Fight Rages Between Israel, Jordan The Weather Windy, Wanner (D»t»lls-P*9» I) THE Home Edition PONTIAC PRESS PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, MARCH 29, 1968 '/fs War in Memphis' From our News Wires MEMPfflS, Tenn. - Police and National Guard tactical squads sealed off shattered Beale Street today and held off looteis in the Negro districts of the embattled city. Snipers fired on a squad car near the Mississippi River yesterday morning. No one was hit. “We are at war in Memphis,” reported Fire-Poiice Director Frank L. Holloman. A 16-year-old Negro looter was slain, 62 persons were injured—three by gunfire— and 300 arrested yesterday. Arsonists set lire to nearly 150 buildings, police said. As the sun rose, the fire-bombs dwindled off but vandalism and looting continued, police said. The violence began on Beale Street yesterday morning when a march by 6,000 Negroes led by Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. in support of striking garbage collectors turn^ into a riot and continued through the day and night despite a tightly enforced curfew. ★ ★ ★ Another possible confrontation between marchers and police was expected today Picture, Page A-2 with Negro leaders saying they would stage another march — this one limited to sidewalks like those held almost daily since the city’s sanitation workers struck Feb. 12. Only police, state trooper and National Guard vehicles moved on the major f Constant Watch Kept County Roads Protected By JIM LONG While it’s no secret that many Oakland County roads leave something to be desired, it is not generally known that a constant effort is made to protect them from damage. This job of preserving the 2,350 miles of road under the jurisdiction of the Oakland County Road Commission is the responsibility of the weighmaster’s office in the Department of Permits and Special Uses. Daily three members of the division patrol the county in a small van and pickup trucks equipped with portable scales in search of overloaded and oversized vehicles that can ruin a road. At this time of year, when weight restrictions are placed on certain roads because of the spring thaw, the division headed by Peter Waisanen, steps up its campaign against violators. LAW OFFICERS Since the weighmaster and his staff are, under law, authorized law enforcement officers, one of their duties is to issue traffic tickets to offenders. Their concern during this critical season is evident In the number of tickets issued during the weight limita- Waterford, County Bicker as Dixie Highway Floods By ED BLUNDEN Nothing was done yesterday about the drain that goes under Dixie Highway south of Walton Boulevard in Waterford Township, and cars and trucks plowed slowly through about a foot of water covering the state highway at that point. Nothing is being done about it today, and it appears nothing will be done about it tomorrow—in spite of threats by neighboring residents. It seems the township is waiting for the County Drain Commission to act and vice versa. Kenneth Squires, Waterford Township utilities manager, said: “Someone is going to get killed at that spot.” He pointed out the danger of a driver hitting the water without noticing the warning “There’s not much the township can do because it’s a legally established county drain district,” Squires said. David Snyder, assistant chief engineer for the Drain Conunission, said: “We can’t spend any money on it, because it wouldn’t be authorized.” It’s up to the township, he contended. The water problem is being caused by the apparent collapse along the west side of the street of the Drayton Plains Extension Drain. Residents of the area can petition the township to form a drainage district, but this is bound to be expensive and would take considerable time. ★ * * Two businesses along the west side of the street have taken matters into their own hands. They built a dam to keep the water away from their doors. POSSIBLE LAWSUIT Neighbors say they are studying a possible lawsuit as soon as they decide who to sue. Luckily the big rains of spring have not hit—yet. From Our News Wires Israel and Jordan fought with tanks, artillery and mortars in a day-long battle ' the full 70-mile length of the Jordan River Valley today. Israel jet fighter-bombers screamed into action against Jordan gun positions. It was the most serious outbreak of fighting since Israel’s punitive attack on Jordan a week ago Thursday and appeared to be growing in intensity as the day wore on. Israel called it a “large concerted attack” by Jordan. A Jordanian military communique said four Israeli planes were shot down in flames in Israel territory by antiaircraft batteries and that a number of Israeli tanks and arWIlery positions were wiped out. Israel reported day-long Jordanian attacks on large Israeli communities near the Jordan River and said its own ar- tillery had knocked out Arab gun sites and a Long Tom artillery piece capable of firing for many miles into Israel. ★ ★ ★ Israel said its guns and planeis scored “damaging hits” on Jordanian positions and “their people” but did not list ca.s-ualties. It said so far Jordanian attacks on the settlements of Ashdot-Yaacov, Tel-Katzir, Massada, Kfar-Ruppin, Gesher and Shaar-Hagolan had caused damages but no casualties. HAND FIGH-nNG Army communiques broadcast by Amman radio made no mention of hand-to-hand fighting such as that eight days ago when Israeli troops, 16,000 strong by Arab estimate, invaded Jordan to wipe out terrorist staging bases. Today’s battling began only hours after an Arab mine exploded Inside Israeli territory killing four Isareli farmers and seriously wounding an American volunteer described only as a 27-year-oId New Yorker. Each side said the other opened the attack. Jordan reported a heavy attack against the abandoned refugee camp at A1 Kara-mah, 18 miles from the Jordan capital of Amman and about a mile and a half east of the Jordan River. Israel calls A1 Karamah the training site for Arab guerrillas attacking inside Israel with support of the Jordanian army. Israeli Ambassador Joseph Tekoah informed the U. N. Security Council of the fighting. He called it a “large concerted attack” and said it was an extremely grave violation of the cease-fire resolution passed by the Security Council last Monday. Tekoah, in a letter to Cnuncil President Ousmane Soce Diop of Senegal, did not ask for a council meeting. He said the Jordanian attack was continuing and he would keep Diop informed. streets during the night, but the alleys and back streets were alive with youths darting forth to set fires and stone fire trucks. In Washington, Democratic Sen. Robert C. Byrd of West Virginia and John Sten-nis of Mississippi called for federal action to block King’s planned “poor people’s march” on the nation’s capital because of the outbreak of rioting in Memphis. * * ★ . Byrd, chairman of the District of Columbia Appropriations subcommittee, said in a Senate speech, “If this self-seeking rabble-rouser is allowed to go through with his plans here, Washington may well be treated to the same kind of violence, destruction, looting and bloodshed” as Memphis. tion period, about 10 a week, compared to three at normal times. * * * The Michigan Vehicle Code establishes the fines for a violation and is based on a graduated scale from two to 10 cents for each pound in excess of the limits. Fines levied by a justice of the peace or a municipal judge against a violator go to the state library fund, as do all fines from state law traffic violations. ★ * * Oakland County receives no direct benefit from the fines, though court costs are tunneled back to the county to pay the fees of justices, witnesses and jurors and to cover the costs of court materials and supplies. * * * Since tickets written on state law cases are issued by a number of policing agencies in the county, and no bookkeeping distinction is made by the Justice of the Peace Auditors, it is impossible to determine how much revenue the state realizes from the weighmasters’ operation. Not all vehicles with overloads are subject to tickets, since special (Continued on Page A-2, Col. 2) KITE-FLYING TIME — Mother proves to be a real buddy for these two Birmingham boys. Helping them get ready for a favorite spring pastime is Mrs. Basil M. Briggs of 900 Brookwood. Her sons are John (centw), 6 and Mac, 9. OCC May Seek Injunction in Rift Over State Funding Brezhnev Raps West MOSCOW (UPI) — Communist party Chief Leonid Brezhnev, in an ai^arent reference to the ferment in Eastern Europe, today accused the West of trying to undermine unity in the Communist camp. In a wide-ranging speech at a conference of the Moscow (City) Communist Party, Brezhnev attacked the instability of the Western monetary system and ■ ■ Soviet intellectuals. Oakland Community College may seek an injunction to stop all of Michigan’s 28 community colleges from getting any money under a federal act for building construction. Mitchell Tendler, director of community relations, told OCC’s Board of Trustees last night that the college has appealed the procedure of the state in dispersing funds of the Higher Educaton Act of 1963. The board authorized its attorney to take necessary legal action—an injunction—if the funds are dispersed to other community colleges before OCC’s appeal is heard. OCC received $750,000 for its Auburn Hills technical learning laboratory on an application submitted by Sept. 15, according to Tendler. Come colleges that applied didn’t receive any funds. Cars Plow Through Drain Water Backed Up On Dixie Near Walton i-' , ;C W ^ Employes Strike at Holly Schools Heavy student absenteeism was the first immediate result as members of Local 92 of the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employes (AFSCME) began an apparent strike today in the Holly School District. Supt. of Schools Russell Haddon said school would continue despite the stoppage, which involves about 60 bus drivers, cooks and custodians. However, at 10 a.m. Haddon said only about 40 per cent of the student body was present for classes at H(dly ijigh School. “I don’t know how the percentage is at the elementary schools,” Haddon commented, adding, “It’s up to the parents to get their children to school and get them home.” Haddon said the employes called in and said they had been asked by their union not to report. The superintendent said negotiations with the union had been going on since last fall and were in the process of mediation when the stoppage occurred without warning. The union’s contract expired Nov. 1. STATE MEDIATOR Haddon said this morning he was attempting to contact state mediator Leonard Bennett to arrange a meeting with representatives of the union. “We had a meeting yesterday, and we submitted a proposal, but they decided not to accept it,” h,e said. A state law says that additional funds, may be granted for other projects on other applications submitted by Jan. 31, Tendler explained. OCC turned in another application for these funds. Then the federal government came along with a bulletin stating that projects not funded in the September applications would get top priority for the January funding. Tendler said this is contrary to state procedure and funds projects regardless Related Stories, Pages A-2, A-3 of need and gives more money to some schools who had submitted more than one project application in the fall. “This is a capricious administrative decision which does not allow us to plan ahead,” remarked OCC President Dr. John E. Tirrell. ★ * * The community relations director also lashed out at the State Senate’s capital outlay appropriations bill for only providing a maximum of $750,000 for each college no matter how many students it serves or whether it is located in urban or rural areas. An original Senate bill following Gov. Romney’s recommendations proposed $1.2 million for (XIC but then a substitute Senate bill now on the floor cut it back to $750,000 to comply with its arbitrary limits, according to Tendler. He claimed the Legislature is holding back money for Wayne Community College which may come into existence. Windy and Warm, It's Kite Weather “Go fly a kite,” chuckled U. S. Weather Bureau experts, as today’s kite-flier delight forecast of windy, warm and partly sunny was issued. Gamboling youngsters have been warned by the city’s public utility companies to heed safety rules by avoiding flying their kites in rainy weather or near any kind of electrical lines or antennae. Winds southwesterly at 15 to 28 miles |)er hour will become west to northwest this afternoon and diminish slowly tonight. Highs today were expected to be in the 70s. Fair and cooler with lows of from 38 to 44 degrees in tonight’s outlook. ★ ★ * Fair and cooler weather will continue tomorrow, with milder temperatures and possible showers due Sunday. Precipitation percentage probabilities are: today, 10; tonight, 5; and tomorrow, 10. In downtown Pontiac the lowest mercury reading before 8 a.m. was 57. The temperature at 2 p.m. was near 67 degrees. 2 Setbacks Dealt to Ill-Starred Fill WASHINGTON (AP) - The ill-starred Fill has suffered major setbacks on two fronts — a powerful congressional committee has denied further funds for building a Navy model of the swing-wing jet and one of the first Air Force models to see service id Vietnam is reported missing. The Senate Armed Services Committee voted 11 to 2 yesterday to exclude from the defense budget $460 million that had been requested for research and development on the FlllB, the Navy version. Meanwhile, an FlllA — the Air Force version of what is basically the same plane — has been reported shot down over North Vietnam. In Today's Press m f Chemical Mace Squirted reporter finds it effective, humane — PAGE B-14. I Psychiatric Facility < Children’s unit is completed ^ at Pontiac State Hospital — PAGED-16. Area News Seven communities to vote Monday — PAGE A-4. Area News . ......... A4 Astrology ............. C-10 Bridge ....... C-16 Crossword Puzzle D-10 Comics ............... C-16 Editorials ............ A-6 High School .......... D-1 Farm and Garden . B-14, B-15 Lenten Series ......... A-6 Markets ................C-6 Obituaries ............B-10 Sports ........ .... C-1—C4 Theaters ........... C-6, C-7 TV-Radio Pr<®-ams .....D*H Wilson, Earl........... D-16 Women’s Pages .... B-1—^B-5 A—2 PONTIAC, MICHIGAN. FRIDAV, MARCH 29, 1968 Siecret Meetings Held Between U.S., N. Viet SAIGON (UPIi — American Embassy Afficials have met secretly with North Vietnamese government representatives In the first known negotiations between the warring nations, diplomatic sources said today They said the discussions took place during the past several weeks in Vientiane, Laos, and resulted in the release today of three North Vietnamese seamen captured by the U S. Navy in July 1966. It was not known if the prisoners were the only topic of conversation between tile American and North Vietnamese representatives. According to the sources, t h e Americans approached the North Vietnamese They asked for discussions to be held specifically to pave the way for possible future prisoner exchanges, the sources said. ★ ♦ ♦ U S. spokesmen told newsmen the three seamen were released in response to North Vietnam's freeing on Feb. 16 of three American airmen shot down and captured over the Communist country. The spokesmen said the U.S. government hopes the exchange will lead to further relea.ses on both sides. But the diplomatic sources said the U.S. government was hoping the talks in neighboring Laos would lead to more di,scu.ssions on other matters. According to American officials in Washington, Hanoi has brushed off more than three dozen U.S. government bids for talks to end the wa-r in Vietnam. ★ ★ ★ Diplomatic sources in Europe last week said President Ho Chi Minh of North Vietnam wanted nothing to do with such talks at least until after the American presidential election i n November. Bobby Engulfed by Enthusiastic Nears Senate Vote Indiana Backers Tax-Spending Cut WASHINGTON (fl - The Senate heads toward a final vote on a three-point taxes and spending - cut bill after rejecting a section to freeze federal public works projects. It also reversed itself yesterday and voted to go along with the Treasury Department's ruling to end tax exemptions on Industrial development bonds, effective Jan. 1. After five days of debate, the Senate was due to vote today on the over-all bill, which would' extend auto and telephone excise taxes at current rates, apply a 10 per cent surcharge to Income taxes and cut federal spending by about 91 bUlion. Sen. John J. Williams, R-Del., who cosponsored the surcharge — spending cut amendment, said democrats have demonsti-ated they aren't serious about spending reductions which affect public works projects back home. * * ★ He told n newsman this is making some Republicans reconsider whether they will support the surcharge pi opo.sal, which President Johnson wants. The Senate voted 42 to 37 to eliminate from the package bill the freeze on public works projects. Supporting the move were 3 8 Democrats and 4 Republicans; opposed were 12 Democrats and 25 Republicans. Sen. Russell B. Long, D-La., floor manager for the excise-tax bill, opposes the package plan but said the vote on public works projects might make it harder to beat the rest of Williams’ proposal. ★ * ★ He .said if the public works freeze had remained in, several senators would have opposed the package because it would have shelved big projects in their states. The auto and telephone excises which would be extended at present rates by the bill will drop automatically at midnight Sunday. But the Internal Revenue Service said it will continue to collect them at the higher rates since it was virtually certain Congress would extend them retroactively. Senate and House leaders have tentatively arranged a conference on the legislation for Monday. Heart Switch in U.S. Debated Constant Effort Is Made to Protect County Roads STANFORD, Calif. (UPII - Two men, one with serious heart trouble and the other with irreversible brain damage, lay in the hospital today while doctors debated whether to perform a heart transplant operation. Palo Alto-Stanford Hospital said the fwo were In the cardiac section for studies. Neither man was identified. Dr. Norman E. Shumway. who performed the world's third heart transplant operation Jan. 6 on Mike Kasperak, would head the medical team. Kasperak, 54, a retired steelworker, died 15 days later. (Continued From Page One) permission can be granted to allow them to travel specified routes during most of the year. NO PERMITS No overweight permits are issued when the weight restrictions are in effect, usually for a four-to-six-week period beginning in early March. The Weather Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Partly sunny, windy and warm today. Highs 65 to 72. Fair and cooler tonight, lows .38 to 44. Saturday, fair and cooler. Winds southwesterly 15 to 28 miles per hour becoming west to northwest this afternoon and diminishing slowly tonight. Sunday outlook: mild with chance of showers. Precipitation probability percentages: 10. today; 5, tonight; and 10, Saturday. Until ScHwdoy Momliig bolnlod PmcinitnHoii Wot IndIcoWd- Consult U«ol fomcott AC WirtMwt* INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. (ffl - A yelling, largely youthful crowd nearly mobbed Sen. Robert F. Kennedy at the Indiana Capitol last night as he made the state’s May 7 Democratic presidential primary a three-way race. * * * Kennedy, his wife, Ethel, and their daughter, Kathleen, 16, had to push their way through enthusiastic supporters jamming the lawn and steps. In the office suite of Secretary of State Edgar D. Whitcomb, a Republican candidate for governor, Kennedy submitted the required petitions signed by more than 500 registered voters in each of Indiana’s 11 congressional districts. Sen. Eugene J. McCarthy, D-Minn., and Gov. Roger D. Branigin were entered by supporters earlier yesterday without being present. Branigin, who is winding up a Florida vacation, is running as a stand in for President Johnson. * ★ ★ State Police Capt. Robert Konkle estimated the crowd at 3,000, including 400 to 500 inside the building. They broke through roped-off step and sidewalk sections as he approached. LOOTERS ON THE RUN — Negroes who broke away from a civil rights march in Memphis, Tenn., yesterday run out with merchandise from a store they looted. Violence broke rally was scheduled. as the marchers neared the downtown section where a Business Director Is Named by OCC A deadlock over the hiring of an executive director of business services by the Oakland Community College Board of Trustees was erased last night when one trustee changed his vote. OCC President Dr. John E. Tirrell recommended the appointment of To make sure that truckers know their obligations, the Road Commission this year distributed some 4,000 maps of the county showing the routes that can be followed with varying weights. The restrictions require that loads be reduced 25 per cent on concrete pavement and at least 35 per cent on gravel and asphalt surfaces. Limits have been reduced two-thirds on a number of local subdivision roads because of their poor condition. Signs warning truckers that weight restrictions are in effect are posted on ail routes leading into Oakland County. * ★ * Failure to comply can, in some cases, mean a considerable loss of time for truckers since they can be ordered to remove part of their load on the spot for transfer to another carrier. COOPERATION EXCELLENT David W. Hasse, director of the Department of Permits and Special Uses since its reorganization to include the W'eighmaster division last year, said that the cooperation of trucking firms with the road commission is excellent. Plans are being made to liberalize the is.suance of permits so that truckers can avoid delays, he said. The department receives about 500 calis a week asking for authorization to travel certain routes. In addition to the county weighmaster, the state has several men checking large trucks on state highways in the area. A few cities, including Birmingham, Troy and Southfield, handle problems within their jurisdiction. Nixon Lashes Kennedy, LBJ Bids as Raucous MILWAUKEE, Wis. (AP) - Richard M. Nixon has accused Sen. Robert F. Kennedy and President Johnson of raucous, irresponsible campaigning. But he had a kind word for Sen. Eugene J. McCarthy, the on-the-scene Democrat who could knife into his Republican vote in Wisconsin’s wide-open presidential primary. In the balloting Tuesday, a voter can choose the ballot of either party. Nixon men are concerned lest the lack of a real contest in the Republican primary lead vast numbers of normally GOP voters to switch and cast Democratic ballots. While he campaigned in Wisconsin, Nikon talked nationally, in a recorded radio address which criticized the campaign style of both Kennedy and Johnson. Woldemar H. Nikkei, chief business officer of Macomb Community College, with a three-year contract at an annual salary of $23,000. The appointment is effective May 1. * ★ ★ The board was deadlocked 3-3 on the appointment before going into a midnight executive session. TYNDALL SWITCHES Trustee Ralph H. Tyndall changed his no vote to yes after the recess, making the vote 4-2. The board recently created the position, as well as executive directors of educational services, community services and research, planning and information systems. It is part of an administrative reorganization to take up the slack of the college’s original three vice presidents have left or will leave at the end of this school year. Trustees Lila R. Johnson, Gordon C. Henderson and George R. Mosher voted to hire Nikkei. The board allowed the sealed vote of Mosher, who is In Peru, to be counted. Opposing the appointment were David W. Hackett and Earl M. Anderson. “We have to give our present staff a chance at these promotions,” Anderson said. “We have the ability for these jobs here in the college.” Tyndall indicated that he was at first opposed to Nikkei’s proposed salary. SALARIES SET The college has established that the salary for the executive directors will be $19,000 to $23,000. Current staff members Walter J. Fightmaster and S. James Manilla will become executive directors of community services and educational services respectively in July at a beginning salary of $19,000 with yearly raises of $1,000. Tirrell said Nikkei’s OCC salary is less than $1,000 a raise over his salary at Macomb. Birmingham Area Vote Near on 14-Mill School Issue BLOOMFIELD HILLS - Residents of this school district will go to the polls Monday in a special election to vote on a request for 14 mills for five years in additional operating funds. A combination of steadily increasing enrollment and rising costs has caused the board of education to make the request, according to school officials. Added pay for teachers, while a factor, is not the principal one in the board’s decision, ’Trustee Donald Hyde said. Nearly halt of the $2,362,000 which the proposed millage hike would produce, Hyde noted, is allotted for 122 new instructional positions. For that purpose 6.9 mills or $1,136,000, will he used, he said ★ * ★ ’The reason for this, Hyde continued, is the district’s rapid growth. From approximately 2,500 students at the beginning of the 1957-58 school year, enrollment has climbed to 8,766 this year. A total of 10 mills, about 71 per cent of the hike proposed, will be used to pay for all costs related to staffing, maintenance, and service for new classrooms, according to Hyde. Besides the 6.9 mills for teachers, the total includes $172,000, or 1 mill, for additional student materials; $246,000, or 1.5 mills, for 48 noninstructional positions; and $102,000, or .6 of a mill, for added buses and utilities. Better pay for teachers accounts for $529,000, or 3.2 mills, of the total. All other increases amount, to $177,000. ★ ★ ★ ’The requested 14-mill boost would cost the owner of a home assessed at $40,000 market value $280 a year in additional taxes; for a $50,000 home the yearly increase would be $350; and for a $60,000 home, it would be $420. The district currently ranks 16th in Oakland County with an overall operating millage of 22.10, plus 7.26 for debt retirement. AP Wirtphol* MAKING CONTACT - Former Vice President Richard M. Nixon shakes a hand, one of thousands he grabs daily, as he campaigns in the Republican presidential primary in Wisconsin. This handshake was at a Milwaukee advertisers’ dinner last night. Fall at Home Is Fatal to White Lake Woman A White Lake Township woman died yesterday of injuries received in a fall at her home. ★ ★ ★ White Lake Township police said that Mrs. Ronald R. Kimler, 41, of 9058 Sandy Ridge sustained a fractured skull in the accident Wednesday. ★ * ★ She was admitted to Pontiac General Hospital after being found unconscious at the bottom of the basement stairs by a son, according to police. NATIONAL WEATHER - Showers tonight are forecast for widely separated areas — in the Ohio Valley area, in southern Texas and in the Pacific Northwest, stretching inland and turning to rain over most of Montana. It will be cooler in the Ohio Valley and along the Atlantic Coast. Dirksen Hurt in Fall WASHINGTON od mechanical condition are junked beacuse their bodies are tattered from corrosion. Millions of others bring a lower trade-in or resale value each year because rust spots are beginning to flake the body paint. ★ ★ The destruction of cars through corrosion is particularly noticeable in the hard-winter areas where salt is used on roads to melt the snow. But it is also prevalent in coastal areas where salt spray from the oceans carries fine salt particles into the air. For a number of years, there have been underoa tings available to help retard this rusting. But they were not wholly satisfactory. They had a heavy asphalt base which tends to dry out, separate from the metal surface and leave pockets where the corrosive salts and other chemicals collected. NEW MATERIALS In recent years, however, new materials were developed which came much closer to deserving the title of “rustproofing.” These were substances which, when sprayed on correctly, stayed sticky and clung closely to the hidden metal surfaces, preventing the dissolved salts from attacking the metal. ★ ★ ★ Undercoating could be applied fairly easily and required no technical skill. But rustproofing took longer, required more skill and the proper tools to apply. It also cost about twice as much as undercoatin^, between and $75 for the average car. But it paid off in preserving cars longer, giving the car a higher resale value at tum-in 'time, or keeping the car jdrivabie condition and appearance over a longer period of its mechanical life. STUDIES MADE Rustproofing concerns have now made studies of cars each year as new models were turn-by the company. They blueprinted the undersides of them, becoming famiiiar with all the corners and crevices and recesses where salty water can splash. They diagrammed on Intruder Dropped in Avengers Style CANTON, m. (AP) - An In-truder in a Canton store was pursued and stunned Wednesday night with a well-aimed karate chop by a store employe who said he only did what they do on television. ★ ★ ★ “I’ve been watching the Avenger? on televisim and I just tried to do what they do,” said Billie R. Vaughan, 27, an employe at the auto supply store. “And it worked,” he said. The karate victim was being heid for questioning by police. BUGS about it .. . CfNTER AUTOBAHN WOTORS Our Mtootlon of now and tiMd Wr* to tho most oom> ptotol Our fsoillttos aro tho dstol Our oustomsr ssrv* tea to toMl Wo guanntM your toMtaotlon, eemo In YOUR CENnR We^re so nice to come back to TELEQRAPH RQAO jntMrtkBfSfHnWnlMi MONK 888-45S1 $50 charts how a rustproofing job should be done. This included mapping on a diagram specific places where tiny holes should be drilled so a spray gun placed into the hole can cover metal areas with rustproofing that otherwise would not be touched. These holes later were plugged up and made unnoticeable. ★ ★ ★ There were some drawbacks to both undercoating a rustproofing. A treatment added 40 to 60 pounds to the weight of the car, causing a slight decrease in performance and perhaps slightly reduced gas mileage. And in the event of an ac- cident requiring repairs to the car, the compound had to be removed and then replaced after the repair work was done. Stones thrown up by tires, tor example, nicked or scored the protective layer of rustproofing. thus exposing metal to rust. These could be touched up, but that would be a continual lob which few motorists would bother to do. All in all, however, the case for rustproofing, o r dercoating in areas where the rusting was not such an acute problem, is one of more credits than debits and would be a good investment for the average motorist. RENT FOR >35V>. AM06 APARTMENT ■ Vll W per Month IF YOUR INCOME IS LESS THAN $2.9,00. PER YEAR! NORTH HILL FARMS Now Accepting Applications For Rentals From People 62 Years of Age and Older *RENT WILL NOT EXCEEO 25% OF YOUR MONTHLY INCOME *RENT INCLUDES: * ATTRACTIVE BRICK FACED BUILDINQS * EFFICIENCY and 1 OR 2 RODM APARTMENTS RENT SUPPLEMENT: $4700 O p*nom), $S,000 (4 p«non>) * IF YOUR INCOME: E«MdiTh.Abov*Figur*«R.ntaU ir iwun inifwniB, 06through»iso * LOCATED ON KENNETT ROAD NEAR TELEGRAPH i DIXIE Housing Need Coupon Pcrsons interested in securing housing in the North Hills Farms rent supplement fill in this coupon and j;.: " mail it to Charles L. Langs, Inc., 785 Auburn, Pontiac, >•:; Michigan, 48058. Under this rent-supplement program, renters with low income will only have to pay 25% of their monthly income for rent. The government will subsidize the difference for the required rent. These units normally rent from $1 06 for an efficiency apartment, $131 for one bedroom, $150 for a 2 bedroom apartment. { Number of Persons:..........Ages:................ I Bedrooms Needed:______Yearly Income: (combined).. MAYTAG Washer & Dryer CLEARANCE SALE 20« FREE Electric Dryer Installation on EDISON Lines Now is your chance fo buy America's most famous washer and gas or electric dryers at tremendous savings never before of-fered at Waite's. Hurry, this spectacular value won't last long. Appliances . . . Lower Level CLEARANCE Hjl Limited Quantities ^Al t No Phone or Moil Orders Wi^iLiLi H All Soles Final. No Returns Delivery on Large Items Only! All Season RAINCOATS Reg. 12.00 $Q and 13.00 O Fully tiined washable raincoats in petite and half sizes. Charge It. Roincoots . . . Third Floor Short Sleeve NYLON SHLLIS a ’4“ Short sleeve nylon shells with zipper closing, in sizes 34' to 40. Assorted colors. Sportsweor.., Third Floor Dirndl Style Junior COnON SKIRTS Reg. $429 6.00 H Stripes, prints and solids in dirndl cotton skirts. Sizes 5 to 15. Sportswear. . . Third Floor Misses', Half and Junior DRESSES Reg. 13.00 $Q to 19.00 0 and O Linen types, cotton knits, crepes, and print jerseys in sizes 5 to 15, 8 fo 29 and M’/z to 24'/2. Dresses... Third Floor Men's Long Sleeve SPORT SHIRTS Reg. 4.00 O $Q to 10.00 ^ for O Choose from ivy button down or spread collars in colorful plaids, stripes, and trims. Men's Wear ... Street Floor Men's Permanent Press DRESS SHIRTS Reg. 9 $C 4.50 X for ^ .Choose from modified spread collars of button down icollars in men's white dress shirts. Men's Wear... Street Floor Boys' Long Sleeve SPORT SHIRTS Reg. $#5 4.00 Save V2 on boys' button down collar sport shirts in plaids, stripes, and prints. Many permanent press. Boys' Wear ... Second Floor Boys' Famous Faroh SLACKS and JEANS 10% OFF Our entire stock of boys' Foroh jeans and slacks in belt ‘loop or continental styles. Solids or patterns. Boys' Weor .. . Second Flwr Size 7 to 14 GIRLS' DRESSES Reg. 7.00 $C to 8.00 J Choose from assorted stylejs in solids, prints or stripes. Wash ond wear and permanent press finishes. Girls' Wear . . . Second Floor Famous Make Womjen's BRAS and GIRDLES Reg. 2.50 $150 $in to 18.50 1 to lU Choose yours from white and colors in ponty girdles^ : girdles and bras. Slimwear ... Second Floor Women's Famous Brand FULL and HALF SLIPS Choose from a host of styles In women's famous maker 100% nylon dacron and cotton or 100% cotton full or holf slips. Lingerie , . Second Floor Decorator-Inspired BRIDGE SET :s *2” I Completely co-ordinated bridge set Includes ploying cords, score pods, pencil, napkins and coasters. Notions ... Street Floor Plastic Coated PLAYING CARDS Reg. 7QC 1.10 / X Plastic coated playing cords in several creative designs. Pinochle decks only. Notions . . . Street Floor Ladies' Costume JEWELRY 1^6 3 for *2 Ladies' costume jewelry In pins, earrings, necklaces, charms, bracelets and sweater guards. Charge Yours. Jewelry ... Street Floor Entire Stock Children's TENNIS SHOES Reg. 3.30 $197 to 3.50 1 Choose from our entire stock of children's fine tennis shoes. Charge It. Children's Shoes . . Street Floor Entire Stock LOAFERS Reg. 8.00 $^97 . $Q97 to 12.00 0 0 Patio and Town Square loafers. Women'* Shoe*... Street Floor Our Complete Line RADIOS 'n PHONOGRAPHS 25% OFF GE, RCA, and Ambassador transistor, table radios, portable phonographs and portable stereos. Charge Yours. Radios . . . lower Level Famous Quality BELLEAIR SHEETS $949 teiliiis $199 or Twin Flat ^ or Twin Flat I Reg. 3.40 Reg. 2.90 Full FiH*d $079 FollFittod $0^^ or Full Flat or Full Flat Jmm Fine Percale Sheet* , Quality Mutlin Sheet* Sheets .. . Fourth Floor 80x90-lnch Size 100% WOOL BLANKETS Reg. $1A44 24.95 10 Machine washable, shrink resistant, assorted colors. Blankets . . . Fourth Floor Large 36x70-lnclj TERRY BEACH TOWEL Reg. $A 6.95 ^ i Extra thick and fluffy terry beach towel. Striking color 1 combinations. Towels .. . Fourth Floor RCA VICTOR New Vista Console COLOR TV Reg. $595 $400 Value X Big 295 square inch viewing area screen in bold, beautiful living color. Features Super Bright Hi-Lite color tube with 38% brighter color. Fine quality walnut veneer finish. TV Dept.. . . Lower Level APPLIANCE CLEARANCE SALE 295 Sq. In. Color Console TV, Reg. $519.. $428 295 Sq. In. Color Console TV, Reg. $499 ..$418 295 Sq. In. Color Consolette TV, Reg. $418, $389 il 2,000 BTU Air Conditioner, Reg. $239.00, $178 [Six Speaker AM/FM Console Stereo, Reg. $225 $160 [Double Door Refrigerator/Freezer ' Combination, Reg. $529 $367 30" Toppon Gas Range, Reg. $249.95 ... $178 Famous Maytag Porta-Dryer, Reg. $109.95, $90 Entire Stock of WOMEN'S SHOES Choose from many styles and colors in naturally advertised brands. Women's Shoes . . . Street Floor | 6500 BTU AIR CONDITIONER ,?& *118 Standard window mounts, automatic thermostote control and operates on 115 volt. Lower Level THE PONTIAC PRESS 48 West Huron IKreet Pontiac, Michigan FRIDAY. MARCH 29, 1968 GSi&'SS. aMntktr ud Advtrtlilaf Dirastor RlCiitU M. mWR'tt Trt»«ur*r and naaDc* OfltCM Vote ‘Yes’ on Bloomfield Water Bloomfield HiUs citizens are talking about the upcoming election April 1, and referring to it as another chance to vote for water. This newspaper thinks that it is tragic that the water issue was not passed years ago when it was first voted on. ★ ★ ★ As is so often the case, scare-type, last-minute propaganda by some selfish group has managed three times in the past to defeat the municipal water system where two-thirds approval is needed. We would like to think that the solid citizens in Bloomfield Hills felt strongly enough about having a city water supply to get out on Monday and vote to approve the city proposal for water. ★ ★ ★ In this day and age adequate water supply and fire protection go hand in hand with the basic requirements for just plain normal living. Currently the City of Bloomfield Hills lacks this very important everyday commodity. Austerity is fine, but when it comes to water and fire protection for your homes it is silly to let misinformation cause any further delay. This is the year to rewrite the chapter and verse and vote an overwhelming two-thirds majority for water on Monday. Also on the ballot will be two city commission posts to be filled. Edward H. Lerchen, 180 Lowell Ct., and incumbent Walter W. Fisher, 149 Marblehead, are both highly qualified and deserve your consideration. Voice of the People Love's New Sweet Song David Lawrence Soys: Airport Facilities Must Meet Travel Trends Dem Unrest Likely to Aid LBJ In all considerations of the Oakland County Airport situation, future forecasts must be kept in mind. The U.S. Department of Transportation estimates that air travel will triple in the next ten years. This sounds impossible but it’s the finding of the experts. ★ ★ ★ Oiir own area must bear one fact in mind. No matter where the future facilities will be lo- cated, fierce protests will arise from residents of the area. But progress can’t cease. We must move onward. ★ ★ ★ America couldn’t have been built by deferring to home owners who didn’t want a living room slashed by a railroad, a highway or an airport. That reaction is natural but it simply has to be viewed in the light of the whole question. WASHINGTON - Emphasis nowadays is being placed on the crowds that Sen. Robert structive alternatives are not being offered. This presents to the Republican party, too, its most important challenge. For the problem the Republicans face in the campaign Is not merely how to Technology Makes Wheels of Progress Go Round Preseason publicity is ballyhooing the latest advance in lawnmowers— key-operated self-starters, no less. Here, as with automobiles and so many other things, the credit can probably be given to the women’s influence. Anyway, it is one more small example of how competition in a free enterprise system spurs progress. Some may complain that manufacturers’ sole interest in introducing annual and sometimes meaningless model changes is simply to make us discontented with last year’s product, and that last year’s product is deliberately engineered to wear out at a precise date that will insure a continu- ing turnover in the market (which seems no small technological feat itself). ★ ★ ★ And it may well be true that automobiles, washing machines, vacuum cleaners or whatever could be built to last, say, 30 years. But if they had been built that way 30 years ago, few could have afforded them, and even if they could, it would merely have meant the freezing of technology at the 1938 level. Until some centrally planned economy shows how to do things better, we’ll stick with the present system with all its faults—including the fact that it makes us unhappy with our old-fashioned, 1967-model grass clipper. Kennedy and Sen. Eugene Me Carthy are attracting, and the Impression is being conveyed that a real threat to P resident J ohnson’s p 0 I itical future is being raised within his own party. | veterans of American poll- Funny or Frightening? tics are inclined to believe Disagrees With Senator on Troops for Vietnam Senator James B. Pearson suggests pulling troops out of Europe to send to Vietnam. Most tours to Europe are from 15 to 24 months. If t^se men completed their tours in Europe and then went to Vietnam it would mean an additional 13 months away from their families. Is it fair to order our men to be away from their loved ones for two to three years? ★ ★ ★ Maybe Sen. Pearson would like to be separated from his family that long, but ask our boys who are doing a man’s job what their answer would be. The morale of our boys and men is low enough. Let’s not bury it. JOAN E. DANIELS 510 CAMERON ‘Voice Opinion on Value of Space Program’ Every day we hear talk by uninformed people about the Space Program. It has taken many years to assemble a staff of men capable of doing this highly trained work. Now they are letting skilled men go and doubling up other jobs. ★ ★ ★ The Space Program covers not only travel in space but the manufacture of many self-propelled smaller rockets --now our salvation in Vietnam. The discovery of many new life-saving drugs, new foods, new fabrics to withstand extreme heat and cold, new research instruments have all been a part of this program. It is a far more important program than subsidizing farmers and the Cholera in Hogs program. We are now ten years behind Russia. Can we afford that? This is one of the critical issues facing Congress at this time. Let your congressman hear how you feel about it. G. MARTIN 70 MOHAWK Discusses Issues in Troy General Election It would appear that one issue in the general election in Troy on April 1st concenis whether the “master plan” is a deal with Mr. Johnson as a fixed and inflexible pattern for the future growth and develoi^ Dolitical nersonaUtv but to ment of Troy or merely a guideline subject to change Md ponncai personauty. out lo jj ^ important that the master plan be flexible. ★ ★ ★ Because of their experience, hard work, proven dedication and affirmative attitudes, I urge the people of Troy to vote ............. 6__B_____ Glen Honghten for Mayor, and Sherwood Shaver and Hil- worth the risks of a change at bert Hirshfield for city commissioners in the City of Troy this critical time. prove to the people that what is proposed as a substitute for the policies of the incumbent administration is going to'be LAWRENCE Bob Considine Soys: PowelVs Performance-- Percentage Rigged Against Drillers for Oil, Gas that the Kennedy-McCarthy uprising probably will help rather than hinder the renomination of President Johnson and may even increase support for his election. The political mistake being attributed to Messrs. Kennedy and McCarthy is that they are attacking the head of their own party. Extreme criticisms might next plane to be expected from the Pitcairn Is- Republican (^position, but speeches by Democrats intended to discredit the President actually help to deface the image of the party itself. Sen. Kennedy’s speeches place on Mr. Johnson—and not the Democratic party itself—the blame for things which have produced discontent across the country. NEW YORK - Did you ever see a performance the likes of Adam Clayton Powell’s 0 n general election on Apr! li VINCENT J. McAVOY, MAYOR CITY OF ’TROY Youth Facing Draft Gives View on Vietnam 1 am 18 years old. I have just registered for the draft. If our government is for the people and by the people then you will use me as a sacrifice in Vietnam. 1 cannot vote for or against any decision. I cannot resist all of the citizens of the U.S. Our President and you have sent thousands of boys to their death over the past seven years so that all of you can say, “We have never had it so good.” I don’t want to die so that all of you adults can have better business. I don’t want to die for the benefit of politics and history or for a ridiculous word “commitment.” land. At times he Isn’t It time to make a definite decision to declare war M get out and stop forcing a minority to death whQe the rest of you live in splendor? Please make a decision and stop playing with a few lives while the majority goes free. YOUR TOY Drilling figures for the first half of 1967 show that of 3,889 exploratory wells drilled in the United States, only 708 produced even a trace of oil or gas. The other 3,181 were dry holes. Records compiled by the American Association of Petroleum Geologists over a period of years show that on the average, only three out of every 100 new-field wildcats (weUs drilled in areas not previously productive) are likely to find enough oil or gas to be profitable. Is “pouring money down an oil hole’’ replacing the rat hole as the axiomatic measure of economic futility? ‘SchooV Voters Score on Wide Front By DICK SAUNDERS Something besides progress came out of Monday’s school millage election In the Pon-tiac School „ District There were t w 0 distinct messages; one concerning our kids, the other concerning Pontiac’s Negro poiwlation. First, the kids. They’ve changed since I was one of them. SAUNDERS I’m not sure exactly what it is. Maybe it’s more sensitivity. Nor, can I say this impression is based on a vast, well researched investigatimi of attitudes of ail papils ia our school district. Actnally, it’s based on Just a handfnl. What I’m trying to say is that I can remember a time wb^ millage requests went to tile voters and I was a pupil Some of our teachers gave us the pitch about the troubles which would befall the school system if the mill-age was rejected. * ★ ★ We generally reacted with a ho-hum attitude. Not so with my kids. I spent a good deal of the past weekend trying to prepare them for a suspected defeat of the millage request Monday. It Wasn’t easy. They were really upset about the mere thought that they’d lose music and other special classes if the millage failed. Since then. I’ve talked with other parents who experienced the same reaction in their kids. Maybe we will have to re-evaluate our thinking about getting to the parents through their children. * ★ ★ The younger pupils are evidently not emotionally equipped to accept and understand a defeat as readily as adults. As for our Negro community, it is interesting to note that the predominantiy Negro voting precincts voted in favor of the 6.2&-miIl increase. This says something. First, from a segment of the community where housing is generally poorest, there is more unemployment and the average annuad wage Is lowest, you would expect the strongest opposition to any tax hike on purely economic grounds. Add to that the protest votes one might expect from a minority group in a school district where racial integration of student bodies and teaching staffs is progressing much slower than many feel is equitable, and you come up with a sizable “No” vote. That wasn’t the case. The majority of the Negro community voted “Yes.” Putting aside economic and social problems, tiie Pontiac Negro stepped up and voted to pay his share toward betterment of the entire community —black and white. I wonder if the white community will return that act of good faith when open bousing is decided at the polls June 2|47 The average voter, on the other hand, is much more likely to hold parties rather than individuals culpable. Bobby Kennedy’s assumption is that, if he can prove that Lyndon Johnson has followed a wrong course—in both foreign and domestic affairs—the voters will still wish to maintain the Democratic party in power. Actually, more penetrating attacks on the Democratic administration have already been made by aspirants for the Democratic presidential nomination this year than by any of the Republicans. Politicians on the Republican side are pleased with the opposition to the Johnson administration that has been develoi»d, and they expect to capitalize on it during the forthcoming campaign. ★ ★ ★ During the five months that will elapse before the Democratic convention is held in Chicago, it is possible for the country to become fed up with the carping criticisms emanating from the opponents of the administration and to begin to wonder why con- Verbal Orchids Emmon Jack Soncrant of Union Lake; 84th birthday. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph E. Cole ofClarkston; 55th wedding anniversary. Mrs. Frank Nichols of Rochester; 89th birthday. seemed to be a John Barrymore, playing the role of a defrocked monk driven whacky by wine, women and too much son at BtanlnL At other times, he flamed and fumed with the impressive zeal of an Old Testament prophet calling down a shower of brimstone. It was difficult to see just how many flocked down 7th Avenue when he took to the pavements, coatless, shirt open almost down to his navel, the sweat and rain in his h^ and on his face. But if there wasn’t quite the crowd he hoped for he reached Into the New Testament for consolation: “As the Lord said, ‘Whenever two or three are gathered in my name, I will be amongst them.’ ” ROLE UNCERTAIN The role the reverend will play in the momentous political and racial events that lie Just ahead is not now known. A guess is that if he takes unto himself a candidate it will be Bobby Kennedy, and if he embraces a Negro leader it will be Stoke-ly Carmichael. There is always a chance, of course, that the several outstanding legal cases against him will dump him in prison or send him winging back to the Bahamas. If it is the former, Powell could well become something of a martyr by means of thought convolutions rtn to •fiHttad to th* uw ^ fipuMt-I all local mwi printod to Tha Pontiac Press to dcllvared Iw (ST 5? “"•* • mailed In OaKland,---------- '' THE I’ONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAV. MAIK H 29. inc8 A—7 LBJ's Team Runs Scared Wisconsin Victory for McCarthy Looms MILWAUKEE. Wis. (UPI) -President Johnson’s political team in Wisconsin is running his primary campaign as if it were besset by an enemy armed with new weapons on an unmapped battlefield. It is relying on old fashioned organizational politics in a state with no tradition for that style of political warfare. It is facing an unconventional opponent in Sen. Eugen( McCarthy, the Minnesota peace candidate challenging the President with an army of student volunteers and tireless personal campaigning in an effort to carry his message to every voter and every home in Wisconsin. Scared by the results in New Hampshire, Johnson forces have sent major administration spokesmen into Wisconsin to defend his policies against daily assaults from McCarthy. ★ ★ ★ These have included Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey, Secretary of Agriculture Orville Freeman, Postmaster Gen. Lawrence F. O’Brien and Atty. Gen. Ramsey Clark. More professional talent also has been recruited for Johnson campaign headquarters. One newcomer, bearing scars from the New Hampshire primary, is James Keefe, chief aide to Sen. Thomas J. McIntyre, D-N.H. MICHIGAN TALENT Another is Neil Staebler, Democratic National Committeeman from Michigan who acquired a reputation as organizational genius during his tenure as Democratic State Chairman there. The Wisconsin vote is next Tuesday, just three weeks after McCarthy came close matching Johnson’s turnout in the nation’s first 1968 presiden-tiai primary in New Hampshire. Although he trailed t h e President in the popular vote, McCarthy won 20 of New Hampshire’s 24 delegates to the Democratic Natonal Convention. a* ★ * Leslie Aspin, a former campaign manager for Sen. William Proxmire, D-Wis., is field director for the Johnson campaign in Wisconsin. He left a job in the Pentagon to serve as deputy in this state to James Rowe, the Washington attorney, old political ally of Johnson and national chairnuui of the Citizens Committee for Johnson - Humphrey. NO PREDICTION After moving back to his home state in mid-February, Aspin is complaining that McCarthy ‘‘got a head start” in the competition for the votes in the Democratic primary. Aspin refuses to predict the outcome, but says he would be very happy to see Johnson poll 51 per cent of the vote. Aspin says he is uncertain about the outcome because of the endorsement given McCarthy for Wisconsin by Sen. Robert F. Kennedy of New! York, and because of^ “crossover” voting. Wisconsin voters are not registered by party and can vote in either party’s primary. Republican leaders have appealed to GOP voters to stay in their own primary, which offers no significant contest. Former Vice President Richard M. Nixon iis a sure winner over Gov. Ronald Reagan of Callifornia, an inactive candidate, and Harold E. Stassen, who keeps trying although he has not won presidential primary since 1952. ★ ★ ★ The last major Democratic presidential primary contest in Wisconsin was held in I960, when John F. Kennedy defeated Humphrey. Both candidates were heiped by Republican ENDS SATURDAY March 30 One Full Color 5”x7’’ TOT TRAIT Color Portrait ...... 99 _ _ n. M S p.a. Hon.. Thun, ' Fri.,Sii. ______________ T««i.*WoA SEARS IN PONTIAC Seal’s Soma auantUlai limitad ... on mIo wMIo Hioy loit Men’s 2.99 short sleeve no>lron dress shirts, now 2.49 All no-iron fabric, including oxford cloth in reg. or button down styles. All popular solids, stripes in sizes 14V> to 17. Save todoyl Reg. $18 exciting match-mates in 3-pc. weekenders 1299 The brightest girls around sport these sparkling color coordinated outfits in single or double breasted styles. Tattersall, plaids, checks, solids. A stroke of brilliance in newest colors and styles, sizes 8 to 16. Make a matchl Boy’s 2.99 short sloove pormanont press sport shirts 1.88 6ig noise now is wide track stripe, spring solids, colorful pastels in Ivy or button down collars. Dacron® polyester /cotton in Waldorf styling. Sizes 8 to 18. SALE Girls’ Easter dresses in many colorful fashions 4.97 - 5.97 Sizes 4-6x Sizes 7-12 lace, ruffles and pretty Easter egg pastels In nylon. Dacron* polyester/cotton and cotton voiles. Many, many styles including natural waists or straight lines. Some have their own petticoatsi Shop today and sovel Check these low prices on HEALTH AND BEAUTY AIDS I 99e IS fl. n. VO-5 skampon For regular 77* or dry hair ^ ' 1.39 Mini-Mist dry shampto Really gets VIC hair clean * • < 1.39 Softique bath nil. special Long lasting QQc Concentrate. OOg 3 fluid oil. Sfluidozs. Tandar Touch skin moisturixer 7 fluid Rig. 79c Hazel Bishop lipstick 97« Reg. 21e box Kleenex tissues 125 tissues I fie per box Reg. 69e Suave hair spray 13-oz. wt. spray can 55« per box 79e Happy Face skin cleanser New, big 4-01. wt. jar Eosy to usel f O Q Dependable PAINT SALE! Paint Oapartmant at Draytan Plain. Only 3.99 Jet Speed latex wall paint gals. One coat covers most surfaces. Hard plastic surface won't absorb grease, dirt. Completely washable. White and decorator colors. Sovel Waterproof basement paint 2 7*’ Majestic keeps walls dry for years. White, colors, 2 gallon pail. Savel Jet Stream semi-gloss enamel 2 2*’ Reg. 1.49 ea. Easy to use. Dries to hard, non-glare finish. Many colors. Majestie floor/poreh enamel 2 ... 2” Weather resistant for wood, concrete, in many colors. Hurry nowl Reg. 89e metal pan and 7-ineh rollar sat For fast, even paint application. 57' Reg. 3.98 4-in, nylon bristle paint brush For all interior, exterior surfaces. Reg. 4.99 antiquing kit in ehoica of finishes Two-step liquid kit ^44 has all you need. OPEN 10 A.M. TO 9 P.M. (SaU 9;30-9) Drayton open Sunday Noon to 6 p.m. (Downtown cloiei Twe$^ Wti. al 6 p.m./ DOWNTOWN AND DRAYTON PLAINS A—8 THE PON'ITAC PRESS. FRIDAY. MARCH 29, 1968 SPRINt; CLEAN1N(J ~ Petal the ele- phant Is scrubbed by keeper James Me- house at the Philadelphia Zoological Gar- Bfllls on her first day outside the elephant den as Peggy waits her turn. SHt«S Michigan's Fine Jewelers '/2 0F¥^Z^ 0 Oval>Jew*l tramliler mov«m«ntt , ,, • No cordt.. • Operatot on one flashlight bottory V • Runs 20 months without bottory roplocomont Efoganf Gifts For Any Occasion ... or Add a Smart Touch to Your Homo AHrMtiva dMorstor dock wltli aittmatini i brass sphere-tipped rods. Brown dial with white hands. R0gular $20 $995 Regular $20 MORE THAN 1/2 OFF y ^0^ Genuine solid walnut spokes with altematini sphere-tipped brass rods. Brown diai. white hands. American-made ieweled transistor movement Diameuriy. ,22.50 MORE THAN $1120 Va OFF ■ ■ 11 MODELS AVAILABLE AT Vi off regular PRICE Easy Termsf Regular $30 *14« Large, genuine soiid walnut diamond-shaped spokes and narrow spears on polished brass frame. CIrcuiar-finished brass diai with star-studded biKk canter. Poiished brass hands. Americanntade )c**lnd transistor movement Diameter 26”. polished brass frame. Circular-finished brass with star-studded black center. Polished brass hands. ried transistor movement Diameter 23*. Against Thurmond Attack Kerner Defends Riot Report in Hearing WASHINGTON (AP) - Illinois Gov. Otto Kerner, nominated by President Johnson for a judgeship, has appeared before Senate panel for a confirmation hearing but spent most of his time arguing with a Southern senator about the report of the riot commission which he headed. “You really think white racism caused these riots?” asked Student Confab Chooses Rocky HOLLAND (UPl) - It took 1,200 high school delegates to a mock Republican convention three ballots to pick a presidential nominee. And they finally decided on a non-can-didate — Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller of New York. ★ * ★ The delegates, representing 23 high schools in West Michigan, voted Rockefeller as their preference and then chose Sen. Charles Percy of Illinois to be his running mate. iSen. Strom Thurmond, R-S.C., ■Sat the Thursday hearing, w * * “This had a great deal to do with these riots—the feeling of repression by many Negroes who allegediy felt there is a barrier against them,” Kerner swered. * ★ * Thurmond said Negro civil rights leaders Stokely Carmichael, H. Rap Brown and Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. “have gone from city to city and in their wake have followed riots.” Kerner said that would be impossible. WHY BLAME WHITES? “Then why blame the white people?” Thurmond countered. “This attitude has developed' over a pwlod of time,” said Kerner, who was chairman of the National Advisory Commission on Civil Disorders. "For many years the Negro has been kept In certain areas and not allowed to move. Intentionally or unintentiemally because of white people,” Kerner added. ★ * ★ Illinois Sens. Everett M. Dirk-sen and Charles H. Percy, both Republicans, endorsed the President’s nomination of the Democratic governor to be a judge on the Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals. The Senate will vote on confirmation. The President was quoted Thursday in a Negro magazine as saying the Kerner Commission’s report was “the most important report that has been made to me since I’ve been President” but that that reme- dies it calls for would cost $80 billion. “I can’t get that,” Johnson was quoted as saying by Jet Magazine. The magazine said the quotes stemmed from a conference between Johnson and Negro publishers March 15 at the White House. “Congress won’t vote me $80 billion, and there is no point of disillusioning,” the President said in the Jet article. our policy ... no one has one like this Gliding Granny LONDON (UPI) - Mrs. Ann Welch, 50 and a grandmother, has been named manager of the British gliding team of 17 men and women who will compete in the world championships ini Poland in June. | 1AII furniture may be returned within thirty day» for a full refund if • you are not entirely aati.ficd. 2. All furniture will be serviced at no diarye for as lon(j as you own it. .......... Jo receivu le furniture within one month. 3 We will refund the difference in cash if you should hatipen to receive • a lower price somewhere else o '' '' The Better Bedroom 1‘eople on Telenraph Road nf 1718 S. Tiliirapb Rd.. Bloomfield. Between MirKle Mile and Orchard Lake Rd. STORE HOURS: MONDAY-SATURDAY 9 TO 9 • CALL 334-4593 LAST 2 DAYS TONIDHl AND SAT.! l\/lagna ONCE-A-YEAR FACTORY-AUTHORIZED ANNUAL SALE DELUXE COLOR CONSOLES Old-World French Provincial —model 748. All with today’s BIGGEST PICTURE! Your choice of five authentic styles... u!l NOW ONLY w 'w Graceful Contemporary—model 740. Magnavox INSTANT AUTOMATIC COLOR always brings you perfect color pictures..,INSTANTLY and AUTOMA-nCALLY! COMPACT And VERSATILE COLOR TV BIG BICIURE CONSOLE At A Table Model Price! NO DOWN PAYMENT • 30 MONTHS TO PAY! Plenty of FREE HOME TRIAL! We Do Our BUY! SELL! TRADE! USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! Own Service Open Every Nite Til 9 P.AA. j TEL-HUROH SHOPPING CENTER-PONTUC FE 3-7879 1550 UMON LME RD.-UNION IAKE 363-6286 Free Parking At Our Door THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, J^IARCH 29. I'lXiS A—9 Lenten Guideposfs—27 She Discovers Intense Love (EDITOR’S NOTE — This is the 27th in a series of 40 articles to be published by The Pontiac Press during Lent telling personal stories of faith in action in the lives of sincere people, others relatively unknown.) By EUZABETH BYRD Writer, New York City There was nothing extraordinary about the day as it began. I awakened as usual at 9 o’clock in my bedroom facing New York’s Blast nth Street. As I stretched and yawned I moved mentally through the day ahead. There would be the usual six or seven hours of work on my novel; a beauty-parlor engagement at 4 p,m.; a dinner date at seven. In my robe I went to the kitchen, put on water for coffee and drank a glass of orange juice. Then, suddenly, I was struck by what I can only call an “awareness” — a moment nearly indescribable, a moment so emotionally shattering that I sat down on the kitchen stool, unable to stand. It was as if, in that brief moment, all the love in the world was beamed on me and I returned it with such intense joy that my eyes streamed tears. I was cradled in the universe, loved by every living thing, based in wind and rain, sea and star. BYRD Time seemed nonexistent, but I doubt if the experience lasted more than 10 ecstatic seconds. Because, when it vanished, as suddenly as it had come, the water for coffee was not yet boiling. LIFE DIFFERENT And my life has been different from that moment. I, who had always hated insects, found myself unable to kill a fly or a moth, not through sentimentality but from genuine compassion. My relationships with people deepened and broadened. Without consciously setting out to, I found myself trying to make amends to those I had hurt in the past. I was perplexed by all of this until I realized that it all stemmed from those brief moments when I had felt so profoundly loved. Was it unique, then, simply a freak of chance, or had others experienced it too? Shyly, I extended tentative little feelers in conversation. At last one day a gay young bachelor friend of my brother’s said, “Ruddell told me about something strange that happened to you a couple of months back. I wonder if it was anything like what happened to me?” His experience, like mine, had happened suddenly, too, as he was driving through the Arizona desert. “It was so terrific,” he said, I had to stop the car. It was like champagne; no a million! times happier and deeper; and although it was peaceful it was exciting, too, and earthy.” “Did it change you in any way?” “Yes,” he said. “I always had believed in God, but now believe in an afterlife.” He reasoned that if such acute perception of happiness existed •— and we both knew that it did — then there must be that kind of happiness somewhere. He said, “I think we had a preview of heaven. In fact I’m so sure of it that I don’t fear death any more.” Nor do I. A year passed since my own experience. Then one afternoon a man came to wash my tall ■ 1-fashioned windows. W e as he worked and he interested to learn that I was a writer. FAMIUAR PATTERN “I don’t suppose you’d ever believe what happened to me,” he said. “It was back in 1949 . . But as he told his story 1 did believe, for here was the now-familiar pattern. He had been visiting a friend who was convalescing in the hospital. “There was an old man in the next bed who started singing. I guess he was delirious. It was right then 'that this thing hit me. It was like . ..” I Again the inability to explain. “It was like heaven. I had to sit [down on niy friend’s bed. I preteneded to feel dizzy but the truth was, I was too happy.” Happy, shaken, awed, always hoped it would happen again,” he went on. “And it did. Last month. I was at home, helping my kid with h i s homework. And all of a sudden, this sort of glory . . . The next day I did a queer thing. I went out and bought a Bible.” “Why was that queer?' asked. “I hadn’t had much faith.” He paused, searching for the right words. “I thought it was enough just to love people. But the kind of love I felt then seemed to come from outside me or beyond me — or above me. I wanted to learn more about it.” I felt he had penetrated to the very essence of these periences. For the common denominator of them all is this outsideness, this otherness, this sense of something completely independent of our worth or our understanding or even out readiness, which impinges suddenly on our lives. NEVER THE SAME It is as if the heart of God reached out to the heart of man. And man is never the same. That God will reach out for us this way — undeserving as we are — always will be one of the most thrilling stories of thi world. Tomorrow — Charlotte Hale Smith, Doraville, Georgi housewife, teiis how surgeons corrected seven heart defects ' a young giri and how faith and prayer brought her through. (Copyright, IfU, iMopotti Auoclotto, Inc.) WHAT SIZE AIRCONDmONER DOVDUNEED? Confused Shout cooling? That's exactly why you should clip this article and save it. The chart at light takes away most, of the mystery by listing the models designed to cool various room areas^ It also shows the broad range of General Electric Room Air Conditioners available. Look it over and clip it. IMPORTANT! Measure your room-area's square footage, then use the chart to further narrow down your search for the right room air conditioner. Plan ahead! Clip and save this ad! BEDROOMS 5000 to 6000 BTU/HR SMALL LIVING AREAS OR LARGE BEDROOMS 6500 to 8500 BTU/HR MEDIUM LIVING AREAS 10,000 to 15,000 BTU/HR Areas up to 120 sq. ft. 5,000 BTU/HR From 120 to 170 sq. ft. 5,000 to 6,500 BTU/HR From 170 to 250 sq. ft. 6,500 to 8,500 BTU/Hk From 250 to400sq.ft. 8,500 to 11,000 BTU/HR From 400 to 600 sq. ft. 11,000 to 15,000 BTU/HR From 600 to 940 sq. ft. 15,000 to 19,000 BTU/HR From 940 to 1470 sq. ft. 19,000 to 24.000 BTU/HR LARGE LIVING AREAS 18,000 to 19,000 BTU/HR NOTE: Because there are so many factors (building construction and usage, Individual customer preference, climate variations, etc.) this is a guide, rather than an absolute rule, toward selecting your room air conditioner. Your GE Dealer can pinpoint the one that fits your need. Here are some in this area: LARGE LIVING AREAS AND MULTI-ROOM 21,000 to 32,000 BTU/HR 115V—7.5 Amp agksiosa sooobtu/hr “ AGK£605F 5000 BTU/HR AGKE306F 6000 BTU/HR AGKE606F* 6000 BTU/HR AGSA306F 6000 BTU/HR AGSH306F 6000 BTU/HR 115V-7.5 Amp 1AGJE307F* 6600 BTU/HR AGJE607F 6500 BTU/HR AGFE609F .8500 BTU/HR 115V-12 Amp AGKE608A 8000 BTU/HR AQJE309A 8500 BTU/HR AGJE609A* 8500 BTU/HR 115V-12 Amp AGDS323B 23,000 BTU/HR AG0S624B 24,000 BTU/HR AGGS627D* 27,000 BTU/HR AGGS632D 32,000 BTU/HR generalBelectric BIRMINGHAM DEMERY'S, INC. 200 N. Woodward HAWTHORNE ELEC. 375 Hamilton CLARKSTON CLARKSTON APPL & FURN. 7183 North Main UKE ORION LAKE ORION APPL. 158 S. Broodwoy PONTIAC PRAYER APPL, INC. 589 Orchard Lake Are. 1108 West Huron GOOD HOUSEKEEPING SHOP OF PONTIAC 51 West Huron GOODYEAR SERVICE STORE 1370 Wide Track Dr. W. GREEN LANE ENTERPRISES 661 South Blvd. Eost HAMPTON ELECTRIC 825 West Huron K-MART STORE 7 Sduth Glenwood PARK JEWELERS 1 North Saginow TROY K-MART STORE 100 E. Maple UNION LAKE PEER APPLIANCE 8161 Commerce Rd. WALLED LAKE TOM'S FURN. & APPL. 1142 E. West Maple WATERFORD CURT'S APPLIANCE 6484 Williams Lake Rd. PLAN AHEAD J SAVE by buying NOW while pre-seasbn prices are still in effect and selections are Ksmmcmio OUR SPARE-SHAPED DOUBLE KNITS GO MORE PLACES, MORE OFTEN! This year, fashion's really in the pink! It's easy to see why — these quick witted double knits have a lot more going for them than just their obvious good looks! Shifts, skimmers, and two-parters are supple, carefree polyester knits that breeze through every fashion situation a girl can get herself into. Great looks to wear museum-hopping on the travel circuit... just as poised for crosstown shopping. Add to this their crease shedding, hand washable ways — you'll wonder how you ever lived without one! A. Overblouxe twosome takes scarflike collar and slimliner skirt. Pink, aqua, or beige. Sizes 10 to 1 8. $18 B. Gently fitted skimmer is buttoned and banded in white, has nigh-rise collar. Pink, navy, or aqua. Sizes 7 to 1 5. $14 C. Short sleeved skimmer has button trimmed yoke. Pink, navy, or green. 10 to 1 8. $14 OUR FASHIONS NEVER SAY HOW MUCH ... JUST HOW RIGHT! REDUCED - LAST 2 DAYS! f' A complete wardrobe of our own superb Gaymode fashion hosiery! REG. 3 PRS. 2.95 ... NOW 3 ■" 2.34 Seamless and full fashioned . . . dress or business sheer — treat yourself to q complete selection of Gaymode® hosiery at these terrific pre-Easter savings! You'll find long wearing micro mesh, demi toe styles, delicate plain knits, cotton soled service weights, even contour fit Cantrece® and Agilon® stretch nylon. Elegant shades to complement every fashion wardrobe in sizes 8y2 to 12. Short, average and long. Don't miss this event... be here earlyl GREAT REDUCTIONS! Gaymodesupport hosiery in proportioned sizes ALL NYLON: REG. 2.98 PR., NOW NYLON/SPANDEX: REG. 3.98 PR., NOW 1.77 2.77 Seamless Gaymode® support hosiery now priced for superb savings excitement! Fashion cued shades and perfect fit . . . as well as the day long comfort and wearing ease you wont! SVa to 12 Short, Average and Long. PENNEYS MIRACLE MILE CHARGE IT! A—-10 THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAV. MARCH 29, 1968 Antiwar Melee Marks Opening of 10-Nation Monetary Confab STOCKHOLM OW - The finance ministers of 10 major industrialized nations, including the United States, opened a crucial international monetary conference today after a melee between club-swinging police and 150 anti-Vietnam war demonstrators The ministers faced the threat of firm opposition to their plans from France. ★ ★ ■A: Violence broke out as U S. Treasury Secretary Henry H. Fowler arrived at the conference hall. The young demonstrators shouted “USA-Murdcrers” and other slogans and burned a large placard in the form of a dollar bill. At least a dozen were arrested as they resisted police efforts to push them back into a side street. The conference was called to take the final step in the creation of a new monetary unit for use in international trade to supplement the principal monetary units now normally used—gold, dollars and pounds sterling. ‘PAPER GOLD’ The new unit — called SDRs, or special drawing rights on the International Monetary Fund, and nicknamed “paper gold” — would increase the amount of international credit available to finance trade among nations and, it is hoped, promote a more rapid expansion of world trade. As the ministers gathered for the conference, the U.S. Senate, considering a bill to cut federal spending and raise taxes, adopted an amendment aimed at European countries that still owe billions in World War I debts to the United States. ★ * ★ The vote on the amendment by Sen. Peter H. Dominick, R-Colo., was 46-25. He said the amendment was aimed primarily at France, but it also would affect Britain, Italy and many other countries. Under the amendment, the United States would refuse to redeem in gold dollars held by those countries but would crrait the amount of dollars against the war debts. U. S. retail sales in 1967 are expected to be about 4 per cent greater than in 1966._________ By-Election Defeats Jolt Britain's Wilson LONDON (DPII Prime Mini.ster Harold Wilson'.s Labor parly government reeled today from its most .sensational ballot box defeat since it came In power four years ago TTie Times of London said Labor’s loss in all four parliamentary special elections yesterday had so shaken some of Wilson’s back bench followers in the House of Commons that they began plotting to oust the prime minister. Polls had predicted that Wilson’s government, deep in austerity and public feuding, was in trouble in the voting to fill vacancies In four constituencies. Labor had held three of the seals. Rut all four went to Conservatives and by such ma.ssive proportions that even Ubor party General .Wretary Len Williams called it “A severe setback ” “This is a devastating verdict by the electors. For the Labor government to hang on to office is to make a complete sham of democracy,” said Anthony Barber, chairman of the opposition conservatives. MARGIN LS TREBLED The conservatives held their .seat of Warwick-Lcam-inglon Spa by 21,922 votes, triple their victory margin in the previous election. And they captured from Labor the seats at Dudley, Meriden and Action by respective majorities of 11,6.56, 15,263 and 3,720 votes. Political observers said the defeat will make even tougher Witson’s task of trying to get Britons to accept his bitter economic measures, including lids on wages and higher taxes. Copper Pacts, Price Hike Branded as Inflationary WASHINGTON M — Presi-i sponsible cooperation of labor I dent Johnson’s chief economic and management to arrest thel adviser has cast a di.sapproving|wage-price spiral,” Okun said, eye on the labor contracts ten-|sKVERE SETBACKS 1 talively agreed on with Whitej addition, he said, the House help to end an moved in because month copper strike. .some Western states suffered] Arthur Okun, chairman of the President’s Council of Economic Advisers, al.so branded as inflationary Thursday a price hike announced by one of the four big copper producers in- ; severe economic setbacks because of the .strike. Meanwhile, a tentative con-tract .settlement covering ' I another 2.000 copper workers ,our mg COHP.. .’"-iwas reported. This completed volved m the prolonged dispute. of the original 60,000 . sU ikers. Okun said the wage increases for some 60.000 copper workers In 22 stales were bigger than „„ , , .. . . , the new agreement Is Tn^ S-h^’^^tween Kennecott’s Chase! announced the pr.ee h k e , International reached an agreemen w. h it Association of Machinists. , unions which is expected to set the pattern for the rest of the (Adv»riu»m#ni) I Industry a total hike of $1.13' Wake Up Your hourly in wages and benefits over 40 months | mining, smelting, and refining * J i» V workers. Some other employes AllCl Be TOUT j won a 75-oent increase over 36! SMILING BEST I months. i fl ' . . Peristalsis is the muscular action | PRIMARA PRICE ! of your digestive system. When I’helps Dodge fixed a primarv; peristaltic action slows down, iir j ,i'.> waste materials can build up in copper price Wednesday of 42 tract. You can become cents a pound, up 4 cents. irregular, uncomfortable, stuffed. 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NO MONEY DOWN-NO PAYMENTS >TIL JUNE-3 YEARS TO PAY ZENITH 20” DIAfiONAL MEASURE COLOR TV A brand nnw Z.nith high p.rfennanc* handcraftMl color TV choMii. Supor Vidoo Rongo tunor. Sunshino Color Picturo Tubo, oxcludvo Color Domodulotor circuitry, 6“ twintono tpookort. 25,000 volu of picturo power, full 82 channel UHF/VHF tunor. "Puih-Pull" On-Off switch. Auto-lorifior. Logs opt. extra. 399“ Fretter’s Pontiac S. Telegraph Rd., Va Mile South of Drchard Lake Rd. FE 3-T051 FrettCT’s Southfielil on Telegraph Road Just South of 12 Mile Rd. 358-2880 Fretter’s Oakland 411 W. 14 Mile Road Opposite Oakland Mall 585-5300 OpcB Daily II te l-Sunday 11 to 1 Romney Signs Bill for Added Spending THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY. MARCH 29, 1968 A—11 LANSING (UPI) - A $2.73 million supplemental appropriation bill for state building projects this year was signed into law ITiursday by-Gov. George Romney. Signing of the bill brings this year’s authorized general fund spending to $1,102 billion, which is certain to be boosted by another $32.4 million as soon as the House approves another Deadline Near on Easter Tapes for Servicemen Easter “Voices from Home,’ taped messages, to be sent to servicemen overseas, should be made by April 6, the local Red Cross office at 118 Franklin Blvd. announced today. That date is the last day a family can make the free 15-minute tape at the Red Cross office and still be reasonably certain the message will be delivered by Easter. ★ ★ * Appointments for taping may be made between 9 a.m. and 4:30 p.m., Monday through Friday. Saturday tapings are possible if prior arrangements are made. CM Sets Class on Side Arms supplemental appropriation to help state agencies meet their unanticipated bills. ★ * ★ The capital outlay measure signed by Romney includes $1.92 million from the general fund and $812,819 from restricted funds. Among the major appropriations included are: $600,063 for higher education, which Ix'eaks down to $402,822 for temporary classroom at Saginaw Valley College; $130,000 for completion of plans for an instructional facility at Western Michigan University; $31,000 to finish construction of the forestry building at Michigan Technological University; and $30,000 for the remodeling of the trade and industrial building at Ferris State College. ■k It -k $605,450 to the Department of Ck)nservatlon for beginning construction of a coho salmon hatchery on the Platte River. $104,000 for the use mental health programs, which $100,000 will be used to complete construction of the forensic diagnostic center at Ypsilanti State Hospital. k k k $500,000 for remodeling of the Cass and Mason state office buildings in Lansing. Of the restricted fund money, $804,819 will be used from funds earmarked for waterways purposes to permit an early start on launching sites in connection with coho salmon fishing. Following numerous requests by residents concerned with the increasing crime rate, Community Activities, Inc., of 5640 Williams Lake, 'Waterford Township, has decided t o sponsor a course in the use of side arms. A qualified instructor wiii conduct the ciasses, according to CAI officials. The course will begin the week of April 22 and continue for five weeks. Persons participating in the training must be at least 21 years of age. k k k Interested persons can register by contacting the CAI office. The days and times the classes will be held depend on preferences designated b y registrants. The instructor will determine who will qualify to receive the training. Woman to Be Tried for Manslaughter Charged with manslaughter ii a fatal stabbing, a Pontiac woman yesterday was ordered to stand trial in Oakland County Circuit Court. No trial date was set. Following her arraignment before Judge James S. Thorbum, Mrs. Nannie Tiller, 35, of 204 Prospect was returned to the Oakland County Jail in lieu of $2,000 bond. Mrs. Tillery is accused of he Feb. 14 death of Jesse J. Williams of the same address. He was stabbed in the neck during an alleged scuffle with Mrs. Tillery’s son, Norburt. ALCOHOLISM iiiipmsiliLiTr KNOW WHAT IT IS NOW IT OAN OE TREATED A.A. MEETINGS: 11 AM. Mon.-Sot. 8 P.M, Sun.-Sat. AUANON mMlingu 1:00 P.M. Twi. and Thun. MMKng on Saturday, 7:30 aitan la anyann Inlumtud. Spualinn fnm: A.jL.^Al-ANON ar lalatad fialdt tn aUi MkliND COUNTY ALAND CENTER f En^ne or Transmission L igini _______ Troublo ... CALL MIDAS PHONE 334-4727 Little Joe*s FIATUM FURNITURI VALUII 3-ROOM COMPLETE OUTFIT Priced as Low as mi NO MONEY DOWN Long, Easy Terms Little Joe’’s BARGAIN HOUSE Cormr laMhuiii and Wallen Open Daily to 9 P.M. Sat. 9 A.M. to 6 P.M. 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I won’t go inb details, but it is all my fault, because I told him | something about her ^ past that she told me in confidence. I am sorry I told him now, but I never thought he would hold it against her and make such a big deal out of it. This girl is the best i friend I ever had, Abhy, and I wanted her to be my maid of honor, but now my fiance says he doesn’t even want her at our wedding. I am just sicjc ova: this. Worse yet, he says he doesn’t want her in our home after we’re nfarried. What am I supposed to do? I don’t choose his friends. My fiance says if I loved him. I’d listen to him, and end my friendship with this girl. I say, if he loved me, he wouldn’t ask me to. I love them both and I want him to forgive and forget. Who’s ridit ^ how woidd you handle it? IN THE MIDDLE DEAR IN: If your fiance asks you to make a choice between your girl friend and him, that’s a decision only you can make. I think his unforgiving and holier-than-thou-attitude is less than admirable, but then I don’t know what the girl’did to provoke it. I hope you’ve learned a lesson. No fish ever got caught keeping his mouth shut. ★ ★ ★ DEAR ABBY: I am a single woman, 41, gomg with a man of 58. He is a widower with three grown childrei^ He’s very attractive and represents the kind of security a woman itoy age rarely finds. He was happily married for 30 years and now he wants to marry me. The trouble is my mq^her. We have lived together since Dad died 12 years ago, and ever since I told her I want to marry this man she has cried and carried *a will adjust timakaapinf ta this talaranca. M iMcaaaary. •uttairtta Is tar ana OPEN MON., THURS., FRI. UNTIL 9 P.h ■w mm I Clusters of luscious purple grapes symbolize abundance and good eating. These special clusters are intended to protect your hands and table f^m very hot pots. One pot holder and two hot mats are crocheted. Leaflet S 406. KINNEY'S SHOES For the WhoU Family PONTIAC MALL MIRACLE MILE THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, MARCH 29, 1968 B—a Theta Sigs to Hear Astronaut's Wife Garden Unit | Value Conflicts Topic of Guest Speaker to Hear Talk, 'Wildflowers' j Dr. Milton Covensky will ad-j dress the April meeting of Pi Lambda Theta following 6:45 p.m. dinner at Topinka’s on 1 West Grand Boulevard April 5. Syndicated columnist Rene The Matrix dinner will be at-' Walter VanDien of Michican onv\Anfav» C a 4 A ____I__I U.........___________i:__’ . . . .. .... ® . Carpenter, wife of S c o 11 tended by women in journalism Carpenter, the second astronaut and related fields of com- to orbit the earth, will be the featured speaker at the Detroit Professional chapter. Theta Sigma Phi Matrix dinner on Monday. The banquet will be held in the Book Casino of the Sheraton-Cadillac Hotel at 7 p.m. Following Mrs. Carpenter’s address, she will be questioned by a panel of newspaper people, moderated by Mrs. Dorothy JUrney, women’s editor of the' Dietroit Free Press. ★ ★ Panel members include Russ McCloy, director of the Women’s Department of the Detroit News: Judd Arnett, Detroit Free Press columnist: and Jean Pearson, Detroit News science writer. McCloy lives on| Watonga Drive, Union Lake. j Iowa-born mother of four and one of today’s most successful columnists, Mrs. Carpenter writes with rare wit and wisdom about her life, her children, and her observations of things and situations that all women face. LETTER WRITING Her career as a writer was inspired by her husband’s enthusiasm for her letters written during their many months apart. She says: “When your husband is flying with the Navy he has long deployments away from home. Written communication was my marriage for nine months of each year for a long time. munications, their escorts and General chairman for the event is Mrs. Tom Jakobowski of Royal Oak. Mrs. Edwin Olson of Priscilla Lane, Avon Township is president of the Detroit Profesdonal Chapter of Theta Sigma Phi. RUSS McCLOY State University will be guest speaker at the April 8 meeting of Birmingham branch Woman’s National Farm and Garden Association. VanDien is also in charge of teacher education for the Department of Conservation, including the Haven Hill and Higgins Lake projects. His topic will be “Familiar Michigan Wildflowers.” TEA Tea will be served at 12:30 at the Birmingham Community House. Mrs. Fred Harley is tea chairman and Mrs. Marvin Katke and Mrs. Norman W. Berry will pour. j Robin Esley, scholarship stu-| dent of the branch, w i 11| graduate in June. She will become second in command at ^ the Kalamazoo Nature Center. ★ ★ * The Dirt Gardeners of the branch will meet at the home of Mrs. Harold Storch at 10:30 ij:?:: a.m. the same day. Robert! Known of White Chapel'^S Memorial Cemetery will discuss ^ I the fall planting for t h e I Memorial Garden which the Enamel Closet Inferiors Apply a coat of bright enamel to the interiors of closets as a real work-saver. It’s much easier to wash the enamel than to repaint the closets. Dr. Covensky, a professor of history at Wayne State University, will speak “Conflict of Values in Today’s Culture.” The Alpha Pi and Alumni chapters of Pi Lambda ’Theta will host the North Central Regional Conference May 4 at the McGregor Memorial Building at Wayne State University. Dr. Richard Wisniewski A Wide Variety dedicated a few years in Spring Styles Evening Course Set for Knitters Spring fashions offer a sturdy ; in contrasts. There are the skirt I i lengths, mini and maxi, the hotj -colors up against the pastels i and all going alongside black ^ intermediate knit- * which is back. *■*"8 will be offered at the CAI ■k -k ir Building, Williams Lake Road. With a budding television! There is long hair as well as ®*8ht week course is career ahead, the 39-year-old;the boyish crop, and the no-'scheduled for evening hours, blue-eyed blond makes it clear dipstick look as well as the Mrs. Francis Curtis will be the that her husband and family | brightly roughed lips of the instructor. < mono For fur are still No. 1 in her life. 1930s. For further information and - registration, contact the CAI I Building. Movie strongman Mickey Hargitay, a former husband of the late actress Jayne Mansfield, poses with airline stewardess Ellen Saino, 25, ' after announcing their engagement in New York. Hargitay, 37, says the wedding is planned for Easter Sunday in the New York suburb of Mamaroneck, the bride’s hometown. Diamond Flight in Celebration of Golden Year RAMONA, Calif, (ff) — To celebrate their golden wedimg anniversary, Neil Stonehouse took his wife, for an airplane ride. He made his first : flight in 1918 — the same year they were notturied. k * * With his wife as a passenf Stonehouse led a group of friends, piloting 13 planes, in a diamond formation as they circled Ramona Airport. He was flying a piper J-E Cub that he had rebuilt himself. k * * Afterwards, all were guests at a reception attended by Mr. and Mrs. George Karcher of St. Louis, at whose home the Stone houses were married 50 years MMH SRK! Sofas of High Style and Quality Now at Special Sale Prices! $1 Q$90000 rary, Traditional, Colonial and jE* TO ^ Provincial. Good Furniture Costs You Less at i?f TDVi'rrTD1? Oonvaniant Tarms-N day plan tama at a PDltNlI UKE OPEN daily IiM to 6;M 144 Oakland Ave. MON. and FRI. iVENimS mL • PONTIAC Fr«« Parking Lot Off Clark Stroot Student Suits for Spring from the Lion Wayne’s education department will be the main speaker. His topic will be “Professionalism in Education.” After nine years of Fidel Castro’s rule, Cuban men permitted to buy only one shirt and one pair of trousers a year, reports the American Institute of Men’s and Boys’ Wear. /EDDING INVITATIONS? here's the Perfect Solution to so many problems... RaoHy . . . H coth K> lUilo to bo to righti Simply mIkI fronl bMnHful STARIIGHT IhMi mnounnmwih.nopkira.brMa't Ma.brkia’f toko knif*. gifta, lirotntaciu Haim, wadding mamory booia, labia dacaraflana, bridal occatMiriat, ale. ExcHIngly panonallxad. Your dioica of riylaa and pricat. Household Appliance & Specialty Co. Phona 335-9283 . Spring Costumes for Young Girls^ Easter A. For the best dressed young men — our sportster outfit: 2-button country squire shaped plaid jacket from 'Botany' comes with solid color twill pant and reversible vest that matches both. In a selection of fabrics. Plaids available in light ton, grey or blue. Boys 8-14. 35" B. Wool twill double breasted sportcoat, taking the fashion lead with hacking flop pockets, 8" side vents. In spring colors, sizes Student, Regular and longs 36 - 42. Boys’ ^^Robin Hood” Dress Shoes Treat your feet at Lions with the newest styles in block leather with fashion and comfort. _ Priced according to size and style. O" 8^ Sizes 5-8 and 81/2-4 Miracle Mile at Telegraph Rd. Daily 9:30 A.M. to 9 P.M. USE YOUR LION CHARGE Navy Coat with Pleated Skirt on Dress A. At the top of fashion In her double breasted coot of 100% bonded acrylic with brass buttons. White sleeveless shift with l^nife pleated skirt edge and belt with blue and green stripe. sizes 5-6X.. 25" 29" New Look.. . Striped Cotton Knit Costume B. In navy and white stripe the newest look for spring, her costume of cotton will bo the envy of her fashion world. Her double breasted coot with epaulets of red on shoulders and red mandarin collar and red cuffs, will command attention. White dress with navy and white striped yoke. sizes?-12.............................. 23" Patent to enhance Her Wardrobe Young Girls "Robin Hood" elegantly fashioned for your best costumes. Hi-style with buckle and cutouts. Girls' Black or White Patent. sizes8"A-4. Priced According to Size and Style B— THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY. MARCH 29, 1968 TRAIN HITS BRIDGE - The wrecked engine of a Milwaukee Road passenger train rests against broken bridge piers after being derailed in Minneapolis. About W feet of track was ripped out during the accident which occurred Wednesday night. Police say the accident was apparently caused by vandals. Two crewmen of the train were treated for minor injuries. 'Lyndon Will Run, Not Walk' LBJ Brother Sees Tough Fight long-time associate said It’s safe, to say that if campaign strategy! is being mapped, Sam Houston is among those at the drawing board. Despite his relative anonymity, Sam once was well-known in | Washington—as Capitol Hill aide to his brother and later as a Democratic Policy Committee staffer. SINCE WEDDING Sam has been living in the' White House since attending Lynda Johnson Robb’s wedding President “get out there and last December. He said he’s| talk about the issues—and de-lived off and on with Lyndon j fend himself.’’ I two-thirds of his life.” | “Everybody enjoys a good j yying in the White House is: clean Rght,” said Sam in a rarej .jjjgjQrically nic^,” he says.! interview during which he g jjjg conven-mented that brother Lyndon is jem pia^e to live in.” WASHINGTON (AP) - President Johnson’s brother, Sam thinks there’s a tough election campaign ahead and that Lyn don “wiil run rather than walk.” Sam Houston Johnspn, !i4, seldom seen or heard in public, has joined the Johnson family in the White House and aims to help the President “all the ways I can”—and to “keep out of trouble myself.” ★ * He says he’d like to see the too busy with problems of his presidential office to devote as much time as he ordinarily would to a campaign. 'EASIER THAN 1964’ Tali, lanky and possessor of a Texas twang much like his And brother Lyndon is .ikely 'to come in and cut your light out.' He’s been doing that to me for 30 years,” Sam said, recail-ing his brother’s oft-repeated brother’s, Sam Houston recalls'taunt; “Sam Houston, are you many of Lyndon’s campaigns. i working for the power company He predicted this one “won’t be or me?” as tough as ’64’ or 1948, when! President’s only Lyndon first won a Senate seat bother in a family of five chil-by just 87 votes. 'dren, studied law and says he Sam, once privately described went to four colleges-San Mar-by his brother as “the smartestjcos. University of Houstbn, Unl-politician in the family,” versity of Texas and Cumber-shrugged off questions about land Law School. He worked in what role he might play in any Lyndon’s Senate office until he Johnson bid for reelection. j broke his right leg in an acci-★ * ★ dent. Osteomyelitis set in, Sam But it was iearned he has a said, and four inches of bone desk at Democratic National had to be removed from the leg.i Committee headquarters. And a That’s when he retired. Twice-married and twice-divorced, he has been living with a sister in Austin, Tex., in recent years. He has a son and daughter by his first marriage. Sam said he came to the White House to work on galher-ing the President’s private papers for the Johnson presidential library. ★ ★ ★ Five years younger than the I President and one inch shorter at 6 feet 2, Sam seems to joy conversation and talking on the telephone almost as much as his brother. White House operators refer to him as “Mister Sam.” Although openly hoping for the excitement of the campaign, Sam—like everyone in the White House—isn’t quite admitting the President is a candidate yet. ANYTHING HELPFUL Sam says, “I want to do anything helpful. I wouldn’t knowingly do anything to hurt him.” He reported that Luci Nugent’s son, Lynn and Johnson’s little white mongrel dog, Yuki, are the President’s favorites. And he spoke of “a little bit of jealousy” between the dog and baby as they v|e for the President’s attention. ★ ★ ★ Through the years, Sam noted, he has had such titles as ’the congressman’s brother,” ’the senator’s brother,” “the vice president’s brother” and now “the President’s brother.’’ “You guess what my title will be next January,” he suggested with a chuckle. JULE FAMULARO IL LYNCH Law Degree For MAYOR Engineer For COMMISSIONER PETER TAUCHER Attorney For COMMISSIONER A VOTE FOR F.LT. Is A Vote For A Better GOVERNMENT IN TROY Mr. and Mrs. John Kokolli Mr. and Mr, Gerald Honchborgor Mr. and Mn. Don Grier Mr. ond Mrs Anthony Polotto Jock and Jeonn. Slin. Mr. ond Mr,. Tom Donnelly tori Schm... Mr. ond Mr,. Ronold Bridge Keith Bon d Bo n and Juno Vaughan Mr. ond Mr,. Loon T. Ooniton Roleigh and Brenda Bodenboch Fra nk ond Sara Mai.ano Mr. ond Mr*. Robert Brock Mr. and Mrs. Joh Bill ond Joanne Whitcomb Mr. and Mr,. Jo»oph OoMore Godield G. Tho Mory R.dpoth Mr. and Mr,. ClilFord WhlHlold Helen B. Tho K* n ond Kathy Freemdn Mr. ond Mr,. Lawrence J. Taylor Edward J. Huabntr Hoi old and Shirley Si»on Mr and Mr,. Roy Chamber, Mr. and Mn. Joi :k Davis Jock o nd Chorlotte Morningitor Mr. ond Mr,. Cod Cook Mr. and Mn. Sylvetl ler Silveitrie Johi n ond Lorene Houifeld Mr. ond Mr,. Ed Volode Mr. and Mn. Jomei McFarland Mr. and Mr,. Douglas Lonnin Mr. and Mn. Brui ;e Blotch Jem Hormon Bob ond Betty Coylor Mr. and Mn. Gen< t Spilman Mr. and Mr,. Jim Pottiion John ond Marianne Dennison Mr. and Mn. Horve y Clounen Mr 1 and Mr,. Don Olm,teod Bill and Jon Goodwin Mr. ond Mn. Joi lel Polik Mr 1 and Mr,. Gene Spilmon Lon and Grace Wilber Mr. and Mn. Jim Sandison Mr. 0 nd Mr,. George Menold Dick and Margaret Fritby Mr. and Mn. Willit am Broiler Joe Hein Ernie ond Rita Boulon Mr. and Mn. Neal e R. Clark Jock Stewart Bill and Edith William, Mr. and Mn. Allc in Dutch Mr. Ol ltd Mr,. C, Jo,eph Socho Norm and Alice Krebiehl Mr. and Mn. Mei Till Kelly Mr. c ind Mr,. Robert Steven, Joe ond Shidey.Boker ' Mr. and Mn. George Price Mr. or id Mr,. Ronald Ackerman ' Lon ond Glody, Horn Mr. ondMn. Char le> Snyder Mr. ond Mr*. Arche Bartlebough State Aide Urges Halt to DDT Use LANSING (UPI) - Director Ralph A. MacMuUen of the Michigan Conservation Department has urged officials of 26 communities, including Detroit, to halt use of DDT for control of Dutch elm disease. ‘The growing evidence of the harm that this p e r sd s t e n t c hlorinated hydorcarbon insecticide is perpetrating on our natural resources and environment lease us no other choice,” he said. ★ ★ ★ The city that concerns the department the most,” spokesmen said, was Detroit, which has a large supply of DDT on hand and as yet has not changed its plans to spray trees with DDT this spring. In a letter to mayors, MacMillan commended as “true conservationists'’ the leaders of 30 communities that have agreed to scrach DDT from their Dutch elm disease mosquito control programs. SOME PLAN USE According to Ted Black of the department’s Pesticide Control Division, the following cities still plan to use DDT this spring: ★ # ★ Clawson, Dearborn, Detroit, East Detroit, E s s e x v i 11 e, Femdale, Garden City, Grosse Pointe Farms, Grosse Pointe Woods, Harper Woods, Hazel Park, Lapeer, Lathrup Village, Livonia, Midland, Mount Clemens, Northville, Oak Park, Plymouth, River View, St. Clair Shores, Southgate, Warren and the villages of Grosse Pointe Shores and Han. MacMullen said there is little ’excuse for continuing use of DDT, since there are shortlived, safer insecticides market. the MacMullen conceded that some other insecticides cost more thatn DDT. But, he said, “The benefits in a cleaner environment will be worth the extra costs in inconvenience and money.” lidcntially, comptotely ind carefully prepare your tax Complate Accounting Services return. We puarantee your r«'“r" »««rofoly 8 CONVENIENT LOCATIONS preparjl. ^ 6524 Williams Lake Road Jn^err™ It*foond,**lhot It in Waterford, OR 3-0074 ~!;.i?;"irThoCo?;ri.’'’* 18 E. Huron 332-5898 4676 Dixie Hwy. 673-1582 Free Parking Perry & Huron Next to Bob's Submarine Be a ScoHs EariyBird WIN A PONTIAC FIREBIRD Nothing to buy. Just fill in this coupon and take it to any Scotts dealer listed in this ad by April 30th Yes! I want to WIN a 1968 Pontiac Firebird hardtop coupe. OFFICIAL RULES . On Ihis tnlry blank, or a plain 3" x 5" pieca ol paper prni your naine and address... and deposit it at the special Scotts EariyBird Display at your Scolts dealer-no later than April 30,1968. n i ui.i, ' Winners will be determined In random drawings conducted by the D. L Blair ■ Corporation, an independent judling organiMlion. whose decuiont era finiL Only one priia to a family. Winners will be notified by mail. No: •----1™ -iBered. to residents r>( the U.S.A. except ' State and local reguleliont apply. ^tts Earljfiinl Sale $150 off Turf Builder You’ll love the way turf builder makes grass multiply itself. Turns thin scraggly grass into a sturdy, vibrantly green lawn. Keeps it that way longer too, thanks to Scotts Trio-nized bonding. Save on Turf Builder now. 15,000 sq ft 03795- 12.45 Save $1 on 10,000 sq 8.95 Save 50c on 5.000 sq ft3r45' 4.95 $2 off Halts Plus HALTS PLUS goes right to work fullfertilizing your good grass—^making it grow sturdier and greener. At the same time Halts Plus lies in wait and knocks off crabgrass as it germinates. Result? A greener, thicker, healthier lawn without crabgrass this summer. 5,000 sq ft 34:95" 12.95 Also save $1 on 2,SCO sq ft3>99’6.9S $ 1 off Windsor Here’s your chance to save on Windsor, the improved variety of Kentucky bluegrass that feels like velvet and wears like iron. Windsor makes magnificent green turf. Loves summer heat and thrives under hard use. Windsor 2,500 sq ft H795- 10.95 Blend Seventy 2,500 sq ft ^ 8.95 (70% Windsor) I dealers I AUBURN HEIGHTS MILFORD OXFORD PONTIAC Auburn Heights V&S Hardware 3320 Auburn Rd. Phone: UL 2-2020 Milford Hardware 404 Main St. Phone: 684-2955 Tunsteod True Value Hardware 3 S. Woshington St. Phone: OA 8-2517 F. J. Poole Co., Inc. 151 Ooklond Ave. Phone: 334-1594 DRAYTON PLAINS Elden's Hardware 3040 Sasha bow Rd. Phone: OR 3-1420 ORCHARD LAKE Howell Lumber 4220 Orchard Loke Rd. Phone: 682-1020 PONTIAC Auburn Ooks Nursery 3820 W. Auburn Rd. Phone: 852-2310 ROCHESTER Bordines Better Blooms 1835 S. Rochester Rd. Phone: 651-9000 Fillmore Hardware 4180 W. Walton Blvd. Phone: OR 3-1880 Strong Brothers 3375 Orchard Loke Rd. Phone: 682-2730 Barnes & Horgrove, Inc. 742 Wj Huron St. Phone: 335-9101 Case's Hordware 335 Main St. Phone: 651-4211 Regal Feed & Supply Co. 4266 Dixie Hwy. Phone: 673-2441 LAKE ORION Jacobsen's Greenhouses & Garden Town 545 S. Broadway Phone: MY 2-2681 OXFORD W. A. Komm Feed & Grain Co. 33 Pleasant St. Phone: OA 8-2293 Fay-Barker Hardwore 650 Auburn RJ. Phone: 332-3721 McNob Building Center 3535 Elizabeth Lake Rd. Phone: 682-8200 WALLED LAKE Fitzgerald & Sons 970 W. Mople Phone: 624-4583 THREE COLORS SPECTACOLOR every new auto loan If you’re buying a new car or truck before April 15th, we’ll give you a free blanket to finance it at Community National Bank. It’s an $18.95 washable wool car blanket in red plaid with a handy carrying case. And getting one couldn’t be easier. Just pick out your new car and ask the dealer for Community National financing. He can take care of all the details right there in the showroom. Or if you prefer you can stop in at one of our 20 convenient offices. Either way you get the free blanket—as well as Community’s usual fast, friendly service and low bank rates. National I Bank Offices in Oakland and Macomb Counties Bank at Community ... Most people do! Member FDIC B—8 THE PONTIAC PRES5?;. FRIDAY. MARC H 29. 1968 Hannah Sees Advantages ih Black Power Move •LANSING (AP)—The chair-' ' ll will be bad if it promotes! man of Ih^ L. S. Civil Rights and seeks to enforce self-scgre-Commission said Thursday the jjalion," added Dr. .lohn A developing Black Power move- Hannah, named first commis-ment could be good for Ameri- . . . . ..if Sion chairman in 19.S8, He also can society if it generates pride and’ a.spiration among is president of Michigan .State Negroes ' Lniversity. Addressing delegates to a il.self sufficiently for us to magnificent contributions to the|ately sets blacks against whites time has come for the federal: regional conference of the appraise it fully or fairly, but-building of our country by men in constant confrontation, fori government to begin shifting^ National Association of State jt is already evident that it h.ju; and women with black skins that is the course that can leadjthe responsibility for action on' Boards of Education, Hannah potential both for good and f-or and give them due credit for only to defeat after involvingiracial problems to the localj . ill. J what they have done, are doing all of us in what could be alievel. * * * I ★ ★ ★ ^ and can do. struggle too dreadful to con-1-------------------—-------— ' i "This movement has still not| "It will be good if it causeis ★ template.” California has more military j yet developed or manifested!America to reappraise thi "It will be bad if it deliber-| Hannah said also that the! bases than any other state. Negroes March i for Third Night Monroe Seized Fireworks Explode, Hurt Man Omc a CHI tried to block the procrssiun, and a carload of vhitp lircklcrs sped by, f man tiers u .dked the , asphalt I A.VSING iLPL -- A Route 11 wilt,mil lights and only , '...'.nf,Seated fireworks' .x casioiia! police escort pxp|(«ied 'ITnirsday c a u s i n g It rn.in K'i. sprcilic oh|cct damage and" injury to one "as II, pu.icsi the anvsl d ^ police smm .J dcmunsirators during here. of niarclu's in ,Siv hialp police report that one ‘ employe, .lerome Thompson.! *siillered a hrui.sed hand and jai! II, Mm MH possible minor burns. NO i\(')m;\ i * ★ ★ V.cdiiesdc, ttii- Miia,! iim„n was v cifirnl Tlic Ntiglm about I Minpc u I H im, I tlir S.'.ri;,: I'..', le .Scii'ioi and '.win! il ers rein.Ha:cri and p'tnopal (ired Thr\ sun :ri ledt-nd cuiiri of the cmn|jlaini.- Damage to the warehouse. Imated just a stone's throw (idni .Stale Police headquarters, 'II tiring was light, police said, idltion.r ,,t --------- liaimnc Heiiiiit; li.limg m Iceland this teach idl ,,if drastically, tile .school pre\ailing northeasterly winds tia.c filed eailv in the vear prevented the otei s.tnu' herring Imm eoming in the iiMi.ii iiMiiim giounds VIKING CARPET AS LOW AS 5390 Dixie Highway FIX BROKEN DENTURES AT HOME IN MINUTES Amasing newQuik-Fit rapairi broken plates, fills in cracks and replaces teeth like new. Fast! Easy to use! No speriai tools needed. No costly dental billa. Murks every time or your money hark. Accept no substitutes, always ask for F»X At All Drug Stores 'School Aid Systems in Need of Changes' OETROrr I AID The shift A major city, which u.ses i of people from the central roughly only about a third of its| cities lo the suburbs has income on schools, needs pro-1 created a pressing need for portionalely more stale aid than! 1 (hanges in the formulas stale's a district which is able to spend [ I use in distributing state educa- a gre.iter portion of its taxj * fional ,Hid to Iwal school revenue on schools, he said. i hoards, a gathering of .school a paper prepared for the| I board members from across the workshop by Dr. Seymour! I coimtrv was told Thursday. Sacks, a Syracu.se University j This p'int was made in professor of economics, staled' several papers presented lo a that most stale aid formulas; workshop on state school now in effect were drawn up finance laws at the 28th annual when big city school districts convention of the National were the wealthiest in the stale. School Roard.<^ As.soriation in and smaller, rural areas needed Detroit assistance. 1 * ^ * W * A I "This is a major national "Basic state policy still oper-problem which has not had any gs if there had been no substantial allention." Hugh changes in the relative fi.scal| Calkins, chairman of the work- capacity and requirements of shop and a member of the central city and outside central Cleveland Board of Elducation. city areas since the late 1940s,” said in an interview Sacks’ paper said. Calkins said that, on a state- wide basis, the local lax \e annual expenditure peri nue m most states goes large! 10 primary and ^'‘«’ndar> metropolitan! schools In the latger cities, compared with! such as Detroit and Ceveland ^ , surrounding cities.! however, roughly two-lhirds of * “ 1 the revenues goes to other a * ♦ , municipal services such as fire, By 196,'i. the balance hadj and police, he said Many slates, shifted, with central ctitiesj he added, base the amount of spending an average of $438: money given to local districts annually per pupil, compared| partly on the tola! tax revenue with $fi73 i n the surrounding! in that citv areas "■'D- , Troublemaker Groups Spawned Many Police' WHIRLPOOL • ZENITH • GEI^ERAL ELECTRIC • WESTINGHOU^ • ADMIRAL • RCA VI GAS POWER I MOWER 20" rotory. Powtilul $29 87 MOTORIZED 24” B.B.Q. 24" odjuitobU grilt, hood. S*uidiV' builE F99 ALUMINUM LAWN CHAIR ij Attraclivo Sturdy flat. Limit 2. , f $5 SUNBEAM ' Ladies’ Shaver^ ■99 UDY EMPRESS HAIR DRYER Hoot toloction. Lorgo Gen. Electric TOASTER ^ SUNBEAM MIXMASTER 3 iptodt, boots, whip*, Poworful motor. 99 $/|*T $10^^ *^6” ^10” ^7 REFRIGERATORS 1 $\»«PHILC09tu It r.lng.rolor. MOO *09 JI79 95 WlSHNGHOUSl lOtu, h. ce S249 95 WHIRIPOOL 14 cu largo lop (roorOr. Prov. j *159 $269 95 HOTPOINT 2 dr. with g>ont top froet-#r COMPlfTIlY FROST FRfI IN BOTH SEC-TIONS Prov. yri medols.............. ^199 $220 BOTH SECTIONS N $200 ^297 ^398 FREEZERS II ! CLEANERS • POLISHERS 1 LEWYT 'Sturd}" Vacuum cl#on#r. Pow#Hul motor Casy-rci|llwh**lt. Silheuatt# ^9 ^|9 / contifar stylirM^ ^ | "9 REGINA Eloctrikbroom. Ltghtwoight. P#rf#ct for stairs ond WFSTINGHO Vocuum cl#on*r. PowarFul motor WilhcWdning tool., $9 1 ^ T Sol* prietd . m GENERAL ELECTRIC sw##p#r. Look send ' it'ioloctric HOOVER ViKuum cloonor. Censtollotion l°on n^'oHo'^m^rtf $25’^ SUNBEAM Vocuum cl#on#r. Sup#r pew#r. Sup#r dust bog. Wtdo frock wh#*ls. To# $^9^188 switch with 7‘pc. s#t of occ#isori#s G.E. 4-SPEED Record Player 6 TRANSISTOR POCKET RADIO ISO HOOVER upril hi vocuum ctoonor. Triplg oction Rug pil«4;id|uitmont. Too twitch. Largo $^A88 diipotoblo bog^' Solo pricod.................. REGINA Floor pelithor. Comploto'with nt *19*' MONTH-EN0 ISCOUNTi $1 79 9.5 WESTINHOUSE Upright frooitr. Storoi ovor 300 Ibt. *135 ADMIRAL 13 rang* Full width ov $97 $147 I HOTPOINT 30 ' 9l*clnc rang* Full y outomotic *117 *220 *195 LA1ST 3 DAYS TIfURS., FRI., SAT. si MON. 'i • OPEN qiAILY 9 a.!iii. to 9 ' ELgCTRIC HOUSEWARES • SMALL APPLIANCES FREE DELIVERY and SERVICE Why chance paying more el.ewhere? Here are the top brand., quality, service ond price! . . . Here are big selections, easier terms, immediate delivery, and guaranteed satisfaction! . Plus the guarantees I and warranties you'd expect nationally advertised I famous brand appliance#. Many, many more not advertised. Most new in crates or caiions. Some in limited quantities. Not all items at all stores. Merchandise subject to prior sale. STEREO • HI-FI $97 I AUDiO St*f*o hr ti combmatton* with AM- rodib Early Amor.can Of Conttmpo I 7FNITH St»f*o H, I. con*oU f omb.nat.on *,.th AM IM IM Sl*i*o radio Wol hut $100 $199 I GENERAl ElEtTRIC St»r*o h L ton I GENFRAl EllCTRIC St*i*o corrvbi m INSTANT CREDIT All major credit cards, bank cords or store charge plates honored at Highland for immediate credit. $168 $200 $180 $299 $250 PROFESSIONALlHairdry#r. Adiustobl# h#ight. H*ot i*l*ction ^ $14®® GENERAL ELECfl Easy, smooth sit st**l btod#i. RIC Slicing Knif*. $g88 GENERAL ELECl| 8 cups cofF##. ^ iTIC Coff## park. $388 GENERAL ELECll 3 fp##dt - b.#4i mix#s. E|#ctor b$ $3” GENERAL ELECERIC Con op#n#r. Shorp smooth cjij ttmg Op#ns $3” GfNtRAL ELtciiRIC Sl.pm dry iron. Iron, oil Febiics. Lightwisight Fabric soloctor guid# w nd control $3’* SUNBEAM EI#cA Sw8#p S#cond 3$ ^ic Alarm Clock, $|«7 WISTINGHOub dial ond guid#.^ E Stoom-dry Iron. Fabric $399 LAUNDRY Podo pod end duroblw to a custom#r. . ^ silicon# cov#r. On# 29* laundry BASli^ET. Dufobl# plostic.lOn# to o customor . J 18* general ELECg^lC Ho.ror>#». H#ot s#l#ction. Rfoil dry*r F#otur#. Lorg# $11®® SUNBEAM EUctjr SoF#ty lock and | ic knit#. N#w tap#r#d $388 GENERAl ElECt RIC TEFLON $11®® $12®* HOTPOINT (ully outomatic porlobl. diih-VKoti.rt. Front looding w{th 6 cycle op.ro-tion. Lorg. copocity. Prov. yrl. tnodoll. . . *137 smiHMiiai FREE 10-DAY HOME TRIAL No Gu«iiwork wh*n you buy Color TV at High-lond. Try H in your horn* for 10 doyi at ouf • Kp9n*9. Boeortomyou or* ploatod. FREE DELIVERY AND 90-DAY SERVICE $175 $257 $279 $327 $340 I SYLVANIA 20" color ,-3rtabl« with fro# roll- * oround cart. Giont 227 sq. in. pix. D«Iux* with dipol* onFonno. UHF/VHF. "OWW , I RCA VICTOR 23" color upright wolnuf wood * ^ ; I conioio 295 iq. in. rocFonuglor. UFH/VHF. SHARP 14" color portablo. D#lox# with ce hondl*, dipol# ontonna. 102 *o. in. Wol grainod Finiih. UHF/VHF. . RCA VICTOR 1 8" portobi* color. 1 BO sq. in. ractongulor UHF/VHF. PHILCO Color TV lowboy. Full 267 sq. in ur* Do ux*F*atur*s. UHF/VHF. $297 $269 $380 rodio. UHF/VHF... J995 RCA VICTOR 23" Color combinotion with sF*r*o hi-Fi, AM-FM, FM-st*r#o rodio. 295-sq in.UHF/VHF.6-spook#r. Walnut. 'Zenith COLOR TV SALE' Zenith Color TV. 1 A", 1 8", 20", 23" dia. screen sizes. Portables, consoles and combinations. French Provincial, Early American and Italian Provincial styles. All priced to sell on sight during this AAonth-End cleor-k once sole. BLACK/WHITE TELEVISION! ADMIRAL ptrtonol portobi# TV's. Hondl# UHF/VHF. Soloot............................... ^63 $109.95 RCA VI.CTOR 12" portobi# TV s#»s. i 71 ^iq. in.jsc^angulor^tub#. Built-in antanna I ZENITH 12" 74 s^, in. pjK. o. portobi# TV with UHF/VHF. $90 $69 SHARP Giant 18" dio. po D#lux# f*atur*i. 1 72 sq. in $99 MOTOROLA 18" portobi# TV. 172 sq. UHF/VHF.^Slim^dtiigrv cobin#F with h $97 EMERSON 12" penonol portobi#. Lightwoight ■ with hondl# and ontinno. UHF/VH F. ^TfTl I n baft#ry (bott, opt. *T7 Syivonio 1 2" dio. portobi# TV with hondl# and - UHF/VHF, 74 sq. in. pix. Smart slim I SYLVANIA Giont 18" dia. portobi# TV With 38 I UHF/VHF. V*ryd*lux*. SUNBEAM Hi-Dom# frypon. Mulfi-cook#r. Buff#t styU, $11®® SUNBEAMCan op#n#r/knif# tharp#n#r. *12“ ELECTRIC Slicing Knif#. 2 stalnUss st##l blod#s. SpoH#rguord f#otur#. B-ft. cord $6"^ HAMILTON BEACH 8l#nd#r. 32-ounc# capo-city 2 s0##ds, 4 surgicol sl##l blod#s. *16” BATHROOM Seal#. AccuroF#. Smortly ityl#d. Eoiy to^#ad dial. $|9a Intro r.d MASSAGER. Soothing No rthom $397 PROCTOR Stoom-dry iron. Doluxo f ooloro*. $399 PROCTOR 4-.lico loo.tor. Aotomot Ic 4- $1088 PORTABLE Hond minor. 3 .pood., b.ol., $599 Sunbeam Party P#rk. Br#ws 1 2 to 30 cups outomoticolly. Signal light. No drip fouc#t *10” DISHWASHERS HOTPOINT automatic portobi# dishwoih#rs Top loading. Big capacity. Autemotic cycl#s. Pr#v. yrs. mod#ls $88 RCA VITOR wood consol# TV. Giant 265 sq. - in. pix. UHF/VHF. Conl.mporory $147 'I RADIOS *TAPE RECORDERS $399 GENERAL ELECTRIC AM-FM Transistor rodio. Poworful 1 Otroni.^b^ttory sov#r circuit. *13’ *4” Easy to r*od diol .. $381 POLICE BAND AM portobi# radio. Portobi# cas#. Eorphon#, bott#ri#s. BATTERY bp#rot*d r*cOrd p *19* MINIATURE trantiitorii#d top# r#c ord#r *14" GENERAL ELECTRIC D#.ux# clock radio Eosy r#ed diol......................... EnIrAL ELI oto. l\tont ik#. With bo $11»® $16®® G.E. Wolki* Tolki*i. Tronsistoriiod 2-woy communication. PorPair... . *14“ G.l. Cartridg. top. ncerdpr. S tranii.tor, Remol. control mik.. Solid Itet.. 5414*88 With boltori.,...................................... *3" ?V" V . NO MONEY DOWN • 3 YEARS TO PAY PONTUC MALL SHOPPINS CENTER TELEGRAPH ROAD, Corner Elizabeth Lake Road OPEN DAILY 9 to 9 • PHONE 682-2330 THE PON'flAC PRESS. FRinAV. MARC H 29. 19fi8 B—9 WOMAN SHUNS CHARITY - Miss Ethel Cazier, 91, of Chicago sits in a hotel lobby yesterday prior to resuming her search for a new home. She was evicted from her apartment, where she had lived for 40 years, for failing to pay the rent. She said she had been unable to pay the rent because her apartment had been robbed. Miss Cazier said, “I don't want to be a subject of charity.” Striking N.Y., NJ. Longshoremen Return to Work NEW YORK (AP) - New York and New Jersey longshoremen—back to work after an 11-day strike—today began the big heave to move an estimated 500,000 tons of cargo piled on piers or in ships in the Port of New York. Some 18,000 workers—about 2,000 more than normal—were called to the docks today to start clearing up the jam of cargo and enable a stream of ships to put out to sea. * * ★ When the strike was settled Thursday, 156 vessels were at anchor or piers waiting to be loaded or unloaded. Ships with military cargoes and tankers were exempt from the strike, estimated to have cost the shipping industry $16.5 million and the longshoremen more than $4(million in wages. The waterfront paralysis was one of a series of strikes that have hit New York City in the past year or so. One of them— by employes of moving companies—is more than a month old, and no settlement is in sight. The longshoremen’s strike started March 18 in a manpower dispute between the AFL-CIO International Longshoremen's Association (ILA) and the Waterfront Commission, a New York State-New Jersey agency. The strike, however, hit mem-ber.s of the New York Shipping Assocnation (NYSSi, which represents 145 shipping and stevedoring companies. * * ★ The longshoremen struck to protest plans by the Waterfront Commission to reopen the register to admit 750 new men to work on the new automated piers in Poll Newark and Port Klizabeth, N .) , where manpow er shortage.s have been reported. Longshoremen in other sectors of the port were angry because new jobs were planned in New Jersey while many of them were jobless because of shifts in shipping operations. ANNOUNCKMENT Burton B. Turkus, perni’anent arbitrator of the waterfront industry work contract announced the agreement between the ILA and NYSS. Longshoremen traditionally have had seniority only in their own sectors of the port. But the new pact that ended the strike provides for a large degree of manpower mobility in this way: If a hiring agent is short of men at any pier, he is to apply for emergency help through the shipping association, which is to use computers to locale available longshoremen. Then, 18-man gangs are to be sent where they are needed. The men are to be i-ecruited on the basis of seniority and guaranteed a full day's pay. Repeal Being Asked for Tonkin Resolution WASHINGTON (AP) - A House faction has asked repeal of the 1964 Tonkin Gulf Resolution—the closest thing the United States has to a declaration of war for the Vietnam conflict. “By repealing the Tonkin Gulf Resolution,” Rep. Lester Wolff, D-N.Y., said Thursday at a news conference, “we do not commit ourselves to any specific alternative to present policy. ★ ★ ★ “Rather, repeal of the resolution will make it clear that Con- play a major role in the determination of that policy.” Rep. Benjamin S. Rosenthal, D-N.Y., another of the 21 sponsors of the proposal, said if it were put to a vote in the House “we would come very, very close” to victory. NO HEARING SET But it won’t even be scheduled for a hearing because “those in power won’t permit,” Rosenthal said. The resolution was adopted and, further. Congress wants to cress wan s a natoal Tbate in Congress in August gress warns a naiionai oeodie in , attacks—some the formulation of future policy ir. critics of the administration insist there was only one—by North Vietnamese torpedo boats on U.S. destroyers. It empowered the President “to take all necessary steps, including the use of armed force,” to repel aggression. News Briefs From State's Government A reexamination of feelings about the war was also called for Thursday by the AFL-CIO American Federation of Teachers. The AFT has until now refused to take any position but the union announced Thursday will conduct a poll of its 150,000 members to see whether the rank and file want to continue this noncommittal stance or choose a stronger one. FOUR OPTIONS The members will vote on four options ranging from withdrawal with all deliberate speed to greater military effort to end the war. Major attention to war po'icy ; expected at the campaign planning conference of Young Democrats that opened Thursday in Washington. Resolutions will be adopted Sunday. Maine Vodka? PRESQUE ISLE, Maine (AP) - Republican State Chairman Cyril M. Joly Jr. has a suggestion on how to get rid of Maine’s potato surplus. Joly told a GOP platform committee meeting Thursday that the state’s excess of spuds might well be made into vodka. Yank in Mexican Death Row 'Not in Bod Situation' MATAMOROS, Mexico (AP) - Dykes Askew Simmons Jr., an American held in a Mexican prison under a death sentence for almost nine years, is not in a particularly bad situation,” U.S. Ambassador to Mexico Fulton Freeman said Thursday. Simmons, 38, has been jailed in Mexico since 1959 when he was arrested in cwinection with the slayings of three members Monterrey, Mexico, physician’s family. ★ Freeman said there is no pos ; sibility that Simmons will be ex-; ecuted. He said he believes tne death sentence will be commut-ied soon. LOCAL and WORLD NEWtS Every Hour on the Hour AllDayLongl PON First In Furniture, Carpeting & Appliances STARTS TODAY! Continued For Just One Week Only! A TREMENDOUS CHANCE FOR YOU TO GET FAMOUS QUALITY FURNITURE CARPETING AND APPLIANCES And Save! OVERSTOCKED... GIGANTIC OUR REGULAR EASY TERMS DURING THIS BIG SALE! BUY WITH NO MONEY DOWN!! 12 Months Sann lU Gash or Up to 36 Mos. to Pay immsdiaftly and pay for it on t«rmi that tit your budgot. w* guyani« compiBi* •uti.. and co-operation from the moment you walk into our »tore .. • and tor oil the year* thot you e|y your furniture purchote! Every member of our etoff corriei out our policy of THE CU5TO COMES FIRST" You'll never find a better ploco to buy ond thii it the be>t time to tovo FREE!! FURNITURE CONSULTING SERVICE BY OUR TRAINED, EXPERT STAFF We'll gladly o»«itt you in making deciiiont obout the right furniture arrangement . . . the right colon and fabric* . the pieces yowsheuld hove to moke your home o jhowploce of good tosto and comfort! Di*cu»* your need* with u* with no cost or obligation . . 536 NORTH PERRY, Pontiac Just Across Glenwood from Kmart OPEN NIGHTS TILL 9 P.M.... OPEN SATURDAY TILL 6 PHONE FE 4-9615 B—10 'J'lIE PONTlAC ]*RESS. F^IDAY._MARCK^^^^ 1968 Deaths in Pontiac, Nearby Areas Ezra D. Bennett | Mrs. Ronald R. Kimler Mrs. Grace M. McKinney AI.BKRT T. HASTINGS Service for Mrs Ezra D. (Nellie M ) Bennett, (>4, of 590 E. Madi.son will be 1:30 p.m. Sunday at Gaskin.s Funeral Home, Harrisburg, 111., with arrangements by Voorhees-Siple Funeral Home. Burial will be in Cedar Bluff Cemetery, Pope County. Ill Mrs Bennett died Wednesday. | Mrs, Mary E. Brightbill Mary WHITE LAKE TOWNSHIP -| ORION TOWNSHIP -Service for Mrs. Ronald R.IService for Mrs. Grace (Elaine M.) Kimler, 41, of 9058 McKinney, 81, of 1540 Lapeer I Realty Division Head Is Named; Sandy Ridge, will be 11 a m. Monday at the C. J. Godhardt Funeral Home, Keego Harbor, with burial in Oakland H>M. .Service for William H. Bonner, Hastings majored in civil 76 1340 Harmon will be 11 engineering and received his Monday at Pursley-Gilbert bachelor's degree in public Puneral Home, Pontiac. Burial service engineering f r o m ^iH be in Perry Mount Park Purdue University in 1940. Cemetery, Pontiac. ------ — ]yir Bonner, a contracting 1 Li I n 1* carpenter, died yesterday. He Arfifl Msn to KGtirO ® member of the Saull Ste. miv/u I lull lu Marie VFW I Surviving are a son, Daniel H. of Milford; four daughters, Mrs. Otis H. Cardinal of Lake Orion, Mrs. William Schaffner o f Ix>y J. Lucia of 1775 Hunting- Mount Vernon, N. Y., Mrs. ton, Bloomfield Hills, retires E|jygj,eth of Chicago and tomorrow after 14 years with Mrs. Steve Smith: three will be 1 p.m. tomorrow Sharpe-Goyette Funeral Home, Clarkston. Burial will be in Lakeview Cemetery, Clarkston. Mrs. McKinney, retired from Pearce Floral Co., died yesterday. She was a member of the First Baptist Church Clarkston and the Clarkston I Pioneers. Surviving is a son, Earl J. of Pontiac. VIET DEATH - Word of the death of their son, Pfc. Brian Marshall, has been re-Mrs. Nicholas J. Rosiello' f^^^ed by Mr. and Mrs. Jack ' ------ 4226 Derry, FRANKLIN — Service for Mrs. Nichdlas J. (Elizabeth R.) Rosiello, 48, of 32000 Mountain View will be 9:30 a m. tomorrow at Franklin Community; Church. Burial will be in Franklin Cemetery by Vasu-Lynch Funeral Home, Royal Oak. 1 Mrs. Rosiello died Wednesday. She was a member of ., . , , .. Franklin Village Players, the^™““®“ Orchard Lake Country Club and when his car stalled at Wellesley Mothers Club. | Saginaw and Wilson, Pontiac Surviving besides her bus- police said, are two brothers, John and band are two daughters, Judith Peter R. Milertin, 20, of Yale I Brian; a sister, Julie: and his’and Barbara at home, and four told police three men entered grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.isons, Michael, Donald, Robert his car, beat him and took his Adrien Sylvester of Detroit. iand Peter, all at home. wallet at 12:27 a.m. Bloomfield Hills. The Defense Department reported the area youth killed in action recently in Vietnam. Beaten, Robbed A motorist was beaten and Papal Court Is Abolished by Pope Paul Blaze at Local Bar Is Caused by Arson Man's Condition Still Is Critical VATICAN CITY (UPI) pedestrian hit by a car Pontiac firemen say arson Wednesday night on Dixie was the cause of a fire that'Highway at Silver Circle redamaged Tassi’s Cavern Bar, 22 mains in critical condition today E. Huron early this morning, I at Pontiac General Hospital, Pope Paul VI today abolished ★ ★ ★ [officials there reported, the papal court with all its, ^he fire broke out at 4:08| Donald 33 of worldly trappings of splendor ..m., did about $500 damage to S u m m e r hill. Independence and replaced it with a purely the structure and s m 0 k e Township, iras struck ^ a car functional body of a “strictly damage to the bar a n d^7®" religious character.” apartments upstairs, ' said. The Pope fired scores of; firemen of 828 Tyrone, Waterford Township, while crossing the road. The fire I 1 in the alley Ingham County Avon Youth Burned by Flaming Missile /N* AA A 12-year-old Avon Township Judge Dies at 04 boy, Lewis BukUc Jr., suffered papal retainers and dismissed behind the building and was members of Rome’s proud touched off with waste paper, ‘‘black nobility” from his im- firemen said. mediate retinue in the most ------------------------------ drastic reform of the papal household since the Middle Ages. The act, following a reform of the Roman Curia that assists bead and eyes ihurch^^'^was" fSed by* LANSING (UPI) - Judge when an unknoiro assailant "‘ 0™ oMhI E. coash, 64, of ti'a 2 00 S significant moves of Paul's five-'I"gham County Circuit Court,j^ng side his house at 2409 ^ vear-old reien f^'^d yesterday of a heart at-|Llvernois at 4 p.m., yesterday, year-old re^gn. ^ * jtack. [according to Oakland County ™ -J 1 ' * * * I sheriff’s deputies. He is the son longe^r would^UrUd^le ^n* Coash had been ill since theMr. and Mrs. Lewis Buklic ceremonies in which he is car- "'‘ddle of last December but Sr. * * * ried in procession. The pro- carried on his duties in a cessions, marked by r e g a 1 limited manner. He was ap- The boy was treated at Crit-splendor for centuries, will be pointed to the Circuit Court: tenton Hospital and released, limited to clergymen and will bench in 1945 and had been| Deputies said someone, pos-include a larger number of [elected continously in every sibly another child, threw some- I Rome parish priests, he said. (election since then. ithing at the boy and fled. From Post at GM r, e n e ral Motors. GM's general auditor, he is a member of the American Institute of Certified Public A (■ !■ o untants, American A c -counting Association and the Institute of Internal Auditors. sisters;and 14 grandchildren. Lisa M. Hortick ATLAS TOWNSHIP - Service for Lisa M. Hortick, 18-month-old daughter of Mr.and Mrs. Gerald N. Hortick ofe 12362 Collidge, will be 3 p.m. tomorrow at the Huntoon Funeral Home, Pontiac, with burial In Christian Memorial Cemetery. The child was fatally injured * * * in an accident Wednesday, He was associated with the Survivors include three public accounting firm of Has-! brothers, Steven M., Brian D. kins and Sells for 27 years prior and Mark H , all at home; and to w orking for GM. grandparents M 38 8>A 44'A +3% S7'A S8'A +2»‘ 1648 1648 - ' 36 24 23% 237A ' 36 25 24% 25 + 124 5048 49% SO'A +248 ' 14 3048 38 41% 41% 41% -F ' El .72 18 24% 24% 24% - ^\x 31 39% 38% • n 2.79t 358 105'/i 101% 0 1.28 56 25'/% 25 2.80 61 73 72'/% pf» 1 on 6 23’/% 23’/^ , - 61 120 117 118 -FT/4 • ■ 101% 973/4 99 I 17% 17% 17% » 45% 45% 45% 70 16% 153A 15V» 8 36 35'/% 36 „ 34% 37V4 I 48'/4 49'/4 I 14'/% 14% . . • 2m 28'/i - % __ .. 2 90 9T/a ■ 76 30% 29% 30% —U— M 1BH It U'/. + ' 21a 41'A 41 41% + ' 14 21'A 21'A 21’/. + ' 3* 5BH 58'/. , 58'/. — ' 20 38 37% 37% — ' 18 44'A 44 44 . Ill 41% 40% 41 — ' 44 72% 71'A 72 - ' 11 11 It 11 + ' 21 53 52 S3 + = 183 80'A 7»'A 7»'A — ' . 8 28'A 28 28’A + 'A 7 7SV, 25'A 25% 24 48 By DIANNE REED Each year brings the annual Our Lady of the Lakes Science Fair, the regional fair, and finally the Metropolitan Detroit Science Fair, in Cobo Hall. The display there may be seen from next Friday through April 9. 'Three OLL seniors entering who have won honors at Cobo Hal! in previous years are Karen Keenan, Kevin Feliksa and Joan Coomes. Karen’s project concerns the training and regeneration of planaria. She trained them to swim In a Y-maze. As they regenerated, they trainejd themselves and it proved they learned faster from one another. Karen remarked, “They learned two or three times as fast.” ★ ★ ★ Joan’s project involves antibiotics and their side effects, proving that “afla-toxin” not only kills bacteria but also produces liver cancer in animals. Kevin’s math project works with the square root of pi. JUNIORS PARTICIPATE Juniors participating in the fair are Julie Garwood in botany and Ralph Berg in physics. Sophomores Maureen McKowan and Steve Gingras will also enter. Freshmen Donna Keenan, Donna Ga-larneau, Peggy Hagan, Grade Garwood and Dave Whittam will compete in the junior division. 'Their projects are limited to experiments, graphic arts or collections. Others participating in the school fair were Tim McDonnell, Mary Garwood, Kathy Motsinger, Julie McDonnell, Gail Garwood, Melanie Lynch and Kris Cen-tilli. ★ ★ ★ Sister Mary Raymond, science teacher and moderator of the Science Qub, . has encouraged and assisted the students. s> regeneration IM iEMNlRs nociss OF PlMAttiAm \ SCIENCE ENTRY — Karen Keenan, ‘ senior at Our Ladjr of the Lakes High ■ School, and her : science instructor. Sister Mary Raymond, check t over the last-minut« details of Karen’s ^ entry in the Cobo 1 Hall Metropolitan ' Detroit Science i Fair. The Cobo j Hall display may ] be seen through | April 5-9. n—2 Of^DJNANCE NO 944-r by registered Bids shall be . niAiified opinion be forfeited < be acc^ted ai )wed Of r th4 :hecks of the each bfoder's representaflve conditioned nf r^lrlth Cudtil .. ......Wright, . attorneys. Detroit. - . ---------0 the legality of the bonds The cost of said legal opin* of tha printing of the bonds will l by tha Township. There will i t usual closing papers. •TIgatlon certificate, d of delivery of the bc..w.. ------ delivered at Detroit. Michigan, or such other place as may be agreed upon between the Township and the purchaser The right is reserved to re|ect any or all bids. Envelopes cootalninn the hlH« should bt plainly marked ' Bonds " GLADYS THOMAS Deputy Township Oei Approved Jan. 23. \96% State of Michigan Municipal Finance Com^^l5si( Published In The Pontiac Proponents predicted that the administration’s bill could pass “ west BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP IS ACCEPTING BIDS FOR A 1968 PICK-UP TRUCK TO MEET THE FOLLOWING SPECIFICATIONS: 1968 84 Ton Pickup Truck lion r D»p«i odv with ! 4 lp»^T?i Rear Axle_5.500 lbs. H. D. Springs—Front A Re Tires- 5 Mud 8. Snow- 5 W Tires 8 17.5 8 Ply Tubeless 60 AMP H. D. Betlerv Gouges—Oll-AMP-Temp Fresh Air Heeler 8, DefrosI Dual West Coast Mirrors-, Inside Mirror Two Speed Elec. Wipers 8. Rear Step Bumper Oil Fllter-1 Ql. Type 2 Spotlights H. D. Shocks -Front 8. Rea Non-Slip Rear Axle Directional Lights H. D. Brakes H. 0. Seat Cover BIDS WILL BE ACCEPTED UNTIL 5.00 P.M Wednesday, April 3, 1968 at the Office of the Townthip Clerk, 4460 OrchOrd Lake Road, Orchard Lake, hf'-" igan to be opened af the regular T snip Board Meeting on April 3, 196i 8:00 P.m. The Township Board rase the right to relect any and all bids. 3/29, 3/30, 4/1. 4/2 GOP 0 move the ad- mber R1-28091-06 ----- -A, ^ ______________________________ w, ...» undersigned that on April 3. 1968. at 10 o'clock A M„ at 205 Main St.. Rochester, Michigan, public sale of a 1966 Chevy It. 2-Dr. HT bearing molor number 116j76W105469 will be held, for cash to the highest bidder. Inspection thereof may be made at h 705 Main St., Rochester, the place of storage. The undersigned reserves the right to bid. Dated: i BUY, SELL, TRADE - - - USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! h 26, 1968 National Bank great affect” caucus decision I forward with ministration version. Acting quickly and with little debate, the Senate approved four committee amendments to the bill, llie key amendment provides that the filing of a discrimination charge against ja home owner after a sale 'transaction had begun could not hold up the sale or transfer of I the property. j Another significant change [leaves it to the judgment of I the judge to decide whether costs and attorney fees should be assessed against a complainant if his charges were proved false. The bill would outlaw discrimination on the basis of race, color, religion or national! origin in the sale or rental of “ housing. Discrimination cases, filed through the State Civil Rights Commission, could be taken to circuit courts, which could levy fines of up to $500 against individuals and $1,000 against Death Notices Bennett; dear sister of Mrs. Georgia Drury; also survived by nine grandchildren. Mrs. Bennett has been taken to Uie Gaskins Funeral Home, Harrisburg, Illinois for services Sunday, at 1:30 p.m. Interment in Cedar-Bluff Cemetery. Arrangements by the Voorhees-Siple Funeral Home. BRIGHTBILL, MARY E.; March 28. 1968; V/i North Saginaw; age 82; dear mother of Mrs. Ethel Webster, Wesley, Melvin and Ernest Bright-bill; dear sister of Mrs. John Dirky, Charles and Herbert McConnell; also survived by SIX grandchildren. Funeral service will be held Monday, April 1, at 1:30 p.m. at the Sparks - Griffin Funeral home. Friends may call after| 3 p.m. Saturday. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 and 7 to! 9.) BUTRUM, JAMES T.; March 27, 1968 ; 661 Cameron Street; age 75; beloved husband of Gladys Butrum; dear father of Mrs. Martin (Virginia) Schultz and Mrs. Richard (Emma Turnbull; also survived by 11 grandchildren and 13 great-grandchildren. Funeral service will be held Satprday, March 30, at 1:30 p.m. at the Huntoon Funeral Home with Rev. Phillip Somerg officiating. Interment in Perry Mount Park Cemetery. Mr. Butrum will lie in state at the funeral home. EARHART,^ WILLARD March 27, 1968 ; 2 2 46 Rosemary Street; i beloved husband of Violet Earhart; dear father of Mrs. Betty Walls, Denise Albert and Earhart, Archie Hill and Edward Corby Jr.; dear brother of Elizabeth Golob and Lawrence Earhart. Funeral service will be held Saturday, March 30, at 10 a.m. at the Huntoon Funeral Home Interment in West Berlin Cemetery, Allenton, Michigan. Mr. Earhart will lie in state at the funeral home. HOR'TICK. LISA MARIE March 27, 1968; 12362 Coolidge Road, Goodrich, (Formerly of Pontiac); beloved daughter of Gerald N. and Shara Lee Hortick; beloved grand daughter of Mr. and Mrs. L. Saddler; beloved great-granddaughter of Mrs. Edith Saddler and Mr. and Mrs. Richard Rohrer; dear sister of Steven Michael, Brian D. and Mark H. Hortick. Funeral service will be held Saturday, March 30, at 3 p.m. at the Huntoon Funeral Home Interment in Christian Memorial Cemetery. Death Notic^ service will be held Saturday, March 30, at 10:30 a.m. at the St. Michael’s Catholic Church. Interment in Mount Hope Cemetery. Mr. Mirovsky will lie in state at the funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 and 7 to 9.) OLSON, GUSTAVE; March 27, 1968; 1775 Sylvan Glen, Keego Harbor; age 76; dear brother-in-law of Casper F. BackmSn; also survived by one nephew and five nieces. Funeral service will be held Saturday, March 30, at 2 p.m. at the C. J. Godhardt Funeral Home, Keego Harbor. Interment in White Chapel Memorial Gardens. Mr. Olson will lie in state at the funeral home. (Suggested visi|ing hours 3 to 5 and 7 to 9.) ROWAN, PEARL N.; March 26, 1968 ; 2879 Alexander, Avon Township; age 67; beloved wife of Harry Rowan; dear mother of Mrs. Betty Woelfle, Mrs. Jean Ann Middleton, James E. and William H. Rowan; dear sister-of Laird Betz; also survived by nine grandchildren. Funeral service will be held Saturday, March 30, at 1:30 p.m. at the Harold R. Davis F u n e r a ' Home, Auburn Heights, with Rev. William Palmer officiating. Interment in White Chapel Cemetery. Mrs. Rowan will lie in state at the funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 and 7 to 9.) SENUM, GLADYS; March 1968 ; 314 Freey Street; age 66; dear mother of Mrs. Daniel (Janice) Polasek; dear sister of Mrs. Opal Lund-hagen, Mrs. Irene Popinger and Martin Olson; also survived by two grandsons. Funeral service will be held Saturday, March 30, at 1 p.m. at the Voorhees-Si^le Funeral Home with Pastor Charles A. Colberg officiating. Interment in White Chapel Cemetery. Mrs. Senum will lie in state at the funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 and 7 to 9.) KIMLER, ELAINE M.; March 28, 1968 : 9058 Sandy Ridge Drive, Drayton Plains; age 41; beloved wife of Ronald R. Kimler; beloved daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Sutherby; dear mother Steven F. and Airman First Class Ray E. Kimler; dear sister of Mrs. Beverly Hagner and Arnold Sutherby: also survived by one granddaughter. Funeral service will be held Monday, April 1, at 11 a.m. at the C. J. Godhardt Funeral Home, Keego Harbor. Interment in Oakland Hills Memorial Gardens. Mrs. Kimler will lie in state at the funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 and 7 to 9.) YOU CAN AFFORD ITl lao'i or OTHIR PLANS OR USt YOUR OWN Capp-Hom# financing coven tVtRYTHING we do and furnisli -including complete HLATING, PLUMBING.. KITCHLN CABL NETS end FIFC7RICAL pack- Charles McGrow 1609 Crone Court Midland, Michigan 48640 Phone: (517) 835-1884 pletely enclose your iish complete finishing iside and out at a firm do the simple finish-k yourself, OR you can sub-t for completion and still savel »ay you save a lot of money juallty Capp-Homcl McKinney, grace March 28, 1968; 1540 Lapeer Road, Orion Township: age 81; dear mother of Earl J. McKinney. Funeral service will be h^Id Saturday, March 30, at 1 p.m. at the Sharpe Goyette Funeral Home Dial 334-4981 or 332-8181 Pontiac Press Wont Ads FOR FAST ACTION NOTICE TO ADVERTISERS ADS RECEIVED BY 5 PM. WILL BE PUBLISHED THE fOllOWJNG^DAY. '*ol'lo«!na |!*'°o"no I, it will b« a>tum*d th« od •ct. Th* Pr«M no r nsibiljty for •rror* eth«r than CASh'waVt AD^RATts"* 5 3 05 5 40 8.40 6 3 66 6 48 lQs08 7 4 ”27 7,56 n.76, 8 4 68 8.64 1344. 9 5 49 9 72 15.12- 10 6 10 10.80.16,80 An Qddit.onol cKorg* of 50 coni. ill b* mod* for ui* of Pontiac Proti The Pontiac Press FROM 8 AM. TO 5 PM. Card of Thanks 1 THE FAMILY OF PFC. Fred McHugh Jr. wish to thank their friendG/ neighbors and relatives for their kindness, Thoughtfulness and flowers during our r t c e nt bereavement. Especially wa want to thank Rev. Pika for his words of comfort during our time of sorrow. Rev. A. Cuppetelll, C. F. Sherman Funeral Home, The United States Marines Corps for the Honor Guard, the Auxiliary of the Hadley Fire Dept, for the dinner and the newspapers for thair realtors for first offense and clarkston. Interment iri $2,000 for subsequent offenses. vSen. George Kuhn, R-Birmingham, chief backer of the local - option substitute, said he and others have a number ofMcLEAN, MARBLE; March 24, Lakevlew Cemetery Clarkston. Mrs. McKinney will lie in state at the funeral home after 6 p.m. tonight. Loved One, Mrs. Evelyn EImt Moose Lodge, _ . . McCandless, Brigadier and Mrs. Grindle ot tha Salvation Army and to tha Voorhees-SIple Funeral thoughtfi always ba ramemberad. Daughter, Mrs. William ....... Granddaughter, Mrs. Donald Cp> amendments to propose to the bill to make it more acceptable. Kuhn said, however, that he does not plan to press the substitute. I TO C I 3JH HRmratha Av Death Notices BAIRp, VICTOR; of Brainard, Detroit; beloved husband of the late luouise; dear father of William, Winston, Mrs. Barbara Ashley and the late Betty Baird brother of Mrs. Elsie Newman of Toronto, Canada. Services 10 a.m. Saturday morning at the R. G. and G. R. Harris Funeral Home, 4251 Cass Ave., Detroit. BENNETT. NELLIE I March 27. 1968 ; 590 East Madison Avenue; age 64; beloved wife of Ezra Bennett; dear mother of Mrs. Lorraine Phelps, tJtIrs. John Kloeppek, Mrs. Fred Massey, Mrs. (Carles Settlemoir and David 1968 ; 6545 Andersonville Road. Waterford: age 84; funeral service will be held Monday, April 1 at 3:30 p.m. at the Sparks - Griffin Funeral Home. Interment in Oak Hill Cemetery. Friends may call after 3 p.m. on Saturday at the funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 and 7 to 9.) : MIROVSKY, JAMES A.; March! 26, 1968 ; 3332 Joslyn Avenu6;i age 53; beloved husband of Virginia M. Mirovsky; dear father of Gail J., LeRoy W., Gerald J. and Daniel E.. Mirovsky: dear brother of Mrs. Lewis Sly, Mrs. Roy Hendrickson, Albert, Jack and| Robert Mirovsky ; also survived by three grandchildren. Loyal Order of-Moose will conduct aj memorial service Friday, at| 7:30 p.m., followed byi Recitation of the Rosary at 8:15 p.m. at the Voorhees-Si-i pie Funeral Home. Funeral | Nieces end Nephews, WE WISH fo EXPRESS our deepest thanks to all our relatives, neighbors and friends for their prayers, food and cards and all acts of kindness In our' bereavement, Your thoughtfulness will always be remembered. Our special thanks to Rev. A. P. Rickard, may God bless you all. Charles Fearnow and Children. Mr. end Mrs. Wm. Tyler. Mr. end Mrs. Bob Bunday,_____________________ IN LOVING MEMORY OF our dear Mother. Nellie Maya, who pas«« \ Office in the following | \ boxes: I C-5, C-8, C-13, C-17, ) C-18, C-31, C-35, 65. Funeral Directors COATS FUNERAL HOME DRAYTON PLAINS________| Huntoon 79 Oakland Ave. Voorhees-Siple FUNERAL HOME. 332-8378 a" Over 40 Ytars SPARKS-GRIFFIN FUNERAL HOME "Thoughtful Service" FE 8-9288 Cemetery Lott divide, 2 or more graves. $85 per grave. Mrs. Thaler, 9554 Memorial, Detroit, 48227, VErmont S-1533. 5 CEMETERY LOTS In White Chapel. 6 grave lots. To settle an estate. Good price for cash. Phone 884-3275, Milford. ____________ Choice graves *95 ee These Craves ai ANY GIRL OR WOMAN NEEDING a friendly adviser, phone FE 2-5122 before 5 p.m. Confidential ANY PERSON WITNESSING an accident March 20, around 8:30 p.m. between '61 Pontiac Conv. and black Triumph at 3rd and Joslyn St, Please call 338-9704. a plan you can afford. DEBT CONSULTANTS OF PONTIAC, INC. 814 Pontiac State Bank Bldg. COMPLETE POODLE GROOM, *7 Information, appointment, 673-6997. GEY OUT OP DEBT ON A PLANNED BUDGET PROGRAM YOU CAN AFFORD TAILORED TO YOUR INCOME SEE MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELORS 702 Pontiac State Bank Bldg. ________FE 8-0456____________ HOLIDAY HEALTH CLUB mem-bership, 2 mos. old, take over payments. 682-6523._______ SPRING OPENING UPLAND HILLS FARM New lambs galore. Calves, piglets, baby chicks being hatched daily. Farm tour for whole family. See milking of the cow, sheep shearing at 2:30 and have a chance to pet baby animals. Delightful horse drawn hayrides, pony rides Delicious food from farm kitchen. Farm admission and tour 25c, rida and food extra. Open Sundays after April 7lh, 11 to 6 o.m. FAMILY VISITS SUNDAYS ONLY. WEDDING PHOTOGt Professional color. Bi able. Call 338-9079, ; Lost and Found FOUND — JANUARY 1, CAMERA, vicinity Adams and Square Lk. Rds. Identity 852-3705, after 6 p.m. FOUND - POINTER, Waterford Twp. license. DA S-2031. ________ FOUND: COLLIE, 'VigHiTY Square Lake and MIddlebaif, 682-1613 or 682-5560. LOST — black LOST; 5 MONTH OLD mala Beagle. In vicinity ot Orchard Lk. and Voorhels. Name of "Joey." 335- Help WantO^N^IO 1 MAN PART TIME man, over 21, to w_.............. eves. Call 674-M20, 4 p.m. * p.m. a capable of running shift. ^ Call 852-1080, ™'"7me'n PART TIME For evening work. 21-45. Married and reliabTe. *200 mo., steady work. Call Mr. Patterson. 623-0101, 5-8 p.m.________________________ $60 PART TIN\E Over 31, married, easy hours _____673-9680 bafwaan 4-6 p.m. A-l ME“chAniC, CHRYSLER ex- perlencr ------- -- — benefits, _____ _____ Call Stu., 626-1572. ) Cross, good pay. AIR CONDITIONING SERVICE man with experlanca, full time, year round, top wages, all banefitt, truck tumlshed, call S4»e93S. ALL TYPES OF SAAALL lot lathe and hand screw machine work to lob out. Reply giving agulpment and rates to Pontiac Press Bex C-18. AN OPPORTUNITY For debit agents v for both Ufa and H abllshing the f. Mustlw It This Is a Michigan Co., with home offices In Detroit, and wa are prepared to give tha right man plenty of assistance to become solidly established In his own business. The man wa i For personal Interview write to Mr. John. L. HIM, Vice Pres., Metro Mutual Ins., Col._ 18264 AMBULANCE PERSONNEL OVER 21 FULL TIME ONLY EXPERIENCE PREF. NOT NECESSARY BENEFITS INTERVIEWS WILL BE CONDUCTED AT 7? E. HURON ST. Pontiac. BET. 12 NOON AND t DANIEL MILES, Personnel Manager ARCHITECTS Architects for production and specifications dapartments. Large Detroit Architectural-Engineering, firm, desire progressiva thinking exparianced man with aptitudq and stamina for dealing with work In an efficient manner. Call Eberle M. Smith Assoc. Inc., 313-965-1110 ext. 52._____________^__________ position. Pontiac Salary, oon Call 674-2272 Hdp W^antwIJWi^ ARTCO INO FITTERS WELDERS BURNERS BENCH HANDS FIXTURE BUILDERS TOOL MAKERS MACHINE OPERATORS UNION SHOP .......~—isc,. Lake Orion ASSISTANT to ASSIST MANAGER 18-25 yrs. old H.S. Grads Opportunity to work Into manage ment position with International corporation. Must be neat, aggressive, and willing to learn. Only those who can start Immediately need apply. starting salary $142.50 PER WEEK Call Mr. Tone 9 a.m.-2 p.m. _____ 338-0359 _______ AUTO PARTS CLERK, must be experienced, full time or weekends. Apply Hollerbacks' Auto Parts - 273 Baldwin. 338-4054.___ AUTO PARTS STORE counter man and salesman. 20723 Evergreen. .... KEEGO SALES 8. SERVICE, 3080 Orchard Lake Road, Keego Harbor. AUTOMOTIVE EXPERIMENTAL PROTOTYPE Sheet Metal Men And Sheet Metal Finishers Paramount Engineering Co. N EQUAL OPPORTUNITY 363-0611. After 11 a.m_____________ BARTENDER, DEPENDABLE with pleasant personality, experience not necessary. Inquire at Pontiac BENCH HANDS Day shift, union rates, overtime. Delta Associated Industry 450 FAIR_____________FERNDALg Boiler Operator LICENSE Permanent position available on afternoon shift. Salary plus afternoon differential. Excellent fringe benefits and personnel poli-, cy. Apply Personnel Dept. CRITTENTON HOSPITAL BUS BOYS boys. No 'Sunday work. Apply In person only. TED'S PONTIAC MALL BOY TO EXERCISE horses, must have experience. 628-2821._ BUMP-PAINT MAN with sorhe experience who wants to learn bump and paint. Salary, fringe benefits, steady employment. Hahn Chrysler "‘-------- ■ Jaap, 625-2635. OAR WASHERS — DRYERS - 149 W. Huron — apply 8:30 to 9 a.m. C A R P E NTERS JOURNEYMEN, Sterling Township area apartments, ,8-12 months steady work. E&M Nolan Contracting Co. 476-0297 or 453-3482 after 7 p.m. An equal opportunity employer CARPENTERS Roughers, Journeymen, overtime, George 0. Braxton. 879-0739. CARPENTERS Troy, Southfield and northern suburbs/ steady work, Union only. MU 9-1013/ 9 to 5 p.m CARPENTERS-ROUGH, u n Year around yyork. 662-9122. CARPENTER CREWS An equal opportunity employer CARPENTERS. LAYOUT MEN, saw CHIEF ACCOUNTANT SUPERVISION OF ACCOUNTING PERSONNEL. NATIONAL CONCERN, EXCELLENT SALARY AND FRINGE BENEFITS. SEND COMPLETE RESUME TO PON-TIAC PRESS BOX C-5, PONTIAC, MICH._________ CARPET CLEANERS FLOOR MEN CITY OF PONTIAC CUSTODIAN SALARY 15327-86068 Graduation from high school, serlence In building cleanir expert minor 450 Wide Track Drive E CONCRETE STEP installations. Full Degrae perience turing. Corporal 16 for at I automoblla manulac- CARPENTERS Rough for apartment prolects, Pontiac area and East Side area. Call Wllllt Taeple, 674-1962 after 6. CREDIT ADJUSTER^ INVESTIGATOR No experience necessary, will train to become branch manager. Rapid advancement. Outstanding salary, DIE MAKER MOLD MAKER TOOL MAKER Top rates, full benefits. To be relocated In Lake Orion in the next few months. Apply In person to T. D. Shea Mfg. Inc., 7040 East 7 Mile Road. ____ DIE MAKERS TOOL MAKERS MILL HANDS Journeymen or 8 y 58 hours, long prog...... . benefits, first and second Apply In person only. Help Wanted Male Drill Press Operators Day shift, union rates, overtime. Delta Associated Ind. 450 FAIR __________F^ERNDALE DRIVER SALESMEN National company needs driver salesmen tor Pontiac and vicinity. Ages 25-50. Paid tralging program. Guaranteed salary. $6,000 PER YEAR Plus commission; plus profit bonus and many other company, oenefits. Retirement, Insurance and vnea- DELIVERY BOY, full or part lime, must have car, good salary, and fringes, 13040 W. 7 Mile, 341-7900, ELECTRIC MOTOR WIND E R , prefer small 3 phase stater, ex- ELECTRICIANS HYDRAULIC FITTERS mellts. Long program, J; eldmation Inc. 31720 Stephen wy., Madison Heights. __ EXCLUSIVE ' Distributorships Available their ovvn business, experience in direct sales necessary. $30,000 to $50,000 a year business opportunity. confidential appointment with tha area director. Call 543-7354._ EXPERIENCED LIGHT MECHANIC benefits. Apply t n tools. Salary plus fnnge Factory Workers Employers Temporary Service Clawson 65 S. Main Rp^for^ _ 26117 Grand River FARM AND STABLE WORK, full lime, *1.50 hour,' Finance Opportunity Fine opportunity for a career wth one of nation's largest and fastest ew. General Public FIRST CLASS GAS STATION ATTENDANT le Rambler —Jeep Delta Associated Ind. 45^ FAI^___________FERNDALE FLOOR rNSPECTOR FOR PLASTICS DIVISION OF AAACOID INDUSTRIES. PHONE ...... ..... Bloomfield Plaza, Telegraph and Maple Rds. 626-3010. GAS STATION ATTENDANTS and mechanics, local refs. Available day or afternoon shifts. Paid vacation. Good wages. Shell Station, Woodward and Long Lk. Rd. Bloomfield Hills. Apply 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. Daily._____ GAS STATION ATTENDANT, full or part time. 335-1658. Perry and Madison. _ GAS STATION ATTENDANT, lood pay. Apply Standard Statio orner Orchard Lk, Rd. and A^ap _Rd. _ , ________ ______ GARbEir”sTORE MANAGER, must have' wide knowledge of plant material, sales and merchandising; also experienced landscape personnel. Apply In person, Jacobsen's Greenhouse, Lake Orion. GENERAL ACCOUNTANt MINIMUM OF 3 YEARS BACKGROUND, COST BACKGROUND AND GENERAL LEDGER EXPERIENCE DESIRABLE. SEND COMPLETE RESUME TO PONTIAC PRESS BOX 2635’DixTe’H'll^'. eSTpIip.' GOOD OPPORTUNITY FOR right people, fringe benefits Included. Apply at Sea-Ray Boats, 925 N. To qualify you must be 24 yr». or older, 5'9" tall, no police record, good work history. Wa will Interview at the HoMday Inn, located at 1801 S. Telegraph, Pontiac, on ' Sat., March 30, 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Inquire at desk for room number. NO PHONE CALLS GRILL MEN FOR NIGHT shift, good wages, hospitalization, vacation with pay. Apply at Ellas Brothers Big Boy Restaurant, -r-‘--------■- snd Hi — GUARD For Utica, Mf. Ciemens and Detroit area. Top Union scale Paid Vacation and holiday benefits. Call i collect. Bonded HANDYMAN To do odd lobs and assist In maintenance. Mature and depend-■able, excellent salary and benefits. Heavy Duty Mechanic To work for Audette Pontiac, 1850 Maple Rd., Troy. New facilities, 2 ..... ... working HELPERS Day shift, union rates, overtime. Delta Associated Ind. 450 FAIR_______, FERNDALE le benefits. Call 887-4118. Hydraulic Mechanic Day shift, union rates, overtime. Delta Associated Ind. 450 FAIR FERNDALE HEAVY DUTY MECHANIC AT bus garage. Full time position. Liberal salary and fringe benefits. Huron NEED fo YOUNG MEN 18-25 To do pleasant Outdoor work 6 days from 2-10 p.m. High School Grads $3 PER HR. TO START Call Mr. Cupp 9 a.m.-2 p.m. FE 8-0350 IMMEDIATE OPENINGS FOR JUNIOR DETAILERS Some tool design detailing experience required. DRAFTING TRAINEE Applicants are required to have a minimum of 2 years of high school level training In mechanical drawing. Call Mr. Brown at 566-2211 or apply In person at 950 W. Maple, Troy, Mfeh._________________ IMMEDIATE OPENINGS FOR men who can be on the lob everyday, pleasant lob and secure future, starting pay St .65 per hour, plus time n for all over 44 hours, ap-, ply at Payless Station, 6594 Dixie Hwv. Clarkston._____________ IMMEDIAteLY 2 MSSJ landscape Nursery work, 492-3291. THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, MARCH 29, 1968 D—3 THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, MARCH 29, 1968 COLLEOE GRADS C*r*cr M>*nlnai in acc......... mai1(C«nB< •nglntarlnfl, data pro-casslng, proflrammlng, ananlngs natlanwIM, no txp. nacatsary. Call Mri. Smith. INTSttNAtlONAL PERSONNEL SSM050 RECEPTIONIST, ACHEERY HELLO it tha kay to thl> door, r«c. location, l!M. Call Kathy King, U4->471. Snalllng S Snatllng. arcSffARY f5R BnE I offlca, ganaral oNIca aklllt^ Company Rtpresentotivcs EX-SERVICEMEN Wondaring whera to go? Wa hava caraar opportunltlas In all fleios. 9 Work Wontod Molt Work Wontod Fomolo bou, S4SS, SJa-jan, tr plua. Call oarl TYPIST $400 Tha only raquiramant you nH. — this opaning It apaady typing, ad-vancemonl to aacrctarlal dullai, all banailti. Call Wrt. Batehalbar. INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL ___________SSIIOSO________ instractiom-Schools 1 Pick up and'dallvar. PE l-tott. WOMAN WANfS 6aY WORK, MON.a TUES.y THURS.y FRi. FE Crodit Advisors Var GENERAL 0FFICE-$400 Id Intaraiting dutlat tor youi 5. If you can typa SO w.d.i lop Corp. V..... — II train VNTERNA^iONAL personnel i 1 WO ^woodward, gtiam. _ 6a2-02tt MAINTENANCE PERSONttEL FOR ia E. Huron -----—1 olllce claaning, ■ita.dy LIcaniad by Mich. Stala “ —- “—‘Itt. Call Dick ------- --------- ACCOUNTING TYPING, MATH, LAW, ENGLISH AND SHORTHAND REGISTER NOW FOR CLASSES bMinnIng March llth. MICHIGAN SCHOOL OF BUSINESS CREDITOR ADVISORS - IS A Personal Finoncial COUNSELING fried to borrow yourielf ci work, U i. 334 U , Snelltng A SneMIng. boerd of eduction MANAGEMENT'TRAINEE FEE PAID Work for biu« chip ma benefits. Call Mrs. ATTENTION Auto Mechonics Acfy-Arc Welding Body Fender Repair INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL Management Trainee TRADE SCHOOL WOLVERINE SCHOOL laoo watt Fort_____WO SdSt2 Work Wontod Mnlo high tchool gradt and collaga fnternatlonal Pariennal. 1-477-1111 ‘ MANAGEMENT TRAINEES ialuminum .mousses ^^eaned, TO $7,200-FEE PAID Unlimited potential for H.S.G. E»c.i opportunity to learn with a major L *'* ' RETIREES S42-I26I Only. Work --------- bat. t-S r ~ iCOOK or 1 all araaa. 39M222 ■^rIll'n Exp^^ FE YOUNG MAN OVER 50 Young Lady over 50 ' Work In air condlllonad oNIca lust completed, only a hours per day. MAN wlahai _________ ^ FE S-0120. MACHINE etPAIR. (SirTTfi E. Area. 7II-S7II Washington. MAN OESIRES contract w I, tools, dies. gusgas, __ _____ luturas, call a7S-l|27. MANAGEMENT personnel manager, c o m p a n y i president or V. President all helpful, call Mr. Frye. I 5722 W Maple Rd. Orchard Lake _ . ¥*C U T I VT nveiiaoie oua to Irantlar out o stale, over • years axp. Ii msnagamant, backed up oy ad ditlonal I yaart In msnagamanl sales personnel end general ad ministration, strong In profit Plan ning and operations. Oagrsa li math and business admlnlstrsHon PLASTER AND DRYWALL rapali Ina McCowan, FE 4-3S«7. Pointing ond Peceroting 23 Wonted Reol tetote Expert Painting Special Get-Acquainted Prices. Free Estimates. FE 2-7732 or FE 5-8256 LADIES DESIRE INTERIOR painting In Wstsrtord area, free estimates. OR 3-«30a or OR 3-WU. PAINTING AND PAPERING. „ . . - . ------------- -------- quidala your debts without a l>an. Bring your bills to: DEBT AID, INC. SOa Community Nat'l. Bank Bldg., FE 2-Oiei Licensed and Bonded. ProBMHoking A Tailoring 17 dressmaking Jnro alteRa- _________TION$>-Ma>0401____ Incomt Tox Strvice 19 You're next. Orval Upholitering 24-A SPRING SALES On fabrics and upholstery, batter than new at half tha price. Call the experts at 335-1700 ' ----- astimata In your hm Upholstery Co. r FREE Coml. 36 Apartment*, Unfurnished 38 Apartments, Unfurnished 38 FAST ACTION List with us to gat top price lor your home. IVAN W. SCHRAM REALTOR nn Joslytl FE 5-7471 '—Pontiac 20 years BEDROOM, HEAT FURNISHED no children or pots. SI3S. laennla '•-t Apts., «74 2M7 or >73-8977. I- 2-BEOROOM. NEW. NEAR MALL Carpeted. Appliances. Air and nd condlllonad, heated. Rac. m. Adults, no pats. From SI35. SYLVAN ON THE LAKES come. Phone 682-44M or 357-4300. WEST SIDE. NEAR Stata Hospita.. . large rooms. Stparate oath and entrances, $100 par mo. In-' ell utilities. Adults only. . — -- pets. Security dep. re- chlldren o ■ BEDROOM. KITCHEN furnished. 535 a week. Includes utilities, t __________________________________________________ Child welcomed. 38 jwffwrton. off^ HouMi, Fumlshed 39 i. 391-0416. Cadillac, Serving Pi I HAVe A P\ WITH CASH FOR -ORCHASER I A START- IF TIME IS YOUR PROBI.Ei 2 BEDROOMSa ADULTS onlVa Wixom' area, eventngsr 63«-T438. 2 BEDROOM TERRaCE. ClarRston Lake front. Adults. MAple S-2S76. 3 ROOMS. NEWLY decorated. Pvt. '-‘h. Specious. $25 a wk. 550 dep. 2 BEDROOM HOUSETRAILER, 5140 month, security dep. Avail. April 15. 628-1402, aft. 5 p.~ beiore you hi urban. Agent, 3 AND 4 Rooms, i child und( months, 157 Whlttemore. 3 BEDROOM, NEAR PontU, General. Completely furnished. 5150 per mo. Sec. deposit required. Also 3 bedroom unfurnished, phone FE 4-4300._________________________ LISTINGS NEEDED FARMS-HOMES ACREAGE RIDGEWAY, REALTOR 3 ROOM APARTMENTS, KITCHEN Transportation 25 S3 FOR SHORT FORM. LONG for Itemliod. S5 average lee. in yoi home, slightly higher. E. Dunn Co. 2074 Cass Lake Rd. 682-7581. '**if**-*'^ phone 1 883-5536 lever AAA CALIFORNIA. SEATT--------------- Dalles. Top allowance, Cadillacs others. BR 2-5777. 16151 Grand River, Detroll.___________________ DRIVE NEW CADILLAC TO New York, gas paid. 363-7570. _______ DRIVERS - E N T I R E U.S.A., Florida, New York, end ell Points. New cars waiting. Insured Drlve-away System, 21250 Schoolcraft, Detroit. Phone 531-4070. ___________ LOTS WANTED so tt. or larger, any loo Cash Buyers. YORK 674-0363 lata -----,. ----- _________REALTY, 642 4220_________ NEWLY married COUPLE wants starter home In Pontiac. Has 81500 to put down. Agent 330- S3.00 SHORT, 83.00 rang torm, your home, 07.00. 673-0341. 54 UP, YOURTTOME or our dffke". Keys Tex Service, FE 1-2377, 362S, SMALL FARM OR WOODS V Wanted Nousahoid Goods 29 54 UP. NOTARY PUBLIC KEYS TAX SERVICE ^_Vour homt or our offlco ALL BOOKKEEPING AND TAX SERVICES william J. Sourlell, 12 yrt. exp. Formal tralnlnfl In Federal and State tax codes. Certificate from M.S.B. 6534 williams Lk. Rd. 673-0074. 4674 Dixie Hwy., Drayton Plaint 673-IS53, II E. Huron. Ffe r WILL BUY OR SELL your furniture. FEDISiaL and state tax rarvice. Lake Orion Area, 673-6015. Next to UAW Hall imbltlon, SECRETARIES TO $500 Dynamic boss needs tnp notch secretary, convanlant location, axe. working conditions, all baneflts, call Mrs. Batchalber -------naTti-....... _______ ______ In FE I-I7I4 NEED UBORERS fc'* lir, .f'K Call Mannower_ 332-53861 axcapt businattas. OR 3-1463. PAINTING ----------“ lone higher INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL INTERIOR, axlerlor, 334-77j67. PATCH PLASTERiNd, ALL kinds. Howard Meyers. OR 3-1345. RETiWif: BOO K kli e PTn gT, timakaaping, and payroll. Desires perl - or — full lima ------- " " __i‘3>8-Mll.______ SCHOOL CUSTO"5iAN~“ [aniforlal work at building for rant or pai ~ Howa. 873-7803. f-3 Moving and Trucking BASEMENTS A light hauling. flfUCklNO C 22 Painting and Decorating 23 what hava you? B & B AUCTION Dixie rtwy._______OR 3-271? NEED USED furniture. Road. 673-7534. Wanted Misceilnnaeus NEWSPAPER 85c PER 100 pound delivered. Royal Oak Waste Paper and Matal Co. 414 E. Hudson, Royal Oak. LI ............ WANTED TO BUY Walnut trees standing Maple tlm-ber-VENEEk BUYERS, pay top 3 BEDROOMS, HEAT furnished, «. Sashabaw In Drayton Plains, FE I 5 ROOM LOWER ON WALDO ST. Completely redecorated, basement, garage, heat furnished. Refs, re- ----- snridll Ilka for -------- write BILL JENNINGS, 37411 Grand River, Farmington, Mlchl-gan or call ^7. SMALL INCOME apartment unit, buye. ........ Walled Lake, Commerce area. 343-6703. HACKETT RLTY. A MODERN NEW 1 bedroorr only, heal, stove and reir----------- furnished. Lake Orion, avail. April 1st. MY 3-1576. FOR YOUR EQUITY, VA, FHA, OR OTHER FOR QUICK ACTION CALL NOW. HAGSTROM REALTOR, OR 4-0358 OR EVENINGS FE a;005. Lake Rd. 673-5168 bet. 6:30-8 p.ni APARTMENT FOR RENT I ford. For ai In Water lesirei irford area. Agent. OR AVOID dtOWDSI 3 ROOMS ON Elizabeth Lk. Boat well, beach. Adults, no pets. 5375 Cooley Lk. WANTED LOTS Builder needs at once 10 __ feet or more In any area. Klnzler Realty, 823-0335. _____________ WANTED 2 BEDROOM home, cash, Chet Racine, FE 4-6622.________ YOUNG COUPLE NEEDS a home the Rochester-Shelby ir-Shelby ________ ___________ -Bsement preferred. Need to move In by June 1st. Agent. 731-1010. Apartments, Furnished 37 WANTED: CHILD'S PLAYHOUSE. FE 2-5000. 1 BEDROOM APARTMENT Complete with appliances, wall to wall carpeting and air cor.-ditlonlng. Immadlata occupancy, FE 4-0S1. WINCHESTER GUNJ and Colt guns, also old guns for my son's collection. Any family heirlooms sold to me will not be re-sold or traded. Call Major Collins, 334-9207. 2 AND 3 ROOM cabins/ adults np««MPp*H 1971 nivU Mu/w SILVER CERTIFICATE bllle pay top cash price - any quantity,! Northwood Coin Shop - 222 Sherman Dr, R. 0. LI 7-7710. 2 ROOM AND BATH, $20 WEEKLY, 26 Cross SI._______________ 2 BEDROOMS, BASEMENT. 530 par 2 ROOMS AND BATH. Wanted to Rent 2 OR 3 BEDROOM HOME. North side. Or Orion Tp. Call 371.3017. ‘ 2 TO 3 BEDROOM HOME, Ki 2 ROOMS AND BATH, ground flooi adults only, 176 Sandarion Stroat. 2 ROOMS, 1 OR COUPLE only, FE house with basement t Good area. FE 2-7817. RENT, LEASE OR ' BUYI share Living Quarters 33 est. FE 5-7457. ASPHALT AND SEAL coat, atnmatai^ F ._________ ASPHALT AND SEAL coating, free astimatat. 874-0722. _ AUBURN HEIGHTS PAVFNG Tennis courts, parking Guaranlaad, FI SPRING SPECIAL 15 cants lor 5" ' heavy duty gutters Installed, troo aaflw downspouts . 674-3704. M&5 GUTTER CO. COMPLETE 673-6866. Licensed - bonded t 5^4703, driveways. OR 3-0326^ ___ D5mTN0 CONST. CO. Asphet Paving. Ftee_Qoote^474-3755 bRIVEVVAY SPECIALTST, 335-'4700, tree eillma^_______ _ TRI-COuHtY as'p'hALT Paving Sealing. FE 3-7607. Free Est. _ Bouts and Acetssories Eiactricni $ervitei Excavating BIRMINGHAM BOAT CENTER r CEN_____ haaaquartcri. Siarcratl aluminum and llbergiaa Shell Lake and I.M.P. tlbarglav 1265 S. Woodward at Adams Road. I 7-0133. Sno-Mobllt sales, lerv- Buiiding Modtrnixotion fencing PONTIAC FENCE CO. 5833 Dixla Hy., Watarford_8230040 Floor Sanding CARL L. BILLS SR., NEW 4 C w. aNTUrH. fLUUK LATin Banding and finlthlng. PE 34)582. Floor Tiling Buiinoss Sorvicos CUSTOM FLOOR COVERING. LI-noiaum, formica, Ilia. Carpating. 741 N. Parry, FE ^40f0. Carpentry lierntad. Rtas. Call attar 5 p 682-0648.____________ __________ CARPENTRY AND CEMENT work, tree eyyinyele$^L_2-5252._______ CARPENTER WORK,' rMsonabie, at its bast, rec. room, celling tile, Income Tax Service Landicajping ...._ _____ Fraa aatlmatai. J. Waltman. FE M3U._____________ LAVVN CUTTING AND fortlllling Fields Landscaping. UL i- roofing^ and siding, winoow repiactm* ' 363 2337 or 673-1728 Or 363-6563, AL'S DEPENDABLE LA spring clean up. Call 6: ‘carpentry and painting New and repair. FE 5-1331 1 INTERIOR FINISH, kitchens panel! ing, 40 yaari experience. FE >; 1235. ________________________ '■{ JOHNNIE'S LAWN CUTTING. Corpot Cloaning TALBOTT LUMBER ervice, wood or alumlnur Building and Hardwart supplies. ------^-kTan- D I b b I a GARAGE 20x20'-587S. C E BLOCK AND CEMENT WORK,! Ponllac. 37M173. 1 ------ ------------------'^STulI Moving, Starnge CEMENT WORK OF ALL W SMITH MOVING CO. Your moving cement SNYDER BROS. MOVING CO. WE GUINN'S CONST. CO. _______334-7677 orJ71-267l_ FIREPLACES. EM 3-«77. Vt Painting and Decorating NOTHING TOO LARGE OR smell commercial or residential, 27 yrs.|., axp. Free est. 623-1372. J. Bales. A-l PAINTING AND Credit Advisors painting, work guaran- led. Free estimeles. 612-0620. A painting and decorating, exp. Free est.. UL 2-1378 If it's at all possible — we do our |____________________ best. Read Classltlcation 14-A then cHARLES PAINTING-DECORATING ... or call Debt, Aid. Btst quality mr‘——'------------ Ik Bldg. FE 2-0181 mVnshfp 332-8771. Drassffloking, Toilonng ALTERATIONS, ALL TYPES, EXPERT PAINTING AND PAPER hanging. Call Herbla, 673-6770. decorating, __ ■ letther coits. 682-7533. ALTERATIONS - MEN - WOMEN -children. FE 8-2567 - FE S-4251. BETTY JO'S DRESSMAKING Weddings. eltersHons. 674-3704_ DRESSMAKING AND elleratlooi free asllmales. 673 PAINTING. PAPERING, WALL cleening, peper removal i SendmCy. PE 4-tS4t. ‘ FE 4-8138. Piono Tuning DRYWALL SERVICE Old end new 827 3238 YOUNG WORKING GIRL withes share luxurious apt. with s«m 335-8177 before 3 p.m.________________ Wanted Real^tata^ 1 MILLION Road Grading Roofing NEED A NEW ROOF OR root repairs? Call Walled Lake Roofing. L‘“ *■ immerclal or residential. OSI- Ingle, coir 1-3176. pair roots. FE 0-I72S. QUALITY ROOFING WOALACK ROOFING, REROOF Complete Ins, coverage. Fraa ast -lates. 338-4545. __________ HOMES. LOTS, ACREAGE PAR-CELS, FARMS, BUSINESS PROPERTIES, AND LAND CONTRACTS WARREN STOUT, Realtor 1458 N, OpdYkt Rd. FE M165 Urgently need for ---— *---- Sand—Grovel-Dirt SAND, GRAVEL AND flittred -easonebla, 623 1^72._________ I BULLbbzTNG; FINISHED grade. Tree Trimming Service Trucking -A LIGHT HAULING a PE 4-5623. LIGHT MOVING, TRASH _ 8d raaionabla. FE 4-1353. ED'S LIGHT HAULING strvice. R»at. rales, FE 3-6648.___________ halFling and rubbish, name ■our price. Any time. FE 8-0075. ght hauling, moving reasonable, 682-7514. _ i. Depandable. FE 5-7643 LIGHT HAULING. BASEMENTS, garages cleaned. 332-5541.____ LIGHT TRUCKING, DAY or night. 682-1751.____________________ LIShT HAOuRgT BASEMENTl, garages cleaned. 474-1242.__ LIGHT AND HEAVY TRUCTcTRG, ~ bbisha fill dirts grading and grav-and front-tod toadlng. FE 2-0603. LIGHT HAULINGf M'OVfNG 33^75i8. truck Rantol Trucks to Rent Stml-Trallers Pontiac Farm and Industrie! Trac’pr Ca. S2S S. WOODWARD i 4-0441 FE 4-1442 * n Dally Including ‘ Water Softeners TV anttnnn installment 2 ROOMS AND BATH, mature cou- 0 a wk., $20 dep. 163 General Pontiac Contact Pontiac Press Box C-26 2 ROOMS AND BATH, completely furnished, utilities Included, adults only S3S week, $50 dap., 625-2720. and bath, 1 separated bedroom, no children, FE 2-1037, 73 " ■ St„ next to Michigan Bell. LAKEPRONT, SWIALL 2 bedroom, adults, S13S per month, lease, near --------- -----p/yt, 3^30134, Rent Houses, UnfurnishBd 40 •MS, GA , Thorpe 3337364'after T:'30 p)n AMERICAN HERITAGE APARTMENTS NO VACANCIES Now taking appllcatlFtns for r tit call! 628-3155. BLOOMFIELD ORCHARDS APARTMENTS Ideally situated In Bloomfleld-BIr mingham ---- swimming pool and large sun deck - All utllilles except electric. No detail of luxury has been overlooked In Bloomfield Orchard Apts, located on South Blvd. (20 Mile Rd.1, between Opdyke and 1-75 expressway. Open dally 7 to 6 p.m. Sunday, 12 to 6 p.m. Closed Thursday. For Information: UN 4-0303. Mgr. 335-5670, FE 8-0770.____ GRAND PRIX APARTMENTS 1—2 bedroom from $120 -jer mo. 1—2 bedroom With carpeting From $130 per monlh 315 S. Telegraph, Pantiac See Mgf.y Apt, No. IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY CORAL RIDGE APARTMENTS LOW LOW RENT FROM $132.50 r mROO''* ^ND wages FOR elderly Completely carpe(ed, c u^ retiree, tor help around car lot. drapes. Hotpoint air conditioning, | pg 5-3278. 4 ROOM HOUSE. No pets. Elizabeth Lk. 4S2-0531._______________ FREE RENT AND WAGES pla, no children, new furnished home, women to do light houiework, man to --------------- yard and care for I--------- .... .. em|>loyed elsewhere. H. Hoffmen, Lower Straits Lake; Edg Subdivision. "One year lease. . monthly. Prefer no children or pets, 2-bedrooms, garage, available weekend of April ..... Call 517-373-5770 anytime or 363 3819 weekends. basement, fireplace, carpeting, $185 mo., short 363-5364.__________________________ SMALL 4 ROOMS AND bath, -'-lerly e- —---------------- Tlgt drinking and no dog Call atf. 5 p.m. UL 2- I basement, next to Cen al School. Caretaker, FE 2-1037. Rent Lake Cottages shower, sate beach, bi 3 BEDROOM RANCH, FORAAAL dining room, enclosed carr**"' porch, family room, all stal THUNDER BAY Alpena, Hubbard Lake COHO COUNTRY Lake and river acreltes. Buy your cottage, home, ca b I h trailer, camping sites. $17 mo ping sll ---- — jf Club ______________ —. collect 517-354-3407 or write free Information, T h u n d a r Bay Village, Alpena 3, Mich. privileges, 543,500, terms. 3637411. 3 BEDROOM HOME, fully carpeted, 6 yrs. old. $15,500. 335-^.__________ BEDROOM HOME, $7840 ON your lot anywhere In Michigan, bring your plans to Art Daniels Realty, 1230 N. Milford Rd., 68S-IS67 or 274-7250._____________________________ 3 ROOMS AND BATH, dePMit re- qulred, 135 Draper, Pontiac.__ ATTRACTIVE SLEEPING " RdOM, Win bedSr pvt. entrance^ TV and parking. 332>d739. _________ LIVE furnished rooms, rates b< - - ____________begin et $ weekly. Contact Mr. Shieldsa 36 . Pike St. or call 332-8591 bet. 9 a.n and 5 p.m.____________ LOVELY ROOM FOR man 563 W. Huron FE 3-711 ROOM NEAR COURTHOUSE and Pontiac Mall, FE 4-0341. ROOM AND WAGES FOR el 6 ROOMS — ON N. SAGINAW St. soma furniture. 116,000, terms. WILLIS M. BREWER REAL ESTATE 724 RIker Bldg. FE 4-5181 Ih 2 ROOMS AND BATH, welcome, S22.50 per wk., wit.. dep.. Inquire at 273 Baldwin. Call oven^range, heat included, plenty ROOMS FOR CLEAN AND neat m of parking, large closets, garbage “' ■ .....— —' —■ disposal, laundry-storage space. 33i-4054._________ 3 ROOMS AND BATH, ( 77 Foster. FE 3-4572. LARGE CLEAN adults, no drinkers, FE 5-5182. to us to purchase land conti and assume mortgages on he and vacant property. We will_ you cash for your equity. For prompt service this phone number Is available to you 24 hours perl day, 7 days per week. TED McCullough jr. _______ 674-2356 3 ROOMS, ADULTS ONLY, $20 -------- plus deposit, utilities furnished, UL 2-3774. 3 ROOMS AND BATH, In Pontiac, baby welcome. 852-1775.__________ 3-ROOM, BIRCH PANELING, NEW suspended ceilings. Marine batr Directions: Turn west from It Second St. drive 2 blocks to Wilcox Rd. in Rochester. Fumlshed model t I. Phone: 651-0042. Incomparable Values 'inity, range, refrigerator nditic— ------- conditioner, disposal, carpet ROOMS — MAN $11. PER week - SLEEPING ROOMS FOR gentlemen only. $11 per week. Mature people preferred. Steady employment. 338- geretor, FE 8-0845. Formica cup^rds. From $28.50 vyeek, $50 dep. No children, pets or drinkers. In City. 674-1581, II no 1-50 3 ROOMS AND BATHa chi.« welcomea S35 per wk., with $75 dep. Inquire at 273 Baldwin. Call MULTIPLE ally 'til I LISTING BACHELOR OR COUPLE, employee days, 3 roomiy 391-0930 after 8:30. SERVICE Lounry. Money in 24 hours. YORK .._ JUY WE TRADE OR 4-0363 FE 1-7176 4713 Dixie Hwy____1702 S. Telegraph CASH 48 HOURS LAND CONTRACTS—HOMES WRIGHT 312 Oakland Ave. FE ^9U1 ROOMS, BATH, NO drinking, pats. 55 Williams. FE 4-8433. I ROOMS AND BATH. Inquire Royal Apts. aiSO Highland Rd. 873- Apartments, Unfuraished 38 and state hospitals Webster School, the Mall. Call after 5 P. 1 BEDROOM Complete with appliances. Wall to wall carpeting and elr conditioning. Immediate occupancy. Apartments, Unfurnished 38Apartments, Unfurnished 38 SOMETHING NEW-JUST FINISHED Ready-to-move-into Apartments between two lovely lakes n slighted? We think so. Just because you don't want to bother with home owner chores, Is no reason you shouldn't be living beside a lake or enjoying tha swimming, fishing, selling, water-skiing, that goes with It. So we built Sylvan-On-the- drapes, elr-conditloning and parking area. Private beech and boat docks Included. Come on over. Last one In Is the sissyl SYLVAN ON THE LAKES on Cass Lake Rd., between Cass and Sylvan Lakes Just North of Keego Harbor DIRECTIONS: From Pontiac, take Elltebeth Lake Rd. to Cass Lake Rd. end turn left, or take Orchard Lake Rd. to Casa ■ ■ - ■ ■ turn right. From Detroit, take Middle f Lake Rd., and turn left. Belt to Orchard L $125, 2 bedroom also Includes natural fireplace, S160. OR 3-3462. INDEPENDENCE GREEN APARTMENTS Beside an 18 hole golf course included In rent - all tor r charge, clubhouse. Indoor I of golf < some furnished a p a TERRACE, Manager, 2403 Ja $150. S e I. FE 2-6807,________________________ NEW I SEOROOM apartments, 760 Square* feet, wllhin walking General Hospital. $135 per mo No children. Tru-Kraft Homes 873-0331. BEDROOMS, NEW 2 BEDROOMS, for adults, ni pets, heat included, 14 Milt Rd. Welled * d Lake, 824-4718. NEW DOLLY MADISON APARTMENTS Near J. L. Hudson-Seers new shopping center. Includes heat, gas frigerator, disposal, Rooms with BoorA ARTIST SUPPLY, OFFICE SUPPLY OR SPECIALTY SHOP Miss Karnehm. i32-»203. Rent Office Space AVAILABLE NOW Rochester's f OF rvvv......... . ........ newest office end commercial center. Medical suites, general office suites and commercial spaces. Plenty of free parking. Phone 651-4576 or 731-8400. COMPLETELY PANELED OFFJCE space with separata private office for lease —---------- " " Utilities Inch rental, Walton ...» ----- CALL LARRY TREPECK SHOPPING CENTER LOCATION Karnehm. 332-7203. spacious rooms with Rent Business Property 47‘A Woodrow Wilson phone UN 4-7405. From $135 Models open 11 a.m. to $ p.m. IMMEDIATE POSSESSION FURNISHED AND UNFURNISHED APARTMENTS AVAILABLE ooDonKi DcoiKi GORDON-BEGIN C0~ 14 MILE AT 1-75 ;________585-1125 30,000 SQ. FT. BUILDING WITH ‘3 ft Clearance, and railroad sio-ig. O'Nell Realty OR ------------ NOW LEASING BLOOMFIELD MANOR and 2 bedroom luxury apartments ullt-ln Hot Point appliances, models „ J 2220-2370 ORCHARD COURT APARTMENTS 2 bedroom apartments Adults Manager-Apt. 6. 17 Salmer 2-bodroom ........................ of country. Private entrance, fireplace, patio, balcony, personal utility room with washer and dryer. Located In Hlllvlew Village, Williams and Elizabeth Lake EM 3-20S8, Apt. 144, Sum- mlt viet Court. EM 3-5811. apartment Fireplace Apartments, Unfurnished 38 enne Service. 338-3274, 332-3671, BLOOMFIELD WALL CLEANERS. Well Drilling Welding CHET'S PORTABLE WELDING, wrought Iron boom truck servlet • derrtoTatfon work 893-8B80. THE GUY WHO SETS OUR RENTS - ISN'T TOO BRIGHT All he s asking is $143 a manth. But laak what he's giving — a beautiful new Apartment in a brond new building just across from Oakland University. He's including a big living room and dining area, large bedroom, fully-equipped kitchen, air-conditioning, carpeting, drapes, extra storage space, and private parking. No where near Rochester or Pontiac will you see anything as nice, and you can move in now. (We olso have 2 bedroom opartments with everything the T bedroom apartments hove, plus on extra bedroom for families with children. Oakland Volley Apartments on Wolton Rood between Adams and Opdyke, just east of 1-75. Model apartments open Friday and Monday from 4-7 p.m., Saturday ond Sunday from 12-6 p’.m. Phone 335-7776 or 357-4300. w..iCe« PIvv.awwve.g w-w- ----- repair, GInglevllle area. MY 3-5752. 25,200 SQ. FT. ......... parking on the 128x140. Contact Bruce Annett personally. Annett Inc. Realtors .J E. Huron St. 33S-0 Office Open Evenings 8. Sundays parking. F Keego Harl industrial for Lease 11,200 sq. ft., air flees, ample parking, convenient all major trucking, rail X-weV-etc. Less current rate of annuel rental for 5 years or loaner led of.) lent l-VUBfS, Ask for Walt Sfelner. Chamberlain Florida Properties____^48-A ______ ___________ _______ Garage J boat shelter. Lot 165'xl25', :e shade trees, paved roads, city .......... —- ‘*"■*0 to; C.E. 210,' High Springs, -4 BEDROOM, GAS HEAT, paneled khchen, carpet. $10,750. $1,000 down. Located at 327 Auburn Avi imm. possession. Call OR 6GS67. 2 EXTRA SPECIALS ORCHARD LAKE, 2 ACRES, . BEDROOM, S ROOM HOME. Over Iqoking Upper_SfraIts,_Lk., "■ ...... room, 17'x17' kitchen, IS'xlS' formal dining room, 3 fireplaces, 17'xl3' family......................... c. PRICED SSI.000. ALSO LAKE FRONT $69,700. Cost ----1120,000. A lake •? your front a golf course et your c_ «... -------TRADf C. Schuett Sola Housbs 2-BEDROOM, BASEMENT, g^ furnaceg north tide near Fist Body. By owner* 18/900. $1/i dwn. FeV4878 or 333-7603. 2 BEDROOM CANAL trwt n Independence Twp./ $13/500/ agents. 623-0920. 49 SoiB Hou«t« 49 BIRMIN6HAM-BL00MFIELD , 3 AND 4 BEDROOMS '4EWLY decorated 147 down, we buy homes. Art Daniels Realty, 1230 N. Rd. 685-1567 or 274-7250. 3 BEDROOMS, BRICK, basement recreation room, 2 car garage, near Pontiac Motor, schools and shopping. FE 5-4443 or FE 5-4772. BRICK HOME, irea, contains large I, natural fireplace. , located on top o mirhot w 3 MODELS OPEN DAILY AND SUNDAY Drive out AM7 lust west of Cass Lake Rd. to Candetstick. Direct. DAN MATTINGLY LARGE BI-LEVEL Excellent locati*" edge of city. 3 Be(drooms LOW DOWN PAYMENT NO MOR rOAGE COSTS MODEL OPEN 510 California 1:30 to S o.m. — 4-dey w WESTOWN REALTY FE 8-2763 days After 7:30 p.m. - LI 2-4677 ___________ ... ....... ..rpefing, full basement and fenced In yard. Needs $3,200 down. Located In 2 BEDROOMS Large living room, sun-room, fu basement, garage. $10,6S0. Terms. IN THE CITY Convenient locatoion In Birmingham. Area of sloping sites and winding roads. Brick Cape Cod. Living room, dining room, kitchen, 2 bedrooms, full bath, 2 lavatories. 47x15 UNFINISHED 2nd floor with igh plumbing In—easily —- steel kitchen, built-lns. locatcid c SNYDER KINNEY (Sc BENNETT 4-H REAL ESTATE Orion - Oxford — 3 bedroott ranch, S yrs. old. Immaculate, full basement, country kitchen, 2 car garage, large corner lot, Orion schools, price $20,200 — Birmingham $7500 down to 5 -‘- —— ------------■ GIROUX ELIZABETH UKE ceramic bath. Full batament on IVb- car garage. Corner lot, r'-*- '- Many er*— ----------- a faaturet m ANDERSON 6c GILFORD Wa will trad# 674-3141 682-1872 THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, MARCH 29. 19 ROSS From $31,500 “SKESfe" IRWIN Houses 49 Sale Houses 491 Sole Houses 49: Sole Houses 49 Sole Houses 4 ;:VndeRwood model . CLARK FE 5-8183: IRWIN Mattingly nPPM S,US'SJ!i.V WEST OF TOWN $10 Deposit zmz" FE 5-3676 642-4220 FIVE EAGER EATERS JOHNSON rsHsss z.tr..rsz\rx"c.r. fOHNSON LOVELAND |gigp:s3Q?l=' VON WE BUILD 1 bedroom ranch horn starting at $12,308 UNION LAKE AREA m:mm HALL gilk doLn^'V.'iLfo?! Nicholie & Harger Co. bidrLI,f,^^°Tne%^^„T5^KlWARM AND HOSPITABLE UNION LAKE AREA CALL I K. IRWIN 8, SONS | ^ , !jA554r°.ne7f i 5*2^500.'°' EASTHAM DAN MATTINGLY AGENCY 682-900^0R OL^1-M2, riHo\7/ ... E=e 1.81 Sj STRUBLE IF YOU'RE LOOKING- afUoDry' FOR DETAILS keTting lf£P? RAY Wideman IS New Model 1-4 SAT., SUN. mms -?5S'?aw' Erushour ! BRIAN'S O'NEIL BUYS WHY NOT TRADE? THIS LOVELY 3 BEDROOM ^NCH WITH 1 ACRE TRI-LEVEL SiliiP:gl®>3 0 DOWN - VACANT | [”rwT73-3488 682-2 SPEfT’ SUN. 1-5 5873 Sutherlai ANDERSON 6c GILFORD 674-314F* '""'*682-1872 GIROUX 1 Highland^Road^Iwf) 673-78 > wgrr.-----^-73,-03 YOUNG-BILT HOMES^^^^ iffiRO” CASH FOR YOUR LAND ■^YLVAN~LAj^ K. L. TEMPLETON, F Want Ads for Action "'b°p^N°S^Vir PHONE: 682-2211 ^ S.3Caas^^^ Lduinger OPEN OPEN bedroom ms laSnby Clarkston School Area =ss'.Fs;.i Gl or FHA TERMS THIS ELIZABETH LAKE TIMES^ THE KITCHEN BiSll mmi weekdays ’ STOUTS Best Buys Today Times Realty ND CONTRACT TED'S Trading MR. CLEAN'S WIFE Brown CAN'T BEAT IT OUR GUARANTED TRADE-IN PLAN mmmm WMwm #i» 2536 Dixie Hwy. / D— Nwm IVAN W, SCHRAM List With SCHRAM And Call the Van OPEN EVES. AND SUN REALESTATE REVIEW! NEAR MALL -VACANT 49 Sole Houtei 49 Lake Property Val-U-Way $600 TO MOVE IN 3 BEDROOMS Is o( clospts And spAClou spp. Priced under S15,C». ' $»00 to move In. ReASonable S PARTRIDGE “IS THE BIRD TO SEE" LAKE FRONTAGE ACREAGE acres, beautifully wooctea lake tf property in, an area of ex- *e from Detroit. Only $29,i00 with dn. payment. Owner will consider ‘r property In trade. No. ‘4-5044- ASK FOR BUSINESS GUIDE 259 S Woods partridge REALTORS M\ 4-3932 HURON ST. 334-3581 THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY. INIARCH 29, 1968 54 Sale Farms 56 Business Opportunities 59 HUNT ^ X—XT TT-iT-^ BEST BAR BUY-BAR NONE 51 lots-Acrenge ACRES METAMORA Business Opportunities 59! Sole Household Goods 651 So[e HouseholitGoo^^^^« I ACRES METAMORA HUNT —T T'X~\'\—^ B“T BAR BUY—BAR NONE swImmlriilS^tadro'S'm Df 1 V U W ' LocAted on busy DWe Hwy. N. ot JVjmrTJn® arm hnu?e Just In IITO 1^1 J Y L t Pontlac. Class C nlflhtclub, seats ^wssom^- 1 lV_y 1 J_jX ln"?iud\"1 r«m°'lJo’Sse“w"h"b;^^ BENJAMIN & UNCLAIMED FREIGHT SINGER MACHINE Buttonholes and fancy OFF BALDWIN NO CLOSING COSTS nortgage wMh only $1400 'Sown. HERRINGTON HILLS iled floors and garage, situated t lovely corner lot? Then, look , Itindscapotf 10'rooms, mintues from Pontiac, 5700. P Northern Property ' 24X24' 2-BEDRCMDM houi L West Branch. Needs . 70x135' p.m. r* ACRES. BISHOP, INC. JO A-5728 CLARKSTON AREA NICE BUILDING SITE in ilrppts. Priced at $3950 78-ACRE FARM bedrooms. Family roorr fireplace. Full basement, excellent condition. 40 x rooted barn plus ottu blacktop Brian Realty, Inc. 623-0702 *"^lth 5904 Dixie Hwy., Watertord All" in COMy ISLAND "i H,',”. A real hot spot and money maker, L only 2 years old. Best ot >qulp- ' tPO"*- Only «o*n. I Ses STATEWIDE REAL ESTATE ' ■Chased 3,yq00______________ 3*3-3900 5,4 5 TeleBrJpITRd' INVESTORS Exclusive 'tanchlse avall^able, new 1WIZARD WRINGE'R Washer concept In pre-assembled *35. 682-2191 -«?.Yil,.,. Hoysng,^^^^^^ . ^ Left In layeway. Dial-A-Patterni $43,80 or $6.90 monthly. 332-5761, modal, does everything mat $350| Northern Sewing Machine Co. . r.??'oT$7‘‘monT HO cOlilTvf'SoV^ pllancg, 335-92B3.________ Repo. H^ver Waf^er’$99.95 1 Dial-A-Matic sweets pSrt paym.-nt.'- ' lett tn ^PPl-'^NCE, 1NC,._ PARTY STORE party store Including j above av«.%.»v .v.^. .■ Includes property. Consider due only $31.11 $1.10 I ,r USED RANGES AND WASHING Machines. 32 ACRES 01 with V z ACRE. Wooded h DIXIE HIWAY FACTORY Cement block bldg. 100x360 laining over 35,000 sq. n ' RESTAURANT Due to IM h4 this going bu Complete T. 628-1597, MANISTEE' Coui $ Too DOWN 4 Acres 104' on White River OPENING SALE - Newaygo Coi ' .................... 17,200 Clarkston Real Estate FOR sale' BY OWNER cTu'b. WE BUILD-TRADE ROYER REALTY, INC. PHONE 628-2548 MAIN OFFICE. 823 S. Lapeer Rd. Oxford DISTRIBUTOR growin, . .—........ . _ _ . . (Multlmlllion Dollar Prepared Ford Business.) No experience requlrean Merely restock locations with National Brand Product. Company assures exceptional and profitable income for our dealers. Will not vith present business , as accounts can I RHODES real estate $40,000. $10,000 down itract. I for ' MODEL .. /er, used l $100; Older st HAMILTON GAS serviced evei EARNING POTENTIAL! $780.00 A MONTH. OR MORE DEPENDING ON SIZE OF ROUTE. lemi-retlred couple. , ____ . . . . A. J. RHODES, REALTOR ' Xu^triPL^I UStInTsERVIcI^'' iL'l^htld“Applian«,' 465 Elim Lk. Rd., 335-9283.____ ENT SIZE ' WALNUT 9 PIECE dining room suite, good condition, $125. Hotpolnt electric range, 38," good conditicn, 0 electric log, $25. FE 5- WANTED .................,, . refrigerator; dinette set; studi Beauty operator to buy this deluxe couch; end table; 2 pc. llvin equipped beauty shop. Located In ^oom set; bedroom sets; sma " WAREHOUSE HITE RIVER. Located ap- R, J. (Dick) VALUET REALTOR FE 4-3531 Elesperl KEATING Sale Business Property 57 I of While cioui If M-37 22060 V Itionld' *bidg*‘"'''$i"',500. Income Property $3,000 DOWN AND ASSUME $ 157 ACRES-CLARKSTON .Scenic rolling terrain with c sioerable road frontage In i developing area, suitable subdivision or other deve' ments. Only $625 per a^ CONTRACT: 9 n I also separate electric and ‘ meters, 2 car attached garage, ’ cent contract and only $95.'K mo Clark Real Estat" Huron St. FE 3 7888. , APARTMENT BUILDING . _______ sparkling river offerlng^the T'%' THE CAT SAT IN THE SNOW. hSn'dr°/d«"'‘’„“,' J" M^IniX'THE SNOW MELTED. National Forest provide excellent THE CAT SAT IN THE MUD. deer and bird hunting. Choice' , . . ri ^ building sites. SPECIAL OPENING The morol IS: Don t tesT on SALE PRICE ONLY $2,1S5. down. $25 monthly. Other l available. Plan to inspect. Wn,. w. ,, mif-rrsieu m ucycvh---... ... phone for free map - pictures - vestment acreage, don't YOU be today. COMPANY -> ._ self-sufficient ________________________________ -essful in an ever expanoing yIaR AROUND MAINTENANCE business of your own, then wnle to business, Detroit, area for ,alue of chests Please enclose name, rolling stock and 1 months bargair ■e GEORGE IRWIN, REALTOR le MULTIPLE LISTING Id 298 W. Walton ____; lamps; desk; misc. M. C. LIPPARD 115 N. Sagina _____________ SALE, OPEN to public. Entire inventory of new top brand refrigerators, freezers and ------ —. Must be sold. Every ratched Items ,_____ _________.... .Ho reas. offer refused, terms. Sale: today and .--------- .«« .--nance Co, APARTMEN1 ELECTRIC STOVES w 'Ejp 'czBflji *37. Maytag washers $29 to $59. ^'°y; N.„ .nia Beds, $69. 2 pc. living !W) 2 name,' rolling stock receipts. 585-2600. Troy. 3 SQ, FT, BUILDING with ft. clearance, _ ______ ^ .. ,_O'Neil Really. OR 4-2222 past accomplishments. buIinFss—pr'op' $25,000. FE TION. National Pizza Company, Liberty, St. Louis, Mo. 63132. Code 314 HA -3-1100. 1-50 ! BEDROOM SUITE, 3 piece modern, I Akin rnkiTDArTC i with mattress all in good condition. LAND CONTRACTS i $75,. Hide-a-bed - — Urgently needed. See us before •- '^Warren Stout, Realtor j lASO N. Opdyke Rd. FE i-8161 _______Open Eves, 'til 8 p.m___ $39. Bedrooms, let $79 50 up! Sofa beds $49%“ ■s. Lots o* 3 pc, living room sectional $139 up, ' Trart.-ins reclining chairs $39.50 up, 4 burner apt. gas range, $79.50, 4 burner elec, range $99.50, 2 step tables, I coffee table $14.95 tor set. Mattresses for most everything, bunk beds, roll away beds, hide away it Waltoh, FE 2-6842. 0 covers. Best a BEDROOM SUITES, TVS, dinette I Open sets, refrigerator, washer —^ -------- dryer, odds and ends. 363-4878. beds and etc. '“pEARSON'S FURNITURE --;210 E. PIKE FE 4-781 1362 'f; Phone (Acre Code 616 ) 722-686( '•i Evenings and Weekends /59-74i4i o 744 3577 180 ACRES WITH P”R|VAT1 lake’, mile long, 200 yards wide, ex celicnt fishing and hunling Located near Glennie. Ideal fo private club or subdivision. $35,00C spring business. We c 110,10 acres lust off vine rd. Over W mite o- . . on Nelsey rd. Same on Maceday lake Waterford Township. U.S. 10, $1,750 per acre. ON ANDERSONVILLE ROAD. HALL :e $8,750 plus inventory. McCullough realty ,1'“''.''ll GOOD 6Vj% LAND CONTRACT ildentiali _taKE $16,000. TO HANDLE ' 'If*! CLARENCE C. R I D G E W A Y , '■ F'l'' REALTOR, MLS, 338-4086. DOWNTOWN BUILDING Contains 494;817 ent^ under the main Saglr Practical! Stfeet comerrs.l j under short! floors with! business or olllces. Being olfrredl deprecleted velue of building: eksna. . NEAR OAKLAND "U" Immaculate 3 bedroom brick ranch w Ith 2 car attached garage. Large Living Room with I fireplace, dlnlng-famlly room: combination 12x32, large modern! country style kitchen, pracllcallyi All rooms Are carpeted and] custom drapes thruoul Nicely! landscaped lot 135x150. $34,tJ0,! MULTIPLE DWELLING Located on busy W. Maple, this parcel of land zoned multiple dwelling Is excellently situated near the proposed Crittenton Hospital and other establishments; which would make this land an excellent Investment. We will take land, home or income property in trade. Cash terms, $22,500, McCuHough j'r'^at V?4-2?39° ^ TWO FAMILY INCOME i Aluminum sided, 7 Mile end Woodward area, new furnace and new hot water heater A t-»rritlc buy at $17,500. FHA terms priced at $2,000. '* OAVISBURG AREA. ilentv of ro»rt^?ontlae 5460 Highland Rd. (M59) MLS i wLw make an S?ai Ope^-9___________________________ 674-2239 o t site Conveniently FOR SALE INCOME proper^ on Dollai _______> to shopping and 1-75.' West Huron. Reply to Pontiac , »ibo small home on property.! Press Box C-20._______________________________ and Priced to sell. Call for more details, forced TO SELL SHRIMP jX)at Wanted Contracts-Mfg. 60-A Furniture, 210 E. Pike. 1 MILLION I s to ^purchase^land contracts! CHROME DINETTE SETS, assermiTe assume mortgages on hon * - -^rty. - ■property I LudingtonI LOCATED IN STANDISH KENT Fkitablished in 1916 00 ft. paved fror tr frontage. $7,95 business. Building i ■d at only $24,500 oi ' : I GROCERY -cense now quipped, 1 306 ACRES-PRIVATE LAKE NW Oakland Co, approx. 4 mllei off 1-75. Ideal for development golf course or recreetionet area AMrox. 3 miles of road frontage RR rum Va mile thru acreage Large scenic, wooded area $229,500, terms. 9600 SQ. FT. BUILDING DOUBLE STREET FRONTAGE One of the best locations Ir Pontiac with frontage on bott Oakland and Cass Ave. 52,000 tq ft ktt. 7on**d for either light mfg. glazed tile hen, 2 bedrooms and ( 1 down, 2 bedrooms, central air conditioner, 2 car brick garage, cement drive , Carpeting and drapes Included at. $28,b0, terms. DRYDEN PROPERTIES VacAhl 2 acres zoned comm'I City water and gas. Reduced $10,500. Also a former Chi-vrol dealership bldg. 60k90 In e cellent condition plus 2 Iran bldgs, $28,500, terms Hardware, fully equipped including tixlures and real estate consisting ol 3 bldgs on, main street. Owner sacrificing at $41,500, terms ^ 15 ROOM BRICK-WEST SIDE and^sultable for many uses such as doctors clinic, union hall. 'Loke Property 51 ICASS LAKE KEEGO HARBOR, 674-2239 BIG 'lot, near • property. Giadwin 2 ACRES w tage. Also MLS vvllh $1,950 BUILDING LOT _____ for lust $10,000 T MISS OUT ON THIS. Is available to you 24 h day, 7 days per week. TED I McCullough jr. 674-2356 I “ 1-50 LAND CONTRACTS Urgently needed. See us octora Orchard Lk„ FE 4-8462 — 33. WHITE ZIG-ZAG 1968 model, unclaimed layaway. Makes buttonholes, designs, etc. lust by dialing. Only $87 cash or $5 month. Household Appllence, 335-9283._____________________ II Antiques 65-A l-A SUPER FLEA AAARKET SUN., MAR. 31, n to 5 Loaded with rare, odd, old and antique merchandise. China cabinets; furniture; dishes; iron art; round table; milk cans; mirror; silver; pewter; chairs; cheats; ‘ ■ s; records; ox yokes; pump i; trunks; curios; and junque. X.—t ---* Lake Rd. Close to 175. V Warren Stout, Realtor ,1450 N. Opdyke Ro. FE 5-816S ,______open Eves, 'tn 8 p,m. DINING ROOM OUTFIT, V Champagne beige, 693-6709. ricted for custom homes. 625-1756. ELIZABETH' LAKE FRONT South shore. 60x170 ft. Ex beach. $15,000. $3500 down. E Realty 662-2410 ENJOY COOL WOODED pint! beautiful H/a acre, private 426-6603. HIGGINS LAKE Desirable pine lots, 5 acre t mi. to 1-75 180 mi. to Pontia Forest and ski area. Pa electric. $95 dowti, $25 rro. C Montgomery 925-4141, home L 8696. Resort Property COTTAGES Drayton Woods. Price $3,500. FOR YOUR NEW HOME - r high lot B5'x200' excellent locati Now at $4,000. Only $500 down. Floyd Kent, Inc., Realtor " MOO^pixie Hwy. at Telegraph _______^'9-9^dally 625-4116 type Pri' industrial " guiP-nt .. 17“ 'Lter,'“$6o,o5o"tmli AVON TOWNSHIP |"C. ________________________________________________ 216 S. Telegraph" Rd‘^'_ 334-3551 ""“"n foVdeMlK WARDEN REALTY EMgir";V4o&I' Money to Loan organ; truni Auctlonland, '________________ A-1 ANTIQUES, estates, art glass riiCLllFiKic nICUiOKIC wanted. BLUE BIRD AUCTIONS, CUSHIONS—CUSHIONb ; 3340742 or l-634-8831. Custom made for Danish, Colonial 1928 RED SPORT COUPE WITH and Contemporary chairs and rumble seat, good restorable con-sofas. Spring sale on dose-out jltion with 1929 Reo parts car, fabrics. Call 335-1700. Coml. j650, can be seen at 5528 E. Holly Upholstery Co._______ ________ Rd., Holly, or call 634-8894. CR|B, MATTRESS, B U G G Y , ANTIQUE FURNITURE, DISHES. glassware, misc. Selling entire collection. 5569 Savoy.________ playpen. condition. 674- ri Welt. 4540 Dixit DRYER $35. DOORS $3 EACH. Apt. size refrigerator $35. Bunk beds. Misc., G. Harris. FE 5-2766. G ^ A N b KAMPSEN "IT'S TRADING TIME" A 4-5400l| refrigerator. $20 ei carpeting, $50. All i ------i ditlon. Ml-0425 after 6. 52 C $54,900, Call 887-5700 Trend Homes, Inc., PO. Box 295, Rochester or phone OL 1-6701. higgTns la'kefront'cottage J completely furni blacktop street. 623-0184, LOT 50 X 150; PAVED sifee't: Foundation, sewer and water connections completed for 1200 sq. home. Plans and permils avallabi tract. Call 693-69 h, 3 car garage, --------- 1, etc. Al Snell Rte. I, Owosso, 1. 517 723-2058, , I NEW cot TAG E AN D wooded ' Tot.' y paneled dining' pyu -rice $2895 v BROOCK INC ; 4139 Orchard Lake Road j At Pontiac Trail , MA 64000 4444890 HIGHLAND MILFORD area ' i acre lake front $50 mo. bik. top rd. Near expressways, rolling. Open Sun. Bloch Bros. 623 1333, FE 4 *’ 4509, 5660 Dixie Hwy., Waterlord. . HILLSIDE LOT OVERLOOKING q E FRONT BUILDING S Kt to $10,000. Other s » and up, AL PAULY 4516 DIXIE, REAR . & Apr. (Member Lots—Acreage 1. 2, 10 ACRE PARCELS, roMIng EM 3-9531, Fowler.' 2 LOTS CORNER JOSLYN AND larg“e"'slopin^ CORNER loT ON DIXIE HIGHWAY IN ' Ad"ims''a:d Wafton DRAYTON PLAINS LOT, GOOD LOCATlbN,' Excellent building for any kintj 681-0097 business. 6,000 sq. ft. ~ Plenty of --- parking. On main corner, will be IN pXFORD^ City avalla& April 1st. New gas system, big door In rear .. -jilding lor trucks to enter. Can be purchased on terms. For inform-ition call 334-0921. 1071 W. Huron St. MLS FE 4-0921 AFTER 8 PM CALL_ 681-M22 ORCHARD LAKE ROAD AR COMMERCE ROAD, lot ... ______ 162'x120' CORNER, excellent 4 Clarkston schools, Lake tooth ^ouse and garage. V/ater 1 Priv., — $3,250$5-00 enO Sewer. $29,000. n. MENZIES REAL ESTATE M-59 HIGHLAND ROAD Office 625-5485 Near Pontiac Lake, 316'^tr , Alter 5:00 call Salesmen; "Norm Haggadone 625-2775 a,- ^ Mike Ferguson 673-7146 docks. $40,000. $10,000 dov & ONE MILE WEST "OF OXFORD AUBURn“aVE EXCEPTIONALLY NICE 91x150 lot,, ,,ores brick each association bathing beach near by ^ Washroom d 5A $4,000 reasonable terms other lakPi i oj *go v no n0f fronts and off of lake lots starting at! jJsqoo. ded, 'a** WEBSTE*R*'^*Realtor RAILROAD SIDING 692 M9I 'MANUFACTURING ZONING, City of, _____ __________ Pontiac, IVj acres, completely HAVE STATIONS WILL LEASE le have some excellent service sta- echanical business. Small vestment only. CALL LARRY TREPECK OR GUS CAMPBELL 674-3184.___________________ . icenseo Money L refinishIng, furniture re..—. -types hand caneing, hand carving, custom matching colors. All work guaranteed. Harold Richardson, MATCHING PAIR ANTIQUE sandy .. alter 6. _ ---- NEARLY AN ACRE ON black top NEAR^ COMM^^R^CE^ LOANS LOANS $25 to $1,000 Insured Payment Plan BAXTER 8. lIviNGSTONE Finance Co. 401 Pontiac State Bank Buildir FE 4-1538-9 freezer, $49; VI FREIGHT DAMAGED : 10 piece maple bunk bed ... $68 ■4 piece modern bedroom......$97 '10 piece living room group..$125 L' KAY FURNITURE 37 S. Glenwood ______K-Mart Shopping Center____ GE 30" RANGE, Excellent, $100. 651-4745. ORIENTAL RUG. China cabinet. Oak "'~h back bed, buffet, peddlars I, gate leg table, chest, dishes, ;s, misc. 391-2267, , good building 30'x20', ....■* —•> loading IF YOU ARE 23-73 Mortgage loani^_______ FOR THE PAST 42 YEARS ’ HIDE-A-BED, $69, electr., _________ B $39. Auto washer, $35, bedroom I suite, $49, gas and elec ranges, ---- $20, TV, $10. Plano bench $10, A9 round piano stool, $20, grand piano, $200, refrigerator, $69. Smith 1 Van Li— "J “ I Jessie. Smith 10 S. : A SPOT FOR YOU _____s Station- — ------ • around the Pontiac area. Gulf Servi and arou.._ ...- . ---- ------ ■e nas gas! PUMPING GASOLINE ONLY '-------‘ ' Excellent pot—-'-' gasoline sales _____ high volui - Small Investment . ____ __..-y Trepeck or Gus ipbell 674-3184. ___________ Voss & Buckner, Inc. HOUSEHOLD bPECIAL ■jm N.bnn.l Bldn Pontiac A month BUYS 3 ROOMS OF 209 National Bldg., Pontiac FURNITURE - Consists of: k-.. Ik.oioo Xinnn fn txnnn in'®-Piede living room outfit with 2-pc. have been loaning $1 MO to JSOOti^ io j , cocktail table, 2 table lamp.s and . (1) 9'xl2'rug included. 7-plece bedrcoih jsulte with double . Before you borrow o s see or phone us at; RHODES near Orion: Hochestp Schools, $3,900. GREEN ACRES HOMESITES No. 3. Rea 20 ACRES - sonably priced. C Hadley Rd. $15,000. i - Ortonville Rd. $8500.' _____ _________rage b ! and office on part, $67,000 lerm available. L DIXIE HIGHWAY NEAR TELEGRAPH RD. 325' troi . FE 5-7569 . 9: :3f" r"' IRWIN Of Commercial property B0'xl6r While . J. RHOMS. RtALTOR L... SALE OR LEASE, ••• irehousing ' Home Owner PRIVATE MONEY AVAILABLE Stop Foreclosure Consolidate Your Bills Pay Off Present Land Contract Balance WILLIAM WINT 565-6595 dresser, chest, full-size bed with Innerspring mattress and matching box spring and 2 vanity lamps. 5-plece dinette set With 4 chromi chairs and table. AIT for $395. Your credit is good at Wyman's. WYMAN NOW OPEN Y-KNOT ANTIQUES 1 Davisburg next to Post Office (Formerly 10345 OakhMI) n ok e 4 _____d-O-Day. _______ _______ Cluthra. Tlf- fany Favrile/ Webb, M. W. and N. E. Burmese. Gunderson and N. E. Peachblow. Slag, A m b e r i n a , Pittsburgh Pull-up, Bohemia, China, watches, Dolls. Appointment Only. 419-53M261. If no answer call back. 2721 Evergreen Rd., Fi, TV & Radios Walton TV, FE 2-2257 23" BLACK AND White TV com-binatiion radio, record player, 674 kM-FM COMBINATION, 40" long, radio and stereo, slido rule tuning, 4 speaker system the remote ____________________________________ speakers provisions. Claim for N T E RNATIONAL HARVESTOR $158.02 cash or $8 month. Chest type freezer, 7V2 cubic foot,! Household Appliance, 335-9283. $50. Sears upright relaxicisor. TV BARGAINS, LITTLE rotary sewing r , $30. e FE 8-2306 258 W. Walton 1 lot for parking. $65,000, teirr 500 ACRES-ROCHESTER AREA , 673 9272 B«*ach 7 $5500, MULTIPLE Lj^ING SERVICE _ — UNDERWOOD LAKE FRONT LOT c ke, $2500. ivileges \Aidc1le liable, 50 Acres ^ of cultivation, intensively farr for years with quality loam ; produces splendid crops, 4 fri bedrooms each Used as la story steam healed brooder large processing bldg., 4 s silos 12x35 each, office bldg. 1 many other bldgs. Ideal for dustrlal or development purpo* having over 2 mile of good n frontage, tiose to expressw# Realistically priced at $550, for Lease—Telegraph Road 1800 sq ff. air-condilioned bricK bldq., also 1200 sq. ' ft, mKlal storage bldg. On 14,000 sq, ft. SINCE 1923 WE HAVE BEEN OF FERING, SELLING. TRADING AND LEASING ALL TYPES OF REAL ESTATE. CALL OUR office for THE COM PETENT, EFFICIENT HANDLING OF YOUR REAL ESTATE NEEDS. OUR SALES^ ASSOCIATES HAVE YEARS OF EXPERIENCE AND ARE WELL TRAINED IN ALL PHASES OF THE REAL ESTATE BUSINESS WE BUY. SELL, LEASE OR trade RESIDENTIAL, COM MERCIAL, INDUSTRIAL, ACREAGE OR FARM PROP ERTIES Annett Inc. Realtors 28 E HURON STREE T Ottice^^oen Evenings and ^338-0466 Co. EM 3-7114 [ LAKE HOME 'p prMleges*'loc?tl^^ i°'mile'^south . 3, Goodrich In an area of fihe home hi Here Is the extra pleai^ure « fishing and swimming. Good road ^as and excellent schools. $15,90i ? C. PANGUS, INC., Realtors 0 OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 630 M15 Ortonville, CALL COLLECT NA 7-2815 UNDERWOOD' . Everett Cummings, Realtor 2563 UNION LAKE ROAD EM 3 3208 363-7181 t', ACRE WOODED LOT IN, Rockdale Sub_, Rochester, 791-5958. .‘ 5 ACRES WITH 331' of'frontage on fenced yard,’ a new shopping on'’this olfering" $33,500^on ,erms.! BATEMAN INVESTMENT 8. COMMERCIAL ierly 377 S. Telegraph Rd. 338-9641 FE 5-9446 Aftei '2' a. Weekdays after lu„beR YARD BUYING OR SELLING CALL JOHN K. IRWIN & SONS Swaps 63 KIRBY SWEEPER |.|„ -S------------------------- I EXCELLENT CONDITION - $50 '*11 CIRCULAR SAW sharpener, $10o' FULL GUARANTEE J. . 357^^.^ jvtagnum! Kirby Sefvice & Supply Co. ,. ..... . o™--------2617 DIXIE HWY.___________674-2234 pistol, I II after 7, 879-6348. LARGE_^PINK _COycH, ^^gold- -___i fleck mobile home couch, $10; oc- -aslona! chair, $5; blon-* ---------- Itract. Call 624 5446 before 15 MILES NORTHWEST OF trees, this a corner par< 5 min. from 1-75 fre $3,950—10 per cent down. 5 acre parcel 3>/a mi. Clarkston. $5500-10 — .NDE 8665 Djxie VON Clarkston, 625-2375, 50 ACRES LAKE, wlfdlife, o black top, close to^shopplnc p“hone JirttTafter 5 p.m'Building Sites 100 ACRES ' 3 ^bedroom^^home, WATERFORD TWP. - 132 x 5c^33J-3759 PRIME" I'NVESTMENT 5 ACRES WEST HURON STREET of Close In parcel with valuable Hurt own. Street frontage ?J cjJJ o u -'veaway price of lust $45,000 wl Deral terms. Should double ar iple In value fast. Call or stop 'details. WARDEN REALTY 962 CORVAIR, 4-SPEED. Goodi , , condition, $200 or swap tor 4 Oakland County | motorcycle. 682-6064.________________ j table, $5; table ; LINOLEUM RUGS. MOST SIZES, $3.49 up Pearson's Furniture. 210 E. Pike St., FE 4-7881. ' Looking for '■ A Business Of Your Own .tlMODERN DINING SET, china bu fet, table with leaf and pad, chairs, good condition. Ml 6-3699. 13434 W. Huron, F d. Only 4.500. PRIME INVESTMENT ____________^ ^ ^ a_cre5_z_on^ IndustriaL' I I I A / Sale Clothing^ Must Sell Singer ewing machine, little used Repossessed. This one will make blind hems, button-holes, desigr etc. $52.20 cash or will accept per mo. Call anvtime. 334-381 Monarch Sewing. -ImAPLE DRESSING TABLE, bench. Valuable frontage < $20,(X)0-°$4,000 down. Walters Lake.' ............ .......nt, $4,500. Lar ‘ $500 down. . ___ES - White $45,000. $8,000 down tract. WATERFORD TWP. - Across Strw ,1 CALL TODAY FOR DETAILS | HOWARD T. KEATING' n this area p.m. size 7-8, $20. 674-0680 a NEW ELECTROLUX V A C U U cleaner. Slightly used. M u sacrifice, best otter. 334-3089. d Dyke and Chicago SPRING MIST MINK stole, size 14, $200. Squirrel jacket, size 14, $50. 646-0164. from Oakland Lake. 80x120. $2,750. i ED: LIGHT INDUSTRIAL, I to 10,000 sq. ft. building with 6 acres land or vacant. Pon-area. Miss Green, Detroit, 891- NbAK I-/5 tAKKt:«aVVMT, UKIUIX TWP CAN BE PURCHASED F(>R; AS LOW AS $50 DOWN ON LAND CONTRACT WRIGHT REALTY . , , 382 Oakland Ave. FE .'.9141 »OI® rarOlS_______ AVON' TOWNSHIP. 65'acres,'i’ mile;.. '' ^27^" from the city of Rochester, $3100 80 tO 800 ACRES VON REALTY ! REALTOR Mall MLS Room 110 682-5802, It busy 682-5800 Commerce and Green Lk (W. Bloomfield) Opdyke and University (Pontiac) )-96 and Novi Business Opportunities 59 Business Opportunities 59 $3100’ 651-8482._____ 'BUILb YOUR HOME IN'A bea‘utlfuP -..-s rnM/t jind lakei partly iile"o«'f-Tsl^'lO rnin. -- Drayton Plains, ' 4-5606 or 285-1 It Wyandotte, 3907. ACRES. BY OW'NERI Lapeer, 19 miles from Flint, nice slightly rolting land. 793-4039. CHOICE" LOT ' • Waterford Township. 338-8073. GOOD FOR YOUR SOUL GOOD FOR YOUR BODY GOOD FOR YOUR MIND PEACEFUL ATMOSPHERE Sale or Exchange 58 ^ ATTENTION INVESTORS, 25 per cent return. For sale or trade, mobile home park site. 25 acres, ready for development. Engineering completed, permits granted, city sewer and water available. Located Cedar Springs, Michijon, 18 miles north of Grand Raolds. Advanced Village Housing Com-pany, 2)990 Greenfield, Detroit, 48237 . 543-8484.____________ Business Opportunities 591 (Novi) I representatives ' .... Michigan. Dale A. Dean Farm Broker and Auctioneer. Write or call 517-278-2377 - days Headquarters - Dean Realty Cc or 517-288-6)27 - nights.________ FOR FARM SEEKERS— >ct now - planning a high- Well located farm lust east of: profit soft Ice cream-fried Chicken-, — Lapeer on good blacktop road. 69 cents, Roast Beef takeo-uti 12 units. Complete set of buildings including] operation or cornbmatlon? " very comfortable 3-bedroom far"' '—‘‘ * home with air --------- heating systei Sale Household Gwdi ___________65 1968 DIAL-A-MATIC Brand new sewing machine that does everything Including making fancy s 11 tc h e s, buttonholing, overcasting of edges and so fourth. Left In Lay-A-Way originally sells for $134.58 balance only $33.15 or $14.58 weekly, call day or Imperial Vacuum. FREE THREAD AND the7sTatio'n's')ocaTed-'ef'^^^^^ WITH PURCHASE. and Chicago, Commerce and Green nexa Lake the week of April 1st through 338-2544 the 6th daily from 8 a.m. to 7 p.m.!------------------------ to answer any and all questions V*, WHAT 'yOU'D EXPECT TO PAY pertaining to any of the above ~ ~ locations. For additional Information. Call Mr. Ardonotkiskl, LO 5-6088 days. KE 5-5917 Eves. NEWLY UPHOLSTERED ' hide-a-bed, 5 piece diiic seats newly upholstered. ----- sweeper with all attachments, tank type. Cast Iron urn. FE 4-8341. II be atT' NORGE REFRIGERATOR, contWtIon, $65, FE 2-1027._ REFRIGERATOR, COFF'EE TABLE, - -‘ep-tables, 2 lamps, $35, or will separate. FE 5-7695. REFRIGERATOR WITH deep freeze $75. Wall mirror 30x40 $f0. 9x12 Braided rug $39. Sewing machine $20, 2 table lamps and pole lamp $15. New poster bed mattress sjorlr^s $150. 28' extension '-u— imcludi. .. 34 x 36 tool ! .....y hot water Other buildings I sement barn plus! . Only $840 per sh layout, equipment, sho* ,„ .low. No franchise, no fees. FEILER SALES CO. 1434 Gratiot, Detroit WO 3-4020 MOTEL INVESTMENTS Down River area, 20 units, over 30 per cent cash flow return, $35,000 down. Exceptional buy: Flint area, 12 units, beautiful living quarters, $25,000 down. We have other motels throughout Michigan and ----_ 357. Stout, Realtor Op'^THE'^lToUN'rRY AND ^THE '45^N._Opdyke Rd^ FE 5-8I65; TARNISHED BEAUTY OF NATURE ; ' SMALL FARM 5 ACRES, wooded, hilly and nice Modern country home with 2 acres. ------ ., --- 2 j^rns with 8 built in stalls, 2 car brick garage and breezewa'/ at-■ -m home. Perfect jniry living. CO 4083. HOWELL Town & Country, Inc. r'/j ACRESr 570' of road frontage,T Except^naljy located 3’.3 miles north $6,995, $900 down car brick garage op road with tached to 3 bedr 6,900. Term? ' * ^ 7 ACRES on blackt large 495' frontage, S 10 ACRES, for people •es-ideal. wooded, stream. $39,500. 33 ACRES, a northwest i slightly nrir»H nately 7’'2 Clark Oil AND Refinery Corp. '««8m Has Immediate Openings For Dealers NEIGHBORHOOD BAR, LIQUOR and SDM, also 3 bedroom modern home, cottage and boat livery Walled Lake area, doing exc. business. Grocery and party store Wqlled 3 ROOMS BRAND NEW FURNITURE $297 $2.50 per week. LITTLE JOE'S BARGAIN HOUSE 1461 Baldwin a* Walton, FE 2-6842 SINGER AUTOMATIC ZIG ZAG Sewing machine — sews single c double needle, designs, overcast: buttonholes, etc. — m o d e r cabinet. Take over payments of: $7 PER MO. FOR 8 MOS. OR $56 CASH BAL. still under guarantee Universal Sewing Center 2615 DIXIE HWY.________FE 4-0905 1 DINING ROOM SET $49, LIVING room set $49, bedroom .set $75, kitchen set $22, refrigerator $29, stove $29, odd chairs, bookcase, desk, poster bed, M. C. Lippard, “ Saglnar- 2 PIECE SECTIONAL, custommade priced. $357 pe 70 ACRES, rec Pine trees of over mile LAPEER COUNTY We have several choice parcels ol land lust N. ot M-21. Range from further C. PANGUS, INC., Realtors | ---------A WEEK I GEORGE IRWIN, REALTOR ORTONVILLE MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE ........ ! 298 W. Walton FE 3-788; -3 Prime Locations-Lake Orion Walled Lake Pontiac For Further information call: LI 8-7222 An equal opportunity employer PARTRIDGE "IS THE BIRD TO SEE" EXCHANGE FOR THIS ORCHARD INVESTMENT 90 acres with 2244 beautiful fruit trees at the city limits about 17 mi. from Ann Arbor. Over 1,000 of the trees are red and yellow Stark Delicious ot the new highly-deslrable and productive '"spur type." All equipment and a roadside stand fixtures are Included. For added income, owners built a new 40x40 ft. tully-equl|»ed poultry bldg, now leased at $275 per mo. Delightfully modern 2 bedroom ; brick bungalow with a finished recreation room. Storage barn and refrigeration. We recommend it as an exceptional value at this price of $109,000,000 with easy terms or exchange. No. 14-4421-F. ASK FOR BUSINESS GUIDE PARTRIDGE REALTORS 1050 W. Huron St. Pontlat FE 4-3581 or 965-8759 i 2 TWIN BED FRAMES, oox springs -nd headboards, $25. MA 5-1916. SEAT UPHOLSTERED Co___________ ark green $45. 4 piece bedroom (t, double dresser end vanity i ■" tlrrors, blonde, $200. 887-5774. del, green lounge cheli le and chairs, d6-3920.__________ 3-ROOM — (Brand new furniture) “7. Cash, terms, lay-ewa irson's Furniture, 210 E. Pike 9x12 Linoleum Rugs $3.89 Solid Vinyl Tile . 7c n Vinyl Asbestos tile 7c e« Inlaid Tile, 9x9 7c es Floor Shop-22SS Elizabeth Lake "Across From the Moll" 12 CUBIC FOOT REFRIGERATOR and freezer comb., like new. FE 2-3870. 12 X 12 WUNDA WEAVE off wtiltb ---------1 yr. old $50. Ml 2-4383. public, entire inventory of new Zenith, RCA and Motorola TV'!;, color TV and steftos must be sold. Every item discounted. Scratched sets priced accordingly. No rea. offer refused, terms. Sale: today and tomorrow, 10 to 9. Hill Appliance Co., 2416 14 Mile Rd., between Woodward and Crooks. For Sale Miscellaneous 67 8 DRAWER MACHINIST CHEST and 11. Other Items. FE 2-4537. SINGER MODEL 66 WALNUT CABINET SEWING MACHINE ZIg Zagger makes decorative stitches, blind ‘ ^ d hems and so forth, SINGER DELUXE MODEL-PORTABLE ZIg zagger, in sturdy carrying case. Repossessed. Pay oft: $38 CASH Or payments of $5 per mo. 5 yr. guarantee Universal Sewing Center 2615 DIXIE HWY.______FE 4-0905 SOFAS REUPHOLSTERED, ! fabrics during S—'---" Coml. Upholster STEARNS AND FOSTER innerspring mattress and box springs, 330, 682- 8602._____________ SYLVANIA MODERN Inut console ___________ ____________ $3. Crib, mattress, $S. Twin Maple bed — TV, $35. TV t ..................... .... springs, $45. Walnut occasional chair, $5. 2 modern walnut tables, $8 ea. OR TAKE OVER PAYMENTS GE range $1.50 per wk. GE refrigerator $2 per wk. GE dishwasher $1.25 per wk. GE portable TV $1.25 per wl 6484 Wllliems Lk. Rd. CURT'S APPLIANCES Pontiac Music and Sound 3 Huron. 332-4163. _______ POLICE MONITOR RADIOS. REGENCY AND SONAR. 1 yr. warranty. Prices from $84.95. Town & Country Radio and TV, 4664 W. Walton Bivd., Drayton Plains. 674- RECORD player NEEDLES hard to find? See us — We have most all kinds Johnson TV-FE 8-4569 45 W. Walton near Baldwin STEREO CONSOLE 1968 model, 30" long with dual channel speakers, auto, changer. Plays all sizes. Only $90 cash or $5 month. Household Appliance, 335- tools $80, OR 3-6462. II paneling, cheap. '‘1. Huron pump. B" ROUND HAND BASIN, defective $3. Double sinks, defective, $4. G. A. Thompson, 7005 M-59 W. . VOLUME SET OF American People Encyclopedia, 1967 edition, with 10 children books, dictionary with stand, like new, $200. 334-3971. chair, complete $50) 1715 Baldwin. 105,000 BTU NEW gas fi_____________ stalled with ducts. Average '■ Also aluminum siding Insta___________ Reas. A. 8. H. Sales. 62S-1501. 625- BABY STROLLER AND playpen. BASEMENT RUMAAA6E sale. March 30, 12-3 p.m. 5839 Williams * Drai***^ oi-i-e. Lk. Rd„ Drayton Plains. ___ FIRED and radiators to heat 6 room house. 125,000 BTU boiler, lOO* of baseboard, $399. Spring salt. G. A. Thompson, 7005 M-S9 W. BOLENS TRACTORS SIMPLICITY TRACTORS 0 attachments ^ BOYS' 5 PIECE bedroom i bedspread, drapes and rug $65; formica end tables, larms $ exc. condition. 624-1071, after 3 BRIDES — BUY YOUR WEDDING announcementa at dlsoount fram, Forbes, 4500 Dixie. Drayton, OR For Sole MiscellaneBus 67 j Musical Goods THE PONTIAC PRESS, 711 ^ts-Hunting Dogs 791 Auction Sales FLOOR SANDERS-POLISHERS WALLPAPER STEAMERS i BLUE LUSTRE SHAMPOOERS I $1 A DAY 951 JQSlyn _____ PE 4-6I0S! I UNUSUALLY MARKED kittens,; $2. Hold tor Easter. 6Um7. I HI DAY. MARCH 29, 19R8 By Kate Osann Rent Trailer Space BRUNSWICK POOL TABLE~“ ..............- excellent coii^i GRINNELL'S SURPLUS STORE BARGAINS, misc., .V .. ■ , u.m . rri < Sat., 243 W. Strathmore. Pontiac CRIB, tHEST MATTRESS~bugDie, mIsc. Items. 674-3S60. CULLIGAN MARK 2~model 3325W.I Water softener, 5 yrs old Exc Mnditlon,^ on city water dqn't need! DINING ROOM SET, mlSernT^ex-cellent condition, 36" window tan, an^s and tables, baby clothes. DOG HOUSES, INSULATED. ALL i sizes. 748 Orchard Lk. Rd. ! DRYER, SWING SET, buggy,“baby vinclal end table, school desk, i movie screen, sandbox, 334-1434. For The Finest In Top-Quality Merchandise Shop At Montgomery Ward Pontiac Mall $189 RIGHT PIA^ FROM $69 iflOND OR FROM $388 Easter. LI 5-6805.____ _ _ AIREDALE PUPS, Champion Mr Ideal family pet, watchdog hunter. S70. 625-5589. AKC MINIATURE Dashchuftds! d B & B AUCTION ! END OF THE MONTH CLEARANCE SAT. NIGHT MAR. 30 7.00 P.M. SHARP JACK MEYER WITH GROCERIES (BY THE CASE) Loads of fire damaged furniture and appliances males, 13 weeks old. $50. 887! Repossessed and unclaimed I AKc~3ERMAN SHEPHERD, female freight too numerous to '.......R,se'^vice, also mention Female, 9 mos. $25. 682-7226._________| AKC BEAGLE PUPPIES, 8 weeks!Quibell^' quality. 879-63A9. LOW EAST TERMS GRINNELL'S GARAGE SALE: Miscellaneous day sale. Sat., Sun., Mon., from 1 p.m. 367 S. Blvd., East, Pontiac.' ; Thursday, Frid Juniper, Auburn Heights. HOOVER DIAL-A-MAfiC Vacauum must sell, being trar terred. Call FE 4-1037._ HUBLESS SOIL PIPE E 1. Thompson, 7005 JEWELRY, ODD LOTS for prizes, resale, etc. $1.20 dozen up. 4 chairs and china, $90. dinette set 4 chairs, $15. Call after ' - ~t. at 239 W. Rutgers. KITCHEN APPLIANCES, DINING room, bedroom turn., MI s household Items, Reas., 544-7772. LAVATORIES COMPLETE $24l50 value, $14.95, also bathtubs, toilets, shower stalls. Irregulars, terrific values. Michigan Flourescent, 393 Orchard Lk., FE 4-8462 — 1. gas furnace burners. g equipment. UL 2-3640. NEW NYLON CARPET 25 yards ironer, hand mower, 625-2546.___ PILE IS SOFT AND LOFTY . . ... ..... . .... carpet UPRIGHT PIANO, $■ heater, 149.95; 3-plece bath sets, $59.95; laundry tray, trim, i’"-' shower stalls with trim, $ RAILROAD TIES, BARN wood, split almost new, $135, 682-8475. RUMMAGE 1865 ORCHID, misc. from 4c - $4, includin stroller, teeter-babe. No pre-salei 8192 Cooley Lake Rd. Office Equipment RUMMAGE SALE, Clothing, boats. SINGLE AXLE LOW BOY OFFICE FURNITURE refinished -nd reupholstered by experts half the price of new. Cali 335-17(1 Coml. Upholstery Co. PRINTING PRESSES—OFFSET 5433 Dixie. Waterford PRINTING EQU I PM E SOFAS UPHOLSTERED AT half the price of new. Call 335-1700. Cor' Upholstery Co. _________ Michigan Flourescent, 393 Orchard Lk., FE W62 — 32. More^quipment 4-x7' DISPLAY easonable. 682-1320. 1025 Oakland TORO 16" SNOW blower, and 26" Reel lawn mower. Comb. CR 3- TUB ENCLOSURES, GLASS ONLY THE SALVATION ARMY RED SHIELD STORE IIS W. LAWRENCE ST. Everything to meet your need; Clothing, Furniture, Appllai USED JUKE BOX RECORDS ■ ents and up. FrI. and Sat. 94 North Saginaw Street UNIQUE PORTABLE STEAM saunas, no money down, payments less than $4 per week. FE 8-8532 or FE 8-2383. USED AND NEW OFFICE DESKS, chairs, tables, files, typewriters, adding machines, offset printing presses, mimeograph, drafting boards and fables. Forbes, 4500 Dixie, Drayton, OR ^9767 or ■" WASHED WIPING RAGS, as low as .24 per lb. 25 lb. boxes to 300 lb. bales. Used Office Furniture — desks, chairs, etc. Priced to sell. New 5 hp, 3 phase air compressor, $550. New and used steel, angles, channel beams, plate, pipe. Used metal garage doors. Ideal for signs, temp, sheds, etc. WHEELHORSE LAWN AND GAR- horse 32" motor, mower $50, 673- Hand Tools—Machiiwry 68 1962 CATAPILLAR D-4C, OR 3-5730. 63 E. Walton Dally 9-6 FE 8-4402 Air compressors, l u b r i c a- tion equipment, hydraulic lacks, steam cleaners. Welding equipment. Etc. Pontiac Motor Parts, 1016 University Drive. FE 2-0106. Sond-Gravel-DIrt 76 1-A SAND AND GRAVEL, all areas delivered. 673-5516, Waterford. A-1 BULLDOZING, finished grade, gravel, top soil. M. Cook. 662-6145. FOUNDRY SLAG FOR YOUR driveway. A^1 black dirt. FE 2- BRIDGEPORT MILL V-REM, Reid service grinder, Leblond lathe, Detroit, FO 6-0790, 521-2325. Cameras—Service h carrying case. $200. 651-4779 used. Top brands, save up to ; per cent. Peoples, FE 4-^235. ALTO SAX, good condition. _______________682-8000_______________ BALDWIN PIANO, WALNUT finl excellent condition. UL 2-3640, BALDWIN SPINET organ. Like n; In rental return Pianos. Like ni GALLAGHER'S 1710 S. Telegraph FE 4-0566 U mile south oft Orchard Lake AKC MINIATURE JET Black poodle puppies. 10 wks. $50. 12 mile- " of Lapeer, lust off M24 Vi M on Otter Lk. Rd._______ animal clippers, FE 2-5639. aTcc poodle, 2 months. Female. Reas. Vet's Certificate. 335-0120. AKC TOY POODLES, WHITE, 673-2051 GERMAN Shepherd AKC........... wormed, shots, 7 wks. 624-2539. AKC DACHSHUND PUPPIES-$75. ADORABLE DALMATION puppies. and formed, $65, guitar, (Like new) HOUND, AKC REG., 1 years, 807-5963. I puppies. Also AKC Tiny White Toy 1 stud service. Reas. 585-6453. BEAUTIFUL SABLE AND white rnlllec. A mn X09.10ni of Public Act Of 1949 (C SATURDAY 7 P.M. Due Hall's Auction, 705 Rd, MY 3-1871.__________________ SATURDAY MARCH 30, 10 A.M. Dasen Farm and Home Disposal 510 S. Vernon Rd„ off M-21, 14 Ml. West of Flint. 2 Tractors, tillage tools, drill, corn picker, wagons, shop. New 16' House trailer, relics, household and lewelry wagon. Stan Perkins—Auctinneer Ph. 635-9400__________Swartz Creek 90 Boafs-Accessories LARGE LOTS, NATURAL GAS PONTIAC MOBILE HOME PARK. RESERVE SPACE NOW FOR spring, -“.upancy - Sun Air Mobile ^ mes Estates. 6600 E. Grand > River, Brighton. Michigan, 227-I6S1. 1967 CHRYSLER CHARGER, 1 |T SQUAR'e'LAKE mobile HOMES . TUBO-CRAFT |et V $7,000. 651-4501 il Squari AbULTS ”' 0NLY -- NO thog^ng;l, . ___ Telegraph Rd. Pontiac 338-9S69. Auto Accessories 91 Clarkston Auto Ports 6 North Main 625-5171 OPEN 9 TO 9 New and rebuilt auto parts COMPLETE LINE OF ' CUSTOM & SPEED ACCESSORIES ALSO COMPLETE LINE OF RACING TIRES. Tires-Auto-Truck ALSO COMPLETE LINE OF CUSTOM AND SPEED HARRINGTON BOAT WORKS 3212 after 5 p.m. Early Bird Bargains D—7 97 Wanted Cers-Truckt 101 We would like to buy late model GM Cars or will accept trade-downs. Stop by today. FISCHER BUICK 544 S. WOODWARD 647-5600 _ lk Cars-Trucks 101-A }, 100 JUNK CARS — TRUCKS, m ALWAYS BUYING JUNK CARS m and r.crap, wp tow_._ FE 5-020L COPPE R 'BRASS;' RADI At ORs'— ACCESSORIES “Your little boy was very, very good, Mrs. Travers. I think he has the measles!” Goodyear Service Store 1k37p' Wide Pontiac ' Open Friday 'tllj NEW 825x20 TIRES. ( SUNDAY 3 P.M Truck loaded v » furniturt modern couches. Early American sets, recliner chairs, swivel chai" and used merchandise. Ha Auction, 705 W. Clarkston Rd. f 881 Travel Trailers rhrome wheels. New i 2635 Orchard L, OPEN DAILY 9 TO 6 MON. AND THUR5. TILL 9 SUNDAYS 10-4 Expansion Sale MORE ROOM TO BETTER SERVE YOU This week's Special LUDWIG DRUM SET » SALANTI ACCORDION, 120 bass, white, $100, 681-0533. BRITTANY REGISTERED pups. OR puppies. House hunters. $60. 644-7309. TYLER'S AUCTION 605 Highland Rd. 673-9534 Across from M-59 Plaza Open dally from 18 to 7. Auction every Friday, 7:30 p.m. We can buy-sell-trade your furniture; appliances; books; tools; TVs; misc. Items. Consignments also wanted. 90 da^s same as cash 1968 Starcraft Campers i Inside display I CRUISE OUT, INC. I E. Walton Dally 9-6 FE 8-4402 1968 NIMROD CAMPERS | ALL 8 MODELS ON DISPLAY All accessories and parts MG SALES I u .. T 1 r . . 4667 Dixie Hwy. 673-6458 Oraytonj HOlly TrOVel COOCh InC. FANS-MONITOR THUNDERBIRD RITZ CRAFT TRAVELTRAILER5 I SKAMPER AND PLEASUREMATE i CAMPERS—7 8 I 8 SLEEPERS ^ Auto Service — Repair 93 I Factory Rebuilt Motors ! I For cars, trucks, $89 up. High! i performacne engines. C o r v a i r specialists. ’EZ TERMS 537-1 117 I MODERN ENGINES ,, MERC CRUISER DEALER CRUISE OUT INC. j 63 E. Walton _Dai]^y ^6 FE 8-4402; MARk"55' mercury'^ ELECtRIC,I pl7w!)oTboaJ.'62i“uM. *_"**L..*°' still A FEW GOOD BUYS ON 1967 UNITS! MFG, GLASSTRON, CHRYSLER , I AUTOMATIC transmission, power broke unit and p^^wer steering assembly for 1964 Pontiac. 687-6351. __________ _ _ 75 h.p.,'2 chevy" PICKUP WHEELS >KD (ftpreurv, rim for^^ord^Fe‘ 1-77^.^^° 390 ' CUBIC TnCH ENGINE, $175, good condition, 887-5097. 1965 CHEVROLET 383 cu. ft. com- 1964 CheVI $125.. f 2-dr. linkage. w Silverline : Cruiser, (Marin ME 4-6771 Plycrc price marked. Wilkin's Lake Garage, 4093 On Rd., Orchard_Lakc.______ MOTORS: '60 AND '61 Poi APACHE 1966 AAASA Hardtop, \ '-S, $975. 625-2272. PUPS, AKC I champion blood II registered, I. 798-8613, iTEINWAY STUDIO PIANO . . . USED BUT IN GOOD CONDI-, TION ................ $395! GALLAGHER'S 1718^5. Telegraphy .. FE 4-0566 I COME SEE AND SAVE, Norwegian 1 DALMATIAN PUPS, AKC, 7 WKS. ' Excellent blood line, - sired. OR 3-6759. UmtMlk HORSE MILEY, DRESSING room, hydraulic brakes, $2,000, 474-2189. 5 YEAR OLD thoroughbred mare. Registered. Very gentle. $400. 1261 Brauer Rd„ Oxford, 628-3007. Open Daily 9 to 9:30 Sat. 9 to 5:30 -aka DALMATION 8 MONTHS, MALE, AKC, champion sired, purebred, II..— — —irkings, exc. best of litter, e for show or rnifj, children, 642-980 APPALOOSA MARE AND foal $400. Call OR 3-0760.__ USED ORGANS PRICED RIGHT TO CLEAR. Lowrey Tempest, only used 8 w 453>-5419, Plymouth. EASTER RABBITS ORDER early, 628-1309 after 4 p.m.___________________ FREE (2) DOGS TO GOOD home, j 673-3989.______________________ IGERMAN SHEPHERD PUPPIES, WURLITZER AND THOMAS ORGANS AND PIANOS INSTRUCTIONS AND INSTRUMENTS._________________________________________ JACK HAGAN MUSIC german ^short hair puppies, f Elizabeth Lake Rd. 332-05011 AKC males at hales 623-0254. Auburn, Rochester. 852-5506, REGISTERED APPALOOSA FILLY, black, nice, 673-0250. APACHE CAMP TRAILERS PICKUP TRUCK CAMPERS A good selection of new 19< Apache Camp trailers and picku truck campers, all at close oi prices, while they last. Open daily ’’■"'bill coller Vi mile E. of Lapeer City limits on M-21 Wally Byam's exciting caravans). Mo^ Homes 1-A Beauties to Choose From RICHARDSON DELTA MONARCH DUKE HOMETTE LIBERTN COLONIAL MOBILE HOMES . E 2-1657 623-1310 25 OPDYKE 5430 DIXIE ,, Motorcycles 95 ! 1965 BMW, R50, $650. I 39 FE 4-6388 or FE 2-8835. | 1965 "YAMAHA' 250“CC. '-OFS OF! extras. Good condition, very reas.! ■ ^^4»4. ALUMINUM PICKUP COVER, fitt Ford or Chevy. FE »9840. O'XSO' HOWARD. FURNISHED. Or • 1. Extras. 332-7028._ Camping Private Lake Sale beech, flush toilets and showers, 1)40 M15, Ortonville. 2x50 HOUSETRAILER, 196 used. Must sell. 332-004). CAMPERS FOR PICKUPS PHOENIX AND WINNEBAGO Trailers REESE AND DRAW-TITE HITCHES Sold and Installed. HOWLAND TRAILER SALES between kids, $225. 625-1577. iai oackgrouna. c ____________________________ —-:iV v! •_______________,WE HAVE 12 HORSES TO sell, /I'AICERMAN SHORTHAIR pups end 7 mares, geldings and yearling colts.l ----------- ,---1- ^11 good_^ broke__ and^ gentle. 575 month female. 625-3940. GERMAN SHEPHERDS. I year old ERRY blue TERRIERS, months, show and oet, A champion sired, phone eves. weekends, 449-2197. ____________ LABRADOR PUPS, registered, shots. t $1495. Davisoi . .iress $995. Als . Forbes 5433 Dixi< Mist green. Call Mrs. 4 mo„ 338-8966. LEAVING STATE, 1 year old, Va sheep dog, he Is fust smaller, white, $50, raised outside, FE 5- Unlon Lake Rd. EM 3- Guaranteed. Terms. Double D CENTURY YELLOWSTONE Travel trailers WHEEL CAMPER TENT TRAILERS Quality at any budget STACHLER TRAILER SALES, INC._______________________ Highland (M591 682-9440| 967 PARKWOOD, BEDROOM, 60x10, 1964 NEW i/loon. Central air. Very C 13595 or reas. offer. 693-6596. TONY'S MARINE SERVICE 1968 Johnson Mtrs. on DIsplai Discount on all 1967 Boats-Motor; 2695 Orchard J^k^ Rd. SylvanJLake. USED CRUISERS SPRING BUYS 1966 HONDA 90, VERY good, $200.1 3S Owens '66 yacht, h Save Auto., FE 5-3278.________________ loO hrs., radio, showe 1966 HONDA 450, LOTS Of extras, tion, electric stove wi ‘ mileage $8"" 1 225 h.pH 1966 HONDA 305CC. 800 Miles. Lil new. $450. 625-2410_«fte£4:30 p.m. 1966 HONDA 160. Excellent conditk extras. 46 Sanderson. 1W6 HONDA SCRAMBLER, 305 c good cond. best offer. 625 1688 aft> New and Used Trucks 103 1958 DODGE, 1 TON STEP \ good 3301. 1966 SEARS 106 CC, excellent con-i dition, 1200 mi., $275. 739-0805. 1966 TRIUMPH BONNEVILLE.' Ex-1 cellent condition. 3,200 mi. $995. Ml! 6-1022.______________________ 803 Oakland Ave. Ition, plus ^JS2l._ 1- 1967 BRIDGESTONE WITH >tl helmet, like new $250. 388 Jordan Corner of Featherstone. Pontia MANY OTHERS Authorized Dealer TROJAN SLICK CRAFT I MDDELS ON DISPLAY INSIDE WALT MAZUREK'S LAKE & SEA MARINE Saginaw at S. Blvd. FE 4-9587 Hrs. 9-7 p.m„____Sun, 12-6 p.m. running condition. $350. 673- 1959 FORD )'/a TON WRECKM, --- engine, extended boom, oual Is, 20 ton wrench, 363-9941 or 965 PONTIAC CHIEF. 12'x50'. Ex- 1967 BSA SPITFIRE, Mark II tras. UL 2-2509, :arpeted,;i967 HARLEY SPORTSTER 900 CCl -«|1967 YAMAHA TWIN ditlon 642-3340 from 9-5 p.m NOW HERE!! BSA, TRIUMPH, HONDA : NORTON, DUCATI, AND MONTESA Extras. $3,195. 335-!,. T2X60 Colonial,!BSA 250 CC EXCELLENT condition. Hay-6rain-Feed EXTRA GOOD HORSE AND < hay. Will deliver. 627-3229._ HAY, STRAW, CORN 731- BARBEQUE MACHINE; . warmer; 2 wells, elec, trypots; stainless steel stand and hood with 2 speed exhaust fan. FE 2-1545 bet. m6 p.m._______________ _____________ POODLE CLIPPING AND service. FE 8-3631._______ HAY AND STRAW. UL 2-3369. stud services. FE 2-1497. SEALPOINT SIAMESE kittens, 6 Sporting Goods (3) 38 SPECIALS, $40 and 25 ai r. 720 W. Huron $t. Studs. 625-4384. 7.65 (32 CAL.) 8 shot auto pistol. FTENS, 1 female. Farm Equipment BUY A WHEEL HORSE TRACTOR Specie! sale, save up to $180 s Hardware, 905 Orchard Lk. Daily 9-6, Sun. 9-2. FE 5-2424 CASE 1000, POWER SHIFT, TAMERLANE BOW, lOts "ot ex- SILVER FRENCH POODL|^ MALE. BOWS AND ARROWS—334-6349 GENE'S ARCKERY-714 W. HURON BRAMBLEWOOD COUNTRY CLUB Dir.: 2 MILES NORTH - . GRANGE HALL ROAD ON FISH; LAKE ROAD AT HOLLY MICHIGAN. 2154 MINER RD. HOLLY 634-9209 SPRING IS A good time for a ST. BERNARD Pups, AKC, masslv Swiss Type, from rhe oncini "Mighty Moe." Temperament ere for children. TERMS. 682-9258, IROWNING AUTOMATIC Polychoke, recoil pad, $ 100 Winchester 94, $65, both like new FE 5-3516. WEIMARANER, AKC, 6 months. AM shots. 390-9694. WEIMARANER PUPS. AKC, cham-plon stock. Deposit taken. 644-4607. DAWSON'S SPECIAL CLOSE OUT prices on Evinrude snowmobiles. See the Scatmoblle, the year around vehicle. Take M-59 lo w. Highland. Right to Hickory Ridge Rd. to Demode Rd. Left and follow signs to DAWSON'S SALES AT TIPSICO LAKE, Phone 629-2179. WHITE GERMAN SHEPHERD pups, 5 weeks, 391-3234. WHITE BULL TERRIER, AKC. Pro line, 4 woods, 9 rms, like new. 356-6614, aft. 6 p.m,___________ ITHACA 12 GAUGE pump feather ——- condition, $90. After 5 Auction Sales weight, good a p.m. 335-3739. SKI-DOO SKI-DADDLER Snowmobile PONTIAC LAKE BUILDERS SUP-ily. Sand gravel fill d' ‘ ily. Sand gravel )R 3-1534.___________ S.A.W. SAND & GRAVEL Pets-Hunting Dogs ABERDINE TERRIER, Scotties, Fish, 10 Gallon Aquarium i plate, $17.49. Uncle Charllr- MORRIS MUSIC 34 S. Telegraph Rd. Across from Tel-Huron FE 2-FENDER JAZZ MASTER gu.— —3, Fender Super-Reverb ...1 CC— 679-T254. i-n DACHSHUND PUPS, AKC, ESTEI HEIM kennels, 391-1889 1-A POODLE CLIPPING, M UP-- Stud Service puppies. FE 4-6438-rTEAR OLD DACHSHUND, Pure bred, $35. FE 2-9820.___ a, 755-4541 Warren, Located 3 miles East of Clarkston, on Clarkston Rd. Then '/• mile North to 7855 _____________ tors — 1963 Ford Tractor, model 2000 series; 1956 Cate "Vac" tractor w-tront end loader; 2—1951 Case "Vac" tractors; John Deere "A" tractor; John Deere """ tractor; 1965 GMC Diesel Truck 16' Grain and Cattle rock; 1' Ford Econollne Van w-sport$nn Camper; 1936 Dottae 2 ton truck dump box 1953 Plymouth imt, $1475. Special price on some Massey-Ferguson lawn and garden tractors while they last. New Massey-I clerk ------- ______ _____ .toger Walstead- Prop. Clarkston 625-4619, Bud HIckmott - General Auctioneer, Dxtord - 628-2159. 8 & B AUCTION EVERY FRIDAY ..... 7:00 . EVERY SATURDAY .. . 7:00 P.M. EVERY SUNDAY . . 2:00 P.M. WE BUY - SELL — TRADE RETAIL 7 DAYS WEEKLY CDNSIGNMENTS WELCDME CASH PRIZE EVERY AUCTIDN 189 Dixie Hwy. DR 3-2717 B & B AUCTION END OF THE MONTH CLEARANCE FRI. NITE MAR. 29 7:00 P.M. SHARP TMls,*%ntlques, railroad salve 2-wheel trailers, lawn mowers, n... and used furniture, mattresses, (all sizes) TVs, radlot, stereo, -■— freezes, refrigerators, auto, wi end dryers, groceries (In cate yard goods, baby beds, elec. — Ing machines, Honda motorcycle. Hundreds of other articles too numerous to mention. CASH PRIZES GIVEN AWAY AT EACH AUCTION 5089 Dixie Hwy. DR 3-2717 APPLIES - CIDER Many varieties. Fine quality. Dakland Drehards, 2205 =. Corr merce Rd. 1 mi. East of Milford, 0 GMC CAMPER SPECIALS 1968 PARKWDDD Mobile Home, 12x56' completely turn. Color TV, deep freeze, humidifier, recliner chair. See Home Lot 18t-D-13318 Dixie Hwy., Groveland Mobile Manor. 634-4665._________________ STACHLER TRAILER SALES, INC. 3771 Highland (M-59)___682-9440 oader or will sell, 602-9215. ARK'S TRACTDRS AND MACHIN-iry. MA 9-9376.________________ wagoner loader, Vi yard bucket, Sherman Backhoe, with 12" and 10" bucket, sand pads, 95 per cent rubber on high lug tires, ready for LIMITED TIME ONLY ____ -Aesa camping ,.„,.^is are specially priced. Buy Now! Save money! Start planning for the great weekends ahead in the world's largest selling camping EVAN'S EQUIPMENT 6507 Dixie Hwy. 625-1711 Marlette Royal Embassy Rec Squire Lam Delta American Victo MARLETTE EXPANDDS DN DISPLAY FREE DELIVERY AND SET UP WITHIN 200 MILES. 12 X SIK American 1968, $4995 DN DISPLAY AT: Cranberry Lake Mobile Home Village 9620 Highland Rd., (M-59) 2 NEW 13' AND 15', SLEEPS 6, burner range, stainless sink, gal. water storage. Insulate; lalousle windows, only 1,100 lbs $995 up. 363-6613 or 624-1554.. NEW 17' TWILIGHT TRAILER, $1595 GODDELL TRAILERS 3200 S. Rochester Rd. o; ----S Rochester Rd,_________8! DRD 3000 6 HOURS, $2,695, Ford 4000 and plows, like new, $2,495, Ferguson 65, and plows, $2,495, tractor, loader and undercarriage. Allis Chalmers HD — 11 with new under carriage. 440 JO loader. JD dozer with new undercarriage, $2,195. All kinds equipment — Industrial, buy-sell-trade. Clark's Tractors, l ml. E. of Fenton. AAA 9-9376.____________ 3091 W. Huron Inventory Reduction 14' Frolic ..................$1.«5 16' Frolic ..................$149$ 9' Frolic ..... 21' Travel master 24' Boles-Aero tors on a rental bi a Bob Hillman a you 825 S. WOODWARD Pontiac Farm and Industrial Tractor Co. I 4-0461 FE 4-1442 Open Dally Including Sunday Special Sale RECONDITIONED AND RESHARPENED USED MCCULLOCH CHAIN SAWS. ONLY $75 EACH. King Bros. HOMELITE CHAIN SAWS, JO ... Deere and New Idea parts galore. Davis Machinery Co., Ortonville, Travel Trailers 8' CAMPER. BUNK BED new g< stove. Insulated, table and chair 10' CABOVER ALSO 8' for pickup. 1540 Peterson, ---- ‘— Community - ' I from oak 12' YUKON DELTA Ice box, cook stove, water anc lights. Only $895. Ellsworth Trailer Soles 6577 Dixie Hwy., Clarkston 625-4400 4' ASSEMBLED TRAILER, s. $495, FE 8-9970 alter 6.' 17' FAN, GA.S ai ’, FE MADE IN MICHIGAN 31690 Grand River 476-2800 PIONEER CAMPER SALES BARTH TRAILERS & CAMPERS TRAVEL QUEEN CAMPERS MERIT FIBERGLASS COVERS (8"-27"-35" covers) ALSO OVERLAND 8. COLEMAN : 2-3909 SALE .. $2495 .. $3495 .. $5475 ill are ealfcontalned TRUCK CAMPERS Skamper (fold-down) .....$1,19 W Frolic, S.C.............$1,79 Tour-A-Home ............. $ •! SEE THESE VALUES TODAYI Open Mon.-Frl., 9 •im.-B^p.m. Set., 9 te 5, Closed Sundays SPORTCRAFT MANUFACTURING Steel frame pickup sleepers and tops 4160 Foley, Waterford, 623-0650 CORSAIR, GEM ROAMER AND TALLY-HO ALSO Corsair and Gem pickup campers and Mackinaw pickup covers Wog-N-Moster THE NEW EASY-UP EASY-DOWN HARDTOP TENT CAMPER 1968 Models Now On Lot AT JOHNSON'S 517 E. WALTON BLVD. Loaded with equipment All 100 per cent warranty Starting at only $1495 Autobahn Motors Ihc. Authorized VW Dealer Vz mile North 6f Miracle Wile 1765 S. Telegraph FE 34531 WOLVERINE TRUCK CAMPERS AND SLEEPERS. Factory outlet, repair and parts, new and used, rentals. JatTks, Intercoms, telescoping bumpers, spare tire carriers, auxilerating gasoline tanks. Lowry Camper Sales, 1325 S. Hospital Rd„ Union Lake EM 3-3681. BSA HORNET, 650 CC, 1967, di 3 months, like new. 647-1145._________ Best Mobile Home Sales Open Daily 9 a.m.-8 p.m. FREE-FREE-FREE Leather (acket with each new Suzuki. THE NEW 500CC SUZUKI IS NOW HERE! MG SALES 4667 Dixie Hwy. 673-6458 Drayt SUZUKI, 1966, mint condition, 80 CC, low mileage, one owner, $200. FE 2-5892 after 7 p.m. SUZUKI CYCLES 50CC - 500CC 12 month or 12,000 ml. warranty. Choose from the many road and trail models. Rupp mini bikes 5 big models on display. Priced Irom $144.50. Take M-59 to W. Highland. Right to Hickory RIdga Rd. to Demode Rd. left and follow signs to DAWSDN'S SALES AT TIPSICD LAKE. Phone 629-2179. COTTAGE SPECIAL New 1968 60'xl2' unfurnished $3995 FOB Furniture kit, $150 Others from $2995 Countryside Boats-Accessories All Models 1968 Windsors CUSTOMIZING. WHY PAY MORE? J. C. Talklngton Mobile Homes, 2258 S. Telegraph. Across from Miracle Mile. 338-3044.___ HONEYMOON SPECIAL New 2 bedroom, 50x12 furnist set up, delivered ready to m... In! $4167 Including sales tax and insurance. PLUS? HONEYMOON SPEC? Drive out, see ,end sr -only $67.62 per month. PEERLESS MOBILE HOMES 13318 Dixie Hwy., Holly 6 miles S. of Grand Blanc A-1 Used Rigs 17' Thompson --- Full raft i Load er, 61 MANY OTHERS TO CHOOSE FROM PINTER'S MARCH SPECIALS FOR EXAMPLE THESE 1968't 12'x60' 3 bedroom. $4795 12'X50' at $3850 12'x44' at $3550 Also the Danish King, luxury for less, featuring exterior storage. Large savings on everything In stock. Free delivery end set up within 300 miles. We will not knowingly be undersold. MIDLAND TRAILER SALES Open 9 to 0 Sun. 1 to 6 2257 Dixie Hwy. MOBILE HOMES 12 X SO", 2 YEARS OLD, Il pletely seHip, adults only. Cranberry Lk., Village 357-5647. FULLY FURNISHED $3595 Many used 10' and 12' WIdes Large Savings Free delivery up to 300 ml. , THE ALL NEW 1968 DETROITERS Bob Hutchinsons Mobile Homes OR 3-1202 Open Dally till 8 p.m. Sat, and Sun, till 5 p.m. NOW AT TOWN & COUNTRY MOBILE HOMES Spring Sale Specials 12 X 50, 12 X 52, 12 X 60 inoblle homes. Ideal for vacation cottr.ges or lust comfortable, no inair tenance living. DELIVERED AND SET UP. TELEGRAPH AT DIXIE HWY. 334-6694 Oxford Trailer Sales -- 50 to 63 long, ide. Early Amerlc-,, . and modern decor Expando or tip-outs, Priced right. Bum right. Phone MY 2-0721, ml. S. of Lake Orion on M24. trailer and trailer SPACE, take over payments and move Agent. EM 3-6703. ' beam, completely equipped. Deluxe interior, lounge seats, 2 rear lump seats, full Dow seal, 5 yr. warranty. Ray Greene sailboats, Steury, GW-Invader, Glasspar, and Mlrrorcraft boats, Kayot and Dalphin Pontoons, Evinrude motors and Pamco trailers. Take M-59 to W. Highland. Right to Hickory Ridge Rd. to Demode Rd. left and follow signs to DAWSON'S SALES AT TIPSICO Airplanes F.A.A. APPROVED SCHOOL - LET tires, all gzxxl rubber, snow blade, $1000, 8794^.____________________ 1964 FORD PICKUP, GOOD CON-•“•'nn, radio heater, $950. .VIA 4- Wanted^ Cars-Trecks 101 A LATE MODEL CAR wanted, wItt WANTED: MINI BIKE, Always Neeci Sharp Cars! We Pay Top Dollar! Immediate Cash! ALL MAKES AND MODELS WE WILL-TRADE DOWN SPARTAN DODGE joss Oakland EXTRA EXTRA Dollars Poid FOR THAT EXTRA Sharp Cor "Check the rest, then get the best" at Averill AUTO SALES !-9878 2020 Dixie FE ; HELP! ) FOOT SAILBOAT. Stare fibergiBS with 18 foot aluml mast and all nylon sail. Exce condition. $275. Call after 7 674-0856. i 300 sharp -------- . — lids and Buicks for out-of-arket. Top dollar paid. AUTO SALES MANSFIELD 1104 Baldwin Ave. FE 5-5900____________ FE 0-8829 12' ALUMINUM BOATS ........$10 Trailers $120. 15' flberglas runabout (2 only) $569. 15' canoes $169. Special Orders For 4 speeds end Corvettes. Out of state market Top Dollar Averill LONE STAR RUNABOUT, 18V ...p. Evinrude motor, Gator trailer plus extras, A-1 shape. 682-7J78. 15' FIBERGLAS BOAT, black 16' FIBERGLAS SKI BOAT, Mercury 17' SKI AND drag boat, 421 Por tiac powered with extras, exi condition. 673-1087, att. 6 p.m. B' CHRISTCRAFT SPORTSAhAN 18' STAR CRAFT ALUMINUM boat, ttiotor, trailer, convertible top, aft, side curtains, radio. OR 3-2247. ,, 1964 CARVER CRUISER, 120 Chrysler I.O., head and galley, 110 -----1, tandem trailer, $3,000. *3707°'______________________ ' OWENS, EXCELLENT shape, summer dockage oaid for. call after 5, UL 2-3440. 30 HORSEPOWER JOHNSON with t and controls, $140. MA 6-7575. _____P. INTERCEPTOR 1— 190 hj>. Interceptor 2— 17' CC Sportsmen, 95 h.p. 1—17' CC Riviera with 95 h.p. 1—19' CC Capri with 120 h.p. —-....IK'S BOAT SERVICE AA COHO FISHING "SPECIAL" Starcraft $2267 YES! IT'S A FACT YOU CAN SAVE MONEY AT: Birmingham Boat Center 1265 S. Woodward at Adams Ml 7-0133 STOP HERE LAST M&M MOTOR SALES Now at our new location 'e pay more for sharp, late mo cars. Corvettes needed. 1150 Oakland at viaduct TOP $ PAID (Downtown Store Only) for all sharp Pontiocs AND CADILLACS. We ore prepared to moke you a better offer! Ask for Bc*-Burns. WILSON CRISSMAN Hahn Chrysler - Plymouth - Jeep. 6^-2635.____________________________ )66 MEYERS’ FULL META'L J:.° for Jeep, exc. shape. 731-2887._____ AT DEALER” COST ■d Dll tires. Amoco Orchari a Ford, also 1961's Chevy Falcon and For, 1963 Ford % Ton 9 ft. Insulated van, with rear and side doors, heavy duty tiros and springs. Light green tlnish, perfect John McAuliffe Ford 277 West Montcalm 1964 CORVAiR^PiCKUP. Lika new, $450. 602-0173. 651-8347._______ 1964 CHEVY V, TON PICKUP, \ canwer' Including .Ink, dinette. 1964 DODGE 1-TON lake, with dual rear wheels, n 11/- $795 John McAuliffe Ford 277 West Montcalm FE 5-4101 1965 CHEVY SPORTSVAN, radio, heater, excellent mechanically er" hres. no rust. $1050. EM 3-6570. B65 CHEVY VS t( $1000. Call UL 2 I pickup, 6, ownei- 6 FORD SUPER VAN, SM95, 334- 1966 INTERNATIONAL TANDEM tractor, 230 GMC V-6, 71-N engine, 5 and 3 transmissions; 1966 Monotone 25' tri-axle dump trailer. 807-5229. __________ 1966 GMcT tON Stake, 14,000 actual ?30*PM** *'•'■'■•'>•7' $74-0267, after 1966 FORD F-100 pickup, $■ • --' r warranty. $1395. JACK LONG FORD Rochester_______ OL B-97H 1966 JEEP WRECKER, 327 V-8, 8000 pound Ramsey boom. 674-0371 before 6 p.m., after 6, FE 2-3287. fii CHEVY CARRYALL, V passenger custom, power steering - brakes, V-8. Can be seen at 1767 CHEVY PICKUP, excellent condition, v-8, standard transmission, extras, 9,000 miles. Pvt. 682-4105. ___________________ 1967 FDRD FlOO pickup, tu-tona V8, ' -sed, 4500 miles. $1995. JACK LONG FORD Rochester _______OL 1-9711 1967 CHEVY VAN, IDS V-8 or will swap at equity. PR 4-1197. 1967 FDRD pTcKUP, Ranger, automatic. 731-6093, aft. 6 p.m* suspension. Must sell, going I service. 624-5946. miles, private. 363-0743. 1967 JEEP CJ-5, V-6, ft........... hydraulic plow, 900 x 15 whitewall snows, free wheel hubs, 2-speed transfer case, 2500 mies. Must sell — drafted. 626-3703.____________ 1967 FDRD PICKUP % ton. VO positractlon. 363-9450 after 6 p.m. 1967 FORD Pickup tori/ with long box, radio, heater, 352 V8, engine, lust like new, only fl895 BILL FOX CHEVROLET Rochester FDR SALE DR SWAP, TD6 crawler - bucket, I960 F 700 Ford, it deck dump, 2 speed X, Snow plow. Fine cond. $950. 357- “TOP DOLLAR PAID" GLENN'S TDP $ FDR CLEAN WHISTLER SAILBOAT ll'x5' fully equIppM, working sail, flberglas construction, aluminum, mas* boom, $550, AAAyfalr 6-2693. TRUCKS ARE OUR Business 1966 GMC 8' Wideside Pickup, blue and white finish, V-6 engine. 1966 GMC 8' Widbside Pickup. Aqua finish, 1-6 engine. 1965 GMC 8' Wideside Pickup, red paint with whitewall tires. 1967 GMC ’$-Ton Dual Wheel, ♦ 2-speed, new red paint. 1963 GMC Diesel 6-cyl. tractor, S- GMC Factory Branch Oakland at Cass FE 5-9485 D—« I'HE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY. MARCH 29. 1968 ms VW, VERY SHARP, lOSjNaw and Ut«d Cart Ahilt,:i»64 BUICK SKYLARK, » 106lNtw and Ustd Cart 106lNew and Used Cars 106'('ARNIVAI> Bv Dick Tu rner | New and Used Cars 106 New and Used Cars 106 New and Used Cars 106 .........}9 VW BUS, •53-4644 WT'Tfeb, IN 6xc4llfrnt ' diwon. RONEY'S AUTO, ‘‘ % PE 4-4909. pussengtr inpowv i=actory «'ir1964 BUICK ELECTRA 3S5 V.W. 1300 - H.500 miles. min' condition, fuM i - 682-0414 town, only $1268 .95™i5:——.......t88 down. $52,04 per ............. John McAuliffe Ford 4 630 Oakland Ave FE 5 4101 •' 1965 BUICK 400 LeSABRE ' 2 door 1966 ALPINE CONVERTIBLE, i cellenf condition. AAA 4-1903, it»6 VW, EXCELLENT condition: vyhltewalls, 1 s^lKed i ECONO^Y_C4^S__________^ 4-31311 ,Vr|oF nyl'c leaycHEVY WAGON Standard shill, 1 call 333-5937 ............................. 1965 CHEVY BEL AIR sad, ■----Ititui sea mist green wi _ _ - I ------dinated Inferior. 6 cv •dtop, aolo.l “heater, aufol TAT9 345 black ..........- ______ I Delco load lavalars, . ............Jan,' FE 3-7338. poweri"shafprsl' 1962 iAAPALA aiObOR' "ice. Just' 8 with power stearin ........................0 S c steal at S350.;' , PLYAAOUTH, 677 A-24. S1JS0. Call 363-4 1967 VW SUNROOF, AAANY LX TRAS, $1750, 334-WU Alter s p m. 1967‘ FIAT-ABARTH SPYDER, 9,000 miles, radio, heeler, lach, 4 speed top. Asking «195. Call'iSs W45 1967 VW, GbOO"^ CONDITION _ 651-9481 1967 TRIUAAPH GT6, fasiback, light blue, S3300. OR 4-00*5 1967 VW 1500,' WHITE,7,edio, push- I 1967 FIAT 8.S0 COUPE, radio, h 1967 ALFA ROAAEO GT Veloce, il Interested In a test GT tar tall F E SJ632^ bUNE BUGGY 1959 VW components, mecbanically perfect, 6200, 863 ardlop. All , 1893 61750. 332- SS?C, GLENN'S 196.S Wildcat Butek. Powe beige, radio, heater, wmirwaii tlres. Balance Due 1274 36. lust assume payments of $2 18 per week. KING AUTO SALES 681-0802 REPOSSESSION 1962 Corvair AAonia 4 to choose Irom KING AUTO SALES 681-0802 1962 chevy' sf&T'lON WAGON, fterlor. 6 cyl. radio, I “neaier, auromatic, brand new tires, spotless condition spring special at' only $1068 full price. Just $88 down and $35.31 per month. John McAuliffe Ford 630 Oakland Ave. FE^-4IOli 1965 CHEVY 4 DOOR Bel Aire automatic, double power, newl brakes. $950, 642 3244 GLENN'S' 1965 BIscayne 3 door. 6 cylinder i Standard transmission. L. C. Williams, Salesman 952 W. Huron St. powe,, laclo,|^a^,^,ondll,on,ng. Mike Savoie ; Chevrolet 7 miles East of Woodw*-»rd | >00 W Maple Ml 4-2735' TOM RADEMACHER CHEVY-OLDS 1965 BUICK Wildcat 4 door I hardtop, automa' CalifornI lerford. body. 5864 Southwa A 5-5071 4-7500. I DUNE BUGGY BODIES ” trames shortened ' All accessories and parts MG SALES & SERVICE 4667 Dixie Hvyy. Drayton Plaint __6J2-6658 DUNE buggy: PARTS AND ACCESSORIES , FRAME SHORTENING !l( BY BILLY DOYLE ^ sstio Fllrabath Lk. Rd. 682 9248 turner Ford, Birmlnghan "Michigan's Fastest Growing VW Dealer Offers, I A FINE SELECTION VANDERPUTTE OF 100 PER CENT bu™1 WARRANTEED USED CARS Lake fe 11965 BUICK Elecira 225 cyllr_. $575e or best offer CONVERtlBI Ml /-2360 al ir!l9A3 CHEVY IAAPALA hardtop fr family ci 6-5259. 1963 ” I M P A white. till buckets, new windows, tatir _ L 731-8593. MONZA CLUB Coupe. ' $485,! I" Down, payments $4.92 week | III Mr. Parks, Ml 4-7500. Harold I BUICK SPORT WAGON. $1795, Turner Ford, BIrrnIngham. - ---- payments $14.92 week.119^3 CHEVROLET CONVERTIBLE,! like new condition. 100 ^ warranty. $1395. Autobahn Motors Inc. Authorized VW Dealer tion! ’'3 Mile North of Miracle Mlit rat'1745 S. Telegraph F^H-4531 MA'i966 CHEVY irNOVA sports coupe. 651-0496 h GLENN'S 1966 Chev Power str L C. 1965 MUSTANG 2 - DOOR 4 cylinder, a '* •'“* * heater, 20,000 1239 pftcr 5 p. best offer. 338- Pretty Ponies 1965 and 1966 MUSTANGS SEVERAL USED MUSTANGS TO CHOOSE FROM CONVERTIBLES HARDTOPS FULL EQUIPMENT Priced From $1295 As Low As $39 Down And 39 Per Month HAROLD TURNER 1966 *''US'f*J^pg‘^°^^(,'ilewallf^deU 'mJ*4'7I74'^°'’*° ' _____ 1967 MUSTANG GT 2 DOOR FA! back, disc brakes, lull pow Autobahn' WOULD YOU BELIEVE? NO gimmickS^-^no giveaways right cars at right I»^R[CES MANY MANY TO CHOOSE FROM 1963 Merci 1962 Pont! double- $599 1963 Corvair . .. 1963 Falcon cpc. 1942 Chevy 4 door, V-8, auto $: Motors Inc. 1961 Tempest. 4 door, auto $i Authorized VW Dealer ■ 1940 Ford, 2 door auto S ,765 s lii™ M53 OPDYKE MOTORS 9^PfaTc§nViJtURT--V;dOOR 3V33«'/-''« foupe, \6ith power steering, brakes, FE _?^237________ itomatic, showroom conditioning, MERCURY 4-DOOR, automatic --- - -ranty. ;1795. ' FE 8-9238 Autobahn I CHRYSLER- L6-24, Lake 2-;^l. _____ >64“”CO"MEt STATION WAGON. Stick, ve, 4 *— '2 Mile North of Miracle Mi . !;j:B<^i;^bi9r4-do£'s^an::-^ ' 36,000 mi., gcK>d condition, by the yillage of Holly. 634-9571. S600. 363-3432, 9 passenger with V \ 4-7500 '1967 FORD FAIRLANE 500 h with V-8, automatic, radio, power steering, beautiful white finish, black all vir terior. $2188 full price. Ju! down, and $65.58 per month. 50,000 mile new car w; power. Best otter. 647-7192.__ ; 1966 f-BIRD LANDAU LUXURY al| Its finest, beautiful silver blue with black leather Interior and a blacki vinyl top. Full power and factory air conditioning plus all the ______________ goodies, spring special only $2588. 630 Oakland John McAulitte Ford 1967 “mustang candy apple red 630 Oakland Ave. ________ FE 5-4101 finish with matching Int ’ 1966 FORD COUNTRY sedan, station ‘ .......... wagon, 10 passenger V-8, radio, heater, chrome luggage rack, beautiful candy appfe red, with whitewalls, $1966 full price, just $168 down, and $63.53 per month. 5-year or 50.000 mile new car luggage rack, beautlf ig blue, with all vinyl i ie ready for that nli just around the come fecial at onty $1388 ft ”i"u ■ 64 A i (( t A John McAuliffe Ford John McAuliffe Ford 03^,3^^ avc,_____fe s-4joi f ' 19'65"" mercury convertible, arnival red — white top — white ,terior — mercomatic — 390 automatic, wide radio, heater. irold| GLENN'S ^aymcnls 58 66 1966 CHEVY IMPALA AUTO.iAATIC, srks. Ml 4-7500.1 Power steering, brskes, new ,ld Turner Ford, Birminqh, — ■ ■ .......... SHARP 1963 IMPALA SS con.ertil week. Call )t $1695. Autobahn i L. C. Williams, Salesman BillGolling Shfi VW Inc. vinyl 82 Maplelawn Blvd. Off Maple Rd. (15 Mile Rd.) ACROSS FROM BERZ AIRPORT Just South of PontI- TOYOTA THE LOWEST PRICE FOREIGN HARDTOPI HASKINS AUTO SALES 6695 Dixie Hwy. Clarkston MA 5-3112 TRIUMPH TR-3 1960 Convef YOUR VW CENTER 70 To Choose From -All Models-—All Colors--All Reconditioned- Autobahn Motors Inc. Authorized VW Dealer VS mile North of Miracle Milt >765 S. Ttitgraph _ FE 8-4.53I j New and Used Cart 106 I FINANCE REASONABLY, cars, trucks. Economy cars 2335 Dixie,, FE 4-2131._ Need a Car? | New in the oreo? I Repossessed?-Gornisheed? Been Bonkrupt?-Divorced? Got 0 Problem? Call Mr. White'” ..... FInanc. ... $1455, OAKLAND CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH ' 724 Oakland Ave. __FE 5-9 4 36' GLENN'S $2,600. 628-2193. 1966 BUICK WILDCAT converllbli double power. 363-4738. 1966 BUICK SKYLARK.........$1792, $39 down, payments $14.88 week. Call Mr. Parks. Ml 4-7500. Harold Tiirrrer Ford, Birmingham, BUICK "l966' RIVIERA. 19,000 ml ‘' condttionlhfi. Everything on GLENN'S 1966 Bulck, 4-door sedan. Powe steering and brakes. Tinted gUss. L. C. Williams, Salesman FE 4 7371 FE 4 1/9 Many More to Choose I rom 1966 BUICK" SPORTS WAGON, auti with double power, white wit., chrome luggage rack. MILOSCH CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH, 677 *' Lake Orion. /\AY 2-2041. 1966' BUICK SKYLARK hai $950. /39-9VJ7 REPOSSESSION 3 Chevrolet Impala 4 Door "Ting auto sales 681-0802 1963 CHEVROLET H'95'"' I Mike Savoie I Chevrolet 3 W, Maple Ml 4 27351 2 miles^ast of Woodward | log, 1963 corvair;'‘3-SPEED, GOODI radio,“healer; whilewalis, ..............-E 5-4766. ' a black top. Very sh, US 10 al MIS. Clar 765 S. Telegraph ______FE 8 - 966 ..CHEVELLE, ' ASS U> payments. 624-5602. _ 966 IMPALA SUPER SPORT, " “Which Mary do you want to talk to? Dreamboat or Tugboat?” New and Used Cars 106jNew and Used Cars CHRYSLER 1967 NEW Yor door hardtop. Full power. ^.,... _____... __ „ green. 1 owner. Royal Oak. 547-4592 | pqrd CUSTOM , 1968 CHRYSLER 300. LIKE new.| "0" Down, payments After 6 p.m. call 684-0601. ! Call Mr, Parks, Ml 4- John McAuliffe Ford 630 OaklancLAve._ ,_____FE 5-410I 1966 FORD GALAXTE 500 4 door, 1 V8, automatic, power steering, $1595. JACK LONG FORD 106 Roc^st^r__________________9J-i:’7Ui ' --'|f966 FORD PICK UP % ton, V-8, ; at $2288, monthly. John McAuliffe Ford 630 Oakland Ave.________FE 5-4101 ..latching Interior, and black vinyl top. V-8, automatic, radio, heater, power steering, brakes, all this for the same price as a Ford. Only $1488 Full price, $88 down, and $59.86 per month. 5-year or 50,000 payments $11.88 i. Parks, Ml 4-7500. Ford, Birmingham. ..ally a one In a million. Spring,' Special tor Only $1488 full price,' ^ $188 down. ,r John McAuliffe Ford > 630 Oakland Ave._________i power, excellent condition. 7 KESSLER'S stick transmission, eater, j ..>.1 special c Just $88 dOM otiess condition. tires, exc. _shape^ *J-150. 332 85.53. 1964 CHEVROLET $495 Mike Savoie Chevrolet 1900 W Maple Ml 4-2735 2 miles Eest ol Woodv 1964 MONZA CONVERTiBLE, while with gold trim, extra sh**-" RONEY'S AUTO, 131 Baldwin. 4-4909. 1964 CHEVY. SILVER' .VI IH'b vinyl top. 327. Air. AM-FM n double power. Power anlcnni new tires Including snows. I condition. Days S49-a400 ext. 7 642:4672. _ _____ 1964 CHEVY IMPALA Hardtop, Powerglide, power steering, pc brakes. Showroom new. $1295. 1966 OLDS 4 door sedan, hydram, power steering, power brakes, ■ black finish. $1795. DODGE CARS AND TRUCKS bhie^ tinVsh.^MILOSCH CHRYSLE ^ Sales and Service ' .uunm ...... PLYMOUTH, 677 M-24, Leke oxjor<) _____________________'-'400 John McAuliffe Ford Orion MY 2-2041. __ _ ,,^3 j ooqr STICK, clean, 630 Oakland Ave. FE 5-4101 TOM RADEMACHER _ $195. wjqoi, Dealer,_____________________ ~ ----------------------------- /-ijpwY-OLDS i960 DESOTO, 4-door hardtop, ttiis ,966 CHFTv^:^\^£^conver-ib,e,j H''^S*l"TAVBVVR-jrE^';' -ed^thl union Lake, EM 3-4155. _ $1895. On 1962 66'DGE WAGON I US -- -------------- ■■■ ' ----- ----------- I 5071, 1966 IMPALA SS 2-Door Hardtop, silver v black vinyl top, black bucket se, 327 V-8, 4-speed, console, 24,000 tual miles, 25 month warranty. $1800 illh $195 ■ price.! 2968 after 6 p.m. OR Sat, a $2300. 642-2311. seats,! 1966 COMET CYCLONE *1895, $39 ather, down, payments $15.95 w------------- I tires.! Mr. Parks, ■“ ' P" 1966 FORD CUSTOmGoO 2-door, i “ERCURY BUYERS^ automatic radio heater, power *^^'*®"* * steering, 'beautiful twilight Wue ^ r$i^dal'^?'onl;Sl2irfuM''price"'Ml(';“'?™ down, $42.36 per month. 5-year or 50,000 mile new car warranty' MA 5- Torque 6593.__ _ 1962 LANCER ONE'OWNER, LIKE I new, $495. Full orice. Buy HERE—Pay Here! MOTORS, 251 Oakland Ave 11964 DODGE, 318 ' FE 8-automatic, AUDETTE PONTIAC 1850 W. Maple _Ml 2-8600 1966 ' CHEVY* IMPALA 2 hardtop, V-8, double power. T965 FORD usiom 2-door, automa leenng, |v|(.Au|jffe Ford , .,3 ~ , 630 Oakland_Ave;_ ^_^F^5^4101 MERCURY Mlk'PSn'VniP GALAXIE 500. candy' 'c"i. iVlIJVC; kjtu VUUt? I apple ^ed, black vinyl top. Good' Harold Turmr Chevrolet rngham. v.MCV(vici Goxx cr»Dn riicrnAA con o 44nnt- ------- Maple^ ..... I 2685 n'.'Perry. old car down' ondition. We will towi 200 A-1 used cars to choose rn. HAROLD TURNER FOO«^ ' -7500. 464 S. Woodward, Bi CONVERTIBLE A^Hes East of Woodward FAIRLANE CLUB Sedan Down, payments $9.66 w- .A. 4.7500.1 Call Mr. Parks, . lid Turner ---------- vertible ditioning. $1895. 642-8774.____ FORD: When you buy it l< ' MARKET TIRE give It a free .i safety check. 2635 Orchard Lake' ®l Rd^ Ke^goj^____________ _ Cmo FORD, HOT 38T Bulck engine, *1 body good shape, needs starter.! ' Make offer. 106 S. Edith, basement -1 apt. _ _____________ 1955 FORD, GOOD transportation. eering, auto. '5. 651-0900. 1965 FORD FAIRLANE sports coupe with VB, automatic, power steer ing, brakes, $1195. JACK LONG FORD Rocj^e^ter __________OL_ 1-9711 coordinated Tory equipment, ana special ing sale price of Only $1288 full ce. Just $68 down, $49.04 per nth. 5 year or 50,000 mile new ‘ warranty available. John McAuliffe Ford ! 1630 Oakland Ave.________ MUSTANG CONVERTIBLE, * ---- *'-8, engines. 1963 MERCURY Colony Park Wagon $795 Bob Borst to choose from \ some with automatic, _ sticks, all ready for fun ii i\S LOW AS $1588. Full f 188 down, $61.29 per mon 'r 50,000 »T>il» nP«i rjAr liable. jl.'l® juy:il963 MERCURY COLONY PAR'K 1. 5 year wagon. Power steering. s. $750. 682-1288. -barrel, console, Plusj $50. 334.989S. C0RVETTE,"2 lops, $3800. 332-i 1964 MERCURY . _________ atfeT-car- Ford ■Molor-ComVa'^^^ John McAuliffe Ford i ^o^V'sTerinl ^aVauT - ........automatic, radio, heater,!630 Oakland Ave. FE 5-4101' Call 682-7671. 1966 MERCURY Park Lane 4-door hardtop, power steering, power brakes, factory air-conditioning, vinyl top. $1995 Suburban Olds 635 S. Woodward BIRMINGHAM 1967 COMET CALIENTE, $1995, $39 down, payments $15.92 week. Call Mr. Parks, Ml 4-7500. Harold Turner Ford, Birmingham.______ 2-DOOR hardtop. 1962 OLDS STARFIRE 2-Door of $3.07 pt... KING AUTO SALES 681-0802 963 OLDS 88. ORIGINAL owner, 4 door, stick, no rust, no dmts, *650. 19M OLDS F 85 COUPE. 1967 CHEVY IMPALA. *2375 apple red, black GLENN'S 1966 Lemans Coupe. Power sreei Ing and brakes. L. C. Williams, Salesman red llnish. *1695 1967 CHEVY CAPRICE 4 door hardtop, V-8, Powerglide, powrr *279^"' * '' ” TAYLOR CHEVY-OLDS WALLED LAI^ _ 624-4501 1964 IMPALA 'STATro'N WAGON, turquoise, double power, mint condition, 626-8237. 1964 MONZA Sport Coupe, white with red Interior, automatic transmission whIIrwall tires, radio, 41,000 actual miles, car is Immaculate: $700 with $195 down ‘ AUDETTE! 2rdoor $99. FE 4-6324. ___ 1959 FORD GOOD transpo $69. Full price. Buy Her Here! Marvel Motors, 251 O Ave. FE 8-4079. TRANSPORTATION 1960 Falcon, A-1 running *125 1961 Pontiac, needs work > * »8 I960 Plymouth Wagon, clean *98 1956 Chevy, V-8, needs work * 88 1959 Rambler, wagon, sharp 1 88 1962 Rambler, convertible * 88 NO FAIR OFFER REFUSED MANY MORE TO CHOOSE FROM GRIMALDI CAR CO. 900 Oakland Avenue fi 5-9421 1900JM. Maple_____I960 FORD 2-dbbr, V-8, automatic. CHEVY IWALIBU, POWER] 682-9223. Riggins, dealer. _________ Ing, brakes, automatic, --- --------------------- - • $2195 Mike Savoie I power steering, brakes, — ----,, for that nice vacation — Spring Special only *1798. Full Price, Only I *188 down. John McAuliffe Ford 630 ^al^n^AvC;___________^ M101 1965 MUSTANG V8, automatic, like new, *1295. JACK LONG FORD Rochester________________' i '.1,95. $3595 VANDERPUTTE BUICK-OPEL chard Lake I --MODEL CADILL,-- HAND AT ALL TIMES JEROME CADILLAC CO. PONTIAC 1850 W. Maple Rd. Ml 1964 CHEVROLET Impala SS 2-door hardtop, MAKE'oFFE'r Bob Borst 'h Lincoln-Mercury Sales ir 1950 W. Maple Ml 6-221 ' 196.5 IMPALAi 2-DObR ha'rdto ' vinyl top and Interior, tinted glas , 283, stick, wife's car, OR 3-29.38. ! 1964 CHEVY -‘- WAGON WITH 6 cy automatic, --- GARNISHEED WAGES, CAN GET YOUR CREDIT RE-j NEW FINANCE PLAN. IF BANKRUPT, Eldorado Blarrit:, '53 E 363-6706. ESTABLISHED AGAIN. WE! '’smT-'T'^oown HAVE OVER 80 CARS THAT! ‘^*?ur«r CAN BE PURCHASED. WITH NO DOWN PAYMENT. COME IN AND SEE CREDIT MGR. MR. IRV. beviTi«: OAKLAND I CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 1724 Oakland Aye. FE 5-9436 .! 1965 CHEVROLET Autobahn Motors Inc. Authorized VW Dealer ' j Mile North of Miracle Milo 765 S. Telegraph «^E 8-45311 1967 CHEVELLE 2 Door Hardtop, white with black | vinyl top, 283 V-8, console, 4-speed,, bucket seats, 9,000 actual miles,' factory warranty. $2300 I T AUDETTE i PONTIAC I 1850 W. Maple Rd._ '_Ml 2-6600, 767' Tmp'aLA sport COUPE, j Power steering and nrakes. Ex-Iras *2250^ MA 41641 after s, Fri. ...1967 CHEVROLET ^ ! power, ^'«'’^2395 Mike Savoie Chevrolet Park! .. .. ___ week. Call Ml 4-7500. Harold turner eord, Birmingham.___ foao^FORlTGALAXY V^B autom'atl'c, *75. 682-3129. I96f FORD COUNTRY SQUIRE, double power, auto. 8, radio, heater, air conditioned, *275 ; 682- 1965 FORD 2-DOOR Seda Custom, carpeting, all vi ' terior, auto., radio and whitewalls and wheel cover! barrel, new dual exhausl, good, good tires, *900. 651-4348. 1965 FORD FAIRLANE RANCHERO, will take trade In. 681-0925._ ^450. 546-2726 or 887-4210. steering, I red vinyl V-8, automatic, brakes, ebony blaci........ Interior. Spotless condition ... out. *1588 full price *188 down, *59.86 per month. 5 year or 50,000 mile new car warranty available. John McAuliffe Ford 630 Oakland Ave.___________FE 5-4101 1965 GT convertible Mustang 289—4 ------" $1,500. 662-4S45. n US 10 at Ideal second cai------ . - MIS, Clarkston, MA 5-5071. ____ '62 FORD CLUB Coupe $485. "rt" Hnuun navments $5.44 week. Ml 4-7500. Harold d, Blrrr 1965 FORD SEDAN, $695. $39 down,] payments $9.92 week. Call Mr.; Parks. Ml 4-750Q. Harold Turner! Ford, BImrIngham.____________^___ 1965 T-BIRD HARDTOP, WITH beautiful twilight blue with matching ----- — Star Auto —We Arronge Financing— $100-$1,000 NO MONEY DOWN ditlor ...imings, showroom con- ____ spring special at only $2188,' II price. Just $188 down, 5 year GO-GO-HAUPT PONTIAC -OUTSTANDING SPECIALS- 1967 FIREBIRD 1967 FIREBIRD Convertible, V-8 engine^ automatic, low mlleago. low mileage and a teau’titui yellow'^ finish.*""*^' $2595 double power, nice red and whit# finish. $2695 1965 PONTIAC Cafalina 2-door hardtop, has double power, hydra- 1966 LEMANS 2-door with red finish and this ona Is Ideal for ssion the young at heart. Save lots today. $1995 1966 PONTIAC Bonneville 4-door hardtop, full power, radio and 1964 DODGE Station Wagon, has V-8 #0010#, automatic trans- heater, double power, automatic transmission. $2295 mission, and In very nice condition. $995 1966 PONTIAC Executive 4-door sedan, double power, automatic. 1963 VW KARMANN GHIA 2-door hardtop, hera Is a great air conditioning and little sports car in great condition. . $1095 HAUPT PONTIAC 1963 Bonneville 0 W. Aaple Idorado. TOWN Seder brakes. I Suburban Olds!, BIRMINGHAM ' 1962 C _______23,'Sm, *S?Vr^wlir'c\l|l s/TeHnt'Mke'new''''”"’ FEA093J. ................. i $2395 1963 Chevrolet 2-Door *595 CHEvVTmpala 2 door Hardtop, |Xk *495 automatic, Powtr 1961 Ford Hardtop..........*195 Ikes, *155 down, F I n a n c e j^,5 lance of oiilv -- J “'•S- igao Pontiac 2-Door Hardtop *495 OAKLAND ; CALL CREDIT MANAGER CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 96^ Oakland FE 8-9661 —— J.v.rr.r.~^ FOR'D GALAXIE 500 9- 1967 CAMERO j passenger Station Wagon, tir ■ 1963 CADILLAC door' sedan, j *1297. Full'--'-? LUCKY AUTO' LUCKY AUTO ] *1 Mike Savoie 1940 W. W> ft 4 1006__ ( LOOKING for" 1959 Bulck 4 ler Ford, Birmingham. _ 1965 CHEVROLET" Bel Air station wagon. $845 Mike Savoie radio, heater, ---- - “T____ . $2.04 'king auto sales 68T08W _ FALCON WAG'ON ' 1966 CADILLAC OeVille, good w J pecutive's car, ' fieciric, exc. o FE 3-78 4 DOOR Sedan! h black vinyl top.: 'paxt of Woodward '^"0" DownT“payments**4.65 week. 1968"“3%U:HEVYnMPALA,“4-ipeed, TurnefTord.'^ViVminQha^' *2850. EM 3-7423 5-6 p.m -------------------------------- B sold 1900 W Buick 'Special paj^ts, or complete. 852-4355 1962 BUICK INVIC7A "i'opot, John McAuliffe Ford 630 Oakland Ave FF 5 4 1963 BUICk' ELECTRA 225.' , 1966 CADILLAC COUPE DeVlHl ' pxccllent. Iluly equipped lor beaut and comfort. Details call 626-0841 1966 CADILLAC C alaix 4-door ----- 1 0006. $.1175. AL HANOUTE On M24 in Lake Orion MY 2-2411 ATTENTION C H E'V'R O L BUYERS. $39 or old car d( regardless ol condition. We will ■ 1 used c MISSION IMPOSSIBLE BEAT THESE PRICES ilioning, one] 1965 IMPALA, 2 door hardtop, ------ aulo,. V-8, power steering, power brakes, gleaming red, with all black leather interior with many extras. $1595. 1963 IMPALA, auto V-8, 2 door hardtop, a beautiful gold with inyl lop and tinted glass. door hardtop. 196iB IMPALA CUSTOM Coupe, jrn'yTnop. "r^sir'^giteri'i?: clock, ilk? new. Call OL 1-0080. " »ntnmatic. rad.o. 327 engine II price , black i I down, and $28.28 per 1 3-3845. ______ 1968'CHEVY IMPALA custoi vinyl top, loaded Coupe, )r $1395. m RKET TIRE ; it i LUCKY AUTO 1940 W. Wide Track FE 4-1006 __or 3-7854 GLENN'S KING AUTO SALES 681-0802 I62b Or Ko Keego. EVROl. E T 1957. 4 DOOR; '^ket, fires PKC 625-2727' aft. 1959 CHEVY 2 DOOR, $150 J94.0184. 1960 CHEVY^ BEST OFFER. 3J2-7238 D CHEVY 4 DOOR, 8 automat $295 Mike Savoie Chevrolet 7 miips East ol Woodward 1961 CHEVY wagon, $150 UL 2-2658 1961 CORVAIR WAGON VANDERPUTTE BUICK-OPEL 196-210 Orchard Lake t^e $995. Full . 1965 IMPALA \J6 AAi«ii green wmt You can buy door sedan, 6, standard iransmlsslon. Silver gray, Tip top shape. $895. 1965 FORD. CUSTOM, auto., 6. $1095 1965 FORD GALAXIE, 4 door sedan, power steering, power brakes, auto., V-8. Gleaming yellow with black Interior only :hgose from, 1 onvertible and ____________ ____each. 1964 PONTIAC CATALINA. 2 1968 CHEVELLE 2 f /inyl top. Dark l ___ ------lag wheels with wide oy^ McAuliffe Ford ic, 'or! 630 Oakland Ave. _FE ^4101 i REPOSSESSfON 1963 Thunderbird KING AUTO SALES 681-0802 mike SAVOIE! 1963 ~F6Rb^FA^'rA'ClKr“ tTftZ iVlilVlj kJJl. V payments ^.88 weeK Troy's New ' ' ' '’™ " CHEVROLET DEALER 1900 W. Maple 2 Miles East of Woodward Ml 4-2735 REPOSSESSION 1963 Ford Galaxie 500 4-Door KING AUTO SALES 681-0802 good 1965 Cc 1962 CHRYSLER NEW YORKER 4-1 1963 terior, double power, V-8, matic Balance Due $365.72. assume payments of $3.12 REVERSE CHARGES GRIFFIN CHEVROLET INC. 752-3032 — ASK FOR _ KING AUTO SALES 681-0802 REPOSSESSION 1962 Chrysler KING AUTO SALES 681-0802 19"63 FORD 6, AUTOMATTC, nice. 682-9223. Riggins, dealer 1964 FORD COUNTY SEDAN statlor wagon, ‘ automatic power brakes, beautiful Arctic white with black all vinyl interior, it you are looking for the ex-: ceptionally mint condition car. Spring Special only--*1288. With' ! $88 down, $52.04 per month. John McAuliffe Ford 630 OaHland Ave.___________FE 5-4101 TONY ARMENIA*DAV “barber powel^^sfeen'^down? Syme^^ “1965 CORVAIR ^g->_Yakes,,^6-w.y>t, ,.Jr_con_- Call_^ Mr. ^Parks.^M^^^^^^ 2-door hardtop, automatic. balan«®of only $1085.' '.... $995 OAKLAND Mike Savoie Chevrolet 1900 w. Maple Ml 4-273: 2 miles East ot Woodward GLENN'S 1965 Chevy convertible. l owner 22,000 actual ml. L. C Williams. Salesrr 952 W. Huron St, FE 4-7371 FE Many Mare to Choose Froi 1964 DELUXE GALAXY Convertible, -sdia heater, whitewalls, power leering, new top, original oi mlTeage. Ml 7-3090. after 5 CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH __________________________ 724 olkland A«. F^5-^436! „GALAXIE ,hardtop, “1965 CHRYSLER New Yorker 4-door hardtop, fully loaded, factory air conditioning, speed control, power contour seats, olive green with gold interior. A ' truly beautiful car. $AVE this has wanted — has ever radio, he------- ----- --------- brakes, beautiful metallic aqua with matching interior, spring, special at only *988 full price, — V-8. , automatic. Bob Borst. down, *39.04 pci - John McAuliffe Ford F^E 5-4101 19*4 FALCON BUS Wagon *995. , . , ,, - I ! "0" Down, payments *8.92 week. «,l Lincoln-Mercury Sales Call Mr. Parks, mi 4-7500. Harold 11950 W. Maple Ml 6-2200l Turner Ford, Birmingham. MM msMim jpMm Just Make Small Weekly, Bi-Weekly Payments With As Little Ast BmM Because at STANDARD AUTO SALES, You Can IBM MSM 1304 BALDWIN a Blk*. south ef Walton-PhOM HERE ARE JUST A FEW EXAMPLES OF THE MANY FINE CARS TO CHOOSE FROM! 1962 PONTIAC Catalina <-Door with beautiful gold finish, double $495 $5 weekly 1961 FORD Galaxie sticky shift, radio, heater, red and white as. $295 B $3 1962 BUICK Invicto $595 a $6 w-w 1959 CHEVY Wagon stick shift, 6 cyL runs good. $195 1964 MERCURY Monterey 4-Door Hardtop; power steering, brakes. PHcs $795 Only $8 Weekly 1963 OLDS Hardtop Beautiful 2-door, metallic blue finish, matching interior. a $695 » $7 <■>-«> 1964 PONTIAC 4-Door Power steering, brakes, outstanding green finish. $795 oZ $8 weekly 1962 OLDS F-85 Hardtop Automatic, radio, heater. Nice. $295 OnTy $3w.ek.y 1959 CHEVY Hardtop 2-Door with V8, automatic. $195 1963 BUICK 2-Door Burgundy finish, matching InMrlor. “cl $695 oSy ' $7 Waekly 1963 CORVAIR Monza Fire engine red, 4 speed. Only I $495 OMy $5 Wiakly 1963 FORD Convertible Burgundy wtih a black top, V», automatic. $595 IVEN IP YOU'VE! HAD A REPOSSESSION, BEEN BANKRUPT, BEI^N OARNISHBEDi OR BEEN TURNED DOWN BY OTHERS. TRADE-INS ACCEPTED, PAID FOR OR NOT. DUTY AT AU. TUMES TO IMMEOlATEkY O.K. YOUR APPUCATIOM. (Formerly Kessler Hahn) Chrysler-Plymouth Rambler-Jeep SPECIAL SALE! 1964 BUICK LeSabre ^D•or Hirdtop, with power ttecring, rtdlo, heeler, e reel luxury cer for little of the $795 1965 GMC Pickup •A-Ton, pertect condition, 4 •peed trenimiMlon, e rea work horse. $1195 1962 CONTINENTAL 4-Door with full power, musi lee to eppreclete. Reduced to- $895 $1195 1965 CHEVEILE Malibu 2-Door Hardtop, « 327 anplne, stick, brioht i ..-.-u .... ---- ne, STICK# Q ’•'$T?95' 1965 PLYMOUTH Salelite, 2-Door Hardtop, with 3M engine, 4-speed, real sharp with solid let black llnlih. Only— $1495 1958 CHEVY BIscayne 2-Door, with radio, haater, and la only— $99 1963 VW 2-Door Sedan, with soft yellow tinish, ready to go at only— $695 ON DIXit HWY.-NEAR Ml5 CLARKSTON MA 5-2635 New and Used Cars THE PONTIAC PRESS. New and Used Cars ______ FRIDAY. MARCH 29. 1968 rl.XRM.ADl KE By Anderson and Leeminir New and Used Cars D—9 1264 OLDS It 2 DOOR hardtop. Power %tearlng and brakes, radio, whltawalla, good condition, $200. 682-n2»0- TOM RADEMACHER CHEVY-OLDS 196S OLDS n 4 door hardtop, automatic, full power, radio, heater, yyhitewalls, one owner, new car trade. S1525. On US IQ at MIS, Clarkstoh, MA 5-5071. »65 OLDS CONVERTIBLE, extnu*"* condition, owner, $1,500. TE 4-2 1265 OLDS —-"‘Ion, _________________________ DS LUXURY sadsn^ All 's-iMy* *%Vei,"”j”nyl' top'll 12*6 Plymouth 2-Paasenoer Station $100. $72-6366. REPOSSESSION 1262 Valiant Convertible KING AUTO SALES 681-0802 5L......- $4.22 weel 1263 PLYMOUTH 2 PASSENGER' station wagon. Fully equipped. Warren, 268-1263.________ 1263 VALIANTr2 door hardtop, vary clean, 6$2-6432._______ REPOSSESSION TOM RADEMACHER mileage, one owner, $1425. On US 10 at MIS, Clarkston, MA 5-5071. 1966 OLDSMOBILE Dynamic 8$, 2-door hardtop, automatic, power steering, power brakes, premium tires, tire engine red. $1988 Suburban Oldr BIRMINGHAM BEATTIE FORD A-l USED CAR SPECIALS 1965 Chevy Suburban Carryall with VS, power steering, brakes, only — $1395 1967 Comet 2-Door Hordtop with VS, automatic, power steering. Only — $2195 1967 Mustancj 2-Door Hardtop With 4 cyl. •utomatic# rMtlo# htattr. $21?5 1966 Ford Fairione 500 4doer sedan, with V-l, power Steering, brakes, Only- Si 795 1967 Ford F-100 Styleside with VS, automatic, custom cab. Only — $2195 1964. Ford Galaxis 500 4-door with VS, power steering, brakes and radio; to go at only— $1095 1967 T-Bird 2-Door Hardtop with power steering, brakes, windows, factory air, new rubber, balance of car war- $3595 1963 Ford F-350 Wrecker 4>BpMd# 4>Wt work at— $1695 (On Dixie US-10) Waterford "YOUR FORD DEALER SINCE 1930" 623-0900 tl^l Turquols automobile, full factory equip------- ----- power steering. BIRMINGHAM Chrysler-Plymouth 681-0802 1964 PLYMOUTH 2-Passenger Station Wagon, automatic, power steering, power brakes, whitewall tires, radio, heater, Immaculate beige with matching Interior, a perfect second cer. 135 month. $1995 BIRMINGHAM Chrysler-Plymouth 860 5. Woodward________MI 7-3214 1265 PLYMOUTH FURY I'll, Convertible, 32,500 miles, best offer. 335-1206 eves, or weekend.__ 1265 PLYMOUTH SPORT Coupe, with VS, automatic, radio, boater, power steering, brakes, beautiful artic white with Crimson red Interior, cenT be told from a new one. Spring Special only $1388 lull price, SS8 down, and $56.37 per John McAuliffe Ford 630 Oakland Ave.______FE 5-4101 1965 PLYMOUTH SPORTS FURY $1395. ------- SEDANr with V8, John McAuliffe Ford 630 Oakland Ava.______FE $>4101 black Interior, VS, automatic, power steering, console, red line tires. 7,000 actual miles, new car factory with $195 down AUDETTE PONTIAC 1850 W. Maple Rd._AM^2-^ 1267 PONTIAC GTO 2 DOOR, hardtop. All black. Air. Ram engine 4 speed. 430 positractloi power disc brakes. AM-FM radii 8,300 ml. $2425. Ml 6-1022. 623-6626 after 5. I, excellent condition. New ond Used Core 106 New and Used Cors 106 1963 RAMBLER CLASSIC 4>door station wagon, automatic, ladio, and heater, s^lal this 'vuak only S425. ROSE RAMBLER-JEEP, Union Lake, EM 3-4155. today at S standard shift, overdrive, tcdlo. :yl. engine, stick .jter, our best buy — full price. Just SS8, VII, ano $24.27 per month, i John McAuliffe Ford | 630 Oakland Ave.___________FE 5-4101; l26S RAMBLER AMERICAN, A-1 j condition, $725. 624-2467. After 5. | 1265 MARLIN WITH V-«, autornatic,' -1lo, haater, power disc brakes,: lutlful candy apple red finish,! black tu-tone combination, 181 down, $52.04 per month. John McAuliffe Ford 630 Oakland Av>._________FE S-- 1967 PONTIAC CATALINA. Hardtop# low mlloaga, power steering, brakes. Air conditioning. Vinyl top, - tinted glass. FE 4-2587. _____i 268 BONNEVILLE. 4 door hardtop, blue, air conditioning, ell power, other extras. 6,000 miles, $3575. | $1525, $32 -____ __________ ______ week. Call Mr. Parks. Ml 4-7500. Harold Turner Ford, Birmingham. ; ). Other extras. 332- ‘‘Maybe I don’t want to work my way through college after all!” New and Used Cars 106 New and Used Cars 1. Cell A irks. Ml 4-7500. 1, Birnn— PLYMOUTH 1966 BELVEDERE 4 door, radio, eulomatic, I'xr.eilant shape. Can be seen Saturday a ' Sunday, 6207 Delhi, Clarkston._______________ 1262 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX 2i1266 PONTIAC CATALINA, 2 door hardtop, sharp, $625. MARVEL -......... ■ “ MOTORS, 251 Oakland Ave. FE 8-4027. 1263 PONTIAC CONVERTIBLE. $722. "0" Down, payments $6.22 week. Call Mr. Parks, Ml 4-7500. Harold Turner Ford, BIrm-Ingham.____________________ SHARP 1966 CUTLAS 2 door, ooubl# *>pwer# auto, light blua ext.# wtr-‘“ Finyl int.# $1#B95# after 6:30 o. 1966 PLYMOUTH ,_____________ BARRACUDA Tc‘2n»fe'!'1?t*i Fastback this unit has hardtop. 966 CATALINA. WAGON. FULL' power. Air. AM-FM radio. Rear tpeaker. 13#000 ml. Good tires. I Ciean. UL 2-1026.______________, 966 PONTIAC GRAND Prix. | Hydramatic, full power# vents. AM-j FM. transistorized Ignition, plus! $2195. 334- 1967 CUTLASS Supreme 4-Ooor, white will robn interior, V-S, auti AUDETTE PONTIAC H50 W. Maple Rd. Ml 2-8601 I26f OLDS 98, 4-DOOR, sir, fui tie, only $1525. jtomallc. Floor - —---------------------- - . ....... ADKINS AUTOTaTES”''^ (jLENN S used very lit-73a OAKLAND AVE. FE 2-6230 '-i—-s- T 1963 Catalina auto. First DOWNEY Oldsmobile, Inc. 550 Oakland Avenue _FE^8101_ 1267 PLYMOUTH GTX? 440 Cubic inches. 375 H.P. Torque flight : fE 4-1006 transmission. Console. Heavy duty;- suspension “- cc . 7110. 1265 Chevy Pickup. Only r, vinyl toi I. $26-6471. 1967 OLDS _____ Deluxe, full power, fac* tory sir Suburban Olds BIRMINGHAM 635 S. Woodward MERRY OLDS MO DEAL MERRY OLDSMOBILE 52$ N. Main ROCHESTER, MICHIGAN 1263 PONTIAC 2 DOOR Ca'v Auto. 4 to choose fror- *-$527. Can be purchi money down. LUCKY AUTO 1266 Bonneville. Power steering and brakes. TInfed glass. Cordovan top. L. C. Williams, Salesman V W. Huron St. ............... Wagon Sale '63 Through '65 6's & 8's —Many to choose from— AS LOW AS $695 Village Rambler 666 S. Woodward Birmingham 646-3900 1968 AMERICANS From $1853 Village Rambler 666 S. Woodward Birminghom 646-3900 DEMO and IFACTORY OFFICIAL Sale - ALL MODELS, POWER EQUIPPED -— Many With Air — Village Rambler 666 S. Woodward Birmingham 646-3900 1240 W. Wide Track r brakes. FE 5-' REPOSSESSION 1263 Pontiac 2-Ooor Hardtop KING AUTO SALES 681-0802 1266 PONTIAC WAGON, $1225, $32 -■— payments, $16.88 week. Call ... Parks, Ml 4-7500. Harold Turner Ford, Birmingham, 1267 PLYMOUTH FURY, 2 passenger wagon, double power, radio, auto.,i whitewalls, wheel covers, 15,000 miles iW-PONTIaC- CAtALINAp2jiob 1967 VALIANT original miles, exc. running con- signet 4-door, beat the depredation . r J_| X J. .1—1 automatic, power steering, power, brakes, 7«oio^,_heateG_, whltew^^ PONTIAC I W. Maple Rd. $2425 $16251 $1625 _____________________ $1325 1267 MG Mark II Convertibla . $1225 1266 Falcon Waf ' *--- ___ . —.. ..jgc...................— 1264 Bonneville 4 door hardtop $825 1264 Catalina 4 door ............ $725 1262 Buick Special 2- passenger ......................$425 1262 Mercury Convertibla .. $325 tlre$, a gleaming midnight blue,; BUY, SELL, TRADE . PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS USE 1967 OLDS I 2$ a*' $1595 ind $2695 333-7863 PDNTIAC; When you buy it I MARKET TIRE give it a fn safaty check. 2635 Drchard La! * ■ Keego. 1262 TEMPEST WAGDN. 1262 PONTIAC CATALINA 4 DOOR, REPOSSESSION 1262 Pontiac Tempest KING AUTO SALES 681-0802 ering, brakes, beautiful roDin ewg blue, and all vinyl in-, terlor, spring special at only $1188 full price, and lust $8$ down, $47.71 per month. John McAuliffe Ford 630 Oakland Ave.__________FE i 1968 PONTIAC '2976“ CATALINA 4 DOOR SEDAN Comes with decor group, hydramatic, push button rodio, mirrors remote control mirror, power steering, brakes, whitewalls, soft ray gloss in windshield. ON M24 LAKE ORION mw PONTIAC-RAMBLER Ask for Stub Groves, Jim Bornowsky, MY 3-6266 OPEN 9 TO 9 1964 CATALINA automatic, power s la er brakes, 22,000 actual i new at: $1295 PONTIAC RETAIL STORE 65 UNIVERSITY FE 3-7951 1264 PDNTIAC CATALINA hardtop with a beautiful artic white finish black vinyl Interior, V - $ I. Spring Special__ iml^^isas 1264 PDNTIAC STAR CHIEF, factory air condtioning, full power, '— mi., excellent condition. Fraser 721-1626._________________ TOM RADEMACHER CHEVY-OLDS 1264 CATALINA 2 ' brakes, buckets, radio, heater, iteering, I heater. $1125. On US 10 at M15, Clarkston, MA 5-5071.____________ 1264 PONTIAC GTO, 4 SPEED, posl-track, rally pak, low ml., new ex- 1265 TEMPEST CUSTOM 4-door standard tranc"-'—''”' ' ,000, MA 6-3611. SHELTON PONTIAC-BUICK 855 S. ROCHESTER RD. 651-5500 1965 DODGE Poloro 1967 DODGE Pickup 1965 MUSTANG Hardtop 1961 CONTINENTAL 2-Door Hardtop, with V-l, automatic, power slaaring, burgundy exterior, lovely black vinyl tn-Terlor, whitewalls. i/j-Ton with radio, heater, ready to go with a turquoise, and is yours for Only — Radio, heater, automatic, white-walls, Acapolco blue, r a a 1 beauty. Only — walls, let black, with black and white Interior. Only — $1595 $1795 $1295 $795 1963 VALIANT 4-Door Radio, haater, automatic, wMla-Jwalls, solid white finish. Only — 1963 PLYMOUTH Wogon 1966 CORTINA 1966 CHEVY Caprice 2-Door Hardtop, V-S, automatic. Fury with V-l, automatic, rack on top, Indian turquoise, with whitewalls. Only— 2-door with radio, healer, whH» walls, racing green finish. Only power steering, radio, heater, whitewells, beautiful snow shoo white with black vinyl roof, whitewalls. ; $695 $795 $995 $1995 SPARTAN DODGE USED CAR SALES FE 8-4528 855 OAKLAND (JUST NORTH OF CASS AVE.) NEW CAR SALES FE 8-9222 265 PONTIAC LeMANS, V-8 doi power, automatic, buckets console, 20,(W milM, 1265 4-DOOR PONTIAC • ■)le power, extra clea., I, $1425. UL 2-5266. 705 Auburn Heights. la line,! 26,200 GLENN'S 1265 Tempest Coupe Power sfeei ing and brakes. L. C. Williams, Salesman 252 W. Huron St. FE 4-7371 FE 4-171 Many More to r-- 1965 GTO 2-Door Hardtop, red with matching Interior, automatic, power steering, power brakes, 30,OOO. actual miles, 25 month »------- ' ------ AUDETTE $1595 Suburban Olds PONTIAC 1265 Bonneville, - - -vinyl top, black vinyl Interior, el power, low mlleag- ’ ---------- condition, 353-7626. GLENN'S 1266 Bonneville, full power with factory air. 421. White with bik. cordovan top. L. C. Williams, Salesman 252 W. Huron St. FE 4-7371 FE 4 17' Many More to Choose From 1264 EXECUTIVE, 2 DOOR hydra., doubla power. AM-FM radio, phone 343-6514. FACTORY OFFICIAL SALE AT 1967 CHEVY Biscoyne Wogon 4-pas$enger with V-8, Power-glide, power steering, brakes; radio, heater, whitewalls, luggage rack, Positraction axle. Tuxedo black finish, tinted glass In windshield. FACTORY WARRANTY. $2645 1967 CHEVY Impolo Sport Coupe with the 324 angina, Powergllda, power steering, air conditioning, tinted glass, radio, heater, white-walls. Black vinyl top. Butternut yellow and FACTORY WARRANTY. $2845 1967 CAMARO Sport Coupe $2395 1967 CAMARO Sport Coupe with 327 engine, powergllda, power steering, power disc brakes, 4 sOason air conditioning, posa-tractlon axle, AM-FM Rodio, console deluxe Interior. Maderla maroon finish, white vinyl top. Ficfory Warranty. $2745 1967 CHEVY Caprice Sport Sedan 4-door with 327 V-8, Hydramatic, power steering, power disc WARRANTY. $2895 1967 CHEVY Biscoyne $1795 1967 CHEVY Impolo Sport Sedan with the 324 V-8, Hydramatic transmission, power steering, brakes. Factory air conditioning, - -- edio, hf*" ■ — $2695 1967 CORVAIR 4-Door Monza Sport sedan, with t^ese.,. steering wheel, push button r dio, 4 apaed, tinted glass, re: seat speaker, Mederla mam finish. Lass than 10X100 mill Factory Warranty. Only— $1945 QUALITY CARS 1965 CHEVY Convertible with V-l, automatic, power s Ing, radio, haatar, whitev India Ivory finish. Dniy— $1595 1965 1964 CHEVY FORD . Biscoyne Wagon Foirlone 500 Sports $lon, power sfeerlnot brakes; radio, heater# whitewalls. India Coupe, with V-8, automatic, power steering, buckets, radio, heater, whitewalls. Red finish. '”"$1595 $1345 1966 CHEVELLE SS 396 4 Speed with buckets, radio, haater, whitewalls. Black vinyl top, Ai-ftc bronze. $2045 Oakland County's Largest Volume Chevrolet Dealer 631 OAKLAND FE 4-4547 Widest Selection of "OK" Used Cars in Oakland County D—10 THE PONTIAC : , MARCH : 4Hootorui------- 7 Inebritted l«»b.IKl'flOlld ucii^eniit trM 13 Fifh esn 14 Puri New Children's Psychiatric Unit At Pontiac State Hospital Child Psychiatric Facility Is Completed at Hospital __■*r* . / v/iiurvn pars* «ii« 57 CypriJi^ fiih $ Dress typn 33 Complete SSAndmt <2 worn) costume constelUttcuD je small ____ DOWN JOUnitof eiKwror 32 LanMU mountain 24 Whirlpool a nicuan 2S Iroquwan SAuitralian from Indian Hobart 27 Preposition 4 Mouths 29 Self-acting 5 Gained victory SO Snow vehicle - - • 31 Oq^tic 34 Red chalcedony St Toward 38 Number 46 Adduce 47 In the midst of 40 Fix again 30 European river 53 Compass point 54 Land parcel By ED BLUNDEN A new facility for the children’s psychiatric unit at Pontiac State Hospital has recently been completed and one section is already occupied. The large building, with four wings, cost $2,162,000 including furnishings. It will provide, on the western edge of the hospital grounds at Elizabeth Lake and Telegraph, , services for inpatient and day-I care for mentally ill. f The new facility is called Fairlawn Center. A similar unit, Yorkwoods, was established in Ypsilanti in 1965. Some three or four other similar hospital units are planned geographically for the state. * * ★ It contains dormitory rooms for occupancy by no more than four children, classrooms, many of them of a special nature, recreation areas, a swimming pool and support facilities such as offices and the kitchen. When fully activated capacity will be for some 80 resident children. School, special treatment and recreation areas will also serve some day-care children and 60 over -14 - years old patients, housed in units of their own elsewhere on the grounds. The facility serves the same basic 10-county area rounding Oakland County does the rest of the hospital. Construction of the new care center is a project urged and supported by the Michigan Society for Mental Health, United Fund agency of terested citizens. landscaping was not. One of the wings is presently in use and the others will become operational later in the spring. The new unit will be under the administration of Dr. James W. Johnson, director of the child division psychiatry. * * ★ Other officials include Peter Medrano, psychiatrist for children under 14; Michael The Oakland County Chapter,' . . , ■ . , which was highly instrumental fairlawn principal; in ohtaininb the unit, held its John Taber, chief socia EtMfr^-Voice/ COMPLETE HOME MUSIC SYSTEAAS Setting new utandards in sound offering flexibility in design of your own loud speaker *ystem and a more complete selection available. Llectro-Voic© satisfies the most discriminate listening preference and pocketbook. Compare before you buy. See Our Package Ditplayfor $199.50 PONTIAC MUSIC S SOIWC ."Tu,S.T. ..»P *=C.SSO.,f^ RICKY'S PIZZA HOUSE 335-U64 or MsTm 819 Woodward'Ave. st in obtaining the unit, held its monthly meeting there last week and toured the building. ONE WING IN USE worker; Dr. Charles Marcan-tonio, chief psychologist; Mrs. Katherine Jones, occupational therapy; John Kearns, recrea- Construction is complete, but tional therapy; and Marilyn installation of furnishing and [Long, chief nurse. A HAPPY MOMENT - In one of the hallways of the new children's unit are Dr. Donald W. Martin (left), medical superintendent for Pontiac State Hospital, and Alex Kapsalis, president of the Oakland County Chapter of the Michigan Society for Mental Health. TYPICAL CLASSROOM — Concentration is on small classes and special education at the new children’s facility. Preparing the room is one of the teachers, Lynda Allen. Burtons Think Retirement but Talk About A4ore Work By EARL WILSON LONDON — “Elizabeth thinks I’m working too hard and wants me to slow down, but I’ll probably go on working like a dog for years,” Richard Burton said. It was his comment on the report that they’re retiring from acting. Burton was in his 7 dressing room at MGM’s Elstree Studios, wait- , ing to do a scene with Clint Eastwood in “Where ^ Eagles Dare”—and Elizabeth was coming over ,38k from a nearby studio where she and Mia |i'arrow were emoting in “Secret Ceremony,” in which she plays the part of a paid lady. Liz arrived looking the part—only a little too beautiful—in a matter of minutes, and men-, tioned the arrangement they have now, written into their contracts—that they must be working WILSON identical or adjoining studios, so as not to be apart. ★ Dr * Not in the history of pictures has there been such an. arrangement. Would you like a drink, Luv?” Richard asked. Why not?” she said. “How many have you had' swore it was his first of the day. Yes, he said, he might write, might direct, and Elizabeth he could envisage retiring in three or four years. Still, he wants her to follow up “Secret Ceremony” with “The Only Game in Town”—and after that she will do “Lady Macbeth” if they can get Sir Laurence Olivier or Sir John Gielgud “or one of those eminent gentlemen” for it, and he would direct—but if they’re unavailable he will play Macbeth and some one else will direct. + ★ * Thus It appears that the retirement of Burton and Liz Is I hope rather than a reality. THE MIDNIGHT EARL . . . Cab Calloway told Pearl Bailey he’s thinking of retiring after “Hello, Dolly!” and Pearl said, “Oh no-after this we’ll co-star in T do, I do’” . . . The Tony Awards ceremony’ll be a black tie affair—including stagehands and TV crews. Mickey Hargitay, once Jayne Mansfield’s husband, will wed Ellen Siano . . . Douglas Fairbanks, dancing a new step (“the RFK”) at the Electric Circus, puffed: “I never worked this hard making movies” ... The magazine “Eye” predicts a fashion fad for girls: Phony beauty marks and freckles. TODAY’S BEST LAUGH: Tom Eilerts says his grandmother, long a Liberace fan, points out how smart he is: “Even before the financial crisis, he turned all his gold into lame jackets.” REMEMBERED QUOTE: “These days a bargain is anything you can buy for only twice what it’s worth.” EARL’S PEARLS: Larry Mathews heard of an off-Broadway theater that plans a Cary Grant Film Festival. They’re gonna show his X-rays. Comic Cucho Viera tells of his home town in Puerto Rico:_ ‘This town was so poor that when it rained, the colors ran.” . . That’s earl, brother. . *?• ^ * - SWIMMING POOL — An important part of recreational of the Oakland County Chapter of the Society for Mental therapy at the new children’s facility at Pontiac State Health, a group instrumental in promoting its establishment. Hospital is this swimming pool. Inspecting it are members wwon rumiitE m N. Saginaw Sears 'Only 1 and 2 of a kind UP TO 50% OFF Sofas • Chairs • Divan Beds Recliners • Chests • Dressers Odd Beds • Box Springs Mattresses • Dinette Sets and Many Other Miscellaneous Items! HOURS SAME AS STORE -'X 'kmmm* FAMILY ROOMS ALUMINUM SIDM6 COLOR ALUMINUMS ROOFING—SIDM WOODFIELD CONSTRUCTION L COME TO YOU FREE ESTIMATE AND PLANS - NO CHARGE 12 S. MILL Pontiac, Mich. FE l-98e0 6 Months Bwforw Flrit Payment FINEST LOCAL CONTRACTOR FOR RELIABLE TV SERVICE ('all Your TESA of Oakland County ^ Service Dealer Get Prompt, Professional Service Dealer Listing: SAVE $100 on FISHER Stereo Consoles SA WATTS PEAK POWER • SOLID STATE CIRCUITRY • HIGH SENSITIVITY FM STEREO TUNER • WIDE RANGE AM • SIX SPEAKERS Music Soars When You Hear It on a Fisher! CUSTOMADE PRODUCTS INC. 4S40W. Huron St. (M-59)__1_______ 678-9700 THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY’. MARC H 29, 1998 Summit Opposed! i TUNIS, Tunisia (AP) — Pres-! ident Habib Bourguiba sent a letter Thursday to King Hussein of Jordan saying the time was’ not ripe for an Arab summit meeting. Bourpiba h'aS qjc-pressed the same opinion on several occasions, and has not; attended recent meetings of Arab chiefs of state. The Tunisian president said, however, that he favorjed consultations at lower levels, such as between foreign ministers. -Television Programs— D—n A Look at TV Programs furnishad by stations listad in this column ora subjact to chonga without notica ; Negro's Role Growing Spring Brings Yule Thanks PONTIAC MALL OPTICAL & HEARING AID CENTER Phone 682-1113 HEARING AID DEALER^ COME IN du^g^ TOD^ 1968 DECORATOR COMPACT Th0 RUBENS.Y3910W Handsome ultra-compact vinyl clad metal cabinet In grained Walnut color. Two 5*x3’ speakers. Telescoping Dipole antenna for VHP reception. SPEClAl- Fits any room in your home! Full Zenith handcrafted quolityl * Zenith Handcrafted Color TV Chassis * Super Video Range 82-Channel Tuning System * Sunshine'* Color Picture Tube e Exclusive Patented Zenith Color Demodulator Circuitry e Two Zenith Quality Speakers ZENITH QUALITY rOVK BEST BUrl E-Z Terms 24 Mo. to Pay Open Friday Nitet 'til 9 TV’RADIO SERVICE 770 Orchard Lake Ava. F£ 5-6112 Channel.: 2-WJBK-TV, 4-WWJ-TV, 7-WXYZ-TV, 9-CKlW-TV, 50-WKBD-TV, 56-WTVS FRIDAY NIGHT 6:00 (2) (4) C - News, Weather, Sports IT I R —Mov.e; “Underwater Warrior” (1958) Dan Dailey, Ross Martin (9) R — Dennis t h e Menace (50) R C — Flintstones (56) Friendly Giant — "When I Am Big” 6:15 (56) Davey and Goliath 6:30 (2) C—News—Cronkite (4) C — I4ews — Huntley, Brinkley (9) R C — Gilligan’s Island (50) R -T McHale’s Navy (56) R - What’s New 7:00 (2) C - Truth o r Consequences (4) C — Traffic Court (9) R - Movie: “If a Man Answers” (1962) A young newlywed tries to revive her husband’s fading interest. Sandra Dee, Bobby Darin. (50) R — Munsters (56) NET Journal - How American colleges help young men gain maturity. 7:30 (2) C — (Special) Harlem Globetrotters — The Washington Generals, with comic Pat Harrington as their new coach, challenge the 42-year history of Trotter basketball lunacy. ( 4 ) ( S p e dal) Sports Documentary — “Jesse Owens Returns to Berlin” relives the drama of the 1936 Olympic Games. Some of the footage shown is from the 800 cameramen Hitler had on hand to cover what he expected to be t h e -German domination of the games. (7) R C — Movie: “The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn” (Conclusion) Eddie Hodges, Archie Moore, Tony Randall (50) R—I Love Lucy 8:00 (50) R C - Hazel ‘ (56) Continental Comment 8:30 (2) C - Gomer Pyle -Gomer trys to arbitrate between two feuding Hungarian families who refuse to let their children marry. (4) C - (Special) Michigan Cum Laude — A salute to the University of Michigan’s 15 0th anniversary is hosted by Tom Harmon, All-America halfback class of ’41, and Mike Wallace, class of ’39. (7)C — Operation: Entertainment — Ed Ames hosts a show for the Seabees at Port Hueneme, Calif. Guests include Michele Lee, the Kim Sisters, Pete Barbutti, Checkmates Ltd. and comics David and Reese. (50) R — Honeymooners (56) R — Your Dollar’s Worth 8:55 (9) C - News 9:00 (2) C - Movie: “The Hellions” (English, 1961) A Western-style drama set in South Africa. Richard Todd (9) R — Etetectives (50) R — Perry Mason 9:30 (4) C — ( Special) Hallmark Hall of Fame— “Give U s Barabbas” follows the life of the thief who was freed when Christ was nailed to the cross. James Daly, Kim Hunter. (7) R C - Guns of Will Sonnett — Will disproves a saloon woman’s claim that she is Jeffs mother. (9) C — Tommy Hunter (56) NET Playhouse . -“A Passage to India” An Englishwoman visits her son and his fi^incee in , India, and the two women develop a friendship for a young doctor. 10:00 (7) R C - Judd - A sea ct^tain is accused of murdering four people aboard his schooner. The only survivor, a disturbed 10-year-old, isn’t talking. (9) Country Music Hall TV Features Tonight HARLEM GLOBETROT- ! TERS, 7:30 p.m. (2) SPORTS DOCUMEN- ! TARY, 7:30 p.m. (4) MICHIGAN CUM l.AUDE, 8:30 p.m. (4) OPERATION: ENTER- TAINMENT, 8:30 p.m. (7) . HALLMARK HAU. OF FAME, 9:30 p.m. (4) NET PLAYHOUSE, 9:30 p.m. (56) Tomorrow AMERICAN BANDSTAND, 12:30 p.m. (7) COLLEGE ALL-STAR BASKETBALL, 2 p.m. (4) (50) C — Les Crane — Dagmar Wilson, founder of Women Strike for Peace, discusses the Vietnam War. 10:30 (9) C — Nation’s Business — A representative of the Federal Liberal party is scheduled. 10:45 (9) Provincial Affairs 11:00 (2) (4) (7) C-News, Weather, Sportte (9) News (50) Joe Pyne — Topics include voluntary sterilization. 11:30 (2) Movies: 1. “Dead End” (1937) Humphrey Bogart, Joel McCrea; 2. “Strangelehold” ( 19 6 2 ) Macdonald Carey (4) C—Tonight — Sammy Davis Jr. hosts. (7) C —Joey Bishop (9) R — Movie: “War of the Wildcats” (1943) Self-assured oil promoter and cowboy fight over oil rights. John Wayne, Martha Scott 1:00 (4) Beat the Champ (7) News 1:30 (4) C-PD(J 2:30 (2) C-News, Weather.. SATURDAY MORNING 6:05 (2) TV Chapel 6:10 (2) (>-News 6:15 (2) Farm Scene 6 :30,(2) C-Sunrise Semester 6:55 (4) C-News 7:00 (2) C-Captain Kangaroo (4) (J-Ck)untry Living — “Spdng Lawn Care” 7:30 (4) O-Oopsy, the Clown 7:45 (7) C-Rural Report 8:00 (2) C—Woodrow the Woodsman (7) C-TV College 8:30 (50) R—Jungle Jim — Oil millionaire and his wife are kidnaped. 9:00 (2) C — Frankenstein-Jr. ‘ (4) (>-Super 6 (7) C-Casper (50) C-Upbeat 9:30 (2) C-Herculoids (4) C-Super President (7) C^-Fantastic Four (9) (Special) CBC Sports Presents — Britain’s Steeplechase and Oxford -CamlH-idge Boat Race are telecast via satellite. 10:00 (2) C-Shazzan (4) R C—Flintstones (7) O-Spiderman (50) Rocky Jones 10:30 (2) C-Space Ghost (4) O-rYoung Samson (7) C—Journey to the Center of the Earth (9) R—Hawkeye ( 50) R—Movie: “Under Fire” ( 1 9 5 7 ) Four members of patrol are accused o f cowardice. Rex Reason, Harry Morgan, Steve Brodie 11:00 (2) C-Moby Dick (4) C—Birdman (7) C-Kihg Kong (9) Window on the World 11:30 (2) C — Supermau-Aquaman (4) C—Ant-Squirrel (7) C—George of the Jungle 11:45 (9) Gardening SATURDAY AFTERNOON 12:00 (4) C—Top Cat (7) C—Beatles (9) This Land of (Xirs — A visit with a woman cowboy (50) Rr-Movie: “Pitfall” (1948) Insurance agent investigates beautiful blonde’s claim. Dick Powell, Lizabeth Scott, Jane Wyatt 12:30 (2) C—Jonny Quest (4) C—CoolMcCool (7) C—American B a n d -stand—Show features the Beatles sound and includes film of group at press cffliference and singing “Penny Lane.” (9) C—Curling 1:00 (2) C—Lone Ranger (4) International Zone 1:30 (2) C—Road Runner ( 4 ) C—Professionals — The Los Angeles Dodgers’ Lou Johnson and Jim Lefebvre are profiled. (7) C—Happening ’68 ( 5 0) C — Championship Wrestling 2 :00 (2) R-Movie: “Creature of the Walking Dead” (1963) Results of experiments in immortality are in hands of scientist’s heirs. Rock Madison, Ann Wells, Willard Gross (4) C—(Special) College All-Star Basketball (7) R C — Movie: “Gunsmoke” (1953) Gun-fighter becomes close friend of man he is supposed to kill. A u d i e Murphy, Susan Cabot, Paul Kelly (9) R—Movie: “Inside the Walls of Folsom Prison” (1951)» Iron-fisted warden tries to block reforms. Steve Cochran, David Brian 2:30 (50) C—Roller Derby ^ 3 : 30 (7) C—Pro Bowlers’ Tour (50) R—Movie: ‘‘Dead Man’s Eyes” (1944) Blind artist is acpused o f murder. Lon Chaney Jr., Jean Parker 3:55 (2) C-Year of the Tiger 4:00 ( 2 ) C - C B S Golf Classic — Sam Snead and Gardner Dickinson are pitted against Miller Barber and Bob Charles. (4) C—George Pierrot — “Colorado Holiday” (9) Wrestling (56) Sing Hi-Sing Lo 4:15 (56) Merlin the Magician 4:30 (4) C — Flying Fisherman — Gadabout travels to Canada’s Great Bear River. (56) C—Brother Buzz 5: 0 0 (2) C — Outdoorsman (4) C—Shell’s Wonderful World of Golf — Sam Snead and Roberto DeVicenzo vie at the Congressional Country Club in Washington, D.C. (7) C-Wide World o f Sports — Features include the Sebring, Fla., Grand Prix of Endurance and NCAA Swimming and Diving CJiampionships from Hanover, N.H. (9) R—Twilight Zone -Brian Aheme and Pippa Scott stdr in drama about man’s desire to return to days prior to wife’s death. (50) C-Hy Lit (56) What’s New 5:30 (2) O-Gentle Ben — Alligator is falsely accused of killing livestock. Slim Pickens guest -stars. (9) R C-Gidget - Visitor to U.S. gets some advice from Gidget. (56) Observing Eye — “Animals That Lay Eggs” ANNAPOLIS, Md, (APi -By RICK DU BROW cording to the report, the agen- With unseasonable tempera-IIOLLYWOOD (UPl) — cy specifically wants him to tures in the 80s, a Christmas Every day now, television finds[“put a pop .sound into its com- thank-you note arrived in An-itself having to develop its newimercial music and his prime napolis from 9-year-old 'I'lmmy relationship with the Negro assignment will be coke Coca- Gearhart of Donegal, Pa, community. All areas of the'Cola.” To Mr, and Mrs. Clarence broadcast indu stry-en- jjhoaix^aSTERS, NEGROES Thomp.son, his aunt and uncle, lertainment, news and the ^ he wrote: “I got your pre.sent behind^he-scenes people - are ‘ Advisory involved. „ n « a ^ .surprise, I needed a watch very “I ,Spv” brought the f j ^ s “"^Had. I had one but I lost it,” Negro costar in a series. Billjbrought up the subject of he * * ^ SR?Tv't?"Va;'‘m'oXrtSe^^^^^^^^^^ The thank-you, which arrived NBC-TV this fall, will offer ‘he resnonsibilitv in Thursday, was dated Dec. 27, first female Ne^ro series ®tar, ‘ ^ i9(;7 a handwritten postscript, IDiahann Carroll, in a situation | meanwhile has Ihought the letter was 'comedy. There w,U els. ^ ~ V « -sn t-' new western m the fall with ai Mt-Moni, Laundry Village S«l(-S»tvie« Coin Opnroleri 747 N. Perry St. AcrOM From Krogar Supaf Morket "HOWARD DELL is my PHARMACIST" Fred W Braden 262 Baldwin REPLACE OLD WINDOWS With Solid INSUUTED VINYL WINDOWS WEEDON'S 334-2597 alleged dLscrimination by advertisers and broadcasters staff. BELAFONTE IS HOST Harry Belafonte recently was guest host of the “Tonight” show for a week, and Sammy Davis Jr. has been the host this week. In addition, an interesting sidelight has been brought up in COLORTV REPAIRS Call Us For Jmmedialr Service! LIBERTY ELECTRONICS ...n.r.k.Ro 673-9760 SERVICE OPEN MONDAY ft FRIDAY EVENINGS TIL 9 P.M. COLOR • BLACK & WHITE ANTENNA INSTALLATIONS UHF • YHF COMBINATION • ROTORS Negro star, “The Outcasts. A trade paper, meanwhile,, . , • , reports that ABC-TV’s “Peyton m'"h'" i iirT ih.'"' Place” mav have its first Neeroi'^’"'**"® depiction of these Sy X auuimn. The report «lds that heart conducted hy the shows executive producerj Commis.sion got an okay from the network to J develop the concep and ; jsnow;^^^ w working out plots with his j America-East: “Content in 'fV is, and has always been under the direct control of the corporations who pay the bills: the networks, the advertising agencies and sponsors. All of us, the writers, the producers, the independent connection with ABC-TV’s new |packagers, are employees of game show, “Dream House,” in| these companies. Essentially we! ' Aiaf|iigiiiW|A which young couples competej write to order. We think to! | qWECi V for a top prize which is a order.” ^ $40,000 home. The sidelight'— — arises from the following situa-I o 6 8 oiT("^"iTtt^binnnnnnnnnnnnnnnrTinnfinnnnnnnnriririnnnrinnnro^ tion: • • “Dream House” promises to “ build its homes for winning contestants anywhere t h e y ^ want. What, it has been asked,! if a winning Negro asks for a! heme in an area that gives him! o trouble in trying to move in? I Would “Dream House,” in ef-i feet, the be a “blockbuster?” At any rate, the show promies to back its winners to the hilt — anywhere they want to build. ‘There was another trade! paper item this week from New York about the McCann-Erickson agency’s new musical director, also a Negro. Ac- RADiO & APPLIANCE 422 West Huron FE 4-56TT I Radio Programs— )) WXYZd 270) CKLW(800) WWJ(950) WCARQ130) WPON(1460) WJBKd 500) WHFI-FM(94^ CKLW, Mike Riven WJBK, News, Hank O'Nell WCAR, News, Ron Rose WXYZ, Newscooe WPON, News, Phone-In WHFI Don Bosco , »:30.:-WWJ, Today In Rtvlew WJR, Business Barometer »!4S-WWJ, 7:«*i-WCAR, WPON, News, Jonn irons WWJ, News, Lenten Sermon-ette WJBK, News, Tom Dean WJR, Ntws, Sports, Musle CKLW, Tom Shannon 7j1$-WWJ, Sports-Lina 71SB-WXYZ, Dava Lockhart *:«a-WHFI, Tom Colemai CKLW, AAark Richards WJR, r---- ----------- ____ ____, ___s. Sports U:]B-WJR, Music Till Dawn IXiM-WJBK, Nlghttlma _ WXYZ, News, Johnny Randall CKLW, Million Dollar Week-WCAR, News. Waynt Phillips SA1URDAV MurNINS <:0B-WJR, Waka-Up , Marc Avery Arizona CKLW, News, Weekend WXYZ, Martin < WJBK, Nev-WPON, Ne Weston WCAR. News, Bill Deltell «jJB-WWJ, Newt, Morrle Carlson , ^ 7!M—WJR, Newt, Cavalcad# WHFI, Gary Purece WPON, News, Bill King tiW-^WJR, News Sunr.yside t;M-WJR, Cavalcade 7:00-WWJ, News. Monitor WHFi; Jhn Zinter Newt, Jerry WCAR. Newt. Red A AVOID garnishment ______lit to the amount owed or number of creditors. Not a loan. Call or stop in. Debt Consultants of Pontiac, Inc. Tolephono 338-0333 •14 Pontiac Slate Bank Bld(. $tot« Lic«nB«d ond Bonded Open Sat. 9 to 12 Announcement James Hampton, of Hampton Electric Company, has joined forces with Cadillac TV of Detroit to give you new low prices on all Appliances. • RCA VICTOR 1968 PHILCO 21” COLOR TV *299** Plus Service • PNILGO • MOTOROLA • WESTIIMHOUSE • ZENITH • COLOR TV-STEREOS • REFRIGERATORS • FREEZERS • WASHERS • DRYERS • DISHWASHERS • RAHGES 1967 PHILCO 22” COHSOLE COLORTV |00 1 Yr. Labor and Parts 14441 Cadi&at TV Part of 825 W. Huron (Hampton Electric Bldg.) FE 4-2527 999 99 it 9999 9999 9 99999 09 9 A.UL9JUL9J,.9 SiSr Michigan Cum Laude Afamous alumnus invites you to look at todays university WWJ-TV, CHANNEL 4 WXYZ, News, Danny Taylor WJBK, News, Conrad Patrick SATURDAY AFTERNOON 1J:00-WWJ, News, Marty Me-Neeley WJR, News, Farm WXYZ, News I2:3»—WJR, Cavalcade 1:tB—WJR, News, Showcase 1:00—WPON, News Gary WXYZ, News, Dave Prince WJR, Metropolitan Opera 1:0C-WCAR, News, Ron WJBK, News, Hank O'Neil WHFI. Larry Baker WWJ, News, A l:IS-News, Show 8:30-9:30 PM Friday, March 29 1:30-2:30 PM Sunday, March 31 Visit today's university with football great, Tom Harmon, acting as your host and narrator. You’ll see students and teachers and hear what going to a larga university Is like. You'll visit classes from the Engineering School to the Medical School. It's sure to be an hour well spent for the old college graduate, the prospective college student and the interested citizen. It’s your chance to see, up close, what’s going on in a modern multiversity today. “Michigan Cum Laude." Don't miss it I Brought to you by: B The young-old bank BANK OF THE COMMONWEALTH MtmbN Ftdtul D.|K»it luurtw i D—12 1HE POXTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, MARCH 29, 1968 th anniversary KITE-FLYING TIME — Mother proves to be a real buddy for these two Birmingham boys. Helping them get ready for a favorite spring pastime is Mrs. Basil M. Briggs of ? Brookwood. Her sons are John (center), 6 and Mac., 9. Israeli Planes Hit Jordanian Artillery Posts TEL AVIV * — Israeli planes roared across the Jordan River today and swooped low to plaster Jordanian artillery and machine-gun emplacements _ along a four-mile front. Newsmen in the tense Beisan Valley in Jordan reported that the jet fighters penetrated several miles into Jordan to the Gilad Mountains. An Israeli army spokesman charged that the Jordflnians began firing machine gi|ns at Israeli settlements at 11:30 a.m. Israeli troops fired back, he said, and the Jordanians wheeled up artillery to bombard the sattlements of Gesher, Beit Yosef and Yardena. The Israelis replied with their own artillery. Fighting halted around noon but erupted again one half hour later. At this point Jsraeli planes were dispatched to silence the Jordanian guns, t h e spokesman said. He added there were no Israeli casualties. * * * Tension had filled the valley earlier in the day after four Israeli civilians were killed when their trailer, pulled by a tractor hit a mine in a banana grove in Massada, south of Lake Galilee. AMERICAN WOUNDED A fifth passenger, an American, was badly wounded, a spokesman said. The Beirut newspaper Al Jarida, which compared the situation today to what it was “on the eve of June 5,’’ published what it described as Israeli peace proposals rejected by the Arabs.. It said Israel proposed the following terms: • Israel and Jordan would conclude an economic and cultural agreement in exchange for Israeli withdrawal from the occupied west bank, but not Jerusalem. * '* * • The Sinai desert would become demilitarized and Israeli navigation could be permitted through the Suez Canal and the Straits of Tiran. • Israel would annex the entire Gaza Strip, formerly under Egyptian rule. * ★ ★ • Israeli forces would evacuate Syria’s Golan Heights but leave behind some troops in positions overlooking Israeli territory. A LITTLE HELP - His voice failing. Sen. Robert F. Kennedy pushes his campaign for the Democratic presidential nomination with some help from a bullhorn. Kennedy motored to a downtown Denver arena for an appearance after being treated for a throat ailment by his personal physician. Dr. James Gould, flown in from a skiing vacation at Aspen, 115 miles away. (Story, page A-2.) 2 Setbacks Dealt to Ill-Starred Fill WASHINGTIN Kh - The ill-starred Fill has suffered major setbacks on two fronts — a powerful congressional committee has denied further funds for building a Navy model of the swing-wing jet and one of the first Air Force models to see service in Vietnam is reported mmmmmmimm In Today's Press Chemical Mqce (Squirted reporter finds it effective, humane — PAGE B-14. I Psychiafric Facility Children’s unit is completed at Pontiac State Hospital — PAGE D-10. Area News \ Seven communities to vote Monday - PAGE A-4. Area News ................ A-4 Astrology ............... C-10 Bridge .................. C-10 Comics .................. C-10 Editorials ............... A-6 High School D-1 Farm and Garden ... B-14, B-15 Lenten Series .............A-9 < Markets .................... C-9 Obituaries ......... .. B-10 5 Sports -.......... C-1—C-4 ^ Theaters .......... .. C-6, C-7 i TV-Radio Programs ......... D-11 t Wilson, Earl .............. D-10 * Women’s Pages .... B-1—B-5 The Senate Armed Services Committee voted 11 to 2 yesterday to exclude from the defense budget $460 million that had been requested for research and development on the FlllB, the Navy version. Meanwhile, an FlllA — the Air Force version of what is basically the same plane — has been reported shot down over North Vietnam. The North Vietnamese reported today the plane was shot down in Ha Tinh Province, some 100 miles above the Demilitarized Zone. U.^. officials are concerned the wreckage, if the North Vietnamese claim is true, may yield valuable secrets. Employes Strike at Holly Schools Heavy student absenteeism was the first immediate result as members of Local 92 of the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employes (AFSCME) began an apparent strike today in the Holly School district. Supt. of Schools Russell Haddon said school would continue despite the stoppage, which involves about 60 bus drivers, cooks and custodians. However, at 10 a.m. Haddon said only about 40 per cent of the student body was present for classes at Holly High School. “I don’t know how the percentage is at the elementary schools,’’ Haddon commented, adding, “It’s up to the parents to get their children to school and get them home.” Haddon said the employes called in and said they had been asked by their union not to report. The superintendent said negotiations with the union had been going on since last fall and were in the process of mediation when the stoppage occurred without warning. The union’s contract expired Nov. 1. STATE MEDIATOR Haddon said this morning he was attempting to contact state mediator Leonard Bennett to arrange a meeting with representatives of the imion. “We had a meeting yesterday, and we submitted a proposal, but they decided not to accept it,” he sgid. The Weather U.S. WMthtr Buruftu Forecast (OetoM» Page 2) THE PRESS A^OL. 12(! — \’(). 4..) ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ Memphis Patrolled Following Violence Go Fly a Kite, Forecaster Says; but Heed Safety “Go Fly a Kite,” chuckled U.S. Weather Bureau experts, as today’s kite-flier delight forecast of windy, warm and partly sunny was issued. Gamboling youngsters have been warned by the city s public utility companies to heed safety rules by avoiding flying their kites in rainy weather or near any kind of electrical lines or antennae. Winds southwesterly at 15 to 28 miles per hour will become west to northwest this afternoon and diminish slowly tonight. Fair and cooler weather will continue tomorrow, with milder temperatures and possible showers due Sunday. Precipitation percentage probablities are; today, 10; tonight, 5; and tomorrow, 10. In downtown Pontiac the lowest mercury reading before 8 a.m. was 57. The temperature at 1 p m. was near 68 degrees. MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP) — Troop-protected fire trucks and stringent police patrols kept guard on Memphis today, but fires flickered sporadically in the wreckage left by a riot which claimed one life. * ★ ★ The violence began on historic Beale. Street yesterday morning when a march by 6,000 Negroes led by Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. in support of striking garbage collectors turned into a riot and continued through the day and night despite a tightly enforced curfew. Another possible confrontation between marchers and police was expected today with Negro leaders saying they would stage another march — this one limited to sidewalks like those held almost daily since the city’s sanitation workers struck Feb. 12. Only police, state trooper and National Guard vehicles moved on the major streets during the night, but the alleys and back streets were alive with youths darting forth to set fires and stone fire trucks. At midnight, a fire department spokesman said 148 fire alarms had been turned in in the downtown area. FEED MILL LEVELED The worst fire was in a south Memphis Negro neighborhood where a large feed mill was leveled. Fire Chief E. A. Hamilton declined to link the blaze Picture, Page A-2 definitely with the other fires, but vandalism had been reported in the area. National Guardsmen, riding on the fire trucks, prevented serious interference, however, and firefighters had most of the blazes out in short order. A more serious threat was a sniping incident when five shots were fired at police officers stationed at the intersection of Beale Street and Hernado Avenue, the day’s main trouble spot. * * * Policemen put . on bulletproof vests, and National Guardsmen with sniperscopes moved into the areas. Police elected not to press the search for the .sniper, and no further shots were reported. ‘SPLINTER GROUP’ Yesterday’s march began as a peaceful demonstration, and both its leaders and police authorities said the violence was the work of a splinter group of Negro youths. Frank Holloman, Memphis police director, said the trouble started when 2(MI youths separated from the main group and wipt fn^^i^ili^eaking and looting binge. Police retaliated with clubs and riot gas. In the struggle that followed and continued through the night, a 16-year-old Negro, LArry Payne, was shot to death, more than 150 arrests were made, and at least 50 persons were injured — including five shot and one stabbed. The stabbing victim was an unidentified city bus driver, leading 4he Memphis transit authority to halt all bus service. Constant Watch Kept I' County Roads Protected CXrC Moy Seek Fund Injunction Oakland Community College may seek an injunction to stop all of Michigan’s 28 community colleges from gettin any money under a federal act for building construction. Mitchell Tendler, director of community relations, tpld (^C’s Board of Trustees last night that the college has appealed the procedure of the state in dispersing funds of the Higher Educaton Act of 1963. The board authorized its attorney to take necessary legal action—an injunction—if the funds are dispersed to other community colleges before OGC’s appeal is heard. OCC received $750,000 for its Auburn Hills technical learning laboratory on an Related Stories, Pages A-2, A-3 applicaton submitted by Sept. 15, according to to Tendler. Some colleges that applied didn’t receive any funds. **■■•*• A state law says that additional funds may be granted for other projects on other applications submitted by Jan. 31, Tendler explained. OCC turned in andther applicaton for these funds. Then the federal government came along with a bulletin stating that projects not funded in the September applications would get top priority for the January funding. Tendler said this is contrary to state procedure and funds projects regardless O'! need and gives more money to some schools Who had submitted more than one project application in the fall. “This is a capricious administrative decision whidh does not allow us to plan ahead,” remarked OCC president Dr, John E. Tirrell. * * .. * The community relations directdr also lashed out at the State Senate’s capital outlay appropriations bill for only providing a maximum of $750,000 for each college no matter how many students it serves or whether it is located in urban or rural areas! An original Senate bill followinig Gov, Romney’s recommendations proposed $1.2 million for OCC but then a substitute Senate bill now on the floor cut it back to $750,000 to comply with its arbitrary limits, according to Tendler. He claimed the Legislature is holding back money for Wayne Community College which may come into existence. By JIM LONG While it’s no secret that many Oakland County roads leave something to be desired, it is not generally known that a constant effort is made to protect them from damage. This job of preserving the 2,350 miles of road under the jurisdiction of the Oakland County Road Commission is the responsibility of the weighmaster’s office in the Department of Permits and Special Uses. Daily three members of the divisim patrol the county in a small van and pickup trucks equipped with portable scales in search of overloaded and oversized vehicles that can ruin a road. At this time of year, when weight restrictions are placed on certain roads because of the spring thaw, the divikion headed by Peter Waisanen, steps up its campaign against violators. LAW OFFICERS Since the weighmaster and his staff are, under law, authorized law. enforcement officers, one of their duties is to issue traffic tickets to offenders. Their concern during this critical season is evident in the number of tickets issued during the weight limitation period, about 10 a week, compared to three at normal times. The Michigan Vehicle Code establishes the fines for a violation and is phased on a graduated scale from two to 10 cents for each pound in excess of the limits. ★ * * Fines levied by a justice of the peace or a municipal judge against a violator go to the state library fund, as do all fines from state law traffic violations. Oakland County , receives no direct benefit from the fines, though court costs are tunneled back to the county to pay the fees of justices, witnesses and jurors and to cover the costs of court materials and supplies.N \ -k-k: Since tickets written on state law cases are issued by a number of policing agencies in the county, and no bookkeeping distinction is made by the Justice of the Peace Auditors, it is impossible to determine how much revenue the state realizes from the weighmasters’ operation. Not all vehicles with overloads are subject to tickets, since special (Continued on Page A-2, Col. 2) Cars Plow Through Drain Water Backed Up On Dixie Near Walton Nothing Is Done About Flooded Street By^DBLUNDEN Nothing was done y^sterdliy about the drain that goes under Dixie Highway south of Walton Boulevard in Waterford Township, and cars and trucks plowed slowly through about a foot of water covering the state highway at that point. Nothing is being done about it today, and it appears nothing will be done about it tomorrow—in spite of threats by neighboring residents. It seems the township is waiting for the County Drain Commission to act and vice versa. Kenneth Squires, Waterford Township ^tilities manager, said; “Some one i^.^ going to get killed at that spot.” He pointed out the danger of a driver hitting the water without noticing the warning “There’s not much the township can do because it’s a legally established county drain district.” Squires said. NO AUTHORIZATION David Synder, assistant fchief engineer for the Drain Commission, saidr “We can’t spend any money on it, because it wouldn’t be authorized.” It’s up to the township, he contended. The water problem is being caused by the apparent collapse along the west s|^ of the street of the Drayton Plains Extension Drain. Residents of the area can petition the township to form a drainage district, but this is bound to be expensive and would take considerable time. ★ ★ ★ Two businesses along the west side of the street have taken matters into their own hands. 'They built a dam to keep the water away from their doors. POSSIBLE LAWSUIT r Neighbors say they are studying a possible lawsuit as soon as they decide who to sue. Luckily the big rains of spring have not hit—yet. T*(j)NTIAC\ MICHIGAN. MHI)A^ . MAIU II ->it. Ii> Secret Meetings Held Between U.S., N. Viet SAUiOX tlTh AmeririUi Kml>Hss> offirials have met secrell) with North Viefnanieso government representatives According to the .sources, t h e Americans approachc'd the North Vietnamese. They asked (or discussions to be he way for ■hanges, the during (lie pa: tianc. I.aos. ai today of three captured hy the T S. Nav\ in .lnl\ 196(i. It was not known if the prisoners were the only topic of conxersation between the American and North N'ietnamese representatives. ■espon.se ; on Keb. 16 of iliree American airmen shot down and captured over the Communist country. The siMckesmen said the U .S. government liopcs the exchange will lead to further releases on both sides But the diplomatic .sources said the U.S. government was hoping the talks in neighboring Kaos would lead to more discussions on other matters. Accortfing to American officials in Washington. Hanoi has brushed off more than three dozen U.S, government bids for talks to end the war in Vietnam. * ★ * Diplomatic sources in Europe last week said President Ho Chi Minh of North Vietnam wanted nothing to do with such talks at least until after the Atnerican presidential election i n November. Tax-Spending Cut Bobby Engulfed by Enthusiastic Nears Senate Vote Indiana Backers ^ WASHINGTON - The Senate heads toward a final vote on a three-point taxes and .spending - cut bill after rejecting a section to freeze, federal public works projects It also reversed itself yesterday and voted to go along with the Treasury Department's ruling to end tax exemptions on industrial development bonds, effective .Ian. I. After five days of debate, the Senate was due to vote today on the over-all bill, which xvould extend auto and t2l)elepbone excise taxes at current rates, apply a 10 per cent surcharge to income taxes and cut federal spending by about $6 billioa. Sen. John J. Williams. H-l)el., who cosponsored the surcharge - spending cut amendment, .said demociats have demonstrated they aren’t serious about spending reductions which affect public works projects back home. ★ * * He told a newsman this is making some Republicans reonnsider whether they will support the surcharge proposal, whioh President John.son wants. Heart Switch The Senate voted 42 to 37 lo eliminate from the package bill the freeze on public works projects. .Supporting the move were 3 8 Democrats and 4 Republicans; opposed were 12 Democrats and 25 Republicans, Son. Russell B. l.ong, D-La., floor ninnager for the excise-lax bill, oppo.ses Ihe package plan but said the vote on public works projects might make it harder to beat the rest of Williams’ proposal. * * ★ He said if Ihe public works freeze had remained in, .several senators would have opposed the package because it would have shelved big projects in their slates. The auto and telephone exci.ses which would l)e extended at present rales by the bill will drop automatically at midnight Sunday. But the Internal Hevenue Service said it will cohtiiuie to collect them at the higher rales since it was virtually certain Congress would extend them retroactively. Senate and House leaders have tentatively arranged a conference on Ihe legislalion for Monday. INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. 'J-i - A Veiling, largely youthful crowd nearly mobbed Sen. Robert F, Kennedy at the Indiana Capitol la.sl night as he made the state’s May 7 Democratic presidential primary a three-way race. Kennedy, his wife. Ethel, and their daughter, Kathleen, 16, had to push their way through enthusiastic supporters jamming Ihe lawn and steps. In the office suite of Secretary of State Edgar D. Whitcomb, a Republican candidate for governor, Kennedy submitted the required petitions signed by more than 50(1 registered voters in each of Indiana’s II congressional districts. Sen. Eugene J. McCarthy, D-Minn., and Gov. Roger D. Branigrn were entered by supporters earlier yesterday without being present. Branigin, who is winding up a Florida vacation, is running as a stand in for President .John.son. * ★ * State Police Capt. Robert Konkle estimated the crowd at 3,000, including 400 to 500 inside the building. They broke Itirough roped-off step and sidewalk .sections as he approached. in U.S. Debated Constant Effort Is Made to Protect County Roads STANFORD, Calif. (CPU - Two men. one with serious heart trouble and the other xvilh irreversible brain damage, lay in (he ho.spital today while doctors debated whether to perform a heart transplant operation. Palo Alto-Stanford Hospital said the two were in Ihe cardiac section (or studies. Neither man was identified. Dr. Norman E. .Shumway. who performed the world’s third heart transplant operation .Ian. 6 on Mike Kasperak, would head the medical team. Kasperak, 54, a retired steelvxorker, died 15 days later. (Continuerl From'Page Onet permission can be granted lo allow them lo traV'cl specified rouies during most of NO permits . No overweight permits are issued To make sure that truckers know their obligations, Ihe Road Commission this year distributed some 4,000 maps of the county showing the routes -that can be followed with varying weights. The restrictions require that loads be reduced 25 per cent on concrete pavement and at least .35 per cent on gravel and asphalt surfaces. Limits have been reduced two-fhirds on a number of local sion roads because of their poor The Weather Full c.s. PONTIAC AND VICINITY - Pai to 72. Fair and cooler tniiiglil. lows 38 westerly 15 to 28 miles per hour bei diminishing sloxxly tonight. Sunday oi tation probability percentages: 10, IcKlax; 5, t Bureau Report ’ sunny, windy and warm today. Highs 65 44. Saturday, fair and cooler. Winds south-ling west to northwest this afternoon and chance of showers. Precipi- : and 10. Saturday. u.,1 ig truckers that weight IS are in effect are posted on leading inlo Oakland County. * ★ ★ Failure to comply can, in .some cases, mean a considerable loss of time for truckers since they can be ordered to remove part of their load on the spot for transfer to another carrier. COOPERATION EXCELLENT David W. Hasse, director of the Department of Permits and Special Uses since its reorganization to include the VVeighmaster division last year, said that the cooperation of trucking firms with the road commission is excellent. Plans are being made to liberalize the issuance of permits so that truckers can avoid delays, he said. The department receives about 500 calls a week asking for authorization to travel certain routes. In acTdition to the county weighmasler, the slate has several men checking large trucks on state highways in the area. A few cities, including Birmingham, Troy and Southfield, handle problems within their juri.sdiction. NAllONAL WEATHER - f areas ~ in the Ohio Valley area, in southci west, stretching inland and turning lo rain cooler ui the Ohio Valley and along the Atlari It are forecast lor widelx separated n 'I'exas and m ihc Pacific North-over most of Muniana. It will be ic Coast. The hosf comment : I declined early today lo his condition. His office lay that the latest fall me hip Dirksen broke last I X rays showi^ no new LOOTERS ON THE RUN - Negroes who broke away from a civil rights march in Memphis, Tenn., yesterday run out as the marchers neared the downtown section where a with merchandise from a store they looted. Violence broke rally was scheduled. Business Director Is Named by OCC A deadlock over the hiring of an executive director of business services by the Oakland Community College Board of Trustees was erased last night when one trustee changed his vote. OCC President Dr. John E. Tirrell recommended the appointment o f Woldemar H. Nikkei, chief business officer of Macomb Community College, with a three-year contract at an annual salary of $23,000. The appointment is effective May 1. The board recently created the position, as well as executive directors of educational services, community services and research, planning and information systems. It is part of an administrative reorganization, since the college’s original three vice presidents have left or. will leave at the end of this school year. The board was deadlocked 3-3 on the appointment before going inlo a midnight executive session. TYNDALL SWITCHES Trustee Ralph H. Tyndall changed his no vote to yes after the recess, making the vote 4-2. Trustees Lila R. Johnson, Gordon C-Henderson and George R. Mosher voted to hire Nikkei. The board allowed the sealed vote of Mosher, who is in Peru, to be counted. Opposing the appointment were David W. Hackett and Blarl M. Anderson. “We have to give our present staff a chance at these promotions,” Ander^n said. "We have the ability for these jobs here in the college.” Tyndall indicated that he was at first opposed to Nikkei’s proposed salary. SALARIES SET The college has established that the salary for the executive directors will be $19,000 to $23,000. Current staff members Walter J. B'lghtmaster and S. James Manilla will become executive directors of community services and educational services respectively in July at a beginning salary of $19,000 with yearly raises of $1,000. Tirrell said Nikkei’s OCC salary is less than $1,000 a raise over his salary at Macomb. 1 Nixon Lashes Kennedy, LBJ Bids as Raucous MILWAUKEE, Wis. (AP) — Richard M. Nixon has accused Se. Robert F. Kennedy and President Johnson of raucous, irresponsible campaigning. Bur he had a kind word for Sen. Eugene J. McCarthy, the on-the-scene Deemorat who could knife into his Republican vote in Wisconsin’s wide-open presidential primary. In the balloting Tuesday, a voter can choose the ballot of either party. Nixom men are qpneerned lest the lack of a real contest in the Republican primary lead vast numbers of normally GOP voters to switch and cast Democratic ballots. While he campaigned in Wisconsin, Nixon talked nationally, in a recorded radio address which criticized the campaign style of both Kennedy and Johnson, “Sen. Kennedy accused his fellow Democrat, President Johnson, of calling upon the darker impulses of the American spirit,” the former vice president said. “The President and his supporters too often respond in kind by savage attacks on the motives of his critics.” MAKING CONTACT ^ Former Vice President Richard M. Nixon shakes a hand, one of thousands he grabs daily, as he campaigns in the Republican presidential primary in Wisconsin. This handshake was at a Milwaukee advertisers' dinner last night. Clashes in Panama PANAMA CITY (UPD - Panamanian national guardsmen today clashed with bands of youths who roved the capital city's streets and stoned homes of officials supporting President Marco A. Robles. • ' Dirksen Hurt in Fall W.ASHINGTON 'ifi — Sen. Everett .M, Dirksen, ’R-III., is on the injured list again. The •72-year-old Senate Republican leader fell Wednesday night while changing a ceiling light bulk at his home and was admitted to Walter Reed Hospital. He has been in and out of Waiter Reed several times in recent years. Started by Trash Blazes Rash of Grass Fires Hits Area * Flames froqi uncontrolled ttash fires, whipped by winds with gusts up to 45 miles per hour, caused a rash of fires yesterday in southeastern Michigan. Leon Guzinski, a State Conservation Department forest fire supervisor with offices in Pontiac, blamed dry vegetation and carelessness as the causes. More than 300 acres were burned off in Highland Township yesterday, according to Fire Chief Asa Smith. Rochester and Avon Township firemen answered eight such calls in their areas, and Independence Township firemen fought four grass blazes. The Brighton area was reported as being severely hit by fires. ★ * ★ Guzinski advises trash burners to stay near their fires and to obtain local burning permits from fire departments if they live outside a city or village. Birmingham Area Vote Near on 14-Mill School Issue BLOOMFIELD HILLS - Residents of this school' district wilPgo to the pools Monday in a special election to vote on a request for 14 mills for five years in additional operating funds. A combination of steadily increasing-enrollment and rising costs has caused the board of education to make the request, according to school officials. Added pay for teachers, while a factor, is not the principal one in the board’s decision, Trustee Donald Hyde said. Nearly half of the $2,362,000 which the propoed millage hike would procuce, Hyde noted, is allotted for 122 new instructional positions. For that purpose 6.9 millsor $1,136,000, will be used he said ★ * ★ The reason for this, Hyde continued, is the district’s rapid growth. Prom approximately 2,500 students at the begin-ning of the 1957-58 sc hool year, enrollment has climbed to 8,7^ this year. A total of 10 mills, about 71 per cent of the hike proposed, will be used to pay for all costs related to staffing, maintenance, and service for new classrooms, according to Hyde. Besides the 6.9 mills for teachers, the total incudes $172,000, or 1 mill, for additional student materials; $246,000, or 1.5 mills, for 48 noninstructional posi-tion|; and $102,000, or .6 of a mill, for added buses and utilities. Better pay for teachers accounts for $529,000, or 3.2 mills; of the total. All other increases amount to $177,000. ★ ★ ’s The requested 14-mill boost would cost the owner of a home assessed at $40,000 market value $280 a year in additional taxes; for a $50,000 home the yearly increase would be $350; and for a $60,000 home, it would be $420. 'The district currently ranks 16th in Oakland County with an overall operating millage of 22.10, plus 7.26 for debt retirement. Absentee Ballots Available in City Persons wishing to cast absentee ballots in the city’s general election April 15 can now pick up the ballots, City Clerk Olga Barkeley said today. Registered voters who will be out of the city during the election, those physically disabled and voters over 70 are eligible to use absentee ballots, she said. Application forms are available at the city clerk’s office. Persons who write in asking for the ballots must sign the requests, Mrs. Barkeley said. Absentee ballots will be available until 2 p.m. April 13. ★ ★ Voters will elect seven city commissioners.* one from each of the seven voting districts, in the election. New Gold Process Told WASHINGTON (UPI) - The Interior Department has discovered a new process which, if it works out, may double or quadruple potential gold reserves in the United States. J. Cordell Moore, Assistant Secretary of the Interior for Mineral Resources, said yesterday the new process may permit gold to be freed from ores con-. taining carbon, hertofore impossible on a commercial basis. ^ . Pontiac PrtJi Photo Stray Dog Visits With A New Friend, Laurel Toby Family Is Hunting for the Owners of Whaf's-lfs-Name (a Stray Dog) By BETTY ANN SCHULTZ WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP -Will the owner of Tammy (King? Ripper? Duke? (please come forward? It’s been two months since that the big, friendly collie has been making the rounds of homes in Sylvan Manor between Orchard Lake and Middle Belt roads. The stray has been fed and provided lodging often by several families. Yesterday, Mrs. Charles D. Toby, 2384 St. Joseph took the dog in for $3 worth of rabies shots and a |1 license. She plans to keep the dog temporarily and requests anyone believing they lost it to call her or Mr and Mrs. William FrankenField, 2425 St. Joseph. 8 WEEKS AGO Tammy — as the dog is known to one of the Toby’s daughters. Laurel, 5 — ar- Avondale School Study Group Picks Chairman, Other Officers The newly organized 25-member Av«i-dale Citizens School Study Committee has elected Sam R. Sheehy, 3450 Greenwood, AvonTownship, as chairman. Robert Loedwyks of 6832 Killamey, Troy, is vice chairman, and Mrs. William M. Bergin, 1664 Ledbury, Bloomfield Hills, is secretary. Sheehy described the group as being “concealed citizens intent upon providing quality education to the children of Avondale at a cost the local taxpayer can afford.” The committee was named at a recent board of education meeting from a list of people who had volunteered to serve on a factfinding group. 'Their decisions regarding the recent failure of a 12.7-mill election and the future course of the district will be made On Local Officials, Ballot Issues 7 Communities to Vote Monday Voters in seven area communities will go to the polls Monday to elect local officials and, in some cases, vote on ballot propositions. * ★ * * Issues will be on the ballot in Birmingham, Bloomfield Hills and Lapeer. In Birmingham, the city’s fair-housing ordinance, passed Nov. 29 by the City Commission and later suspended by public petitions, will be subjuect to a public referendum. Bloomfield Hills voters will be asked to approve the installation of a municipal water system. By charter, the proposal requires a two-thirds majority. In Lapeer, a city charter amendment to allow the establishment of a municipal court is scheduled for a vote. ★ ★ * Candidates and the offices they are seeking are: Lapeer Two three-yeat City Commission terms are being sought here. Candidates are incumbents John W. Manner, 1150 Jefferson, and John Wadsworth, 813 Lincoln, and challenger Lester E. Lyman, 834 Huron. Birmingham Six candidates have filed here for two vacancies on the City Commission. 'They are Incumbents Ruth B. McNamee, 1271 Lakesdie, and Carl F. Ingraham, 940 Harmon, and challengers 280 Cranbrook. George R. Lyon, 511 Wallace; James D. Schmidt, 691 Pilgrim; William M. Hef-Dodd, 2462 Derby. cumbent Jane R. Cameron, 710 Suffield, and Sidney W. Smith Jr., 210 Abbey. Bloomfield Hills Two contests will be decided in the municipal electio here. Three candidates h avefiled for two three-year terms on the City Commission. Edward H. Lerchen, 180 Lowell, will join incumbents Robert A. Fry, 1255 Trowbridgel abd Walter W. Fisher, 149 Marblehead, on the ballot. A contest also looms for constable, where Lawrence M. Finn, 719 Westview, will oppose incumbeM Virginia H. Craig, 9iin rrnnhrnnk ' Troy Two candidates have filed for (wo library board posts. Running will be in- The mayoralty will be sought by two candidates, Jule R. Famularo, 3461 Alpine, and Glen H. Houghten, 6359 THE PONTIAC PRESS FRIDAY, MARCH 29, 1968 A—4 haHlews Glacier Gets Blame for Water Problems rived on a stormy, sleety night about eight weeks ago, recalled Mrs. Toby. The dog had no collar or tags, added Mrs. Toby. Since then, the stray has wandered in and out of the neighborhood. The dog is always clean and gentle with children. * * ★ Inquiries have been made to area animal shelters to check if someone has reported a lost collie. An Oakland County Animal Shelter emplbye told Mrs. Toby that she has ownership of the dog because she provided the rabies shot and has put an ad in the paper seeking the owner. ★ ★ ★ “We don’t want the dog, though,” said Mrs. Toby. If the owner doesn’t show up in a week, she said she will try to find a home for the dog. BLOOMFIELD HILLS — If residents of this city have water problems, they can blame the glacier, according to City Manager Elmer Kephart. During the last ice age, thousands of years ago, Kephart said, the ice covered this area. When it retreated, it left a hodgepodge of different geological structures. “When they put in a sewer system,” the city manager recalled, “ftey would get sand in some places, and then not 20 feet away they would run into stone and diatomaceous (silica and quartz) rock. We have one sewer over in Trowbridge Farms that has 42 feet of piling holding it up.” The resulting problems with wells and water supply have led some residents to seek the establishment of a municipal water system, to be connected with the Detroit metropolitan system. ★ * ★ Monday, the water question will be on the ballot for the fourth time in three years. Since the city charted demands a two-thirds majority for approval of a water system, the proposition has failed $480,000 Bond Issue Novi School Election Monday known April 29, according to a board directive. “The committee shows fair geographical representation and an excellent spriti of cooperation and purpose has existed,” reported Sheehy. ' “I only hope that in the days immediately ahead, all citizens will channel their concerns to the members of the committee and refrain from any further dissent until the committee has completed its findings,” Sheehy said. the chairman reported that two subcommittees, one chaired by Robert Hurley, 1521 Ledbury, Bloomfield Hills, and the second by Loedvryks will attempt to discern the ability of the area to finance education and the practices now used by the administration in regard to budget, curriculum and personnel. NOVI — Voters of the Novi Community School District will decide Monday whether to sell 8480,000 in bonds for the purpose of building an additicm to Orchard Hills Elementary School, 41900 Quince, and improving Novi Elementary School, 26350 Novi. ★ * * A millage increase to finance the bond issue appears unnecessary, according to Schools Supt. Thomas Dale. Electors of die district may vote between 7 a.m. and 8 p.m. at the Novi Community Building, 23360 Novi, according to sdiool district officials. ¥ * * Proposed at Orchard Hills School is the constructing and equipping of eight classrooms — six for grades 5 and 6 and two for special education students. Plans also call for tapping into the local sanitary sewer system und improving the site. NOVI SCHOOL Contemplated at Novi School, is site improvement and renovation of the older part of the building. Completion is scheduled for fall of 1969. _________ I Result Is Same Community Dinner Set I jn Novi Recount OXFORD TOWNSHIP - The Community Associaton will serve a Swiss steak dinner Wednesday at 5:30 p.m. at the Thomas Community Hall, 487 First. Farmington School Millage Bid This Year Appears Necessary FARMINGTON — “It appears that a millage request will be necessa^ sometime this spring or summer,” said Farmington Schools Supt. Roderick Smith. No decision on this has yet been made. Smith reported. But the Imard of education has tentatively aimroved next year’s AAillage Vote Possibility Gets Huron Valley Nod It was after midnight this morning when the Huron Valley Board of Education worked its way around to giving a decisive nod to the possibility of a millage election this June. A citizens committee will be m-ganized for the possiUe vote June 10, all board members agreed. The board will meet Monday to launch the cmnmittee. It also expects to hear a report from Schools Supt. Truman Owens on how to proceed in preparing the ballot proposal. Board disagreement came on a vote calling for deficit spending in the 1968-69 school year. The motion did pass. It allows a tentative 8159,000 deficit. ★ ★ ★ The preliminary budget expenditures were estimated at 84,183,000. Revenues . are anticipated at ^,023,800, according toOwens. The motion lor deficit spending passed with five yes votes from Carlos C. Trask, Harry Porter, Mrs. Jeanie Smith, Lyle TVler and Cloyd Feigley and two no votes from Dr. Norman Krieger and hiring new and rehiring present person-Board President Arthur Burklund. nel. Buridund explained that he had been In Florida when several budget meetings were held in die past three weeks. “It’s difficult to pick a deficit figure without knowing tihe other figures relating to it.” Dr. Krieger said that a deficit budget this year may lead to even larger deficits in the future. ★ A * The other board members indicated that they preferred trying to head off the deficit by a vote on added millage and not jeopardize ttlucational programs. FORCED TO DECISION The issue of deficit financing was forced to a decision by the administrative staff. “We cannot wait any longer for a decision on this,” said Supt. Owens. Top staff members pointed out that they needed to know immediately how much money they would be allowed in When President Burklund said the board would study the situation and CMne back with suggestions, Owens immediately suggested a proposed deficit figure of 8200,000. ★ ★ ★ In a further move to get action, Owens pared the deficit 892,000 to the 8159,000 figure. Of this, the board recently approved the expenditure of 8117,000 for additional staff for the 1968-69 school year. Owens’ would trim: the administrative intern program, a cafeteria subsidy, paving of thp high school parking lot, high school roof improvements, half a clerical position; reductions in the summer education and in-service programs, the custodial staff and capital outlays. The superintendent assured that this deficit is manageable. However, he and Burklund indicated that the district would have an increased deficit after employe negotiations. . 1/ budget which requires an addition of 7.6 mills to balance it. This doesn’t mean, however, that a millage request would be for 7.6 mills. These mills are added to the proposed budget as a matter of procedure in blancing it now, explained Smith. Ilie proposed budget comes t o 810,903,482. Last year’s budget was 89,351,000. The tentative budget has been sent to the Oakland County Allocation Board. Smith said he expects that changes will be made before the budget is final. DEPENDENT FACTORS Final figures, according to Smith, depend (»i: final valuation of district property, the state aid formula not yet determined by the legislature, and settlements of contracts with school employe bargaining units. District voters defeated a S-mill tax proposal last November. On the same ballot they approved a 89-miSioir<’bond issue. A petition from 15 Kimberly ] subdivision families objecting to a change in high school attendance lines was also handed to the staff for study at a recent board meeting. The change involved 65 students vrtio would start high school at Farmin^on instead of North Farmington high school next fall, said Smith. PAROCHIAL REQUEST A request from Our Lady of Sorrows High School to enroll students in Farmington High School courses on a part-time basis was also assigned to the staff for study. The request is to have 50 students attend art, German, Spanish and industrial arts courses starting this Fall, said Supt. ^ NOVI — A recount yesterday of f the ballots in the March 11 general election resulted in no change. J. Philip Anderson, who was Village Council president but lost his bid fw reelectimi, 242-241, requested the recount. The candidate with the winning ^ vote was William L. Dney, who I has begun a two-year term. The two otho- winning candidates in the field of 13 received four-year terms; having polled more votes than Duey. ★ ★ ★ Total cost of the recount is about I 860 — 820 for each of the three I members of the Oakland County | I Board of Canvassers present yes- l| ^ terdayi | I -k -k if ^ fe I The cost to Anderson is 85 for | I each of the village’s precincts, a i I 810 total, reported ^s. Mabel | I Childs, county election clerk. I Herbmoor. Four candidates are running for two three-year city commission seats. They are Sherwood Sahver, 345 W. Square Lake; Hilbert R. Hirschfield, 2680 Bretr by; Carlos W. Lynch, 454 Beldale; and Peter A. Taucher, 3791 Woodman, Walled Lake Five residents are running for three City Council seats here. They a.'-e John E. Prieskorn, ,1111, Asher; William T. Roberts, 584 E. Walled Lake; and incumbents Frank E. Hamilton, 1393 Nolta; Robert F .\ Freeman, 1432 S, Commerce; and John E. Nail, 1346 Decker. Unopposed in his bid for reelection as mayor is Wendel G. Kellogg Jr., 1620 Beverly. All terms are for four years. The single voting place in the band room of Walled Lake Junior High School, 615 N. Pontiac Trail. W/xom three times despite getting better than 50 per cent of the vote. The last time residents voted, in April 1967, 62 per cent were in favor. NO COST FIGURES No definite cost figures are available for the proposed system, Kephart said, lior has the commission decided what method of financing to use. A 1965 estimate for the entire system was 82,231,(MM), he said, adding, “The latest word we^ve had is that the cost index has gone up 11 per cent since then.” The total cost, however, would depend on the means of financing, Kephart noted. If the system were paid for with 30-year bonds, he explained, the cost would be approximately twice as much, including interest. Another problem which would confront the city if the syst^ were installed would be what to do about two subdivisions, Whitehall and Bloomfield Sites, both of which have community wells and water systems. No determination has yet been made as to what extent, if any, the two areas would share in the cost of a citywide distribution network. The mayoralty is being contested by incumbent Wesley E. McAtee, 3031 W. Maple, and Frank Jadzinaki, 2945 Maganser, former city Oolice chief. This post carries a two-year term. * * ,* Seeking three four-year terms on council are six candidates. They are Charles S. McCall, 3883 W. Maple; Mrs. Mary Parvu, 3645 W. Maple; Mrs. Kathryn L. Miner, 30290 Beck; Neil L. Taylor, 2901 aganser; and incumbents Gunnar E. Mettala, 2752 Loon Lake; and Oscar B. Simmons Fr , 2028 Hazel. Polls are at the City Hall, 49045 W. Pontiac Trail. Keego Harbor 'Two men are vying for the three-year City Council term here. Incumbent mayor Fred Milliron Fr. of 2433 Hester is opposed by Vernon B. Edward of 1764 Sylvan Glen, the city’s representative to the county board of supervisors. ★ ★ ★ , Running for the one-year council term expiring April 14, 1969 are Roscoe McGehee, former planning commission chairman, of 2063 Wiilow Beach, and Joseph Weichsel of 1660 Beechmont, whose recent appointment to council ex- Stanley Lubow, 1933 Cass Lake, runs unopfMsed for the two-year constable term. ★ ★ * Polls are open at 7 a.m. at the City Hall, 2025 Beechmont. State Will Open Bids on Farmington Paving FARMINGTON TOWNSHIP - Bids will be opened Wednesday for the construction of nearly a mile of paving, curb and gutter on Farmington Road, south of 1-96, the State Highway Commission ha^ announce ★ ★ ★ The estimated cost of the work is 8440,000 with completion scheduled for Oct. 15. ★ *. k The Farmington paving is one of 20 highway construction and improvement projects to be bid on next week. 'They are expected to cost 818.8 million. Consumers Franchise Vote Monday in Rose ROSE TOWNSHIP - A franchise election for Consumers Power Co. will take place here Monday. k k k Approval will not affect customers of other power companies. Consumer spokesmen emphasized, but will grant the utility company a nonexclusive irrevocable 30-year franchise to do business in the township. independence Mari Mental Health Aide Is Named Joseph Minjoe of 6292 Peach. Independence Township, has been named assistant administratve officer for the Oakland County Community Mental Health Services Board. y * * .'The position pays 811,200 yearly. 'The board provides a wide range of services to adults and children in fields of mental illness and retardation. Minjoe had been a systems analyst for the County Board of Auditors since 1964. Before that he handled date processing for Oakland Schools, the C o u n t y Intermediate School District. JOSEPH MINJOE arnifi nintaUdvs age' rarely finds. He was happily married for .'iO years ahd now he wants to marrv me. The trouble is m\ mother We have livc^d together since Hud died 12 years ago. and e ver since 1 told her 1 want to marry this man she has crutd-and carried on like ,\ou wouldn't believe. She savs he IS loo old lor me and it will never work out. 1 told her .she could Jive with us. but she refuses to move to the citv where we would live. (She and 1 presently live in a suburb t When her friends try to tell her that she should be happy that f'll have someone to IcKik aftef- rife when she’s gone, she sa.vs HP. is only 12 years younger than SUP is, and he won’t last that much longer Abby, 1 could be so happy with this man it it weren't for mother. W hat shall 1 do ’ TORN HPAR TORN Marry the man. And George Plimpton and his bride, the iormer Freddy Espy, smile Thursday after their wedding in New York City. Plimpton. 40, formerly one of the jet set's most eligible baehelors, is editor of the Pans Review and author of Paper Lion, an account of his "Walter Mitty" attempts at professional .sports. His wife. 26, helps manage a photographic studio. Itpis the tirst marriage .for each. Women's Unit of PAUF Sets Awards Tea Plans for the annual Awards Tea of Pontiac Area United Fund were formulated this week by the Women's Hivision. * * * Sponsored by the Pontiac State Bank, the tea will be held April 25 at Spring Lake Country Club. Outstanding volunteers frt>m agencies within the PAUB and leading campaign workers from last year's campaign will be honored. * ★ ★ Prederick Poole, last year's campaign chairman and Bruce Annetl, president of PAUP, will make the awards. CHAIRMAN Mrs. Paul Gorman is chairing the event. Assisting her with decorations will be Mesdames Adrian Ish, Varce Murray, Richard Jorgensen and Vincent Brons- Mr. and Mrs. William Belaney will serve as master of ceremonies and publicity chairman, respectively. * ★ * Mrs. James Cowen and Mrs. Robert C. Irwin are in charge of the awards; Mrs. Glenn Griffin in charge of hostesses; Mrs. William EJmerson and Mrs. Joseph Warren, invitations. ★ ★ ★ Me.sdames Charles Ross, William Wright and Richard Veazey make up the program committee. ' *■ * * Mrs. Erma Bombeck, syndicated columnist, will be the principal speaker at the 1:30 p.m. event. Bridge Players AAeet There will be a meeting Saturday at 8 p.m. of the Bonneville Duplicate Bridge Club in the Community Room of The Pontiac Mall. All bridge players may attend this special master point game. The Robert B. Calvers of Yarmouth Road announce the engagement of their daughter, Julie Ann, to Randolph Marshall Hani-ner: He is the son of the Duncan H. Hamners of Walnut Lake Road, West Bloomfield Township. The bride elect is a graduate of the University of Michigan where her. fiance received his MA degree. He received his BA from Virginia Military School in Lexington. They will wed July 20. The Howard D. Johnsons of Bald Mountain Road. Orion Township announce the betrothal and August wedding of their daughter, Janice E., to Ronald M. Fol-berg. He is the son of Mrs. Sylvia Folberg of Detroit and Israel Fol-berg of Sierra Vista, Ariz.. Miss Johnson is g senior at Eastern Michigan University, her fiance's alma mater. He is presently studying at McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario. German MefolcroHs to J&e Displayed of Cranbrook Acodem^ Galleries Closed Mouth Policy Always Best An outstanding exhibition of contemporary German metal design is the new show which will open in Cranbrook Academy of Art Galleries on April 13 and will remain through May 5. "Metal: Germany" presents items as diverse as candlesticks, cutlery, tabernacle doors and pendants. They were selected by Paul Smith for the Museum of Contemporary Crafts,, New York City, where the exhibition was first shown, and are now touring the country under the auspices of the Smithsonian Institution. The show is,being sponsored by His Excellency Heinrich Knappstein, Ambassador of the Federal Republic of Germany. , ^ Old metal-working methods such as granulation have been rediscovered and put to use by modern craftsmen in West Germany and certain of their techniques of obtaining colors recall Renaissance jewel work. Jewelry of all kinds — drop earrings with ends of clustered pearls, a bracelet of solid gold, rings of all shapes — are included in the 133 items in the exhibition. ★ * * Cranbrook Academy of Art Galleries, located in Bloomfield Hills, are open Tuesdays through Sundays from I to 5 p.m., except major holidays. There is an admission. , V ■ Rochester School Teacher Winner ' in Detroit Edison Cooking Contest By JANET ODELL , Pontiac Press Women’s Editor A Rochester widow and grandmother ol 13 was crowned "Queen of the Kitchen ” Thursday at the ,«;eventh "Queen of the Kitchen" contest,v sponsored by Detroit Edison. Mrs. Clifford H. Dayton, a third grade teacher at Meadow Brook School, won top honors in the annual "Cook-off for Women Who Work." For her macaroni and cheese ring mold, Mrs. Dayjon received a new electric range of her own selection. It was my first time to be one of the judges in this contest. The other two were Detroit food editors, Kay Savage of the Free Press and Cyrilla Riley of the News. Ten days ago. we met and went through the nearly 400 entries of one-dish meals that could be prepared in an hour. The 10 finalists prepared their dishes yesterday. Have you ever eaten lunch all momr ing? In fact, have you ever eaten lunch that included macaroni and cheese, salmon, an Italian style casserole, shrimp, baked beans with vermouth, chicken with orange, ham-spinach quiche, curried rice, corned beef and eggplant? It’s an experience. It was fun to chat with the contestants, ask him if he has a friend for your mother. DEAR ABBY: My husband is from Pakistan and I am from Sweden. We have been happily married for three years and are both in our late twenties, I am employed as a secretary, an(i am helping my husband complete his education. We intend to make the United Slates our home. Our problem: we plan to go to Pakistan next year to visit my husband's family. His. father is very well educated and speaks fluent English, but he wrote to us several months ago insisting that I learn Hindi! M> husband wrote to his father telling him that 1 did not request that HE learn Swedish, and there is no reason for ME to learn Hindi. My lather-in-lavv wrote back saying that 1 should indeed learn the language of my husband’s people and if 1 could learn to speak five languages, (which I do ) il would not be too difficult for me to learn a sixth! He informed us that tiindi study manuals were being sent to me. Abby, a Far Eastern language is entirely different from a Germanic or Latin language, and I have neither the lime nor the desire to learn Hindi. Now I don't even feel like going to Pakistan, but I hate to disappoint my husband. Have you any suggestions'.’ WEARY DEARY WEARY: Have your husband teach you a tew conversational phrases in Hindi. rHe|lo, good-by, 1 am pleased to meet you, ” and "Sorry I do not speak your language very well.”' Keep a Swedish sniile on your (ace and listen a lot. ■k * * CONFIDENTIAL TO ' L(X)K1NG: ” Yoil meet respectable people where respectable people gather. If you want to catch mountain trout, don't go fishing in a herring barrel. ★ ★ ♦ Everybody has a problem. What's yours? For a personal reply write to Abby. in care of The Pontiac Press, Dept. E-600, P.O. Box 9. Pontiac, Mich. 48056 and enclose a stamped, self-ad-dressed envelope. nine of whom had never done anything like a cook-off before. Lillian Hardy of Lapeer had been a finalist several years ago. The women ranged in age from the young unmarried Jean Wynn, who invented an interesting eggplant casserole, to> middle-aged women who had cooked for years. All are employed full time; all have had to learn efficiency. Second prize went to Elizabeth Brantley of Detroit who cooked a salmon-frozen pea casserole with cheese biscuits. Judy Wuckert, who lives in Ruth with her school teacher husband and works as a schooi secretary in Ubly, took third place honors with an easy, quick “Sicilian Supper” casserole. ^'Nedra Noordhoorn, a speech cor-rectionist in the Walled Laktf schools, prepared curried rice. Her husband, who is Dutch, helped her work out just the right seasonings for this dish he remembered as a child; it has an Indonesian background. Much to their surprise, two women from the same company in Detroit were finalists; Louise Hindelang and Florence Van Waetermeulen were informed only minutes apart that they would be competing against each other. The prize wiiming recipe will be found orr page B-2. The other two wjll be published Saturday. * ★ ★ All 10 recipes are available in a souvenir cookbook that readers may obtain at their’ local Detriot Ediswi office. Mrs. Clifford H. Dayton of Rochester, crowned "Queen of the Kitchen" Thursday in Detroit Edison’s annual Cook-off for Women Who Work, is congratulated by Harlan B. Ritze, manager of Edison s Oakland Marketing division. *■ . 5 - . > Mrs. Henry V/uckert of Ruth, a young homemaker and school secretary, w^njhird prize for her casserole recipe. Kenneth J. Mudie, manager of Edison's Thumb Marketing Division presents her with a blender. Mrs. Brooker Brantley of Detroit, an inspector in a silk-screen printing shop, won an electric rotisserie-broiler for her salmon and cheese biscuit casserole: THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, MAR( I The Wendell Lehmans of Lewisburg, Ky., announce the engagement of their daughter, Marilyn Sue of Winkleman Street, to W. Clell Laney. He is the son of the son of the Theodore Laneys of Marion, N.C. Vows are slated for August. Cultural Calendar DETROIT Iff) — Here are the major cultural events scheduled in Michign for the period from today through next Friday. ART DETROIT - Institute of Arts, Chinese Treasures from the Avery Brundage collection, through May 5. Sculptures and drawings by Henry Moore, April 3-April28. Hours; Tuesday 9 a.m. to 9 p.m.; Wednesday through Sunday, 9 a.m.-6 p.m. closed Mondays and holidays. MUSIC DETROIT — Masonic Auditorium, Paul Rivere and the Raiders, tonight, 8 p.m. DETROIT - Ford Auditorium, Detroit Symphony Orchestrti, Jacqueline Du Pre’, cellist, March 30, 8:30 p.m.; Detroit Symphony, Mary Costa, soprano, April 2, 8:30 p.m.; Detroit Symphony, Riverside Benefit Concert, April,,5. 8 p.m. Sixton Ehrling conducting all three ccmcerts. ANN ARBOR - Hill Auditorium, University of Michigan Choir, spring concert March 30, 8:30 p.m. ANN ARBOR - University Events Building, Henry Mancini and Orchestra, March 30, 8:30 p.tn. DETROIT — Memorial Building, University of Detroit, Errol Garner, jazz pianist, April 5,8:30 p.m. MUSKEGON - Wayne State University Men’s Glee Club, tonight 8:30 p.m. BIG RAPIDS - Wayne State Univursity Men’s Glee Club, March 30, 8:30 pjn. STAGE ROCHESTER - Meadow Brook Theatre, Oakland University, “No Exit’’ by Jean-Paul Sartre and “The Firebugs” by Max Frisch, March 30 through April 28. Hours: 8:15 Wednesday through Sunday; Saturday; 6:30 p.m. Wednesday 1:30 p.m. ROCHESTER - Studen Enterprise Theatre, Oakland University, “JB” by Archibald MacLeash, March 29-30, 8:30 p.m. ANN ARBOR - Mendelssohn Theatre, “Princess Ida,’’ Gilbert and Sullivan Society, March 29-30. Hours 8 p.m. Friday and Saturday; 2 p.m. Saturday. ANN ARBOR - Hill Auditorium, “Hello Dolly,’’ presented by University Professional Theater, with Dorothy Lamour, 2:30 and 8:30 p.m. March 31. ANN ARBOR — Mendelssohn ’Theatre, “A Midsummer Night’s Dream,” with Stratford National Theatre of Canada, 8:30 p.m,. April 1-6. ANN ARBOR - Trueblood Auditorium, “Antigone,” with University of Michigan Players, 8:30 p.m., April 3-6. DETROIT — University of Detroit Theatre, “Noah,” by Andrew Obey, 8:30 p.m., March 29-31; repeat April 5-7, also at 8:30 p.m. JACKSON - Stone Village Theater, “Chalk Garden,” with Jackson Civic Theatre group, 8:30 p.m. March 29-30; “Biederman and the Fire Bugs,” 8:30 p.m., April 5-6. DETROIT — Institute of Arts, “On Ne Badine Pas Avec L’Amour,” with Les Productions d’Aujourd’hui, 2:30 and 8:30 p.m., April 1. MISCELLANEOUS DETROIT — University of Detroit Student Union, annual debate between University of Detroit and Wayne State University, “Should the Federal Government Guarantee Minimum Amount of Cash to All United States Citizens?” p.m., March 31. Doctor Tells Mothers of Danger Signs Though a vast number of symptoms in a child prompt anxious mothers to wake doctors in the middle of the night, only six situations warrant immediate attention, according to a leading pediatrician. Dr. Marvin J. G e r s h describes the six bona fide crises that can’t wait for regular office hours in his book, “How To Raise Children At Home In Your Spare Time’ (Stein and Day): • Breathing difficulties. An infant or child who wakes up having trouble inhaling, may be suffering from croup. First try steaming him. A cold steam vaporizer is preferable Otherwise, bring him into the bathroom which has been steamed up by the hot shower. If there is no relief, phone the doctor. • Bleeding. If the bleeding cannot be stopped, he might be better off in a hospital emergency room that’s equipped to stop bleeding. Your doctor will probably suggest this when you phone him. • Severe abdominal pain. If it persists for more than an hour or two, your pediatrician should know about it. (This does not refer to the fairly common “15-minute bellyache”.) • Stupor. A state of loginess, with dulled mind and senses. • Coma. Unconsciousness, from which the child cannot be aroused. • Convulsion. Uncontrolled movement of the limbs and general trembling of the body. Most other children’s symptons can wait for the doctor’s regular office hours, according to Dr. GershJ But, he pleads, don’t call him at all to tell him Junior’s nose is running. “Leave the poor guy alone. He cannot do anything much about a cold anyway, much less an incipient cold.” Beer and Pop May Stain WASHING-TON, D. C. (UPI) — Be careful in popping off the ips of beverage cans. Beer and soft drinks can cause stains which can become permanent with time and heat, cautions the National Institute of Drycleaning. A ★ ★ If any of the beverage spills, take the garment to the cleaners and explain the exact stain. If caught in time, the professional may be able to remove it. SPIIHS FISIIIU Fumts BUSTir OUT ai OVER FME ranUlE CORDUROY >78t I All COTTON NEVER-PRESS .. >68( I FAMOUS MAKE CURTAIN FAORICl WMTE TERRY CLOTH I Soft, absorbent, fin* quql-I ity cotton tarry cloth. COnON SHEATH LININfi I Large selection of colors. 45” wide, washable. 78‘-87‘ SPORTSWEAR 100% drip dry cotton. Many styles and colors to choose from DRESS AND SKIRT ZIPPERS FAMOUS BRAND THREAD DECORATE WITH ADORN Self adhesive, c( dacorotion plastic. Self adhesive, contact o25t 99(t 1125 H, PERRY AT COBNEB OF ARLENE Mayo Clinic to Be Sent to IRONWOOD (AP) - 'Twelve-year-old Robin Gustafson, critically wounded during a ram-in which seven persons shot to death, worsened in Condition Wednesday. Physicians said Miss Gustafson has developed complications from gunshot wounds of the lower abdomen and her left hand, including peritonitis, an internal inflammation. * ★ * The girl was to be transferred from Grand View Hospital in Ironwood to the Mayo Clinic at Rochester, Minn. Robin’s mother, Vienna Gustafson, and her maternal grandmother, Mrs. Sally Johnson, 61, were among those killed in the two-hour shooting spree March 16. ★ ★“ ★ Eric E. Pearson, a 56-year-old Ironwood woodsman, has been! charged with first-degree mur-i der in one of the deaths, that of Rudolph Maurin, 56, of Iron-wood. He faces trial in May. Paper Clothing Will Boom in Next 30 Years NEW YORK tUPII - Within the next 30 years, 75 per cent of the U.S, population will have 1Korn paper clothing of one kind or another. The prediction comes from fashion observers at Union Carbide, which supplies paper treating chemicals. Paper clothing already is a multimillion-pounds per year business. Within the next several years, it is expected to reach billions of pounds. The range of paper products is from surgical Mr. and Mrs..Robert II. Smith of Second, Avenue announce the engagement of their daughter, C a then n e ‘ Mary, to JohnT. Leman-I ski. He is the son of the Sylvan J. Lemanskis of Northfield Street and is presently attending Oakland University. ENDS SATURDAY Man-h .HO One Full Color .V’x7” TOT IRAn’ Color Portrait.......... 99r. Sears -i.Thur*., I I SEARS IN PONTIAC Women Drivers in Ancient Rome TULSA, Okla, (UPI) —I The American Petroleum Whether they deserve it or ‘^at lady 'charioteers in ancient Rome women drivers were considered' ,._r- r-_______________=_______ were not permitted to drive in wear to political blazers, froml^ problem long before the the city on Sundays or during pillow cases to evening dresses.! coming of the automobile. | heavy traffic periods. [ B. Embroidered Dacron polyester and nylon, bra. *2.50 Lonit leg panty girdle with power lace front panel. *7.00 C. Nylon lace bra has fiberfill lined undercups. *3.00 Lace trimmed girdle. *5.00 New Fashion Mall - Pontiac Mall Use Elizabeth Lake Entrance Shop, Monday, Thursday, Friday^ Saturday ’til 9 Use Your Michififan Bankard or Security Charfife B~ ifi 11^.^ ^ ’INK I’OXTIAC I’HKSS. FHI1).\^. 'lAlU H fiFly Elephants to Tribesmen phanis at a Monlagnard village to help the tribesmen haul tim-^ SAIGON (API Within the •'W'e'll walk them onto ^ext few days the Green Berets spread-out cargo nel at Ban * zers to put them to sleep and wrap the cargo net around The elephants are now just them. A fork lilt will set lhem| outside a Special Forces camp on a wooden cargo pad and inloj at Ban Don in the central high- ,|,p f'130 •• lands, about 150 miles from the Monlagnard village, of Tra The Gi;i0 will fly the elepluinls we ll do this,” said the Special Special Forces troops pushed cause of the mountainous ter--Ito Chu l>ai, 18 miles east of the •’"'(•'s a poke s m all, •'Wejttie Vietcong out of Tra Bong in rain,” the Special Forcesj Montagnard village A giant' Charlie (the Viet-. August 1965, With Green Beret spokesman said. "There is no! 'CH.54 "Flying (Yaiie" heli((ipter ‘"''fi' waf'ng for us." help, an old sawmill was put other way to get in there except! {will lift the elephants into the * * * into operation again for the live- by ^ 'village, which lacks a landing The elephants were purchased Ithe 1.200 Montagnards all around the village. ’ strip to accommodate the lour- hy the U S. Agency for Interna-*tht're. , tranquilizers, ob-i engine CI50 Inmal Development at $.590i "'Diey cannot use mechanized 1 tained from a London firm, wilP "Fm not going to say when each. ■ , equipment to move timber be-[not harm the elephants. YOU CAN RELY ON RELIABLE! • Service • Price • Guarantee We Repair Automatic and Standard Transmissions (Any Make - Any Model) RELIABLE TRANSMISSION 00. 922 Oakland Call 334-0701 A spokesman lor the U S 5th , Special Forces group outlined this plan: Three Pig Valves for Woman's Heart l.KKDS. Fngland (AP« A surgical team at Leeds, Inlir-mary transplanted three-valves from a pig into the heart of a woman on Monday, it has heen , learned. The woman, .lean Rarstow.I 58, a mother of two, was reported recovering satisfactorily ' A man was given one valve from a pig s heart in an opera tion at Oxford in 1%6 -* * * A British Medical Association spokesman in London said he was unable to determine immediately whether a three-valve operation had heen done before. Ex-Areo Gl Dies in Viet Copter Crash A former Rochester resident. Marine Corps First LI. William Hall, died when his helicopter crashed in Vietnam last Siiiv day. The helicopter reportedly w»as downed by sniper fire. Hal], 25, graduated from Rochester Higlv .School and received a RA from Michigan .State, Univefsity. He attended Cheed^ii College in Avon Township and Abilene Christian College in Abilene, 'I'ex. Hall’s wife, Kay, lives in Wichita, Kan. He look his naval trailing in Pensacola, Fla , and Quantico, \’a Ills parents. Mr. and Mrs M a n r i c e ■ H a d 1 , W’ e r e missionaries in Saigon, Vietnam, in. 1964-66 tor the Royal Dak Church of Christ. HaH's father was admissions director and assistant to the president of ' Michigan Christian College prior to their trip to Vietnam His parents now live in Wichita, Kan. Medicare Panel Is Reappointed LANSING :4’i Members of a special ad hoc House com mittee, namedpin February 1967 to study the problems It^fedicare (loses for nursing homes, have heen reap(>ointed for another year by House Speaker Robert Waldron The five ary Reps .lames . F a r II s w o r t h . R-Plainwell; Minority Leader William Ryan, D-Detroit; Roy Smith. R, >'psiianti. Robert Mahoney , D Detroit: and ,1 o h a n n e s Kolderman, R-Wyoming 2 Groups to Tour HOLLAND P Two Hope College musical groups leave April 5 on their res|)ective spring lours. The college chaiiel ■chpir plans 17 concerts on the 6.000-mile tour in Michigan. New York and New .lersey, returning to Holland April 22 The college symphoiietle plans concerts in seven Midwestern and .Southwestern states. Gar Wash with GAS 6 Gals. - 99' 10 Gals. - 69' is Gals. - 39' 17 Gals. - 19' 18 Gals. - 1' KUHN Auto Wash 149 W. Huron St. PEOPLES OPEN SUNDAY 12 to 6 p.m. Shop every evening 'til 9 sale ^100 genuine ioam rubber 'tuxedo' sola Beautiful Tuxedo Foam rubber sofa complete with bolsters in smart coordinated traditional fabr'cs. Exquisite'hand-tailored deep-tufted back, wide selection'of colors and covers. now..buy a sofa for the price of a chair sale ^220 CHOOSE FROM 400 SOFAS...NOW ON SALE IN A HUGE SELECTION OF STYLES, DESIGNS, FABRICS, COLORS ...ALL AT SALE PRICES! sale *199 to *269 Yes, when it comes to sofas — any style or design, you'd have to look a long, long way to match the fabulous buys you find at PEOPLE'S! Especially during our sensational sofa sole! Shown are just live of hundreds more! Each one SUPER-SIZE with FOAM and RUBBER cushions. One glance and you'll know these are quality sofas all the way! Rich decorator fabrics, delightful prints and fresh new designer colors and designs. Come in today or this week, day or evening ... for FIRST chance at these sofa bargains! N0 money down • ,$10ambnili Hand carved French Provincial exclusive sofa. Hand-tufted back, fruitwood frame, huge color choice. sale ^240 Kingsize Spanish-style wood frame 3-cushion sofa. Hand-tufted back, exposed wood frame, wide color choice. No money down • $10 a, month other stores in DETROIT PORT HURON . PONTIAC • ANN ARBOR • FLINT . TOLEDO, OHIO • PEOPLES Exclusive cane-arm Mediterranean sofa with hand-carved frame, rich fine mattlesse fabrics in your choice of colors. 3-cushion comfort. Exquisite decorator and designers first choice! - , ' i PONTIAC O U T F i TT I N G C G y' TELEGRAPH ROAD and SQUARE LAKE ROAD Miracle Mije Shopping Center THE PONTIAC PRESS, FlUDA^ . MAHC II JiMDfJH / p,, . ♦ Mari Poor, Elderly Hit hardest Inflation Picks Pockets MARKETS The following are top prices covering sales of locally grown produce by growers and sold by them in wholesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets as of Wednesday. Produce Apples, Golden Delicious, Apples, Golden Delicious, < Apples, Red Delicious, bu Apples, Jonathan, bu. Apples, Jonathan, C. A., Apples, Cider, 4 gal. case Apples, McIntosh, bu. Apples, McIntosh, C. A., Apples, Northern Spy, t. Apples, Northern Spy, C. A., Apples, Red Delicious, bu. Autles, Steele Red, C.A., bu. Apples, Clder,^4^9^a.^case^ Beets, topped, bu............. Cabbage, Red, bu........^ ^ Cabbage, Standard J/ariety, b: ,’ pk. bskt....... Celery. i Parsnips, Vi-bu. Potatoes, 20-lb. bag Radishes, Black, 'A bu Rhubard, hothouse, 5-lb, Rhubarb, hothouse, az. Squash, Hubbard, bu. Turnips, topped ........ Poultry and Eggs )ETROIT (AP) - (USDA) — Egg including U.S.): dr^g1(?33-3B”larg 31-36; medium, 27-30, s and tryers Whites, 19'/2-2t CHICAGO EGGS CHICAGO (AP) - Chicago Mer. Exchange—butter steady; vrholesale buy 6, 90 B 6«4; 89 C 61' ; 89 C 62>/4. : steady to fi wholesale boy :ent or better Grade A whites 32 CHICAGO POULTRY CHICAGO (AP)-(USDA)-Live poull Wholesale buying prices unchanged; roi ers 25-27; special fed white rock fry 20-22. Livestock DETROIT LIVESTOCK DETROIT (AP) - (USDA)-Cattle 100 slaughter steers and heifers absent, ‘^"utin'ty cows 19.50-20.50, few 21.00. 1-2 195-240 lb butchers 19.75-20.25; 1-3 22( . — -.aughtc. — 4 27.25-28.00; good 2-------------- - 850-1,000 lb slaughter heifers yield grad 2 to 4 26.25-26.fi; gdod 24.50-25.50. Sheep 100; not enough O" ---------------- ‘ Trading Is Moderate Stock Market Prices Are Firm /Promoted at Pontiac Div. NEW YORK (UPI)-Prices today opened firm in moderately atctive trading on the New York Stock Exchange. Shortly after the opening bell, he United Press International dock market indicator had Dicked up 0.15 per cent with 757 issues crossing the tape. There were 37 advances and 220 declines. General Dynamics, chief contractor for the controversial Fill fighter plane, dropped V* to 49% after losing around 2 Thursday. A Senate committed said the Navy would not purchase anp of the Flll’.s in the fiscal year beginning July 1. Boeing gained % to 69V4. McDonnell Douglas picked up a small fraction. Lockheed opened unchanged. Control Data advanced 114 to 124% in the electronics. 69. General Electric eased slightly. Steels moved narrowly. U S, Steel opened unchanged at 38 Jones & Laughlin picked up to 46%. Du Pont rose slightly but Eastman Kodak dipped a fraction in the narrowly mixed chemicals. Ford lost Vi to 48V4. Chrysler Burroughs jumped 1% to 175_^ tacked on % to 57. Gold stocks Fairchild Camera slippeil '{TTojtended fractions lower. The New York Stock Exchange Staff Changes Made in Engineering Dept. By JOHN CUNNIFF AP Business Aanalysl NEW YORK (AP) - Amcri-•ans this week got another discouraging report from their pTncpStket, a term that President Johnson used some time ago to describe inflation. Inflation is not just au unwcl-'ome guest hut dex is the tax of inflation—a taximal taxes which might elimi-in almost every sense of thelnate inflation but impost anoth-word except that it has no basi.‘(|er penalty? in law. It ignores law complete- * ♦ ................ Well, as the President indicat- Intlalion is an insidious tax. It vvho wants a pickpocket as a Promotions within Pontiac Motor Division’s engineering department have been announced by Stephen P. Malone, chief engineer.' • Eric D. Bothwell of 436 Rewold, Rochester, was named senior graphic Illustrator, He joined Pontiac as a graphic illustrator in 1967. CUNNIFF NEW YORK (API - New York Stock ixchange selected morning prices; —A— Abex Cp 1. ACF Ind 9 AdMim Addres-AirR-edfr Address 1.40 AirRedfn T.50 AlcanAlum 1 AllegCp .20g AliegLud . 2.40 Alleg Pw T 14 22% W/2 22% + AlliedCh 1.90 tmAirIjn .00 kmBpteh .6( tmBdcsl 1.6( \m Ca ACrySU' ..... Can 2.20 ACrySug 1.40 *“^.yan 1.25 ...^fpw 1.52 AmEnktf 1.30 27 34% 34% 34% — 3 40% 40% 40% — --17 29% 29% 29% + % 19 ARVo 60V8 68Vs 77% 77% „ 24% 24% . 10 44 433/4 433/4 + V2 48Va 48 48 49'/2 49V4 49’, . 26^/ 44 23’ AmMFdy .90 68’/# — , .. .3 773/4 — .. 86 243/4 24% 24% + V4 10 44 433' 18 48’/a 48 10 49'/2 49’, 2 26% 26% 26% 44 23’/4 23 23'/4 . 18 33’/^ 33’/8 33’/2 -f- V2 4 40 ................... 7 76’/8 Hook Ch 1.40 ■•-.use Fin 1 lUStonLP 1 ..jwmet .70 HuntFds .SOb IdahoPw 1.50 AMet Cl 1.90 I 18Cem .60 Val Ind ----nn 1.06e LOFGlss : 8 18Vb 18’/b 18’/^ 4 Burt ind 1 20 Burroughs 1 :orp wt s Eng 7 2% 2% 2% . 9’^8 9 3-16+3-16 20 2 7-16 2% 2^8 .. Creole 2.60a 4 » 36 Data Cont 4 B’/4 16' Oixilvn Corp 44 26% 26’ Dynalectrn 15 15% 15’ EquityCp, .33t '''' Cal FInanI CalumH 1.20 CampRL .45a Camp Soup 1 Canteen .80 CaroPLt 1.38 CaroTT .76 CarterW .40a Case Jl CaterTr 1.20 Cenco Ins -3n Cent SW 1 Fargo Oils Fed Resrces Felmont Oil Frontier Air Gen Plywood Giant Yel .40 Goldfield 23 53/4 5Ve 5% - 2 5 4 15-16 4 15-16- 42 10’/2 10% KE'a .. 3 16’/4 16 16 - 16 153/4 15% 153/4 - Cert-te 127 13 12'/2 12% - Gulf i n Cp Cities Svc ClevEIIII CocaCola Colg Pal CBS 1.40b NewPark Mn Pancoastal RIC Group Rvan C Pet Scurry R_ SignalOilA la SyntexCp Technicol A Stocks of Local Interest Figures after decimal points are eighths Detrex Chemical MUTUAL FUNDS Chemical Fund Bid Asked . 8.10 8.'' .17.10 18: 9.73 10, .13.54 14. Keystone Growth K-2 ivestors Growth Liggetta-M 5 Lily Cup 1.20 Litton 2.65f 9 13H 13'/J 13'/i — VS < 2214 22V. 22 V. ., , 24'/j 24'/3 241/s 7 27V. 27V. 27V. . . 34 4(»fi 39V. 4014 -I- % 35 175V4 174'/i 174'/. + V4 2 72’/4 72'/. 72'/. .... 7 35'/4 3S'/4 35'^ + 'A 27 62'/4 *214 62'/s + 'A 32 8'A 8'A 8'A .. LodSdA 2^ 545 42/A 41 42V. -f 1 •‘(SL 571A SB -fl 5 17 1614 1614 -- 25 23V4 2314 2314 -t- 21 25 ^ 6 514 5=/. S’/. .. I 37 37 37 ...jdFd 3.06e MagmaC 3.60 Magnavx .80 •0 Cp 1,60 10 1414 14'A 1414 + ' 13 37V. 3714 3714 + ' 5 47'A 47 47 — ' 5 40V. 40 40'/. — ' 150 41'/I 40V. 41'A -t- ■ 5 20 19V. 19 V.--) 6 46V. 46V. 467A -E 4. 61'/ ■‘”'- 5 34'/ ...jrquar ,30t MartinMar 1 MayDStr 1.60 Wno’-IJo Merck 1.60a 34'A 34'/. -t- ’ 19 36'/l 36'A 36'A ... 9 2614 26'/? 3il/z — ' 124 57'A 57 57'A + 77 45V. 45V. 45V. ... 2 3614 3614 3614 - MldSoUtll .82 MInnMM 1.45 MInnPLt 1.10 Mo Kan Tex MobllOII 2 ColuGa ComICre i.ou ComwEd 2.20 Comsat Con Edis 1.80 ConEleclnd 1 ConFood 1.50 6 26 25V. 25V. — ' 70 3214 3214 3214 -- 1 31 43V. 43'/a 43V. + ■ Contair 6 37V. 37V. 37V. 6 28V. 2814 28V. .. 38 19'/. 19 ’"'‘- .“'A +,X CorGW 2.50a Cowles .50 CrouseHind 1 Crown Cork CrownZe 2.20 90 124'/. 12314 124'A -H'A 1 39V. 3914 39V. + 28 3614 36 3614 ... 1 330 330 330 ... 6 13 13 13 .. 3 26'A 26'A 26'A— 2 59 “ 15 42 42 42 _D— DenRGW 1.10 Det Steel .60 DiaSham 1.4o Disney .30b DomeMln .80 DowChm 2.40 Dressind 1.25 Duke Pw 1.20 duPont 1.25e DuqU 1.66 Dyna Am .40 4 27% 27% 27% .. 42 24% 24’/b 24'/s .. 2 17’/2 17’/2 17‘/2.. 7 25% 25’/2 25% + 6 29 28% 28% . 6 42’/i 42’/4 42’/a........... 28 58% 58’/8 Sm -1% n 80 79% 80 ' 4 34% 34’A 34% 14 33’/4 33’/li 33’A 9 149’/4 149’/4 149’/4 + % last Air E Kodak 1.60a EatonYd 1.25 EG&G .10 El BondShr 2 ElectSp l.Olt EIPasoNG 1 Eltra Corp 1 2 17’/2 17‘/2 W^ + % 47 27% 27’/% 27% _E— 41 140'/2 139% 140 6 52’/8 52'/% 52'/s + 4 29'/4 29 29 .. 6 18% 18% 18% + 1 32 32 32 , 23 93 92’/2 92V2 + 6 30 30 30 .. 24 29 28% 28% + 1 14'/4 Treasury Position 8 72 72 72 WASHINGTON (AP) - The cash Posi-IE?i'hKL'/‘' tion of the Treasury compared with cor-| pigp^,,^, ,74 respondlng^^date a^^year ^rch 23,. WStI .7^ - s4 qyyxu v 1 i 6,957,247,386.66 % 9,805,423,399.06^'ordWot 2 0 Deposits Fiscal Year July 1— ForMcK 25e ■ 111,493,121,764.32 110,430,813,898.47; .......------ . iFruehCp 1.70 13 32’/2 32’/2 4 19 19 :30 STOX 5 wyyf.. 6V/2 61’/a 61’/a — ’ 135,001,830,646.49. 121,822,353,959.18; tal Debt— ■ 351,825,128,614.08 332,770,666,777.61 GAccept 1 25 31% 3T’/8 ' 31’/® + Vb Dynam 1 w... Elec 2.60 Gen Mills .80 GenMot .B5e GenPrec .80 DOW-JONES AVERAGES STOCKS I 30 Indus ................ 20 Rails .... 15 Utils ......... 0..... BONDS 40 Bonds 10 Higher grai 292.39—0.23 75.24—0.03 . 63.93- -. 74.85 7 35’/4 35’/4 35'A + .. 72% 73 33 39% 39'/a 39’/a - 20 257/8 25% -25% + 2 63 63 63 6 26’A 26’A 26'A . 7 47’A 467/8 47% .. GtA8.P 1.30a 2 227/% 22% 22% — % 2 35’/a 35’/4 35V4 ...... 12 287/# 28% 28% + 'A (hds.) High Low Last Cho. Salts Net 6 50 50 SO .... 170 17% 17'/a 17% + 1 32'/4 32’A 32’/4 + ’ 8 20% 20'/4 20% . 9 32’/a 32Va 32'/a 14 727/8 72% 7m ■ 22 21% 21% 21% - 57 41’/4 40% 41’/4 - Sear! GO 1 30 (hds.) High Low Last Chg. 4 6% 46’/a 46% + 62 62 61’ a 61% — _______^ 11 21'/4 21 21 ........ Shell Oil 2.30 12 60% 60^8 60% Seeburg .60 Shell Oil '> ShellTr SherwnWm ^ Sinclair 2.80 ----Co 2.4C SIngerCo SmIthK 1 1 66’/a 66’/a 66‘/a - ’ 15 5V/I 51 51’/4 +1, 10 667/b 66'A 66'/a .... 18 34'/a 34% 34% — ' 19 71'/a 70’/a 71’/4 + ’ 16 33'/4 32'/a 33 22 687/8 67’/4 67'/4 39 1067/8 106 106 26 42% 42»/A 42’A 96 35’/4 34% 35’/4 7 407/8 4«7/- -inr/B 8 41’A 4 SouNGas 1.40 SoutPac l.tO South Ry 2.80 Spartan Ind SperryR .20e SquareD .70a StBrand 1.40 Std Koils .50 StOIICal 2.70 StOMInd 2.10 StdOMNJ .85e 15% 15% — u a'>/'4 8% 8% — 4 39% 39'/a 3?Va ... 4 31 31 31 ..... 6 51% 51 Va 51% + V4 1 28% 28% 28% — % 16 602'/4 602»A 602'/4 +1% StevensJ 2.25 StudeWorth 1 Sun Oil 1b Sonray 1.50 SurvyFd .56e Swift Co 1.20 TampaEI ,72 42 27'/4 27’A 27’A + Va Int T8.T '.85 46 46% 6% 46% + % I 377/® 377/» 377A .. Texaco 2.80 TexETrn 1.20 Tex G Sul .40 Texasinst .80 TexPLd .40e w 58V4 58V4 58’/4 - 1 80% 80% 80% + 7 46 W 46’A 46’/4 + Textron .70 Thipkol .40 TtitikRB 1.80 TransWAIr 1 Transam lb Transitron TrlCont 2.30e 8 40% 40% 40% + V4 I 247/8 247/8 24^8 ■ * 4 197/8 19% 197/8 6 21% 21% 21% 12 32 317/® 32 TRW Inc 1.60 10 53»A 52% 52% — % 2 327/® 327A 327/11 + ’A 8 847/® 84Va 84% f % ........................ + % 8 27 26% 27 UnOilCal 1.40 UnionPacif 2 Unlroyal 1.2o UnltAirUn 1 S 36’A 36'/® 36'A - 13% 12% 13’/4 + 15 11% 1P/a 11%............... 13 70*/i 20Va 20% + % 3 46 Un Fruit 1.40 UGasCp 1.70 Unit MM 1.20 US Borax la USGypsm 3a US Ind .70 US Lines 2b USPIyCh 1.50 Livingstn Oil LockhdA 2.20 LoewsTh .lOh LoneSCem 1 LoneSGa 1.12 ■ -iIsLt 1.24 cyStr 1.20 247A 25 + ] $ sti 1 8 38% 38% 38Va + % 5 30% 30% 30’A - % -M— 1 17'A U'/4 t7'A — 2 38 36 3* — 67 26% 26 17 42'A 2'A 42V» + ' 14 34% 34'A 34% -F 12% 12% 12% -t- I 37'A 37 37'A + 10 86'A 85Va 86'A -)- 2 19% 19% 19% ... 1 21% 21% 21% — 14 43% 43% 43% — ' 12 26'A 26 26'A — t 29% 291/4 29% -r NatBisc 2.10 Nat Can .60 NatCash 1.20 N Dairy 1.50 Nat Dist 1.80 Nat Fuel 1.68 —N— 15 2 24 24 — 1 45% 45% 45% + 19 37% 37% 37% + 6 27'A 27'A 27'A .. 6 24% 24'A 24'A ., NatLedd .fie Nat Steel 2.50 Tea .80 Nevada Pw i 1 32% 32% 32% + 'A 7 26'A 25% 25V» 32 19'A 19'A 19'/j NoNGas 2.60 Nor Pac 2.60 NoStaPw 1.60 Northrop 1 NwstAIrl .80 11 52Vi 52% 52V. + 32 35 34% 35 ,r? ,,aiA xoa/. Occident ,40b 322 33% 33'A M% + % OhIoEdis 1.42 19 26 WA M -F % OKIO.GE 1.04 8 20V. 20% M% OlinMat 1.20 Eft S5S-?/: Pace El 1.40 — - Ltd 1.50 . Pef -ISg PaePwL 1.20 PBCT8.T 1.20 PanASul 1.50 13 39% 39% 39% — 12 2B'A 277/. 28 . . 78 49 8% 49 -F —P— 7 31% 31% 31% .. 9 25'A 25'A 25'/. — 4 23'A 23'A 23>A .. 28 33'A 32% 32% 74 197A- 19% WA -F ' 19 30% 30% 30% — Park'eDavis 1 W 25% 25'A 25% -F ' pSSoJal .25. 115 471/. 47% 47V. PennDix .60b - 2 107/® 187/8 187/8 — PaPwLt 1.56 PhllMorr 1.40 13 * PhMI Pet 2.40 Polaroid .32 ProctrG 2.40 PubSveColo 1 pDbIkInd .46f Pullman 2.80 I 8’A 8’A 8V8 + 13 467/8 46’A 463/4 + _R_ 55 46^ i 168 22’/2 22'A 22% + Reading Co ReichCh .40b RepubStI 2.50 16 40'/4 39% 40V4 - 11 82’/2 82’/4 B2’/4 15 25% 243/4 25% + IhCo i.08 18 32V8 32'/a 32’ 3 49 407/b 49 -r 24 777/8 77% 77% + 29 69’/® 69 69’/® 21 43% 43 43 — 21 337/8 33% 337/8 + 20 24% 2'A 24% + 12 40% 40'/4 40'/4 — 21 27% 27‘/4 27’/4 — 6 45 443/4 45 ... 15 19’/4 19 19'A + 160 477/e 47’ a 47'A -|- 24 20 19% 19% - 49 36’/4 36 36’/4 -f- 5 217/8 21’A 213A - 30 60’/4 59V® 60’/4 - 94 52'/4 52 52 - 69 70'A 6934 693.4 - 7 62% 62% 623/4 • 2 123/4 123/4 12*4 4 39% 39’4 39’4 21 46% 46V4 46’/2 , , 2 52% 52% 523/4 — % 51 49% 4934 49% — 4 61 60% 61 - '* 37 38’/® 377/e 38% - ' 6’/2 6% '' 25'/+ + 7 25'/4 ^ —T— 16 54'/i 24% 24% — 12 38'/j 38% 38'/j - Tenneco 1.28 37 25'A 25 5 35% 35’/, 35'/, . 37 37'A 36V. 36V. - 15 48% 48'A 48'A 8 28% 28'A 28'a — '4 Twen Cent 1 29 30’A 29V. 30'A _u— ____ ... 19 18'A 18 18 Un Carbide 2 167 41'/, 41 41'A 14 38 14 44 93 41V. 40% 40% - = 33 72'A 71% 72 — ' 11 11 11 11 -F ' 6 52'A 52 52 — ' 26 BO'A 79'A 79'A -- ' 7 28 28 28 + ' 4 25% 25'A 25% — ’ 20 67% 67% 67% + ■ Norman L. Pilcher of 762 Southampton becomes senior project ehgineer. He was first assigned to engineering research and experimental in 1964. • William F. Sparks is named group leader. Sparks of 1391 Orchid, Waterford Township, has been with Pontiac since 1956 and has us Smelt lb US steel 2.40 Uplohn +60 Varlan Asso WarnLamb 1 Was Wat 1.20 WestnAirL 1 Wn Banc 1 20 WnUTel 1.40 90 55 53% 54% - 50 3BVA 38V4 38V2 ^ 27 43’A 42% 43’4 + _y_ 20 23% 23'A 23'A 21 38'A 38 38 - w WestgEI .... Weyerhr 1.40 Whirl Cp 1.60 White Mot 2b iDIx 1.50 7 21% 21% 21% 6 25V. 25% 25V. 7 32% 32% 32'A 17 32'/, 32 32'/, 28 62% 62% 62% 18 39% 39% 39'/, 12 49% , . 48 217/. 21% 21% — ' —X—Y—Z— XeroxCp 1.40 37 241 240'A 240'/, YngstSht 1.80 44 3KA 32% M'A Sales figures are unofficial. extra dividends or payments not designated as regular are Identified in the following footnotes, a—Also extra or extras, b—Annual dend. d—Declared or p _____ _________ e—Declared or _______ __ far this year, f—Payable In stock during 1967, estimated cash value on ex-dIvidend or ex-distrlbution date, g—Paid last year, h—Declared or paid after stock dividend • . k—Declare--------- ...... ilatiVe Issui arrears, n—New issue, p—Paid this yeai dividend omitted, deferred or no actio taken at last dividend meeting, r—D< -'----■ “ paid in 1968 Plus stock dividenc t—Paid In stock durin cld—Called, x—Ex. dividend, v ■ants, ww—With warrants, wd—When i v|—In bankruptcy or receivership being reorganized under the Bankrupt; — securities assumed by such coi fn—Foreign issue subject to I Srest equalization tax. • Walter F. B u c h 1 e r becomes design engineer. Buchler of 2720 Berry, Bloomfield Township, fha s been a senior detailer, layout man, senior designer and senior project engineer. He came to Pontiac ini 1957. • Named supervisor of miscellaneous engieneering is Robert J. Kruszewski of 127 Dwight who has been with the division since 1947 in various supervisory positions. • Jack G. Kudray of 193 E. Iroquois has been advanced to senior checker. He came to Pontiac in 1963 as a senior detailer and also served as a layout man. • Elton G. Pierson, who joined Pontiac in 1965 as a designer, has been promoted to senior project engineer. He lives in Royal Oak. previous experience as detailer and layout man. Burroughs Elects Engineering VP DETROIT (AP)-Dr. Robert R. Johnson has been elected vice president-engineering of Burroughs Corp. by the firm’s board of directors, it was announced Thursday. A native of Madison, Wis., Johnson, 40, succeeds T.M. Butler, who held the post since 1965 and is retiring after 49 years with Burroughs. To Vote on Pact GRAND RAPIDS (UPI) United Auto Workers Local 206 members at American Motors Corp.’s Kelvinator Division plant here were scheduled to vote tohight on a contract offer they turned down more than aweek ago before calling strike March 20. is tricky. Often il cannot be seen, lor it disguises itself as prosperity. It would have you measure the economic engine, for example, by the heat it gives tax collector. Among its other faults, pickpocket inflation is: • UNJUST. It often hurts the poor more than the rich. Food prices, for example, are becom- off .rather tlian by the power it jing inflated again. Tlie rich man produces. ! might need to spend only 10 per * * * cent of his pay on food. But the To pul it another way: you’re Po®'” fan’ll/ may have to budget It is also cowardly, for it picks on those who can do little about il, on elderly men and women and others on fixed incomes, for example: on people who can’t go out and earn more to replace the money /Taken from them. The pickpocket’s report came in the form of the consumer price index, which rose to 110 in February, meaning that prices then were 19 per cenj higher than in the 1958-1959 period. It was the 13th straight monthly rise. really not advancing if your pay increase is matched by increased prices. A lot of activity is generated, but you’re just spinning your wheels. You’re not moving ahead. This is not quite the case at the moment. Living costs are increasing, but so Is buying power. Wages might be increasing for corporations, but so are corporate profits. Still, much of what looks like improvement is just motion. STANDARD STAND People are making more money but their living standards canndt reflect this completely. A steady amount of the dollars they put in their pockets is fingered quickly and silently by the pickpocket. So, if inflation is a tax, why not let it be? Why introduce for- RUTHLESS. Inflation doesn’t present any arguments in its defense. It does not go through proper channels, such as Congress, where it can be examined before getting your money. It just takes it. • GREEDY. It literally feeds on itself. This is the spiral, in which a wage increase to offset higher prices becomes a reason for business to raise prices to offset higher wages. A spiral can spin out of control Ijke a tornado. • IRRATIONAL. It really doesn’t make much sense to raise wages oniy to see the Increases wiped out by rising prices and so on. But what is utterly irrational about inflation is that il can be spotted and headed off—but usually isn’t. , SHOW CAR — The experimental Astro II is one of three new show cars being introduced by the Chevrolet Division, at the International Automobile Show opening tomorrow in New York City. The Astro II has a midengine configuration with a liijuid-cooled V8 engine. The radiator is in the rear while luggage can be stored in the front compartment. The wheelbase is lOO inches. The other new cars are the Astro-Vette, an experimental Corvette designed as an aerodynamic study car, and a 1968 Corvette with a customized interior. Estes Sees 9-Million Car Year The auto industry is ex- International Automobile show periencing a sales upturn which fully justifies expectations for a nine - million - car year, E. M. Estes, a General Motors vice president and Chevrolet Division general manager said today. Estes spoke at a news luncheon at the opening of the in New York City. 'The show runs to April 7. explained that at a seasonally adjusted annual rate, total industry passenger car sales have climbed steadily in the first three months of 1968. News in Brief Soviets Mourn Dead Gagarin About $150 was taken in a break-in at the Dog ’n’ Suds drive-in restaurant / 1(145 Baldwin, last night, according to Pontiac police. The money was taken from a cashbox. A cigarette machine was looted, police said. “In January, the sales rate was 8.9 million cars a year including imports. In February, sales were at an annual rate of nine million, and during the first 20 days of March cars sold at a 9.1 million rate,” he said. School Project Bids Received in Waterford ) 14'/b 14 14'4l - ReynTob 2.2o RheemM 1.40 RoanSe 1.67g 12 29% 29 29% -F ' 117 271/4 27'/i 27% — 'k 9 1% 41% 41% -F 'A 3 42'/» 42'A 42'/j -F '/t 24 30'/4 30'/i 30'/4 .............. Five bids for consiructon work on a new aijministration building for the Waterford Township School District were received yesterday. The apparent low b*d of the Roy L. Hanson Construction Co., 2111 Orchard Lake, calls for spending $249,440. The construction project will be the final project authorized by school district voters in June 1966, when they passed two bond proposals. Plail*' cadi for the former Waterford Center School, 1021 Airport, to be remodeled and a new addition—to include of education meeting room — to be constructed. •nie building is now being used by Oescent Lake School pupils. Associated Press Writer MOSCOW (AP) - nie top three Soviet leaders stood under a gray Moscow sky today as an honor guard by the ashes of Russia’s first hero of the space age, Yuri A. Gagarin. Thousands of sorrowing Russians filed past the urns containing the ashes of Gagarin and Soviet Air Force Col. Vladimir S. Seryogin. The two cosmonauts were killed in the crash of a MIG trainer Thursday. ) 66'A 65 66 -F2 Scienfif Data 71 128% 126% 127% + % SCM Cp .60b x28 40Vj '«'/a + ’ ■ Scott Paper 1 82 25% 24% 25 r- SbdCstL 2 20 " 41 42 41% 41% .. Air pollution can cause considerable fading of color and color changes in many fabrics and fibers. Pontiac Motor Division employe reportedly was held up at gunpoint by two men in the parking lot of the firm Montcalm and Joslyn, shortly after midnight. Jimmie Insco, of Royal Oak told Pontiac police the holdup men took $6 and an uncashed check for $61. “We fully expect sales to continue at or very nea/ this rate for the remainder of the year, barring major upheavals in domestic or international affairs,” he added. Estes said Chevrolet’s sales Oakland County Sheriff’ deputies are investigating the theft of about $300 from the home of Marc Carsey, Dearborn, Avon Township, the thief apparently entered the home sometime last night and took the money from a can and a wallet, deputies said, today. Communist party General Secret^ Leonid I. Brezhnev, Premier Alexei N. Kosygin, President Nikolai V. Podgorny and other Soviet leaders stood in silent tribute as the first hon- ] or guard. Gagarin’s widow, Valentina, J, shook with sobs under her mourning veil as she approached the urns in the black-draped Central House of the Soviet Army. Gagarin’s daughters, Lena, 9, and Galya, were also crying. Rummage Sale—St. Benedict’s Hall, 'Lynn St. Fri. and Sat., 8:30 to 12:30. -Adv. Rummage Sale. Amvets Auxiliary Post 12. American League 206 Auburn. 8-1, Sat., March 30. —Adv. upturn in March has been more than twice the gain of the industry as a whole. The truck business continues show 'great vitality, with sales for the first three months of 1968 at a seaenally adjusted rate betwee 1,650,000 and 1.7 million, according to Estes. There is growing reason to believe 1968 will see an all-time truck record, topping the previous high of 1.61 million trucks sold in 1966,” he said. Chevrolet is including two winning Soap Box Derby rape cars in the auto show to call attention to the important rede assigned to derbies as a constructive summer activity for boys. Area Farmers Reminded of Reseal Loan Deadline Farmers still holding 1967 wheat, barley, rye or dry edible beans are reminded that they have until Monday to request loans under the Reseal Loan Program of the federal govern- 1968 Sales Forecast Reallirmed by Ford Pontiac Shrine No. 22. Order of the White Shrine of Jerusalem installation of officers Sat., Mar. 30, 8 p.m. 22 State St. Devota Stitt WHP. ' -Adv. After a funeral Saturday Gagarin’s , and Seryogin’s ashes will be placed in the most honorable spot in the Soviet Union, the Kremlin Wall facing Red Square. Ladge Calendar STOCK AVERAGE tomplleb by Th^AisodataB^ Prast^ Ind. Ralls Util. Stocks Noon Thurs. Prev. Day Week Ago . Month Ago .472^5 182'.6 154.1' 327. DEARBORN (AP) - Henry Ford II said Thursday night that sales gains and existing economic conditions this year reinforce his December prediction that new car sales in the United States this year will reach 9.3 million units. He said they also backed up his predlctiop that truck sales in this country this year will total about 1.7 million units. Both predictions include sales of imported cars. Ford, chairman of Ford Motor Co., said industry sales for the first three months of this year should be about 15 per cent higher than the same period in 1967. merit. Application must be made through the County Agricultural Stabilization and Conservation Service office, 4515 Highland, Waterford Township. Alfred Haack, chairman of the Oakland County Committee, noted that the maturity date for these crops is April 39, 1968, but added that reseal Oy extension privileges for an additional year are available on 1967 wheat and barley. added that producers storing under the Reseal Loan Program for 1968-69 will earn a payment of approximately 13 cents per bushel per year. The same thing applies, he said, to wheat and barley stored in approved commercial warehouses. Haack said that in the case ol warehouse-stored loans, storage charges at the rates under the Grain Storage Agreement wib be paid to the warehouseman by the Commodity Credit Corporation, ri 1 \owi'iAc l>^Es.^nul)A^. march 20. ims Jacoby on Bridge VfCnRDJ’f/iJfA^ Q—The Adding hu been: West Nerth E»>t Sontli 2 4k Pas* 3 4 Pass 4N.T. Pass S V Pass ? Yoo. South, hold; 4AKQJ97< VAKS2 41 4t What do you do now? Ar—Tesi ulrht bid dve ae* franp and ask for kings or yon adght Jump right to serea and hope that your partner ha* ____[ mnd heart control. Wo Blightly fSTor the eonaervattro Ht* BO*tnunp. TODAY’S QUESTION What do you bid as dealer vdlh: 4C 4AKQ«54 4KQJ1414 Answer Monday By OSWALD AND JAMES JACOBY Duplicate bridge rewards skill more than rubber bridge and the team-of-four match based on Inter national Match Point or IMP scoring is the most skillful f 0 r m (rf duplicate, but ever in this gam there is a tre-| mendous 1 u c k| factor. "Today’s hand decided a recent I MP m a t c h when one North-South pair bid six spades and the other stopped at game. The luck factor is represented by the queen of clubs. Move it to the East hand in place of of the small clubs and the si bidders would have lost the match. The swing involved in the location of this club queen was 750 points each way or a total of 1,500. Translated it meant 26 IMPS total. The hand caused considerable argument. The winning team I claimed that the slam contract was more likely to succeed than to go down because it would make any time West held the club queen dP when West held five small clubs“ so tliat the queen would drop on the first club lead. Obviously c o r r e c I dummy technique would be for declarer to draw trumps, cash one of ^dummy's high clubs to check on the possibility of a singleton queen and then to fall back on Top Car Slate DETROIT (AP) -Scheduled autbrnobllk production in the United States tjiis week is the heaviest of the year with 194, 481 cars slated, the trade publication Automotive New.s reported Thursday. slam was ju.st about as close to being an even money proposition as you will ever find and that a small amount ofl overbidding by the winning I The peninsula of Yucatan is North and South had paid off I famous for its ruins of Mayan this time. Next time it may not.'cities. THE BETTER HALF THE BERRYS By Carl Gruberi By United Press International Today is Friday. March 29‘, the 89th day of 19M with 277 to follow. The moon is between its new| phase and first quarter. The morning star is Venus. The evening stars are Mars and Jupiter. On this day in history: In 1812, the first wedding took place in the White House wheni Mrs. Lucy Payne Washington j became the bride of Justice Thomas Todd of the Supreme Court. In 1847, Gen. Winfield Scott | captured' Vera Cruz. The Mex-| lean troops marched from the city to be disarmed. ★ * * In 1945, 1st Army soldiers j marched 55 miles to all but cut' off the Ruhr Basin. In 1967, France launched its first nuclear submarine. BOARDING HOUSE (MY WORD,I’M„HOMOREP BYtHl-S-^EXPRESSION Of CONFIDENCE.^AND VtME OTHERTWOTour NATIONAL ORGANIZATION OF \ GUYS RUNNiN" <)OWLS» POES NEEP A PRESIDENT } ARE PUSKOVERSlwiTH 60LP AND IIV^AGINATIVE ( MAJOR-— / NEW pROGRAMS.-'—MAK-KAFF/- \ VOu' LL. PUT'emY but of goukse’ Tll have to I ( DOWN LIKE THE^ CONSIDER MY OTHER \ first beer-Y \ Responsibilities/ TUMBLEWEEDS by Tom Ryan CITIZENS OF GRIMY GULCH.' LET'S GIVE TUMBLEWEEPS A ROUSING SENP-OFFON HIS MISSION TO RESCUE PEAR KNUCKLES FROM THE INPIANSi GODSPEED; LADi AND REMEMBER! SHOULD THOSE TREACHEROUS; RED RASCALS GIVE YOU ANY TROUBLE, YOU ALWAYS KNOW WHERE YOU raw TfVRM PGR HPI P/ closet Hider Is Charged A burglary suspect arrested in a closet at 261 Judson wts' arraigned in Pontiac Municipal Court yesterday on a charge of breaking and entering. | Police said Thomas Williams,! 28, of 256 Judson was found in the closet after a resident heard ^oneone breaking into f building and phoned police. A pistol was later found in the | kitchen. Bond vyas set as $25,(*00! and examination for Tuesday at| 1:30 p.m. , PRACTICING f . GRI6BAGET0URNAN\ENT= Meg, ?THE Are Your School's Activities Now Appearing in The Press? THE PONTIAC PRESS PONTIAC, MICHIGAN. FRIDAY, MARC'I D—1 makeup study — Grpves High School junior Janet Butz determines the kind of makeup she will use on Jim Brian as Renay Weiner awaits her turn. Jim and Renay are seniors. The teen-agers are readying the Groves’ production of “West Side Story.’’ The musical may be seen Tuesday through Saturday at 8 p.m. in the school’s Little Theater. West Side Story Is Planned By BENITA ROSEN “Practice makes perfect’’ goes the old maxim. The cast of “West Side Story,” the spring musical being produced at Wylie E. Groves High School is a qualified example. Often described as a modern-day “Romeo and Juliet,” the play revolves around the romance of Maria (Renay Weiner), a Puerto Rican girl, and Tony (Jim Brian), an American. the result of Tony and Maria s love. The rumble is brief, however, because the unexpected use of switchblade knives brings /diBth to the leaders of both gangs. Pontiac Press Photo The tiw loveks are plagued by the fact that Miffla’s jlirother, Bernardo (Gary Sallen), is' loader of the Sharks, and Tony’s best friend Riff (Jon Otto) is leader of the Jets, rival street gangs. A rumble between the rival gangs is Comic relief in the musical is obvious when Officer Krupke (Brad Bowman) is encountered, but the over-all effect is that of bittersweet tragedy. ON NEXT WEEK “West Side Story” will be presented in the Groves Little Theater Tuesday through Saturday at 8 p.ni. Tickets will be available at the door. Though often not as glamorous as Dogpatch Dance at Watted Lake Roundup of News From Area Schools Troy By JOANNE SANDERSON Everyone at Walled Lake High School is looking forward to the Sadie Hawkins Dance tonight sponsored by the senior class. The Girls’ Athletic Association will go to Waterford Saturday for a "Play Day.” Sponsor Nancy Smith will accompany the girls. Wednesday night, the boys and gii^ls who participated in winter sports were honored at the annual Sports Banquet. Awards for wrestling, basketball, skiing and cheerleadiiig were presented^ Junior Chris Grapentine was selected as an outstanding scorer from more than 2,500,000 high school and college students in the Time magazine Current Affairs contest. Other students from Walled Lake with high scores were Bill Milligan, It sensor, Frank Davis, Robert Russel and Skip Ward, all juniors. Carmen Ginter of the social studies department, will present Chris with the certificate of excellence and merit. According to general student opinion, the Student Government is ineffective and impassive. The annual Forensic Contest was held recently at Walled Lake Winners are Dan Conway and Walter White, extemporaneous; Patt Spurr and Jeanne Grun, humorous; Majorie Mickel and Ed McCallum, declamation; Nan-nette Bridge, original oratory; and Cheryl Dooley and Bob Hanson, interpretive. The multiple reading award was granted Linda Hooper, Ellen Simmons, Cindy Buttenmiller, Diane Hruska, Mike Elwood and Jim Monroe. MoJt By GEORGIA ROSEWALL It’s Leap Year and anything goes. Waterford Mott is living up to this Pontiac Prets Photo by Edward R. I A PROPOSAL •— Marmee (Claudine Powell) and Meg (Suzanne Grogan—back window) register shock as Jo (Hope Locklear) appears disinterested in a proposal of marriage from Layrie (Dave MeSkulin).. The scene is from Emmanuel Christian High Scbool’s production of “Little Women.” The classic will be presented tomorrow at 8 p.m. under the sponsorship of the schools junior class. By Emmanuel Dramatists 'Little Women Is Offered By JOHN SINER A dramatization of Louisa May Al-cott’s classic novel ‘Little Women’ as interpreted by Roger Wheeler will be presented tomorrow evening at 8 under the sponsorship of Emmanuel Christian High School’s junior class. Set in the Victorian decor, the play centers on the lives of four March sisters and their adolescent escapades. Heading the case as the “little women” are Suzanne Grogan, Meg; Others in the cast are Paul Dotson, Mr. Lawrence; Ruth Dunlap, Miss Annie; Ann Jokenin, Aunt Carol; and Beckie Loop, Hanna. Completing the cast are Dave MeSkulin, Laurie; Clyde Murphy Brook; Claudine Powell, Marmee; and Melinda TTiemm, Aunt March. ITie play is under the direction of Mrs. Richard Burke. girl-ask-boy dance til 11 in Mason By LINDA SWEET The Troy High School Student Government has been receiving a lot of criticism lately. Two years ago when the Constitutional Convention was held the constitution was completely revised in the hopes of improving a then miserable situation. One of the most controversial proposals concerned the. Student Court. It was finally decided ithat the Student Government should set up an annual Student Court in any way they saw fit. This has never been done. statement with tonight from 8 cafetorium. The theme of the dance is “Leap Year Love-In.” Psychedelic posters, strobe lights, flower power and Incense and peppermints will provide wild decorations. Hippie-styled clothing will be in order for fte occasion. Prizes will be awarded for the best costume and best corsage. Entertainment will be provided by Panic and the Paak. The Untroddeh Ways and the One-Calorie Strawberry-Cherry will also appear. Junior Debbie MacDonald said, “What Student Government? "Die administration runs everything.” However, government member Junior Linda Robinson places the blame on the entire student b^y, saying, “Every activity that the Student Government initiates is unsuccessful due to lack of student interest.” Whatever the problem is, neither the students nor the teachers are very/ interested in solving it this late in ■ the school year. Next year, however, brings the second Constitutional Convention and benefiting from experience perhaps a better constitution will be drafted. Dominican Avondale Holly This year, the seniors plan to spend a day at a dude ranch near Grand Rapids which features swimming and horseback riding. Booths such as the marriage booth, the dippy duck, the fortune teller, nickle toss and sponge throw will feature teachers. Members of the HHS A Cappella choir and students helping with the production of “HMS Pinafore” traveled to Pontiac Northern High School yesterday to view that school’s production of the Gilbert-Sullivap musical. Darrell Burgett is the musical director at Holly. Brandon Multiple reading group members'Rosa-lea Brooks, Leanne Hoffman, Gregg Schulz and Duane Stowell, reading from “Green Pastures,” earned a first place. Other winners were Linda Miller, Marge Widman, Yvonne Lanfear, Lisa Troyer, Nancy Svetcos, Steve Krantz, Debbie Pacer, Peggy Shepard, Gary Barns, Raymond Geeck and Bill McDonald. Kenneth Stubblefield of the faculty is the adviser. Molly Hafner, Beth; Hope Locklear, Jo; and Sally Watson, Amy. .. Novi By THOM HOLMES Last week proved to be profitable for the junior class of Novi High School. Its ^bake sale, an overwhelming success, earned $540 for the junior prom fund. March 19, salesmen from the junior class went around the Novi community and took orders for cakes, pies and cookies. Stevenson By PENNY McMILLEN Stevenson High School students were recently offered an insight to the grim details concerning narcotics arid the effects of drug addiction. The Sterling Police Department sent Sgt. A. Stozenfeld from the SRD detective bureau to speak to both boys’ and gjrls’ gym classes. Sgt. Stozenfeld, with his discussiwi, presented a film, “Narcotics; the Decision.” A post office, incense pagoda and jail will add to the fun. For 10 cents you can send your best friend or worst enemy to jail. Committee chairmen are Nancy Stephenson, decorations; Mari Lynn Hutson, publicity and tickets; Wendy Walter, refreshments; and Larry Gibons, entertainment. The dance is sponsored by the Student Council. By ANDI BARNES Friday was declared a student government day at Dominican Academy by the Student Council, and teachers in many cases turned classes over to students. Oxford By JAN MALANE The Avondale High School Spirit Risers Monday elected officers for next year. All juniors, they are Dan Souheaver, president; Karen Sheldon, vice president; Jo White, secretary; Carol Beamish, treasurer; and Dennis Graham, Student Council representative for the Spirit Risers. The campaign was a silent one. The aim of the election was to select officers on abiiity instead of popularity. Judges made up of the rertiaining members of the Spirit Risers stressed quality of leadership in the choice By MARCIA CLARK A carnival sponsored by the seniors at Holly High School will be held tomorrow at the high school. Money raised from this project will supply funds for the senior skip day. West Bloomfield By BOB BROWNE The forensics team traveled t o Detroit’s Servite High School Monday to compete in the district competition. Chosen to compete in the regionals were Larry Brower and Jere Neill, first and second, respectively, in radio-news broadcasting; and Randy Caswell and Gary Blain, first and second, respectively, in extemporaneous speaking. The drama classes and the Drama Club will present the r version of “The House of Bernarda Alba” April 4 and 5 at 8 p.m. in the high school. According to student director Brian Yazejian, the play is a tragedy of women without men. The story involves a domineering mother who attempts to repress the spirit of her five daughters and of how this repression leads to violence and death. By MICHAEL COOPER Brandon High School was well represented in the district forensics contest at Servite Nigh School Monday. The winners will compete in the regional contest at Dearborn. The play was written by Federico Garcia Lorca, the Spanish poet and playwright. Registration began for the underclassmen this week for their enrollment in next year’s classes. The members of the junior class traveled to the campuses of Oakland Cranmunity College W^nesday. Lake Orion performing on-stage, the behind-the-scenes-work is vital in “West Side Story.” Working steadily since tl|e end of February, crew committees are doing their best to insure a smooth running production. Among the committee heads are Linda Bice and Sue Cavellaro, costume; Marge Strange and Debbie Thomas, props; Jan Sharpe and Wendy Zeldner, publicity; Mike Steckley and Chris Ventzke, scenery; Doug I'ekete and Karl Klap-thor, lighting; and Darra-Lee Hackett and Carol Cofer, tickets and programs. Student chairman of the makeup committee, Janet Butz is working with her crew under the direction of Mrs. Robeh Boak, logic teacher. Waterford Class to Offer 'Beauty and the Beast' By MARY JERGOVICH Waterford Township High .School’s play production class will present ‘ Beauty and the Beast’’ by Nicholas S. Gray today at 4ip.m.,and tomorrow at 1:30 and 3:30 p.m. The double-cast play stars Margaret Higgins and Marsha Stier as Beauty; Meade Moore, the Beast; John Gaines, the Wizard; Harriet Jo Mansfield and Marti McAllister. fWikey; and Tim Cutler and Tom Whaley, JMr. Clement. Assisting the production’s director, Mrs. Peter LaBatt, drama and speech instructor, is Maiy Jane Sh»i>key of the student body. Mrs. LaBatt also sponsors the school’s National Thespian Chapter. Other cast members are; Joan Knight and .Sharon Warner. .Icssamine; and Soundra Hale and Nancy Howell, Jonquilline. ^ Student musical director is Merle Carson with Cathy Raup as dance assistant. Mary Totten of the Seaholm High School faculty will play the score of “West Side Story” on the piano. Michael Job, speech teacher, is director; Debbie Kahn, assistant director; faculty member Anne Hobart, producer; and Bob Griffin, .sta$!e manager. Bob Griffin and Dan Dalton are in charge of sets; Ucida LaBarge, publicity;'Dave Beaudrys, sound; and Bonnie Gregory, costumes ;rnd makeup. Others in the crerw are John" Neff, magic; Carol Schaad, properties; 'and Duane Williams, lights;. Students were given the opportunity to ask questions. Stozenfeld concluded his warning to the students saying, “You’ll always have a tendency to go back to drugs — so don’t start.” Note A dance featuring the "Bottles of Goodness” will be held afterward. Tonight is the last night to view the Science Fair in the gym. Featuring displays by students from sixth grade through higri school, the fair has been in progress since Wednesday. Prizes were awarded Tliursday evening. The Science Fair has been sponsored by the Science Club, under its president, Mike Milosch and advisers, Richard Billman and Mark Orchard, faculty members, Jerry Bixby, master of ceremonies for Northern’s show said, “The Student Council has had a great success and much credit for this must go to talent s^ow chairman Linda Tenjeras.” By DEBBIE RO€HON Students at Pontiac Ylatholic High School had a half-day scission of school today as the faculty met to discuss report cards. > Faculty Day was rec«;ntly held at Pontiac Catholic. TeacheriB were honored with corsages and boutoniOieres.- Several students brought cakes to Iielp celebrate the occasion. ♦ A special portable throne , was constructed by students, anxl faculty members were , carried through the school. on the seat of (bionor. 1 Science Fair Time Keeps Many at Our Lady Busy By DIANNE REED Each year brings the annual Our Lady of the Lakes Science Fair, the regional fair, and finally the Metropolitan Detroit Science Fair, in Cobo Hall. The display there may be seen from next Friday.through April 9. Three OLL seniors entering who have won honors at Cobo Hall in previous years are Karen Keenan, Kevin Feliksa and Joan Coomes. Kevin’s math project worlki; with the square root of pi. ^ .lUNiORS Participate \ Juniors participating in the fair are Julie Garwood in botany mid , Ralph Berg in physics. Sophomores: Maureen McKowan and Steve Gingras will also enter. Karen’s project concerns the training and regeneration of planaria.. She trained them to swim in a Y-maze. Freshmen Donna Keenan, Donna Ga-larneau, Peggy Hagan, Grad© Garwood and Dave Whittam will compote in the junior division. Their projects are limited to experiments, graphic arts or collections. As they regenerated, they trainejl themselves and it proved they learned faster from one another. Karen remarked, “They learned two or three times as fast.” Others participating in the sdhool fair were Tim McDonnell, Mary darwood, Kathy Motsinger, Julie McDonnell, Gail Garwood, Melanie Lynch and Kris Cen-- tilli. Joan’s project involves antibiotics and their side effects, proving that “afla-toxin” not only kills bacteria but also produces liver cancer in animals. Sister Mary Raymond, science teacher and moderator of the Science Club, has encouraged and assisted trie students. CAtDUBAUSM regeneration « «**»!«« fsoCESS . OP puhariars By DIANE CHAMBERLIN The Lake Orion High School faculty meets the junior high faculty tonight in a fund-raising bhsketball game, sponsored by the Lake Orion Education Association at 7;30 in the high school gym. This project is to raise money for scholarships and a summer camping program for needy students. Some money also will be donated to the Township Library. Special halftime entertainment is planned, featuring the high school Pop Band, directed by Robert Greene, and “cheerleaders” supplied by the Future Teachers Association. SCIENCE B5NTRY — Karen Keenan, senior at Our Lady of the Lakes: High School, and her science instiuctor, Sister Mai'y ) Raymond, dieck over the last-minute^ detaiis of Karen’s entry in the Cobo Hall Metropolitan Detroit Science Fair, The Cdbo Hall display may be seen thromgh April 5-9. Pontiac Prtit l»k«ta