The Pontiac Press Wednesday, May 21, 1969 WEDNESDAY If the Apollo 10 mission goes according to schedule, the networks will periodically preempt or interrupt regularly scheduled programs to present progress reports on the mission. R—Rerun C—Color WEDNESDAY MORNING 5:50 (2) TV Chapel 5:55 (2) C — On the Farm Scene 6:00 (2) C~Black - Heritage 6:30 (2) C - Woodrow the Woodsman (4) C — TV High School 6:45 (7) C — Batfink 7:00 (A) C - Today (7) C — Morning Show 7:30 (2) C—News, Weather, 12 12 12: 7:50 (9) Warm-Up 8:00 (2) R - Captain Kangaroo (9) C — Bozo 8:30 (7) R - Movie: “Comrade X'" ( 1 9 4 0 ) Clark Gable, Hedy Lamarr 8:45 (1)6) R—Human Relations 9:00 (2) R C — Lucy Show " (4) C — Ludden’s Gallery — Mason Williams. Liilda Cristal, S k i 1 e s and Henderson and Danny Cox, guest. (9) Ontario Schools 9:15 (56) Science Is . Discovery 9:30 (2) R C — B e V e r 1 v Hillbillios* (56) Liston and Say 9:50 (56) All Aboard for Reading 10:00 (2) R C - Andy Grif-fith (4) C — Personality (9) Ontario Schools 10:10 (56) Of Cabbages and Kings 10:25 (9) C — Preview Promotion 10:30 (2) C — Mcrv Griffin (4) C—Hollywood Squares (7) C — Galloping Gourmet (9) Friendly Giant 10:35 (56) Reason and Read 10:45 (9) Chez Helene 10:55 (56) Spanish I 11:00 (4) C-It Takes Two (7) R — l&ewitehed (9) Mr. Dressup (50) C—Jack LaLanne 11:20 (56) Misterogers 11:25 (4) C — Carol Duvall (9) C—Morgan’s Merry-Go-Round 11:30 (4) C— Concentration (7) C—Funi|iy You Should Ask "(O) Take Thirty (50) C — Kimba 11:50 (56) Friendly Giant 11:55 (7) Children’s Doctor WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON 12:00 C—News, Weather, . Sports (4) C—Jeopardy (7) C — Dream House (9) C — Bonnie Prudden (50) C — Alvin 05 (56) R—Americans From Africa 25 (2) C — Fashions 30 (2) G — As the World Turns (4) C — News, Weather, Sports (7) Let’s Make a Deal (9) R—Real McCoys (50) R - Movie: “Night and Day” (1946) Cary Grant, Mary Martin, Eve Arden, Monty Wooley 12:45 (56) C — Spanish I 12:55 (4) C - News 1:00 (2) C — Divorce Court (4) C—Days of Our Lives (7) C — Newlywed Game (9) R C — Movie: “Kimberly Jim*’ (1965) Jim Reeves,/ Madeleine Usher 1:05 (56) Art Lesson ^ 1:25 (56) Science Is piscovery 1:30 (2) C—Guiding Light (4) C — Doctors ^ (7) Dating Game 2:00 C—Secret Storm (4) C — Another World (7) C—General Hospital (50) C—American West . (56) Reason and Read 2:15 (56) American History 2:30 (2) C-Edge of Night * (4) C — You Don’t Say (7) C—One Life to Live (50) R — Make Room for Daddy 3:00 (2) C—Linkletter Show (4) C —Match Game (7) C — Dark Shadows (9) R—Dennis the Menace (50) R — Topper (56) Medical Education — “Obstetrical Emergencies” 3:25 (4) C - News 3:30 (2) C — Search for Tomorrow (4) C — Hidden Faces (7) C—Anniversary Game (9) C — Magic Shoppe (50) C—Captain Detroit (56) Memo to Teachers 4(00 (2) C — Love of Life (7) R Movie: “On the Waterfront’’ (19S1) Marlon Brando, Eva Marie Saint, Karl Malden, Lee J. Cobb, Rod Steiger (9) C — Bozo (56) That’s Life — “It's OK to Be Angry.’’ 4:30 (2) Mike Douglas — Van Johnson is cohost. (50) R—Little Rascals (56),TV Kindergarten (62) R—Star Performance 5:00 (4) C—George'" Pierrot — “Michigan Vacation North’’ (9) R C — Batman (50) R — MunsteTs (56) Misterogers (62) C — Bugs Bunny and Friends 5:30 (9) R C F Troop V (50) R — Superman (56) Friendly Giant (62) R — Leave It to Beaver 5:45 (56) Sing Hi — Sing Lo WEDNESDAY NIGH^T 6:00 (2) (4) (7) C — News, Weather, Sports (9) R C - I Spy - Kelly and Scott try to prevent a killing (50) R C — I^lintstones (56) What’s New (62) R — Sea Hunt 6:30 (2),.C News — Cronkite (4) C — News — Huntley, Brinkley (7)^ — News — Reynolds ^ (50) R — McHale’s Navy —In the skipper’s ab- sence, Binghampton orders Parker to crack down. (56) TV High School (62) R — Highway Patrol 7:00 (2) C — Truth or Consequences (4) (7) C — News. Weather, Sports (9) R C — Movies: “Fame Is the Name of the Game” (1966) Tony Franciosa, Jill St. John (50) R — I Love Lucy (56) C — Spectrum — Discovery of the genetic DNA code is re-created, and its significance is discussed. (62) R — I Led Three Lives 7:30 (2) C^ Baseball : Detroit at Chicago (4) R C — Virginian — Civil engineer’s dreams of riches are challenged by " Trampas, his childhood friend. (7) R C — Here Comes the Brides — The new sheriff turns out to be a real town tamer. (50) R — Hazel (56) C — Book Beat — Paul Chevigny. author of “Police Power: Police Abuses in New York City.” is interviewed. (62) R — Ann Sothern 8:00 (50) C—Pay Cards — Buddy Greco is celebrity guest. (56) News in Perspective (62) R Ozzie and Harriet 8:30 (7) R C - Movie: “The King and I” (1956) English widow becomes governess and teacher of the numerous children of the hard-headed king of MR. STEAK LIKES KIDS . . . 4tnd kids like Mr, Steak, too ' Once they've been there, you won't find the small fry dragging their heels when you mention having d'^ner (or lunch) at Mr. Steak, It's fun for the kiddies to watch their dinners being prepared and they love Mr. Steaks friendly face. SPECIAL MENU FOR THE YOUI)|G$TERS America’s Favorite FAMILY Restaurant (not a drive in) (no alcoholic beverages served) RR9 Rllnn ELIZABETH LAKE ROAD U U ^ U U U U Opposite Tho Pontiac Mall The Pontiac Press Wednesday, May 21, 1 969 13 Siam. Deborah Kerr, Yul Brynner, Rita Moreno (9) C — Four Concerts From Europe "" (50) C — Password (62) R - Movie: “The Lion Has Wings” (1940) Merle Oberon, Ralph Richardson 9:00 (4) C — Music Hall — Tony Sandler, Ralph Young and Judy Came frolic in London. Guesting are Norman Wisdom and Nancy Ames. (50) R—Perry Mason (56) Standpoint 9:30 (7) C — (Special) , Apollo 10 — If the space shot goes as scheduled, the movie will be interrupted for live color pictures as the craft moves into lunar orbit. (9) C — Film Makers — “Satan’s Pipers,” a modern version of an ancient . myth. (56) C—PBL—“Multiply . ^. and Subdue the Earth” 9 : 55 (62) Greatest lines Head- 10:00 (2) C — Hawaii Five-0 — Gangster who plans to spill the beans about his boss is the target of mob assassination threats. (4) R C — (Special) Jack Benny’s Birthday Party — L’lrille Ball, Lawrence Welk and Dan Blocker join Jack in a spot of western movies. Rouvan and Djennis Day sing, and Ann-Margret and Jerry I ewis make cameo appearances. (9) (50) C “ News. Weather, Sports (62) R — Movie; “Breakthrough” ( 1 9 5 0 ) David Brian. Frank Lovejoy 10:30 (9) C - Show of the Week (50) R—Alfred Hitchcock 11:00 (2) (4) (7) C - News. Weather. Sports (9) R — Movie: “Jolly Bad Fellow” (British, 1964) Leo McKern, Janet Munro (50) R — Movie: “The Human Jungle” (1954) Gary Merrill, Jan SterL ing. Chuck Connors 11:30 (4) C — Johnny Carson (7) C — Joey Bishop — Raquel Welch heads guest list. 11:35 (2) R - Movies: 1. “Return of,Dr. Mabuse” (1961) Lex Barker; 2. “Woman Chases Man”-(1937) Joel M c C r e a . Miriam Hopkins, Broderick Crawford WEDNESDAY 1:00 (4) R Champ Beat the>« (7) R — T^xan 1:30(4) (7) C -Weather 2 ■: 4 5 ( 2 ) C Weather 2:50 (2) TV Chapel News. News, SAVE MORE-BUY DIRECT FROM FACTOR Spettotu\« , [ Choose from motp rabmet styles, fu’i'.lie'. I and FORMICA rolor^ »hon be*0'o ICall 624-4515 Now Open Dai/y 8-5 Sundoy I I 3 NO JMONEY DOWN MIDWEST! l/ITPUCMd WE MANUFACTURE. liiimyiTii INSTALL, SERVICE GIANT OPEN HOUSE SALE This week only Sat. 1 7th to Sun. 25th FREE FAVORS: DOOR PRIZES: 100 HOLDEN RED STAMPS PLUS: 10,000 HOLDEN RED STAMPS with purchase $1000.00 OFF ON THIS MOBILE HOME /or; ACADEMY, BROADUNE, BARON, FAWN,«LANDOLA, PARK ESTATE, RITZ-CRAFT, STAR, STATESMAN 1084 OAKLAND AVE., PONTIAC 334-1509 PARK SPACE FOR MOBILt HOMES AVAILABLE i"/ yf, The Weather U. *. WMiMr •uraM Pirac } Showers Likely THE Home Edition PONTIAC PRESS Army Is Doubted on Contamination PONTIAC. MICHIGAN. WEDNESDAY,*MAY 21, 1969 VOL. 127 NOk 89 ★ ★ ★ W -t2PAGE^. "l0«^ WASHINGTON (AP) - House Investigators have obtained military maps ^bowing a biologically contaminated area in Utah hear a gas warfare proving ground where the Army has said there is no contamination. The maps raised the question of Army truthfulness, according to Rep. Henry S. Reuss, D-Wis., chairman of the subcommittee investigating the use of biochemical warfare agents such as nerve gas. warfare;^ testing had killed the sheep, but the government paid compensation to owhers of the animals. 'i • Republican Rep. Sherman P. Lloyd, whose district iridudes Dugway, testified he is convinced tte Army did not lie about the maps. Since the area is outside^ot in—Dugway. “Don’t you think honorable men would have to say: ‘No we don’t have one within the proving grounds, but we do have one outside’?’’ asked Reuss. Army witnesses were called to appear today before Reuss’s subcommittee to explain the maps and two incidents in which Army spokesmen reportedly were not straightforward about what is going on at Dugway Proving Grounds in Utah. The Army and Air Force maps, exhibited to the subcommittee yesterday, showed a ‘“Permanent Bio Contaminated Area’’ nine miles'in diameter located about 15 miles outside Dugway Proving Grounds. ENCEPHALITIS TESTS Lloyd also said he believes the Army is conducting tests on VeneMelan equine encephalitis, a lethal disease. “I think this encephalitis has been found in rodents in the area,’’ he said, DENIED BY ARMY Reuss said he is concerned about the maps since Army officials had denied there was a contanoinated area in Dugway. ^ Some 6,000 sheep died last year near the proving ground. Military olfficials did not concede that chemical biological Blit, Lloyd said, he accepts the Army’s contention that it is not field-testing the disease. The testing probably is done in laboratories, not in the field, Lloyd said. In other testimony yesterday. Dr. D. A. Osguthorpe, con-isultant to the Utah State Agriculture Department, said the Army denied for a week after a botched nerve gas test at Dugway last year that any gas had been tested for two years previously. Southfield Stadium Site Hit TEARDROP -r Students at Berkeley, Calif., run (lower right) as a helicopter spewing tear gas makes a low-level pass yesterday over Sproul Plaza wi the University of California campus. The use of-ai helicopter to spread tear gas was introduced as police and National Guardsmen broke up gathering knots of demonstrators. -e SOUTHFIELD - A Southfield lawyer has announced he is circulating more than 300 petitions against building a multimillion-dollar sports complex in this Detroit suburb. Pete Mitoff, -Southfield resident and Detroit attorney, said yesterday he foresees no difficulty in collecting within a month the 1,000 signatures required for an ordinance. The petitions, with room for 20 signatures each, seek to limit the size of any stadium built in Southfield to 12,000 seats. If the petition^ were validated, the City Council would have 30 days to either adopt the ordinance or schedule it for a popular vote. 'Ihe proposed stadium would seat 73,000. couple of suburban sites ^e also in jeon- “They might question whether the tention.) ‘Restriction on the size of the stadium is a Sigmund A, Beras, Southfield city at- Reasonable restriction.’’ Beras sUted. tomey, said that it Mitoft’s petition drive ' Southfield Mayor Norman Feder has were successful, the case could go to said he is against locating the stadium court on the question of zoning. there. County Has to Share Families Motel Bill Douglas Paid Citv byilnif Aided by g ^ v Fund He Heads TO I Ratifies Pacts & .........- . ' Unions SENTIMENT HIGH “I plan to get another 200 out by the end of the week. Right now there’s enough sentiment to get 5,000 to 8,000 signatures.” said Mitoff. (Southifield Is only one of several sites being considered for the domed stadium. Pontiac and downtown Detroit are among the main contenders, although the State Fairgrounds in Detroit and a WASHINGTON ifl - Supreme Court Justice William 0. Douglas has been paid a $S0d-a-day fee by a California study center which gets part of its mohey from the controversial foundation he heads. The ^payments to Douglas by the Center for the Study of Democratic Institutions, Santa Barbara, C al i f., totaied about $4,000 for I960 and this year, a center official said. Douglas has come under fire already for his outside president and only paid official of the Albert Parvin Foundation, which has had Stock ties with Las Vegas gambling casinos. Congressmen have called for an investigation of Douglas’s Income in the wake of Justice Abe Fortas’s resignation from the Supreme Court in the dispute over a $20,000 check from the family foundation of jailed financier Louis E. Wolfson. By ED BLUNDEN Yesterday cduld be termed “the day peace broke ()ut” between the city of Pontiac and its employes. Tlie City Commission ratified one-year contracts — expected to cost a total of $800,000—with four of its employe unions at last night’s meeting, ending strife and marathon negotiations that began last January. The move was somewhat of a surprise. The bargaining was only completed last Friday, and the unions had held their ratification votes over the weekend. Indications were the commission,, which had not seen the completed proposals before yesterday, would study the matter at least one week. However the commission consensus appeared to be: “Why wait?” The vote was 6-1 with Commissioner Robert C. Irwin dissenting. $10,150. Both salary rates were $9,000 yearly in January 1968. 'The other salary agreements give the Pontiac Municipal Employes Association (PMEA) 32.5 cents per hour increase beginning this year. For Local 100 of the Federation of State, County and Municipai Employes, the rate increase is 30 cents per hour, retroactive to Jan. 1, and an additional five cents on July 1. Teddy Wants Sirhan to Live By JEAN SAILE It Is costing the state and county $33 and $35 a day, respectively, to keep two families in a Pontiac area motel, it was disclosed yesterday. The monthly motel tab is more than $2,000, plus three restaurant meals a day for io persons. Despite the tab, it's allegedly not a satisfactory arrangement — either for the families involved or for the County Social Services Department. The costs are a sore spot with social service officials, and so is the housing shortage which has forced the department to turn to motels for necessary housing. who reported that nowhere in the county has the department been able to locate suitable rental property for the second mother. IN FOSTER CARE “We may have to put her children In foster care and provide her with a room if the motel puts them out as it is threatening to do,” said Miss Hinckley. The first mother is currently awaiting FHA approval on a mortgage which will put her into her own home. She’s been at the motel since March 27, Miss Hinckley said, and it’s cost $33.28 a day plus meals. at restaurants for the whole family since that time. DOUGLAS RULING ASKED The American Ba*- Association’sTlthics Comnoittee said yesterday Fortas had violated its canons of ethics. Sen.'John J. Williams, R-Del., who requested the opinion, told the Senate he is also seeking an ABA committee ruling On Douglas’s role in the Parvin Foundation. Douglas is chairman of the board of directors of the Santa Barbara center as weil as Parvin Foundation head. PICNIC SUGGESTED In a further move aimed at harmony, a “field day” for all city employes and their families at some picnic site was proposed by District 5 Commissioner Rert F. Jackson. He said this would bring about greater solidarity and harmony in the city. His proposal was placed under study. The center has been the second highest recipient of payments from the Parvin Foundation in recent years. However, the contributions represent only a small portion of the center’s financing. , The center encourages the study of civil liberties and seminars on international politics. The agreements now have only to be printed up and formally signed. They reportedly put pay scales for city policemen and firemen second only to Detroit in the state as of July 1 this year. At that time, regular policemen will get $10,300 yearly and firemen The firwnen and municipal workers held numerous picketing sessions in front of city buildings during the late winter and early spring. In the first week of March, three of the unions Went On strike, and there was some violence on the picket lines with tear gas used once to disperse the crowd. Policemen did not strike. The workers went back to work under court order and remained on,the job during continued negotiations. A mediator from the Labor Mediation Board Leonard Bennett, aided early bargaining. On March 24 a fact-finder, Harry N. Casselman of 3279 Hartslock Woods, West BIooiAfield Township, was appointed by the state board. Casselman conducted further negotiations, which resulted in Settlement, and never actually issued a fact-finding report as is done in most cases. District 2 Commissioner Irwin, who voted against approval of the contracts, said he wanted to delay approval and was upset by a nonwage clause regarding “agency shop.” (Continued on Page A-2, Col. 4) LOS ANGELES (AP) - Sen. Edward M. Kennedy has asked “compassion, mercy and God’s gift of life itself” for the man condemned to death for assassinating Sen. Robert F. Kennedy, the district attorney said today. Edward Kennedy said his brother NO BETTER OUTLOOK Motel life vrill soon be ending for one Earlier Story, Page D-12 Aid to Dependent Children (ADC) mother and her 10 chil^n, hut for another with eight youngstert there’s currently no better outlook. Miss Ora Hinckley, county director of social services, told the social services board yesterday that the inability to find suitable housing has caused t h e predicament. would have wanted It that way, Dist. Atty. Evelle J, Younger said. Younger addressed the court at a session for sentencing, and arguments for a new trial, for Sirhan Bishara Sirhan., He said Kennedy’s remarks were in a hand-written letter delivered to the district attorney’s office last Saturday. He did not read the letter aloud but furnished copies to defense attorneys. Expenses for the two families are paid both by ADC state-funded allotment and codnty emergency relief. “We’re just beginning to understand the magnitude of the housing problem.” said William LeFevre, deputy director. The second biother has been at the motel since May 12. Her bill has been $35 a day plus meals. Her previous residence was condemned and she was evicted, workers reported. “It's a bad situation,” Miss Hinckley reported. “Telegraph Road (on which the motel is located) is no place for children to play. The motel is about to enter its busy season and wants ^ the families out.” The director said neither family has relatives with which to place the youngsters and nobody has been willing to rent them the space they need. “There just aren’t enough big low-cost homes in the county to take care of the needs,” Miss Hinckley reported. ‘MAN OF LOVE’ Tbie letter. Younger said, called Rob-/ert Kennedy “a man of love and sentiment hnd compassion. He would not have wanted his death to be a cause for the taking of another life.” The letter noted that 'Younger had inquired some weeks ago whether the Kennedy family wanted to express views on possible penalties. 'Bell Violating City Code' Michigan Bell Telephone Co. and city officials are being accused of violation of a city ordinance in construction of the $12.4-miIlion addition to Bell facilities in downtown Pontiac. The charges were leveled at last night’s City Commission meeting by attorney Jerome Mulligan representing Local 4612 of theComrfiunication Workers of America (CWA). city parking lot at the south end of the building.’ The City Commission agreed to the construction when Bell provided the city an equivalent parking area across the street. Mulligan's contention is that this is illegal and not adequate — replacing (Continued on Page A-2, Ck)l. 3) Cloudy Skies Due; Showers Possible Clouds rolling In late tonight will hover over the Pontiac area tomorrow. There’s also a chance the clouds will dump a fewv showers. Temperatures falling to 39 to 44 tdhl^t will warm to 58 to 63 tomorrow. 'The outlook for Friday is a chance of showers and a fittle wander. Probabilities of precipitation are zero today, 10 iper cent tonight, 40 per cent tomorrow. A low of 38 was the recording in downtown Pontiac before 8 a.m. The mercury had climbed to 62 by 2 p.m. Flash Mulligan said the City Commission was violating its own ordinance in permitting the construction and said “a deal” had been made. Specifically the charge was that off-street parking was not being provided, as required by the city ordinance, for the over 200 additional workers expected in the six-story annex to the present building at East Jluron and Mill. In Today's Press Marijuana Laws Nixon tries to put extracted teeth back in - PAGE A-3. Water Pollution Mayorr William H. ’I'aylor .Ir. this morning denied any deal had been made. He claimed the charges were an attempt to inject the city in a problem between Bell and its employes. He termed it “a ' lifiion fight to get parking .spaohs/for employes.”, ’ / Raylor said that in the land swap for -the building, the city “gained a few spaces for parking and got rid of some old buildings (cleared for the new park-irtg) ... I am sure the building is not going to slop.” Ripples of fouling spreading In Michigan — PAGE B-8. Long Holidays Milliken signs bill creating / four separate threeklay holidays - PAGE A-9. A-4 D-8 D-8 E-IS WASHINGTON (AP)—President Nixon chlef^l^l^e *of tte ulSted* SUtes £ 1 BUWVING PROTEST - Walter Skinner of Pasadena (fore I'Fellow draft Wolester Charles Friend (rear) helped put ouf nreme CoM and wUI aiuoance the Aground) batUes a fire in his clothing, sparked by burning the fire Without injury to either. Skinner. Friend and a ^rd choice on teievision at I tonight. I ^ords taken from a Los Angeles induction center yesterday. . man were charged later with conspiracy to comfnit burglary. The mayor admitted, “There are problems there and we Intend to dig them out.” Taylor said no immediate pians for additional downtown parking were under consideration. “We may have to go to a parking "structure (high-rise) pretty soon,” he said. The annex is being built on a former Area News ......... Astrology Bridge Crossword Puzzle Comics ............ Editorials' Food Section D-1, D-9, D-11 Markets . D-lt^ Obituaries C-5 Sports E-1—E-5 Theaters D-2 TV and Radio Programs E-15 Wiison, Earl E-15 Women’s Pages B-i—B-4, ■ ‘ ^ .A'' ..A.' , “f A^2 J .,' . . I" THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, MAY 21, 1969 u ;\\u.:\\ > p' ;\ 'A'l to Brand WASHINGTON (AP) — Congressional Intervention appears the only roadblock to a proposed Federal Trade Cdlnmissiop, regulation requiring all cigarette advertising to state that smoking may causq death. The FTC said yesterday the new regulation will apply sometime after June 30, the expiration of the 1965 Cigarette Labeling Act banning changes in current advertising practices. Unless Congress extends the law—and It is considering it—all advertisements Will include clearly and prominently the warning: “Cigarette smoking is dangerous to 'health and may'cause death resulting from cancer, coronary heart disease, chronic bronchitis, pulmonary emphysema and other diseases.” ONLY ON PACKS NOW , The present warning (now only required on packages) says; “Caution; Cigarette smoking may be hazardous to your health.” And while the current warning is affixed only to packages, the FTC moved to force the tobacco industry to couple the sterner message with all television and radio commercials and newspaper and magazine advertisements. Chairman Paul Rand Uixon has said h^^refers this approach'—tying a strong waning to all advertising—over action planned b:^ the Federal Communications Commission. The FCC said three months ago it will impose a ban on sharp limitation on cigarette commercials on radio and television unless Congress moves to extend current legislation. With both regulatory agencies pro; posing tough measures, the tobacco industry has appealed to Congress to continue indefinitely the milder provisions of the 1965 law. The cigarette makers have the support 6f tobacco state congressmen who four years ago Were abl& to tie a ban on advertising regulation to the act te-quiring the warning on packages. smoking is dangerous to health and may tause death from cancer and other ^F.Tpiaining its reasonj for amplifying th|t proposal, the FTC said “additional evidence has come to light” linking cigarette smoking to coronary heart, pulmonary emphysema as well as cancer. Birmingham 'Censorship' Policy Eyed by Schools That action prevented the FTC from putting into effect a rule forcing manufacturers to include on all packages and advertisements a warning that In promulgating the rule, the FTC scheduled a hearing for July 1 to hear opposing sides of the cmitroversy. Written views, the comlnission said, will be accepted through Jpne 20. Varner Given enafe's OK for Arts Council LANSING (AP) - A poetry reading in the nude on a college chmpus led to more than a^^ hour of debate yesterday before the Senate confirmed t h e nomination of .Oakland University chancellor Durward Varner as chairman of the Michigan Council on the Arts, by a 20-15 vote. Varner said this morning that he appreciates the support of the governor and the 20 senators who voted to confirm his nomination. “I did not campaign for, or seek, the post. The governor asked me if 1 would ® accept the position, and I was pleased to because the Michigan Arts Council is a citizen effort area-1 believe is important to the state,” Varner said. Sen. Robert Huber, R-Troy an outspoken critic of Varner and goings-on at Oakland — made good on a promise to. fight Gov. William Milliken’s appointment. Varner told the Senate Business Committee, which screens appointees, that he would not interfere in campus activities “until an angry public objects,” Huber said. The senator cited two incidents at Oakland which he previously had condemned on; the Senate floor. One involved a male student who stripped and read poetry during a class. The other dealt with the showing of an “objectionable” movie, “Chafed Elbow” during a university film festival. Varner failed to demonstrate “strong moral conviction” in allowing such things to happen on the campus, Huber maintained. Senate minority leader Sander J^vin, IVBerkley, condemned the opposition as an “effort to villify Chancellor Varner, to make a scapegoat out of him.” Varner knew nothing about the strip Incident before it happened, Levin Said. “The instructor said he had no advance knowledge. The student started to disrobe when the instructor was out of the classroom. L. Harvey Ixxlge (R-Waterford Township) and Levin were among the 20 senators voting in favor of the confirmation. Among those voting against Varner’s nomination were Huber and George W. Kuhn tR-West Bloomfield Township). U City Commission Ratifies Employe-Union Contracts BIRMINGHAM :-r The board of education agreed to Reassess its policy on distribution of printed materials last night,, following an assertion by a resident that the policy is unconstitutional. Shelby NeWhouse, 464 Townsend, said the policy inhibits students and teachers from expressing themselves without prior censorship. (Continued From Page One) He said this provision means that employes of the four unions covered in the contracts must join the union, pay the equivalent of union dues or quit their jobs. 3 Men ArejHeld in Tavern Death Irwin said he was concerned about the 50-some employes in the PMEA who had never joined the union and could now lose their jobs if their principles prevented them from either joining the union or paying the dues. Three area men are being held for investigation of murder in connection with the death of a Pontiac Motor Division inspector in a Pontiac bar early this morning. The three allegedly got into an argument and fist fight with Joha C. Klose, 47, of Leonard at Duckey’s Bar, 782 Woodward.,- DEATH SCENE — Authorities examine the refrigerator In which the body of Bobby Albrecht, 3, was found Monday night at his Chesterfield Township home near Mount Clemens. He was found curled up in the refrigerator after search parties had combed the area since his disappearance Thursday. The possibility 's being investigated that someone besides Bobby may have shut the refrigerator door. Pontiac police arrested the three men at the Country Kitchen restaurant, 2041 Auburn, Pontiac Township, shortly after the fight. Police had gotten their names and descriptions from witnesses. Being held in Oakand County jail are Everett J. Peel, 25, of 2406 Cole, Orion Township: Donald J. Harding, 31, of 607 Meadow; and James M. McAleer, 22, of 2455 Pine Lake, Keego Harbor. They have not been charged. On this point he was answered by District 1 Commissioner T. Warren Fowler Sr., who said, “Each received the benefits whether they paid the dues or not ... I’m happy to see it settled. It’s not unfair.” TAYLOR’S STATEMENT Mayor William H. Taylor Jr. said the commission had been informed of proceedings all along. “We backed our negotiating team ptiblicly all the way . . . we want to show our employes we were working in good faith,” he said. Other commissioners pointed out that not a single employe who had not favored the unions had refused to accept union-negotiated wage increases. The board’s policy now calls for a check of contents by the superintendent of schools on all printed or spoken media distributed through the sthool system by teachers and pupils. » Pell Hollingshead, board president and an attorney, said .the policy is a “reasonable statute.” He said the “check” provision is in the policy to assure that no disruptive elements are included in a student- or teacher-preparpd communication. HIGH COURT CITEb The provision, Hollingshead said, is in compliance with Supreme Court decisions on free, speech. \ ' In the policy reassessment, Hollingshead said, the board will raise,the,*, legal question of its responsibilitj^ if material in a teacher or student publication is held libelous. The disagreements over the board’s communications policy arose over printing of an underground newspaper by Seaholm High School students last winter {without prior permission from the su-jierintendents office. The added cost to the city budget of the four agreements was placed at about $80(),000 in the 1969 budget. City Manager Joseph A. Warren said the budget would have to be revised and resubmitted on this basis. BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP - Mrs. William C. Newberg of 4310 Vernor Ct. is one of 10 persons selected for 1968 Michigan Volunteer Leadership Awards. Mrs. Newberg received her award for originating the “Drop in the Bucket” program to encourage creativity in inner-city children following the Detroit riot in 1967. CHANCE TO SKETCH Mrs. Newberg transported children Nixon Seen Sure 'Bell Violating of Thieu Accord City Ordinance' WASHINGTON UP) — Congressional sources say President Nixon is confident he can reach agreements with South Vietnam President Nguyen Van Thieu that will advance Chances of peace in Vietnam. Nixon reportedly told GOP congressional leaders at the White House yesterday that, despite contrary, reports, Thieu is proving very cooperative with the new administration. Thieu and Nixon will meet June 8 on Midway Island for dismissions expected to center on new Vietnam'-elgctions and U. S. troop withdrawals. (Continued From Page One) former parking space but not providing for the new parking needs of the new structure. Women employes have to park -far from the building and many work at night and are worried about being attacked, the lawyer said. E. Eugene Russell, district commercial manager for Bell, said this morning Bell recognized the parking problem and is trying to work with the city to see that adequate facilities are provided both for emplqyes and for the public. ‘FH.THY’ LANGUAGE The bartender, Kenneth Currie, 29, told police he stopped Peel from playing pool and Peel started using “filthy” language and tried to start a fight. Klose then stepped in and told Peel to stop using profane language, according to Currie. Currie said he went to phone police and when he looked back toward the bar, he saw Klose on the floor. Customers said Klose was struck in the face repeatedly while he was draped over a bar stool and was struck and possibly kicked while on the floor. Klose was found in a pool of blood on the floor by police, They said he was cut on the face by an assailant’s fists and that no weapon was used. The Truth Is Out After Freak-Out DEAD ON ARRIVAL Klose, a utility inspector, was dead on arrival at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital. An autopsy was to be performed this morning. PURLEY, England (UPI) -The “monster” banged against the door with its hard white head, waking Mrs. Marion Fauldei; and then scuttied off into the dark. “It looked like something from outer space. My husband took a quick look at it, but he wouldn’t go near it,” she said. from one school one day a week for nine opportunities to sketch in different locales — her own residence, a farm setting and at Cranbrook Institute. The 1967 program involved 30 children from the school one day a week for nine summer weeks. The 1969 program has grown to include 150 children from some t> 10 schools, five days a week for nine weeks. The community leadership award was presented by Gov. William Milliken in conjunction with Michigan Week. Price Beef Is Real The police rescued the Faulders from a hedgehog with a yogurt carton jammed over its mouth and eyes. ^ WASHINGTON (AP) - Rising prices were at record highs for beef at 90 cents a pound, and lamb at 96,7 cents, in the first three months of this year, says the Agriculture Department, With Americans eating more beef than ever, cattle prices will continue to run at their highest level in 17 years, despite increased output, officials predict. The Weather DENIED VIOLATION Russell denied that any violation of any city ordinance had been made by the company. Mulligan said he had checked into various city departments and that in his opinion Bell had not been required to meet .specifications required of other builders regarding parking. , Only ChieLSfays on Duty ' Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PON’riAC AND VICINITY — Today fair and cool, high 58 to 63. Tonight Increasing cloudiness and not so tool, loW 38 to 44. Thursday mostiy cloudy wdth chance of showers, high 58 to 63. Friday outlook: chance of showers and a little warmer. Winds northerly 5 to 15 miles per hour becoming northeast to east 5 to 15 miles jje said, “The lots are always jam-this afternoon, and southeasterly tonight increasing to 10 to 20 miles per hour Thurs- packed now” and charged the city had day. Probabilities of precipitation: near zero today, 10 per cent tonight, 40 per cent never made a study of the problem. Thursday. Shelby Firemen Walk Out Today In Pontu Tuesday In Pontiac None of the commissioners or administration last night claimed Bell had met requirements of the ordinance. City .Manager Joseph E. Warren made a report which staled parking requirements downtown shall be determined by the Planning Commission, which may grant special exception to the minimum number requred. Mulligan insisted the Planning Ckim-missibn had played no role thus tar in the construction. MUNICIPAL PARKING Warren further said, “It was the intent of the ordinance that in parts of the city where a municipal parking system was in operation, the parking requirements will be taken care of by that system.” The commission voted to get a legal opinion before making any statements. Shelby Township’s ‘Fire Department was left unmanned today except for «hief Robert Schmidt, after six firemen in the Macomb County community walked out this morning, apparently over a wage dispute. Another six fire fighters scheduled to report for the .same 8 a.m. shift called in sick. The firemen's action came after another bargaining session last night failed to resolve the differences between the township board and Fire Fighter’s Local 1338 over retroactive pay — the last major disagreement in contract negotiations. . The board has‘agreed to pay firemen wages equivalent to the police department — an annual salary scale ftf $9,250 now that moves to $9,650 July 1 and to $10,200 in July, 1970. of $8,000, want the new scale made retroactive to July 1968 and not January 1969 as the board is proposing. Chief Schmidt said he would attempt to I make arrangements with fire dejiartments in surrounding municipalities for assistance if emergencies developed. The next shift was to begin at 4 p.m. The chief is not anticipating that the men will report. The fire department has 21 men on the payroll including the chief. Township Supervisor Kirby Holmes said no further negotiations are now scheduled. The wage hassle in the yearlong negotiations, which have already gone through mediation and fact-finding, has centered around the township board’s refusal to use the general fund for fire department salaries. Fire'fighters threw up picket lines around the Township Hall during the board meeting last night but were not picketing today. be a climber WANT IT RETROACTIVE The firemen, who now have a base pay Michigan Week Calendar AP WlfRphoto. NATIONAL weather - Rain is predicted tonight over Rie central portion of the United States and in southern Florida. It will be cooler in the southern Rockies and through the northeastern states. THURSDAY EVENTS ' 10 a.m. to 4;.30 p.m. Open house, tours at Pinegrove. Free. „ , 12 45 p.m. Modern dance performance, Lee Garris/and Johnna Harrington, directors. Pontiac Creative Arts Center. Free/ 2 p.m. Miniconcert by Whitfield Elementary School, Kay Danielson, director. Wisner Home'. Free. .. „ ... 3 p.m. Miniconcert by Lincoln Junior High School Wind ensemble, Terry Odelll, director. Pontiac Creative Arts Center, Free. 7 p.m: Afrifcan Folk Ensemble, Ahmed Shabazz, arranger. Tel-Huron Shopping Center outdoor stage. Free. . 7 to 9 p.m. Afro-American creative arts display. Pontiac YWCA. Fr®*- 7:30 p.m. Pierce Junior^pgh .School hand-bell choir. Marjorie Wiley, director. Pontiac Mall. Free. i 8 p.m. Rochester Conununity Orchestra's “Cabaret Concert.’ Elks Lodge, Rochester. Admission. Mak^i mountains look Ilk* wera 4i«var tharo and otiiaf cyclers Ilka iltay Had training wheels. Big, powerful georing takes you there, and its light weight mokes . ..Gelilt ROBBINS SPORT CYCLE 22IT Auburn Road Noar Crooks Road Phono I82-4MI aUlCK SERVICE THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, MAY 21, 1969 A—8 Nixon Revising Antidrug Push WASHINGTON (AP) - President Nixon is expected to ask Congress soon to put back the t^pQi extracted from the federal ant'imarijuana laws by the Supreme Court this week. The court,'ip overturning the marijuana conviction of Dr. Timothy F. Leary, specifically left the door open for newieder-al legislation to control the controversial weed. The administration, sources said, is laboring to revise the antidrug message Nixon was aboiit to send to Congress before the court pointed up the defects in existing federal laws. . Meanwhile, some federal and locar law enforcement officers tended to discount, at first reading, the impact of the Leary decision on their ability to deal with traffic in pot. WRITTEN BY HARLAN Justice John Marshall Harlan, writing for a unanimous court, ruled Monday that: * Hie 5th Amendment’s privilege against self-incriminati(Hi is an absolute defense to prosecution for failing to pay the federal tax of flOO per ounce on marijuana. By signing government forms of intent to possess marijuana, the court reasoned, an individual incriminates him-as to possible state prosecution. The second law, making it illegal to import marijuana into this country without proper authority, is defective in its presumption that the possessor knows marijuana came from abroad. It does grow in the United States. The ruling did not affect the legality of the antipot laws on the books of all 50 states. The federal anti-importation law is still valid if the government can prove the possessor knew the marijuana was for-eign-grPwn. SOME CONFUSION An Associated Press survey of federal and state-local lawmen the states bordering Mexico brought varying reactions and some apparent confusion about—the Leary decision. Several federal offidials declined to estimate its impact-as did the Justice Depai^ent r-until they and the Bureau of Narpotics and Dangerous Drugs can analyze it and formulate new guidelines. ■k -k "k Fred Martino, assistant director of border operations for the U.S. Customs Service in San Mego, Calif., said the decision ‘doesn’t make any changes the law concernfajg smugging -r as far as we’re concerned, lutely no change. When we apprehend someone here, it is for smuggling. Anything coming acros dared is 4p violation, whethef it’s marijuana or anything else.” WAYS OF INTERCEPTION “There’d be ways of intercepting it,” said New Mexico State Police Chief Joe Black, ‘‘even if the federal officers can’l take action on the border. We can get the information and once they get into New Mexico, we have good laws the books.” * kk T. W. Fuller, acting agent in charge of the federal bureau in New Mexico, said “'Diere are other federal laws that can be effectively used to combat the Mexico-U S. movement of mari- ____ ‘We can stiir fite' a case in state courts under state laws if necessary.’ k U. S. customs officials in Nogales, Ariz., said they would SMihue to make arrests under the smuggling laws unless advised differently by Washington. U.S, Commissioner Albert Rios, however, held up arraignment of three youths charged with smuggling until he ‘ Military Uied as Scapegoat hr Vietr Barry WASHINGTON (AP) - The rnilitary-industrial complex is a scapegoat for the politically ambitious who sense the nation is tired of Vietnam, Sen. Barry Goldwater told the National War College today. The Arizona Republic^ said the nation is undergoing an all out attack on everything that has to do with the military and defense. Su rtax, Reform Tied by House Committee WASHINGTON (AP) - President Nixon hjay, havte to^eet tough fiscal terms laid do^by ■ s House Ways and Me^s tihmittep if his requested tension of the income su£^ to be approved. J Committee members have made it plain to administration officials they want a stiff price in budget cutting and a congres-sionally-imposed lid on spend-Ing^They also are in a mood to couple the surtax extension with I think this is largely the' work of men who realize the popularity of the whole idea that military costs are unnecessa' ... that much of the money new!going for things that wouldn’t midancelrom the federal court, work anyway and that we can * kk safely divert any expenditures U.S. Atty. Edward E. Davis inlof this type to other, more Phoenix said the decision could;pressing needs,” he said, leave him with a logjam of. “The military-industrial com-churt cases bepause of the in- plex just happened to be here,” validation of the marijuana tax Goldwater said in his prepared law. itext. the first Tnstailinent^^t form, a ihove which may not fit the Nixon timetable. PUMWORIIIS AND NOT KNOW IT idiretine, noM-picIdag, a torioenUni .1 itch are often telltale ugna ---- _,4.4|V f Reg.$5-'98t«........ 5.24 |„ (o, m." -"^2^ 45-Ubs *' * o** 90.Ub.Wed»««-*‘-|59 ; Adutt Size......* rimming- -TIE®’ 29 Snorkel-" • • • * I cor Wds Swim Goggle* •; • jge I ....:usi •■■■...■'•111 ^ sss^^?r-V.-.v.-.ixsi «i4*: ' oil and carry r Yl llh ICO^IR _ nuss'cns or H ,v dk. Sllft gauoh 188 CAH 1. Jrri.of $2.49 Value ' • K/ of colors In c®"' VOS vPP«" rs \ $5.99 d Seller —- r ughtweigM ' that revere* _ Water r.p- t:monrn'OcWnewo»doWe^^^,,^tNT_ u blue •W'* 'f Ic turtle neck ... o« by $5.«« i. Seller inrch oround — W ~ % \ i Value* \$15.95 summer tiyl«» ^ hadies'«P^'"9“''tsttiOo'''V'"'‘^* 5 to "4- ® sites 0 "■’ j fjpfff* Simms Bros.^98 N. Saginaw St.-Downtown Pontiac w; f 11 -!r ■' ,j, i-,'% •}« j ri y//-'V(1r (' / /'. I- THE PONTIAC PRESS Today's Controversial Ills Focus of New Avondale Course WEDNESDAY, MAY 21, 1969 Law May Scuttle A bold new social awareness class Is available for 25 lUth graders next fall at Avondale High School. The cla?s — with no texts and little regular testing '— will be taught by Oakland \University’s Dr. Harold Gorevine, ai^ociate professor of history and supervisor of OU student teachers. Apple Mandl^tans The Avondale Board of Education recently gave its. full support to Prof. Gorevine’s class proposal, agreeing to pay him a regular teacher’s salary ^ based on his one-hour-per-dayt fiv»days-per-week class. “The stuff taught in social studies classes today are fine, in their place. Subjects such as the New Deal, history of &e labor unions and others are all rather > dry. They could be taught anywhere. “What I’ll to do is to zero in on where file kids live, the Pontiac-Detroit nietropolitan area. This is where the kids confront issues that will affect them as adults. mistaken definition. It will be up to me and to the other students in the class to correct fundamental eirors. Avondale Sdhwil District. Dr. Gorevine wants college4>ound students and noncollege-bound students as well. NOT INDO)CTRINA'nO|»I y'The ^lass Will not be one of in- FULL CREDIT CLASS “Every ^id has to face the s^e “This area Is a microcosm of America, doctrination. Differing and opposing views Will be encouraged,’’ Dr. Gorevine said. Dr. Gorevine described the class as a “joint teacher-studenjt undertaking,’’ the success of which is predicated on mutual ORCHARD LAKE — A proposed subdivision on Apple Island has suffered a setback in the City Council’s decision to pass stricter regulations on use of waterfront lots. The new amendment regulates the number of cars and boats that can be placed on waterfront lots. The amendment, passed this week makes a proposed parking plan for future Apple Island residents illegal. The prospective developer, John Rowenchuck of 5753 Cherrycrest, was not at the council meeting. Rbwenchuck, who has an option to purchase the island, envisions the development of luxury homes. Transportation to and from the mainland would be by a combination of;land and water vehicles. A iy4/acre site at the end of Willow Lane had been proposed as the parking lot for 60 to 90 cars belonging to future Island homeowners. premises or using it for access to the water. • Minimum width for owner or tenan-occupant is five feet of lake frontage. • Such premises shall not be used as a means of access to any dock or boat storage area. No boats shall be moored along the frontage. • The parking of automobiles closer than 100 feet to the water’s edge is prohibited. Topics to be covered. Prof. Gorevine explained, would be student life, urban and suburban sprawl, transportation, local autonomy, taxation, schools, urban and rural poverty, race relations, crime', courts and the police. An opinion on Apple Island problems, prepared by the village lawyer. Dean G. Beier, was read to the council. He said that two zoning questions were involved. First that the proposal to moor boats at the mainland would violate the new amendment but believed that the problem could be subject to a variance. CONTROVERSIAL TOPICS “All these subjects have become highly controversial in recent years. Everyone seems to have an opinion on each subject, but I’m not so sure these opinions are based on factual evidence and rational thinking,’’ Dr. Gorevine said. “The goal of my class, then. Is to have the students gather at firsthand -through interviews, study of public documents and the reading of news publications — background on these issues. I want them to express their opinions in class based on factual data and articulate presentation,” Dr>,Gore-vine explained. 1 reiSlly.“lEvtfy“'maji^r^^ group is represented. We have huge corporations and powerful labor unions, big cities and siilsurbs^ agricultural regions, affluence and extreme poverty. “I will not be a teacher trying to impose a point of view. I only want the students to arrive at conclusions in a rational, logical way. Too often, kids base opinions on misinformation or “The only thing I’ll have over the kids is the fact that I’m older and have read more books. Otherwise, this is a discussion of opinions, and getting a studept to explain to his classmates and himself his sincere opinion is as far as a teacher can go,” Dr. Gorevine explained. The class itself will be a mixture of the socio-economic structure of the things whlfeh 'he gets out of ^ool electing men and yoting bn millage. All students need to understand his reasons for decision,” Dr. Gorevine explained. Avondale Supt. John Dickey said that the class is fuUy creditable toward graduation as a part of the high sch !. THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, MAY 21, 1969 Damage May Hit $50 Million in N-Arms Plant Fire GOLDEN, Colo, (AP) — Dam- AEXD termed a production build-imay have started the fire with age from a fire May 11 at a nu-ctear weapoi^ factory here may total $50 million, the Atomic Energy Commission said yesterday. filie fire, still of undetermined oHgin, broke out in what ing at its Rocky Flatt Plant,!the beat it generates sponta-operated near Golden by Dow!neously. Chemical Co. . j One firemen received expo- * * A sure to radioactivity above pres- AEC officials speculated ailcrib^ levels. He was treated the time that radioactive pluto^ I and returned to duty. There nium housed in the building'were no injuries, and radioac- tive contamination was limited, to the area pf the building, all within the plant site. REPLACEMENT COSTLY An AEC minary estimates indicate it will cost $40 million to $50 mil- ilion to restore and replace damaged faciUti^. ,* ■ The fire, was confinSd to the two-story building where the blaze broke out, but an adjoining building suffered water and smoke damage. We could win the battle and lose the customer. We could make your next visit to Osmun’s your last visit to Osmun’s. All we have, to do is make sure we sell you something. Anything. A suit, a shirt, a tie, a key case. Anything. it isn't too difficult. After all, selling is our line of work. Besides, given enough time, just about anyone can sell something to just about anyone else. So making sure you don’t walk out empty-handed really doesn’t prove what a wonderful men’s store we are, does it? , All,it proves is that we sold you something. Something yoti-didn’t want to buy. And when the dawn comes and you realize you've been had, it isn’t likely that you’ll think of us in glowing terms. » Or that you’ll be eager to come back. Which brings us right to the nub pf the problem. We can’t afford to make any sale today that will keep us from making sales in the future. So we don’t jump on you when you walk in. We-don ’ ttelL you the^uit--looks great on you when it really looks awful. Wedon’tfollowyou around until you buy something in self-defense. We won’t arm-wrestle you until you reach for your wallet. Or'we’ll wind up with nothing to sell but our stores. we know there are other men’s stores in town Tfiree of oOr stores are open evenings ‘til 9: Xol-Twelve Mall (Telegraph and 12 Mil? in South-. field); Tech-Plaza Center (12 Mile and Van Dyke in Warren), and Tel Huron Center (Telegraph and Huron in Ppntiac). Our downtown Pontiac store isopen Friday m evenings 'til 9. Look around. Bring your Osmun's or Security, ■■^|^|||•'^ Chirgecard, Michigan or Midwest Bankard, or money, if you like. V9III I1I V ^ MEN’S AND BOYS’ SALE ^ 3 days ONLY! THURS., FRI„ SAT. SALE Men’s reg. $6 to $7 Waldorf full-fashioned knit shirts Fin* imported knits Including Orion* acrylics, Ban-Lon* Textrallzed* nylons and mor*. Ring necks, hl-mock, collared styles. Over 30 new foshion colors. S-M-l-XL. ^88 Men's reg. 13.99 alpaca sweaters 10.88 Perfect golf or casual cardigan sweater with the look of luxuryl Assorted now shades. In sizes S-M-L-XL. SALE Boys'3.50- 3.99 acrylic knit shirts Full-fashioned mock turtle or high crew neck acrylic knit shirts or* washable. Choose ring-neck, solids or stripes; colors. Boys' sizes 8-18. 2.88 Boys' camping shorts sturdy comp shorts feature compass attached to self belt. Choose block, blue, green. ■ Boys' sizes 8.. 18. | ^ OPEN 10 A.M. TO 9 P.M. (Sot. 9:30-9) epM Sundtnr Noon fe 0 p.m. I cInm Tuet^ Wti. 6 pM.J DOWNTOWN AND DRAYTON RUINS ■'; '■-'/It .. .. -j ' ■ ', ' ■ '■■■ ■ ■ THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, MAY 21, 1969 A—^9 \Milliken Signs Holiday Bill LANSING (AP)-A li-milUoni ■capital outlay and another creating four separate three^lay holidays in the state are among bills signed into law Tuesday by Gov. William G. Milliken. The extra long-weekend h days put Michigah in step with the Federal Uniform Holiday Act.'.It specifically requires bai^^ and courts |o close on four holidays, but state, municipal and business workers could be affected. The extended holidays, their calendar dates and revised observance days are: " Washington’s Birthday, Feb. 22, to be observed the third Monday in Febhiary. “ Memorial Day, May 30, the Monday in May. Columbus Day, Oct. 12, the second Monday in October. ‘ Veteran’s Day, Nov. 11, the fourth Monday in October. A Michigan Civil Service Commission spokesman said some 44,000 employes in the state’s 49 departments would not Immediately be affected by thqinew act unless the commission changes its holiday schedule. State employes now observe seven Widays: Year’s, Memorial Day, Indepen-, dence Day, Labor Day, Veteran’s Day, Thanksgiving and Christmas. If approved by the commission, state workers would pick up two holidays— Washington’s Birthday and Columbus Day. Milliken also signed Tuesday a bill allowing judges to order emergency hospital confinement, diagnosis and treatment for persons thought to be mentally ill. Confinement, under the act, could not be for longer than five dajn The capital outlay allocation would take $956,000 frpmothe state general, fund and $405,000 from restricted funds. A Fuzzy-Wuzzy No-No Ch i-Ch i, An-An Say Bye-Bye LONDON (AP) - An-An, the rejected Russian panda, flew back to Moscow in style today after three years of a love life that never got started.* London Zoo oflTicials finally called off the attempt to mate the willing but never insistent male from Moscow With CJii-Chi, Britain’s frigid female. An-An’s cage was put in a special compartment of a British airliner, with a doctor and four stewardesses looking after him. He was fast asleep. Chi-Chi, the always reluctant female, remains at her London Zoo home and no longer will hpve to share her favorite bam-b^ shoots with another. The two giant pandas never expressed much feeling for each other, despite two highly pifoli-cized love visits across the Iron di Curtain. Successive failures to mate them—:first in Moscow and then here—mean feat giant pandas are likely to become exfeict out- ______________ side Red China and North Ko- that was that, rea. Chi-Chi and An-An are the only two in captivity outside those countries. das, and perhaps already over the hill for bree^g puip^s. China is letting no more pan-is leave fee country. Zoologists first tried to mate Chi-Chi and An-An at fee Moscow Zoo in March 1966. The first day he tried to nfe noses, she boxed his ear, he gave up, and When Chi-Chi and An-An came from Peking as babies, they looked like teddy bears. Now Chi-Chi weighs 235 pounds, An-An 350. Each is about 13 years old, middle age for pan- Some experts doubted ^-An’ manhood. But Desmond Morris, then Chi-Chi’S chaperoiji, said the female panda had grown up with human kindness and was trolled by her first panda affection. She stayed in Moscow for another mating period, in October, put to no avail. Beating Case Officer Quits ANN ARBOR (UPI) - A white city policeman accused of beating a Negro employe of the city’s human relatims department resigned yesterday. Police Chief Walter Krasny said Patrolman Wade Wagner resiged as a result of an investigation into the incident. Wagner had been suspended with pay pending the outcome of the probe. Senate Rejects Golf-Drink Bilt But Measure Will Be Reconsidered Today State House Clamps Down 1 on Small-Loon Business The police investigation showed that Raymond E Chauncey on May 10 went to a West Main Street bar to inallegations of racial discrimination for the human relations department. | The bar owner called police, who handcuffed Chanuncey and took him to the police station for investigation, police said. At the station, Wagner allegedly hit Chauncey twice in the face, police said. LOSING (AP) - The Senate tod^ planned to reco^ider its rejection of a bill authorizing additional resort liquor licenses to established golf courses. The upper chamber voted 17-14 for the bill Tuesday, falling three short of the number heeded for passaf -The Senate was.It convene a 11 a.m. for a joint session wife the House, then begin work at 2 p.m. The liquor bill, sponsored by Sen. Oscar Bouwsma, R-Muske-gon, wpuld allow the State liquor Control Commission to grant resort licenses to golf courses that are open to the public and have been operating for at least two years. Bouwsma amended the measure Tuesday to specify that the courses must include at least four acres and a nine-hole course. Provisions of the bill would not apply to miniature golf cpurses. The measure stipulates that the liquor commission must consider “economic development factors Of the area” before granting a license. Passed 30-1 and returned to tl\e House for concurrence LANSING (AP) money should a man who doesn’t have much, or can’t onto it very long, be allowed to borrow at one time? Should the law seek to protect the innocent, little guy from himself or blow the whistle on the loan shark? Those questions will be in the Michigan Senate’s lap when it takes up a bill passed Tuesday in the House to clamp down on the small-loan business. The House meets today at 9 a m. By a somewhat narrow 57-42 vote, the lower chamber cut maximum, nonbank loans from $10,000 to $3,500 — at an effective annual rate of 19.5 per cent, REJECTED PROPOSALS Rejected were proposals fo set the ceiling at $5,000 or $2, OCO. thf $3,500 top amount, a man who is denied, or does not seek, bank-rate credit could borrow $300 at 2% per cent month, another $70O at 1% per cent per month, and an additional $2,500 at IVi per cent per month. The $3,500 figure was a comp-romise offered by Rep. Alfr^ R. Horrigan, D-Flint. Earlier,^ the House gave freshman legislator his first taste of victory against veteran How much Of Bangor and Donald Pears of Buchhndn, to exempt fruit and vegetable canners and packers from personal property taxes oti warehoused foodstuffs. Rep. Gerritt Rasper, R-Mus-kegon, a first-term legislator, charged the bill amounted to a $2-million ^'giveaway” that would seriously cut tax revenues of several communities, counties and school districts principally in the south and western Lower Peninsula. Rdot is a fruit grower and Pears a real estate dealer and former H6use speaker. Hasper, jubiliant over “my first victory,”\said he’d been criticized for ranging beyond his own -elective district to contact government officials and industry representatives. One legislator, Hasper said, “resented” his calling the Gerber Food Co. to verify reports the baby food manufacturer planned to contribute funds amendments was a bill author- opposition, izing township policemen to en- Rejected was a bill, introduc-force state laws. led by Republicans Edson Root SAVE UP TO Famous maker sale of Antron separates for women, reg. $5-$ll 599 Perform your own fashion magic. 100% Antron® nylons in solids, prints and stripes, dll color coordinated to make perfect year ‘round outfits. In red/ white/navy,, maize, beige, mint, pink. Sizes 8 to 18 and 34 to 40. Thousands sold at ^gular prices! $8-$10 short/long sleeve tops 4.99 $5-$6 sleeveless shells ...... 2.99 $7 print shells ...- 3.99 $11 A-line skirts . ...5.99 $11 pants........ 5.99 equal to the taxes it would no longer owe the town of Fremont in Newaygo County. Indication that Gerber’s had no plan to balance its anticipated exemption with a contribution led Hasper to fight the bill, he said. In other action the House approved bills to: Grant as many as 50 additional liquor licenses in resort areas in the next five years. Raise interest rates from 71^ to 10 per cent on margin loans backed by stocks and bonds. The increase in a relatively sophisticated and limited financial area gives Michigan brokers a competitive edge over New York-based firms which may chaifge up to 9 per cent. Set stiffer penalties for obscene harrassing or false telephone calls. • Prohibit discriminatory statements or advertising by real estate dealers. rIduCE “YOU TOO” Can Have a Slim.. Fun.. Figure For Summer Fun in ONLY 6ILj[o 90 DAYS You Can Be Your Perfect Dress Size • If you are tizo 16 . . . i You can be a perfect SIZE 12- in 60-90 Dayo • If you are a six* 18... You can be a perfect SIZE 14 in 60-90 Days • If you are a size 20 . .. You con be a perfect SIZE 14 in 60-90 Days • If you are size 22 . . . 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Representatives of uhiversity presidents Tuesday eight of Michigan’s 11 state-sup-closed ranks against “intention-lported colleges and universities ally disruptive \ and negative”!were there and approved it. campus disorders, vowing they] * * * will “not tolerate-intentional Not represented were acts of physical coercion or of youngest, Saginaw Valley J ' violence.’^ ‘College; Oi||tland University, an At the same time, they reaffirmed their dedication to peaceful dissent and said they plan to avoid out si d “ teivention in campus disorders unless absolutely necessary. The presidents’ action .came at a meeting of the Michigan Council of St^te College Mothers to Ask offspring &f Michigan State University; and Ferris State College, where racial violence the night before had done ex: tensive damage and left 14 of the students injured. protect RIGHTS We will not permit any group within our institutions to infringe on the rights of others. \\v - Ak'iVJ THE PONTIAC PRESS. WaPXESDAY. MAY 21, A—11 'An Onion in a Daisy Patch' Used-Car Parts Firm Gets License One of three used 'V.' Mom Raises Kids,Voice on Company's Phone Advising a little mother about baby care is only one of the side effects involved in the work of Mrs. Napoleon Jones of Linda Vista Street, as she .? Pontiac PrtM Photo by Rolf WWItr tries to instill m appreciation of music in her '‘ArU start” pupils at Pontiac Creative Arts Center. Today's Woman Music'Plus Children Equals Success By JUNE'E2>B!RT Music and children are woven Interchangeably into the fabric of life for Barbara Jones of Linda Vista Street. Music came first, in Detroit where Barbara grew up and studied piano and voice at the Detroit Institute of Musical Arts. A career in opera or on the concert ftagd was the goal of the young st^rano who majored in music at Adrian Collie and devoted 10 years to voice stuc^ with Dr. Kenneth Westerman at Ann Arbor. Ht * ■ ★ Posti(radUate wbrk at the Juilliard Schoigi of Music in New York follow^. Leonfyne Trice was her roommate and Barl^'reihembenmany happjr times wheB the residents Urould gather Iround the piano and entertain themselves with music and song. . - * , ■* ★" Hii^hUghts of those years were her concert debpt at the Detroit Institute .of Arts at Age 20; suiging t^ lead in “VeihiB and Adonis” in a Greenwich Village production during her student days and professional choral and solo work in New Vork. Illdess put an end to those dreams. Hostess Wrong to \Serve Men Guests First By EUZABETR L. POST Of The Emily Post Institute Dear Mrs. Post:, I went to a lovely home dinner and the hostess served her husband first, then the other gentlemen, and then the ladies. I’ve always served ladies first in my home and then the men. She claimed in a restaurant or hotel this is correct, but not in your home. I’d ' very much atmreciate your reply. — Mrs. Rose ★ * it Dear Mrs. Rose: The hostess you apeak of is not backward, but she serves backwards. Whether dinner is at her home or in a restaurant she is wrong, llie woman seated on the host’s right is ^ served first, then the other guests in turn, and her hu^nd is served last. If she is passing the dishes herself, she serves him next to last, and herself last. BRIDESMAIDS’ Dear Mrs. Post: All the girls in my wedding party are having their hair set for my wedding with the exception of two. They are 16 and 15. Their hair is shoulder length, wavy, and fly away. They announced that they are wearing it "straight.” ★ a *■ I don’t want to hurt their feelings, they are lovely ^rls, but am I wrong in assuming that girls that, age should set their hair no matter how lovely It looks straight? I’m afraid it will look terrible with the veils. — Cindy , ★ * * ' ' Dear Cindy: The important thing is that the bridesmaids’ veils or head coverings be l^iping. If they do noV look well on long, straight hair, the bride may tactfully ask the ^rls to wear their hair up or in a style more appropriate to the costume. ★ ' * it Girls who wear their hair straight need not curl it, but there are a variety ^of ways of making it more becoming, and \ they owe it to the bride to go along with ■' her wishes.v' contracted pneumonia and returned to her fajnily to recuperate. NEW PATH Upon her recovery, she Worked for a time as resident director of music and recreation therapy at Sigma Gamma Hospital School for Orthopaedic Cbddren — and children have dominated the picture ever since. Marriage to a college-days sweetheart, Napoleon JoneSi .gave her two children of her own, Lisa, 10, and Jeffrey^Jj who attend Mark Twain SchWi. Barbara, it follows naturally, became active in the PTA and served last year as president. She was also ^hiral cariiainman this year of the PontiM PTA Council and is chairman-elect for nei:t year of the same committee. Here music comes into focus again, since this chairman automatically serves on the executive committee for the Pom tiac Symphony. Duties concern pro- ^ motion and ticket sales for the family concerts. In her free hours, Barbara teaches piano to some 15 students,, including little Lisa; she leads a troop of Camp Fire; Girls; works occasionally as a substitute Love Turns Them On LONDON (Jf) - Alan Margolis married Penny Wise and spent $120 to tell London about it. 'That was the cost of an advertisement he booked for space on the illuminated tape which flashes news bulletins arid advertisements from high above Piccadilly Circus, in the heart of-London. The message said; "Alan Margolis loves Penny Wise and they were married today.” It appeared every four minutes along with the neWs, weather forecast and commercials. in the Pontiac School system — usually in library -r- and is sometimes called upon to perform as soloist at All Saints Episcopal churehi where she was soloist for a couple of years. 'TBACRES PRESCHOOLERS Recently, Barbara took on a new job, teaching preschoolers music appreciation at Pontiac Creative Arts Center, in the ‘‘Artstprt” program. Napoleon Jones studied piano as a child' too and the family does many things together, ira’s brother is also a .singer. So youth and music surround the soft- and Sullivan.” Bell Chorale to Sing First Formal Concert The Bell Chorale Will present a program of music from the Renaissance to the Broadway stage at Pontiac Central High School at 8:30 p.m. Saturday. This is .its first formal concert . The Chorale, founded by Its director, Frederick Bellinger, eight years ago, is sponsored by the Pontiac Department of Parks and Recreation’s adult education program. * * * Music by Badi, Hassler, Mozart, BrMups, Tsehesnofeoff, Cain and Britten Will be followed by songs from “Show Boat” and a group.of spirituals to be sung in memoiy of Dr. Martin Luther King. Clara Hatchett, soprano, will be featured soloist. Tickets may be purchased for the concert only, or for the concert and afterglow at the WaWrdn Hotel. By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN " DEAR ABBY: We have a woman in our office who is raising her kids on company time over the telephone, At ' least six times a day we can hear her yelling, “Get those kids out of the house! Your high boots are in the back closet? behind the sleeping bags! Tell Stevie I want to talk to him.” Then she screams, “Steven, you go rights over to Jimmy’s house and get your bicycle. You know I told you tinbody ia to ride that bike but youl” Twenty minutes later she calls home and wants to Know if Judy came home from school yet, and did she bring her boyfriend in the house?, Just now I heard her holler, “That dog would never bite if you didn’t tease him. Did he break the skin? Is it bleeding? It it's: not bleeding, don’t bother me.” BANG! I have nothing against w o r k i n g mothers, Abby, but what do you think of women who. work and leave their kids to raise themselves? CO-WORKER DEAR CO-WORKER: Same as you. * * ★ DEAR ABBY: As you can see, this letter is signed “Miss Barbara.’’ However, I am not a “female” in the true sense of the word. In fact, I am a woman “imprisoned” in a man’s body? I have inquired about a sex change operation, but there is a long waiting list. w ★... ★ I hold down a man’s job, but after work I don feminine attire and my whole life changes. I am now considering seekihg employment as a female, hs^ow I cQuld easily pass for a woman as ram small and feminine looking and have had total electrolysis on my face, and niy voice is more like a woman’s than a man’s. w * ★ My question: In filling out an application for employment, am I within my rights to write “CONFIDENTIAL” where h asks, “SEX?” A lawyer friend of mine says I am. Will you advise, please? “MISS BARBARA” DEAR “MISS BARBARA”: Better check with another lawyer. And consider this. Even though you may be “within your rights” legally, whether jiou’d be h'ded with that kind of ah ;dpsWer iS another question. ' it * * DEAR ABBY: I can’t understand my rignd» We have gone steady for four it and I’ve known him ndd^iy dll itoy life, . He is a doctor and in a good position to marry, but he has never proposed to me. Every time I talk about marriage he changes the subject. He doesn’t date anyone else and neither do 1.1 am really not even engaged. . I have tried everything. (Making hirh think there could be somebody else interested in me,, which there isn’t and taking a job in another city, ^hich I also wouldn’t consider.) I am 25^nd anxious to marry. He is 31. What shoufa I do? \A CREEK DEAR UP: Face it, your doctor’s prescription for happiness doesn’t iticlude you. YOU propose to HIM, but be prepared to hear the awful truth. Everybody has a problem, What’s yoiirs? For a' personal reply write to Abby, care of The Pontiac Press, Dept. '' E-600, P.O. Box 9, Pontiac, Mich. 48056, and enclose a stamped, self-addressed envelope. Three Michigan beauties, from left, Julie Ann Hamilton, Cedar Springs, National Cherry Festival queen; Jackie Lund, Ludington, Michigan's Apple Commission representative and Susan Gail Seller, Akron, Mich., Michigan’s Bean queen, visited Cabo Hall earlier this week. They are presently touring New York and Washington to carry the story of Michigan’s principal agricultural products to governmental officials as a principal activity of Michigan Week. Experimental Child Companions Provide Security By TAlRICIA McCORMACK NEW YORK (UPI) - Behind the iron curtain and in some other nations, working mothers take their children to government-run daycare centers., In Switzerland, some mothers take the children along to office or plant, depositing them at company-run childcare facilities. Mothers and children visit atlunchtime. In Alnerica, it’s do the best you can -and cross your fingers when it comes to childcare problems facing working moms. Now uncle Sam knows that and in one Ponllac Pr«»» Pheto attempt to crack this nut has earmarked around $1 million in the search for a new and better approach. Some of the money is being spent this year under the direction of Mrs. Edmond Phillipis, associate professor of social work at Washington University in St. Louis. * , ★..... The experimental program a he’s directing is taking place in Wellston, Mo. What’s different about it: Child care companions, in addition to regular daycare staffers. The two man-and-woman teams, older persons who love youngsters, iwovide a home away from home for the children. They supplement cla.s.swork in homelike rooms furnished with rocking chairs, lamps, rugs and even pets. BOLSTER SECURITY In an interview, Mrs. Phillips said the companions bolster the child’s security and sense of belonging while away from his family. Some are away from 6; 30 a.m. to 6 p.m. The companions also take the children Shopping, allowing enough time to inspect bugs or buds, if the child is so inclined. If the experiment’s timetable is met. Trio Named to Judge Pontiac Artists' Show The 21st annual exhibition of Pontiac Society of Artists will open at Pontiac Creative Arts Center with a reception from I to 4 p.m. Sunday. The puhiic may attend. ' The juried show will include over a hundred paintings and sculptures in all media. * * * Judges for the show are Eve de Boicourt of Galerie de Boicourl in Birmingham; Peter Gillenan, art teacher at Wayne State University; and Svea Kline, sculptress from Cranbrook. \ > * A - * A special award will be given by (irumbacher’s of New York. Mrs. Russel P. Foukes is chairman,of the event. The exhibit will run through Hilltop Center which is the name of the facility will take two-year-olds in June. In September, after-school care for children through 12 will be provided. * ■ * ★ “The need for such centers is tremendous,” Mrs. Phillips said. “Coming home to an empty house isn’t What these children need. “And casually dropping by a community-sponsored recreation center isn’t the answer either. ★ w * , “They need to go to a place where they will be checked up on if they don’t show up, a place with activity and a chance to do nothing — if they feel like it—in a homelike atmosphere.” KEEP OFF STREETS Such places are part of her dream to keep the “latch-key kids” from becoming children of the streets. , , What’s learned at Hilltop will be reported back to. the children’s bureau, under whose authority the grant was made. How long it takes for any of the recommendations to take shape nationwide is anyone’s guess. “It can’t happen too soon” Mrs. Phillips said. “We have only children to save.” The Charles Allens of Willow Tree Lane, Avon ^ a Township, (standing) hosted members of the Roch- of the summer festival as Mrs. Roger Starves, Ap- .. ...... ester Meadow Brook Festival committee Tuesday ple Hill Lane (left) and Mrs. William Belaney, Wil- , (5j,n,.ry hours are i to 4 p.m, ^venin^^^Chuck AUeri reddids t^e ^cr^eri for slides wood Road,^both Avon Township, check brochures, daily except Friday. v Legislators, Employes Full of Beans Today LANSING (fl - Bean soup, baked beans, bean doughnuts, bean cake, bean cookies and ~ would you believe — bean candy, were on the menu at the State Capitol today.. The bean soup is served free from a giant kettle simmering on the Capitol lawn. Gov. William Milliken, legislators and Capitol workers were Invited to dip in until the kjettle ran dry. In mid-afternoon, legislators were invited Ho take a,break and taste the rest of the bean goodies, served in the second floor Capitol rotunda. The Michigan Bean Commission and Michigan bean growers and processors are backing the bean bust. They, want to point out, as part of , Michigan Week, that , beans are a $55. million annual industry in Michlgaln. ^ B—2 il- THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, MAY 21, 1969 Gou|iles Are Married in Church Ceremonies Spearing- Bass MRS. ROBERT J. B. SPEARING MRS. MICHAEL R. A floor-length veil, topped with a pearl-accented pillbox, complemented the gown ot organza over taffeta Chosen by Alice Ann Bass for her wedding Friday to Robert John B. Spearing. ^-^carried a nosegay of roses md carnations for the evening Heremony in St. Joseph’s Catholic Church, I^ake Orion. Rita Marie Welch was maid tori Shanahan, Jeffrey Watters, Warren Qdlins and Roger Eyman. The couple was holwed with a reception in the church parlors prior to a honeymoon m the Southern States. They will make their home in Millersport, Ohio. r-iKK C,. Barton curiee. ________ ’4T Mrs. Frederick Gibb Lake Orion and the late Norman J. Bass. Best man was Joseph Sloan of Madison Heights. Completing the wedding party were Mrs. Thomas Brown Sr., Nancy Hiatt, Elizabeth Bloink, Julie Ann Bass, Norman J. Bass Jr., Gary Spearing, Robert Gibb and Thomas H. Brown Jr. The bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert M. Spearing of Lake Orion. A reception in the Knights of Columbus Hall preceding the couple’s departure for a Florida honeymoon. For the candlelight ceremony, the bride, daughter of the Charles Garvens of Watkins Lake chose a white crepe gown accented with peau d’ange lace. Her flowers were a bouquet of pink roses,'white carnations and Stephanotis. Carol 'Turner of Birmingham acted as maid of honor with Gill Roberts as best man and William Murphy and Richard Paul as ushers. Sadler - Quick Following a church reception, the couple left for a northern Michigan honeymoon. Parents of the bridegroom are Mr. and Mrs. Barton C u r I e e of Meadowlawn Street. MRS. LARRY W. EYMAN MRS. JERRY B. CURLEE SEW SIMPLE By Eunice Farmer Dear Eunice Farmer, when I finish reading your column, I am so excited about making something new I can hardly wait to get to the fabric shop. Then my friends and 1 spend hours looking at patterns. After awhile nothing looks great anymore and our enthusiasm drops off to the point of going home empty handed. Road, and the son of Mr. and Mrs. Maurice' Sadler of Galloway Street, both Pontiac Township, were married Saturday in First Baptist Church of Pontiac. The bride chose a traditionally fashioned gown o f Rochelle lace with s^ pearls and sequin trim. Is there some magic to follow when you want to make a new dress or ensemble?—Mrs. R. R. W. Dear Mrs. R. R. W., This happens to so many women I talk to mat I have wwked out a good solution for you. First, do your ■hopping alcme. Women are notorious for not wanting their friends to look great, so will probably not be honest when you ask for an opinion. In the end you’ll end up with what your friends like and not what you had in mind. Second, look through the fashion books first, also shop the better stores and try to plan the kind of ensemble you would like. With this vision in your mind, just find a pattern that will fill the requirements you need. Most women “overlook” —in other words, they look and look and finally every pattern looks the same. You must remember that beautiful fabric and a simple pattern are the keynotes to any successful garment. It’s better to trust the good judgement of a woman In your fabric department who obviously would understand you and your needs. She isn’t going to misdirect you because if she did, she would lose a valuable customer. Instead, she’ll want you to look so great that you’ll build up the business of the shop as welt as your own confidence. - It's a well-known fact that if you look pretty and know It, the world is at your feet! TAILOR TRIX WINNER Mrs. Joanna Smith, Gardner, Mass, is this week’s Newlyweds, the Michael Ray Sadlers (nee Linda Jean Quic^) are honeymooning in Florida. The daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert P. Shoemaje of Hill Barbara Manlove and David Sadler were honor attendants. Bridesmaids were Linda Matteson, Mrs. Ray McDaniel and Juanita and Anita Sadler virith Colleen Fuller as flower girl. Gary and Gordon Quick, Gary Simpson and Tom Princko were ushers with Rickey Mattson as ring bearer. A reception was held in the church parlors. Curlee? Garven St. Stephen Lutheran Church was the setting for an exchange of vo^s Friday evening between The Alger Conners of Toimship announce the engagement of their daughter, Amy Louise, to Ronald Stambersky. He is the son of the Stanley Stamberskys of Elsie. The couple, who will wed in September, are students at Ferris State College: Test for Towel Quality When buying a towel, hold it up to the light. If it is properly thick, the light will barely show through. Start to Look Now for a Summer Job 'I ByMARYFEELEV Consnltaiit in Money Management Students and their parents can take heart from this quote from a state employment Job interviewer in the midwest: ■Summer jobs should be easier to fmd this year because power is ‘ti^t’ — even in the field of general labor.’* The scramble for jobs that will be available to stud^ when school’s out is already under way. So there’s no time to lose in finding yourself a summer job if you’re serious about building up some funds for continuing your echication. In a recent flash-survey jobs in the midwest which are ripe for student applications — but which will surely be filled in short order — the variety is considerable. And they reflect similar opportunities in other sections of file country. More about these, and hourly wages, in a minute. But first, the student job-hunter should do some reaUstlc thinking: • What is the average amount of your educati a magnificent selection of decorator fabrics and colors ... available in pairs or singly... ready for immediate delivery . . . each looks much more expensive than ii; is. We’ve gathered one of the most complete selections ever assembled at this unbelievable price. Each is wonderfully styled with aippered and reversible foam rubber seat eushibns. arm ~| ....................................... JLriU ^EACH caps and self-decking ... that’s a lot of chair for oifiy. owne& R LJ F? IVJ I X LJ FI E 4107 Telograph Road—jiMt sauthof Long Lake Rd. — Bloomfield Hills—Ml 2-8822 just east of Telegraph Road—UBBrborn — LO 5-3400 \ \) THE POXTiAC W^iJNESUAY, MAY 2], 19t>^ B—8 Meeske Vows Are Spoken on Saturday St. Hugo of the Hills dathhlic Chiirch was the setting Saturday for vows uniting Dorothy Ann Wagner and Charles Jolm ‘'lees^e Jr. ' / ■■ ' For the aftemoo^Mass, the daughter of th^/Thomas H. Wagners of B^mfield Hills was attired '^an ivory peau de soie gown Accented with Alen-con lace/Her bouquet was a casca^g arrangement of gar-denip^ Stephanotis and baby’s ith. ..—* Miss AdSph Shelly, Washing^-ton Street (right) conducts a tour of the Moses Wisner home, Pine-grove, for newly trairied docents, Mr. and Mrs. Wayne McMeans of 0rtonville. Bocents, who are guides, are on hand all this week PonNac Press Photo to show interested persons through the 19th century home^ of One of Michigan’s governors. Pontiac area schoolchildren are giving mini-concertsTMt Pinegrove each afternoon. Carolyn Raffa was maid ofi honor with Nancy McDonald,! Mary Margaret Skinner, Gayj Ludington and E3ise Ann' Meeske as bridesmaids. j Best man was Jay Shutt with; i William and Michael Meeske, ■ jThomas H. Wagner Jr., James Problems and P roposed two tuition scholarships Club News Roundup ‘Community Plannlnga.m. to 4 p.m., will benefit then Rochester WNFGA Couple Wed in Dearborn Recdves Awards, Plants Trees Michigan State University offered by the branch to deserv i ing students. Lunch will oej available. 4 “Outstanding performance In project activities for branches having 75 or more members’’ won an Orchid Award for Rochester Branch, Woman’s National Farm and Garden Association. Presentations were made recently in Ann Arbor during the 43rd annual meeting of the Michigan Division. Individual merit awards included a first in photography, Mrs. Donald Hart, and conservation, Mrs. J. E. Campbell. LaSavage and John a n d Growth,” is the scheduled topic Frederic von Rosen as ushers. |of the final meeting o f The newlyweds received Waterford branch, American guests at the Orchard Lake Association of University Country Club. Women, Saturday. CHARTERED Robert Dieball, Waterfordj ^he new Colony G r e e n'| Township Planning Commission, branch, Woman’s Nat ion all director, will be the speaker. Garden Assocaition, His keynote address will serve received its charter at the an-| to introduce the study topics the gj spring council meeting of; branch has chosen Wr theltb^, j^jchigan Division, held at coming year. They are ^is-g^^bor recently. I Oierry Hill Presbyterian Beleaguered Earth--Can Men^ Members of the new branch Church, Dearborn was the re-Survive?” and The Human ^^ere M e s d a m « s : cent setting fw the marriage of Use of Urban Space. Heinrich Duda, president; iGail Ann Powers and Francis '* * * Joseph’ Scerbak, Cameron winio,». niiniitiiT. Ihnnorarv mptnhpr of Rochester ,®'®'’* *^®‘*®'‘*P*®*- Mrs. F. Hugh Warner will Buchanan. Charles Kreager, tlon, Mrs. Wimarn Bunting, h^orary member of Rochester, The bride is the daughter of,host the 12:30 p.m. salad Frank Neal. R. Joseph newsletter Mrs' Sv branch won thei***'’’ P«wersJluncheon affair in her St. Jude McNamara, Paul Beardep,' Bigham, and newsletkr^^M^^^ 5n ^division (1 to 24 '“* Dearborn Heights. Parents oflorive home. Cohosteskes will be William E. Des Jardins, Robert Forea B. W,Uy won “'“'ll brldogroon, are Mr. «idj„e,d3„ea Charloa Morphy and WUhed, and .loaoph Hamilton! (24 to 49 members) with Fenton independence Alice Powers was maid of honor for her sister with Mrs. David Womack, sister of the bridegroom, as matron of honor. Best man was Larry Rosso. Mint Flavdrih^ Added By JANET ODELL Food Editor, The Pontiac Press Members of the ftochester Junior Women’s Club have put together a little cookbook of candy recipes. They will sell it Saturday at the Flea Market they’re sponsorihg on the parking lot of Rochester High School. Anyope who wants to sample a recipe from this book can try Mrs. Joseph F. Kosik’s recipe for Choco-Mint Balls. Make them in your electric skillet. ' \ CHOCO-MlWr BALLS By Mrs. Joseph F. jCpsik IVi cups evaporated milk *4 cups sugar ' dash of salt w ' 2 pkgs.»(6 oz. each) semi-sweet chocolate pieces 1 jar oz.) marshmallow cream % teaspoon peppermint extract finely chopped-nuts-—/----- .— ------- Heat electric skillet to 300 degrees. Combine milk, sugar and salt. Cook in skillet, stirring constantly, until sugar IS dissob(ed. Bring to rolling boil and coOk 5 minutes, stirring constantly. Turn off heat. Add chocolate, marsnmallow cream and flavoring. Beat until smooth Cool. Scoop out a teaspoonful of candy at a time and roll into a ball. Roll in chopped nuts. Makes about 60 pieces. place. Mrs. William R6land And Mrs. Nocholas NiculsK^jL g/third place in special events. Branch members attending were mesdames: Joseph A. Watson, Thomas E. Kruger, Roger i. Storves, Hart, David and Livonia. GAVE TREES The Rochester brianch has donated over $500 worth of trees, shrubs and evergreens to beautify tbe grounds o f Hie Perryville Road home of Mrs. Arthur Stiller, ‘‘Stlll-,” will be opened Saturday for a Flea Market sponsored by Holly branch. Woman’s Na-The newlyweds, who,4_aW^d”*^, Farm and Garden Club to Meet Devon Gables will be the set-, ting for a noon luncheon Friday! of the Maple Leaf C1 u b . I Hostesses will be Mrs. Orrin Huntoon and Mrs. Vincent Sadovsky. Mrs. Mrs. i Brooklands School. Volunteers honeymooning in the Ozarks,'Asso(^tior MUne, Freeman, and Frank R. did the planting Saturday. were feted at Warren Valley The sale of antiques, white New members Mrs. Harry F r e e m a n , Chapman, national vice presi- Brooklands students worked Country Club. They will make elephants, treasures, boutique Roland Kelly and horticultural therapy; educa-ldent and past president and under their teacher, James their home in Oklahoma. jtems and perennials, from 11 Sadovsky. ----------------------!-------------------—--------------------iKerscher and teacher aide, —^-----------------;---- ’ “ P ■ Mrs. John Ireland. Frank Dulin RING TWIRLING PROBLEM ... do they twist, torn and flop? "NEW" From Connoll/* Jeweleri L(w, RING SIZE ADJUSTER •litninoU* all f(ng«r fitting probUmtind mattdrof minuUit There is no need to alter your ring in anyway — The adjuster is only attqched to ring while in ■ wearing position., <-750 j4KGoid From DOWNTOWN PONTIAC Com*r Huron ond Saginaw Stroall FE 2-0294 Qy&dvC])adi^tDaNMJ(!ll Evelyn LaTiirrieau has joined our staff IMPERIAL BEAUTY SALON 158 Auburn Ave. FE 4-2878 Park Ftree ><• Edyth Stenaon, Owner f4 if of the Rochester Men’s Garden CTub, directed the planting, ssisted by Thomas Krueger. Mrs. Campbell spearheaded the effort, assisted by Mrs. Ronald Cooper and Mrs. Roy Church, cochairmen of the landscaping project. Frederick J. Duranceau, professional landscape architect, donated his services to the planning. Bordine nursery helped with the selection of ihaterials. A bachelor of arts de-gree was recently awarded Timothy V. Kaul during commencement exercises at Oakland University. Timothy’s parents are the Vernell E. Kauls of Warbler Road, Independence Township. Brian B. Bojesen was awarded a Doctor of Medicine degree at Wayne State University commencement exercises held Sunday in Ford Auditorium. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Axel Bojesen of Oakland Avenue. Six Generations i Celebrate 105th | NEW YORK m — There were! six generations on hand when Mrs. Virginia Cosomano^ celebrated her 105th birthday at| the home of Sal Bono, a; grandson. Also present were her daughter, Mary Bono; a great-granddaughter, Deborah Ruiz;! Colette and victoria Bono andj Roseanne Paladdolo, great-: great -granddaughters; and James F ■; ■ 'V'K' 'A ,V\K.a'A, .........A 1 l\j ' A,,. AvA'lt V VT’A a / 'mA'. ' .aVa'^uA.a\ I : y kif, Y ir ' .' ‘ f’ii'ii i f /'’V ''' r ' /) M ly//f J'f li ,''; h I ^ \ \I ^ "'r J'l nj T ^ f/^f jj' , •’, ii.T'fiV’’ r'' SALE... closet ensemble SALE ••• our ^Hudso’ brands Protect your clothes and beautify your closet as well! Attractive matched wipe-clean, quilted vinyl garment bags. In gold colop on-white or black-on-white stripe with Fleur delis pattern. A. Jumboblankctbag:drop-front2ipper,holds3to5blankets. B. Jumbodressbag; full-corded zipper, drop frame; 15-in. wide. C. Jumbo suit bag; full-length zipper and non-tilt steel frame. D. Regular dress bag; full-length corded zipper, 8-inches wide. E. Underbedchest: kraftboard frame, see-thru top, open-door zip. G, 18-pair shoe file: proteas shoes from dust, dirt scuffing. H, Handbag file: see-thru pockets for easy seleaion, holds 10. J. 10-f>air shoe shelf bag: see-thru plastic, zipper front. A» Our own concentrated biodej;rad-able detergent ii safe for sewage, septic tanks. !!• 20 /hf 3.67 C.Sat'f; 100 lbs. 16.97 Ei'tryday Low Prici. I>. Our own Deluxe toilet tissue, 1000 sheets "40 lb. Efiryday Low Prict. If. Our sanitary napkins in soft or gau/e; regular or super. Moisture i *■» repellent shields. /I O I I « 4o-ci. 1 87 ,.6*' (500 2-ply). In white and pastel colors. K. ^ O . 96 rolls, 11.97 40ri)IIS* F. Our face tissue; Regular: 1500 sheets (.500 100 .5-ply). In white and pastels. G* Family: ISOO t)boxes. J. /OO-I fk. 'lludso' castile soap: Toilet si/e mild enough for baby. In white, yellow. pink, blue, green, lilac. I--* Bathsni.i 10 bars i shtrts(600,200 5-ply |07 esX 3 boxts 1.0'7 ;reeil,and ^ ^ '20barsl vater soap, 1, ler. !%'. Our “67i P. Protect your winter clothes! our own moth nuggets of pure paradich-lorctlien/ene kirts moths and moth worms. 5 lb. container. R. Our own'lludso Deluxe paper' hand towels. Strong and absorbent easy-tear sheets. White, 1 yellow, pink, 100J C : 0rollsV# M. Our own cold-water soap, 12o liquid or 1 lb. powder. A'. Our ow pink lotioni/ed liquid dish wash. Mild to /C hands. Qt. si/e. V / P«l- (.5-ply) s S. Our own Deluxe dinner napkins. Large 16xl7-in. size, self-embossed design; facial quality, pre-folded. White, 100 2-ply. 57' Notions, Housnhold Goods—Hudson's I ,d Bosomonl and Northlond, Eastland, Westland, Pontiac, OoMond^Lincoln Park, HudsonTs Budget Store mCHT SHOPPiNQ Thursday. Friday. Saturday .tilt 9:00 P.M.‘. . EU^Mheth Lake Jtd.-Teleyraph Rd. /\y . /' i' v; 1 ^ Ll TWK PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, MAY 21, 1969 The Perldest People Will Swiig To Shifts For Spring Keg. 8.971 Round an J Octagon Sfyin 4 Days Only-Our Reg. 3,44 Luggaga Deluxe Go-Go Watches Train Case or Weekender WH4 new watches, bright color cases and dials. Deluxe bonds. Rtg. $1 Snep-On Watch lands... .77d In vibrant solid colors, paislies, florals and tweed patterns. Save! leigarSiits, iaf.4.«r.... 342 Our Reg, 1,76 Momtng-brighteners in dots, checks, geometries, paislies and high-powered flower prints. Wash-n-wear polished cottons and permanent press cotton/Avril® rayon fiibrici Easy-On styles. S-M-L-XLThis sale only! VMCCtr^TM, ^ Like ft? Charge It I Fanciful Fashion Eye Shodes auUnn*t^^i Adults Rag. 284 Rag.T.17^p^ Rag. 5H Jr. High Styla Sooglassts..... .3Td Reg, 2.671 Padded Rayon Satin Cover Attractive Photo Alhums Ten ll*'xlO" sheets... just slip pictures under the tramparent acetate pages, no glue or mess. 4 Days! 4 Days-Reg,994-$1 A Rainbow Of ' Tops'N Shorts (SirlsT 3-6X cotton knit shirts. No-iron shorts in cotton duck or poplin, 4-7. Charge It! ^ Reg, 1,12 •1,17 Fashion-Fresh! Solid or Print Your Choice, 8S For girl^ cotton duck sun dress^ 4-6X; noiron pre-cured cotton poplin short sets, 3-6X. Like Iff Charge Ifl Sleeveless Hylon Tops Cadet, crew mock turtle necklines. Cotton Twill Bemodas Colors CO- ACT ordinatewidi tops. 10-ia n,g. a.p3r Cawos Shoes Hit The Deck 4 Days Reg. 1,97 Deck-6rippiim Cones Cosnris 4 Days Reg.2.99 4 Days—Rag. 2,771 For Sun^GazorsI Patterned Beach Towels Teens, womenl White, navy, light blue. 5-10. Men's, cushioned insoles. Colors. 7-12. Take a sun-dip on 30** x 60'* cotton jacquard weave beach towels with hemmed ends. Like It? Charge It! 4 Days^Rag.2.97aa, Sporty Shirts Of Cool Hylon Men's short sleeve, 100% nyionknir shirts in frosty colors, ribbed cu£h, waist. Placket or mock tuntle. S-M-L-XL £sv 4 Days-~Rog,1,771 Short Logs and Sleeves Summer Pajamas For Him 4 Days’-Reg, 29Mf Noh^Slip Backing 9x12' Nylon Pile Rug Choice of assorted patterns and colors in cool cotton. A-B-C-D. Special! Boys' Rgg.1.44 Suninier PJ*S/6-16.97^ Continuous filament nylon pile, latex backing. Popular decorator colors. Charge It! rj-7 PONTIAC !tiA MALL DOWNTOWN PONTIAC TEL-HURON CENTER "CHARGE tr At All KRESGE Stores DRAYTON PLAINS ROCHESTER PLAZA BLOOMFIELD MIRACLE MILE ''.A .'-r ■■ A A.; iAk'.UiX;,, , i i \Vii\>■» 4^k‘ '"A,,.,,, 'L . ...\\ ' v\: THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, MAY 21, 1969 B—r 3>m» Lovely LHe-Uke ted ( Potted Geraniums 4 Days — Reg. 87c! Four-bloom plastic geraniums in , bright colors. 12'' high. ^ 1.96 7*BlooMGermi»nis,1.37 ' 67 Geranium Bush Wth 3 Radiant Blooms 4 Days—Reg. 36c! Plastic bushes brighten up house and yard, need no care. 67fi 7-Bloom Bushes. ..53tf 4 Days Only—Cur Rbq. 1.94 "Triton" sc, V^'PInlkNos. Family-size Motorized Grills Wagon Grill With Hood 24" Brazier With Hood 4 Days Only Our Reg. 18.88 IS 33 Like It? Charge If! 4 Days Only Our Reg. 11.88 9 46 Like It? Charge It! 4 Days—Reg. 3.94 Pair, With 6-Ft. Poles Spun Alum. Patio Torches With 5-position, easy52. tri fact we cany so «amv sizes tliM4 you'll be Something Else. Af¥i«M» cany them lot 6tfmg reason: to • kupiquatmay. OUR PONTIAC MALL STORE IS OPEN TUESDAY & WEDNESDAY TO 5i30; MONDAY THURSDA,Y, FRIDAY ASATUROl^l lY TO 9 P. M. TaECRAFN & aiZABlETN LAKE ROADS f -n , T If ' THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, MAY 21, 1969 w-eotr jiV/' ’ HAPPY BONUS 100 EXTRA TOPmUE STAMPS •,‘INNKKPtR” WALUCLOCK by Syroeo. Adapted from early Colonial Inn daalan. Battery operated. Nutmeg finish. A conversation piece. f.1/5 books Top Value Stamps. TGiere’s always a happy holiday feelingf about flopping at Krog^. Part of it comes from Kroger’s special combinatipii pf superb meat> freshest produce and excxlihgyvariety. Part of it comes from your two-way savings: true discount prices and Top Value stamps! y! , V fi^ei UATHWCBArr ATTACHl CASS. Heavy gauge molded Sturdex, with push-buttdn ooka and four-pocket file In ltd. Black, metal trim. 4 Neka Tap Value Stamps. Only Kroger offers both DISCOUNT PRICES and TOP VALUE STAMPS! Why settle fer tew? -■ 7 '' \> VO’ , ' ■ w.- \ J... , 4J..J ■V.iA;A7 B—10 THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEPNgSDAY, MAY 21, 1969 ItoMdhr' all meat “FUN FRANKS" Eckricb- WiMOTS IH RANDOmfIBIGHr FKGS COUNTRYSTYie SlicMl Bacon CiNTnt' CUT t il PORK CHOPS..99' U.S, CHOICE Wo*l Virginia Rmp Rtast......HonRC COUNTRY CCUB POINT CUl) VL3tB* SPECIALLABELDEODORANT Baa Roll-Oa........o'Fs^i70* SPECIAL label Hale Shaoipoo....i?B!l:79* WITH BODY Brack Creoio Rlase^ftW* OILY Jreck SkaaHMe .. KROGER Giant While Bread 4VA-LB ■ LOAVES ■ KROGER FRESH BAKED Battercrest Bread3i!oirn*l 12-oz -----T KROGER Jelly Rolls..... •• TifPKO APPLE, CHERRY OR PEACH Daaish Pastry. 3 VARIETIES V^^eaieDelite Cakes c«* 39*J 77-OZ ••WT PKc a#7r NO RETURN BOTTLES Regiiltir or Djet Pepsi-Ceia ASSORTED FACIAL Puffs Tissue ROUND PEELED 8 Cenladina TeBnatees 22 J-LB 13-OZ CAN WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT quantities, prices and items EFFECTIVE AT KROGER IN DETROIT --------ERN AND EASTEl DAY, MAY 25. 1969. NpNl DEALERS. COPYRlGlfT 1 THE KROGER COi 'TOP VALUE 3W STAMPS C A TOP VALUE 21V STAMPS Mtop value STAMPS jCA TOP VALUE 3V STAMPS Z WITH THIS COUPON ON , ■ ANY PKG I ■ MILD. MEDIUM OR SHARP I ■ PINCONNING CHEiSil ■ Va//rf Thru Sun., May 25,, I A» Kragur T * " WIfN THIm COUPON ON m wITn Tnlf wvrvn vn k mi § n i g TWOiCgALSORONEOAL I any two H-GALS KROGER m 2-PKGS CUt-UP FRYERS ■ KiOOIS LASIL • BUftERMILK OR U 2-PKGS FRYER PARTS OR W KRPOIR LAIH J chocolate O 2-SPLIT BROILERS ■ .........— . iw.iB.ii-c... I, TOP VALUE STAMPS TOP VAI UE STAMPS TOP VALUE STAMPS TOP VALUE STAMPS 1-LB 14-OZ CTN KROGER LABEL COTTAGE CHEESE VuIN Thru Sun.. Mny 25, 1969 At Krmgur Out. t Bait. Mieh. ANY TWOlUQtCTNS PARrAlt GfLATINS i -r.ee ■ PRE-COOKED PERCH, COD i S ICE CREAM NOVELTIES S OR CRISPY FISH STICKS t d I VaM Thru Sum., May 25. 1969 1 Af KiUfarOat. t Eayt. Mteh, TOP VALUE C A STAMPS ylV TOP VAIUE STAMPS CflTOP VALUE 3V STAMPS I Vatu Thra Sun., May 25, 1969 , 1 At Kf«o*r t>«r« Z K«af- Mieh. ^ ■ 01 ■ ■ 01 Bi Oi ■ ■ ■ ■ 01 Bi WITH THIS COUPON ON ANY TWO '/,-GALS KROGER LABEL ICE CREAM WITH THIS COUPON ON ANY2-PKGS COUNTRY OVEN DONUTS 'WITH Tin 5-LBS OR MORE COUNTRY CLUB ■ ALL-BEEF HAMBUROERi 1969 ■ IWB • f ^------------------- , ■ Vallil Thru Sun.. May 2S. 1969 JTfcru 54«.,^M w 25, W» |J --io :.d FOR Ym PATIO Marble Chips so 99 FRESH GREEN Cacambers or Peppers 2-27 ... ,■ , ., -, r-' .; ^ ,rv:', ‘'V' -i ' / ' . ' —” 'i THE PONTIAC PBESS. WEDNESDAY, MAY 21, 1969 _________________ B-U 62S are at KROGER plus Stamps! EXTRA TOP VAIUE SUCMD mo CHOPS 1/4 SUced Perk loin'. wiamamt-4.BMzmt Corsisk Hsss ••••••••••••• RACM 79* NORBEST GRADE *A* TENDER^TIMED 4 TO 8-LB Bsitsvills Tsrksys............ 49* AU MEAT SKIMLESS f sscliks Circit Wiaisrs.u 49* mreiUDe-s m»*9lfrFKa Bonelofs fiams Sliced Boiled 99* KROGER Buf ler-Me-Nat Biscuits 10 9IS-QZ WT TUBE __ _ KROGER BirrTER^-NOr Cieemei Geas i^i^TS* KROGER 2% m-MU Low Fot Milk________ KROGER GRM*A* Largs iggsA...4..#i>ozEK43* ^ PHILADELPHIA Craam Ch00S0 KROGER Froxen LouBonade 4-PL OZ CAN 0 MORTON PROZEN CreoM Pi0f......!^2S* POLAR PAKFUDGEES OR Twie Pops______..*k^49* itiarfnozEH Coffee Rick........^l9< PROzeH NIBLMTS COM OR SUCB9 GROM BEAUS yGreee Giaet....A^29*y BATHROOMTISSUE While deed CHOKE OP GRINOS COPPER Maxweil House yzixof cfjwssjcn QumvBsl AvoBidale Poaches 113 SIZE Celifonio Oropges ■69 NO RETURN BOTTLES OPEN PIT Vernors.ee eeeB 12-OZBTLS *1** Borbocoo SoBco 12Ioz\tlM9^ SPEOAL UBEL-SALADA LO-CAL 1000 ISLAND or chef style Tee Bogs.......'%r69* Kraft Dre$sing.....o‘zik19* ZESTYIPTANGY ALLPURPOSE Brooks CatsBp....”fT!”13' Mazola ^^ TREESWEET UNSWEETENED Grapefruit Juice.....»..-...’.^--<29* BREAKFAST OP CHAMPIONS Wheelies Cereel...............4S< GREAT LAKES BRAND Charceai Briquets....^20 *“99* SPECIAL LABEL Ivery Liqwid_________________ S VARIETIES DAILEY DRUaaUS Pickle Relish......—--------------.'^".19^ POR WHITER WASHES Cierex Bieach-----------------------.^.49* MIST-O-eOLD FROZEN Orange Juice FlAVORFUl REAL ^cUmciiici J Mayonnaise . AO LIGHT MEAT Breast O’ Chicken Tuna munturt *«osEr£ frozen Roynolds Wrop.....%'fL’49* Oraigo JbIco • •••eOZCAN 21^ ST, REGIS WITE SOFT SPREADING Paper Plates.....^n?39* Chiffoi Morgariee'n^lSP FROZEN IN CREAMSAUCE LIGHTLY SALTED MARGARINE ^ Birds Eys PsaSeBowirpjc6 33* Bits Bonnsfeeed.JpkS BIRDS RYE FROZEN RENUZITROOM ____ Glozsd CorrotSeeeewrPKo 3V Air Frsshsnsroeeee OZXAN 3B^ LEMON COOLER Ssnskiis Cookies wt1?kg 49* BROADCAST _ 1-LB Coned Beef Ha$h^/69* FATIO FROZEN Beef Tocos... eeeeeeWl^i 59* SPECIAL LABEL SHORTENING Crisco...........•3 c& 71* 5KC/BH REFUND CreoioDLSP njunn H Kffifflyy See details on jars ‘'‘L\ t'-.T L ■ :* A T. i, L ' ' V ! vTik' L -'i'-."'' J ■ I'V \...t'a: / B—12 THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEPyESDAY, MAY 21. 1969 V. Project Thank You for Viet GIs Draws White House Accolade HUDSONVILLB (UPI) -Somewhere along a muggy battle front in Vietnam, a grimy GI is unsealing a plastic bag. Some 619,999 GIs before him have done the same thing. He takes ^out packets of -ready-to-mix pop and maybe slips on a pair of white cotton socles to stave off infection in his blisters. Project Thank You — which started as a church project in this small community in west Michigan 18 months ago — won an accolade from thfe White House Monday. ; Presideet Nixon wrote the group that “Project Thank You sends something more, important than political feeling to servicemen. It sends them the concern, the love and the personal care of their fellow Americans.’’ It transcends the bitterness of war and concentrates on the needs of individual,’’ Dr. Bob Plekker, president of the Christian Reformed Church Laymen’s League, said in reading the presidential letter. The project was started in November 1967, in response tp a soldier’s plea for a premtdsten-ed towlette, Plekker said. “We went out 2 0 0,000 towelettes before we realiaied the servicemen need many more items,” he s^id. “We researched and found that what the wanted was dry cotton socks, a presweetened, flavored dHnk, reading and writing material,, an^ si resehlable plastic bag.” ' The league launched a^ nationwide campaign to sponsor the costs of the packets, which average soldier most I cost 66 cents to make, he said. ‘We’ve received ovw $1 in free radio and television tiihe and we’ve broadcast on 43 radio stattims from coast to coast,” added Plekker, who had to cut down his dental practice to head the campaign. “When we started, we promised wo would keep sending the packets until the war ended — we figured three or four months.” he recalled. * I* * , ‘But not we’ll keep it up as long as they’re over' tiiere.” Discretion: Better Part of Longevity By Hal Boyle NEW YORK (AP) - There is a spate of books today telling us how to live to a ripe old age. Some of theni “ feature fad ets; other merely reiterate c 0 m m on-sen s e advice which is as old as the ancient Greek longevity prescription: “Moderation in all things.” This rather reminds one W.C. Fields’ famous cure for insomnia; “Get plenty of sleep.” BOYLE However, it takes more than a simple diet, exercise and eight hours of sleep nightly to insure you’ll last long enough to collect on a pension from Uncle Sam. You have to take the right kind of exercise. Just flailing a couple of dumbbells around and bending down and touching the floor a few times is hardly enbugh. TUG AWAY In this tense and restless world the best exercise you can take to insure survival is to grab your nose firmly with both hands and tug it away every time it feels a temptation to stick itself into somebody else’s business. Caution is a prerequisite if you want to satisfy your ambition to become the first centenarian in your neighborhood. Here, for example, are a few Invitations which, if accepted, lead down that one-way path to disaster: “All right, men. I’ve explained the situation. Are there any volunteers?” ,* “Nq wonder the charcoal isn’t catching. You’re not using enough starting fluid, Why don’t you just empty the whole can on the coals?” “Steve Brodie took a chance. Why don’t you?” A LITTLE ACTION? “Those two chicks at the end of the bar look like they’re pining for a little action. Do you want to make a play for the tall one, and I’ll cozy up to the short one?” “I’m not very handy yet with my contact lenses. How about you holding this one while I try to put the other one in?’! “It you’re not sure Df the road, let me take the wheel, only had four or five drinks. “Of course, I could give you written guarantee that there is no defect in the house, but don’t you think my. word of honor is enough?” I “If you can dance the fox trot.! there’s no reason why you can't ^ dance the watusi. Come on out ' on the dance floor, and I'll give you a free lesson” I “Oops, my scarf blew off. Can you lean far enough out of the j canoe to get it?” “We can snap it up now at a real bargain. If there is oil all around it, doesn’t it .stand to ' reaSoTT'that under it, too'’” “Race you to the raft—it can’t be more than a 200-yard swim at the mqst.’^’ A FLAT TIRE “We’ve got a flat tire. Could one of you kind gentlemen help us put a new one on?” “It’s a specialty of my wife’s. Here, pass your plate and let me give you some more,” “You can’t get ahead in busi-| ness by being namby-pamby. If you don’t like the boss’s idea, why don’t you tell hint what you really think of it? The chances are he’ll be grateful that you' aren’t just another yes-man.” j "To perform this next trick, I need the assistance of someone from the audience. You, sir, there—would you step up and m YANKEE DISCOUNT DEPARTMENT STORES GAM ERA FESTIVAL! LIFE ■ - ' . ^ Op«n Nights Until 10 P.M. 1 Pontiac ^ Dotroit Storling. Haights Rivarviaw ' 1 h Exclusive -Sea Our Ad Thurs., May 22 OpM Sundfiys Until 7 P.NL ■ i ■ ■ , 1 liaSN.Pvrry 1 \ At Arivn* , f-y v‘.,' V Cornvr of Joy f Oroonflold Cornor of 14,Mllo «|nd Schoonhorr At Tho Cornor of Fort and King 1 ■ V. ;. ■ ■ THE PONTIAC PEESS, WEDNESDAY, MAY 2h 1969 B—18 yolpe Being Urged to Make Crash Bags a Safety Standard WASHINGTON (UPI) — Transportation Secretary John A. Volpe is being urged to approve inflated nylon bags as an automobile safety device needed to make the Scdety bags mandatory. Can't Mask If —Gas Is Hard on His Nerves By DICK WEST WASHINGTON (UPD - One thing can be said for certain about the Ailtny’s nerve gas program. It is making a lot of people nervous. JPolks around Denver, Colo., are nervous about having 100 mllllo doses of the stuff stored at the end of an airport runway. Folks in New Jersey are nervous about plans to ship 809 tank cars of poison gas through their state en route to the Atlantic Coast. ★ ★ ★ And some members of House Foreign Affairs subcommittee are nervous about plans to dispose of 27,000 tons of surplus gas by dumping it in the ocean. MUST BE POTENT Land o’ Goshen! That gas must be potent indeed. If it has that kind of effect on the nerves while still in the containers, imagine what it could do if actually sprayed on somebody. ★ ★ It is not, however, the possibility of an accidejnt that unperves me. I am more unstrung by the thought that the chemical warfare service could somehow manage to acquire 27,000 more tons than it needed. ★ ★ ★ Twenty-seven thousand t(ms is a lot of anything. But 27,000 tons of poison gas! Ihe motto of the Chemical Warfare Service must be: “Think big!” ★ ★ ★ During last week’s subcommittee hearings on the disposal plans. Army witnesses explained that they happened to have 27,000 extra tons on hand because new and better varieties had been developed. NOT VERY PLAUSIBLE But that doesn’t sound very plausible to me. My the<» 1*^ Alp« Dog Food 'XHUNI^^P '' “ BDOg" " V. SllwDoEFMd ■.a’ ‘i: Frail Drink* n . 3'»?.‘79‘ BTrii Ey# *w»lt* “if 33‘ TaVkiy’Sl pi* . . '™f 49* Kiri^dTiiM^^ Nal* ShanqiM. . . 74‘ b'iiSK'iSf"p„.. 49* b"» B..a.2'5S5i^ 35* ciS;WK"2S!is 69* H m STOUPPEirn rno»N ...y m 11*4 WalsfcRaraWt. ..™^69* V \'' , 'a I , A ' \ ' ; rjv I I ;i|i- .f;- THE PQNTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. MAY 21, 1969 SHHim*kE HYGRADE'S ALL-MEAT Ball Park Franks Qo __ Boneless Beef Roast «>Ow POINT CUT—"SUPER-RIGHT" FRESH Boneless Beef Brisket k O7 ANN PAGE QUALITY Mayonnaise... • .49 A&P LIGHT, CHUNK mFtfkl Tuna Fish... *0"" 7 V WESTERN-THREE VARIETIES Fruit Drinks.... ^ 39 ANNPAGELAYER JM , ,, |g QQ ^ke Mixes.... 4 1 Tc OFF LABEUDEODORANT ^n Roll>On....'" 82 Beef Chuck Steaks Shrimp Dinners BLADE CUT lb g CArH JOHN'S PKG. SiricoMSiMmlB.'^r Be OFF ^7 1C( i UBEL g lor 8c 1-QT. 8^^ j LABEL Bi BTL. LAVORIS 8-OZ. DECANTER 59 Antlsepfii JMouffcwosfi A snrE50% orimraonbMutilul FRAMES I ComplinMnt botip your art and horns with attractiva LA'CHOy^'.A »«» 4 w Chow Mein Noodlet 2 31 Bean Sprouts 2 29 I OMrignad aapadaUy I and coma In a I warlatyofftylM. FREEIl2Graai AriMasleniieces Head and Shoulders FREEionenewpiohira each week foriz weeks MOUTHWASHx 10c OFF LABEL ________________________________________Scope____________________________________________________ 1L. ei< ¥•“'“?«"*" nMhAriMii KJ 69‘ BalhrShaieT "" 6 Ehclr1isorrr.Tr& 77‘ ChiHon Margarine VS wtCaoklas... 75« “« 1” White Blaaeh SSf 49‘ Sallshurj Sfaak. . ™ 1 ” Chun King Dinner nui Butter^Jelly *«’5t* Hllle Bresa Coffee «»*• #0 Coffee pack • • • ■ jaa*, pliibchmann-bprozimunsalteo -n d?i!? as 48< K“iSi.lteH.. w IlSiSM... . . “ 19* E»T«.aFteh 37‘ Mar^arm.. .... K 49‘ CncnmharSllcaa. , «. . \' A THE PONTIAC PHESS. V^EDNESOAV. MAY \n ^1, Hospitals/Docfors Find Computers Really FW the Bill By C.6. MCDANIEL AP Science Writer Hospitals and doctors are using computers with apparent •uccess to record a patient’s heartbeat, take his medical history anrf4ven diagnose his disorders. The medical profession says computers will help relieve the dironic shortage^ oC doctors, nurses and other medical per sonnel and reduce mounting costs. ★ * They save a doctor’s valuable time by reducing his paper work and, doctors say, appeal to patients who prefer the im-^ personal nature of a computer. ’The patients say they can give better answers to a computer "because there is nobody sitting across the table looking impatient,” said Dr. G. Octo Barnett, director of the Laboratory of Computer Science at Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston. FIND IT EASIER Women are sometimes embarrassed when asked questions by a male doctor and fiiid it eas-ler to “talk” to the computer, noted Dr. Warner V. Slack of the University of Wisconsin School of Medicine. The most widespread use of computers at present is for obtaining information from patients. In the past. Dr. Barnett said, this could take up 20 to per cent of the doctor’s time and 50 per cent of the nurse’s time. * * * The patient sits at a keyboard, similar to that of a typewriter, and answers questions appearing before him on a •mall screen by punching the appropriate keys. With some systems he merely has to touch his finger to the appropriate answer to a multiplcichoice question on the screen. This information then appears on a printed sheet, later expanded with the doctor’s observations and laboratory test results, and is stored by the computer for recall at any time. HISTORY IMPORTANT Dr. Slack said that/“many Shysicians consider the medical istory the most important Eof the diagnosu.” He said of standardization of the handwritten recorjd by doctors Tension Eases in (^za Strip 'N^ Atmosphere' tor M/deost Trouble Spot AzA. Israeli Occupied Territory (UP!) — For two weeks > was scarecely a murder, a grenade-throwing or a demonstration in Gaza, and /that’s a long time for this / chronic trouble spot of the / Middle East. ★ * ★ ’This narrow coastal strip has always been a worry to its administrators. The Egyptianii'' Imposed a constant curfew before the six-day war of 1967. And now that it is Israeli-controlled, its Pales tin residents are even more apt to lake matters into their hands. * * ■* Rut recently the periods of iWnparativo peace have been longer. And an Israeli official believes it is due to realization “that grenades and bombs and riots won’t make leave.” IDEA SINKS IN He thinks the idea that Israel will never again aljow the strip to be used as a guerrilla ba.se is. Itlsn sinking in. Residents seem to agree withj the spoke.sman about the new! atmosphere in the sand and saltj air of Gaza. ★ * * A young Arab who said Ihreej months ago that he would not! allow his 17-year-old sister toi attend school becau.se of thej constant demon.strations. stone-1 throwings qnd tangles with! Israeli police and soldiers said: “Of course she's in school.! It's much better now.” HE’S BACK TEACHING Another young Arab, educated/ at Cairo University, was not atl the seaside .souvenir shop which he owns. He was hack at his usual job of teaching at a local boy’.s high school. * w * The military spokesman attributes the change in attitude to a variety of factors otheci than the ineffectiveness of strikes as a weapon against] .Israel.' \ l is notorious, adding that, most doctors’ handwriting is illegible. The computer also aids the doctor in diagnosing a disorder. Fed information about a patient’s chest pains, it might present the doctor with a series of possible heart disorders. Or if a doctor told the comput-er which one of the disorders he tiiougfat the patient had, the computer might then list the drugs and other therapies recommended to treat that disorder. But the computer also Is being used for more complicated and sophisticated .aspects of medicine. ' . ,At Lattei* Day Saints Hospital in Salt Lake City, electrocar-diograms-^readings of heart activity—are being taken in patients’ rooms and transmitted to a central computer over an ordinary telephone lines. ’The hospital also is using computers to monitor patients after surgery, and for tests of pulmonary function, blood pressure and blood chemistry. Just as the computer cap make in seconds computations that would require hours for a mathematician, it also performs these medical tasks in seconds, making it possible to serve more patients with fewer medical personnel. ---- * • ★ ’Die shortage of ^lled computer programmers] is limiting more rapid expanuon pf this computer use. High equipment costs also are a problem, although computer sharing is helping to lower them. At Htirtford, Conn., hospitals that care for 8,000 patients in a 2S-mile radius plan to share central computer facilities operated remotely from the individual ! ho^itals. couple of years ago, to demonstrate the computer’s potential, £KG sensors were attached to a young German secretary in Tours, France. Her heart signals were transmitted by telephone and communications satellite to a U.S. Public Health Service computer in Washing- The one-way trip was 46,000 miles and took three-tenths of a second. Within 30 seconds of the time the signal was<^sent, the young woman’s heart measurements and diagnostic interpretation were back at To^ on paper. PUT TO USE ^ This method of heart testing is being used in Nebraska, where at Good Samaritan Hospital in Kearney EKG readings are transmitted by telephone to a computer ifs miles away at the University of Nebraska College of Medicine. . In Nebraska also, EKGs are being transmitted by radio from ambulances and helicopters transporting accident and disaster victims from remote locations to hospitals. * At Lafayette Clinic in Detroit, the computer is being used to take electroencephalograms (EEGs), which are readings of the electrical activity pf the brain, to diagnose iN'ain disorders. (Advtiilsftntnt) New Moey Wear FALSETEETH WM More Comfort LIFE Is Necessary in YOUR HOME! See Our Ad Thun., May 22 RENT, SELL, TRADE - - - USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, MAY 21, 1969 MAY 21 thru MAY 31 DOWltTCIWlt One of Oakland County's largest shopping areas. Plenty of convenient parking near all stores. Over 100 stores and services. ^ \ V' THE PONTIAC PUK.SS WKDNKSDAy, MAY 21, i960 Peru Bid for Red Trade Falters i LIMA, Peru (UPJ) — Efforts jof Peru’s military junta to build ■up trade with Communist na^ tions appear to be getting the shoulder, according -to Idipkanals here. ' One United States official {climated that Peru has only been able to ^11 the Soviet tJnion $l(n.lN» wwth of Alpaca wool, an bisignific^t amoui^. relations with the United States, diplomats said. Peru’s gestures toward the Soviet block intensified in early April; a time when Peru-U.S. relations were at' their lowest point in history. AS WilVplMt* Captured U.S. seaman - The DefenseADepart-ment relea.sed this and other ^photographs Monday in Washington to illustrate the t^tment of U.S. prisoners of war in North Vietnam. Itr was identified as showing Seaman D. B. Hegdahl of pif U.S. Navy holding a broom and was one of the picty«s used at a Pentagon briefing to illustrate the prisor^s’ loss of weight. life magazine was listed as the so^e of the photograph. The niilitary junta, beaded by^ iGcn. Juan Velasco Alvarado, I has made intensive efforts to jcxpand diplomatic and com-merical ties with Eastern Europe since it took power last Oct. 3. Since that date diplomatic relations have been established rwith Russia. Romania, IY u g oslavia. Czechoslovakia, I Poland, Hungary and Bulgaria. .GESTURES INTENSIFIED I One of the aims of this policy was to o&et deteriorating relations with the Soviet Union, they do not feel it has a solid base. What Peju produces the Communist countries do not need,” one U S. diplon^at ?aid,, The strain was eased somewhat when the United States announced that it would a halt of aid and the elimination of Peru’s sugar quota In the U.S. niarket -r as retaliation for the expropriation of the holdings of the International Petroleum Co, (IPC), a subsidiary of the Standard Oil Co. of New Jersey. i Peru has refused to pay compensation to the IPC on the claim that the company exploited national resources illegally. U.S. CONCERNED United States officials are concerned about Peru’s new Diplomats herd“ view Peru’s closer ties with the Soviet bloc a part of a general trend inj Latin-American countries toj ^rade^ Last August, before the military junta overthrew! President Fernando Belaunde j Terry, the governrtient sent a 20-man trade mission _ to Eastern Eurq>e. The mifltary government has moved much faster and more decisively in that direction. Progress is being made toward developing atomic-heated suits for deep-sea divers. The heater would consist of a small quantity of radioactive but nonexplosive plutonium 238. Full Suspension ... 4 DRAWER FILE CABINETS ■0' *55« • Heavy Gouge St««l • Smooth Gliaing Drawers • Decorator Colors Cole Gray • Desert Sand Quiet roll drawers at the touch of a finger THE AUDIO-VISUAL CENTER Division of Christian Literature Sales 55 Oakland Ave* ^ FE 4-1523 Hdnoi/irm on POW Data PARIS (UPI) — Chief North troop withdrawal, and Haqr’si Vietnan^e negotiator Xuan speech put Hanoi squarely in’ Thuy /said yesterday Hanoi opposition to this part of the would never agree to furnish Nixon peace plan. | Information on captured U.S. GOODfVEAR /pilots as long as Washington refuses to withdraw its troops from South Vietnam. Thuy noted that Defense •Secretary Melvin R. Laird publicly “asked for a list of captured pilots” in the course of a Monday news conference. i “He will never have it so long as the United States does not ■top its war of aggression, and does not withdraw its troops from South Vietnam,” Thuy told newsmen at a lunch in Paris. \ Thuy’s remark about cap-! Ipred U.S. pilots came in the| question-and-answer period following his prepared speech in which he renewed Hanoi’s de-, mand for an unconditional U.S.j troop withdrawal from South Vietnam. i President Nixon’s newly pro-! posed eight-point peace plan precludes an unconditional U.S. Soma Hava Fun in the Sun Others Have Wark ta do TREASURE_ CHEST DEVALUES 1 Fashion Right LATEX SATIN ENAMEL qL 2* H.D.ENltrior6lett EOS HOUSE PAINT gal. 9” THINNER gal. 88* •xIZriMtiC egm DROP CLOTH 7” Scuttle Bucket, Now 3 WALLPAPER IN STOCK Itan, OlUr VakiM o« Ihi. »Mk ACME PAINT 3 N. Saginaw FE 2-3308 BUILDING FOR THE FUTURE Each generation looks for guidance to those who have the experience of the years behind them. Teach your youngsters early the value of saving regularly, with d dividend-bearing Savings Account. 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TlMy my the shovels are being numufactured now in r ffie l^llity of Moscow ministries to translate grand five-year plans into swifter econoi^ surges, no one I that Sberia is a vast ment production. It is second in steel, pig iron, electric power and aluminum production, the mining of bauxite, gol^ and eopper and the refining of pe-troHum. ' ' ' 'I ' What may prove to be the world’s largest copper find has been mapped in Siberia, and the failure to exploit it so far points up a major flaw in the Soviet Sane 4A00 gedogical exploration teams range from above the Arctic Cirde to the borders with Red China and Mongolia lor vidut seems to be h limitless cataloging of natural wealth. AUTMIATED FACTORIES So|diisticated, highly automated factories dot the frozen dra and are springing to life near what were oice fur trading “There probaUy hasn’t,, been an opening of land of such pronise since America’s own] frontier,” a Western economic wqtert in Moscow said. economy, tiie lack of hivestmeht capital. WORKERS’ PARADISE? If there is a workers’ paradise in the Soviet Union, and many laborers question this basic Kremlin tenet, it would have to be Siberia, a harsh and cruel land best known in the past for slave labor camps and exile which often led to an early! death fgr opponents of the regime. Now state factories give Incentive pay of 20-M per cent and more to workers spread through Siberia, a land twice big as the United States but with only 32 million population. Bigger hunks of profits are channeled j toward worker housing and benefits. wations for their children to the point some will,move to be near good schools. The concessions to the work: ers in Siberia were part Of some very capitalist thinking in klos-cpw, which faced both a Iwain and population drain in Siberia onm la^s forbidding workers to qidt their jobs had been> re-BMjed__________________ the government, and within the ministries controling raw materials and production ’from Moscow. They argue that the capital shortage which already existed is severely aggravated by the trend toward consumer goods. It is believed these men are backed by what some foreign experts call the Soviet mili-tary-industVial complex which, LABOR LURE Many decisions now are based not, on “to each accoading to his needs, from each according to his abilities’’ but on: “If we are ) get enough skilled workers and techigians for factory X when it is completed, we will have to offer the right inducements to lure and hold a ' ' bor force.’* The director of one gold-mining operation in a remote area of Siberia where the winters are particularly hard reported that 40 per cent of his profits were earmarked for worker housing, recreation and the like. The other 60 per cent went to the state which finances his outlays for capital equipment. 'fhe Soviet Union already boasts Of having the world’s second most powerful ecmomy after the United States. Worldwide, It Is first in iron ore mining and Education, in what some once called the Land of the Dead, is growing as fast or faster than the industrial base. Some Russians claim that the worldwide knowledge revolution has led This is part of a basic turn in Soviet planning which, also envisions large increases in consumer goods to mollify workers and their families. Factions loyal to the goal of first developing basic industry Soviet parents to prize good ed-!to higher levels still abound in Sherwih-Williams Paints PRICES GOOD Thru Saturday May si SHEmnN%¥huiAMS MONEY* SAVING Sherwin-Wiluams W/’, OIL-BASE HOUSE PAINTS Finest oil-base house paint you can buy for all wood surfaces. Uniform film—self-cleaning. Easy to apply, wide choice of colors. NOW ONLY GAUON r colors in case lots of 4 gallons or more. REUPRI^E $0T9 \-ino l.aU'^ HOUSE PAINT Sherwih-Wiluams SPECIAL! V BRUSH *3“ A-IOOLATEXj HOUSE PAINT Soritapar«d"i^ CAULKING CARTRIDGES Toogtoelsstic seal, will not toittio. Natural or white. 3 for r Tough, flexible finish for wood and masonry, i ’ Self-priming over previously painted surfaced * i in sound condition. Rssists blistering and^ I peeling. Dries lightning fast ^ HOUSE PAINT '*«r! [INSPECTION SERVICE I s aimortwin examine i ou -nowto g m house paint proteetlon. Phono orvisH I I our atora for oompieta details about this | Shekwih-Wiwams FOR FINEST QUALITY PAINTS m N. PERRY ST., FE4t2571 THE PONTIAC Mall DOWNTOWN 682-1310 Open A Charge Account ^-counterpailr, ^ The Soviet figure Is $890 compared with about $4,300 for the United States. On this per-capi-ta basis the Russians also trial j^pch Soviet East Bloc satellites as East Germany and Czechoslovakia. The Soviets also trail Finland, Italy, Belgium and Puerto Rico. HISTORY PARALLEL ■Theiopenlng-oLSiberia hlstork considerable power in the country. GLOOMY ESTIMATE There is some question in the mind of American experts as to just how far Siberia has been developed. One expert said the region so far Is no more than producing its per-capita share the Soviet gross national product. Others believe this somewhat gloomy estimate has become outdated under the present Kremlin regime. Stalin’s attempts to devdop the region , with convict slave labor augmented by hie relocation of peasants is considered a major failure. Khrushchev’s policies are said to have been economically unsound in many areas; he nonetheless built the foundation for the present growth. costs. Even with the most highly automated factories and abundance of resources,, transportation costs can nudge the ultimate cost of finished products above world market levels, making them noncompetitive: The Ural-Kuznetsk coal, iron and steel complex built in the 1930s was the Conunubists’ first large attempt at heavy Industry cally recalls a similar period in the United States. Originally fur traders were the most important factor. Miners found silver lodes in 1698. The real economic and political birth of the region dates to the completion in 1905 of the Trans-Si^rian Railroad which to Vladivostok on the Pacific covers 5,800 miles from Moscow Ocean. The vast distances point up another weakness in the Russian economy—transportation Siberia. But it was World War II that brought the first major surge into Siberia, thanks the German army and air force. Vast numbers of factories and workers were loaded trains and sent into the safety of Siberia where they remain. While it is somewhat fitting that th^ Soviet space center and atomic energy research are centered in Siberia, nature oddly failed to leave any large amounts of one critical metal for the future anywhere in the Soviet Union. This is uranium. No one would question that the Soviet Union, for all its economic accomplishments, still has a long way to go. Although it is second only to the United States in gross national product, based on Moscow’s figures, per-capita share of gross national product ranks 21st according to World Bank figures. New Rights Aide DETROIT (AP) - Wilbur D. , Howard, a four-year veteran of ithe Michigan Civil Rights Commission, has been appointed assistant to the commission’s director. Burton I. Gordin. | Howard will be responsible for inter-governmental relations and special assignments. | • Pant Dresses • Culolte • Shorts • Pants • Tops • Bathing Suits Koret of California and other famous brands Bobette Shop 16 N. Saginaw Downtown Formal Attire Rental Latest Styles-, and Latest dolors For All Occasions CONN'S Men^s "BoysHAiri^ J[32L_SajIna^^ownto^^ DOWNTOWN PONTIAC Offers FREE PARKING ON THE PONTIAC MUNICIPAL LOT (CORNER SAGINAW and HURON) FarnUhed by the Following Merchants: ARTHUR'S 48 N. SagiiMw St. OSMUN'S MEN’S WEAR CONN'S CLOTHES 51 N. Saginaw St. 73 N. Saginaw RORETTE SHOP THE PONTIAC PRESS 16 N. 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Conceived as vehicles of planned revolution in South Vietnam and Laos, this two in-•urgettcy organizatiohs differ in outlook, attitude and perfonh- a civil war pitting two armiesjted directly from the Vietnam against each other, rattjer than war. Needing supply routes an ihsurgency where one side'through Laos to ship its men uses gerriilas to harass tiamletsiand supplies to the South, North and terrorize people. Only in re-|yietnam gave muscle to the Lao cent monbi has a pattern of insurgents, destr^ing central terrorism emerged in the Mekong River Valley area, and this is not yet of any' great significance, say Americans at the scene. Tfie Vietcong, on the other hand, had the South Vietnamese army on the verge of defeat with its guerrilla war in 1965. It government positions in border provinces and conducting other fotays to dissuade Lao government troops from being too inquisitive about what was happening wtheltoCW^ tablished, the legality of the there wUl be much easier to set-Pathet Lao, and its representa- tie than those in South Vietnam, tives hold four seats in the The framework for a solution member Laotian Cabinet. The exists, senior Pathet La® ministeits have long ago left Vientiane, but The Vietcong, however, still their positions remain open for are basically an anonymous them to occupy. bunch of guerrillas fighting in This factor indicates to many the jungles. Whereas the Lao trail”. The American decision to end troop escalation in Vietnam in 1968, and to consider withdraw- observers that the problems |premier. Prince Souvanna by the war. Phquma, can offer to negotiate The Pathet La^ reap some re-. ,,“For the older people, their with the Pathet Lao and thusLards from a Robin Hood-type whole world is topsy-tflrvy,” he may gam in political areas where the notes. “That is why a man of 40, Nin“van ?h?u iSi£2^ yet penetrate^. A who has always supported the h^stature among some of his y®“"8 American official who central government, joins the people, at ’least, by offering to has spent three yeanrin the hin- Pathet Lao. He thinks his son is talk with the Vietcong because terland says foreign aid has being corrupt^ by the newer of the polarization of both sides forced change Ujpon a reluctant | ways. So that is hi? way oj jcountryside. g change, going to the hills.” The leader of the Pathet Lao, Prince Souphahouvong, insists on being addressed by his followers as “royal highness.” The Vietcong leadership constantly emphasizes its proletarian roots, Pathet Lao troops have tic innocence that the disci-;fight a battle these days. “We Vietnam tvne war Conse-blined Vietcong would deplore.'always find North Vietnamese ® ^ ®^ W will sho?t at an eclipse,; bodies on the wire, not Lao-ljj^^^n’t^rps has convinced that a giant fog islf'an- commented on American^ morale has! eating the sun. And they will ex-,m Vientiane. risen. > pend ammunition for any otheri insurgency organic- * ■ x ^ I number of reasons from pureiOons have arrived at simrfar Joy at the new year to tiger'^tages in their planned revolu-hnnfinff tions. Both enjoy massive sup- • port from North Vietnam. With- was deprived of victory only hy ing forces, has suggested to thej the massive injection of Ameri-jpro-Western Laotians that there; can troops. jis a limit to U.S. commitment to * * * Southeast Asia. It has also I The Pathet Lao hardlv ever 'fiJht a biftle Uiese davs »we Probably will never have to face| Vietnam-tjrpe war. Conse- The Pathet Lao has advantages not yet enjoyed by the; Vietcong. The Lao insurgents.) PROBLEM SPOTS out\hi7Wt7they"wouW example, were initially These practices have alienat-Leen crushed, the Vietcong by.d™ Jrom prominent^^^^^^^^^^ ed Pathet Lao units from North the massive American ef(ort,jWho opted for rejji y Vietnamese outms, particularly,the Lao by it?own mher-^b^^^^^ compromise along the sensitive Ho Chi Minh;ent failings. colonialists to trail area in Laos, prisoners in-j DIRECT BENEFIT win independence for Laos, terrogated in Vientiane say. Thej The Pathet Lao have benefit-1 Two Geneva conferences North Vietname.se are said to! prefer to bivouac long distances from their Lao comrades. The Vietcong conserve ammunition and constantly proselyte among the Vietnamese population, winning converts with persuasion, coercion or brute force, establishing intricate cell systems in hamlets, and exercising tight control from the lop. The Pathet Lao have hardly bothered to work amidst the mass of the population in Mekong River Valley, preferring to organize the hill tribes In the mountainous northern provinces which the Lao cem tral government has never properly controlled, and only occasionally slipping down to the Mekong. In terms of political and military efficiency the Pathet Lao "is a pale shadow of the Vietcong,” says one American official who has served in both countries. NEVER OFF GROUND The Lao Insurgency nem. really got off the ground, possibly because of the more easygoing nature of the Lao people. Basically the Lao war has been Redmond’s JEWELRY 81 N. Sag^inaw St. Free Parking in Rear of Store 108 N. Saginaw St.-FE 3.-7114 OPEN DAILY 9:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. iswmm NOW! You can Take and Show Super-8 Color Movies so Perfect theyll call you an Expert! KEYSTONE AUTO-INSTANT SUPER-8 HOME COLOR MOVIE OUTFIT at an Amazing LovO Price I Carnival oi Values 5,000 BTU Coldspot model weighs just 71-lbs. Resists rust» stains. £asy-to-install. Compact! . Og«a FrUay, Satardlay 9 la % TaoAy. 9 la S:M waas. MOKBIH^K AND CO. Downtown Pontiac • Phone FE 5-417 7 A, She was a member of the First,of 38845 W. Nme Mile will be Presbyterian Church of Birm-tomorrow at the - - - Qjj j^j.'heeney-Sundquist Funeral htorf nf Home, Farmington, with burial iiieis oi:._ „___ the American Revolution, Piety Hill Chapter. ingham, Stockbridge 1« OES>«d Daughter. to iJTte™;:! Beverly Hills. | -Surviving, are her husband;! ^r. Wiest died Monday.^Hei me daughter. Mrs. r « e d"i« c ha n i c a 1 Jenkins Of Bloomfield Hills: with the Mich^igan three sons, Forrest B, of Wisconsin Gas Co. He joined he Bloomfield Hills, Robert W. of Farmington Township Plannmg Birmingham and Harold J. of,Comirussion in If6 and was Grosse Pointe; two sisters; one s^etajy from tfj brother; 10 grandchildren; and'^- He was a vesteyman of eight great-gfandchildren. Tnmty Episcopal Piurch of Frank A. Rees^ WOLVERINE LAKE - Requiem Mass for Frank A. Reese, 61, of 555 Laguna Court will be 10 a m. Friday at the St. Williams Catholic Church with burial in Forest Lawn Cemetery, Detroit. Rosary will * * * 'be 6 p.m, tomorrow at the The high school credit classes .Rjchardson - Bird Funeral . haveAet from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m.! Rome, Walled Lake, was a member of Central and 6:30 to 9:30 p.m. twice a| j^r. Reese died yesterday. He Christian Church. j week, offering U.S. history, Lgg a contractor and a retired Surviving are a sister and a civics,English,basic! employe of Ford Motor Co. N. Saginaw will be 1:30 p.m. tomorrow «t Voorhees-Siple Chapel with burial in Oak Hill Cemetery. Mrs. Gilboe died yesterday. Tom Everitt, supervisor adult education. Trinity Episcopal pjurch Farmington and of Holy Cross Churcb, Northville. He also belonged to a Sojouners Lodge 483, F&AM. , Surviving are his wife, Grace; j keep step with any two sons, Conrad E. of Grand___________________ Blanc and Fredrick N. of Oakland, Calif.; a daughter,' Kathryn M. of Albuquerque,' ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. (AP) The New Jersey Medical Society has asked the state not to license any more chiropractors. Dr. William Bromley, president of the state chiropratic society, saidi:hemedical society’s move Wednesday was an Chiropractor Curbs Asked tempt A “destroy th^chlroprac-tic profession by the vicious tactics of slow strangulation.” The medical society at its convention here passed a resolution to “aggressively petition the governor and legislature” to ban further licensing of chiropractors by slate law. “If the New Jersey Medical Society has its way,” said Dr. Bromley, people would be denied their right to a free choice of doctors.” A state board of examiners tests applicants for a chiropractor’s license. SWINGING STATESMAN - Canada’s Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau shows he can group of his con- stituency. At a Montreal reception, he does a quiet fox trot (left), then cuts loose with a younger partner (right). N.M.; five grandchildren; and three great-grandchildren. Workers to Pay for Sub Repairs VALLEJO, Calif. (AP) — Say-1 captains Tuesday began probing 'ing “we feel some responsibili- the unexplained mishap. Second of Four Shots This Week Is Today at Cope Want Ad Gets Back His Lost Billfold brother. Mrs. Willie Wright mathematics and algebra. The classes are free to any ' -adult working toward a highi school diploma. | He was also a former Cseveral hundred civilian ODQCe jargon workers at Mare Island Naval ' Shipyard have offered to donate Service for Mrs. Willie (Lydia) Wright, 52, of 6M jggfg jq gnd Bagley will be 1 p.m. Friday in provides one-half credit for Providence Missionary B^tist subject from Pontiac Cen-Church with burial in Oak Hill trai Rjgb School. There are Cemetery by D a v i s - C o b b jbree terms per school year. Funeral Home. | The UAW program is self- Mrs. Wright, a member of^supiwrting with an assist Providence CSiurch, died yester-uiygugb replar state aid, and day. L J 'the courses are taught by' Surviving are her husband; i ggrtjggj tgggbers. eight chiidren, Mrs. Almariaj ____________ Crumb, Katherine Johnson,.. ^ Gretchen Smith, James, Donald A/rpOrf LOrniDfri©© and Anthony Wright, all of i Pontiac, and Beatrice and Hir©S AdD TO IS© fS .lohf Wh nt hnm<>- a: ' ' Orchestra students from Waterford Township schools will present a music festival tonight Waterford Kettering High School. Featured at the 7:30 concert, - . „ „ ,, will be the high school string' Char ie Brown-Radio call orche.stra, an honors orchestra name for the command module Susan Wright, both at home; sister, Mrs. Alton Fowler <>l /qF Land PurchoSe Pontiac; 11 grandchildren; and * a great-grandchild. Her body may be viewed after 3:30 p.m. tomorrow. Stanley E. Benford AVON TOWNSHIP - Service for Stanley E. Benford, 63, of 1725 Bedford'Square will be 1 The Oakland County Airport Committee has approved the employment of two appraisers in the purchase of some 77 acres needed to complete the master plan at Oakland-Pontiac Airport, Waterford Township. Tile committee approV' yesterday the hiring of Richard Traffic Death Charge Eyed Pontiac police and the county prosecutor’s office are undecided whether they will of selected junior high school students, beginning string from 27 elementary schools and a massed orchestra 125 studenU from Crary, Mason and Pierce junior high schools. Irwin of John K. Irwin and Sops Real Estate, Pontiac, and Blackwood Holmes of Holmes-Harmon Corp., Birmingham. The committee was informed that a recently established shuttle air service between Pontiac and Chicago, Briefcase Inc., has ceased operations. The firm was given two weeks to meet certain obligations before New State Park charge tjie driver of a runaway jUirport contracts are canceled, truck which killed a pedestiran I —————— Monday. I But they have decided to| charge thfe driver of a car ini which a passenger was killed! PETOSKEY (AP) Saturday with negligent 295-acre state park is scheduled homicide. | to open this summer near Petps- ir ★ ★ jkey wi Little^averse Bay. Ilie A warrant for the arrest of!Petoskey City Council this W6ek that driver, Kenneth Bradford^ approved the sale of some 120 23 of 550 Bloomfield was to be'acres of the Petoskey bathing issued today, according t o'^ach to the state for $150,000. police. iThe new f Music Festival in Waterford You're Likely to Hear Today The Navy has released no details on the sinking, other than to say there were no leaks in the submarine, originally slated for part of their vacation pay to help repair the nuclear subma-' commissioning later this year, rine USS Guitarro. The $50 million vessel'sank in 135 feet of water in the napa Riv-SPACE CENTER, Houston |er at its outfitting dock last (AP) — Here is a glossary of (Thursday and was raised Sun-jargon likely to be used by the day. Apollo astronauts and their ground controllers in today’s activity around the moon: ! Capture—TTie point when the moon’s gravity takes hold of the spacecraft. A Navy Board of Inquiry com-osed of two admirals and three There was some speculation that intakes of some type were inadvertently left open, and the vessel flooded so quickly there was no time to close water-tight compartments. MANHATTAN. Kan. (AP) -Last week Johnny Moehlman, a Manhattan grocer, lost his billfold. He placed an ad in the Man- CAPE KENNEDY. Fl». (API llont tions satellite was poised to . rocket towards a lofty stationA,.!!?^^^^’ ry orbit over the Pacific today! * * * •the second of four launches finder had clipped tha scheduled this week at the busy f™"' *^he paper, taped space port. i the billfold and dropped the Friday, a singie Air Force billfold in a maiibox. ’The mail- Workmen aboart ty without injury. fled to safe- Titan 3 rocket ig to hurl five satellites into separate orbits, including two nuclear detection-watchdog craft aimed at helping police the partial nuclear test ban treaty. man delivered it to the store, apparently getting the address from the identification card in the wallet. Directors of the junior and senior high groups are Mrs. Louise Duton, Katherine Derr and Steven McKenzie. No admissiffli wiil be charged. The concert' is open to the pubfic, according to school officials. when the moon landing craft (LEM) is manned. Equigravisphere—Point which gravitational pull of earth and moon are equal. IN ORBIT LOI—Lunar orbital Insertion, or achieving an orbit around the moon. LOS—Loss of signal, as when ihe moon is between earth and a spacecraft, preventing electronic contact after LOS. Local Crash Injures Romeo Woman, 64 A Romeo w 0 m e n Is hospitalized in fair condition after she was involved in a two-car: accident in Pontiac yesterday afternoon. Frances P. Busch, 64, of Terminator—Line b e t w e e sunlight and darkness on moon or earth. Snoopy—Radio call name for the moon landing craft when it is manned. HIGHEST POINT Apocynthion—Point at which spacecraft in orbit is at its highest point from moon’s surface. Pericynthion—Point at which spacecraft is at its lowest orbital point over moon (term derive from Cynthia, Roman god-dress of moon). ! Umbra—Darkest part of a Prospect is in an intensive care'shadow, or point on earth or unit at Lapeer County General . farthest from sunlight. Hospital with a knee injury, hospital spokesman said. is expected to Driver of the other car Bruce L. Gilchrist, 23, of 592 Raskob, reportedly was passing a car on the right on Walton near Tuesday's News W a Glance From! Saturday, Navy Poseidon! mi.'^sile is to rocket from a land! pad for a sixth test flight of the I weapon being developed to sue-1 ceed Polaris missiies aboard America’s nuclear submarine fleet. That will end a busy week' at the space port which bejjanl 'unday with the lift-off of Apollo' JAKARTA, Indonesia (AP) -0. I Brig. Gen. Mohammed Sudhar- Perched atop a three-stage I man went on trial here Tuesday Delta rocket, the commercial before a military tribunal on ch^p-ges of corruption, the first Trial Begins in Indonesia Bribery Case communications s a t e 11 i t owned by the International Telecommunications Satellite Con-■sortium (INTELSAT)—was to blaze away from Cape Kennedy today at 10 p.m. EDT, followed| general ever to do so in graft-ridden Indonesia., Sudharman, 48, is charged with taking bribes Involving $400,000 while serving as dlreo- by the Titan 3 Friday at 3:57 tor of a state-owned tin mining enterprise two years a Pompidou Jsf in French Poll Sudharman, wearing a general’s uniform, denied all charges at what was scheduled to be a five-week trial. He faces at least seven years imprisonment if found guilty. PARIS (AP) - ion poll published Tuesday by the newspaper L’Aurqre indicated. former Gaullist Premier Georges Pompidou Will get 43.5 per cent of the votes in the first round of voting for president June 1, to 36.9 per cent for acting President Alain Poher. The general’s trial follows In-A public opin- creasing criticism of President Communist Jacques Duclos x i* was given 10.3 per cent. Social-J- Heard II of Detrol ist Gaston Defferre 6.7 per cent,!has been elected secretary of ancTMichel Rocard of the Uni-!*be Harvard Law School Oass fied Socialist party 2.6 per cent. The^lass named Diana In a runoff between the two Van Wyck, 24, of Gladstone, top candidates, Poher was re- N.J.^ its marshal, the first ported leading with 56.3 per cent woman ever accorded the to 43.7 per cent for Pompidou. honor. Suharto’s anti-corruption campaign by militant students Impatient for promised reforms and action against corrupt officials. Law Class Elects CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (AP)- Police said Bradford was cost an estimated $500,000 and Laurel,"'lost control of his car' fLp Cfryfa Cnnitnl ' ruuve VOAU X1-- ...JII 010 lu- '-ead- driving a car which ran off the will offer 312 campsites and and struck the Busch car head-road at Wesson and Branch and 6,000 feet of beach frontage, ion, according to police. I into a brick wall. His. passenger, Elma L. Beasley, M, of 93 Elm was killed. Truck driver Abraham Apigian, 44, of 64 Spokane, may be charged if he is the owner or part owner of the Fidler Foods truck he was driving, according to police. He is a supervisor at the Pontiac company. The brakes of his truck reportedly failed at East Huron and Perry and R struck Gertrude Gilboe, 75, of 319 N. Saginaw, who was on the sidewalk. Harambee Office Looted by Burglars Burglars made off with items! valued at more than $1,500 in a break-in reported yesterday at a Pontiac community organization office. A spokesman for Harambeei, a nonprofit black development firm headquartered at 9 Utah, told police that a duplicating RADIO AIRLIFT — An Illinois Tollway pilot maneuvers a helicopter close to a communications tower so workers can swing a radio antenna into place. The job, previously done by derrick, takes about 10 minutes by helicopter. ... Bqricultiiral _ THB STATE ADMINISTRATIVE BOARD Authorized borrewlnn o( up to $iso million to help meet fall school aid THE CIVIL RIGHTS COMMISION Ordered (even contractora doing tensive buelness with the —“ ‘-------- h equal employment opportunity stai ConTIrmea «»n ff! University, Chancellor Ourward V cheirman of the Michigan Count elections HB5471, Waldror per-cent annual It Lapeer County machine^ '^a typewrlf^r \ aiij^ Vacuum ' cleaner were swl^n from the office. GA^ explosion \ — Consumers Power Co. workers ■ shut oK pedgsure Consol Valve 01 A gals main whiqh 'exploded in Orion Township just before noon yesterday. No ♦ one was hurt when the truck in the background apparently Police isaid the building was rolled into the ditch at Joslyn and Scripps Road ind struck entered by unknown meansl the gas fitting.The explosion moved the truck about threje through a rear door, 1 feet. _____ Flaming. Pi ol Michigan" In cori-_______ SBJIO. Stamm. Permit Ingredients In pround meat THE HOUSE Passed; HB2999, Heinzi -.__ ______, _______Township. HB7391, Anderson. Set mlsdemeenor penalties for obscene, terrorizing " telephone calls. ley. ______________ .jal estate practice discrlmlnaflon.v HBJ400, Bradley. Prohibit Indication ot discrimination In real estate advertising. HB32W, Kramer. Increase ------------------' Gqr BoyA6 ELECTRIC CAR COMEBACK - The electric car. bumped off the road by gasoline power early in the 20th century, is making a strong comeback on golf courses and in [Tuesday when he ran in frontj industry. The industrial vehicle line ranges all the way frpm lof a car and was struck. | one-man “chariots” (top right) to “in-plant” fire trucks (top i FLINT (AP) - Six-Vear-old 1 Jeffrey Smith of Flint was killed loft). The Marketeer I (bottom ngh)) is a' two-passenger, t?leotric “shopper ” with storage area behind the front seat. The fire truck is made bv General Telephone & Electronics; other vehicles are by Westinghouse. v i i . \, C-—6 THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, MAY 2l, 1969 r-Junior Editors Quiz on- / / : ANCIENT ART MONROVIA, Liberia (Jfl On paper, Prince Abraham Massaquoi commands the largest merchant fldet in the world. As Liberia’s maritime com-Prince Abraham fees pour in every year from 1,700 ships registered, in ^LiberiaT^eir gross tonnage^ 27 millipn, is greater than that of such traditional maritime countries as Britain, Japan, the United States and Norway. Foreign shipowners pay Liberia for use of the West African republic’s flag. Liberia earned more than $4 million in registration fees and taxes in 1968, about 8 per cent of its total revenue. The prince rarely gets the chance to see his fleet, let alone board a ship. Few come to Monrovia’s modern but snug harbor. QUES'nON: When did men start drawing and painting? ANSWER: One day, a nobleman in the north of Spain was examining some ancient bones in a cave near his home when his little daughter cried oulin excitement: “Toros! Torosl” (Bulls). She pointed to the root of the cave. There, in picture form, was a whole group of brightly colored prehistoric animals. It was mankind’s firsL^look at the earliest known drawing and painting made by his ancestors. Scientists tell us that these pictures, and others like them, were made during the ice age. Drawn by Cro-Magnon cave men on the wails of caves by torchlight, these pictures are thought to have been painted to bring success in hunting. Whatever the motive- of making them, the pictures themselves are generally regarded as masterpieces of art. They are not only extremely faithful to the structure of the animals represented, but they give you the feeling that the artist saw and admired the actual beauty of the animal, its , movement, grace and rhythm. 'These qulaities are exhibited With a skill which astonishes us today. cnm _ _ THURS. DOWNTOWN SAT! MTm . Me JBiw%i5F ■E ^ W (You can win $10 cash plus AP’s handsome World Yearbook if your question, mailed on a postcard to Juniojr Editors ‘ r 0 prizeJ) in care of this newspaper, is selected for a prize!) Ireland Starts Drive to Sell More to Reds DUBLIN (AP) - Ireland, staunchly anti-Communist, is opening up a trade drive to sell more to Communist countries. It is twbe managed by an Irishman wth U. S. experience. Prime Minister Jack Lynch says Ireland is importing more goods Irom Eastern Europe than it sells there, and his gov-ernmentlis determined to right the balance. freland thus follows a policy developed by another Roman Catholic country, Spain, which has steadily increased trade with Eastern Europe for more than a decade despite the mili-t a n t anticommunism that brought Gen. Francisco Franco to power. , Patrick J. O’Driscoll, a 28-year-old on the staff of the Irish Exports Board, was appointed marketing adviser with special responsibility for Eastern Europe. He was trained in marketing techniques In the United States. Yugoslavia. O’Driscoll plans to concentrate on the Soviet Union, Bulgaria, Czechoslovakia, East Germany, Hungary, Poland and Romania. Last year Ireland bought $25.4 million in goods from the area and sold only $4-million worth. From Eastern Europe, Ireland imports mostly raw materials— coal, timber and potash. Ireland has mostly consumer goods to sell, and these need promotion. Ireland has no consular facilities In Eastern Europe. Exporters have complained about this, and the Irish government policy may change. Lynch, said the government had given the Soviet Union a list of Irish exports, including tweeds, woolens, linen and men’s and women’s boots. Lynch also proposed to sell another important Irish product, whisky. CONCENTRATED EFFOR|S Ireland already has a favorable balance of trade with Small Liberia Has Princely Merchartt Fleet “Some of those ships can’t get In here,” he says. The fleet sails under Liberia’s flag l^ause it is cheap. Own-mostly Americans and Greeks, pay $1.20 a net ton to register and 10 cents a top fee every Jan. 1. Liberia promises not to change fees few % years after registration. Some maritime countries regard registration in Liberia as a way to escape taxes at home and avoid union wage scales and safety regulations. They say cheap fees give Liberian-registered ships an unfair com-merical advantage. , Eric Ogden, Inbor member of Parliament from the British port of Liverpool, has called the system “the nearest thing to piracy since the Jolly Roger.” “We don’t call it a flag of con- venience,” Prince Abraham said in a mild-mannered defense. “We call it a flag of attraction. It is a beneficial arrangement for the shipowners. We give their ships. diplomatic protection wherever they go.” Despite prssure from maritime governments, the paper fleet grows.^^The Liberians even own three of their own ships. Onassis was here a month ago,” saio Prince Abraham serenely. “He assured me he. planned to register his new tankers with In 1^, l,0iD0 gross tons of shipping were registered in Liberia. By 1959, tonnage was up to 11,936,000, tapering to 10,573,000 in 1962 when American maritime unions waged an anti-Liberia campaign. The latest to feel pressre from their government Greek owners. ONASSIS AIDE “A representative of Aristotle The world’s first two 300,000t ton oil tankers fly the Liberian flag, which looks almost like the American flag. It has one star instead pf 50. The prince was reluctant ,to discuss Onassis’ Liberian holdings but estimated they amounted to at least 10 per cent of Liberian tonnage. The Liberians stay diplomatically on the good side of such sea powers as the United States. The Liberians rarely bother shipowners with regulations, but n to sail libe- one forbids them rian flag ships to any Commu- nist port. Including the Soviet Union. ' YANKEE HELP Edward R. Stettinius Jr., a secretary of state under Franklin D. Roosevelt, engineered Liberia’s emergence as a world maritime power. The prince said Stettinius in 1949 helped the struggling country of^ one million establish "its registry. His American-owned International I’rust Co. of Liberia acts as sole agent for the Liberians. This takes <,> ^ ’ GRAND PRIZE Register to win a unique Outdoor electric Bor-B-Que. LAST 3 DAYS! THURSDAY- FRIDAY- SATURDAY May 22, 23 and 24 m>nEisi nuiM ohke 636 East Boulevard North Just off Perry SPECIAL HOURS: Join Us in These Last Three Days of Celebrating The Grand Opening of our 10th and Newest Branch. We are looking forward to Serving Your Needs and Becoming Better Acquainted RTght in Your Own Neighborhood. OPEN YOUR SAVINGS' ACCOUNT GIFT OFFER With the opening of a NEW SAVINGS ACCOUNT or ADDING TO YOUR PRESENT ACCOUNT during our Grand Opening . . . through Saturday May 24 ... we have an excellent selection of gifts for you at the NORTHEAST BRANCH ONLY. One Gift per account. KIDS Guess the Penny amount in our Penny Bowl and WIN a beautiful k Murray Bike. $25 plus Account $100 plus Account $175 plus Account An Ash Flash Compact alt purpose Lantern. Waterproof, unbreakable case. Your choice of Thsirmo-SeiVa Insulated Tumblers or the Flash Lantern^ Your choice of a colorful serving Tray ar either of the two previous mentioned gifts. \ \ \ 0-8 m CDIOR iBM PONTIAC PRESS, WEbyESDAY. MAY 21, 1969 SAVE MONEY ON USEO . AUTO PARTS V/m‘n Now Buying Scrap COPPER-BRASS-ALUMINUM (W* Alto Pick Up Junk Cart) ri;° FE 2-0200 1 135 Branch Here's Legislative Scoreboard WASfflNGTON (UPI) -Status of major legislation: TAXES President Nixon Asks repeal ^ of 7 per cent business investment tax credit, coupled with extension to Jan. of 10 per cent tax surcharge, with reduction, then to 5 per cent and repeal June 30, 1970. Housev Ways and Means Committee has finished hearings on tax reform, met yesterday for Noticeto Customers of Michigan Bell Telephone Company Notice is hereby given that on August 1, 1968, Michigan Bell Telephone Company filed with the Michigan Public Service Commission an application for rate increase. The application states that the revenue produced by existing rates is unreasonably and unjustly low, and it requests the Commission to determine the amount of revenue increase required to produce fair and reasonable earnings. Public hearings on said application will be held by the Commission in its offices, 5th Floor, ,^Lewis Cass Building, Lansing, Michigan, commencing on June 16,1969,at 10:00ajn.,at which , time and place the company will present evidence supporting its application. Hearings will continue on June 17,18,19 and 20, as necessary. If hearings are held on June 20, they will be h^ , in the offices of the Michigan Employment Security Comnussioa, Labor Building (former Boulevard Building), Room 311, 7310 Woodward Avenue, Detroit, Michigan. Notice is also given that when and if the Commission determines that an amount of additional revenue is required, the company will at that time submit, for the Commission’s approval, revised charges for its services within the state as required to produce such revenue. admlnistrstion t e ■ t i m o n on surtax. ABM — Nixon has proposed antibalUstlc missile system to protect offensive missile sites. The $900-miilion sou{d>t for this year is contained in two bills. Hearings under way in House ahd Senate. PAY — Congress raised pay of President from $100,000 to $200,000 a year (plus expenses) Allowed to go into effect March 1 a 41 per cent pay boost for its own members, from $30,000 to $42,000 a year. Federal judges, cabinet members, and top officials of the executive branch also got big increases. Separate bill to raise speaker and vice president from $43,000 t $62,500, passed House, but was rejected by Senate. RIOTING — House Education subcommittee holding hearings college riots and federal aid to students Involved. House Internal Security Committee In-e s t i g ating "revolutionary violence” in cities and on campus, hearings planned later. RIGHTS — White House has jPOixunoN tion has e Administra- for Equal Employment Opportunities Commission. Bill to provide such powers, strengthen civil rights commisdon, outlaw discrimination in the selection of state juries and to extend 1965 Voting Rights Act has been introduced in Senate. House hearings on extending voting act under way. CRIME — Nixon has asked extended wiretapping authority to get at corruption of local officials by gamblers. Proposed making it federal crime for gamblers to pay off local police. SMOKING — House hearings completed on further regulating cigarette advertising and possibly banning broadcast cigarette commercials. POSTAL - Nixon asked Congress to increase first-second- and third-class rates, including penny boost for first class, to provide $635 million new revenue. ELECTORAL — Nixon proposed abolishing presidential electors and assigning to each candidate h i s proportionate share of each state’s electoral Of president ny popular vote. Senate: judiciary subcommittee hearings under way. bill to tighten federal regulations on (dl drilling and require well andwessel operators to pay cost of cleanup in. oil leaks. Senate: public works subcommittee hearings ccsitinuing. SCHOOLS — House passed two-year extension of major aid progranns for poverty area grade high schools. No Senate action scheduled. POVERTY — Admiknistratlon has asked one-year extension of antipoverty program with Job Corps and Head Start to be shifted to Labor Department and Health, Education and Welfare, respectively. House: Education and lab o r subcommittee Hearings under way. Senate; Hearing under way. HUNGER — Nixon has proposed expanded antihunger program, to cost $2.5 billion by fiscal 1971. AUTOS — Senate Judiciary u b c 0 m mittee considering alleged abuse in repair, warranty and insurance practices. No legislation proposed. NUCLEAR - Senate, on Nixon’s recommendation, affirmed nuclear nonproliferation treaty, 83 to 15. DRAFT — President has asked CongreSs to replace present method selection with lotterylike system. No hearings scheduled. Signed info Law DEBT r- Nixon proposed redefining national debt so as not to include money government borrows from Social Security fund, and to raise borrowing authority by $17 billion. Congress passed a bill limiting debt increase to $12 billion. Free at One bottle of Horsey Sauce or Arby’s® Sauce when you buy 4 Arby’s® Roast Beef Sandwiches Hseff is a bargain, and MW you get M added bargain: a either tangy Horsey Sauce or zesty Arby's* Sauce. All four Arb/se Roast Beef Sandwiches. AnArby'seinHselfisab free bottle of either t you do is buy four Aii These sauces were created especially for our sandwiches. Before long our customers were asking to buy the sauces because they discovered they gave an added lift to the taste of a great many foods. For example; mix with salad dressings, spread over cook-out treats, add to meat loaves or ham loaves, combine with gravies, use as dips. Just use your imagination to create your own culinary delight Offer Good May 21 through May 28 49 N. TELEGRAPH South of the Mall Creators of Arliy'l Roast Beef Sandwich •1M7, Arty's. IDC FLANNERY 5806 Dixie Hwy.^ Waterford 623-0900 THE PONTIAC PRESS> WEDNESDAY. MAY 21, 1969 CakelsBelow, Not Ice Cream Thr-l What looks like a crunchy Ice 6ream q,upi filled lirith Ice creani and topped with marshmallow, turns out to be a chocolate cake piled high with fluffy icing and made even more festive with chocolate shot, and pastel cake decwations. , These parly-going Cake ’N’ Cups are simplicity itself to make. Begin with a mix-nouide batter, pour into the |ce cream cups, bake, pile high vdth frosting and decorate. The Insults are miniature masterpieces that wM rate cheers from all your cake fans. No matter how bare the larder, if there are eggs in the refrigerator, the makings of a good meal are at hand. The neatly packaged, protein-rich food is the basis of literally hundreds of dishes that have the added virtue of adapting to breakfast, luncheon and dinner menus. And at this season of the year when hens are working overtime, eggs are especially economical, too. It’s a good time then to try some exciting new egg recipes. young This no-work baking will rate your cheers, too, because evnyfliing comes from a pykage! Cake, ice cream cups, and frosting. And when these cidces are baked you havjs nothing to clean up, the baking containers ... ice cream cups ... lire eaten right with the cake. CAKE 'N’ CUPS 1 9 oz. package cake mix 12 chocolate ice cream cups Canned or packaged Frosting Mix Cake decorations Heat oven to 3S0 degrees. Prepare cake batter as directed on the package. Pour approximately 3 tablespoons batter into ice cream cups, filling about ^ full. Set on baking pan or in muffin tins and bake 25 to 30 minutes. Eggs Basic Ingredient for Good Meals A delectable breakfast or late supper dish is Scrambled Provencaje Style. A simple, savory concoction of eggs beaten with prepared yellow mustard, salt, pepper and parsley flakes and added to lightly sauteed onions and tomatoes. SCRAMBLED EGGS PRO-VENCALE 6 eggs 2 tablespoons prepared yellow mustard 2 teaspoons parsley flakes % teapsoon salt ^ teaspoon black pepper 3 green onions, thinly sliced ' 1 ripe tomato, peeled and chopped 4 tablespoons butter, o r margarine Beat together eggs, mustard, parsley, salt and pepper. Cook and tomato in butter about 4 minutes or until vegetables are tender. Add egg mixture and scramble to desired consistency. 4 servings. AND ASPARAGUS • Eggs and asparagus with Golden Mustard Sauce is elegant and satisfying luncheon entree. Fresh asparagus is topped with hard cooked eggs and an easy but noteworthy sauce. •The Seafood Pie calls for canned tuna or crab meat to be briefly cooked witfi onions and added to eggs which have been beaten with cream and prepared yellow mustard. The mixture is poured into a pastry shell, sprinkled with cheese and baked for 30 minutes. eggs on a platter , and pw hot sauce over the top. 6 servings. SEAFOOD PIE 8-ihch pastry shell Vi, cup chopped green onions I 3 tablespoons butter o r margarine 1 can (7-pz.) tuna or crab meat 2 tablespoons Madeira or dry vermouth, if desired 3 eggs * c 1 cup heavy cream •<) GOLDEN MUSTARD SAUCE 1 tablespoon butter o margarine 2 teaspoons cornstarch Ml cup light cream or milk % cup mayonnaise V* cup prepared yellow mustard % teaspoon sugar 2 pounds fresh asparagus, cooked 6 hard cooked eggs, sliced. 3 tablespoons prepared yellow inustard Vi cup grated Swiss cheese Bake pie shell in a 450 degree oven 5 minutes. Cool. Cook onions in butter 1 to 2 minutes or until tender. Stir in tuna or crab meat, heat gently for 2 minutes. Add wine and boil for minute. ‘ In a mixing bowl emnbine eggs, cream, and mustard; beat Cheese Sauce Is Fine Addition to Cabbage Melt butter in small saucepan. Stir in cornstarch. Add cream, mayonnaise, ’ mustard, and sugar; bring to a boil, stirring constantly. Ar-i range asparagus and sliced Here’s a savory way to ser cabbage — and nutritious too. CABBAGE WITH CHEESE SAUCE 8 cups knife-shredded cabbage {Vi to %-inch strands) 1 cup boiliifg water 1 teaspoon salt 2 tablespoons butter margarine 2 tablespoons flour ^ teaspoon white pepper 1 cup milk 1 cup grated (medium-fine) Cheddar cheese, lightly packed / Into a medium saucepan turn the cabbage, water and % until well blended. Gradually stir in tuna or crab mixture. Pour into pastry shell; spinkle with cheese. * ★ Bake in 375 degree oven 30 minutes or until filling is puffed and golden browfi. Let stand a few minutes before serving. 6 servings. teaspoon of the salt. When completely baked, these miniature cakes will rise to about the top of the ice cream j cups. Allow cakes to cool. Then j to complete the “ice cream cone” picture, mound fluffy j white icing over top of the cake, rounding it to resemble a scoop j of ice cream. Top with cake decorations and serve. Serves I 12. These Cake ’N’ Cup desserts are eaten just like ice cream cones, but no one need rush, because they won’t melt. You might even tuck one into your youngster’s lunch box. Imagine his surprise when he sees an ice cream cone in the box! They’re great fun at parties too. To turn them Into birthday party treats, simply top with a miniature candle. covered, until tender-crisp — about 7 minutes; with a long-handled fork turn cabbage over a few times during the boiling. Drain thoroughly. In a 1-quart saucepan over Old Wpfid Name Still Is Used Over 200 varieties of ready-to-serve meats are made by approximately 3,000 meat processors in the United States. Many of these are inspired by old world varieties and bear the names of towns or localities where they originated. Anyone can recognize such places as Bologna, Frankfurt, Genoa, Salamis, Thuringia and Vienna and know what kind of sausage originated there. ELEGANT EGG DISHES - Economical eggs make easy dishes. Eggs are a food bargain in spring. It's a good time to try some exciting new dishes for breakfas't, luncheon and dinner. Good news, homemakers, there's now enough Orange Nip to go around. For quite a while this delicious frozen concentrate couldn’t be made in enough quantity to satisfy everybody. Ben Hill Griffin, Jr. insists on growing his own special oranges in the protected areas of Frostproof, adding just a little sweetening, then Vitamin C. One by one, more cities have been won over by this Florida favorite. Now It's here - each 12 oz. can makes 48 ounces, so it's money saving, too. And of course, it's guaranteed. Ben Hill Griffin, Jr. promisee that if it isn’t the pest you ever tasted, he’ll send yottr money back./ / AV.' \ ■ THE PONTIAC rilESS. VVEDNKSPAY, MAY S?l, 1969 Take-Over of Oil Firms Threatens to Spread in S, America rl In YPFB, i irng ates proj LA PAZ, Bolivia (AP) — An temational Petroleum Cfl.|greater American oil company is under attack in this high Andean capital in a campaign that has simi-la;rities to the one in Peru which resulted in expropriation of In- /ZI3KEECO Tonicht 7:00 and 9:10 PiM. STEVE MCCDEEIV - ^,1 BULLITT (IPC). The campaign is directed against Bolivian Gulf Oil, a wholly owned subsidiary of Latin American Gulf Oil Co., Coral Gables, Fla., and against Williams Brothers Co., a pipeline construction company. goveniment involvement in operation of Jhe huge American-dominated copper mines. -It adds up to a problem for President Nixon and his special envoy to Latin America, Gov. Nelson Rockefeller. TtOMKIlN* mMWMtMMS.-smtursi/V Congressional members of the Bolivian Socialist Falange have demanded outright nationalization of Gulf Oil. Similar moves are seen in oth-Latin-American countries, where a rising tide of nationalism is being vented against the most evident and vulnerable targets, usually a large American petroleum or mineral firm. FURTHER DEMANDS There are demands in Ecua-doi for revision of contracts with Texaco and Gulf Oil companies, and moves in Chile for GIANT MIDWAY Sensational Thrill Rides BIG ICITY SHOWS PONTIAC Sponsorpd by Motro Club ^ Show Grounds: Saginaw at Pike St. MAY 20 thru JUNE 1 SPECIAL MATINEE. All ride prices reduced ’til 5:30 P.M. American businessmen In Peru, for Jnstance, fear that invoking of the Hickenlooper amendment will result in swift reprisals by the Peruvian military bosses against other American investments. On the other hand, American businessmen outside Peru fear any backdown by Nixon will encourage other governments to hop on the “expropriation bandwagon.” MARCHED INTO REFINERY Peruvian soldiers last Oct. 9 IPC, a Standard Oil of New Jersey subsidiary. On Feb. 6 Presi- dent Juan Velasco announced IPC owed Peru ^W.5 million fo: having taken oil from Peruvian soil since 1924. Later the goveniment announced it would pay IPC $71 million for the value of its expropriated property-after IPC settled its debt. Velasco and his military regime based much of their criticism of IPC on an agreement reached in August with the Be-launde government for Peru to take over the company’s oil field and for IPC to continue operating its refinery. Criticism of Gulf Oil in Bollv-1 is based on a recent contract for Williams Brothers to build a $50-million pipeline to send gas to the Argentine border. In Peru, the campaign had marched into the refinery of been led for years by the promi- nent newspaper El Comercio. In Boliva it is led by two promi- OPEN 9:45 A.M. Show at 10:00 A.M. Continuous - 334-4430 YOU MUST BE 18-PROOF IS REQUIRED CONTINUOUS ALL DAY j, Eat Drink and Be Merry A hilurioHS utime t}f miuivnl fun 2nd HIT “DEPRAVED” • cunningly • contrived • color FRONT I^DNNER Bolivia’s new president, Luis Adolfo Siles Salinas, said he had not had time to study the problem, but that his government would respect its contractual obligations. Gen. Alfredo Ovan-do, armed forces chief of staff, and a front-tmw ih THe 1970 presidential election campaign, said he intended to study the case. The situation could become a political football during the election campaign.. Gulf Oil has been the major Child in Car Safety Target A summer safety program aimed at protecting child auto tassengers has the slogan, 'Love ’em? Belt ’em.’ foreign petroleum. operator | Bolivia for 10 years, fxploi and expanding a' highly productive field in the tropical lowland area around Santa Cruz. To handle its, exports jfrom |his landlocked country. Gulf built a OOil-mile pipelinie^which drpps toj sea level at the Chilean port, Arica. , which incidentally oper-property expropriate from Standard Oil of New Jersey in the- 1930s, had opposed Williams Brothers on grounds work they had done in Bolivia previously was technically unsatisfactory. reserves untouched except for cycling and repressuring reservoirs. The growtii in activity on Canadian stock markets has been much slower in recent years than on United States Until now. Gulf has left gas exchanges. n The World Bank on April 20 announced Williams Brothers, a Delaware corporation, would build the pipeline from Bolivian fields at Santa Cruz to a connection with an Argentine pipeline at Yacuiba. The firm had submitted the low bid. The World Bank is paying half the < GuH Oil the rest. ARBITRARY, ILLEGAL’ Jornada called the award “arbitrary, irregular- and illegal. It said the Bolivian constitution 1 been violated by permitting outside body to make such a decision. Bolivia’s state oil agency, The campaign is sponsored by the Auto Club of Michigan and supported by area traffic and safety agencies. I The Auto Club has provided statistics to show that most i children are hurt while riding in I cars (with thejr parents) rather .than as pedestrians. Accident-I victim totals for children, have ! risen sharply in the past year. 'The campaign hopes to promote proper use of restraints for child passengers, along with last year’s “Bring ’em Back lAlive” emphasis. 'donUsdw BxcitBMBiitiiitli desijjnctl by Salvatore! Al hr years uf deswrung and funtroUmt^ the quulii of Americas most lanvm ^ —... ' ORIVE IN IHEATER EE 3-4500 ^ 2935 DIXIE HIGHWAY (U.S. 10) 1 BLOCK N TELEGRAPH RO CHILDREN UNDER 12 FREE Salvatore savs: Salvatore sa\ s: "Our stylin;; is as dist tiue and foruurd-look as the most pxijcnsu c Salvatore says: Sab atore sav s: "There arc details in th SlOOsuit that add to iht price without addinp to Its appearance or Itje. We put the significant detaiLs inourC>9.9i> suit Salvatore sav s: Back to the 1967price*..69.95 PONTIAC 200 N. Saginaw Fraa Parking NOW! For Spring: 1969, Robert Hall brings you the same superior quality the Crown Juilliard is famous for-the.sawe luxury fabrics,the same superb tailoring 2it the same 1967 prix^l ( oi|ie see\^fhe Crown Juilliard...the 69-95 suit that should sell for HOO. CLARKSTON / 6460 Dixie Hw/. juir N. of / Waterflord / UTICA 51035 Van Dyke |SBg 23 Mi. R OPEN SUNDAY NOON TO 6 P.M. V' , f V V ' ' \ THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, MAY 21, 1969 D—H State Taps Borrowed Funds to Level Ebb and Flow of Taxes LANSING (UPI) - Michigan may have a healthy surplus in State Treasury; but it still the must borrow millions of dollars annually to stay out of the red. Yesterday the State Administrative Board authoriz- mld-1970 from corporate franchise tax receipts. Green said. He said some $60 million $80 million will be needed to finance public school aid [payments. This is the third consecutive financing of govemmipnt optfa- limited the treasurer’! bor- ed Treasurer Allison Green to year the administrative board tions under a 1963 constitutional provision permitting the treasurer to borroW up to 15 per cent of undedicated state revenue during a fiscal year. ' PAYLESS PAYDAYS II uic aumuiuuauvc uwuu----------------------- go $150 million into debt this has authorized short-term debt-1 The old, pre-1963 constitution la foot............gavernmenti: ' rowing power to $200,000 and as A result the state, went through an infamous period of “payless paydays" in the late 1950s. "The new provision is a _ one,” Green said. “It pcrini shwt-term borrowing while maintaining the Integrity of a balanced budget.” • Green said it’s not a matter of the state going into debt because of insufficient revenues ito pay for expenditures. He said 'the start of a fiscal year brings a heavy drain on the treasury millions of dollars in bills must be paid and tax collections do not flow in until later in the year. For example, r he said, some $110 million in school aid payments must be distributed in early August, way before the earmarked sales and exci^ tax collections for the payments beef up the treasury. "It is a matter of cash flow,' Green said. "By engaging in short-term borrowing we can keep the flow even and maintain a fiscally sCilnd gteneral fund throughout the year.” Gov. William G. MiUiken, chairman of the administrative board, has estimated the state will end the current fiscal year with a $70-million surplus. He expects to use $57 million of this during the 19^9-70 fiscal year to finance- increased government costs. . bills during the first quarter of thd fiscal year, starting July f. before pwi the rapid decline, the state committee recommended banning the use of poisons' within the protected areas of Gir sanctuary and “drastic punishment” for offenders. The committee also recommended that the State pa^ greater compensation to cal tlemen whose animals are killed by the lions. The Gujarat government has already suspended exports of the Gir lions which arq In great demand in zoos. MNTIAC MALL SHOPPING CENTER • GLtNWOOD PLAZA SHOPPING CENTER • MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER • DIXIE HWY. AT WILLIAMS LAKE ROAD V NORTH PERRY AT ARLEN ' . r ■ /, .t/-' /i?i, \, I D—4 the TONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, MAY 21, 1969 Continuous Dreams, Schizophrenia Ti^ STANFORD, Calif. (UPI) —j occurence of RfiM activities to moat people, daydreams are and drive behaviors in the Nursing Trainingifi Openings are stiil--------- the home nursing daas bdd Thur^ays from 3:15 to 5:15 p.m. at the Oakland Regknal Office of the Red Cross, Ut Franklin Blvd., according to a Red Cross spokesman. Walter Mitty f a n t a s i sweetening the reality of their lives. But to schizophrenics, the inability to turn off the brain’s dream- producing mechanism -while awake-ma3r-be "the basic problem of their mental illness. ★ * A team of Stanford University psychiatrists has reached that tentative conclusion after five years of research on sleeping cats. The researchers say their evidence indicates the schizophrenic’s inability to stop dreaming results, in turn, from the lack of an essentia’ regulating chemical-seretonin -In his brain. . REPORT ON PROGRESS Dr. William C. Dement, professor of psychiatry and director of Stanford’s dream lab, reported on the progress of his team’s research in “Stanford M.D.” published by the school’s Medical Alumni Association. Using a new drug which prevents the brain from producing serotonin. Dr. Dement causes cats to hallucinate, attack other cats and behave with the mixture of normality and abnormality observed in schizophrenia. * ★ * Ifream research, in both animals and humans, has centered for several years on 9 phenomenon called rapid eye movement (or REM) sleep, which occurs in humans every 90 minutes throughout the night. During these periods, the sleeper shifts his eyes to view his dream world in much the way he observes the real world while awake. The brain sends similar commands to other parts of the body to act out the dream activities. •STRAITJACKET* “Fortunately for us,” says Dement, “there is a sort of Btraitjacket of peripheral inhibition which prevents us from impulsively carrying out these commands.’’ Studies/^at Stanford and elsewhe^ have shown that depriving someone of REM sleep can cause mental changes similar to those of severe mental illness They have also' established , that normal persons deprived of dreaming for several consecutive nights will “rebound’’ by dreaming nearly all the time when finally allowed to sleep uninterrupt^. But dream-deprived actively 111 schizophrenics and cats treated with the serotonin -suppressing drug do not show this rebound effect. need is FILLED Dement believes this is because their need to dream is filled by hallucinations and other abnormal behavior while awake. ‘ Dement’s current hypothesis Is that both dreams and man’s basic driyesr-sex, hunger, aggression — derive from the gamp special nervous system in the brain, which “energizes” these motivational behaviors. * ★ ★ “REM sleep periods provide a safety valve for this drive system by allowing it to discharge harmlessly through sensory pathways, which may. In turn, be what gives rise to dreaming,” he reported. “The , serotonin neutrons in the brain are assumed to inhibit and regulate both aspects of this drive discharge (dreaming or behavior). “If they fail to perform their function, the result is a disorganized and uncontrolled London Landmark Is Leaning a Little By National Geographic Society WASHINGTON - London’s famed Big Ben is tilting toward the Thames, but engineers believe the landmark, a t Westminster Palace faces no immediate danger. The 316-foot clock tower has slipped just a few inches in the last 110 years. The Leaning Tower of Pisa, measuring only 180 feet high, lists more than 16 feet out of line. * * ★ 'The name Big Ben originally referred to the 13'/i>-ton bell that P strikes the hours, heralds news broadcasts, and booms and a deep throated note over London rooftops. Through the years, the title j has extended to the clock andi tower. ' waking state which could easily account for nearly all attributes p of the psychotic Illnesses in b human beings.” State Motor Vehicle Accident Claims fund. * * * That is the advice from Secretary of State James M. Hare, who pointed out a provision in the claims fund law which prohibits petitions under $200. ‘The fund yras established basically as a safeguard against catastrophic financial problems caused by large medical bills and high property damages, not to settle small claims of under $200,” Hare said. ★ ★ But he added, the Small Claims Court, which division of the District Court h: designed to handle damages of $300 or l4s. The Small Claims Court reviews, the evidence and if it finds the uninsured driver was at fault, a judgment is filed with the Secretary of State’s system, was s p e c i f 1 c a 11 y|financial responsibiUty section. PONTIAC MALL SHOPPING CENTER OLtNWOOO PLAZA SHOPPING CENTER t MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER north PERRY AT ARLEN DIXIE HWY. AT WILLIAMS LAKE ROAD „ \ il t / '/ r / ■ -ly ii,;; i:; n ^ ^ ;___________[________________THK PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, MAY 21, 1969 Actors' Rules Bared: WhatCan Come Off tor Show to Go 0n NEW YORK (UPI) — Actors’jiiot be required for a performer. Equity AssodaUon. iwiewing «no perfonwr may be le-8uch oldies as the casting couchL,i^ in the light of such^oderni**^ theater as “Hair” and “Che!”]®*’ ™* **“ sumonr has set down a list of dos andjan actor, singer or dancer, dmi’ts for producers and actors, j Most of its guidelines were! «No sex acts will be re^ don’ts. They include: quired of any performc Equity stage manager or an official Equity observer is in writing in advance of his signing the >^ntract, and . the script will fe%ibmitted to the pcrforxnsr for prior preview if- the performers must be made I the possibility of legal con-well aware — in writing — of]sequences. At a press conference Monday, Equity Executive present, and only professional Two Financial Fir DETROIT (AP)—Two major financial institutions will join the business exodus from downtown Detroit early in 1970. American Savings Association ms fa Quit Defroif and Citizens Mortgage Corp. will make the move from Woodward Avenue to a site on Ten Mile Road in Southfield, it was announced todby. Secretary Angus Duncan said ‘^ard sex acts, actual sex acts, are out altogether, but even in the area of simulated sex there is the possibility of arrest ; by our rules, he (the performer) is protected to some extent -r the producer must auditions. \ • When nudity or acts of a sexqal nature are required of a piaiiMmier in the course pf a stage presentation, the performer must be so advised He so requests. ★ * HoWev«r, Equity said it was permissible to appear in tiie nude and carry out simulated sex acts on the stage, although indemnify him in the case of arrest, must furnish bail, fines and legal counsel at no expensa to the actor. “What he cannot do is erase an arrest <»• conviction record.” ' Wisconsin breweries produced 15.8 million barrels of beer in rrs CRITICAL - This 16-inch steam isolation valve, nearly two years in the development, gets an in-depfii check from an engineo-. It will be used to trap live steam in emergency situations at a nuclear power plant. Nuclear plants now in use or planning stages will turn out 72 million kilowatts a year, more than the natim’s entire generating capacity 19 years ago. NASA's New Flight Voice Publicity-Shy SPACE CENTER, Houston (UPI) - The new “Voice of Apollo,” a soft-spoken Missouri native named Jack Riley, hopes to shade himself from the public spotlight associated with his job in the past. Riley, who is leading a three-man team in telling the world about Apollo lO’s moon orbit flight from inside the Houshm Mission Control Center, stepped into the lead “voice” slot after the resignation of Paul Haney from the space agency. Haney has become world-famous, first as the “Voice of Gemini” and then as the “Voice of Apollo.” Last month he was removed from his job as chief spokesman for the space center and transferred to Washington, prompting his resignation. The man who replaced Haney as chief space center public af-fairs officer, former newspaperman Brian Duff, decided against .trying 11 assume the role Haney had played in describing flights from Mission Control. NOT FAMILIAR ENOUGH Duff said he feels the Mis^on Control commentator’s post is , “a job of great pressure, and requires a lot of intimate knowledge.” He said he was not familiar enough with the moon-flfght program to attempt going on the air during flights. That left Riley, who has been at the space cento: since 1962 and has worked on the Mision Control Center team during other missions, iii the No. I 'slot. Riley said he does not want to be thought of as the “Voice of Apollo.” If {^ssible, he said, he wants to avoid personal prominence. NEWSPAPER EDITOR Befbrw - johring^ thr agency, Riley was exeOutive editor of the Independosce (Mo.) Examiner and also worked for the General Dynamics public relationi department. He is a graduate of the University of Kansas. Prices! Farmer Jack promises you, liw best service^ tool In fact, he'll give you your purchase FREE if the cashier for^ to say "thaidc you". And he always keeps his stores dean and well stock* ed just to please youl FULL SLICES U.S. Choice ound Steak BOYAL bock . 1 lb. s oz, size Cornish Hons MAPLE LEAF Ico Croom CAMPBELLS BBANO Rkh T^ninlo Jvko ATASTYSHACK Form Crost Fig Bars 1QT, 14 OZ. CAN Light Wosson Oil ALL PUBP06E ENBICHEO. Town Frido Floor e DEUCIOUeYLAVIMIS Thank You Puddings Working with Riley, but ( less busy shifts, will be Douglas Ward and Robert T. White. Ward, a former Voice of America radio man, is th^ only one of the trio who had broad-1 cast experience before joining the Mission Control team. White, the “voice” wlth^e most mission contrpl experience, will be on his 11th iniSsion. hf-Class Speaker' MIDLAND (AP) - Nyle M.| Jackson, acting deputy assist-, ant postmaster general, will! deliver the address at Sato-j dayV dedication of Midland’s j new post office. i ■ V ' \ ’ /.a' FEBSH.FUL^>0Yc.. t-LK.'^a*. 3t.0i, -AW Each FRIENDLY SERVICE Bunch X X lauKi PIWLIS 263 AUIURN AYE. ★ iOOP TOWN Till HIONLAND RD. PiOPLiS 468 E. PIKE STREET FOOD TOWN 1200 BALDWIN AYE. PEOPLES 100 AUBURN AYE. \" :a’'\r'r', 7 /' D=L. THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. MAY 21, 1969 Bridge tricks From Jacobys Q-The Uddiag hu bem: WMt Nortk EMt SMft ir Pm 2* ■ 2V Pm 24 Pm 4V Pj You, South, hold: 4AQ7I VK2 442 4AKM24 What-do you do now? A—With • good portaor nlw NORTH 21 ^ 4Q972 4AS ♦ K9753 4K8 17EST ----lASlL(n>^ 4J105 4A4 VS432 4KJ1087 4J86 4AQ1042 4J105 42 soirm 4K863 VQ» 4 Void 4AQ97643 East-West vulnerable West North East Sooth Openlng'lead—4 2 By OSWALD & JAMES JACOBY In IMP play, as in rubber bridge, the accent in play is on making your contract. The winning IMP player tends to make safety plays in order to assure his contract. Today’s hand shows Paul Soloway violating this principle on the theory that an ovtrtrick is likely to represent one IMP and there is no point sacrificing even one IMP needlessly. Paul found jhim^lf In a reasonable four-spade contract after his partaer had cue bid the enemy’s heart suit. He went right up with dummy’s ace of he4ffts—amL._promptly led a spade to his king. Then he led a second ^pade and played low from dummy. This play is known as the obligatory finesse. There is no reason to play high and the play of the low card may force the ace. which is just yhat hap^ pened here. East cashed his king of hearts and continued with the ace of diamonds. Paul ruffed and after drawing West’s last trump proceeded to make the rest of the tricks. Five odd was worth 20 points and one IMP. At the other table North had played three no-trump and made four. there. Paul pointed out that if East had 'two spades and no clubs, he would have held a very good two-suit hand would surely have, found a bid over North’s twobearts. ' On this day in history ; In 1937 what is considered to have been the first Democratic National Convention opened in Baltimore. In 1881, Clara Barton organized the American Red Cross in Washington. In 1941, President Franklin D. Roosevelt proclaimed ‘‘an unlimited state of national emergency;” Seven months before Pearl Harbor. ( In 1962, the American Medical Association labeled President Kennedy’s proposed Medicare legislation as a “cruel hoax.” Recovery Ship Gets in Better Position , , ABOARD U.S.S. PRINCETON, i^uth Pacific (AP) — The modern Navy: steaming with the carrier Princeton, awaiting the splash-down of the Apollo 10 as-; tronauts, Is the communications ship Arlington. "The Arlington requested and received permission to change course temporarily Monday, lo; change its angle into the wind, j Seems the crew was bar-becueing out on deck and the smoke was blowing back into their faces. THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. MAY 21, 1969 Here’s a treasure of a recipe your children wiil pirate right but of the cookie jar: Fudge-Raisin Nuggets. TBiey’re crunchy and chewy, fun to nil^ble and simpler to miake than you’d probably imagine, for new instant oatineal with raisins and s^ice ms*es the job quick and the r^lts gt'eat. ' No skull and HAM LOAF WITH MUSTARD SAUCE — , Men, and particularly bachelors, are touchingly grateful for home-style cooking featuring plenty of good, old-fashioned food. So be kind, to bachelors and inVite at least one to share a dinner of Ham , Loaf with Fluffy Mustard Sauce. Raisins Surprise in Ham Loaf Never think of leftover ham 1 as leftover ham. Think ham loaf! And never hesitate to ^erve this homey dish to company under the misconception that dinner for company somehow has to wreck the week’s food Thank goodness, delicious food needn’t be costly. Far better to use some imagination in menu planning and care in food preparation than to throw money around at the check-out counter! The ingenious recipe bran flakes with sugar-coated raisins instead of bread crumbs for a moist, flavorful ham loaf. If you’re a working girl, much of the preparation can be done ahead. Grind the ham the evening before, but do the actual mixing as soon as you get firmly into an 8x4-inch or a 9x5- inch loaf pan. Bake at 350 degrees fbr hour, or until browned. Invert onto warm serving platter. Garnish with pineapple slices and parsley, if desired. Slice and serve with Fluffy Mustard Sauce. Makes 6 servings. NOTE: For easier slicing, let loaf stand about 20 minuteb before serving. > Fluffy Mustard Sauce 1 tablespoon sugar % teaspoon salt 3 tablespoons prepared sauc*V4mustard mustard 2 tablespoons vinegar 1 tablespoon water 2 egg yolks, beaten ,, 1 tablespoon butter margarine home. Then relax with your guests while your entree bakes. Fluffy Mustard Sauce, made with whipped topping mix, can also be made the night before. 1 cup bran flakes with sugar-coated raisins % cup milk 2 eggs, slightly beaten 1 tablespoon prepared mustard ; 1 teaspoon Worcestershire sauce Dash of cayenne 4 cups (1 lb.) ground cooked ham - Combine cereal, milk, eggs, and seasonings; mix thoroughly. Add ham and stir until well blend^. Pack ham mitxure Touch of Onions Does the Trick Add sugar, salt, mustard, vinegar, and water to egg yolks; mix well. Cook over hot (not boiling) wsfjter, stirring constantly until 'thickenied about 4 or 5 minutes. Stir in butter and horseradish. 1 tablespoon horseradish Vt cup prepared whipped topping Instant Oatmeal Part of New Cookie Recipe Sdium heat to soft ball stage^pepper and grated cheese. Lay 4 degrees) or until syrup two Norway sardines, dove-tail,' Continue cooking Roll Up Bread With 2 Sardines Jlere’s a new taste treat. Remove the crusts frpm thin of bptteced bread over Sprinkle each slice with s^lt. Yours for fabulous flavor! dropped into cold water forms d, soft ball. Remove from heat; stir in .^peauut butter, instant end; add dab mustard; roll firmly, jellyroll style. Stick with toothpicks' and dot * * * '' h^h^.DttCT^ Drop quickly by teaspoonfuls,on baking sheet. Toast in hot onto waxed paper. Makes 3 oven until lightly browned! dozen. Serve piping hot. “Vlniage-Flavor” SOY^SAUCE for all is goodness with thipse Nuggets. They combine three wonderful tastes and textures into one cookie: the sweetness of old-fashioned fudge, the chewiness of oatmeal and the cruncbiness of peanuts. X marks the spot in yourj busy schedule when you take a I; short time out to make Fudge- * Raisin Nuggets with breakfast cereal used in a new way. FUDGE-RAISIN NUGGETS | % cup cocoa % cup peanut butter V4 teaspoon salt V* cup light com syrup % cup milk, Mi cup peaiiut butter ’Three 1%-bz. packets instant' oatmeal with raisins and LETTUCE AND FRUIT—Trim and core a large head of spice, uncooked I Iceberg lettuce. Cut into 6 equal wedges. Arrange on platter. 1 cup salted peanuts I Place slices of 3 large peeled navel oranges between lettuce Combine cocoa, sugar and wedges. Add radish roses and sprigs of parsley. Cover and salt in medium-sized saucepan;! chill until serving tithe. Combine 1 cup sour cream with Vi* stir in syrup and milk. Cooki cup cranberry-orange relish and V2 cup orange or pineapple nuttf hoot ctiifino until' juicc; blend well. Spoon over salad when ready to serve. Makes 6 servings. Simply marvelous for MEATS POULTRY FISH BASTING GBAVIES SOUPS VEGETABLEiS RICE NOODLES SALAD DRESSINGS BARBECUES • Uiitike other soy sauces, Kikko- e purely from select quality soy beans, wheat, * ’ salt—nothing else—age-mellt (as fine wine) ... an unhurried eighteen months. AT LEADING MARKETS NOW 10^ OFFregular price over medium heat, stirring until' sugar dissolves. BUY! SELL! TRADE! USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! Remove from heat and cool thoroughly. Then fold i n prepared whipped topping. Serve with ham loaf, baked ham, poached salmon, corned beef, or boiled beef. Makes about 1 cup. TO STORE; Cover and place 1 refrigerator. Remove from refrigerator about 30 minutes before serving. Shop once...get 18 happy breakfasts start with a can refrigerated biscuits, a ioaf of French bread or a pie crust-lined tart shell. Add some imagination with plen^tiful onions as the basic ingredient. Bake, serve and enjoy the results. POPPY ONION BISCUITS Pop open a tube of buttermilk biscuits. Place biscuits on a greased cookie sheet flattening slightly. Spread with thinly and sprinkle with poppy seeds, browned in butter and cooled. Mix 1 egg and 14 cup sour cream. Spoon over the onions and sprinkle with popy seeds. Bake according to package directions. FRENCHY ONION LQAF Cut 1 loaf French bread; diagnoally into 1-inch slices,! almost through. Spread each rfico^ with margarine, or-hutter. Piace an onion slice between each bxead slice. Wrap in foil. Heat in 400-degree oven about 15 minutes. A nidiersworthof Stio-Bol sanitizes, deodorizes amd removes rust stains from your you-know-what. WITH JUMBO' ASSORTMENT 2 Kellogg's Corn Flakes® 3 Kellogg's Sugar Frosted Flakes® t. 3 Rice Krispies® 1 Sugar Smacks® 2 Special K® 1 Froot Loops® 2 Raisin Bran 1 Apple Jacks® 2 Sugar Pops® 1 Puffa Puffa Rice® General purpose cleaners arc fine for moiht jobs. But not for cleaning toilet bowls. They don’t deodorize, sanitize, and_removc rust stains like Sno-Bol. ' Liquid Sno-Bol cleans in seconds while it deodorizes and sanitizes. It’s faster and more efficient than any dry bowl cleaner. You can pour Sno-Bol full strength to remove rust stains and calcium deposits. And it works better and costs less than other leading bowl cleaners. and save 10^ in the bargain (liy a ludidls worth and see..) Saute 6 thinly sliced onions in| tablespoons butter; add 14! teaspoon salt and 14 cup diced bacon. Saute until golden brown. Add 2 cups milk to 3 tables-; poons flour. Beat in 2 eggs and 2 cups shredded Swiss cheese. Add onions and pour into tart shells. Bake at 350 degrees about 30 minutes. / MIAMI BAKE SHOPPE Opan Every Evenint til 9 THE PONTIAC MALL SAM S WALTER ; Deliciovs Sausaya ; Carry Out* — 682-9811 PONTIAC MALL Here’s the easiest way we know to satisfy a big family. Eighteen personal servings of Kellogg favorites—fresh' in their individual packages; all kinds; all nutritious. And all in a one-pickup assortment. Your grocer has it in his cereal section; you can have it in your kitchen at a lOf^ saving, if you’ll hand him this coupon. 'YV,. J: li—10 J / , the PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. MAY 21. 1860 N0W...A FANTASY IN FOOD SHOPPING "XL Li mmj OM Fosbion 100% Pure Beef HAMBURGER 3Ss. or More 59 9 lb. BONELESS HAMS 69! U.S. Grads A CHICKEN BREAST ..........kJ 69^ Whole Shaak Half. U.S.D.A. Choice U.S. Grad* A CHICKEN LEGS1?.V U.S. G'rad* A\ SPLIT BROiLERSfF:ril;:r> U.S. Grade A PK-(KHKKV“'.. BONELESS CHUCK ROAST Table King SLICED BACON 69c Butt Half.............>k.75C PIECE SET Six beautiful patterns to select from... e Importtd Bavarian Porcelain e Durfihle-Higb Fired e Pearly White Translucent Body e Gold & Platinum Trim e Pattern Registration • Open Slock Warranty 89 69 rSESETBOnCEl Mb. , Pkg. Fresh California UTTtCE large Head Fresh Florida Yellow SWEET CORN U.S. No. 1 Florida !■ F SEEDLESS GRAPEFRUIT 5 ^. 59 U.S. No. 1 Fancy Western *| WINESAP APPUS........... 10 £.69 Sale Starts Today Thru Sun., May 25th mmt HOIR Boston Style B'iiiri B;jiil BAKED BEANS^- ProgrosBo TOMATO PASn Prlneo ELBOW MACARONL 29 m A9 POTATO SALAD 'f:-29 FRUIT COCKTAIL 22^ w 47^ .22^ 25^ 29^ 44^ tel 5^ 25* HAWAIIAN PUNCH RoeenslitutsS REALEMON JUICE ^ Lewis Sherry\Orange M MARMALADE ^“49^ Extra Faney-Rieholisu |P A SnWEDTOMATOES ’^“2^ PIScss A Stsms-Brondywlne. MUSHROOMS Dot Monts Light CHUNK TUNA Vlwsic "Hot Deg” DILL STICKS Queen Sixe South Shore SPlNlSH OLIVES TOMATO CATSUP Big Peek—White Kn NAPKINS fflAKOAl UCHni)%;29* 59* 79* 29‘ .19‘ .15* 59* 88* 49* =19* 29* SKIN GIANT PEASSir 29* Reelsmen LEMONADE c-o'' Michigen F ^ SOUR CREAM Dolry Fresh Asigrl*®""^*™*"*® M* SLICED CHEESE Seeltest lee Creem SANDWICHES .OT Wilson Quelity A BUTTERMILK >sc,OT^ Minute Meld Fresh California ^ ^ ORANGEJUICE Yenderleaf INSTANT TEA ■Freese Dried' MAXIM COFFEE Qarlie. Italian, Temate Marinade REESE DRESSINGS Whiter Whites ROMAN BLEACH .Beth Sixe DIALJOAP Speeiel Label 'Ceseode DISHWASHER Family Sixe Anti Psrspirant RIGHT GUARD Aqua Net HAIR SPRAY FRENCH FRIES Green Giont in Butter Souce NIBLETCORN in Butter Souee Pkg. 4-ex. I Aerese Can B-ex. Aerese Can 605 SOUTH OPDYKE it Soith BW. - Opii Diily 9-9, Sit. 8-9, Sa. 10-5 1964 SOUTHFIELD it 14 HHi Jtii4 walnut LAKE Wifiif Liki Mai it likstir * JT" . _ / JL- — -- ■§ Jf MM I pineapple in the sauce comesitom and up sides of 9-inch pie mlChigCin roods^ otGp Up r By JANET ODELL I We’ll suggest a few new twere soaked, about 20 minutes. | 1 pint cottage cheese Food Editor, The Pontiac Press I recipes for Michigan foods to-1 Drain, reserving bean liquid. V2 cup grated raw carrot Diirini? Michiean Week let’sl‘**'y and follow with additional! Meanwhile, melt 2 tables- V4 cup chopped green pepper eat Michigan produced food. It’sj'^nes on Thursday. Eat proudly poons of the butter in Dutch! ¥« cup sl^ed celery hard not to do that most weeks!an