose all the fights.” Ann Davis’s husband came hurrying. Dan handed his share of the burden over to him, and don’t want to get involved in-in—” She didn't finish it letting it hang in the air. When Dan didn’t help her out by asking what she meant, she , j, ..Yn„VF spoke again ‘‘Vou must have seen what happened at the depot this afternoon. You knew] “Name is Dan Driscoll,’ Alex was going to that saloon said. “I’m just stopping “Wait!” Kate Royal cried. "Please!”, ‘NEW AROUND HERE’ Ed Davis introduced himself new around ways— The earrings she had been holding slipped from her hand and rolled on the carpet at Dan’s feet. Instinctively, they both stooped to retrieve them. Their heads collided. “My fault,” Dan said. “I hope you aren’t hurt.” “Not at all,” she said. Dan JookM down. “The earrings?” he asked. “Never mind,” she said. “I’ll find the other one later. I have one.” “Good night,’’ Dan said. “Good night, Mr. and Mrs. jDavis. It's been a real pleas-Dan ure.’’ over^ (To Be Continued Tomorrow) Qtmew kAIAWn r-irbC»X m I Al ITV ^ ALWAYS FIRST QUALITY Special Buy! 4 pc. place setting of 'Classic White' English ironstone Whot an attractivO addition to your dining enjoymentl Doep flutgd design in dazzling while-to white it looks like costly china! Chip-resistant and completely dishwasher safe. Tra-.ditiahoi elegonf styling by J. & G. Meaken Ltd. 4 pc. place setting includes 1 ea.: dinner plofe, cup, saucer, fruif/dessert bowl. Buy a few sets for you and a friend! ^1 CHARQCIT! Sugar bowl w/lid ....... $2 Coffee mug ... .> .... .. 76o Round vegetable dish .. . $2 V 7" salad plota •. 50o 12" platter 2.50 ....... 75c Tureen w/lid $6 USE YOUR PENNEY CHARGE enneuf lAfAN/C CIDOT m I Al ITV * ALWAYS FIRST QUALITY GADGETS GAIORE! Penney’s for fabulous housewaro buys! YOUR CHOICE... Decorative wastebasket Rubber bath mot Treat your horn* and yourself to th* handiest household gadgeto—at Pen-nay's incredibly low price of 88c eachl So many practical ideas for your kitchen, laundry, closets, both—and outdoors, tool Dish drainer Ovhr-the-door steel hunger PENNEYS MIRACLE MILE STORE HOURS 9:30 A.M. TO 9 P.M. CHARGEITI dilljilU A—8 THE PONTIAC PllESS. MONDAY, JANUARY 22, 1968 f#"' ■ ■ 3.97 >• V( Shop evenings ot Hudson's Pontiac, Northland, Eastldnd, Westland open till 9 p.m. Monday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday; Downtown Detroit open till 8:30 pan. Monday and Wednesday ’7 L'.-’ v'r Marianne Strengell, former head of the weaving department at Cranbrook Academy of Art, returns for a one-woman show of black and white photographs. Titled, “Nature Through a Weaver’s Eye,” the show opens Tuesday and stays through Feb. 4. An invitational preview was held Sunday evening. Cochairmen of the event were two former PotiNtc Pr«« Ptwio by Rail WInMr students of Miss Strengell’s, Mrs. H. J. Linn, Kirkway Drive (left) and Mrs. Harlan Quinn (not pictured). Miss Strengell (right) also designed the rugs seen in the photograph. The galleries are open every day except Monday, from 1-5 p.m. There is an admission charge. Dad Ignores His Children Communication Gap Evidenced By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: Every day my husband picks up your column and says, "Well, let’s see what Abby has to say to those nutty people^ who write to a news-! paper psychiatrist!’’! H^would never admlfl tlwt Hll could use somef help. My husband is a goodf provider and generally! a good husband, but he| is a very poor father | to our six children, who* range from three to 12. ABBY He never pays them the slightest attention unless it’s to punish them. munlcation between them. Why can’t you tell your husband these things? You seem to be an intelligent woman and your complaints make sense. If you aren’t able to get through to him, find someone who can. Your husband needs desperately to get this Important mes- * * ★ * When a male friend comes over here, the children compete for his attention and the man can’t get the little ones off his lap. I am worried about how this will affect the children’s lives. Will my girls be so hungry for male affection and approval that they’ll be pregnant at 15? And will my sons grow up being Mamma’s boys? What can I do before it's too late? Or am I being silly? ' WORRIED DEAR WORRIED: It's sad that a couple who have spent more than a dozen years together have so little com- Dear Abby: It disgusts me to read the letters in your <|oIumn that begin, “Wl^ile straightening my daughter’s room I came across one of her letters, or her diary, and after reading it, I was horrified. Where have I failed?’’ Perhaps, these mothers should begin by looking at their own code of ethics. It is important to children, especially teenagers, to feel that they are in- ’Calendar TODAY Parliamentary Club to Meet Wednesday Mrs. Alfred Rothweiler as leader and Mrs. Ervin Christie as sponsor will lead Wednesday’^ meeting of the Parliamentary Study Club at 1:30 p.m. in First Federal Savings of Oakland. The Demonstration Regular meeting will embrace: Question of Privilege; To Make a Special Order; To Postpone Indefinitely; The Withdrawal of a Motion; Division of a Question; Points of Order. Order of Eastern Star, chapter No. 228, 8 p.m., Pontiac Masonic Temple on East Lawrence Street. Special meeting. TUESDAY Pontiac General Hospital Auxiliary, 12:45 p.m. First Federal Sav-* ings of Oakland. Dr. Nicholas Cherup, director of hospital’s Physical Medicine department, will speak. YMCA. Bridge Club, 7:30 p.m. All bridge players may attend. Cranbrook Music Guild, 8:30 p.m., Cranbrook House. “'The Singing Statesmen’’ men’s glee club from Michigan State University with Alan Poland as director. Lawful Abortions Pass 100 Mark DENVER, Colo. — Abortions were performed on 120 women under Colorado’s liberalized abortion law during the eight months it was in effect in 1967, the Colorado Health Department said Friday. The law, signed April 25 by Gov. John A. Ix>ve, increased the grounds on which abortions may be performed if authorized by doctors. The old law permitted abortions only if tbe life of the mother was endangered. * ★ ★ The Health Department said 50 of the abortions under the new law were authorized for psychiatric reasons, 22 be-cau.se of physical danger to the mother or child, nine because the woman was a rape victim and 37 listed as therapeutic abortions for which no other reason was gjven. „ Two patients were termed „ suicide risks. OUT STA’TE Twenty-nine, or 24 per cent of the wotnto, ’ were from out of state. California led^e out-of-state list with nine. ’Three were from Illinois, two each were from New York, Wisconsin and Kansas, and one each from Kentucky, New Jersey, Florida, Idaho, Louisiana, Michigan, Iowa, Nebraska, North Carolina, Ohio and Pennsylvania. The youngest patie^ was 12 and the AP Wlrt|Hi«l« Patrick Lyndon Nugent shows his grandfather, President Johnson, how easy it is to reach out and grab a shoe and a boot during a recent visit to the LBJ Ranch in Texas. “Little Lyn" is the 7-month-old son of the Johnsons’ younger daughter, Luci. Photo toas released by the White House Saturday. ^ / oldest was 48. There Were 47 under 20 b«v years 25 between 20 and 34, 18 between 25 and 29, and 30 who were 30 or over. * * W All but three of the operations were performed in Denver hospitals. One abortion was reported In Greeley, Colorado Springs and Boulder. Prize Winner Tells Solution to a Problem By ELIZABETH L. POST The following has been chosen $s the prizsHVlnning letter for this week. A copy of Emily Post’s Etiquette has been sent to Mrs. Miller of Pittsburgh, Pa. Dear Mrs. Post: Here is our way of handling what can be a very great irritant to some people: the question of whether a wedding gift arrived or not. * ★ ★ Our daughter was at college, our fu- ture son-in-law came from Texas, and their gifts were sent to my home. ’Therefore, as each gift arrived we decided to send cards, printed as follows: “This is to assure you the safe arrival of your thoughtful gift. ★ ★ ★ Mary and John will express their gratitude after they have received it from my custody.’’ * ★ ★ We received many grateful comments on our thoughtfulness so we felt it was worth the effort. Our daughter, graduated, married and settled into their new home before she felt impelled to write her “thank-yous,” so that the notes, when they came, were long, newsy and personalized instead of the normai brief thank-you I generaliy receive. * A- ★ Is this ndt a new approach that modem living might adopt? Or is it in poor taste?—Edith Miller A A * Karin M. Walstrom and David Bryant Flint were married Saturday in Harbor Springs. Their parents are the Ward H. Walstroms of Harbor Springs and the Edgar B. Flints of West Long Lake Road. MRS. DAVID BRYANT FLINT Karin Walstrom, David Flint Exchange Vows on Saturday Karin M. Walstrom of Harbor Springs became the bride of David Bryant Flint, West Long Lake Road, Saturday afternoon. A reception at Birchwood Farm Lodge followed tbe ceremony in the First Presbyterian Church of Harbor Springs. AAA Dear Mrs. Miller: My only possible criticism of your plan would be that it might afford the bride an excuse to wait too long to write her thank-yous. Note or no note, this should be done before the wedding has faded from memory. A A A If the bride is diligent about writing as soon as possible after the honeymoon, I think your system has great merit. “WAITRESS’ Dear Mrs. Post: My husband and I eat in a restaurant frequently. On several occasions he tried to get the attention of the waitress but could not, so he called to her, “Waitress.” I told him that he should say, “Miss.” AAA An ivory satin gown designed with a high rise waiSt and long lace sleeves was worn by the bride. The same Alen-con lace formed an inverted panel in the A-line skirt and full train. BONNET A puritan bonnet of matching satin and lace held her cathedral length veil. She carried white orchids and tropical leaves. AAA Maid of honor was the bridegroom’s sister, Marilyn A. Flint. ’Their parents are the Edgar B. Flints of West Long Lake Road. AAA Bridesmaids were Mrs. David S. Cooper, Mrs. H. Howard Flint II, Mrs. William Noack of Indianapolis, Ind. and Susan Ridings, Grand Rapids. dividuals with privacy and rights of their own. Having a mother who comes snooping around reading personal mail and examining private possessions will surely force the child to become deceptive and secretive and cmstantly on the defensive, rather than to feel free to dl-cuss personal problems and share private experiences with her mother. AAA If a mother feels it is necessary for her to know everything that happens in her child’s life, she should Wach the child early to trust her and come to her and share her feelings openly. AAA This way the mother can express feelings of her own, and perhaps point the child in the right direction without promoting the kind of mistrust and tension that often develops between mother and daughter if the daughter finds she has no privacy. TTje more I read about such mothers, the more I appreciate my own. AAA Troubled? Write to Abby, In care of The Pontiac Press, Dept. E-600, P.O. Box 9, Pontiac, Mich. 48956. For a personal reply, enclose a stamped, self-addressed envelope. I think “Waitress” sounds belittling and rude. My husband maintains it is correct. What do you say?—Eva A A A Dear Eva: “Waitress” is an honorable term, and not in any way belittling. However, I prefer to summon a waitress by saying “Miss” which does somehow sound a bit more respectful than simply “W^tress.” The Rodney G. Browns of Bloomfield Hills announce the engagement and June wedding of their daughter, Margaret, to Charles J. Barnhart. He is the son of the Charles B. Barnhitrts of Rockville, Md. Miss Brown is a graduate of Marietta College, Marietta, Ohio and her fiance is a graduate student at the University of Rochester, Rochester, N.Y. H. Howard Flint II was best man for his brother. David T. Fischer, Bruce Knight, Robert M. Fletcher of Wood-side, Calif., and Frederick W. and Ward H. Walstrom Jr., the bride's brothers, were ushers. A A A ' Parents of the bride are Mr, and Mrs. Ward H. Walstrom of Harbor Spring. ★ ★ A After a honeymoon in the Bahamas, the young couple will live in Bloomfield Hills. YOU SAVE MORE C&v0umjc> AT THE FLOOR SHOP 4’x6’ WALL BOARD Scored Panel ACOUSTICAL STYRAFOAM CEIUNG TILE TKC 12”x12” TILE Special THIS WEEK ONLY! MIKA COUNTER TOPPING 4'x8' Sheets ARMSTRONG CORLON Wood Patterns and White with Gold Flocks • Greaieproof • Stain Retitlont • Alcohol Proof 1/t Genuine MOSAIC TILE 55 Blu* Csq. Ft. Groan Pink Across from HUDSON'S rmiLia.nHL.KERo. pQNTIAC MALL Phone 334-5216 FRONT DOOR PARKING Open Mon., Thurt., Fri. Tuo«.,Wod. 9 to 9 Sot. 9 to 6 THE PONTIAC IHIESS, MONDAY. JANUARY 22, 1968 ALL PERMANENTS ^95 (j ^95 Jim IIIVIIEIt Includes All This: 1 — Now I^iislre Sliampoo 2 — Klatlorins Hair Cut 3 —I.anoliii N'oiitralizing 4 —Smart Sivio Sotting NO Al’I'OINTMKNT .\ki:kssakv HOLLYWOOD BEALTY Open Mornings at 8 A.M. 78 N. Saginaw Ovor Ba/.lov Mkt. 338-7660 LET’S GET ACQUAINTED! Are You Looking for a Beauty Salon That Combines Fashion Know-How and Economy? CONSIDER US We Specialize In Giving the Latest Hairstyles a Distinctive Personality All Their Own CALL 623-1089 5217 DIXIE HWY. DRAYTON PLAINS Jcotiei ■Mai/o FmIroiu JNeumode NEUMODE’S popular and beautiful dress sheer available in a wide range of lovely colors. MIRACLE NO-BlND TOPS. Reinforced heels & toes. LAST WEEK OF SALEI 'DEPENDABLES'walking sheer seamless. NO-BIND TOPS. Toe & heel reinforcements. „ 2 pairs $1.50 / / ^ JNeumode J{osier^ Shops 82 N. Saginaw St. BEAUTY SALON 2nd Floor 682-4940 Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Gulda Sr. of Elizabeth fa.ke Road announce the engagement of their daughter, Pamela Lynn, to David Vernon Adams. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Jack Adams of Goldner Street. A late October wedding is planned by Liry da Diane Christie arid Michael N, Davis/The bride elect is daughter of Mr. /and Mrs, James Chyistie of St. Jude Drive. Her fiance is the'son of Mr, and Mrs. William G. Davis of Beacham Street. Mr. and Mrs. Leonard t Smith of Ontario, Calif.,' announce the' engagement of their daughter. Melody Sue Newhouse to Pvt. Norman L. Tope) Jr., USA. Pvt. Tope, sort of Mr. and Mrs. Calvin-'^ Pauloski of Utica, is currently serving in Vietnam. Mr. and Mrs. Jack D. McClusky of Greemvood Street, Avo.n Township announce the engagement and June icedding of their daughter, Linda Aon. to William F. Jack-sou. He is the son of Mr. ami Mrs. William H. Jackson of' Green field. Ten II. Mr. and Mrs. Carl E. Johnston of Highland announce the engagement of their daughter, Barbara Anne, to Pfc. Michael D. Adkins, USA. The son of Mr. and Mrs^ William Adkins of Milford, he is currently stationed in Vietnam. Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Mdrkle of Warren announce the betrothal and June wedding of their daughter, Janice Marie, to Russell L. Hickson. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Hickson of Mary Day Street. Mr. and Mrs. Noel C. Keener of Davisburg Road; Springfield Township announce the betrothal and June wedding of their daughter, Mary Jean, to Jay Anthony Mayo. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. John S. Mayo of Pontiff Street. The engagement of their daughter, Pamela Ann, to W., Robert Knapp is announced by Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Trainer Jr. of Burgess Court, White Lake Township. Miss Trainer and her fiance, son of the William Knapps of Milford, are planning late June vows. A December wedding is planned by Ardythe Jeanne Gallant and Pfc. Eldon Coburn Young Jr., USA. The bride elect, a student at Andrews University in Berrien Springs, is the daughter of the William D. Gallants of Lakevieio Drive, White Lake Township. Her fiance is the son of the senior Eldon Youngs of Corpimi. Christi, Tex. Life in a Kibbutz' Program Topic Unhappy Divorced Man Gives Words of Advice Life in a kibbutz in Israel carpeting to washer described for the members of ihi.^ letter came into The Press Beta Theta Vhiljf « fitting follow-up to the .senes recently completed Beta chapter Sorority recently at their meet- ..... ing in the Pioneer Drive home!"" of Mrs. Forest White. Mrs. Ruth afib dryer. Naturally we became deep in debt but I didn’t care because she was worth it. I should have taken a part time job to help I am in the process of being I'lJL 1 didn’t want instead of displaying pleasure at being home, I would just mope around and be restless and grouchy much of the time. At times I would snap at my wife over nothing. I seemed to take out all my frustration Scribner was the guest speaker. --- -- ^------------o w ★ ★ divorced. For a long time I to be away from home any long-on her when I should have treat- Mrs. Prudy Purgaric served couldn’t understand why. ft cr than necessary. ed her with love and affection, as cohostess. bothered me so badly I had to AMBITIONS [ ™. • * r - Gourmet Wares wanted to make somthmg children, a comfortable home self;-I am lonely, heart-brok-^^ T . , Tt ■ I *u- ^ ^ l^urn- and happiness. She didn’t care en and deeply ashamed of my w * * * New on Market i.?.!,!1'!!! '"^ desire to better my station about all those modern conven- former behavior. ^ave marital problemsf She would have gladly worked a little harder if we could only have taken a vacation for a week or two each year, gone out to dinner occasionally or even a drive in the country with our children. Now I realize more fully what my wife really need(^ and wanted of me but it may be too late. Those I love now re- And when you come home t(», an extra fine meal, just take a little time out to let her knoW how much you enjoyed it, and top it off with a kiss. ★ * ★ A loving wife is worth far more than all the money .or material possessions in m« world. Don’t spoil her, just sho\^ letter is that another young cou-in life; to make her proud of iences. pie might benefit from my ex- me, and to provide my family; A new gourmet cookware sh periciice. vvith everything they could ever' consists of combination sauce; * w ★ pot and casserole, a crepe su- My wife and I married young ★ * w zette pan a chafing dish and a but we were both very much in| I soon became discontented cheese fondue pot. love. I loved her so very muchlwith my job. I became de- * * * that I suddenly became ob-| pressed and discouraged be- The set al.sn includes a stain- sessed with giving her everyjcause I felt I was getting no- less steel warming stand unit comfort and convenience pos- where. with an alcohol burner and a sible. I bought a new home and j Naturally, I carried my bad stainless steel trav. Colors Set for Fall, 1968 If you think 1967 zipped by too filled it with the best of every- disposition home with me and'^®®^’ Boys’ and Young Men’s Apparel Manufacturers Association they’re already up to fall of 1968! BURTg DRESS SHOES, CASUALS A new season ... A new you with one of our specially priced permanent waves R*9 $15 ■ PERMANENT with thompeo and lat Rag. $20 PERMANENT with thompoo and lat Rag. $25 \ PERAAANENT • with ihampoo Olid lot USE YOUR CHARGE 73.1 966 11«« save npito *5 a pair in our twice-a-year clearance TAne to samp up sntivg.s on Ihis-sro.son colors and styles for all occa.sions, vppered in leather, snede, patent. Choose pumps, slings, straps, ties, all heel heights. Harry! Not erery style lejl in every size! Pontiac Mall HIE PONTIAC MALL 0 but it taught me a lesson. It has shown me how much a woman has to do and how hard Here’s what they say about they have it. the 1968 fashion colors — earthy • * * * browns, burnished golds, moun-| In summation, I would like tain greens, woodland russets. ;to advise the young man to NFW FXPKRiFNrFS [ professional Nhw fcXPivKlhNLKh help (^,3^ available td, Since my wife left I have you through a marriage coun-had the children with me for selor or .social worker. They a week or two on occasions. Fare glad to be of service td cared for them single-handedly,!you and you can greatly bene^ performing all the duties I had I fit as I have from their train* rarely lifted a finger to help| ing, skill end experience, with in the past — cooking, feed-j * * ★ ; ing, laundering, changing and' Remember, you can’t buy bathing fhe children, etc. |love. You have to earn it and Believe me, this wasn’t easyiRETURN it. JRA Drayton Plains Read the Labels * ★ ★ The rea.sons for these colors; boys and young men will wear the country look next fall. They’ll wear it in the city, for Several federal laws control show appreciation for what the!the labels on food and other wife and mother does and has done for him. Be considerate and kin d. Bring her flowers now and then rrts, at school, for leisure, (even one helps to put the mes 1 presumably in the country, sage across) .She will inv» v™ too. for it. consumer products shipped across state lines. So read the labels, to know the differences among similar products. Reading helps you get exactly what She will love you|you want and it may save you money. S OWE PRldE flWLV! NONE HIGHER ALL 100% HUMAN HAIR WIGS Compare at $125.00 VF.RY LARGE SELECTION OF ALL SHADES World’! E'inr«t Human Hair Keg. $49.00 WIGLETS ^15 HUMAN HAIR FALLS *49 Wonderful color range! Yon’ve »rrn Ihrm al thrice the price for ihU fine rtualilr. SPECIAL on PERMANENTS Custom Cold Wave Phone FE 5-9257 • Beauty Salon iqS!i Complete A'o Appointment JVecestPry 11 N. SA(«INA\B^-t Between. Lawrence and Pike Si. A'. lit Canadian Trip Follows Exchange of Nuptials ^ Newlyweds, the Michael D. ding trip to Canada, foUowlng an % ■ Corcorans (nee Ruth L. Pom- exchange of vows Saturday in * fret,) have departed for a wed-^^- Catholic Church, De- I —.................■ trnit. . ■ ■ ★ ★ * For the late morning Ceremony, the daughter of Mrs. Melvin Jones of Jefferson Street and the late Leonard Pomfret wore a,traditionally styled gown of organza and Chantilly lace. * ★ ★ To complement her attire she wore a matching lace head-piece frosted with pearls crowning a shoulder length bouffant veil. Rosebuds and baby carnations made up the bridal bouquet. Honor attendants for the wed^ ding wer§ Mrs. John LaBlance and William Martin. Acting as bridesmaids were Mrs. Richard Garnett, Mrs. Jo- IMPROVE YOUR OWN HEARING AID NOW—for most Hearing Aid maHes and models! - NEW LOW-COST- ACOUSTIC MODIFIER* with exclusive sound channel. SHARPENS YOUR WORD-UNDERSTANDING •NATtMMIO. DMSMf i -p.' -ijai MRS. M. CORCORAN Student Wins Design Prize Eric Renner, candidate for an seph Leal and Rita Pomfret. |MFA degree in design at Cran-Richard Caulfield, David Cetic,brook Academy of Art, has been and Richard Tweedle assisted awarded a $600 purchase prize the groom. ;in the competition sponsored by * w (the International Council of So- A reception at Cambridge Hall cieties of Industrial Design and followed the vows. organzied by Christian Holzapfel Pontiac Mali Optical S Haaring Aid Oentar Th« Pontiac Mall V Phono 682-1113 i The bridegroom is the son of furniture manufactur-'^^rthern Michigan honeymoon 'HIK PON' II.U IM{i:.SS. .lA.M AHV -JJ, liRiS Janet Stafne RapeatsVows in Ceremony Gloria Del I.p*«ili*n ih*if. full width vago^We criaper, built-in egg atoroge, butter beoper, magnetic door gaaboto. • WhitaO Copper* AveuMfe. 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Dr. Loichtmon Is among the more than 400,000 Evelyn Wood Reading Dynamics Institute graduates who have increased,,, their reading efficiency three times or better. Other graduates include members of th* Whit* House staff under th* late President Kennedy, members of Congress, business executives, educators, doctors, lawyers, high school and college students and housewives. Dr. Leichtman read 349 words a minute prior to enrolling in th* course. He now reads better than 1370 words a minute with increased comprehension. Evelyn Wood Reading Dynamics Institute guarantees to increase your reading efficiency three times with equal or better comprebension or tuition will be refunded. 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FE 3-7061 Fretter’s Southfield on Telegraph Road Fretter’s Oakland 411 W. 14 Mile Road Just South of 12 Mile Rd, Opposite Oakland Mall 685-5300 Opan Dally II ta l-SaMlay II to 1 THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY. JANUAKV 22. 19G8 B-5 Wheels of His Own S"Z‘"rLS,l‘” ■ »«l -nanv u, , [""“IK-al r«»arch b.c»ui« tlieir pjil !h physical structure, bones, mus- . the rescue by cles, brain and nervous system building a rear carriage for Eld with her son’s Erector set. * ★ ★ Ed is a 6ayear-oId resident of the Fehl household In suburban Qeveland Heights, and last fall he seemed to be slowing down -even for a turtle. Mrs. Fehl, a violinist with the Cleveland Philharmonic, took Ed to a veterinarian and got bad news: a hernia. Ed was losing appetite and was dragging his rear quarters along wherever he went. are similar to man’s." Black suid tht apes could be raised on 5,000 square miles of government-owned land in the Florida Everglades. COLUMBUS, (Miio (AP) - A Jersey cow and a pony named Snowball were guests Sunday at a downtown hotel. The unnamed cow had a stethoscope pushed against her side while Dr. R.B. Heath talked about the "diagnosis of abdomi- „ .. nal disorders in dairy cattle." “There wasn’t anything he * * * (the yet) could do, so 1 got somej Snowball went to sleep as Dr. whwl and other part from my Albert A. Gabel discussed “eq-sons set and taped ujne anethesia” during the them to Eds back end,” she|opening day of the 84th annual meeting of the Ohlo^Y*^®*'^®*^ Dove Part)^« Also Expected to Get OK California to Certify Wallace Today SACRAMENTO, Calif. (UPI) ■ Officially, former Alabama Gov. George C. Waljace earns a place on the California ballot today, and so probably does the dovich Peace and party. Secretary of State Frank M. Jordan is expected to announce the Wallace’s American Independent party and the Peace and Freedom party Have collected enough signatures to qualify. Each needed 66,059. The road ahead looks unclear. Both parties now must hold a said. IMPROVING "Ha learned how to use the wheels right away, and now he pulls himself all over the kitchen. "He seems to be getting stronger now,’* Mrs. Fehl added. "And the hernia seems to be receding.” Medical Association. SOUPED-UP TURTLE - What do you do when your 6-year-old pet turtle has a hernia? Mr. and Mrs. Charles Fehl of Cleveland Heights, Ohio, found that their turtle, Ed, was really dragging last fall, and a veterinarian advised them that their pet was un- AP Wirophol* able to use his hind legs properly because of a herina. So Mrs. Fehl, a violinist with the Erie Symphony and Cleveland Philharmonic, got busy with her son’s Erector set and put wheels on Ed. Though a strange quirk in thel state law, all persons who registered for the two parties to allow them on the ballot now could switch back to their for-j Freedom jmer parties in time to vote inj the June 4 primary. The law only requires the party have enough registrants to qualify in January. There’s no need for a definite number again until January 1970 — [ust before the next election. To get on the ballot, Wallace campaigned throughout vote-heavy California and concen-state convention — there’s no|tr3(g(j particular on the pop-need for a primary election forLjous southern part of the state, either party to pick a slatej por two months, Wallace of party electors. California has moved around the state selling 0 electoral college votes. g^y|g jjj Southern Coh- The American Independent i servatism — a platform of mili-I party already has its candidate, tant antifederalism, a denuncia-I George C. Wallace, if he chooses'i'on of intellectuals in govern-jto enter the November presi-ment and a call for "law and jdential elections. order.” ! The Peace and Freedom par-^ Despite all his efforts, which ! ty has not selected a nominee. i have been tiring even for a man with Wallace's obvious energy, Wallace says he still is not sure he will become a candidate for president. (ASvcrllMmMl) Wake Up Your PERISTALSIS And Be Your SMILING BEST Peristalsis is the mudieular action of your digestive system. When peristaltic action slows down, waste materials can build up In the lower tract. You can become Irregular, vmcomfortable. stuffed. The unique laxative formula of today's Carter’s Pills gives effective. temporary relief of the Irregularity by activating the slowed-down muscles of the lower tract and stimulating peristalsis. So If you’re sluggish due to Irregularity. take Carter’s Pills to wake up your perlstsdsls and you’ll bounce back to your smiling best Millions of satisfied users take Carter's Pills for effective temporary relief of irregularity. Vriiy don’t you. 48*. ALLEN, Ky. (AP) — A small brown dog which wandered from Detroit to this eastern Kentudty community Is going by plana the rrat of the way to Louisiana to Join his owners. Mr. and Mrs. Eddie McFadden planned to pick up Corky today for their first reunion since they | left him In Detroit two years, ago and moved back to Shreve-' port, La. I ★ ★ ★ I Corky showed up In Allen, apparently starving, a few weeks ago and took up with a group of boys sleigh riding. One of them, Byron Hamilton, 14, took him home. A tag on Corky’s neck gave the McFadden’s address as Detroit. 'They were finally located In Shreveport after a series of telephone calls by the Hamilton family, but complications in shipping freight from eastern Kentucky prohibited shipment of animals. ★ ★ ★ Shreveport television station KSLA heard about the problem and arranged to fly the Mc-Faddens to Kentucky in the stations’ twin-engine plane. ARCADIA, Calif. (AP) - Thei state and Los Angeles County Arboretum awaits your bid for 100 peacocks. Or one, for that matter. The arboretum has 300, which is 100 too many. The 100 will be sold to the highest bidders after bidding closes Feb. 5. No minimum number, no minimum price. Officials suggest a bidder be guided by what a peacock is worth to him. NEW YORK (AP) - Philanthropist William Black . has urged the federal government to raise anthropoid apes for use in heart transplantation research. Black, who donated $5 million to Columbia University for a medical research building, said Sunday: “Anthropoid apes—not Riof-Climafe Defection Will Top Sessions WASHINGTON (AP) -- The Bffective use of police Intelligence to identify and keep ^ack )f the potential “leadership of iriolence" In big-city slums will ■eceive high priority at a series )f conferences sponsored by the Justice Department for police :hiefs of 125 communities. The emphasis on intelligence-;athering was placed by Atty. 3en. Ramsey Clark at a Satur-lay news conference at which le expressed the view riots can >e prevented by “the man in the niddle’’—the police. * ★ A aark said the key to keeping he lid on potentially explosive ituations in Is a "balance be-ween overacting and underaot-ng.’* And he aiild police chiefs id has conferred with personal-y realize that as well as prepar-Bg' for the worst they must '(ace tip to the facts of anger, letr^ and frustration in the cites" and play a major role in 'eliminating the conditions in lie city ghettos." lEAT MAN CITED „"(jne policeman on the beat iho loses his temper," he said, an undo all that police depart-lents accomplish in their ef-)rts to Improve community re-itlons. “If a look at the new Chevy II isn’t enough to change your mind about compacts,'a ride in one almost surely will.” “Motor Trend, November ’67 driver’s delight” “Car Life, October ’67 “The ’68 Chevy II has grown an inch in wheelbase and six inches overall, but it’s grown a mile in style, comfort, quality and performance.” “Car and Driver, December *67 .y ^'Aha. This might be the sleeper of the year.” “Hot Rod Magazine, October ’67 Chevy n Nova Coupe One more nice thing: the price $ 2,284 Manufar.lurer’a audgRalRcl retail price for alandard Six Chevy U Nove Coupe ahown above imdudea Federal Exciaa Tax. tiisgealed dealer delivery and han-dling chargea. Model ahown above equippad at additional coat with Ciialnm Exterior $84.30, White Walla $31.3.1, Wheel Covera Ul.lO. Transportation chargea. acceasortea, optional equipment, stat. and local taxes additional. Car enthusiast magazines keep saying a lot of nice things about the all-new Chevy n Nova. And why not? At last there’s an economy car that doesn’t look or act like one. Besides being a whole lot sportier, it offers a smobthly balanced Six and a 307-cubic-inch standard V8 that runs beautifully on i*egular fuel. See for yourself what all the shouting's about. Road test a Nova now. Chevyn NOVA BE SMART. BE SURE. BUY NOW AT YOUR CHEVROLET DEALER’S. Authorixwd Chavrolaf Deola# in FonHoc MATTHEWS-HARGREAVES, INC. 131 OakUntf Av«. 335-4161 Clarksfon TOM RADEMACHER CHEVRQLET-OLDS, INC. 6751 DIxia Hwy. 625-5071 Loka Orion AL HANOUTEa INC. 209 N. Sark llvA 192-2411 Oxford HOMER MIGHT MOTORS, INC. 160 S. Waakingtan 621-2521 Rockostor BILL FOX CHEVROLET, INC. 755 S. Rockasiar 651-7000 B—6 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MOXDAV. JANUARY^ 2-^ 19(i8 Israel Freeing Last of Egyptian POWs EnENDED OPEN HOUSE CELEBRATION BY POPULAR DEMAND 4 MORE DAYS ATUT PRISON CAMP, Israel (AP) — Several hundred Eg\ p-tian prisoners, clad in thick army uniforms but shivering in Icy rain, lined up in this bleak, windswept camp in central Israel Sunday night for their last roll call before freedom. They stood quietly in rows as Israeli guards counted them onto 19 buses which drove them through the night to the Suez Canal 275 miles away, across the sands where they were captured by Israeli forces in the June war. Some grinned at the thought of home. Some held hands. Some were bewildered. Others were sullen. They were almost the last of the Arab prisoners held in Israel. Since Jan. 12. about 4,500 Egyptians have been sent home. The few remaining go on Tuesday. "Hamsa (five)!” barked a guard. Five men ran forward, clutching little suitcases, and climbed into a blue and white tourist bus. Another shout, another five came aboard. I “I have been well-treated. I’ve no complaints,” said Sgt. Mustapha Zaki Shehadi. ‘Tm happy to go home. Very happy.” Few others wanted to talk. They shrugged and were silent, apparently fearing to endanger their freedom. Atlit Camp was silent and desolate. It will be closed Tuesday. Irnthe last 25 years it has held Italians, illegal Jewish immigrants, Israeli underground fighters and Egyptian prisoners from three wars. j For some of the Egyptians I I captured in June it was their | second time behind the' Atlit wire in 11 years. j Sunday night gates were open. Clothes, blankets and pajamas were strewn near the barbed wire, thrown there by prisoners in joy as they packed their few belongings. The camp commandant, Lt. Col. Ze’ev Bashan, 40, was visibly moved as he watched the I Egyptians board the buses. j Sitting at a desk adorned by two small statuettes of an an-' dent Pharoah carved by the POWs. he said: “Some of them are going back to an uncertain future. Some will be court-martialed, I’m sure. Maybe Cairo fears the others will tell what really happened in the war. It’s difficult to tell what they feel about it. I hope they’ll tell their people who the Israelis really are.” Said Pvt. Muhammed Abdel Hadi as he boarded the last bus; ‘Tm a soldier. I love my president (Gamal Abdel Nasser). I love himriyith all my heart.” Five Antipollution Goals Urged for Lake Michigan Notice to Security Holders of MILWAUKEE, Wis (UPI) Sen. Gaylord Nelson, D-Wis.,1 has suggested a five-point Lake: Michigan cleanup program which he said should be adopted at a federal-state conference on pollution of the lake at Chicago, Jan. 31. Nelson, addressing a statewide conservation meeting Saturday, proposed these goals: • Make the shore of the lake fit for swimming again. ★ ★ ★ “I ask you to look over this list of five proposals,” he said. ‘‘Can you say that any one of these should not be our goals? Is there any of of these goals that can be achieved by one state alone? Can one of these goals be achieved by technicians alone without the help of the highest officials of government and without support of aroused public opinion?’ THE DETROIT EDISON COMPANY Earning Statement for Twelve Months Ended December 31,1967 • Develop a special plan to save Green Bay. • Stop pollution from ships. • Halt dumping of polluted dredged materials back into the lake. • Establish a long-range research and action program to stop lake fertilization by detergents, fertilizers and other chemicals. Nelson told the Wisconsin Resource Conservation Council the conference, called by Interior Secretary Stewart Udall, presents “one of the greatest opportunities ever handed to us to do something really significant toward preserving our natural resources.” (Advtrtlwmiiit) BACKACHE& As contemplated by Section eleven (a) of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended. The Detroit Edison Company has made generally available to its security holders an earning statement for the twelve-month period beginning January 1, 19S7, which is after the effective date {December 8, 1966) of this Company’s Post-Effective Amendment to its Registration Statement No. 2-25664 filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission with respect to $100,000,000 General and Refunding Mortgage Bonds, Series R, 6*/o, due December 1, 1996. Copies of such earning statement will be mailed on request to any of this Company’s security holders. a is otuy Nelson scoffed at critics of the Chicago conference who have said It will be merely political, or for technicians only. TENSION SECONDARY TO KIDNEY IRRITATION THE DETROIT EDISON COMPANY By R. f. Plourde Secretary IF YDU ARE SIZE 20 YDU CAN BE A PERFECT SIZE 14 IN DNLY 60 to 90 DAYS Girl Trapped Common Kidney or Bladder Irrita-tlona make many men and women feel tense and nervous from frequent, burning or itching urination night and day. Secondarily, you may lose sleep and have Headache, Backache and feel older, tired, depressed, Jn such rases. CYSTEX usually brings relaxing comfort by curbing Irritating germs In acid urine and quickly casing pain.Get CYSTEX at druggists. < January 22, 1968 Beneath Bus GRAND RAPIDS UP) _ A 6-year-old suburban Grand Rapids girl was in fair condition today following a weekend accident in which she was knocked down by a school bus and trapped under the vehicle for half an hour. Carolyn Sokal of Plainwell Township was returning from catechism instruction when she alighted from the bus and ran in ijs ,.path as she attempted to cross the street. ★ ★ ★ The driver, Edwin Wilson, 42, of Grand Rapids, said he was unaware the ^rl was in front of the bus until he heard her cries for help. WANTED: BONUS CHECKS Will Trade fDr Lewrey Organ Now there's a deall Ever/one in the family will have fun with a Lowrey. The first day. Come in and see for yourself. // you can point a finger, you can play a Lowrey Organ. Open Mon. thru Fri. 'til 9 Sot. 'til 5:30 Gallagher MUSIC 1710 S.. Telegraph Vo MH« S. pf Orchard Lakt ;Ava. ft— Ferking FE 4-0566 IF YOU ARE SIZE 18 YOU CAN BE A PERFECT SIZE 14 IN ONLY 60 TO 90 DAYS IF YOU ARE SIZE 16 YOU CAN BE A PERFECT SIZE 12 IN ONLY 60 TO 90 DAYS IF YOU ARE SIZE 14 YOU CAN BE A PERFECT SIZE 10 IN ONLY 60 TO 90 DAYS HERE’S HOW A Holiday PH. 334-1591 FIGURE IMPROVEMENT PROGRAM WORKS 1. 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Huron SUPh. 334-1591 lIQIH XODAY* afBlletad P*e;*»9* wr omHOiva prvnipw vwvwwv pwwwww bw thtowahont tha U.S., Ceaede, Udia AatoileB end Newpa. :\ .1 ' V, V THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, JANUARY 22, 1968 B~7 inW. FRANKFURT, Germany U.S. Army officials belittle its role, but West Germany’s most active anti-Vietnam war group claims it is making headway among the 250,000 GI’s stat-tioned in this country. The German Socialist Students' Federation asserts recent desertions by German-based soldiers to Sweden and France are a result of propaganda work. “We think these reports reA fleet a success of our campaign,” says Karl Dieter Wolff, 24-year-old chairman of the federation. It claims a membership of 3,000 and gets funds from their dues. A law student whose education includes one year at the University of Michigan, Woiff Is aware that open calls for desertion couid bring the campaigners into court. The German-Allied Forces agreement ihakes such activity a punishable offense. ★ ★ ★ “We don’t tell them to de-aert,” Wolff explained. ‘‘We Just Rive them a detailed description of what they should do if they want to go over the hill. EASIEST WAY “If they ask us, we tell them what others did and what we feel Is the easiest way: get a weekend pass to Paris. France Is the best place to go. It is also the best place to get work, and people are friendly. Sweden is not as convenient.” Wolff was interviewed in the federation’s office rooms, crammed with mimeograph machines, leaflets, empty beer and soft drink boftles and overflowing wastebaskets. A Vietcong flag and a placard saying “Che e vivo,” meaning Che Guevara is alive decorted the walls. The address of the headquarters, a 10-minute walk from Frankfurt’s main railroad station, is on a list of “helpful hints for servicemen” mailed from France by a purported GI underground. That group calls itself Resisters Inside the Army. ‘NEGUGIBLE EFFECT An Army spokesman said he never heard of the Resisters aside from press reports. He also pointed to a 6-month-old official statement saying: “The effect of antiwar groups on the absentee rate is negligible. Wolff said he understood the monthly dessertion rate is 100 to ISO. The Army labels this figure a pipe dream. It says its list of desserters Jan. 1 included 365 names, counting cases more than 20 years old. ★ ★ ★ Dispatches from Sweden mentioned only 17 desserters who have sought asylum there recently. In France, one recent deserter was identified. HOS'nLE REACTION How does the federation con duct its campaign- “When we started more than a year ago — trying to get soldiers involved in discussions in bars and inns — we almost invariably drew hostile reactions,' Woiff said. “Since then, the change has beoi tremendous,” he went on. ‘Now th^ are giving a thought to our arguments. They are ready to talk with us. And they don’t deiwunce their fellow sol- YOUNG Anfipoverty Efforts of Business Hailed By WHUmV M. YOUNG JR. Executive Dir^tor, National Urban League I have often said that one of the more encouraging developments in recent months has been the determination of the busi ness leaders of America to tackle problems of slums and unemployment. Companies all over America have made new efforts to hire and upgrade Negro employes, and some are put-fting new emphasis on locating plants In the ! ghetto. And thev are willing to break with tradition ; too. In Detroit, for example, the big auto makers s threw out their tests and comnlicated hiring pro-Scedi'res, Thev went ri»ht into the ghetto to re jerni* the Door makes a handy shelL Bnr nowl ImtaHsd* KsMtoru “tefl-RsaP Beetrie Dryer. -g gf ggee Ceaeealed Controls....... JLOlP UUUtmm CamtalUmUd Cm Cm Xto» 30-lnch Gas Range 14-Ca. Ft. 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Door has bookshelf package shelvca. 6,000 BTU Coldspot Air Condltionsr *97 No Monthly Payments Till Jnne 1,1968 on Seara Easy Payment Plan Zig-Zag Sewing Machine COMES C0MPLEH WITH WALNUT FINISH CABINET Sala Prfeo 967 No Money Down on Sears Easy Payment Plan • Overcasts • Monograms • Saws on Buttons • Makes Buttonholes • Satin Stitchss • Makss Dseoratlvs Stitehea Manually Flos these features that make this an outstanding ealnel Front monnted bobbin winder with antomade cutoff. Lever type sdteh width and stitch length, control. New tension control. Scam guides qn needle plate. Even has thfbad cutter. See it! Ssoro Sswing Mochins Depl. ALL-CHANNEL Sears Portable TV Sale Prion <^88 Powerful chassis with 2 I.F. stages and antomade gain controL Convenient front monnted 5-inch speaker for stade-free FM sound. 18-inch picture measured diagonally with 174-sq. in. viewing area. Bay now, save! Sala! Coniola Starao Phonograph........... $144 Sala! Color TV ........... ...■•■• $281 S«ari Radio, TV ond Phonogrdph Dept, No Monajf Down Ofsa Monday, Thursday, friday, Sainrday 9 in 9, TnnrfiK Wadnssdsy 9 so SilO Sears Downtown Pontiac oPh-FE 5-4171 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY. JANUARY 22, 1968^ / ./ S5«-'=^"lKa- Thank you Ruth Dunuin^ Your letter to our Voice-Of-The-People is most appreciated. We hope your reading enjoyment of The Pontiac Press continues for many, many more happy years. THE PONTIAC PRESS For Doily Home Delivery Service Coll 332-8181 THE PONTIAC Pit ESS, MONDAV^ JANCAKY 22, 19(i8 Detroiter Says All Negro Classes Share Concern PITTSBURGH (UPI)-Middle-class Negroes experience t h e same difficulties as those living in the ghetto, the head of a Negro fraternity said Saturday night. “Differences between Negro groups do exist,” Ernest K. Davenport, grand polemarch of Kappa Alpha Psi, said, “But they’re the same ones found in white society. “We ail sb^re a common concern for the welfare of society.” Davenport, a native of Detroit, Is a member of the board of directors of the city’s Bank of the Commonwealth. He said he was shocked when rioting broke out in his home town last summer. He Helped Make His Own Coffin Hart Suggests Corporate Profits Tax AP Regional Service WASHINGTON (AP) - Sen. Philip A. Hart, D-Mich., says a tax on excess corporate profits might be preferable to the administration’s proposed surcharge on income taxes. “I’ve committed myself to support some kind of tax increase,” Hart said. “I just want to be sure that we attempt to identify the .most desirable or least offensive.” * ★ * Hart said the proposed Income tax surcharge, based on a percentage of the regular tax, would be “a lot more comfortable to buy than a flat across-the-board rate increase.” But, he said, “before I com- mit myself to support the tax surcharge ... I want to find out why it would not be more prudent to suggest what amounts to a corporate excess profits tax ■■ GATE CITY, Va. (AP) — James David Langrel has In the basement of his home at Moccasin creek a sturdy wooden box which he hopes will be used as his coffin. Langrel, 90, helped make it 25 years ago at the workshop of a friend, John Carico of Scott County, Va. INTERVIEW Hart advanced the proposal in an interview with Sen. Hugh Scott, R - Pa., recorded for broadcast Sunday on radio and television stations in Pennsyl vania. Corporate profits have in creas^ faster than hourly wage rates have. Hart said. ★ * * “Maybe we could dilute some of the inflationary pressure, re- duce some of the budget and . not harm the economic growth and rate ... by proposing an excess profits tax.” In. discussing the administration’s safe - street bill, Hart and Scott both expressed strong reservations about adding authority for police wiretapping to the bill. PANEL MEMBERS As membe'rs of the Senate Judiciary Committee, Hart and Scott will have a say in the kind of critne - control legislation brought before the Senate later in the year. President Johnson’s Safe-Streets Bill, authorizing federal grants to assist in training and equipping local police forces, already has been amended by a judiciary subcommittee to permit wiretapping by law enforcement officers acting under court orflers. Building Burns DETROIT (AP) — Fire destroyed a one-stery building of the Michigan Tile & Marble Co. on Detroit’s west side Sunday. Fire officials estimated the loss at $25,000. No one was injured, and cause of the blaze was not immediately determined. Police Put End to Nude 'Trip' BOULDER, Colo. (AP) - Police said they arrested a 14-year-old youth Sunday as he perched nude on a rock in Gregory Canyon shouting letters of the alphabet. ★ ★ ★ The policemen said the youth was spotted on the rock about 200 feet up one side of the canyon The officers said they climbed up behind him and grabbed him as he was about to jump. Tliey recovered his clothes nearby and took him to a hospital where a doctor administered a tranquilizer and placed him in a straight jacket. Hospital attaches said his only response to questions was “on a trip, acid man.” ir ir it Ifiere was no identification in his clothes but police later identified the boy as a pupil at a junior high school. His name was not disclosed because of his age. Working at it gets the job done Coll it persistence, determination or whatever you wish. Whatever you coll it, it is the quality hand of a boy with an ailing bike, or put a Pontiac Press Want Ad to work to sell an item you no longer need. In either case, you will see a demonstration of persistence and the results it produces. ^ The Pontiac Press Ad you use will work until it has delivered your message into thousands of homes. It will produce the results you seek. That is why sa many thousands of people, many of them your friends and neighbors, use Pontiac Press Ads each year. WANT ADS WORK AT IT FOR YOU! For assistance in wording and placing your ad. Dial 332-8181 or 334-4981 POHTIAC PRESS WANT ADS Tear Gas Bomb Empties Theater BATON ROUGE, La. (AP) -A tear gas grenade was thrown into a theater Sunday night as several hundred movie goers were watching “To Sir With Love,” a film about a Negro teacher and white pupils in Britain. ★ ■ ■A it The Broadmoor Theater emptied rapidly as the customers, coughing and gasping, fled out the exits. The theater was shut down, pending complete elimination of the lingering fumes. Police were investigating. First state to ratify the proposed child labor amendment to the Constitution was Arkansas, in 1924, (AdvtrflMm«nt) PANORAMA OF THE MOON - A mosaic of pictures of the moon taken by Surveyor 7’s camera shows rock-strewn terrain. The center of the horizon is about eight miles from the spacecraft. Just below the horizon are small ravines and gullies probably AP Wirephoto formed by the flow of ejected debris. The rock-filled crater in the foreground is approximately 18 feet from the camera, while the crater in the upper left is about 2,100 feet away. The latter is estimated to be 200 feet wide. 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JA^L:A.HV 22. 1908 Hanoi Newspaper Dims Hopes for Peace Talks TOKYO (UPD—Hanoi’s official newspaper yesterday scorned any hope North Vietnam would slacken its war effort in return for a halt in U S. bombing aimed at getting peace talks started. It demanded an unconditional end to the Iwmbing. , Attacking President Johnson’s State of the Union message on Vietnam, Nhan Dan said. “'The United States has no right to put any condition to the Vietnamese people. “Neither has it the right to ask reciprocity from the Vietnamese people . . .’’ said the newspaper, the chief organ of Ho Chi Minh, in a policy statement broadcast abroad. Johnson said, in liis speech Wednesday, “The bombing would stop immediately if talks would take place promptly and with reasonable hopes that they would be productive. And the other side must not take advantage of our restraint as they have in the past.” 'This, Nhan Dan said, is an attempt “to force the Vietnamese people to give up struggling in the face of continued American aggression." ’’This constitutes very Insolent conditions . . it said. It accused Johnson of “beating about the bush” on the question of peace. ' * * “It Is clear to everybody that since the United States is overtiyiroinbing the democratic Republic of (North) Vietnam— an Independent, sovereign state—it must definitely and unconditionally put an end to this aggressive act,” Nhan Dan said. Car Pile-Up Kills 6 in California Fqg BAKERSFIELD, Calif. (UPI) — A chain-reaction collision on fog-shrouded U.S. 99 yesterday claimed the lives of six persons, including four members of a Los Angeles family. Eight others were injured. * ★ ★ The multiple accident was triggered when a car traveling south in the northbound lanes collided head-on with a northbound car. In near-zero visibility, three other northbound cars smashed into the wreckage and three others became Involved in a rear end collision while trying to avoid the original smashup. I j John Caudillo, 36, Los Angeles, driver of the wrorig-way car, I was killed. California highway [patrol officers theorized Caudillo j !became lost in the fog and drove i up the wrong access ramp to the divided highway. ★ * ★ Caudillo’s wife, Angela, 36, and two of their sons, Ampro, 8, and Rudolph, 13, also were killed. Another son, Orlando, 9, suffered major Injuries. The other victims were Duard Avery, 64. Encinitas. Calif., and Rose Gould, 54, San Francisco, (AdvtrtlMmtnU Science Shrinks Painful Hemorrhoids 'Sex Symbolism' Is Show Stopper gtops Itch-Relieves Pain AP Wirwhata DRYAIRTR0UBLES1 ITCHY SKIN? DRY NOSE? PUSTER CRACKING? STATIC ELECTRICAL SHOCK? ‘DEAD" CARPETS? OUT OF TUNE PIANO? ■NO mill nOtllMS WITH A Coolerat'or® AUTOMATIC HUMIDIFIER $74.95 Elimlnatd trOubUi cauiad by horth, dry, bakad-out wintar air. Tbit naw CoalaraTor Humidifiar mSiitans tha air, filtan it of du>t and impuritia*. You faal comfortabla at lowar tamparalurai. Phone 333-781 2 NO LONGER BABIES - Muke (left) and Mzuri have grown out of the nursery at the St. Louis Zoo and are sharing a cage. The two young gorillas retain some of the habits picked up in the nursery and need an occasional bottle and a few banana tidbits. When first placed together, they were nervou^and clung to their security blankets. The blankets were shredded after the two became good friends. Muke is a female and Mzuri is a male. Zoo officials expect them to mate in about seven years. Gi Collects Aid for S. Viets Navy Mulls Options to F111B Aircraft POR’TLAND, Ore. (J’l - A chaperone stopped a dance at Pwtland State College Saturday night befause she thought the sexual symbolism of an on-stage performing group was too indecent for young persons to see. 1 ■ * ★ * ! A troupe of 30 musicians and [dancers from Western Washington State College, Bellingham, Wash., was putting on a rock-light-drama show called: “The Bellingham Flash Presents Silverman—A Multi-Media Event, Lights, Drama, Music and Elements of Happening." Finds Way That Both Relieves Pain and Shrinks Piles In Most Cases New York, N.Y. (Special): Science discovered la medication with the ability, in most cases — to actually shrink hemorrhoids and promptly stop the burnint; itch and relieve pain. In one hemorrhoid case after pnother, very striking improvement was reported and veriOed by doctors’ observations. Pain and itching were promptly relieved. Then this medication starts right in to gently reduce the swelling of inflamed, irri-Uted piles. Tests conducted on hundreds ^of patients by leading doctors in New York City, in Washington, D.C, and at a Midwest Medical Center proved this so. And it was all done without narcotics or stinging astringentsof any kind. The secret is Preparation W* — an exclusive formula for the treatment of hemorrhoids There is no other formula like it! Preparation H also iubri cates to make bowel movements less painful, it aootheS irritated tissues and helps prevent further infection. Preparation H comes in both ointment or suppository form. No preaeription is needed. WASHINGTON (AP) JACKSON (AP) - A soldier who believes that “guns and battle are only a part of the I Navy is studying proposals by picture- m Vieluau. 1, heudlu.!»" i'll”* Consumers Power ME-1650-8" Spec. 4 Roger Jarvis of nearby Vandercook Lake spent his leave gathering bandages, sheets and other medical and dental equipment for Vietnaipese refugees, who are sick and orphaned by the war. America's Most Glamorous FOLDING PICTURI WINDOW ALUM. AWNING Rsg. $124.70 I ♦65^®! Installed ALUM, t turers for an alternative to the back to that Southeast Asian fijavy version of the controver-country with a load of mefiical sial TFX fighter-bomber, the supplies he picked up during a Washington Post reports in to- 30-dav leave. editions. .. .. The rough alternative designs The General Dynamics Corp., In building the FlllB, became worried about the plane’s future and several months ago gave the Navy an alternative design, an action which caused the Navy to ask for other proposals, the Post said. The paper quoted sources as saying Vice Admiral Thomas F. Connolly, deputy chief of naval air operations, recently asked LTV Aerospace Gorp., McDonneli-Douglas Corp., and North American Aviation to submit alternative proposals. These, the paper said, have He said he volunteered for ai ♦ * w been received, second year of duty in South! unidentified| If the Navy cancels its 250- Vietnam and made winning the['^®'^ theiriplane FIHB order, the Post respect of the South Vietnamese I out ahead if [said, the decision would not nec- a major personal goal present plane were scrapped jessarily affect Air Force plans No one told him to bring back armament to buy about 1,000 of its TFX ,r,»„ o — version—Bie FlllA—which al- are already in Navy hands, the Post said,'and may soon be presented to Clark Clifford, newly appointed secretary of defense, for a decision on whether to cancel the present TFX contract or to proceed with scheduled production. collecting from hospitals, tors and private citizens. REASONING When asked why he did it, Jarvis, 22, replied, “The United S-100 Loige 8 It. Aluminum WHITE PICTURE WINDOW AWNING $56 InstolUd SAVE *45 Big lavjngsjlow WHITE ALUMINUM SIDING and TRIM Wp 'Over all riptsPi) woodfO'l' suer j: roinitr i fi' p'lr rii'.iam iii'ptl hum' Alum. GUTTERS and DOWNSPOUTS / tfuidiira I FUN ROOM hiitallad ThrYt i Sun Contiol Pitio | lor (vtry ntid. nviry bfidfit. | the supplies. Which he spent a • ■ ^ n u most all of his 30 days at home . McNamara whyeady is m production But such, flown as secretary of a decision would increase the dapAnoA Ktr KXoobAFi O ' AViAm P'HIA'S Ullit COSt $8 MILUON EACH The Navy estimates officially i the FllIB will cost $8 million each. 'Hie Post said unofficial estimates are that each plane | will cost $20 million when equipped for combat. Connolly, it added, asked the aircraft manufacturers to submit plans for a plane which would cost less but do the same basic job, fridge Air F'orce Base outside The Navy plane, known as the The Post said its sources indi-Detroit. P'rom Selfridge they will FlllB, is still being flight-tested cated the Navy asked also for a be flown to the seven-man 23rd and has not been placed in serv- plane weighing no more than Artillery Medcap team to which;ice. 55.000 pounds, compared to Jarvis is attached and which] The Grumman Aircraft Engi-labout 70,000 pounds for the is located 35 miles from Saigon.[neering Corp., a partner withlFlllB. defense by March 2, has cham pioned the basic supersonic, swing-wing TFX design as one that could be used by the Navy and Air Force with savings to both. Some congressmen, how-States is the greatest nation Inipygi- labeled the project a the world, why shouldn’t we help [“multimillion dollar blunder" an underprivileged nation?’ janU termed the Navy version The supplies were taken in two|‘"“ expensive and too heavy for trucks borrowed from a Jack-'“®*^ aircraft carriers, son National Guard unit to Sel- FIJGHT-TESTED 78 NORTH SAQINAW Dotmtemm Pomtiae Storm Omfy SPECIAL TUESDAY • WEDNESDAY THURSDAY BAZLEY FfmouM Frmah, Lean Tender Corn-Fed Steer Beef! SIRLOIN CLUB POT ROAST 43£ Frosh, Lein. HAMBURGER 3 Pounds or More CUBE STEAKS Fancy QQc Trim OSlIl 43; Boiling Beef 29ib WE ACCEPT FOOD COUPONS Fill Your Freezer Nowl Coleman's FURNITURE AAART . . . FIRST IN FURNITURE & CARPET ’^tnor WOAIf Luxurious New Carpeting THE NEXT BEST THING TO ALL NEW FURNITURE Gtv* ywr horn* th* beauty ond warmth of new carpeting and you'll enjoy new comfort better living. 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