LONDON (fl _ The gold rush became a stampede in Western Europe’s bullion market today, and scenes of “near-pandemonium” were reported in the bidding for gold shares on the Johannesburg stock exchange. The Swiss National Bank moved to hajtjorward sales of gold-sales for de-hveryW the metal in 30, 60 or 90 days —to protect its dollar hofdings. The record sale of bullion also was reflected in the London silver market in the general rush to get out of paper money and into something solid like gold, silver or even stock in a gold It was a reflection of the'general public uneasiness following Sat^ay’s devaluation of the pound and also spec-culation that the United States will'be unable to hold the line of $35 an ounce for gold which it is pledged to defend. A change in the U.S. buying price for the metal could mean huge profits for speculators. SECOND DAY metal was believed sold for the second day running. A record 10 tons changed hands in Paris. No estimates of sales in Zurich were available. In Switzerland all gold transactions must take place in doUars and the Swiss National Bank’s move was described as a measure of prudence to protect its supply of dollars. London dealers reported a “gigantic turnover” in the bullion market. In London more than 100 tons of the The price remained unchanged as the United States and its partners in the international gold pool continued to provide the metal to meet the demand. But the run, on gold which developed after Britain devalued the pound raised threats to the dollar. Dealers said the turnover in the first hours of selling today indicated that a recmd would be set. Gold stocks were .also strong on the London Stock Exchange, but industrial shares continued the big decline that set in with wide profit-taking Thursday. The Weather 0. S. Wtdinr Suriiu FotcchI Dreary THE PONTIAC PRESS Home Edition PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 1967 VOL. 12.5 — NO. 2.50 dr ★ —48 PAGES Formosa Says Guerrillas Raid Red China Base TAIPEI (UPI) — Nationalist China today said its guerrilla commandos destroyed eight MIG 19 jets in a raid against a Chinese Communist mainland air base. ★ ★ * It marked the first time Nationalist (Chinese officials reported specific results by their agents on the mainland. A National Detense Agency spokesman confirmed itong Kong newspaper reports that the commandoes struck a Red air force base in Kwantnng Province Nov. 1> and destroyed the MIG interceptors on the ground. “The report is correct,” he said. The spokesmen said the raid was carried out “by our anti-Gommunist fighters on the China mainland in stepped up operations during the chaotic cultural revolution.” ★ * * It was a reference to Communist party leader Mao Tse-tung’s struggle to purge foes in the Red army, government and party. Nationalist Chinese officials previously have said Generalissimo Chiang Kai-shek' s forces are increasing guerrilla raids on the mainland. But today was the first time they reported the results. ★ * ★ “We are checking through our intelligence channels to find out more details, ” the Spokesman said. Area News A-4 Astrology .. C-7 Bridge C-7 Crossword Puzzle D-11 Comics C-7 Editorials A-8 High School D-1 Markets D-4 Obituaries B4 Picture Page .. B-8 Sports C-1-C4 Theaters D-2. D-3 TV-Radfo Programs . D-ll WUson, Earl D-ll Women’s Pages . B-l-B-3 eonlltc Pnii Phot* Book on '67 Events Will Be Available Soon The fourth of the Associated Press’s unique books of living history, “The World in 1967,” is being rushed to completion and will sooh be available to readers of The Press. * * ★ “The World in 1967” is a handsome volume of living history illustrated with action photographs and written by the men who reported the stories in the first place. If you have already started a collection of those books, you will want the 1967 issue. If not, you should consider starting one now, even ordering the back issues still availabfe. In Today's Press Millage Eledions Farmington, Romeo school districts voting Monday.—PAGE A-4. Red Supplies U. S. fears plan to use port in Cambodia. — PAGE B-5. Story of Courage Girl on drill team is at best when she isn’t noticed. — PAGE A-12. CHRISTMAS OFFERING — Chris Fitzgerald of 115 State is the first contributor to the annual Salvation Army kettle appeal. He chats with Mrs. Patricia McCarrick of 201 Whittemore, a Salvation Army worker, as she mans the red kettle near Community National Bank, Saginaw and Lawrence, today. Offerings will be used to provide Christmas baskets of food with toys for the needy of the Pontiac area. 'New North Viet Rocket Units Down 1 US. Plane Every 2 Shots' i MOSCOW (AP) — A Soviet correspondent declared today new North Vietnamese rocket divisions, which he said went into action in August, have shot down an average of one U. S. warplane for every two missiles fired. That would be a remarkable improvement over the showing made by hundreds of the Soviet-made surface to air missiles fired in earlier months of the war. U. S. authoiitiei attribute to conventional ground guns the great bulk of the 755 planes officially acknowledged lost over North Vietnam. Yevgeny V. Kobelev wrote in the magazine Za Rubezhom — Life Abroad — that U. S. pilots have been forced to change their tactics and “study the art of outmaneuvering rockets.” ★ ★ ★ Kobelev did not clarify how the new Snow and Rain Likely for Area Light snow forecast for today is expected to change to rain late today, according to the nnorning forecast. Here is the official U.S. Weather Bureau prediction: * ★ * TODAY—Cloudy with a few periods of light snow this morning changing to rain this afternoon. Hi^ 35 to 40. Rain ending this evening with partial clearing tonight. Low 25 to 30. ★ * * TOMORROW-Partly cloudy and a little warmer. SUNDAY—Cloudy and slightly cooler. ★ * * Precipitation probabilities in per cent are: today 50, tonight 30, tomorrow 10. The temperature dipped to a low of 27 prior to g a.m. in downtown Pontiac today. The mercury moved up to 39 by 2 p.m. crews differed from those previously operating in North Vietnam. * * * “The American planes became easy targets for the rockets,” he said. “The pilots were forced to approach their targets at a low altitude and at great speed.” From 6 p.m. Wednesday, Nov. 8, to midnight Sunday. Nov. 12, there were 567 deaths reported. * Motorists were faced with hazardous driving conditions in sections of the West, Southwest, North and Northeast. SLIPPERY ROADS The Weather Bureau reported that highways in 15 states were slippery from rain, snow or freezing rain. The National Safety Council makes advance estimates of the number o4 persons expected to die on the highways ali holidays except Thanksgiving. The council feels that most Americans spend this holiday at home, and consequently, there are fewer cars on the highways than during most other national holidays. ★ ★ * The worst accident reported thus far during the Thanksgiving period took the lives of four 18-year-olds at Tell City, Ind. Their car ran off a road and hit a tree. U.S. Road Toll Over 200 for Holiday Period By The Associated Press The number of traffic deatiis on the nation’s streets and highways during the long Thanksgiving holiday weekend climbed past the 200 mark today. * * * With more than half remaining of the 102-hour holiday period that began at 6 p.m. local time Wednesday and Con-' tinues to midnight Sunday, the traffic toll stood at 211. For comparative purposes, the Associated Press made a survey of traffic deaths covering a 102-bour nonholiday period equal to that of the Thanksgiving AS wirwhelo U.N. ENVOY IN CRISIS — Jose Rolz Bennett (left) of Guatemala, United Nations Secretary General U Thant’s special envoy in the Cyprus crisis, is not at the airport in Rome yesterday by Erwin Baumgarten, U.N. representative in the Italian capital. Bennett was en route from New York to Ankara, Turkey. He will go to Athens and Nicosia, Cyprus, after talks in Ankara. L/.Sv Envoy Seeking to Block Cyprus War ATHENS (AP) — As U. S. presidential envoy Cyrus R. Vance sought in Athens today to head off a Greek-Turkish war over Cyprus, a spokesman announced in Brussels that the two nations had accepted the good offices of Manlio Brosio, secretary-general of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, in their dispute. An informed source said Brosio probably would go first to Athens, then to Ankara, leaving Brussels “very soon.” Greece and Turkey are members of the Atlantic alliance and held strategic positions on NATO’s southeastern flank. Both nations had alerted their military forces, and Turkish planes swept over Cyprus again, as they have every day for the last we.ek. ★ ★ ★ The tense situation caused the U.S. Embassy in Nicosia to order the evac- See Analysis, Page A-9 uation to Beirut of 400 American wives and children from Cyprus. The State Department « can travelers to stay away from Cyprus, Greece or Turkey, and the Canadian government issued the same warning to its citizens. Vance arrived in the Greek capital after talks with Turkish leaders in Ankara yesterday that roused resentment in the Turkish press and a rock-throwing anti-American demonstration by 2,000 students eager for war. * ★ ★ He was met with reserve oy Turkish officials and made no comment on the negotiations. WARMER RECEPTION Vance could expect a warmer reception in Athens, where the military regime is in a less advantageous position. For the Greeks, war in Cyprus would mean fighting 500 miles from their mainland but only minutes from Turkish jet airfields 40 miles away. Turkey also is stronger militarily than Greece, and the Greek dictatorship can count on little or no aid from abroad. Cyprus was tense after new flights Report of Sons Death an Error ELIZABETHTON, Tenn. Of) - Pfc. John W. Guinn, whose mother thought she buried him last Tuesday, flew home from Vietnam today and said he knew the soldier who was mistakenly buried in his stead. Guinn, 23, of Elizabethton, said he and Pfc. Quinn W. ’Tichenor, 23, of Louisville, Ky., were in the same 1 company. “I’m glad they’ve GUINN got H all straightened out now,” he said before he boarded a commercial flight to Seattle. He arrived earlier at McChord Air Force Base near Tacoma, Wash., on a military flight. * * w Guinn said Tichenor was in the 2nd platoon of his company and he was (fi the 1st. “We took advanced infantry training together at Ft. Polk, La.'’ * ★ * Guinn said he talked to his mother, Blanche Guinn, by telephone from Vietnam Hianksgiving Day, but she didn’t tell him of the mistake. UNAWARE OF MISTAKE Until a Seattle Post-Intelligencer reporter talked to Guinn at the Seattle airport, he was unaware of the mistake. The Army said in a statement that two members of Guinn’s unit mistaken- ly identified the body of Pfc. Quinn W. Tichenor, 23, of Louisville, Ky., as that of the Tennessee soldier. ’The identity was not verified, through a standard check of fingerprints by the Federal Bureau of Investigation, until Tichenor’s body had been buried. “I went through some other woman’s grief,” Mrs. Guinh said Thursday. “He (Tichenor) resembled John so much.” One of 10 children, Guinn was drafted last April and went to Vietnam as a member of Company A, 1st Battalion, 35th Infantry, 4th Infantry Division. Tichenor was in the 31st Regiment of the 4th Infantry. over the island by Turkish jets, the killing of a Greek Cypriot and two bomb blasts in the Greek quarter of Nicosia. ★ ★ ★ In the Turkish section of the capital, Turkish Cypriots dug fortifications and put up barricades. 150 Retd Trcxjps Reported Killed in Hard Fighting SAIGON (AP) — U.S. cavalrymen and helicopter gunships beat off a Red ambush of an American truck convt^ today in the central highland.s in one of three sharp actions reported to have cost the Conununists 150 dead. Reinforcements and helicopter gun-ships helped drive the enemy off. U.S. officers said 32 Conununist troops were killed and seven captured. U.S. infantrymen reported killing 118 Communist soldiers in two battles-with bazooka-firing Vietcong who attacked near Saigon and with entrenched North Vietnamese troops far to the north in the Que Son Valley. ★ ★ ★ In a fierce 11-hour battle that raged until dark yesterday, the U. S. infantrymen claimed killing 61 enemy soldiers. They reported seven Americans killed and 42 wounded and two armored personnel carriers destroyed. The U.S. Command, revised downward its estimate of Communist military strength lined up against the allies in South Vietnam, putting the total at between 223,000 and 248,000 men. Announcing a complete overhaul of its intelligence appraisals of the enerhy’s potential, headquarters omitted from its new tabulation 40,000 Vietcong political agents previously included. 'Police Can't End Causes of Crime' DETROIT (UPI(-Detroit Police Commissioner Ray Girardin said today police could do little to remove the causes of crime. “While police are charged with deterring crime, they can do little to prevent crime in the broader sense of removing its cau.ses,” Girardin said in a statement. ★ ★ * “ “On the whole, they must accept society as it is — a society in which parents fail to raise their children as law abiding citizens, in which schools fail to educate them to assume adult roles and in which the economy is not geared to provide them with jobs,” he said. MOMENT OF THANKSGIVING - Mrs. Blanche Guinn, Elizabethtown, Tenn., holds a picture of her son, Pfc. John Guinn, whom the Defense Department identified as being killed in Vietnam. Mrs. Gpinn received a telephone call yesterday from her son in Vietnam making the day even more an occasion for thanksgiving. ^ S A Quick Sale of Gaa Ran^e Anri Cabinet “It happened the first night, plenty of calls and a profitable sale from %r Press Want Ad.” Mrs. D.S. GAS RANGE. METAL STORAGE CABINET, ruo». mlAC. PRESS WANT ADS can be defined as creating reader reaction, enchantment, involvement, decision and satisfacUon. Nice combination. Dial*- 332-8181 or 334-4981 A--2 THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 24, 1967 Tough Nasser Talk Firms Israeli Stand JERUSALEM W - A tough speOch by President Gamal Abdel Nasser, warning that Egypt wiU fight if necessary to get its territories back, today strengthened Israel’s determination that a settlement can be reached on-1 acceptance of the U.N. Security ly through direct negotiations I Council resolution on the Middle with the Arabs. East and “puts us back at t > Birmingham Area News School, Police Officials Will Meet Wednesday One Israeli diplomat said Nasser’s speech Thursday “torped' oed’’ hopes raised by Eg]^’s Biafra Rebels Ready to Negotiate Peace LAGOS (UPI) — Nigeria’s Iwar with the federal govern- breakaway province announced today it is ready to negotiate an end to the five-month-old civil Birth Defect Could Be a Result of LSD IOWA CITY, Iowa (UPI) The first documented case of a child bom deformed after its mother had taken LSD during early pregnancy was confirmed today by a pediatrics professor at the State University of Iowa, Dr. Hans Zellweger said the women, a 19-year-oId Iowa resident who took LSD on four occasions during the seventh week of pregnancy, gave birth to a baby girl with a deformed right leg. He said he and his associates mation was similar to babies during the Thalidomide drug episodes of the early IMOs. Dr. Zellwegger said that while no absolute findings that LSD would cause deformity if taken during pregnancy could be made without further research, he indicated the hallucinogenic drug might cause birth defects if taken by expectant mothers. * * * FYom his home here. Dr, Zellweger called the research “presumptive evidence.’’ He said studies of Thalidomide babies showed that the Infants were bom deformed when the drug was taken during the seventh week of pregnancy. His research showed the Iowa woman had taken LSD — an other drug — four times, including during the seventh week of The amount taken was enough for her to experience hallucina tions, he said. “This connection between Thalidomide and LSD is the reason why we suspect there is a cause! relationship between the LSD intake of the mother in this case and the malformation of the baby,” he said. ment. ★ ★ ★ A broadcast by the rebels, who proclaimed the independent republic of Biafra, said there is “sUll room for cooperation. It was one of the strongest indications the civil war, which has cost thousands of lives, may be nearing an end in this most heavily populated African state. The broadcast came as four African heads of state began their second day of talks in Lagos with the military ruler of Nigeria, Maj. Gen; Yakubu Gowon. The leaders came to find a solution to the fighting. ★ * ★ Gowon told the visiting leaders yestdrday there is 'no possibility of the war ending unless the breakaway eastern region of Nigeria abandons secession. NOTHING SPECIFIC Today’s broadcast said nothing specifically of ending the secessionist movement. ★ ★ ★ Meeting with Gowon were Emperor Haile Selassie of Ethiopia, Presidents Hamani Diori of Niger, Ahmadou Ahidjo of Camer-oun and Gen. Joseph Ankiah Ghana’s military ruler. Flint Boy, 5, Hangs Self Accidentally FLINT flIPD — A 5-year-oId Flint boy apparently hanged himself accidentally in a closet at his home here on Thanksgiv. ing day, police said. ★ * ★ The boy’s mother, Mrs. Jean Olson, said she found her son David hanged from a clothes hook in the closet, a belt tied around his neck. ★ ★ ★ A stuffed doll was hanged in the same manner next to him, police said. ★ * ★ Police speculated the child may have Jumped or fallen from the chair in the closet. The Weather FuU U. S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY-Clondy today with a few periods «l light snow this morning changing to rain this afternoon. High 3S to M. Rain ending this evening with partial clearing later tonight. Low 25 to 20. Pnrtly cloudy and a little warmer Saturday. South to southwest winds 5 to IS miles per honr. Sunday . outlook: Cloudy and slightly cooler. Percentage chance of pre-cipitation: Today SO, tonight 30. tomorrow 10. Lowut Iwnptrdur* prKtSInfl I a.m.: Sun Mtt Friday at 5:05 p.m. Sun riiM Saturday at 7:35 a.m. Moon Bftt Saturday at 1:54 p.m. Moan riaaa Friday at midnight. Od. Raplda 34 II JKktonvilla 01 34 9 Kanaat City 41 30 § i Moiu«t. auAtt 32 if Miami Bch. (4 a7 Mu.ktgMi 37 33 Mllwaukaa ~ etllilim 34 25 Naw Orlat Travarn C. 33 30 New York NATIONAL WEAlHER^now flurries are expected tonight in extreme northern New England and portions of the western Lakes, central Plains and southeastern Plateau. Mixed rain and snow are forecast for the northern Plateau. Rain and showers will occur in the upper Lakes region, the Ohio volley, the central Gu{f Coast, southwesteni Texas and the Pacific Northwest. square one." . * “That’s why we want direct talks with the Arabs — not a U.N. arranged settlement,” the source said. Nasser ruled out such negotiations or an armistice with Israel in an address to his Na tional Assembly and said the Israelis must evacuate lill areas of Egypt, Jordan and Syria siezed in the June war. FORCE 1HREATENED “What has been taken by force cannot be recovered with out force,” he warned. Optimists at U.N. headquar ters in New York suggested that Nasser might be talking tough to keep his people quiet, a standard tactic of his. But Israeli Foreign Minister Abba Eban said in New York: “We take it as an authentic expression of Egyptian policy.” * ★ ★ Nasser, in his first public statement in four months, said he was not satisfied with the U.N. peace formula adopted on Wednesday. Israel has said it was willing to cooperate with the proposal. ★ * * The plan, sponsored by Britain, calls for appointment of a neutral peacemaker to promote a permanent settlement, Israeli withdrawal “from territories occupied in the recent conflict,” an end to the Arab state of belligerency with Israel and the recognition of all nations in the Middle East “to live in peace within secure and recognized boundaries.” ‘EGYPT TO WAIT’ Rather than endorse this, Nasser said “Time is on our side' and that Egyptian forces should wail until ready. “When the time comes, Wi will not be on the defensive,' he declared. “If we resort to milJtaiy action, our friends would understand and even support us.” BLOOMFIELD HILLS - The board of e d u c a t i o n has announced that’ it was inviting neighboring police departments to meet with school officials on mutual problems next week. The superintendent and the five secondary school principals will meet with representatives from the Bloomfield Hills, BlM>mfieId Township and West Bloomfield Township police forces at 9:30 a.m. Wednesday in the board offices on Andover Road. VIETNAMESE VISITORS - Daniel T. Murphy (right), chairman of the Oakland County Board of Auditors, expiains county government to three South Vietnamese officials who visited the County Courthouse Hie visitors are (from left): Hoang Ngoc An, chief justice of Phu Yen Province; Haynh Dieu, congressman; and Phan Tuang Van, a language department expert. The men are on a State Department sponsored tour. Former Gl Claims U.S. V©t Atrocities ROSKILDE, Denmark M) — A young Negro who said he was a former U.S. infantryman told the socalled Russell war crimes tribunal today a atrocities he claimed he other Americans committed in Vietnam. David Kenneth Tuck of Cleveland, Ohio, gave the testimony at the tribunal set up by Lord Ber trand Russell to tiy to show the United States is guilty of war crimes. Tuck said he had served in Vietnam as a private first class in the 33rd Infantry Regiment before returning to the United States last February and becoming a mailman in Cleve-iand. ★ ★ ★ Tuck said he once saw a Japa nese-American behead an injured Vietnamese prisoner with a machete and then throw the head downhill “as a warning to other prisoners that we meant Gunnar Jarring, the Swedish ambassador to the Soviet Union, has been named speciai U. N. mediator for the Middle East. He said he would probably fly from Moscow to New York Sunday for talks with U.N. Secretary Generai U Thant. “It’s not been possible to low the situation too cioseiy from here,’; Jarring said. “I’ not entirely in the picture, so can’t comment.” SOVIETS HOPEFUL The Soviet Union, which backed Egypt and Syria with arms during the June war and has been replacing some of the Arab losses said in the Security Council that it would have preferred another peace formula. But a prominent Soviet commentator, Viktor Mayevsky, wrote today in the Soviet Communist party newspaper Pravda that the resolution “could be a step toward a political settlement.” “The task now,” he said, “is to fulfill the decision and immediately withdraw Israeli troops from ali the territwies occupied by them.” w ★ ★ As Israel reads the resolution, it does not have to withdraw until other provisions of the resolution are fulfilled, and the mention of “secure and recognized boundaries” means it is not held to those which limited Israel before the war. The incident occurred near a Special Forces camp, he said, "after the first battle involving my unit. Everybody was angry with our heavy losses.” BARBED WIRE CAGE Last January, Tuck said, he saw a South Vietnamese soldier put a knife into the body of a captured Vietcong who was tied up and lying on the ground. ★ ★ * “Since he still refused to speak, he was placed in a cage made of barbed wire,” Tuck said. “He lay there on his hands and knees for a full two days He must have been a superman because he never spdee up. An American officer was present and gave the orders.” A * ★ In March 1966, Tuck said, he himself shot a Vietnamese woman who had not lined up with others after U.S. forces rounded a village near the Cambodian border. “Hie woman looked suspicious, an officer told me,,, and ordered me to shoot her,” 'Tuck Three Diseases in Resurgence ATLANTA (DP9—’Three dreaded diseases which had been or the decline in the United States for a number of years showed signs of resurgence during the last year, according to U. S, Health Department officials. The National Communicable Disease Center here reported noticeable increases in the rate of malaria, leprosy and diphtheria, according to its annual morbity and mortality report released yesterday. Malaria cases in the United States during, last. year, creased at the fastest rate in more than 39 years. The center said the sharp increase — from 147 in 1965 to S65 in 1966 - was caused by servicemen returning Also in 1966, 109 cases of lepropy were repwted in 36 states. Leprosy had declined steadily since 1963. Ten years ago, only 36 cases of leprosy were reported in this country. ’The center said althou^ a sharp increase was noted in thi number of cases of diphtheria, there was a decline in deaths attributed to that disease. Ottawa Ending Death Penalty OTTAWA (UPI) - The House of Coimnons has voted the abolition of capital punishment for murder for a five-year trial period, except for killers of policemen and i^son guards. The action was taken yesterday and requirep only the formality of Senate approval and the traditional “royal assent” before it becomes law. Executions in Canada are by hanging. Excepted from the are the capital crimes of rape said. “I’m sorry I did it, but it was an order.” Tuck told the tribunal of being On board a helicopter carrying two North Vietnamese prisoners in November 1966. “When one of them started talking, an American threw him out of the copter —flying at 6,000 feet altitude—in order to make the other prison er keep quiet,” Tuck said. He said it was general practice not to take prisoners except North Vietnamese officers. “We shot them. The only good Vietnamese is a dead one, we were told.” * * * During cross-examination. Tuck said that after a battle many American soldiers “cut off the ears of the dead ene-nies. The man with the most ears was considered the No. 1 VC killer, and when we came back to camp, he got free beer,” he explained. Tuck asserted that most infantrymen in Vietnkm are Negroes, Puerto Ricans or “poor whites.” A total of 106 of 117 men in his unit i Negroes and this was typical, he He stated he feared being killed “even Iqr my own comrades” if he attempted to disobey orders. “They would have, gotten rid of me one way or another.” Vote on the controvo-sial bill a compromise measure defeated in Commons last year, was 114-87. Sixty-four members, including Prime Minister Lnter Pearson, were absent and -did not vote. Pearson last week during debate on aboliton supported the bill with an impassioned speech that included an attack on capital punishment on the grounds it is merely retaliatory and does not deter crime. Pearson said that instead of exacting ultimate punishment for murder, Canada should seek to eliminate the slums, ghettos and emotional and personality disorders he asserted are responsible for murders and other crimes. {Hvvided by some skilled divers and swimmers. FRANKLIN - William White of 2S860 14 Mile Road, journalism professor and chairman of thesAmerican Studies Program at Wayne State University, has been awarded a grant of $17,500 by the National Endowment for the humanities to work on the Collected writings of poet Walt Whitman. The grant comes through the Center for Editiems of Ameri-The meeting is being called to'c“ Authort a ^up of eight discuss meth^s and procedures ?“«>ors J; for close cooperation regarding the multiyolume edition to safety, traffic rules, vandalism all facets of delinquency which concern both tiie police the schqol system, said Supt. Eugene John-«. The meeting will be open to the public. * * it The board recently discussed the possibility of making a future addition to the adnUnistra-tion building since office space has had to be rented outside the present building, said Johnson. SWIMMING POOL A formal dedication for the new swinuning pool which was put into use this fall at the Andover High School will be Dec 10. Edwin Wichert will be on hand to discuss pool rules and regulations. Entertainment will be be published by the New York University Press. ★ * White, on a year’s leave of absence from the Wayne State, is working on three parts of Whitman’s collection including his diaries, journals and other unpublished prose; his newspaper and magazine articles; and a bibli(«raphy of all of Whitman’s Blaze Rips Area Home An estimated $20,000 damage was done to the home of the Larry P. Rossier family at 2561 Little Trail, Commerce Township last night. i - H!' The township fire department estimatas $15,000 damage to the house and $6,000 damage to the contents. ★ ★ * Chief Clarence Kuttkuhn is investigating the cause of the fire No one was at the home when the fire was reported at ^:48 p.m. yesterday. Firemen and equipment from the township and Walled Lake departments left the scene at 10:23 p.m. Sign-Up Deadline Near for Pageant The deadline is nearing for potential Junior Miss applicants. Monday is the last day that the Pontiac Area Jaycees, contest sponsors, will accept applications for the Pontiac Area Junior Miss Pageant. The pageant will be held Dec. 2, at 8 p.m. in the Pontiac Northern High School auditorium. Senior girls hetween the ages of 1| and 19 from the Pontiac area are eiigihle to compete. Scholarships of $250 will go to the winner, and $100 scholarships to the runner-up. Merchandise awards will also be donated by local firms. * * ♦ The winner of the Pontiac Junior Miss Pageant will compete in the State Junior Miss Pageant in January, also sponsored by the Pontiac Area Jaycees. NATIONAL FINALS The state winner will then enter the national finals in Mobile, Ala., in March. Contestants will not be judged on beauty, but on scbolas-tlc ability, mental alertness, poise and personality, along with physical fitness and creative talent. ★ ★ ★ Entry forms may be obtained at La Vergne’s Hair Fashions, 887 Woodward. Police Official Talks on Riots WASHINGTON (AP) - PoUce Commissioner Howard R. Leary of New York Qty has told Presi- ~ dent Johnson’s Advisory Commission on Civil Disorders the requisites of a riot Include what he called “dry grass” conditions sparked into flame, fed by rumors and fanned by agitators. Leary’s testimony before the commission Sept. 20 was released Thursday. The commission was set up to investigate causes of last summer’s riots and to make recommendations for dealing with the problem, w w ★ Leary described dry grass conditions as “a congested ur-b«i area, inhabited largely by pme^ adia foel left out ol the prosperity that marks most of the contemporary American society.” “It is marked by a rising standard of living,” Leary said, an even more steeply rising scale of demands on sodety. There is generally a high level of fhistration, an increasing amount of anger and almost al-w^^s a feeling that comes from years of broken promises, and ranges from mute dlsap|x>int-ment to outspoken rage.” POUCE ARE INVOLVED The spark usually is an incident in which the police are i|i-volved, such as an'arrest or the policeman's use of a gun, he continued. This is inevitably followed by fumors which magnify the original incident out of proportion, he said. Thus, Leary testified, with the condition, the incident and the rumor, “Step No. 4 begins when the agitators appear on the scene, ready to promote their own aims and ambitions and programs at the expense of the community they profess to Leary told the commission thA agitator Inevitably turns his attention to teen-agers, exciting them into committing acts of vandalism. At that point, he said, a sufficient police force is required-first, to prevent (urther vandalism and then to head off looting, a * w “This is a moat critical area, because it is at this point that the agitator’s efforts to turn dlsturbahce into a riot will succeed or fail,” Leary explained. Studer^t Grounded—It's Time for Book Learning (EDITOR’S NOTE - Jean SoUe, a Pontiac Press reporter, wife of a commercial artist and mother of six children, is taking flying lessons. This is the 13th in a series.) By JEAN SAILE Anybody like to ask me the four strokes of a piston? Intake ■ power — exhaust.' Want to know ■the four forces lacting on an [airplane? ■nmist — drag - lift — gravity. I’ve gone back to school! adered by Ibad weaiber 2AILE from continu- ii:g my private due! with the landing pattern at Oakiand-Pontiac Alrpmt, I’ve started ground school classes. They’ll be necessary if ever I am to win a private pilot’s license. * it * Art Trowbridge is the Instructor; and, while the first few classes aro devoted to a general understanding of the workings of an airplane, it appears that the real crux of the matter Is going to be a study of weather and course plotting. NO STRONG POINT Mathematics is about to assume, an importance greater than the weekly grocery Mil. Mathematics has never been a strong pdnt with me, but Trowbri^ assures that I will be tested and retested until I have the material in hand or head. What this is all for, of course, is the Federal Aviation Agency test which says either 1 know my basics well enough to get a license er I don’t. While this course continues, I will also be continuing to fly. First the landing pattern, then the solo, then about three more houra of landing patterns, about four hours in a practice area, then 10 hours of cross-country, and enough other hours in the air to the point that I know flying well ennigh that I can also take an FAA air test and hopefully pass it. ginning to fill my admitted knowledge vacuum on the whys and wherefores of air travel. PSYCHOLOGICAL BLOCK It also has been explained that my hang-up on landing the airplane ia probably psychological. A number of pilots have faced the realization that they’re not really sure soloing is for them, according to Irtiw-bridge. thing will be right,” Trowbridge assured. He’s right, part anyway! on the terrible Ground diement Jround school lacks the ex-of flying, but it is al-. ready answering questions that have occurred; and it is bb- of the landing pattern, It’s here where the gremlins do the work. “You know you’ve been/jln; atructed in every phase of isixt^ ing, it’s just working them out and getting them all put together. One day you’ll be terrible, and the next day every- Rivers Wants Spain in NATO BRUSSELS (UPI) A senior American congressman today said Spain is a better U.S. friend than France and should be invited to join the North Atlantic Treaty Organizfktion (NATO). Rep. L. Mendel Rivers, D41.C., chairman of the House Armed Services Committee, udd a surprised session of NATO lawmakers, “We need Spain as an ally and we need her now." THE PONTIAC PRES|g. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 1967 Simms, 98 N. Saginaw St. LOOKOnly SMS Would GWe /\Quata(i+^W^\vch Star^ 3atil,\9(i8Qn(\w Gift Item ^foiLBayXn SlWWS E\ecftofticl)ept- Only SIMMS •xtandi thi» guarant**: buy now and tho guarantoo on itom tokos offoct Jon. 1,1968; plus you hovo o full oxchongo privllogo if tho gift you givo is not tho modol wontod by tho rocipiont. Today and Saturday spocials. Sale! SIMMS TRANSISTOR RADIOS -TRANSISTOR Pocket Radio, A—3 102nd Bite Worst Snake Handler Listed Serious Model 1327 radio complete with battery, case and earphone. Slide rule tuning for AM stations. Full year warranty. Former $15 seller Only $1 holds. REALTONE 10-TRANSISTOR FM-AM-MW SW Radio Personal Portable Size Model 2410 personal size portable rodio with 4 bands. FM-AM-SW1 Marine Wave broadcasts. Whip antenna to bring in distont (totions. $39 value. $1 holds. S .',ims Bros.-98 N. Saeinaw St.-Oowntown Open MIAMI, Fla. WV-While 50 tourista watched, a deadly Australian tiger snake plunged its fangs into the hand of Bill Haast, a professional snake handler. He is reported in serious condition, suffering from his' 102nd and most dangerous snakebite. A ★ ★ “It was a brand new snake being handled for the first time,” said Clarita Haast, wife of the 56-year-old herpetologist and his partner in the Miami Serpentarium, a tourist attraction. A ★ ★ Haast was rushed to a hospital in critical condition Thursday. After several hours in the intensive care ward, his condition was reported somewhat improved. AAA Haast claims he has built up immunity from snakebites through injecting himself over the last 19 years with a potion mixed from the venom of cobras, the green mamba; the coral snake and the Indian blue krait. HORSE SERUM Doctors inject such serum into horses, then bleed them to use their blood for snakebite remedy —- but the horses usually die within two years. AAA After many of his snakebites — almost all of them suffered while taking venom daily from the snakes among the 700 reptiles at his serpent farm — Haast has refused medical attention because of his belief in his immunity. Sometitnes he has been near death, paralyzed, when rushed to a hospital. After one bite by a king cobra Haast pulled the fangs from his arm, cleansed the snake’s mouth so it would not suffer ill effects, and continued his work until the venom began to work. AAA His eyelids dropped and his knees went rubbery. Breathing was difficult and he said sounds were tremendously magnified and colors wildly brilliant. TOTAL PARALYSIS Total paralysis wrapped his legs and he could not speak or open his eyes. He arrived at a hospital stiff as a plank. “One moment, I was fighting for breath like a drowning person,” Haast said. “Then a great wave of relief swept over me, like the relief a badly beaten fighter must feel when the bell ends the last round. I think this is the feeling of death.” ★ A * Others have been saved from the brink of death by Haast since he quit the airline business 20 years ago and built his snake farm. ★ ★ ★ Haast’s own blood is often a special life-saver. In March Haast was flown in a U.S. Air Force jet and a Venezuelan air force helicopter to a jungle village in Venezuela to deliver his blo^ to a 5-year-old Indian who had been near death after being bitten by a snake. That was his llth such mercy trip on record. SnURMY HOURS 9 UL to 9 P.M. IWNMOlOWIMiWMIiaaBinBMIXW TONITE ’til Soup Rattler Strikes Chef Weekly Record List Big Selection of Famous POLICE CALL Portable Radios 10-TR. POLICE CALL and AM RADIO $29.95 Alaron 10-lransistor radio vd»h POLICE CALL bond and AM broadcasts. Model B10AP complete — ready to use. $I holds. 1098 SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Chinatown being what it is, Kun Loie wasn’t surprised to get a as rush Thanksgiving Day order i for fresh diamondback rattle-; 2 snake. 3 A A * \ So the 60-ycar-old proprietor ,5 of the T.cue Yuen pet shop pried h I the lid off a box he received re- 7 eently from Texas and fondly r 'beheld six pairs of beady eyes 9 and six flicking tongue.s—rat-10 tiing noises too. |H A , A A . Ij2 Kun Loie stirred the group 13 with a wooden fork until he 14 found the rattler he wanted. He 15 gingerly lifted the squirming 16 serpent, when it suddenly struck 17 his arm three times. 18 AAA 19 As Loie who was successfully 20 treated with snake serum, was being transferred to Chinese Hospital, he explained to ambulance stewards what a fine treat rattlesnake soup is, especially when boiled for a week with herbs. 'Peppermint' Sticking What young people think are the top records of the week compiled by Gilbert Youth Research, Inc. Incense and Peppermints....Strawberry Alarm Clock The Rain, the Park and Other Things ..... Cowsills Please Love Me Forever .............. Bobby Vinton Let It Out ............................. Hombres Soul Man ........................... Sam and Dave I iCan See for Miles...................... Who Watch theVlowers Grow ............... Four Seasons It’s You That I Need ................ Temptations I’m Wondering ...................... Stevie Wonder Kentucky Woman ............ Neil Diamond Love Is Strange ................. Peaches and Herb Everlasting Love ................... Robert Knight I Say a Little Prayer ............ Dionne Warwick It Must Be Him ........................ Vikki Carr Daydream Believer ....................... Monkees She Is Still a Mystery .. Lovin Spoonful Your Precious Love Marvin Gaye and Tammi Terrell Like an Old Time Movie ............ Scott McKenzie Holiday ......................Bee Gees To Sir With Love Lulu YOU Always Get Better DISCOUNTS at SIMMS ... Even at CHRISTMAS! Here’s More Proof! A« you know, somo storos actually 'jack tho pricos up' daring Christmas just because it is Christmas ... but not at SIAAM^ We keep prices down all year long and that's since 1934, - CAMERA DEPARTMENT DISCOUNTS POLAROID _____COLORSMfS >DUi^^Riimily Today 6 p.m. to 9 p.ni.-Saturday 9:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. . . . ond voo don't have to buy a thing. Just coma in and ask tha Palaroid Camara Girf ta taka vaur pSdcllraGirTw^^c- ^h. >IDcamaratond pictura taking. 33»» 15-TR. POLICE CALL FM and AM Juit out — Midland 10-535 radio is •xtra hi-power police coll, FM 6nd AM radio with battery ond earphone. (AC odopler is on optional extra). $49.95 volue. Only $1 holds or charge it. slieoTmitPEKiK 6-TRS. Up to 1 Mile Range 'Commond' walkie-tolkie has up to a I mil* range. Superheterodyne crystal controlled, telescopic antenna. $l holds. With ALARON Extra Hl-Power 9-TR. Walkie-Talkie 1 to 3 Milts $29.95 value — Alaron #89)9 at shown. With squelch control, battery meter, too. mplete 67x35 BINOCULARS and Builtrin RADIO in Top of Leather Case First Time Ever Lost Cobra Found of Zoo FORT WORTH. Tex. (API The ll-fool-long king cobra mis.sing since Nov 14 was found j alive Thur.sday in a storage room of the reptile house at Forest Park Zoo. AAA I Elzie Turner, zoo director, said the snake was found by Steve Boyd, a part-time zoo em-j ploye. AAA Buzz Ross, assistant supervisor of the reptile house, captured the snake and returned it to its display case. said the cobra had apparently suffered no ill effects during its 10-day disappearance. Sold and Serviced By SIMMS... Buy for Christmas Giving Now! ; The Jrwrlrni'QHililyWatrK J I A/antage’ j ^ DIVISION or hauiltOn wArcH cottum * Rogular $49.95 value — quality 7x35 Blnoculori with lemher carrying case which hat a bulh-tn trantittor radio in the top. You can liiten while you ore watching with this combination. Binoculort hot a faster center focusing feature. $1 holds, or get it on our Instant Credit plan. ‘99 Rerih SIMMS..?!, Simms, 98 N. Saginaw St. PUBLIC NOTICE T/ you }ylgnt fustiPepmJahle Pfpces5/n^ OffH Your WNf5(^im PRYPciures fltLOl/^CSrPossible Prices dtmThern io SIMMS 24 hr. Developing FILM Service White Prints Enlarge to SUPER SIZE Why poy 10c or more (or quolily developing ond printing? Guaranteed periect print, ond you poy only (or the good Enlarged to Super Size and doled, Moiled Direct to Your Home Famous 3M DYNACOLOR Movie and Slide Color Film Processing Fotnous 3M dynocolor processing for 8mm roll movies, 35mm 20-exp. roll, 127 size 12-exp. and Instamatic 20 films. Processed and returned to your home. Compare to $1.79. Limit iO. •eeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeceeeeeeeeeee 85 FREE Page Ladies' ITJewol CALENDAR Watches lustebla bracelet. 24,95 • B. Smirtly tailored SwecV’seconcTirand’. 23.95 SIMMSE H N. 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SYLVANIA M3 FLASHBULBS “’iS.'Tlm" ?*.*• POLAROID CARRY CASE Mod«l 1597 COM to hold tho Polorold C lor-vrord ond ravorM ihowingi. With fl.S lent Only $ I hold.. SIMMS.SS 12888 CAMERAS — Main Floor Farmington School Vote Near FARMINGTON - School district voters here will consider Monday a $9-mil-lion bond issu^ and a 5-mil| operating Hie bond issue is the second part of a total $12-million package presented to voters more than a year ago. District voters approved $3 million of the package in June 1966. The bonding program will finance a third senior high school, a fifth junior hQd>> the 19th and 20th elementary schools, and about 50 acres for future school sites. Supt. Roderick Smith said that the administration anticipates no increase in the debt retirement tax levy. He explained that the bonds will be retired over a 30-year period and that the district can receive assistance from the State School Bond Loan Fund. The millage increase for 10 years woul3 raise the school’s operating tax levy from the curemt 23.4 mills to 28.4 mills. The total tax levy, including the 9 mills for bonds, comes to 32.4 mills currently. - Passage of the millage increase would make the total levy 37.4 mills. Salaries, wages and fringe benefits will take up most of the millage increase. The superintendent also points out that enrollment has gone up by 912 students this year to a total of 15,264. Polls will be open from 7 a.iri. to 8 p.m. Monday. Voting places are Precinct 1, Farming-ton Junior High, 33000 Thomas; Precinct 2, Dunckel Junior High, 32^ 12 Mile; Precinct 3, Eagle Elementary, 29410 W. 14 Mile; and Precinct 4, Middle Belt Elementary, 24400-Middle Belt. District residents permitted to vote are those who are registered voters and own property. THE PONTIAC PRESS keaNms 'FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 1907 A—4 8 Mills Asked for District WHOO IS THAT?—The new Rochester North Hill Elementary School mascot, a former airplane hangar decoy, gets a look at student council members Mark Hugger (left) son of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Hugger, 1324 Catalpa; Ann Ungier, daughter of Mrs. Doris Ungier, 801 Plate; and Barbara Moyer, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Maynard Moyer, 5625 N. Rochester. Romeo to Decide School Levy Monday New Mascot at North Hill Is Feather in Students' Cap ROMEO — School district residents here will decide Monday whether they want to approve an 8-mill tax levy — three Of which would be renewed. The school system will be faced with an anticipated $100,000 deficit by next June 30, if the election fails, according to Asst. Supt. Robert Randell. “A favorable election result will also permit at to draw up a preliminary budget for next year and begin salary negotiations with school employes and teachers,” he added. Polls will be open at the Romeo Junior High School and the Washington Elementary School from 7 a.m. to 8 p.m. If the millage passes, residents would he paying a total of 27.6 mills, said Randell. The residents now pay 22.6 mills. Five of the eight mills requested would be an additional tax: however, all would be assessed for five years beginning in December. 1968, he said. This would be an additional cost to the taxpayer of about $40 a year based on $5 per $1,000 of state equalized valuation. “Of the additional five mills, three would be needed to retire the debt and the remaining two would be for additional maintenance, six new school buses, some remodeling, and salary adjustments,” said Randell. ★ ★ * He explained that each mill was worth $33,000 each year to the school district based on 92 per cent collection of taxes. Choices for Appointments at Military Academies Set Congressman William S. Broomfield, R-18th District, has announced his nominations for apiiointments to the U.S. Army, Navy and Air Force academies. Five appointments will be made — two each to the Naval and ^r Force academies, one to the Army academy. The nominees have passed competitive examinations for the academy of C. their choice. After appointed, they must rUtile Did to OQV6 pass entrance exams. Keego Officer's Infant Recognized KEEGO HARBOR — Auxiliary police officer David Erickson, 2955 Elam, has been recognized by the City Council for his attempt to save an infant’s life Sept. 15. Although Erickson revived the infant three times by mouth-to-moulh resuscitation on the way to the hospital, the infant died at the hospital. Also, the council has approved the renting of a building on Beachmont to house the City Department of Public Works machinery during the winter City Manager Gary Dickson expects the rent from December through April to amount to about $1,000. The counril also approved the promotion of Mrs. Robert Ward, 2338 Willow Beach, from deputy treasurer to treas- The promotion for Mrs. Ward, who has been employed by the city for four years, includes no increase in her $5,400 yearly salary. Dickson, who is also city clerk, had been treasurer. Nominees are rated as principal and alternate delegates. ★ ★ * 'The principal delegate for the military academy at West Point is Theodore D. Lee, son of Mr. and Mrs. Edward M. Lee, 200 Tuckahoe, Birmingham. He is a senior at Birmingham Seaholm High School. WEST POINT ALTERNATES West Point alternates Include Michael ',M. Aldrich, son of Mr. and Mrs. Edwin M. Aldrich, 124 Glendale, Rochester: Frederick Van Vurst, sbn of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Van Vurst, 4889 Ardmore, Bloomfield Hills; and Roger D. llersh-man, son of Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Hersh-man, 3736 Thornbrier, Bloomfield Hills. One of the two principal candidates for the Naval Academy, Annapolis, is George J. Quart, son of Mrs. Elinor H. Quart, 235 S. Glengarry, Birmingham. Annapolis alternates are Thomas E. Snyder, son of Capt. Edwin K. Snyder of Washington, D.C., formerly of Birmingham; MacGregor H. Paul, son of Mr. and Mrs. David H. Paul of Paxton, Mass., formerly of Birminghaip; Keith C. Zajic, son of Mr. and Mrs. Richard C. Zajic, 3257 Wendover, Troy; and Stephen J. Hopkins, son of Mr. and Mrs. John H. Hopkins, 1423 Christian Hills, Rochester. ★ ★ ★ The 11 principal candidates for the Air Force Academy include Douglas R. Brower, son of Mr. and Mrs. George E. Brower, 3414 N. Adams, Troy; Michael Phillips, son of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph H. Phillips, 1085 E. Snell, Rochester; William A. Rose, son of Mr. and Mrs. Hans Rose, 6677 Timber Ridge, Birmingham. Others are Mark C. Kraetzer, son of Mr. and Mrs. Henry C. Kraetzer, 1680 Norfolk, Birmingham; and Harold L. Chambers, II, son of Mr. and Mrs. Harold L Chambers, Sr. 47 Sheffield, Troy. ROCHESTER — Who’s the smartest bird in town? “The North Hill Owl - That’s Whoo!” Ask any of the elementary students who Wednesday ensconced the symbol of wisdom and knowledge as their official mascot. Done to the accompaniment of a new school song, written by Mrs. Thomas Marsh, music teacher, and sung to the tune of “The Marine’s Hymn,” the Installation ceremony created more excitement than has been seen in a long time in the elementary halls of learning at North Hill School. “He is very wise and Icyal and foresight is his trait. Our leaders look up to the ovvl, and help to keep us straight,” sang the North Hill choir, it * * What they were looking, up to was a OU Student Teacher Is First in Avondale The Avondale School District has received the assignment of its first student teacher, Brenda J. Hamilton of Fraser. ★ ★ A student at Oakland University, she will begin her teaching assignment in the Avondale elementary schools, according to Hobart H. Jenkins, assistant superintendent of schools. Response to Detroit Hike Novi Increases Water Rate 2 Michigan Soldiers Are Killed in Vietnam WASHINGTON (AP) - The Defense Department announced yesterday that two Michigan men were killed in action with the Army in Vietnam. They are Pfc. High D. Scott, husband of Mary E. Scott of Adrian, and Pfc. Garry ^ Reichard, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ray Reichard of Newaygo. ComiTierce Twp. OKs Land-Fifl law COMMERCE TOWNSHIP - A sanitary land-fill ordinance passed last night by the Township Beard sets up controls tougher than those of the state. Some of the controls more stringent than the state law are those for fencing, green-belts and setbacks, said Township Supervisor Robert H. Long. A prospective operator of a land-fill must still obtain a permit from the township, according to a zonfng ordinance already In effect. The newly passed ordinance doesn’t take effect for about 35 days. ★ ★ ★ It includes, as the state law, provisions regarding the covering of refuse. SEWER LETTER SENT The board also sent .a letter to the Oakland County Department of Public Works stating the township’s interest in participating in an interceptor sewer system which rhay become available in several years. The system may be financed by special as-sessments to those serviced, said the supervisor. former airplane hangar decoy, contributed by an anonymous donor, and outfitted in colorful felt finery. YET TO BE NAMED Presented to Ann Ungier, 11-year-old. president of the student council, the owl is yet to be named. It had to be representative of Rochester owls, for a display in the school hall noted that while most owls hunt at night and sleep during the day, “owls that are found in Rochester are the longeared and short-eared owls and sometimes a snowy owl. The short-eared owl hunts by day and sleeps by night and eats mostly birds.” As everyone knows, no student should be a “night owl.” * ★ ★ , Quite descriptive of owlish habits, the display also noted, “They eat small mammals like mice, rats and moles. When they finish eating they regurgitate the bones, fur and feathers that they can’t digest. OWL PELLETS It continues, “These are called owl pellets. They are found under roosting trees. There were some rather graphic examples of such items in the case. “Owls prefer to live in a pine grove. They use nests that other birds or small mammals make.” ★ ♦ * Come to think of it — that’s probably pretty smart too, as anyone who has ever built a house can vouch. State Road Toll for Holiday Is at Least 9 So Far By The'Associated Press At least nine persons including an Orchard Lake youth have lost their lives on Michigan roadways during this Thanksgiving holiday weekend, most in two-car collisions. Five died in collisions with other cars, three .di^ when they lost control and ran off the road and another was a pedestrian struck down by a motorist. The Associated Press count, which began at 6 p.m. Wednesday, ends Sunday midnight. The victims: Lloyd W. Robinson, 39, of Detroit, who was killed early this moirning when his auto ran off a Detroit freeway and struck a pole. ★ ★ ★ Warrw H. Thomas, 45, of Detroit, who was killed yesterday in Detroit when his auto collided with another car. William Flood, 45, of Benton Harbor, killed when he lost control of his car near Benton Harbor early yesterday and ran into a tree. ★ ★ ★ Gaylord attorney Melvin Frepl, killed yesterday morning when the car in which he was riding struck a utility pole, 11 miles south of Gaylord. Mrs. Mary Fendel, 73, of Portland, died in a Lansing hospital yesterday morning from injuries suffered Wednesday night. She was walking a half-block from her home to church when she was hit by a car. Mrs. Betty Steffen, 25, of Detroit, killed yesterday morning in a two^ar accident in Detroit. Frank Heffner, 32, of Livonia, killed last night when his auto crossed the center line and collided headon with another car In Bedford Township. Richarc' 9ulnn,^ 22, of Detroit, killed when his car was hit by another vehicle, which crossed the center line in Detroit last night. Richard Jordan, 18, of 3184 Middle Belt, Orchard Lake, killed early yesterday in a car-truck accident in Bloomfield Township. 'Here Comes Santa' to Oxford Tomorrow OXFORD — Santa comes to Oxford tomorrow in a 2 p.m. parade down Washington Street that will climax with his installation at the Santa Claus House in the Village Park. Mr. and Mrs. Richard Medaugh, Chamber of Commerce parade chairmen, report some 40 entries will take part. The parade will start at the junior high school and continue to Crawford Street. 6 Youths Arrested in Shelby Twp. as Arson Suspects SHELBY TOWNSHIP - Six Shelby-Utlca area youths, including three 17-year-old girls, spent last night in Macomb County Jail on suspicion of arson. They were to be arraigned today before Macomb Justice Edmond Schmidt in Mount Clemens. Held were Carol Moore, 17, 47911 Burton; Michael Prowse, 18, 8714 Pemberton; Janice Dzierbicki, 17, 44287 Merrill; Marjorie MuszyskI, 17, 8210 Rhode; Frank Tobey Jr., 20, 8471 San Marco; and James Good, 18, 0009 Goff. They were arrested at 10 p.m. last night on 23 Mile Road west of Hayes near the site of an abandoned bam by Shelby Police Officers David Miller and Kenneth Stevens. The two officers said the barn showed evidence of an attempt having been made to set it afire. * * * The youths were picked up as officers were on their way to investigate an abandon^ house fire at 23 Mile and Hayes. Another fire in an abandoned sh^ at 25 Mile and Mound roads had been reported previously. Officers said hn investigation linked the six with all three blazes. The charge of arson is a felony and carries up to a maximum sentence of 10 years in jail. NOVI — Water rates have been raised in the village. The increase was recommended by the village manager, Harold’Ackley, and passed by the Village Council in response to higher rates charged by the Detroit system, which supplies the village. The village will be absorbing a small share of the increase effective this week reported the manager. The rate hike affects, the minimum quarterly bill and the rate per 1,000 gallons over the minimum yolume. The increase ranges from 25 cents more each three months for 7,500 gallons of water with a %” main to $2.50 more each three months for 25,000 gallon's with a IV2” main. Clorkston Youth Group to Feature Panel Talk CLARKSTON - A youth panel will be featured at the 8 p.m. Monday meeting of the Clarkston Area Youth Assistance Committee. ★ A ★ Robert Brumback will serve as moderator for the session which is to take place at the Township Hall Annex. 90 N. Main. Some 14 young people will participate. Refreshments will be served. Avon OKs Ambulance Funds AVON TOWNSHIP — The Township Board has voted to subsidize Fleet Ambulance Service to Ihe cost of $500 a month on a sbe-month trial basis to keep the service available to the area. The decision was arrived at following a combined meeting with city of Rochester and Oakland Township representa-Uves. It was passed by the board following a abort executive session during its regu-, lar meeting Wednesday night. Fleet had.4sked for a $1,000 a month subsidy in order to keep ambulances in the area east of Pontiac. Rochester City Manager William Sinclair said he would recommend to the council Monday night that it pay $300 a month on a six-month trial basis. The remaining $200 a month is under consideration by Oakland Township, which however is partially served by ambulances from the Oxford-Lake Oriom Romeo areas. PROPOSAL TABLED In other business the board tabled its proposed water and sewer operating ordinance for further study. The ordinance, introduced for the first time at a special meeting last week, would provide for the construction and maintenance of some $8 million worth of additional temal Phase I development program — timed to be ready when the Clinton-Oakland Sewer Interceptor goes Into use-age in about two years — the plans call for 27 miles of additional sanitary sewers and 48 miles of additional water „ The sewer program would encompass 12 sections in the northwest portion of the township and the water program would include 26 central sections of the township. ★ * * ' Cost on the sewer program is estimated at $^ million and on the water system at $5 miiiion by Johnson and Charted as part of the township’s In- Township. • fi SISTERLY DREAM — Karen, 8, and Lisa, 5, daughters, the Chevrolet exhibit at tbe Detroit Auto Show The try out a gasollhe-powered dream car to ho given away at THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER Hi. 1967 -t: Corner Saginaw and Huron-Downtown Pontiac — FE 4-2511 After-Thanksgiving Sale Doors Open 9:'30 til 9 Every Day til Christmas Famous Maker Full Fashioned SKI SWEATERS Reg. 18.00 to 23.00 $12 Full fashioned turtle neck, argyle cowl neck and lacey jewel neck. 100% wool. Navy, brown and green trim. Women's Suburban COATS « »18’° Corduroy, wool and vinyl suedes In pile and plaid lined coots. Self trim and pile trim. Belted or not. Blues, browns, greens and navys. Sizes 8 to 18. SpoflMMr... Third fioor HEY, KIDS! SANTA'S HOURS: Monday thru Friday, 3:45 to 8:45 Saturday 9:30 to 8;45 Women's Flannel SLEEPWEAR Reg. $-199 4.50 I Guaranteed washable 100% combed cotton flannel tailored pajamas and shift gowns in assorted prints. Sizes 30 and 40 and S-M-L. Charge It at Waite's. 50-Inch Deluxe POOL TABLE Famou$ Brand Permanent Press Men's Casual SLACKS Reg. 7.00 and 9.00 2 „ »7 Save, Save, Save on men's slacks from our most famous maker. Choose from tapered ivy, traditional ivy, or dress jeans in solids or patterns. Sizes 20 to 40. Charge It. Men's Wear... Street Fioor Men's Kentfield Super Touch SPORT SHIRTS Men's Kentfield UNDERWEAR 3'°'^2'^’ 1.10 Reg. 5.00 ^3 99 Wash and wear 100% 2-ply rayon acetate flannel. Choose from a host of new fall plaids in blues, reds, and browns. Sizes S-M-L-XL Men's Wear... Street floor Fine cotton T-shirts with reinforced neck band. Sizes S-M-L-XL. Double seat, heat resistant briefs in sizes 30 to 44. Fine broadcloth boxer shorts in sizes 30 to 44. Men's Wear... Street Floor Girls' Famous Brand Permanent Press . SLEEPWEAR Reg. 4.00 Pajamas Reg. 5,00 Long Gown Reg. 6.00 Duster $299 $2 29 $2 99 65% Dacron, 35% cotton blend permanent press girk' sleepwear by a famous maker. All first quality, beautifully detailed with lace and embroideries. Sizes 4 to 14. Charge Yours. Boys' Corduroy SLACK SET Completely washable cotton flannel sport shirt wHh corduroy boxer pants. Sizes 3U-6-8. Charge It. Boy's Wnor... SKond Floor »29 95 Sturdy construction, covered cushions, balls, cups and triangle. Super deluxe quality. 60" Table.........$49.95 die-America may low one of its staunchest Asian friends. Japanese leftists and nationalists are demanding return of control over the torrlorty left under American administration by the treaty, of 1951. The solution to this peoblem lies In a compromise which wID mollify the Japanese people and at the same time not jeopardiw Okinawa, which also serves as a protective shield to-Japaa./ The best possibility appears to be the formation of a joint study group which coidd, for example, establish a timetable for return of some of the smaller nonstrategic islands and which could investigate means of changing Okinawa’s status that would be in the best interests of Japanese-American friendship and security. WWW Feeling is running high in Japan over the islands which are strung out to the southwest of the main islands of Japan. The clash between police and 2,509 left-wing students jiist before Sato’s departure }s an Indication of their fervor. This force is combined with but delicate results are needed from the SatoJohnson talks. The main objective now should be to postpone the ftnal decision on Okinawa until after the Vietnam issue is settled. return of the toiaads and their more than one million Inhabitants to Japanew control. WWW With this pressure, positive Ttm PantlM PrMt !■ Or Sentences... New York Dailg News Is Arizona last stop for convicted murderers? At Phoenix, Arlz., a judge consigned to the gas chamber Robert Benjamin Smith, 19, who murder^ five persons in a Mesa, Ariz., beaifty college becaiue he wahted publicity. SSnith’s lawyer aays he will appeal the sentence, which of course ho has every right and duty to do. ' * * * Bat if Smith eveataally goes to the gas chmSdwr, It win be ae tom to society. It wlU be a gain, hepnw one killer will he made permanently unable to kin agate. This news story makes ns yearn fob the retnrp of the death penalty (via the electric chair, er hot sqnnt) for all teardarors hi New York State — and haw about seme hardy seals flghting for same In the INSLeglslatnrer THS yOXTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 24, 1967 A—7 EISUBE TIME GIFTS FOR THE HOME YOU LOVE Relaxing recliners are gifts for people you like - a haven for the tired business man, a respite from housekeeping chores. These from Hudson’s have multiple positions; smooth, easy operation; attractive covers. Our tables and chairs lead an easy life, too. For games, sewing, snacks, luncheons, they’re always ready, easy to set up, simple, to store. Add to the family’s happy Christmas and year’round pleasure with these gifts. Hudson’s Furniture - Downtown, Detroit, 9th floor; also Northland, Eastland, Westland and Pontiac. La-Z-Boy rocker rediner; headrest, concealed footrest. Black Naugahyde* or blue/green Scotchgard® treated texture. $194 La-Z-Boy rocker recliner with concealed footrest, comfortable roll-arm and tufted back. In easy-care black Naugahyde®. $171 High-back Barcalounger fits comfortably. Back, seat, leg-rest movement and footrest. Dark brown Naugahyde®. $209 Off-the-floor Barcalounger styled for contemporary decor. Concealed footrest In Scotchgard® treated gold texture. $149 A. Samsonite Monarch group. 30” table in tan or white vinyl, 8.50; chairs in black, tan or white vinyl; padded seats. Table, 8.50; chairs, 5.95 ca. B. Samsonite King Size group. 34” sq. table in tan or white, corresponding chairs. Padded backs and seats. Table, 11.95; chairs, 6*95 ea. C. Samsonite 40” Round Table group. Four appealing colors, easy to coordinate. Deepwood, tan,, white, green. Table, 18.95; chairs^ 12.95 ea. D. Samsonite Scanda group. Clean-lined Scandinavian style. Vinyl or fabric. 35” tables in 5 colors, 16.50; chairs in 9 colors, 10.95 ca. E. Samsonite Flaire group. Choice of fabric or vinyl covers. Fingertip telescopic leg locks. 35” table, 18.95; cushioned chairs, 12.95 ea. F. Samsonite Woodland group. 33” table in woodgrain, maple color, forest moss vinyl. Table, 13.95; chairs, woodgrain, floral vinyl, 9.50 ea. Christinas tiras at HXJDSOI>T’S A—8 aHE PONtlAC j*RESS. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 24. 1967 Paris Subways Get Luxurious Improvements "hdlo,dialing!” PARIS (ffl 'r- At its best, subway riding in Paris can be a pleasant affair. It’s not always at its best, and they’re working on that. There are still mobs lii rush hour, some stations are dark and odoriferous, and a lot of rolling stock shows badly its half-century of service. But the managers of the government-run Metro are pressing at improvements, and raising fares to pay for them. Today, on an ideal trip, a Pa^ risian can descend a wide stairway with white granite balustrade into a light, airy ticket room lined with tasteful window displays of modern furniture and Oriental cai^ts. His ticket may be either second class or first class (less crowded). Hie tunnel decor is new enameled aluminum paneling In, say, prairie green, autumn brown and yellow. Hie commuter sees clean, up-to-date advertising posters and perhaps museum pieces in glass cases. ART REPRODUCTIONS He may even bathe his eyes with paintings of Van Gogh, Dufy and other masters reproduced in brilliant back-lighted collages of splintered glass. A small box on the ceiling diffuses an aroma of pines — yes, a “perfumer." An air-conditioner wafts cool, filtered air over In rubber-tired silence, the two-tone blue and pastel yellow train arrives and stops with a faint moan of the brakes. Sometimes an intercom can be heard giving traffic instructions, as on an airliner. If there is rib regular red plastic-cushioned seat available, the passenger mi^t find a Jump-seat. If left standing, he takes a firm grip on a polished chrcone upright because the acceleration ban take him off his feet. When everyone is clear of the doors — a closed-circuit television monitor on the platfprm Short Strike Will Hurt AC FLINT (AP) — Union m bers at the General Motors AC Sparkplug division in Flint will stage a walkout this weekend in the latest of a series of short strikes against GM plants. A spokesman for United Auto Workers’ Local 661 said the walkout was called to protest short work week at some sections of the plant, excessive overtime at others, and the lack of settlement of local plant issues. The 2,800 uni(oi members will walH out Saturday and plan to resume work Monday. helps to verify this — jthe train is off with little more than whir of the electric motors. At the end of the trip, the rider may hear a clinking of hammers, but this only confirms that another station beauUfica-tion or modernization job is under way. ■k * * Then, confidently, he strides aboard a “moving sidewalk" or an escalaUn’ which delivers him all the way to the street, relaxed and ready to face his job or his wife. Well, perhaps. Hiese features exist on seg ments of the vast Paris system but few riders encounter all on the same trip. The perfumers and air-conditioners, for example, are experimental only in few stations. The majority of the system is still fi^uently stuffy and rattle-bang. PNEUMATIC TIRES Three of the 14 main lines have been placed on pneui tires, with two of them increasing capacity 25 to 30 per cent due to greater speed and longer trains — which also meant longer stations. Rubberization is too slow to continue, however, there ai ly a few hours per night for work on the tire runways, and the ancient trains must be replaced faster before they wear out completely. There is no more time for track alterations cars& stars Drop in and turn onl See Anierica& Kggest...The Detndt Auto Show. All the *68 cars and excitintf stars. Showii^ now...Cobo Hall,Detn^ Cobo Hall llvMl Sm Woody Henrnui. Bobby Vinton. Della Rocia. Tho Detroit Wheelf.Thc Debutenlea.The Tidal Wave^ Suge showt dally at 4A0 and 8:30 P. M. All that, and ’68 fan too. Domettlc can. Imports. cars& BaperlmenUl cart. Motor homoa. RooreaUonal vehicles for outdoor IMng. Plug a faghlon show every evening by Saks Fifth Avenue. AM for $1A0 aduhs, 50^ children under twelve. Can you afford to sUy home? — except possibly for one line on elevated rails. New steel-wheeled cars In production will be ^lmo$t as quiet as the rubber-tired jobs because of heavier insulation, officials say. All this costs money, of course. Fiares recently 8hot up for example, from 11 to 18 cents a ride when a book Of 10 first-class tickets is bought. PAYS FOR ITSELF But station beautification, progressing at about 30 a year, helps pay for'itself, officials say. The prettier the stations, the more advertisers are willing to pay for space. And presumaMy, the more pleasant it is to whbdc under the city’s traffic jams, the more often people will do it Michigan Ball You know the ttina. It goes: 1. DIall. 2. Dial the Area Code (if different from your own). 3. Diaithenumberyouwant Then say heilo. wiqiRiiwaik»M»^JcfENMBAItplaiic^BobM0Gtet^.8pccialOiuftSt^ 8cfffioMndM«fBcata'M»lacoloryiaN>Wy11iim.,No^.si79l*l;SBI81)(dlCBT. SEE THESE HOLIDAY SPECIAL ClFT SUGGESTIONS AT YOUR RCA VICTOR DEALER’S ■-----------— - ^------------------- Make ■ Color TV sot your spocial gift idoa-(top to bottom) Tho Dubois consolotto features Automatic Fine'nining. 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Mats TV 26820 Daeulagra —III WAYNE •2449 Mfekifau WHITMORE UKI Haaaki 9535 WMirnam Mb R WYANDOTTE Yraatssia Ragla 244IFirtir ypsilanti 211 MIefcIsta A*a. RCA VICTOR miT. *«»P—-Oatrall THE rONTlAG PRESS. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 24. 19G7 Turks Hold Edge on Cyprus?! u. Expels i for Dow Sit-in m W~ . be difficult to convince Police- CHAMPAIGN, 111. (AP)-Sev-faculty committee on discipline use in the Vietnam war and - By NICK LUDINGTfW' |the island Nov. 15, Turkey sawj Turkish Cypriots after the Nov ANKARA, Turkey (^) —jits chance. The Ahkara govem-Tarkey ^wed to U.S. pnasure ment played the incidents up at home and hianded Greets a stiff series of demands: , • Removal of Gen. George Grivas, the Greek military commander on the island. I • Return of arms seized from in 1964, but this time it believes it holds the high cards to deal with the Cyprus crisis in its own way. In Ankara’s view, Turkey never has been in quite so favorable a Dosition to press its demands, the Turks seem determined to make the most of their advantages and what they believe are disadvantages for the Gre^s Aside b-om an overwhelming superiority in military strength, Turkey is counting on a strong psychological'edge. Its government appears relatively stable and the people appear united in support of the government’s stand on Cyprus. Looking at their Greek neighbors, uneasy partners of TUrkey in the North Atlantic Treaty Organization now but bitter enemies during most of their history, the Turks see a reversed picture. INCREASING OPPOSITION Ankara accepts as hard fact that the military dictatorship set up in Greece last April 21 faces increasing opposition at home and has become steadily more unpopular aboard. Fbr rhany Turks the Cyprus Issue is a continuation of territorial conflict that began when Turkish warrior-nomads of the 13th century swarmed out of| central Asia and grabbed at the decaying Greek Byzantine empire. With the capture of Constantinople in 1454, Greece became part of the Ottoman Empire. Four centuries later, when that empire was tottering, Greece broke away. After World War I, wjth Turkey weakened by defeat at the hands of the Allies, Greek troops occupied western Turkey. They were driven out by the late Kemal Ataturk, father of modern Turkey. PART OF OLD EMPIRE Cyprus is one part of the old Turkish empire that never belonged to Greece, though 80 per cent of the island’s 600,000 residents are of Greek descent. The Turks reject the contention that Cyprus should be part of Greece because most Cypriots speak that language, especially since the island is only 40 miles off the Turkish coast. ★ ★ w But it was pro-Greek agitation, that finally forced the British to abandon Cyprus. The 'Turks demanded partition to give the is-| land’s 100,000 Turkish Cypriots, freedom from Greek domina-j tion. They finally accepted a compromise that granted the Turkish minority a certain measure of autonomy under the Greek majority and a veto in key areas of legislation. When the Greek Cypriot president of Cyprus, Archbishop Makarios, announced plans in December 1963 to take away those special rights, the two Cypriot communities went to war. THREATENED INTERVEN'nON Turkey threatened to intervene then. But it was a period of shaky coalition government and the United States pressured Ankara not to settle the issue by force. A U.N. peace force moved to the island to end the civil war. At the same time, Turkey charges, Greece began clandestine troop movements to Cyprus. The Turks believe 12,000 Greek soldiers now are on the Island illegally. Under the 1960 agreement making Cyprus independent, Greece Is allowed 950 soldiers there and Turkey 650. When new fighting flared on 15 fighting. • Payment of ^compensation for the 25 Turkish Cypriots killed in the fighting and for property damaged. • Withdrawal of any Illegal Greek troops on the island. Grivas has been recalled to Athens and it is believed he will The Turks consider this the big break. To strengthen their hand for the other demands, they have created the impression of readiness to land their own ftoops on the island. faculty committee on discipline man D. R. Taubner that women en students have been expelled headed by Prof. Arno Hill, are tile wealer sex. :from the University of Illinois! The university, adhering to .★ * W for fMurticipating in a demonstra-its custom, did not announce the When he went to a woman’s Won Oct. 25 against a talent re- names of the students, apartment to check on a com- cruiter from Dow Chemical Co.' The action was taken as a re-plaint that the occupant was > ★ > * suit of a sit-in in a campus bating up a neighbor, the oc-l* Another undergraduate and building directed against a Dow cupant didn’t even wait to find four graduate students were recruiter who had come to the out what he wanted. She opened placed on probation. university to conduct job inter- the door and floored Officer, * * * views. Teubner with a right to tiie jaw. > The action was taken by a Dow manufactures napalm for use in the Vietnam war and, for this reason, has been the target of several protest demonstrations. Alfred A. Knopf, publisher and a 1912 graduate of Columbia College, received the 1966 Alexander Hamilton Medal, highest award of the Association of the Alumnj of Columbia College. Hunter's Shot Kills Boy, 14 PETOSKEY (AP) - A 14-year-old boy was mortally wounded by a hunter’s stray bullet yesterday as he rode in' a car driven by his father. 'Tm shot dad, you better hur-| ry up,” police quoted James L. Sobleski, but by the time he cduld be driven into Petos-key, an officer said, the boy was dead. ! Police sild the father, Leo M. Sobleski, was driving on 6 rural road jusf northeast, of Petoskey at the time of the mishap. The hunter who fired the fatal shot could not be found, police said. HmEEUNc SHOP (HIU W eiFT IIEil!! FREE LAYAWAY NO MONEY DOWN FREE DELIVERY EASY CREDIT Tappan 2 Oven Gas Range »339** laiokt like ■ built-in Clork-Cuiilrolled Eyr-I.evel Oven. Huld-O-Malir Burner Coniroli, Electric Clock and Tinier. Chuote from While, Copiiertone, or Avocado Green. ENJOY COLOR TY! NOW! TONITE! 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HOUSEKEEPING Phone FE 4-1553 OF PONTIAC OPEN MONDAY and FMDAY *TIL 9 P,M, IONA Mixer and Bowl Set *14*® Mixer it puoranteod for S yeara—alMi detacheo for an a “portahle.** Set Ineladat 3*«peed Mixer, Stand, and 51 West UI19III A—10 THfi PONTIAC PKBSS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBEtl 24, 1967 ''life Churches Sway on Apartheid South African Clergy Softens Race Stands JOHANNESBURG, South Af lica (fl — The Dutbh Reform Church, which backs the gov-1 ernment’s policy of apartheid, is gaining members. The Church of England, which in the main tL fights racial segregation, is los-^Ingthem. Other factors figure in church membership, of course, but the Rt. Rev. Leslie E. Stradling, Anglican bishop of Johannesburg, says; “The tide of opinion In South Africa is running more strongly in favor of the government.” Recently Anglican'lay leaders In Cape Town rejected a proposal to teach that apartheid and racial segregation are itiorally evil. That drew a compliment from Prime Minister Balthazar; J. Vorster. j "This shows how we have progressed,” Vorster said. “These people are probably' not government supporters and it is common knowledge that the Anglican clergy generally displayed a hostile attitude toward South Africa.” CONFIRMATION CANDIDATES The defeated Anglican resolution proposed that all confirmation candidates and Sunday School children be taught that separate racial development is morally evil. The Anglicans are of the same communion as Episcopalians. Canon C. T. Wood of Cape Town said the genuine Anglican attitude toward apartheid is “How can you do such a thing to your fellow man?” The canon said that one rea-aon the House of Laity turned down the motion was that it did not want to impose a point of, view on the.children of parents| who back segregation. He added! that rejection of the resolution taught the more ardent fighters against apartheid that it cannotj be defeated by declarations ofi high moral indignation but oidy| by slow, persistent exposure of! suffering attributable to segre-j fation. . Many Anglican preachersr have for years crusaded against/ apartheid, but lately they have found that some communicants as well as some of their leaders are not so cool toward it. READJUST THINKING The archbishop of Cape Town, the Rt. Rev. Robert S. Taylor, is trying to smooth over differences among Anglicans. He has urged communicants to readjust their Christian thinking and prevent humiliation or suffering. “South Africans should hang their heads in shame over incidents of apartheid injustuce,” he said. “It (s impossible to estimate the amount of human suffering caused by government acts of racial legislation against the black man. It is always the economically less privileged who suffer.” * ★ ★ Archbishop Taylor told of children humiliated because of their uncertain racial origin -- they were neither white nor colored according to government measuring sticks. He said colored fishermen were deprived of their livelihood, people were herded into separate racia areas, families were split due to legislation and those who opposed the government’s racial policy were banned, restricted or deported. “Colored,” Is word used here for people of mixed blood. Supporting the Anglican Church to varying degrees on racial issues are Methodists, Presbyterians and Roman Catholic worshipers. Differences of opinion arise among them as to the most effective way to meet the growing influence of the pro-government Dutch Church. LESS FORCEFUL Some Catholic, Presbytenaii and Methodist churchmen while opposing segregation and the support given it by the Dutch Church, shy away from the more forceful antiapartheid stance of Anglicans. The Dutch Reform Church is the country’s largest with 1.8 million white adherents. It reports its w h i t e following has grown more than 200,000 in the last 10 years. The Anglican Clinrch reports a white membership roll of 390.000 and a drop of 30,000 white worshipers in the same period. The Dutch Reform Church also claims the largest colored Congregation, over 450,000. About 500,000 blacks are in this denomination. It receives a government subsidy of 03.5 million i a year and has spent 06.QZ million on mission work in nen-wbMe areas in the last year. J >.wi.ctvissma ^umiture \ft~ To Capture the Heorts of All Children ■..'1 "Twinkles Will Be On the Premises 7 Days a Week, From Now Till Christmas MOII05Y-FRI04Y 10-8 SATURDAY 10-6 SUNDAY 12-6 .d Only 6 Inches Tali and ALIVE! 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See this very unusual value now! Take advantage of these savings on the kind of bedroom you hove always wanted. 7-PIECE WALNUT DINING ROOM ENSEMBLE Set includes Buffet, Hutch, and Table which expands to full size, plus 4 Chairs. Corvtemporory styling. Women who know fashion will recognize this value. The complete set will speak so well f6r yoju as hostess and homemaker. These seven pieces — Buffet, Hutch, Table and Four Choirs^Ve now specially priced. PRICES SLASHED THROUGH THE HOLIDAYS! Our fumitur. een.t.t. of •Keifino fa.hiont In nomn brand m.ichanditn. Our fnrmt wi budgnt or wn wi I olio offnr 120 duy> tom* at eoihl Your ordor will bo dolhrorod fioo of c Tk Thoy will «»» out tho rod corpot wkon Ihoy moko your. will bo if tho morchondito dootn't plooto tho folki ot homo, wo will choorfully rofund you i ocquaintof Shop ot Colombn't Furnituro Mort and bo totitfiod. adfuttod to fit your in our von by our and our policy Step by ond got 536 N. PERRY STREET Across Glenwood from Kmort-Everybody Welcome! THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 24. 1967 A—11 OPEN DAILY 10-16 ; Sunday 11-' FRIDAY, SATURDAY M-16 MARAUDER* RIFLE 5*96 Our Reg. 7.96 2 Days Only The M-16 Marauder (oei where the action'a the hotteatl 50 rounda of real aound! Rifle meaaurea 32” Iodie addhaa aimulated wood-grain atock and excluaive Marauder Diviaion emhlenu Musical Typewriter Musicai Workbench ^ AM 04 OurR,g.4.S7 d»09 ^£«Jue«tional. ^9^ Tools inoludecL THE BEE SAYS 474 Our R»g. 5.33 See V aay. Leanij alphabet THE FARMER SAYS 474 OurRrg. S.33 Ser 'n Say. Barnyard animali IRONING BOARD DUeount Pricu gm m Board, iron, 4 oS pad, cover. BIG BURGER GRILL 8.96 (Jrilla with onO ordinary light bulb! Set complete with 12 “Add-waler” luixea, aalt ahaker with aalt, mixing bowl, bun inolda, apatula and apuon. Funt LTL MBS nSSV MU 10.96 Our Reg. 12.96 2 Day$ Only Feed iier, then walk ae kieka all by harMlf.., crying. JoM Ilka a real LUGGAGE SETS Our Rrg. 3.96 Hat box, train raae, auit caae. MUSIC BDX IRON |94 Our Reg. 2.27 Pull toy abo. I 2 to 3. SNOOPY SNIFFER 236 STORY CAMERA |44 Our Reg. 1.96 8 alidea tell picture altiry. MAGNUS ELECTRIC ORGAN Our Reg. 2.83 Solid wood body. Savel GOLDILOCKS HOUSE CREATIVE COASTER ^44 Our Reg. 2.97 Storybook toy, pull toyl Funt Our Reg. 5.96 — _ Inrludaa hnflding 44 blorluk TUGGYTOOTER Our Reg. 2.97 16.66 Omit Reg. 17.96 2 Days Only Specially deaigned aixty Hcs-omb! 25 full-aixe treble keya, 6 chord keya, uiuair book, high-iiupu(!l poly oabinet KMART SPECIAL! SHOO FLY CIRCUS PONY ROCKER Our Reg. 6.96 5.95 2 Day Only Splinter-free wood aeat, tray foot reat, tubular chrome rockera and spring. Play balls, safety scoop. 32x IflixlT.” SALE KENNER’S SPRIOGRAPH DRAWING SET Our Reg. 2.93 2.33 2 Day Only So easy with the perfect mesh of wheels, rings and racks. You hold the pen, actually draw the pattern. LIFE>LIKE 32” WALKING DDLL 5.55 Our Reg. 6.66 — 2 Day» Includes 3 different'dressesl near um oou olotnii ... ui KENNER’S GREAT EASY-BAKEOVEN 8.96 Our Reg. 9.97 - 2 Days Bakes with 2 ordinary light bulha. Safe, quick, easy! UnHaU •wnlHy - maw mW !• UsnUn SWINGING CRADLE FOR BABY DOLL 4.57 Our Reg. 4.93 - 2 Dayt White enameled wood. llAi” Xl3”x20”. Vinyl covered. FISHER-PRICE FERRIS WHEEL WITH MUSIC BOX Our Reg. 4.44 3.86 2 Day. Only When the music box is wound, ferris wheel revolves to the caliope sounds of “In the (>ood Old Suniniertiine.*' KMART SPECIAL! SEE ’N SAY MR. MUSIC SAYS* Our Reg. S.33 4.76 2 Days Only Happy-colored conductor leads 12 different instruments including clarinet, trumpet and guitar. Saval 14’/t” CUSTOM Steering Wheel 8.88 Our Reg. 9.97 — 2 Day Tbree spoke "T* Wheel. Steel widi vinyl trim. MDOOR/OUTDOOR TREE LIGHTS 3.57 DIseoMMi Prtc - Charge U 50 light sal with push-in raplaeaabU bulbs. Add-on plaeaablo bulbs. Cbarfs CLEAR OR COLORED MINIATURE UGHTS 222 Our Reg. 2.74-2 Day 35.light sirin|^of pnsh-in ro- LOVELY WREATHS FOR CHRISTMAS 4.44 DUcouat Price - Charge Mi Choice of holly and authentic looking pine wreaths. PORTABLE CONSOLE 5.88 DiscoMiil Price — Charge It CHROME PLATED HAND SPOTLIGHT 4.77 Our Reg. 5.97 - 2 Day Sealed beam hand spotlidiU 12 holu 10* cord. POINSEHIAOR MISTLETOE TRAILER 23^En. DItrount Price - Charge It .... Hotly Trailara.....31o Peinsottia Plantars.IIo MOTORIFIC® RACERIFIC Our Reg. 7.96 2 Days Only 6.66 Tlie shorter the route, the faster the race . . . and cars reully burn ariimiil this Wildcat track hitting banked curves, rirvalcil i.y.pHNscs ciirckpoiiits in tiieir race against time. Car included. AUTO VACUUM CLEANER 8.88 Our Reg. 9.97 - 2 Day f- AUTHENTIC LOOKING GIANT POINSETTIA Discount Price - Charge It 20” poinaettia. Red, white. KMART SPECIAL! CHRISTMAS ALBUM DUeount Price - Chnrge It Includes popular iiiitriimental and vocal aibiinis. .Save at kniart! HOUDAY CANDLES, GLITTER-GLOLITES Reg. 92c - 2 Day Festive tree, cylinder candles. Choice of “glo” lites. GLENWOOD PLAZA CORNER NORTH PERRY AT GLENWOOD A—12 THE PONTIAC PRKSS, FRIDAY, NOVEMB;feR 24, 1967 Joanie Keeps in Stpp With Classmotes BRAINTREE, Mass. W -*| Sixteen-year-old Joanie Hyland checked her blue sweater andi gray skirt costume, thenj stepped off to the sound of the' band with other girls from the I Braintree High School drill' team at halftime ceremonies of the Braintree-Milton thanksgiving Day football game. Joanie kept in position by counting the exact number of steps needed to go one way, then the exact number of steps needed to go another way, then the exact number of steps she should move in still another direction before turning again. During the difficult maneuvers her teammates whispered directions to her. The pretty teen-ager needs a little extra help from the other girls—she has been blind since birth. “Joanie has been with the drill team all this year,” said! her mother, Mrs. John F. Hyland, “but I never go to see her] —I’d be very nervous if she| goofed. But she does have a lot of fun.” DAILY PRACTICE Joanie practices with her teammates every day after school but still finds time to keep on the school honor roll with a full load of college preparatory courses. She studies braille textbooks and takes notes on typewriter like machine which forms braille symbols on special paper. She takes her tests and does her homework on a regular typewriter and even goes to the blackbovd to do problems in s>he s a very girl,” her mother said, “and she finds blindness no handicap. In fact she often jokes about it.’ Joanie once got into trouble in Junior high school when she climbed onto the roof of the building. “I wanted to see what It looked like,” she said with a Mrs. Hyland said Mends often eaU after a football to tell her how well Joanie performed with the drill team. "I think the best compliments come from the people who don’t know her,” Mrs. Hyland said, “because they don’t noUce anything different about her when she’s marching with the girls. They think she’s just Uke everyone else." Spraying Start Decision Due LANSING (UPI) - The Michigan Department of Agriculture plans to decide today when to begin spraying a section of the state with a controversial pes-ticide that conservationists claim can do “irreparable damage and harm to. fish and wildlife.” B. Dale Ball, director of the Michigan Department of Agriculture, said the spraying decision would be made today. But he said weather conditions might prevent the spraying entirely. The Michigan Surpeme Coort declined Wednesday to hear an appeal by a New York-based group the Enveronment Defense Fund (EDF), to forbid the spraying of a section of lamf in Berrien County, an area in southwestern Michigan along the Michigan4ndiana border. The fund, a naturalists group. Is protesting the use of Dieldrin or DDT, to fight the Japanese beetle gnd Dutch elm disease BoUi a federal district court In Gfai rand Rapids and the Michi-gan Court of Appeals earlier had refused to grant restraining orders against the spraying before the EDF went to the state Supreme Court. MERITORIOUS BASIS Handing down its decision Wednesday, the high court said the EDF failed “to persaude the court that they have a meritorious basis for appeal.” Victor J. Yannacone, attorney for the group, said he would have to study a possible attempt to seek action from the U.S. Supreme Court. Fire Fighters Vote Open Fri. and S^t Till 9 .. . Sunday 12 to 6 P.M. relax/recline and vibrate! 'please be seated' with a famous 'stratolounger' or 'berkline' recliner ^89»dJ99 A. 3 chairs in one! 'Sfrotolounger' new >r-rocker-recliner For sitting, snoozing, TV watching and reclining . . . however you relax, this man-size 3-way chair is perfect for you. This Vibrator Rocker-Recliner has a foam seat and back. Upholstered in glove-soft Vinelle for easy care and looks like leather. Huge color choice. Sale $99 B. 'Berkline' mon-size vibrator recliner RELAX WITH VIBRATION Ease the tensions . . . soothe your nerves ... in this man-sized reclining chair. UL approved vibrator goes to work at three different speeds. Choice of colors in carefree vinyl. Sale ^S9 no money down $5 o month OrE3iTI3iTG-SSXiE 227 sq. in. color consolette Now Only 469 95 Here is delightful proof that quality Color TV need not be expensive. This compoct consolette proves o surprisingly good "mixer" for ony. decor. Equally oppeoling is the budget-pleasing price—typical of RCA Victor. Stereophono contemporary consolette with fm/om radio Sale 118.00 You'll bt thrilled to discover that anything sd compact con sound so beoufiful. Olympic has incorporated mony exciting features into this new space soving consolette including AM and FM radio, automatic 4-speed stereo phono and ocousticolly bolonced four speaker stereo system. The Lyric is cabineted in genuine walnut wood with a rich Hi-lustr# finish. 227 sq. in. color consolette ' Very Special 419 95 The BRAYTON — Masterpiece console COLOR TV in handsome fur- niture styled conternporory styling in 227 so Walnut Veneers, Giant zz/ square inch picture. Transistorized UHF Tuner for excellent COLOR reception. Olympic no mohey down up to 2 yoort to pay DETROIT (AP)-The Detroit! Firefighters Association re-> elected Earl Berry as its presl-j dent Wednesday and returned! what It termed exaouUve board to oUice. PEOPLES PONTIAC OUTFITTING CO Telegraph & Square L^e Roads Mirada Mila Shappkig Cantar ALSO DOWHTOWN • WESTSIDE • NORTHWEST . EASTSIDE • ANN ARIOR • NRT HURON To Sing With Orchestra Pontiac Tuesday Musicale Chorus will sing Vaughn Williams’ “Magnificat” and Tchaikowsky’s “Nutcracker Suite,’ with the Pontiac symphony Orchestra. The concert is slated for 8:30 p.m. Tues- SOLOIST day in Pontiac Northern High School Auditorium. presents a concert at Pontiac &tate Hospital and is featured at the state convention of Federated Music Clubs. Other performances are given on request. Soloists for the “Magnificat” will be Alice Engram, alto, and Roger Welton, flutist. Mrs. Ferdinand Gaensbauer is chOTus director. The orchestra will be conducted by Felix Resnick. * ★ Three Instrumental selections will be performed by the orchestra: “L’Arle-sienne Suite No. 2” by Bizet; “Romanza for String Orchestra” by Riegger and excerpts from Leonard Bernstein’s “West Side Story.” The Tuesday Musicale Chorus was estabUshed in 1924. It is made up mainly of club members but anyone qualified may join. * * * * Voices range from fine soloists to untrained singers, but nearly all of the current 50 members have had previous choral experience, according to Mrs. Gaensbauer. She says “The chorus provides women in the area an opportunity to continue musical growth and knowledge, relaxation through singing and friendship and fellowship through a mutually shared activity.” EXPERIENCED DIRECTOR Director of the chorus for 17 years, Mrs. Gaensbauer has had extensive choral work, including training with Fred Waring and Robert Shaw. She obtained her B.A. and B.M. with a piano major, from Parsons College in Iowa and her master’s in music education from Columbia University. Annually, the chorus performs in two Tuesday Musicale Club programs. Alice Engram is a native of Detroit and was graduated from Hillsdale College. Following studies at Juillard School of Music in New York, she toured the United States on oratorio and concert engagements. ★ ★ ★ She was with the Philadelphia Civic Opera Company and New York aty Center before coming to Oakland University four years ago. She has been on the faculty of Oak- land’s Meadow Brook School of Music for the past three years and is director-producer of the Birmingham Musicale Opera Workshop. FLUTKT Roger Welton is a charter member of the Pontiac Symphony. He obtained his bachelor’s degree in music from Michigan State University and his master’s from Indiana University. On the staff of Pontiac School District for the past 10 years, he is instructor in instrumental music at Pontiac Northern High Tickets for Tuesday’s concert are obtainable at the door. Cinderella Ball Funds Supply Buses, Clothing By SIGNE KARLSTROM Mrs. Joseph E. Risdon, president of the Women’s Committee of the ’TB and Health Society, reported at the association’s annual meeting recently that $37,-000 was realized from the Cinderella Bail. This money will go to buy more mobile X-ray buses and clothing for the children at the May bury Sanatorium, as well as other equipment. * ★ ★ Attending the meeting frqm this area were: Mrs. Lewis D. Fykse who is social chairman, Mrs. John D. Richardson Jr. past president, and Mesdames: WofliM -Section THE PONTIAC PRESS FRIDAY, .NOVEMBER 24. 1967 B-1 Charles L. Bricker, M. M. Burgess, John D. Daniels, Lloyd H. Diehl, Jr., John E. Jennings, J. P. Judd, Herman E. Reichart, Lynn A. Townsend. ★ ★ ★ Newly elected officers are Mrs. Risdon, serving her second year as president, and Mrs. William R. Shaw as executive vice president. Mesdames Earl S. MacPherson and Irvin Hermanoff were welcomed in as new members of the association. GLOBE-CIRCLERS John W. Kinsey, president of the Circumnavigators Club, has announced that their 11th annual dinner will take place next Friday at the Mauna Loa Restaurant in Detroit. It will be a black tie affair with dancing following the dinner. Ml-s. Kinsey, who is in charge of decorations, promises something very unusual in the form of shell necklaces from Tahiti and fresh flowers from Hawaii. Among those who have made tions are: Mr. and Mrs. Edwin 0. George, Mr. and Mrs. Vern D. Hanna, Mr. and Mrs. J. Dewey Hawthorne, the Henry C. Johnsons, and Mr. and Mrs. Harold P. Meloche. Others are Mr. and Mrs. Cecil E. Nickel, Mr. and Mrs. John L. Thornhill, Dr. and Mrs. Thomas Y. Watson, Mr. and Mrs. Charles L. Wilson, Jr., the Edward S. Wellocks, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas C. Van De^ift and Jack A. Frost. George F. Pierrot will present the “Michigan Recognition Awards.” Six members of Pontiac Tuesday Musicale chorus prepare for their group's appearance with the Pontiac Symphony Tuesday at Pontiac Northern High School. Front, left to right, are Mesdames: Fred V. Rowe of East Berkshire Drive, James C. Clarke of Holly, and David L. NaH of South Telegraph Road. .In the back row, left to right, stand Mesdames Robert V. Buck of Wenonah Drive, Fred L. Puskas of Edgewood Drive, and Con-■ rad J. Code of Goldner Street. Girl Is Unhappy 'Escape' Is Bad Basis for Marriage By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: I am a 16-year-old girl who has p very unhappy home life. My folks fight all the time. ’They have been fighting ever since I can remember. They treat me like dirt and I want I to tell you, it is miser-able and rotten. My boyfriend, Denny, is 17 and he comes from a home that’s even rot-tener if there is such a word. His folks not only ABBY his father beats his mother. Anyway, Denny has been crazy about me ever since eighth grade and we are thinking of getting married when he graduates from high school in June. If the army doesn’t get him, he hopes to work days at a garage and go to trade school for mechanics at night. He’s real good with cars and motors. Should I quit school and get a job when Denny graduates? I’d have only a year to go, and could finish later. We wouldn’t have much money, but we wouldn’t need much, and at least we'd have each other. I need advice. Thank you. DENNY’S GIRL DEAR GIRL: Don’t use marriage as an excuse to get out of the house — no matter how “miserable” it is. I urge you to finish high school while you have the chance. The “later” you mention rarely comes. Children usually do, instead. ★ ★ ★ DEAR ABBY: Can a girl get pregnant from kissing with her mouth open? Wondering DEAR WONDERING: Not if she opens It ta Bay NOt DEAR ABBY: There Is only one answer for HAMBURGER PUSS whose tender face was constantly irritated hy her boyfriend’s rough beard. She should ask him to SHAVE AGAIN! 1 had the same problem with my boyfriend (now my husband of 18 years). Old cactus chin used to tear up my face during those smooching sessions: Now, when I whisper, “Are you going to shave tonight, dear?” it sends him flying for his razor with flashing eyes. I wouldn’t trade my heavy-bearded man for the most handsome peach-fuzzed face in the world. ALICE ★ ★ ★ How has the world been treating you? Unload your problems on Dear Abby, care of The Pontiac Press, Dept. E-MO, P.O. Box 9, PonUac, Mich. MOM. Eat a personal, unpublished reply, inclose a self-addressed, stamped envelope. Today's Woman Music Highlights Life By JANET ODELL Pontiac Press Women’s Editor “They also serve who only stand and But Margery Bennett (Mrs. Joseph L.B.) of Illinois Avenue not only stands on the sidelines of every musical event in Pontiac — she cheers on the participants with her applause and her enthusiasm. Young people presenting musical programs — and for that matter, any individual putting on a concert —have no better friend than Mrs. Bennett. ★ • * ★ She has always been interested in music. Before her marriage to the now-retired engineer from Pontiac Motor Division, Joseph L. B. Bennett, she taught music in the Pontiac schools. She has raised her own family of three sons and now enjoys a flock of grandchildren who live in the area. She could sit back and relax,-feeling that others could do the work now. She and her husband like to travel. These are their leisure years. Leisurg? As you would expect, she Is a dedicated member of Pontiac Tuesday Musicale. She Is on the board of directors of the Pontiac Symphony Orchestra. She’s an active member of Pon- tiac-Oakland Town Hall and a worker in the Women’s Auxiliary to Pontiac General Hospital. As corresponding secretary of the latter she performs the task with her usual efficiency and willingness. At the hospital she works in the gift shop. •HRELESS WORKER But over and above her contributions within the framework of an organization, Mrs. Bennett is a tireless worker for better music— for more music—for encouragement of young talent. She’s always pleading someone else’s cause. Most parents, after their children have graduated from high school, breathd a relieved sigh and vow they’ll never go to another school musical event. Margery Bennett is the exception. ★ ★ ★ You’ll always find her in the audience. Furthermore, she takes the time and effort afterward to tell the performers that she liked what they did. Or tell their parents how she enjoyed the concert. She’s a one-woman cheering section. When approached about this article, she demurred, saying “Others are more worthy.” But we wrote it anyway and nominate her “Today’s Woman,” an itnportant individual in the cultural life of our community. GENUINE TOP GRAIN LEATHER CHAIRS 5*? *• ***® "*«•» ihouxhtful gift of all! Our handsome, maseuline leather chair with tuned back, curved arms and deep seat cushion has all the comfort a man would want in his relaxing chair. Select in Brown, Spruce Green or Red. Matching ottoman availahle. SELECT NOW FOR CHRISTMAS DELIVERYl $229 SPECIALLY PRICED Open Thursday, Friday, Monday Evenings 'til 9 CONVENIENT BUDGET T RMS 1680 S. Telegraph Rd. near Orchard Lake Roail Free Parking Front and Side of Store - FE 2-8348 r-- THE PONTIAC PEBSS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 1867 ROMANCE m BLUE HiIr kiv^ly rmil)«in iW rirpinrr of i:avaMrr with « »iiwr1. new mmif wf im ■ liTtfiiliriil rim. ArmiiR »( Ruin liink. mill *>11^ ftnlier fftihanri* iIiIk mir nf iIh* imM 5281 Dixie Hwy., 623-0911 Joined Parents on Anniversary !hie William Youngs of Mace-day Lake Road have recently reftirned from Fort Pierce, Fla., where they Joined her parents in celebration of their SOth wed-dlnif anniversary. > Mr. and Mrs. William D. May, formerly of Pontiac, were mari ried Nov. 4,1917. • Three other daughters, and MISSES' AND CUSTOM SIZES SUITS Smartly styled two- and three-piece •ntemblet and walking suitt in junior and misses sixes COATS Designer and original fur trimmed and untrimmed fine woolen coats in misses' and petite sizes. Jacobson's 336 W. AAaple Birmingham Opan Thun, and Frii Evanlngt Til 9 THE FokTlAC PRESS, FRIDAY. y0Vi;MBER 2X I96t This Mother's 'Workout' Is Never Done A football game can be a real I, couldnlt see it. A game is Some of the stuff they egged » l ^ team was trying to clinch the do things with their children. championship of the Northwest But it was nice, all this to- a"** them for 7“ “ ;e^ minor changes, catholic League Second division, getherness. intentional cruelty to ballplay- here ts Irma Factone’s story.) whatever that is. * * ★ ers Smd eh /icatim For men who want the right time of day, give him the Astronout : Accutron for HIS Christmar, hour, if you want him to think of I you every minute olter Chriiimus Day. The unvarying watch { . . . Remember, it's guaranteed up to one minute a month. from $125 I 4'hetrfgf • l.ayatrtiy Mirhifgon IhutkanI JEWELER DOWNTOWN PONTIAC - CCWNER C HURON AND SAGINAW STRUTS M J 03»4 The game was on and the Just to show you: They yelled, colors exciting. The other team “Kill ’em. Bust ’em. That’s our wore green and white uniforms; custom”; or they’d get even ours wore red and white. Very madder and scream, “Harder, Christmasy. harder, hit them again.” I asked my son if this was on All very ungentlemanly. N 0 purpose with the hoUdays and way at all to treat the visiting all soon coming up. He said, team. For goodness sake, Ma, don’t -j-jjg teams were so mixed up. yo^know anything? Watch the-n,ey couldn’t decide which goal post each side was supposed to game. But it was confusing. Those score from. One quarter they’d give us one side, then they’d players were fighting over that ball all the time. They kept los-change their mind the next You could see they didn’t ★ * * i know how to share. They ■ wouldn’t let any one guy keep' It wayeally the visiting team his mitts on the ball for himself j’®*'®' for awhile. Very impolite. pany and should ve kept t h e post they got in the first place. | ^ u . u When our cheerleaders yelled,! Then those bloodthirsty cheer- “touchdown, touchdown, w e^ leaders. They were something want a touchdown! Over there,"‘ else! At first, I though them and they’d point to the right normal and mild looking, but it post .. . well, that’s when) Ii turned out^they were very ag- k„ew for sure where ours was.j Our team should’ve listened, too.) We’d have made many more points. I Then there was this lady on our side — she had her son play--ing out there. She kept beating her brains out yelling at us to cheer louder. I cooperated, but I was getting hoarser by the sec-! ond. I gressive types. Drawers are often an organizational disaster area even for the most fastidious homemaker but new instant drawer organizers from Rubbermaid turn disaster to order in drawers throughout the home. Instant drawer organizers divide and conquer the clutter of silverware, cutlery, kitchen utensils, bath and hair supplies, cosmetics, jewel- ry, sewing notions, tools — all the items that seem to make orderly drawers only a dream. The box-like organizers are available in three sizes — 5” x 9”, 6” 3: 9” and 3" X 15". They easily interlock making it possible for the homemaker to create her own organization combinations. Available in department stores. B-3 Club Announces New Members Three women were accepted as new membe^ when the Pontiac Women's Club met Monday in the Boy’s Club of Pontiac, Inc. They are: Mrs. D. J. Mogg, Mrs. Ervin Christie and Mrs. Joseph Pollina. ★ ★ A guest, Mrs. Roadley Silkey was present when Boys Club director, Cressey Larson, spoke before the group. * * ★ _ Hostesses for this meeting were: Mrs. W. H. Eustice, Mrs. S. M. Pierson, Mrs. Guy Bev-ington, Mrs. Alfred Danton, Mrs. Alfred Coles and Mrs. Wilbert Colwell. FIOOE COTESim I 32i4 Dl«l« Hwy . OR 3.130« Short Hairstyle Most Flattering to Many Faces ^KINNEY'S SHOES t'nr Ihr Wkoir Familr PONTIAC MALL MIRACLE MILE Short hair is extremely flat- My son said for sure that she j * ... terine to a variety of f ace'^*'® 8°ing t® get a Junior Var-;"^®*' 0"e and Auxiliary met re-chanos frnm r^rfar.* n«ai fn *®**®‘‘ foT. raising cheers. cently at the Legion Home, shapes from perfect oval to boys liked to‘ * * w square It has the added ap-to old ladies.) | officers were elected as fol- peal of minima^ upkeep. ^OULD...?” lows: Mrs. Carl Shindorf, presi- After shampooing and partial Hrvino nomh vniir hair into Goldcn Rule all right. They and William Jens, senior and JK Then 5 sSes of ringlets '^®T® junior vice presidents; Mrs. place, inen, a series ot ringlets g^t players were falling to the . ^ . ,,, should be formed. Bangs and “jgbt and left. ^y®*"® chaplain, and Mrs. hair at the nape of the neck odd men dressed in black and Harold R. Schingeck, treasurer, can then be held in place by ,ybite convict stripes yelled, * ★ ★ **^nlilA^h^ir ie anH oi.riaH “Hcaalty! Penalty!” This made Others were Mrs. Allan Her-Once hair IS taped and curled, gitjjgp other «.p and Mrs I.en Mineweaser a light application of hair spray j ^g,, “e, and Mrs. Leo Mineweaser drer the ‘>®®®“®® ®“>- cheerleadL -------------------------- dryer the finished style can be booing. hour^^ ^ ^y at me Make miniature Christmas When ironing lightly starched To keep children from losing smail girl dresses or bonnets, one of their mittens, try sewing skip the tiny lace trimmings, half of a dress snap to one When the whole garment is glove, and the other half to the ironed, shape and stretch the other. Then the gloves may be Barracks Forty-Nine of World ®Hll damp lace with your fin-snapped together when they are removed. Unit Announces Recent Election Clarkston Appliance &** Furniture Co. 7113 N. Main St. Clarlcthm 625-3S99 Pre-Inventory CLEARANCE Everything Must Go... To determine if a concrete though. Especially when I trees for Christmas table dec-yelled out to our player, “Watch orations or favors. Several days floor is drv enoueh to oaint '^*’®''® ^"“ ''® bntterfing ahead of time take pine-cones nippi. nf linnionm If turn He Said it w3s fumbliHg, Hot squarc of wood. Then sprinkle dlvR nn ®P'"lng- So what? The ball still grass seed in the scales of the days, no dampness shows un- ,,as dropped. cones and set in a pan of wa- But it turned out right in the ter. By keeping the cones end. Our team won, 14 to 12. I moist, the grass-seed will could have told them this would sprout green in all directions, happen and saved all the fuss, making lovely miniature trees A mother knows these things. . . when you are ready for them. der the linoleum, the concrete is dry enough. A Vg/(^ 2-Day Sale Ladies’ Fur Trim Coats Regular to $125.00 Ladies’ Untrimmed Coats Regular to $65.00 All Items Gift Boxed Free U$e a Lion Charge With Option Tennt Bare your neckline as low as you dare, with The most beautiful decollete bra in the world. Deep plunging front and back with straps set wide at the shoulders, to stay concealed under the barest of necklines. Lightly wired under the cups for complete containment. Lycra® spandex and lace. White, black or blush. B and C cups, 32-38. $6.00. D cup, 32-38. $7.00. HOLIDAY FASHIONS LOOK SO NATURAL WITH THE PROPER UNDERGARMENTS. Troinad Coriatiarai WILL YOU SPEND FIVE MINUTES IN OUR FiniNG ROOM FOR A BETTER FIGURE FOR LIFEf ■7<‘ Every So// has a bow Flbfr eonlRnl - nyfon/eeRlalt/pol/ttlir/tpondtR. Chorge Accounts ^ Michigan Bankord Bobette Shop 16 N. Saginaw Park Free Downtown FE 2-6921 .\ Small Deposit Will Hold In Lay-A-Way ROLL BilLMCES UP TO 30 FEET LONG (>li()ic<* of (Colors and I'altries OFF OFF ... OLR SELECTION OF ARM.STRONG INLAID VINYL (.as/i X- Curry ACRlLAr$(5 mm $9 (larppl triini U V.1; ((ir|)Pl I riMii V vil. See One ttf the Largest Selectitms ttf DRAPERIES In Till!* .Ar<*a Open Mon. and F'ri. .MgliU *lil 9 I'.M. —Sal. 'lil 5:30 FI.«XHt COVKKIX; 11511 Elizabeth Lake Rcl. 682-9581 py‘ ‘ h 1^—4 TIIR PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 1967 Deaths in Pontiac/Neighboring Areas Mrs. John Alexander Forest Lawn Cemetery, Detroit. iHe was a member of the Dear-I Mr. Andress, chief clerk at born First Presbyterian Church, Service for Mrs. John (Eliza-the Great Ldkes Steel Corp., Jvanhoe Lodge No. 446 F&AM, beth) Alexander, 53, of 575 Ne-died Tuesday braska will be 1 p.m. Tuesday! Surviving are two brothers, in Macedonia Baptist Church including Carl of Metamora; with burial in Oak Hill Ceme-|four sisters, including Mrs. Ed-tery by the Frank Carruthers' v/ard Cline, Mrs. Kenneth Gil-Funeral Home. 'bert, Mrs. Larry Morneau and Mrs. Alexander, a dietitian at Mrs. Pete Troy, all of Meta-Ponlfiac General Hospital, was mora; and his mother, Mrs fatally injured in an automobile Gladys Andress, accident in Kentucky, Wednes- c i day. She was a member of the William t. LOle of Kansas City, Mo.; the Moslem Shrine of Davenport^ Iowa; and Stoneycroft Golf Club, Bloomfield Hills. Surviving are his wife, Phyllis W.; a daughter, Mrs. Robert K. Bishop of Lexington, Ky.; two sons, Sidney G. Ill of Enid, Okla., and John of Birmingham; his mother, Mrs. Sidney Woman Hurt in Area Crash Richard Y. Jordan a 57-year-old West Bloomfield , o Township woman is in poor con- ~ ^rvice dition at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital following a two-car accident in Independence Township last night. Wanted: Footman Must Be Discreet LONDON (J) — The progress of' modern^' man has dropped a little sand in the well-oiled gears of Queen Elizabeth’s household machinery. Buckingham Palace acknowl- are loyal. In an atmosphere much more relaxed than under previous sovereigns they have a tendency to stay on their jobs. But time takes its toll, some get married and look for other ms"SilE M. ’bstersTuc?“of!«>K«» ** “as found it nec-jtypes of employment. Of course three daughters, Mrs. Deloris White, Mrs. Gloria Rogers and ^ tomor- Oak; three grandchildren; Lilhe Johnson, all of Pontiac,, Brothers Funeral brother; and four sisters. TheS S be at the home Cemetery, PonUac. of^h^rs Glo^?a Roger Cole, a retired Jewel Tea , I Co. salesman, died Wednesday ^ |in Orlando, Fla. He was a mem- Mrs. Ralph Carr j^er of Drayton Heights Free ^ I Methodist Church. Service for Mrs. Ralph! Surviving are his,wife, Ada; (Gladys E.) Carr, 68, of 284 five daughters. Mrs. Marjorie Voorheis will be 1:30 p.m. Mon- Brewer and Mrs. Barbara Dowl-day at Sparks-Griffin Chapel, i^g ^,f Lapeer, Mrs. Mary .^s. Carr, co-owner of Carrs Boss of Columbiaville and Mrs, for Richard Y. Jordan, 18, son of Dr. and Mrs. Prescott Jordan, Jr., of 3814 Middle Belt, will be 11 a.mr tomorrow at Church of the Advent. Cremation will be by Bell Chapel of the WiUiam R. Hamilton Co. of Birmingham. Richard, a student at Stowe Preparatory Schwl, VCT®®"t.|ortonvi‘ire, wks“norhospUaTizS through their own G. m=k, Sr o, K,^. JOS,,* W.l,., , „ vestigation by the sheriff’s de- ^ho will be given a three-partment. 6535 Leytonstone. The other driver, Andrew J. McIntyre, 34, of 30 S. Church, Macedonia Church. i i apfp>b _ Service “- lorn*, Cbrkston resident W V^i.'e.'r'orSkj;;;;'' .nd'!!!7. r:^Tt.Tr' r ’"7 Surviving besides his parents, are a sister and three brothers. Memorials may be made to essary to advertise for a footman. The homely truth is that not quite a few get married and remain—there’s no bar to that. In the old days, staff recruited Police Fire Info Student Mobs in India Camp Oakland, Oxford. Mrs. John W. Judd BIRMINGHAM - Requiem Mass for Mrs. John W. (Madeleine G.) Judd, 72, of 370 Town send will be 9:30 a.m. tomor- row at iai will be in Bedford, Va The Rosary will be 8:30 to Rochester Youth Recovering From 2-Car Mishdp A Rochester youth, injured in room apartment with his own bath and kitchen. Salary Is never disclosed by the palace. MUST BE DISCREET The palace demands discreet people, pledges never to disclose what goes on in the queen’s private life, and a cast-iron promise not to write any books or newspaper stories even The emperor Charlemagne was illiterate until his old age, but priceless classical manuscripts were preserved because of his foresight. Chess, Checkers Buffs Challenged Chess and checker buffs wf have a chance to compet against an acknowledged mas ter at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow a the Adah Shelly Library, Eas Rundell at Glenwood. Newell W. Banks, holder o several records in the field o chess and checkers, will ^k« on all comers. Those wishin) to play, will pay a “minima charge’’ for each competition a spokesman said. * * * The feature is sponsored b? the Pontiac Chess and Checks. Clubs, under the auspices of thi Department of Parks and Rec reation. It takes, nine hours a day foi 18 months to make an ivori carving. Holy Name Church. Bur- g two-car accident vesterriav be in Bedford. Va. 1 The need to advertise isn’t ( morning in Waterford Township, actly a development of this week. It has been done before ~....w. — —- noss ot v^oiumoiaviiie ana Mrs. CALCU'TTA, India (UPI) — nieht at Bell Chanel of the Wil-o *1®^®** good condition at ^membtr'^orS^^ mobs lilm R. Hamilton Co. | He Ts ^STrd”t'* Melstrom representing the i!* of Titusville, Fla.; and 10 today in the third consecutive: Mrs. Judd died yesterday. 20 of303 W Un^ *^® market for the grandchildren. day of street fighting over the! Surviving are a son, John S. ’ ★ * * of loyal servants needed ouster of West Bengal’s left-of Birmingham, and three n-j™ ,up nihpr par u/aslfor fhe sovereign clearly is grandchildren. L^rA^ika! To! Lou ™°^® ®^®-^ Church and the American Legion Auxiliary. Surviving are her husband; ■ son, Lewis of Indianapolis, Ind.; two daughters, Mrs. Jack Tiberg and Mrs. Neil Ricketts, both of Pontiac; four grandchildren; four great-grandchildren; a brother, Stanley Clark of Da-visburg; and two sisters, including Elsie Clark of Davis-burg. Herbert Crelley Service for former Pontiac Mrs. Manuel D. Cruce wing state government by Premier Indira Gandhi. TROY - Mrs. M a n u e 1 D. (Thelma) Cruce, 45, of 2412 Virginia died yesterday. Her body is at Price Funeral Home. Mrs. Paul A. Donner WHITE LAKE TOWNSHIP -Service for Mrs. Paul A. (An-I na M.) Donner, 82, of 200 Tower will be 11 a m. Monday at Voor-| In Calcutta’s Jadavpur uni-hees-Sinle Funeral Home, Pon- versity section students smashed George Koopman jj^gp^aji^ed. ’’j' ORION TOWNSHIP — Serv- Township police said the ac-ported killed and many wound- (JeS)!cident happened on Walton Bou- Koopman, 53, of 377 Bunny Run levard near Shawrtee Lane. At New Delhi, Mrs. Gandhi’s'will be 1 p.m. Monday at Allen’s government defeated, 215-88, a Funeral Home, Lake Orion, no confidence motion in Parli-Burial will be in East Lawn j Cemetery, Lake Orion. Mrs. K 0 0 p m i school teacher in 1 former Clair resident Herbert Crelley of jjac, Burial will be in White government buses and hurled yesterday Harlan, Iowa, will be 11 a. tomorrow atVoorhee s-Siple Chapel with burial following in the Dryden Center Cemetery, Dryden, at 1:30 p.m Mr. Crelley, a retired barber, died Tuesday. Besides yesterday’s Pontiac Press, Mr. daughters. Mrs! Delmer Hene-, Crelley leaves his mother, Mrs. man of Dearborn, Mrs. Jackj Harris of Detroit and Mrs. Lula | Strickler of Centralia, Wash.;! a member of the Lake Orion Over $500 Stolen From Bowling Alley Chapel Memorial Cemetery, rocks at police when ordered to Chib ^£s. Donner died yesterday. ‘‘‘''P®''®®^^® P^''®®^‘^®" ^‘'■®^-, Surviving besides her husband at the Sylvan Lanes _______________________ ____________ Surviving besides her husband Calcutta, a city of five mil-® dai^hter, Mrs. A bert E. Bowling Alley, 2355 Orchard by the queen, is regulation day The footmen are only part of a staff of around 25 or so who tend doors, handle meals and otherwise keep the royal family properly served. The age requirement for footmen is sheer logic: that walk from the ptilare kitchen to the breakfast room is about a quarter Of a mile. And footmen are what the name Implies: they don’t sit around. Thieves made off with $115 they stand and walk and stand bills and $490 to $500 in again. Some of their livery, provided are three soos. Leo F. ia'ly^X 'aS'^“”- ,10 day suiting tat often they . of Ponttae. Ed..rd, atans of . get«r.l strike called by g^-EST tL*Z^. ‘ ® ship, sometime early this morn- need to don the knee breeches. >y- Union Lake and Paul A. Donner pommiinist movement leaders *''’® ing. How about good legs, at least survivers listed in gf Minneapolis, Minn.; three __________________________ • mother, Mrs. Rj^e Kloss. j The missing money and dam-for looking-a?purposes? iage to a storage room and main,^lovE AROUND Charles W. Miller |office were discovered at 8:20 .. tin, ntomlng by man, township pohee reported.' ■ ■■■ • ■ „ J 1 Police are investigating the -jshaw will be 1 p.m. Monday gjg Wotertord Twp. Lutheran (3iurch,' Goldie Crelley of Pontiac. Morris C. Doolin two brothers; a sister; 15 grandchildren; and 23 great-) Two Policemen . _ , . ROCHESTER - Service for Are Promoted m Charles W. Miner, 87, of 527 Service for Morris C. Doolin, 05, of 1021 LaSalle, Waterford grandchildren. Township, will be I p.m. Mon-I day at Doneison-Johns Punerai Mrs. Lee Fairchild Home with burial in Ottawa Park Cemetery, Independence! TROY — Former resident Township. I®‘"®‘'‘“’;wniiam C.¥oires' Pontiac Masonic Lodge 21,178, of Royal Oak died this rr>orn-| ^ ^ memorial ing- Her body is at Price Fu- special,’’ a palace spokesman said with an amused chuckle The domestic staff moves around quite a bit. from Buck- Iwith burial in White Chapel , Memorial Cemetery, TToy, by| The African crested porcupinejingham Palace to Windsor or to! The promotions of two Water-|tbe William R. Potere Funeral over three feet long, is the Balmoral in Scotland. When the ford Township policemen has |world’s largest living porcupine.[sovereign moves as many as 60 been announced by Police Chief: Miller, a retired farmer, when annoyed, it rattles the people are likely to move with died yesterday. 'quills on its tail to warn of a her. ______________me Her hodv is at Price KU- i Surviving are his wife, Louise; backward c h a r g e that may! * * * m a nera/^^^^ Promoted from detMive to a son, Ervin of Rochester; a mean death. i The servants, by and large, service at 7.30 p.m. Sunday at, sergeant was Richard Finkbein- daughter, Mrs. Edwin Barg of--------- -----------'------------------------------------- the fun^l home. . , , j - , , er. Robert Reynolds, 27, was Utica; four grandchildren; 13 Mr. Doolin, a retired nmm- Sidney G. Hick$ Jr. promoted from patrolman to de-great-grandchildren; and a sis-tcnance engineer at Pon- ' , tective. ter. Mrs. Anna Zoellner of tlac General Hospital, died yes-! BIRMINGHAM — Service for Roc hester terday. He was a member of Sidney 6. Hicks Jr., 56, of 2300 FInkbeiner and Reynolds both k,e made to the Masonic Lodge. Avon will be 10.30 am. tomor- joined the Waterford Township- , . ' . g-g-ji Surviving are his wife, Nell; row at the Bell Chapel of the Police Department May 7,1963. orodutasi, ii son. Gene W. of Clarkston; William R. Hamilton Co. Burial pinkbeiner 26 was promoted a daughter, Mrs. Linda Hurley'will be in White Chapel Mem- to detective Sept’15 1966 1 . • I TROV-M,s,Eam«,t(C.met vard of Lake Orion Wendell of ® manufacturer’s Both men successfully passed, Turner, 73, of 1120 Chopin died Ri^mfieiH Hills and Trovace '®P''®®®"^®‘‘''® ^®'‘ Co., civil service examinations to es-,this morning. Her body is at Carl and James all of Pontiac; Wednesday, tablish elegibility for promojlion. I Price Funeral Home, and three sisters, including Mrs. Robert Dunn and Mrs. Carlton Here's Color TV that Swivels for Better Viewing Easy to Tune too! [M RCAVICTORAttbMca-COLORTV AUTOMATIC FINE TUNING (AFT) When you’rt first In Color TV, then's |ot to bs • reason. Like Automatic Fim Tunini that locks Id the picture signal. And new RCA tube with 38JC brighter highlights this yiir. You let thesi-nd moie-lrom RCA Victor. P THE MOST TRUSTED NAME IN ELIOTRONIOS We Service What We Sell STEFANSKI ELECTRONICS 1157 W. HURON FE2..0967 Mrs. Earnest Turner Lewis, both of Pontiac. | Frank J. Andress METAMORA - Service for former resident Frank J. Andress, 52, of Southgate will be 1 p.m. tomorrow at Edward Girr-bach and Sons Funeral Home, River RoUge. Burial will be in _ ^ ^ 'Dad, Son Pals' Is Slogan of New YMCA Program ! “Pals Forever, Dad and Son" ts the slogan adopted by Y-In-dian Guides, a new father and son program for boys 6-9 year.s of age, recently inaugurated by the YMCA of Greater Pontiac. Using the life of the American Indian as the major theme, neighborhood tribes of about eight fathers and their sons hold meetings every other week in the home of one of the members. Although new to the Pontiac area, there are already some 5M tribes in Michigan and more than 170,ON in the United States. It ts the goal of the Pontiac YMCA to develop 20 tribes In Pontiac in the next few months. * * * Any interested father and son may participate. A small membership fee is required, but prior YMCA membership is not necessary. Inforamtion is available at the YMCA. 131 University. Tallahassee, Fla., and Austin, Tex., were the only two Confederate state capitals that remained uncaptured during the avllWar. . I A Perfect Present... From Our Early American Past in the best of traditional design Now’s the time for all lovers of Early a Americana tu give a haiiilsomc grandfather cl6ck — at an exceptional price. Its authentic Early American profile rcHrcts era famous for beautifully-designed clocks. A hand-decorated floral design borders an antique white dial with black numerals and hands. The pendulum is genuine brass. Westminster Chime weight-driven movement. Because of special purchase. Only 1249.00. Hurry—time is of the essence, 8-Day Key-Wind $209.00 Order Note. Chrietma* DoUvory Aiiurod. Staff Decorators To Help You 90 Dayt Same A» Caeh No Oblignlion Open Friday ’til 9, Other Evenins* by 828 Main St., Rochester 651-8^66 We Design • We Monufotlure • We Install • We Guarantee THE POkTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 1967 Red Forces A4oy Use Port in Cambodia WASHINGTON (AP) - Some U.S. military leaders express concern that North Vietnam, Red China and the Soviet Union are planning to use a Cambodian port to get arms and ammunition to Communist forces in South Vietnam. * * ★ This development could come if the stepped-up U.S. bombing of land routes from North Vietnam seriously slows up the movement of siq>plies sout^ ward. It is expected that the intensified bombing attacks, begun in August, will begin showing their effects perhaps in January. ★ * * The port in neutraUst Cambodia is Sihanoukville, on the Gulf of Siam. ★ * ★ Although there have been mil- itary studies of a possible quarantine or blockade of the port, it is believed that this country' top civilian defense leaders would not approve of such a step under present conditions. HAIPHONG RESTRICTED Washington has refused to authorize the bombing or mining of Hai{diong harbor in North Vietnam, where Soviet ships deliver supplies. The reason is a wish to avoid direct confrontation with the Soviet Union or Red China which could lead them to more directly enter the Vietnam war. ★ ★ ★ It la for much the same reason that a quarantine or blockade of Sihanoukville would likely not be approved. * * * I In addition, the United States; Is seeking to avoid further trouble with Cambodia’s chief of state. Prince Sihanouk, who already is hostile to the American effort in South Vietnam. ★ * ★ Sihanouk professes neutralism in the war, but with or without his approval, U.S. military officials say, his country has been used as a sanctuary by Viet-Cong and North Vietnamese forces for rest and resupply purposes. CAMBODIAN VEHICLES Information available indicates any arms brought into Si-hanodkville for Communist forces in South ‘Vietnam is hauled up country in trucks— possible Cambodian army vehicles furnished by corrupt officers. ■a * ★ OnSk theory is that the road| used by such trucks was built by U.S. aid funds. The goods then are transferred to North Vietnamese trucks which move through Cambodian territory to the front facing Kontum province in ^uth Vietnam. B—5 Ionia Fair Profit IONIA (AP)-The Ionia Free Fair reports a $37,597 profit from the eightKlay run last August, double the $18,403 of the previous year. Secretary-manager Corris Teachworth said $20,000 Would be used to improve the fair. The jump in profits was attributed to increased patronage of midway | shows and rides and the parking lot. Lumber is being surfaced with a celloluose sheet which makes it resistant to splintering and abrasion. It Is also less affected by variations in humidity and has a superior surface for painting. Extra Nationally Known COLOR TV BlC2l»«4.lR.nofura *399*5 TOfUITYOUNiUDOET Little Joe*$ tatapiMM MI-IMS Optn Daily to • PJi» tatuiDaysSUI.toaP.M. Signature* Roll-iVway 4-Cycle Dishwasher A GIFT THAT MEANS YEAR 'ROUND CONVENIENCE FOR YOUR FAMILY! HandUt 15 place settings with regular, super, rinse a and plate warmer cycles! ^ Has dual detergent dispenser, operation indicator light. 139 REG. 5209 «159 NO MONTHLY PAYMENTS TIL FEBRUARY Wards Bwflget-Valwe 2*Cycle Dishwasher End dis^iwashing chores at 99 this low price — costs just e pennies a day to runi Rolls w* easily on casters. Holds 12 settings; plate wormer cycle. • Has six cycles to handle every job perfectly-her hands need never touch water! • Saves time and work - leaves family free to relax - costs just pennies a day! • Washes, rinses and dries 16 toble settings automatically - glasses are spot-free! • Rolls easily on large casters so you can load it at the table - store it in a corner! • Automatically dispenses detergent during wash, water conditioner during rinse! • With 6-cycle timer control, on-off indicator light and convenient handle! Sales End Sat., Nov. 26th, 5 P.M. Pontiac Mall OPI > MONDAY THfU KHIDAV 10.00 V.M. TO 9:00 P.M. I SVil KDVI '>;iO V.M. ro 9 I’ M. il MlV’l 12 NOON 1(1 .T I’ M. • THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 84, 1967 Due Upgrading Staged Modernizing Planned by Pentagon WASHINGTON (AP) - Pen-tagon authorities are studying U.S. military proposals to reequip the South Vietnamese army so it can take on a larger share of the war burden-Modernization of the Vietnamese army, development of better leadership, and ^e instill-^ ing of self-confidence are basic to Gen. William C. Westmore-| land’s hopes for beginning at: least a token withdrawal of U.S. troops by late 1969. ★ * * The United States has been trying to fashion the South Vietnamese army into an effective fighting force for six years or more. But Westmoreland, U.S. commander in Vietnam, believes this objective is within grasp and is basing his program on that faith-judging by his statements in Washington this week. STAGED PROGRAM The plans envision a staged modernization program to provide the South Vietnamese regular army with about 225,000 M16 rifles and with M60 machine guns by December 1968. In 1969, the South Vietnamese would be given a considerable number of helicopters and new ground vehicles such as personnel carriers. More Vietnamese airmen would be trained as helicopter pilots. ★ * ★ The United States now provides most of the air power and artillery for the South Vletr namese army. 'Diere is no indication of any major change in this—possibly because U.S. military leaders in Vietnam have used control of these important resources to apply leverage on the South Vietnamese when persuasion was needed. The VieH^amese army now has a mixture of M14 rifles and carbines, except for a relatively small number of the M16s given to the South Vietnamese elite airborne and marine units. mCHER RATE OF FARE The M16 is lighter than the MM and has a higher rate of: fire than either the MM or the carbine. The South Vietnamese regular forces number ^ some 334,000 men, and there ^are indications virtuaUy all of them eventually will get the M16. * -A * Westmoreland reportedly won approval in principle of his proposal but details aren’t firmly set. No dollar figure on the cost of the project was available. I Detailing his plana at the National Press Club last Tuesday, Westmoreland said that in lOOOl his command intends to “provide new military equipment to revitalize the Vietnamese army, and prepare it to take pn an ever-increasing share of the war.” COUNTNIG ON DECREASE He also forecast that next year the United States is counting on decreasing the number of military advisers “where the professional competence of Vietnamese officers makes this possible.” American military leaders in Vietnan^ envision the time when the United States might confine | its ground military efforts to shielding Vietnam’s frontiers from Incursions of North Vietnamese regulars, turning over to the South Vietnamese the job of securing the country’s interior and stamping out the Communist insurgents and remaining North Vietnamese soldiers inside the country. WWW The South Vietnamese army still would be salted with American troops, but the main security mission would be the South Vietnamese army’s job. U.S. leaders in Saigon still opposed the idea of a j( mand in which Americans would direct deployment and employment of South Vietnamese troops in battle. Such a joint command, it is felt, would create friction, pro^ lems of “face” for the South Vietnamese, and under self-confidence and expertise which the Americans are trying to Instill into the South Vietnamese officers. M ONTGOMERY WARD is the only and DRY MODEI AfTHIS Low Price! Roads Land Sale LANSING (AP) - The State Highway Department will offer 14 parcels of land in Detroit and dbe in Hamtramck for sale at public ducUon in Detroit Dee.{^ 14. All the properties are a41acent to the Chi;ysler. Lodge or'Flsber freeways. They range In sise from 7i$ square feet to 22,000 square feet. Salt Ends Sat., Nov. 2eth, 5 P.M. THB PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 21, 1967 Time Is Short as Chrysler Talks Resume DETROIT (UPI) - The Thantagiving Day recess behind them, .Chrysler Corp, and United Aiito Workers bargainers today returned to negotiating a contract to cover 8,000 salaried workers less than 72 hours before a midnight Sunday strike deadline. The mmproduction workers will walk off the Job unless they get a contract to match the one obtained for the 95,000 iwoduc-tion and maintenance workers Nov.l. Little progress hu Been.re- B-7 both^ides have expressed op-can be UAW President Walter Reu-ther was expected to Join the bargainers tomorrow morning. And his aides have said they expect' continuous sessions to run right up to the Sunday midnight deMiline. A walkout Iqr the salaried ployes, mostly clerical and engineering personnel, would not tie up Chiysler operations immediately. But all of the company’s production could be halted within a week. PREPARING FOR GM UAW strategists also began preparing tor a resumption of main-table bargaining at Gm-eral Motors Corp. Mmday. Negotiations with the industiy giant have been at a virtual standstill while the union dealt with the Ford M o t o r Co. and Chrysler. ♦ * w ’ Reuther has left GM as the last target In this year's round of bargaining. He will toke the Ford and Chrysler settlements to GM and probably will ask the world’s largest corporation to better the average |1 an hour wage and fringe benefits package he got from the two com- Police Action Pontiac police officers and Oakland County sheriff’s deputies investigated 118 reported incidents and made 10 arrests the past 48 hours. A breakdown of causes for police action: Armed robbery—1 Unarmed robbery—1 Vandalisms—7 Burglaries—25 Larcenies—20 Auto thefts—4 Bicycle thefts—1 Disorderly persons—4 Assaults—9 Obscene phone calls—1 Property damage accidents—32 Injury accidents—IS Evidence that there was some form of biological activity at least 2.15 billion years ago is in the form of chemofossils found in gold ores from mines in South Africa and dated by hydrocarbon anlysis at this age. Pontiac Mall ft Center Our Serviceo Include hmmtn > All molwt ef hearino • Rare phosphorous tube for true-to-life colors e Keyed AGC provides no-fade, no-flutter pictures A handsome deluxe color TV with the fine quality features you normally find only in sets costing far more! 43% more brilliant colors produced by rare-earth phosphorous-coated tube . . . brighter, more vivid, static-free! Needle-sharp long distance reception. Two built-in antennas, multiple signal boosters. Automatic degausser. Automatic firte-tuned UHF, VHF. Keyed AGC for stability. Large 18-in. diagonal view. Rich walnut-grained metal cabinet with bronze-tone sunburst dials. NO PAYMENTS TIL FEB. 1968! Sale Ends Sat., Nov. 26th, 5 P.M. Savo 90.991 Color YV^ with 171-sq. in. screen ^249 Color Magic keeps color pure ... stop base, blur. Automatic gain contro locks picture in . . interference out! Steady reception even in fringe areas. Separate UHF, VHF tuners. Gray enameled metal table model. * 1 B-bich diagonal vImt ' tar mold. cu.toin fittad Nathan Upton («) Pontiac Mall OPEN MO.MUY THIU KHIDV^ 10:00 V.M, K) 9:00 P.M, SAriHD.V^ 9:30 .V.M. TO 9 P.M, Sl MiW 12 NOON lO n P.M. • OK2-1910 THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 1967 B—9 MORALE BOOSTER — While entertaining Israeli ^troops following the battle of Sham El Sheikh, Ron Eliran, one of Israeli’s most popular singers, collaborated with two soldiers to compose a song about the battle. The stirring rhythm and poignantly inspiring lyric pushed the song to No. 1 on the IsraeU Hit Parade. Israeli War Inspires Songwriter Crop Shooter, Beware! Table's tooded . By IBOE WEST .“natuifll.” Roll that numter on WASHINGTON (Ut»I)—l haveithe first throw and you win. oRen beard crap shooters’ talk to the bones, but broadcast to then? Sounds farfetched. Yet, accord-; Ing to the Fed eral ConununK cations Commission (FCC). that is the latest variation inj one of file old-' est ga known to man loaded dice. To make its point, the FCC gave a demonstrafion Tuesday of the first radicHxmtrolled dice WEST Roll it when you’re trying to rdl another number and you lose. Being able to roll a seven at will is, therefore, a sweet position to be in. This sort of thing is not only crookc^, it is illegal. There is a federal law against operating an unlicensed radio transmitter. Which explains the FCC’s sudden interest in the sport. And what particularly pains die FCC is file fact that the dice table operates on the same frequency the federal govern- lent uses. With Freeman rolling the dice and Patrick Scanlon'of the local table ever to fall into the hands office operating the transmitter, of. the law. the FCC staged a crap game to This one was - seised by pil“®trate the advantages of dice larytaMi State PoHce,' who broadcasting, initially weren’t sure exactly what it was fiiey had stumbled wn. It was an FCC engineer, J.J. Freeman of the Baltimore office, who finally figured it out. ^ JOAN CROSBY I change and they would try it Newspaper Enterprise Assn. jout. Soon a song had been born NEW YCWRK — The sun was H was called, fittingly, “Sharm setting over the Red Sea. Israeli soldiers were relaxing in Sharm El Sheikh, having wrested it from the Egyptians, thus extend-liW the southern boundary of Israel by about 125 miles. Floating over the soft warm air were the sounds of a guitar and the melodious voice of Ron Eliran, one of Israel’s most popular singers. Be had volunteered to entertain the hoofiUfies broke out, and new as the smoke of battle cleared away, he was helping the soldiers forget the recent brutaUty. Suddenly, Eliran stopped singing and caltod out, "We have to write something about place.’’ ★ * * el Sheikh.” Someone there had a tape recorder. The song whs recorded to army head quarters. The army put Eliran’i the radio as < Sharm El Sheikh was Israel’s. They played it eight times in the next few hours. It was heard other battlefields and its stirring rhythm and poignantly inspiring lyric became an instant morale booster. I As explained at the demon-They signed him to a record-stration, an ordinary plastic-top ing contract and rushed him table of the type widely used in Into a studio to record his song motel dining rooms is rigged up was placed on one-year proba City Man Gets Probation in 2 Traffic Deaths A 26-year-old Pontiac man Each time Scanlon pressed the transmitter bu^, Freeman rolled 6 and 1. 'Evmi when the dice were at rest, th^ transmitter could make them hhp over to those numerals. Although this was the only dice broadcasting table uhcov-ered thus far, the FCC said it is quite possible that others are in qieratimi. So, dice shooters, beware: * w ★ Your next outing may be with the oldest, established, permanent, radio-controlled, floating crap game in New York. Now Many Wear FALSETEETH With UHI* Worry Do your |alM taeth annoy anil em-barraas by allpplng, dropplnf, or arob-bllnc whan you eat. laugh or talitt Than aprlnkle a little FASTXSTH on your platea. turea firmar and u Makea eating aaaler. It’a alkaline-doean't aour. No gummy, gooey, paaty taata or feel. Helpa cheek plate odor. Dentiirea that fit are eaaentlal health. Bee your dentlat regularly. PA8TKKTH at a" ' rmnnrmnnrr 2548 Eiiiabeth Lake Rd. -BehindThmMaU^ 682-T440: BASEMENT CEILINGS and PANELING AT BARGAIN PRICES! . ^2n99 up 4'X7'PANELS. QUALITY SUSPENDED CEILINGS, sq.ft. 25‘ up DOORS, TmiW, MOLDIMOS, FOBMICA, ETC. Pontiac Plywood Co. urn BALDWIN AVE. FE 2-2543, with En^ish words. The singer says there are hundreds of untold tales of heroism. There is the story of the Israeli alone in a tank who fought Arabs for eight hours and survived, even though he was wounded three times. as a radio receiver. IDEAL SETUP Since the table is portable, it is ideal for floating crap games. Then the sharpie who is ruiining the game conceals in his pocket a radio transmitter about the size of a teen-ager’s All he has to do is activate Or the tale of the two Arab the transmitter; and the dice, pilots who became confused by I which are loaded with magnetic IsraeU intelligence giving orders up seven. uninitiated, I should wjlllam R. Cosper,’l9rand Judy vinced that the other MIG was explain that seven is a l. Bonfield, 17. Israeli plane and shot It' down. When the Arab ground tion and ordered to pay $100 court costs today in the traffic deaths of two Royal Cak teenagers two years ago. The sentence was ordered for James E. Rosser, 312 Cllffonl, by Oakland County Circuit Judge Robert L. Templin. Templin had delayed sentencing Rosser since he pleaded guilty six months ago to negU-gent homicide, Rosser was the driver of a car that collided with another at Telegraph and Elizabeth Lake roads Nov. 7, 1965, killing EUran, who had been a combat photographer during the Israeli war of independence, was , . fiown to Mount Scopus in Jeru-,^®’’"® Israeli were convinced this .Salem, hands, where he became the the other plane was Israeli and jfirst sabra to sing in the great shot it down. With two other Israeli soldiers natural amphitheater since 1948.1 ------------ Raphael Gabai and Amos Etting-1 He performed "Sharm El er, he began to strum his guitar Sheikh, and hum a tune. Words tegan to come. He and the other two men would hit on a phrase and sing it over a couple of times. SONG BORN Occasionally, the other sol diers would suggest a wordjca Records. MONTE CARLO About 10 days after the pocket war ended, EUran was sent to Monte Carlo for a song festival. He sang his song there and was heard by representatives of Dec- Unique 'Card' An inscribed grain of rice was presented in 1929 to the Prince of Wales as a Christmas "card.” “card.” dialf abafgain Direct dialinfl Long Distance Instead of calling Person-to-Person saves money. 40 per cent on a daytime three minute call between Lansing and Detroit. It’s faster, too. Michigan Beii Shuffle Seen After War By Science Service filets, three years later NASA* WASHINGTON — The de-|expenditures will have shrunk mands of the Vietnam war have to some $3.2 billion, compared! sent certain industries skyrock eting. But what will the space and defense market look like when the war is over? to $.6,425 billion spent in fiscal 1967. And the pressure will get worse If the war lasts longer. There’s going to be quite a If conflict doesn't end until 1971, shuffle, according to a six-month'the economic crush will be so study just completed by an ad great that in the following year, hoc committee of the Electronic n ASA’s spending w i II be Industries Association, an or-|crimped down to a trif-ganlzation of firms engaged in nng _ for NASA $2 billion. It electronics manufacturing and-hould then crawl back up to $3 research. |billion in the next two years, The committee did not' try to according to the report, and $2 determine the actual loss in dol- billion will probably be as low lars that might face specific as it will go. barring more wars, fields within Industry. Instead, OTHER SPACE SPENDING they attempted to map out the I Defense Deoartment’s _______, „ . u. well as projects such as the Air companies due to be hard hi ^ ^ jiiting Labor- rLrl‘." P™‘*'‘,atory. is a different story. Mili- tary space spending is expected The biggest market victim qf to keep going up, the committee the war is the National Aero-says, until by 1976 expenditures nautics and Space AdminLstra- will be three times as high as tion, the committee says. Even they were in 1968 and 60 per if the war ends in 1969, It pre-cent higher than in 1967. The Taste of Canada cool, clean, crisp. Its in a bottle of McMaster s* McMASTER'S IMPORTED CANADIAN WHISKY $4.47 the fifth. , atMII Tax IncliHNMl. CAMOlto WHISST. A SUND.» NOOf. IMTOSUO SY. MciMSTn IMNm CO. ALUM PAM, MIOL i ONIV <349<» Also Brand New “1968” Color TV At Low at $250 week You don't know what you'ro missing until you rat g now 1968 RCA ictor Color TV! TV as you'vo novor soon it boforo. a NEW PICTURE CLARITY • NEW COLOR REALISM a NEW, EASIER TUNING a NEW PERFORMANCE and DEPENDABILITY a NEW PROQRAMS and MORE OF THEM • NO MONEY DOWN • IMMEDIATE DELIVERY 10'*Ml«f1 CO aq. In. pklvi* 18” DIAG. COLOR PICTURE Budget-Priced Color Consolette UIQEST SCREEN MADE RCA VICTOR New Vista COLOR TV , . , AS LOW U Color viowing of o purco-ploaiing pHc Supor Bright HL-Li angolor r Tub*. ipor Bright i9,000.voit S FULL LINE OF 1968 ROA VICTOR op,„ AUTHORIZED RCA STEREOS ON DISPUY NOW! 9 to 9 SERVICINQ DEALER ALL-CITV TELEVISION 2363 Orchard LohoRd, Sylvan Shopping Contar Phono M2-M70 2 OaiAT STORES 4SNN. Woodward PhenaMI2-S1S9 OUR GIFT TO YOU.. .FRIDAY S SATURDAY DOUBLE oaib Biu am 9TAMP9 WITH COUPON BELOW FRESH GROUND All BEEF SAVE...20$ lb. Visit The Wrigley Nearest You 2375 Orchard Lake Rood, Sylvan 8040 Cooloy Lake Rood, Union Lake 45 S. Telegroph, Pontioc 1495 N. Moin, Rochester B—10 THE PONTIAC^PRESS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 1967 has tht* law prw€»! mtti €mrm HJimm PAJANUS ill SwSr.it’ SUNDAYS... NOON TILL b P.M CORNER OF DIXIE HGWY. AT TELEGRAPH RD.-PONTIAC lARIAT flDRIt IN FREE PARKING MONEY REFUNDED IF YOU'RE NOT SAIIMIK; ’i HE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, NOVF.MBgR 24, 1967 \Rodias Glory Days Kept Alive by Tape Nuf NEW YORK WB Kg-time io has been dead now for ^bout 18 years, but it is not for-[gotten by those who grew up fduring its heyday. * ★ * (toe man who remembers it, and loves it.^and even longs fw its return, is Frank Buxton. Buxton describes himself as a tape nut who has preserved thousands of hours of old radio programs for -.^well, cotainly not for radio’s return, but for 501 CoDtinnoos Filament %lon How Olljf Effiiotts fuMituM/ the enjoyment o< hearing the fa-nuliar foices jij^ once naore. f "Fred XUen was like a god 'to me when I was growing up,” he said. TEAMS WITH COSBY Buxton, a radio and television personality, and author of "Radio’s (tolden Age,” will attempt to bring back a little of the old flavor when he teams up with Bill Cosby in January for a five*minute, five-day-a-week radio comedy program. ★ ★ ★ ' "Radio was a powerful force aM>roach,'’ Buxtcm said. "The war jitters at the time jielped it go over.” • What "ils behind radio’s mystique? * th* toft, warm, quiet tile that never needs Waxing or polishing . . . because it's carpet! 16 colors. Simple to install. WE STOCK A COMPLETE LINE OF SUSPENDEO CEIUNG TILE As LdwAs includes Metal 191 Ft. Baked Enamel WALLBOARD for KItehons or Bathrooms in 8 Colors f95 4x8* Panels VINYL ASBESTOS •x9x1/1l FIRST QUALin TILE CERAMIC TILE 1x1 39° sq. ft. 4V4x4«/4 39° and Up Plastic Wall TILE 1® Rea. J and UP PAINT SPECIAL MAC-O-LACrK MAC-O-UC LATEX MIL. ROYAL BOND latex enamel AND CEILING TILE 12x12 plain . . . 10*... 12x12 acoustical 13'.., 12x12 styrofoani . 16*.., OWENS CORNING FIBERQLAS CEILINQ TILE (pebble white) 15 '' Solid Vinyl Trio 12x12 d||||2 -•yMc*reciAL23®.„. RUBBER TILE ' •«> 13l PONTIAC’S LARGEST DISTRIBUTOR OF BROYHIU PREMIER COLONIAL SOFAS, CHAIRS and LCVE SEATS OFFERS UNMATCHED DISCOUNT VALUES SOFAS-C’, T, and O’-in prints or tweeds starting at *109.98 CHAIRS-BROYHILL quality starling as low as *89.98 LOVE SEATS-STATIOHARV or rocking starling as low as *189.95 First Come — First Served — While They Last 075 W Huron St Phone 334-9957 If You Don't Buy From Us, We Both Lose Money! TRUCKLOAD PRICES FOR ALL! LIFE SIZE 88yf”x48iy4»'x9Vk»» WIYH YULI LOUS THAT SLOW AND PLICKIR LIKl A RIAL Pini • Realistle Yule Log Set • S .ft. Card, Soeket and Plug • Light Bulb • Rtvolving Fan Attaehmant • Imprintad Firaplaea IN CASE OF STRIKE-PAYMENTS CAN BE DEFERRED lAL rail j $|99 ORCHARD Phone FE S8II4-5 FURNITURE COMPANY 164 ORCHARD LAKE AVENUE • PONTIAC 2 Blocks Witt of South Wide Track DriVf ' OPEN MON. and FRI. FROM • fa • TOES., WED., THURt. and SAT. I fa liSf ! S? Dellvwry I !f^uHiIra a 90 Days Cosh a Good SmvIc# DEAL DIREOT - PAY AT TNI tTORB NO FINANOE 00. INVOLVU LA Rams Enjoy 'Stuffed-Lion' as Turkef1)inner Appetizer THE PONTIAC PRESS FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 1967 C—1 mm Qualifying Keglers Swell in Pontiac Open Tourney •Some 300 more bowlers will take the lanes this weekend in the second round of qualifying of the Pontiac Open Bowling Championship. Huron Bowl, Lakewood Lanes and Fairgrounds Bowling in Milford are the sites for the qualifying and there are openings for fill-in spots on all squads except the 2:30 p.m. Sunday squad at Huron which is filled. ★ * * ★ I Bowlers who enter early squads will have the opportunity to re-enter on later squads in the same house or in another house, should they fail to hit the target score of 600. Qualifying will begin at 11:00 a.m. at Lakewood and 1:00 p.m. at Huron on Saturday. On Sunday, Huron and Lakewood will begin squads at 10:M a.m. and Fairgrounds will have afternoon squads only at 2:00 p.m. and 4:00 p.m. and one to follow if necessary. If past qualifying is any indication, at least 100 more bowlers will reach the semifinals this weekend by rolling at least 600 inclusive of their handicaps. ★ ★ ★ Last week, 70 bowlers made the grade and now await the semifinals December 10 at 300 Bowl. The finals of the tournament are slated for Huron Bowl December 17th. AMONG LEADERS Women are responding in great numbers in the qualifying and wveral women are already among the top qualifiers as result of last weekend. Giry Cooptr. f*'-' VJA.P-"’- - •IP*'’ for •'’•rlM »eMl r»«n(rl«. Sun., 1t:W «.m. - Gcoru Dtnic, Tom Loo, Fronk Jocomino, C. B. Hellon- Roy Moort, Raymond K. Olson. Garry HInli, Hal HInfi, Ernie Haackl^hll Haack Mary Hanson, Duane Hanion, Ron Kinney, John Chrlit'olf, Rachail' Waihl^rn.'^‘’Nanc'y“karba^ J^n MIhalak, Art Beally, Ronald Bird. Sun., t0:00 a.m. — Frank Hasllp, John Snead, Uouglas Mmial, Shirley Caron, David Squiar. . •if' - Lulhar, Barnard Howe, S T'T *0Oloonlan Ban McKarrIcher, RoMrt McKarrlcher, >obart Lawson, Donald Pennell, Sharll Pannall. Nancy Bultmyer, Harry Bull-O'Brlo"- "Oban Da- Longchamp. Kalth Curtli. Son.. 1:00 P.m. - Duana Prarno. Margarat Langa. Cherlai Ross, John Hanion, Jim Rutkowikl, GInny R chardson, J^n BunlaS, Robert Dayli, Marvin rer"'’BaVn;7 Bam7,“"' Sun,, 2:30 p.m. -- William Caldwell, Lloyd Slade, *“P'*l Jo*"’ *“'• van EMa Vrwln'^***'■ *fO«". Hank Sulll- •’®* Urumm, Lawranc* Harmon, a.t,"’j!ll^L'S' ?uTla7, ‘^KnV??yi;rN'.lf'’Sll*k’ Courtney Leader in Puerto Rico DORADO, P R. (UPI) - Chuck Courtney, a 27-year-old California golfer who has had his ups and downs on the professional trail, figures the winter Caribbean tour may be just the thing to get going again. Mike Souchak was tied for second. Courtney, of La Jolla, Calif., demonstrated some of the skills that stamped hifn as a top prospect when he joined the PGA tour four years ago Thursday as he took the first round lead in the $17,500 Puerto Rican Open. The Southern California golfer shot a blazing five-under-par 17 Thursday to grab the lead over the Dorado Hilton golf course. He had rounds of 3^3ft-47 to outdistance his'nearest competitors hy three strokes. Souchak, of Oakland. Hills, Ross Coon Jr., and Edgar Davis all posted first round 70s. Vetran Arf Wall Jr., of Honesdale, Pa., Wiif Homeniuk and Vicnent Sullivan all folimjred with 71s and 12 others shot even par 72. Wall, a favorite on the Latin-American tour, had rounds of 36-35 for hiS 71. Age Group Tankers Vie A Michigan all-age AAU swimming meet will be held Saturday at Pontiac Norhtern High School pool. More than 1,000 swimmers from eight to 18 years o! age will compete. The Team ’N Match total of 3,180 posted at Cooley Lanes by a five man squad from 300 Bowl, led by Les Roth-barth's 751 total, leads this feature team part of the tournament. In the Mix 'N Match doubles, a check of the entries this week showed that Walt Conta and Nancy Jarrell, who marked their entries as a doubles’ total at 300 Bowl, lead this feature with a 1277 total. Conta qualified with a 634 and Miss Jarrell had a 643 second fcst singles total at 300 Bowl. Bowlers should register for their squads at least 15 minutes before bowling time. Failure to report could mean disqualification. , Fontioc Froii Pholq LOCAL GRIDDERS HONORED — Halfback Dana Coin (left) of Pontiac Northern and Pontiac Central end Mike Shorters have been named to the Associated Press’ All-State Class A football second team. Story and team information appear on Page C-5. Dallas, Oakland Triumph in NFL, AFL Contests By ITie Associated Press Thanks to Dallas’ Bob Hayes and Oakland’s stingy defense, the Cowboys and Raiders used Thanksgiving Day to move closer to a merry Christmas and a happy New Year. * R * Hayes iped to three long-yardage touchdowns that sparked the Cowboys to a 46-21 victory over St, Louis Thursday, night in the Cotton Bowl and sent them nearer the National Football League’s Capital Division title and a Harl Fumbles lost Yards panalliad Cardinals ............ Cowboys ............. Sll__Smilh 47 pass In kick) DAL—Parkins I run (' OAL—Hayas 4» punt i kick I SIL—Roland M pass kan kick) DAL-FG Vlllanuava 22 DAL—Hayes M pass from Meredllh (kick lallad) DAL-.R*nliel 74 pass from Rtevas (Vlllanuava kick) OAL—Hayas 34 (Vlllanuava kick) SIL-D. Williams 34 pass from Johnson (Bakkan kick) _pAL—Safely, Roland tackled In and from Meredllh from Meredllh Rushlni^rir^ 17 24; Dallas, Ps Receiving—Sf. land 2-33, Gambrall 3-44; D 5-145, Hayes 4-II0, Reeves 3 Passing—St. Louis. Harl Inst Rushing—St. Louis, Gault 10-31. Roland Parkins 21-14. Reeves 11 .11 ■■ ■ lols. Smith 4-114, Ro 12-23-1, 237. 4-13-2, 02; Dallas, Mered- Jfoncos 7 10 3 0-20 Chargers 0 7 3 14—24 Den—Denson 0 pass from Tansi (Humphreys kick) ,.pen--Crablree 5 pass from TensI (Humphreys kick) P-Posl 7 run (Van Raaphorst kick) Oon-F® Humphreys 13 SD—FG Van RaaphorsI 24 Der»—FG Humphreys 14 SD--OuM:an 72 blocksd field goal re-furn (Van Raaphorst kick) SD-Pott I run (Van Raaphorst kick) . ... !j«»ISual LaaSors Rushino-Oanver, LIHia 22-7?, Hickey t-24; San piago. Post 21-77, Hubbard 4-14. RacalvIn^Oanvar, Crabire 1-107, Frailar*?^' Passliy-Djnvar, Tansi H-41-2, 244 yards; 4an Diego, HadI 13-24-1, 204. •••dor* .............. 17 4 7 14—44 Cnials. .............. )0 0 2 10-22 OaK-FO Blanda 10 * RO** l-omonic* KICK) JC-FG Slenarud 44 klekY”®’’"*" ** Inlercaptlpn (Bland* arudlido * Uo*<*oo (Slen- fegjiss: iS KC-*S*lefy, Oakland holiday .season shot at the NFL championship and Super Bowl. And at Kansas City, Oakland intercepted four passes and returned two for touchdowns as it clobbered Kansas City 44-22, enhancing the Raiders’ chances of replacing the Chiefs as champions of the American League’s Western Division by Christmas and as AFL champs by New Year’s Day. ■R ★ ★ Oakland, 9-1, still has one major obstacle in the West, the San Diego Chargers, 8-1-1, who also have visions of titles after sinking Denver 24-20 in San Diego. Dallas retained at least a two-game lead over Philadelphia and Washington with the Eagles playing at New York Sunday and the Redskins at Cleveland. The Rams sit a half-game behind Baltimore, which invades San Francisco. The other Sunday NFL games match Atlanta against host New Orleans, visiting Green Bay against Chicago and Minnesota against Pittsburgh in Pittsburgh. Boston plays at Houston and Buffalo at Miami in the AFL before the big clash between Oakland and San Diego the following week. Hayes turned back the clock for Dallas by racing 69 yards with a piint for a 14-7 lead and then taking touchdown passes of 59 and 34 yards from Don Meredith. Lance Rentzel caught two more scoring passes, one from Meredith and one from Dan Reeves, in the second half of the nationally televised NFL doubleheader. . ____ .34) I IllPtofi 12 3*. OarraH 4-7. teOlvinjipaklaiHI, Bllgfitikoff 4-1S4. Firebirds' Tickets for Game at Ypsi Available Downtown Tickets for the regular season football finale of the Pontiac Firebirds who face the Ypsilanti Vikings at Willow Run High School field Sunday afternoon, are available at Osmun’s, Griff’s and VFW Post 1370. The Firebirds, hopeful of a post-season playoff ^against Mt. Clemens, must hope for a Mt. Clemens defeat at Dayton Saturday night and then defeat Ypsi Sunday to gain a playoff. Should this happen, the Htle game would be held next Saturday afternoon and the site decidcfl on a flip of a coin. Pontiac edged Ypsilanti, 7-6, earlier this season and the game Sunday is a Tiger Stadium Crowd Heckles Motor City 11 By BRUNO L. KEARNS Sports Editor, Pontiac Press If any of the 200,000 people in downtown Detroit yesterday morning thought the aimual Hudson’s Mummers parade was funny they should have been in Tiger stadium in the afternoon. There were 54,389 who did go to the ball park and most of them had their Thanksgiving Day appetites spoiled as the Los Angeles Rams whipped the Detroit Lions, 31-7. ★ * ★ Even the turkey probably put up a better fight before it got the ax for the traditional holiday dinner. The Lions were offenseiess and defenseless against the Rams who will be cheering now for arch-rival San Francisco to defeat the Baltimore Colts Sunday. Los Angeles is 8-1-2 in the Coastal Division behind the Colts who are 8-0-2, but in their final two games the Rams have Green Bay and Baltimore to play on their home grounds in the LA Coliseum. Against the two Coastal Division teams, Baltimore and LA the past two weeks, the Lions have been touched for 72 points while scoring only 14. Yesterday, the anemic offense produced 38 yards passing and 70 rushing, and in 61 offensive plays (four more than the Rams) the Lions had an average gain of 1.8 yards per play. The holjday crowd got its vocal cords ready for the bigger holidays ahead by booing Karl Sweetan, cheering Milt Plum and then booing Plum at the game’s end. BIRD IN HAND LA coach George Allen shouted “Give me a bird in hand and you can have the draft choices,’’ in the locker room after the game. ★ ★ -R Allen was referring to the castoff veterans he obtained prior to the season, Roger Brown, Myron Pottlos and Maxie Baughan, all defensive men wh^i' squelched the slightest offensive threat made by the Lions. It was the Lions’ defense, a pass interception by Dick LeBeau, which set up the lone Detroit TD in the first quarter. LeBeau took the ball on the 35 and be returned It 27 yards to the eight. 'Two plays later Tom Nowatzke went over Roger Brown and Lamar Lundy for a three yard touchdown. Three questionable plays took place in the second and third periods and ail three favored the Rams. ★ ★ ★ Early in the second quarter, Roman Gabriel passed 39 yards to Jack Snow along the sidelines for a touchdown. Snow made a great over head catch, but many Lions argued that Snow had one foot in the wide out of bounds area. R R R Another play later in the period involved a pass to Mel Farr. Farr slipped to the turf as a pass from Sweeten came to him. The ball bounced away as he was being hit, but it was ruled a fumble and the Rams had the ball on the Detroit 17 on a recovery by Chuck Lamson. Two plays later Gabriel passed to Billy Truax for an easy eight-yard touchdown and the half ended 14-7. With only three seconds left in the half, and after a Lion punt, the Rams utilized the old rule of asking for a free kick, trying for a field goal from their own 45 yard line. The kick was short and thus is ruled a kickoff. It was taken by Tommy Vaughn on the four. He almost broke away after picking up 38 yards. The Lions had the Rams on the run in the third quarter with Plum calling the signals, keeping LA back on its'own goal line, but an interception and fumble helped the Rams get into good field position for the 17 points fourth quarter. R R R The interception was also a disputed call. Plum pitched out to Mel Farr, who pitched back to Plum. The QB then tried to pass from the Ram 13 to Gibbons for what would have been the tying touchdown. Jack Pardee, however, stepped in front of Gibbons, grabbed the bail and continued juggling it until the ball touched the ground at the 13. TOOK OVER The Lions thought he never had complete possession, but the Rams took over anyway. R R R Later In the quarter another pitchout to Farr was intercepted by Lundy who returned it 15 yards to the Detroit 37 from where the Rams’ drive started. The play was ruled a fumble on Plum. The series ended in only four plays with Gabriel passing to Truax for a six yard touchdown. Two field goal tries in the final period failed for LA, but the Rams scored again on a 23 yarder by Bruce Gossett and a two yard plunge by Les Joseph- iliere were eight minutes left in the game and there were possibly less than 20,000 of the 54,000 left in the stands. (Statiitics on Page C4) AP Wlrtphola HIGH-FLYING RAM — Los Angeles Rams’ back Bemie Casey (25) takes to the air to collect a pass in yesterday’s game with the Detroit Lions. Defensive back Lem Barpey makes the tackle. The play gained 18 yards and the Rams went on to post a 31-7 victory. I Lansing Whips T-Hawks I to Lead East Division LANSING — The Pontiac Tomahawks found a whirlwind offense awaiting their unsteady defense Thursday night at Everett High School and dropped a record 164-128 decision to the undefeated Lansing Capitols. The North American Basketball League’s Eastern Division pacesetters ran, jumped and shot their way to a 29-17 early lead with 10 straight points and never were in trouble. Actually, the victory boosted the Capitols into the Eastern top spot since Muskegon handed Battle Creek a 109-94 loss to drop the Braves out of a share of the lead. In the other games. Grand Rapids trimmed Columbus, 124-112, to leave the Comets (a 123-120 loser in Pontiac Wednesday) a half game bekind the Tomahawks; and Holland remained close on the Tackers’ heels by topping winless Chicago, 120-113. Two sharp-shooting guards — Bfian Ferguson of Northern Michigan and bon Edwards from Central Michigan — paced the Lansing romp. Ferguson sank 10 of 20 from the field and 15 of 18 Rookie Dave Bing Ailing as Pistons Lose to LA Lakers LOS ANGELES (UPI) - Dave Bing can handle the basketball like a juggler when he’s got an ac^jpg stomach, but he doesn’t do as well with an aching hand. Handicapped by a badly swollen right hand, the Detroit Pistons, and the National Basketball Association's top scorer managed only nine points Thursday night as the Pistons bowed to the Los Angeles Lakers 132-120. 9- Bing, who sported a 28.9 points per game average before Thursday’s contest, injured his hand playing against the Seattle Supersonics Monday. The lithe second-year man had poured In 31 points during that game until the accident sidelined him. He sat out Wednesday’s tussle against San Francisco, but returned to action for 30 minutes Thursday as the Pistons ended their disastrous five-game swing along the West Coast. In a game marred by 114 free throws, the Lakers led most of the way, Archie Garke, playing his second year in the ’NBA, bagged five crucial baskets /ind stole the ball four times in the closing moments to clinch the game for the Lakers. (Box Score on Page C-4) / charity tosses for 35 points: and the hustling Edwards added 32 with a 14 of 25 (field goals) and four of four (foul shots) night. The hot-shooting Capitols’ twosome had plenty (if help. Five of their mates also were in twin figures led by husky Mack Herndon’s 18 points. Unbelievably, the Tomahawks weren’t overmatched in the statistics despite the score. Led by flashy Dave Gaines’ 34 markers, four of the visitors had at least 15 and they took more shots (124-121) from the field and were only out-rebounded by five (56-51). In addition, the Pontiac pros sank four three-point field goals (Including a pair by Gaines). In spite of these figure the Capitols’ fast break kept the Tomahawks down by at least 25 points the entire second half. The winners scored 51 points in tbe final period to increase their lead despite the Tomahawks’ best scoring period (42 in fourth) and half (76) of the young NABL campaign. Lansing’s 91 and 51 tallies in the same span are league records, as are the winners’ total and the two teams’ combined score. Pontiac’s Jim Patterson led all the rebounders with 12 but this was below his season average which has him among the NABL’s leaders. Marty Letz-mann came off the bench to grab 10 retrieves, matching Lansing’s Bill Curtis, former Michigan State captain. Dick Dzik kept the losers in the contest during the first half with 8 of 11 for 16 of his game total 17 points. Free throw shooting hurt the Tomahawks, particularly in the first half. ★ * * Pontiac will be idle until Dec. 2 when the club will entertain Battle Creek at the Northern High School gym. FONTIAC (114) Patifrson. Thompson Letzmsnn Watson D/ik. F Hyatt Navels. O Jackson Gaines, G Totati Walker, F LANSING (1M) FG FT TF Ml !•« 15 MO 1-2 3 3-7 4-4 10 1-4 0-2 a 1-3 M 3 l-tl 14 i; •0-23 5-4 24 FG FT TF M S-l 0 3-0 M 7 7-!0 3-3 17 5-n 7-10 17 5-0 34 13 7-13 4-4 10 3-7 4-0 10 14-25 4-4 32 3-0 \G0 0 10-20 15-11 35 10^1 40^ 104 15 3$ 30 4t->1N •Includes 3 point goal SCOFF »Y OUARTiFS Pontiac Tomahawk! Lansing Cagltalt NORTH AMERICAN RA5KETIALL LEAGM Eaitam DIvltlaii Holland Carvers Panthers Lansing at Sat Grand Rapids /: C—2 THE rONTIAC PRI^SS, FRIDAY. NOVEMBER $4, 1967 NATIONAL TITLE BID — Northern Michigan University coach RoUie Dotsch and senior quarterback Lloyd Carr from Riverview discuss tomorrow’s game at Fairmont (W. Va.) State.' The Wildcats, top rated team in the NAIA, and Fairmont will play for a berth in the national title game. New Me:dco Highlands meets Eastern Washington State in the other semifinai. 'M' Can Conclude on High Grid Note ANN ARBOR (AP) — Mich-iwith 338 yards in a near upset'Seymour suffered a knee injury igan, flounctering in the midst of five straight losses a month ago, could end the 1967 football sea-on a high note with a victory over Big Ten rival Ohio State at Ann Arbor Saturday. Bump Elliott’s Wolverines have won their last three conference games and now stand 3-3 in the Big Ten and 4-5 over all After losing five of their first six starts. I of Indiana in his first college start OPTION PLAY The 5-foot-8, 175-pound youngster has completed 65 of 1^ passes this year for 734 yards and three touchdowns. He has the speed to make Michigan’s split effective and has gained 328 yards in 123 carries on the option play. When Brown isn’t running, he „ . " " ", lusually pitches out to halfback The big reason for the resw- Ron Johnson, another junior snce has been the work of ju-^ho broke Tom Harmon’s sin-nior quarterback Dennis Brown, g,e season Michigan rushing who tossed a pair of. touch- „,ark of 884 yards in the Wis-down passeA and scored on a ga„,e 44-yard run in a 27-14 victory » over Wisconsin last week. He replaced Dick Vidmer aft-the Michigan State game Oct. 14 and broke Bob Griese’s but is expected to be ready. But defensive tackle Dick Williamson, nursing a sprained ankle, and fuUback Garvie Craw, #ho suffered a pulled leg muscle two weeks ago, remain doubtful starters. ★ * ★ Elliott said Tom Goss, hurt in the Northwestern game, probably will be ready to replace Williamson, if necessary, and Warren Sipp, the starter earlier in the year, has been playing for Craw Michigan holds a 37-22-4 edge in the Ohio State series, which idates back to 1897. The Wolver-JofuiOTn has 909 yards in 200 fees won 17-3 last year, carries for a 4.5 per try average. MSU Kicker Wants More Time on Field EAST LANSING (AP)-Mitch Opponents were held to only 13 Pruiett, the Michigan $tate touchdowns by the 1966 defen-extra point kicker, is like asive crew that was riddled by fellow who plays the cymbals in graduation and injuries, a symphony orchestra. ' | The 1966 defense also only He isn’t called on to perform l pushing a very often, but when he does, This fall, opponents have Head coarfi Bob Caliban begins his 20th year in basketball at the University of Detroit. Hie Titans open Dec. 2 with Aquinas, but face Michigan, Mon., Dec. 4, and follow with a rugged schedule featuring Indiana, Notre Dame, Missouri, Du-quesne among top foes. he comes through with a bang. * * * Pruiett, a 21-year-old, 207-pound senior from Benton Harbor, has a perfect season for the Italians feis fall. The kicking specialist who wears glasses off the field proved his canny eye with 13 for 13 in point department. For Michigan Contest OSU Starts Preparing Early , „ ^ Jim' Berline, Michigan’s split Big Ten total offense record Brown’s favorite pass j receiver. He has 33 catches for 416 yards and two touchdowns, including six receptions for 116 'yards against Wisconsin, j Ohio State, which has been 'vulnerable on pass defense, may seen a lot of it Saturday. Elliott likes Brown to throw the foot ball about 50 per cent of the time. COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - On the Ohio State campus, the feeling has always bemi that Coach Woody Hayes starts pointing for arch-rival Michigan during q>ring drills Beating the Wolverines in the season finale almost always putk a stamp of Bugeye football. * ★ Hiis year Ohio can accomplish a bit more by whipping the Wolves. For one thing, il would give them a 6-3 record, certainly a respectable mark for a team that was floundering at 2-3 four weeks ago. And it would silence the “(joodbye Woody” cries that reached a peak after a 17-13 setback to Illinois that knocked the Bucks out of a possible Rose Bowl trip. Ohio has turned in successive victories over Michigan State, Wisconsin and Iowa since the lUiai been impressive, except for a few standout sophranores. “I think the main reason we have improved is that our youngsters just stuck in there despite our early season humiliations,” Hayes said Monday. Hie real Buckeye standouts are running bac^s Dave Bron-gard, Jim Otis and Paul Huff, Tennis Tourney The Wolverines, weak on pass the year, are L Huff are power run- CurU» ners who have added 416 and 273 yards, respectively. And junior quarterback Bill Long, who has been erratic as a passer despite a sensational rookie season, suddenly has blossomed | BOUNCED AROUND as a running threat. the mainstays of the secondary They have intercepted 12 passes, seven by Curtis, who now holds a share of the Big Ten season mark in that catagory. Cage Countdown Starts for Tough Titan Slate averaged 191.7 yards a game rurfiing. At Tuesday’s workout, Pruiett and Tony Conti, another offensive guard, were working at linebacker spots in an effort by coaches to bolster the defense. Regis Cavender, a-junior from the extra™""feg fullback ' may bump out Bob Apisa, He Ms7mde”his only field the senior at the spot as a goal try. a8«“»st Northwestern. three-year letterman, Pruiett started out as a back playing both offense and defense, was switched to offensive guard this fall and probably will be shifted to the defense Saturday against Northwestern. FEW ’TOUCHDOWNS The only trouble with Michigan State this year is that I Pruiett hasn’t been called upon to perform enough. The Sptui- in TOP FROSH Now if Hayes’ crew can get by Michigan, Woody is a cinch to be back in 1968 with a chance to use his best freshman prospects in more than a decade. Hayes, always the philosopher, figures Ohio and Michigan and seven other clubs in the Big Ten are just average teams. “Purdue,” he said a week ago, “is in a league by itself with the others capable of beating each other on any Saturday.” ★ ★ ★ At best, Ohio State does look like just an average team. Even in victory, the Bucks have not TH£S£ n SHOW eondltioni wHh l________ cknt, dspwidibli. FliMMtMiWMt. n Wid* chclM. Thra* dUftiMt «sd-LJ an U iiMid«rd tntlM opUoMk A pilN isr badsM. □ gkTjni&CSft! □aaAKRsaz RMpMlinfllMrbMkrNL iMilWjrMidwiwtofatat. Q OpUOMl tiKbic □ feMf... IM dwlw aftlMH PERRY'S UWRftRARDER 1IIIIUgMa«dRd.(IIM) •114m 2 Wimbledon Champs Are Sidelined SYDNEY, AiBtraUa (UPI) The New South Wales tennis tournament moved into the semifinal round today with 1967 Wimbledon champions John Newcombe of Australia and American Mrs. Billie Jean King both watching from the sidelines because of injuries. Newcombe, who suffered a badly sprained tendon in his right arm last Sunday, struggled to the quarter-finals before deciding to wdthdraw. Mrs. King, of Long Beach, Calif., tore a tendon in her left leg during a qnarter-final match Thursday and list to Australian Judy Tegart, 6-3,7-9, 64. She was examined by A doctor who advised her to withdraw from Friday’s doubles competi tion. ^ Rosemary Casals of San Francisco, Calif., al beaten, falling before Australian Margaret Smith Court, 6-3 6-1 in another quarter-final match Mrs. Court dis|dayed some of her old power game as she won her first big test since returning from semi-retirement. The U.S. women salvaged one match when Kathy Harter of Seal Beach, Calif., beat defending women’s champ Lesley Turner of Australia, 64, 6-4. Nearly Blind Player Aids Team fo Title at the University of Detroit. With Aquinas in the opener, Dec. 2, Michigan, Dec. 4, Xavier, Dec. 9, and West Virginia, Dec. 11, this ten-day stretch that may give some indication just how far the Titans can go in their pretentious 1967-68 Module. There were few, if any, surprises in pre-season camp. Detroit has two fine guards in Warren senior, Larry Said, and Hamtramck senior, Ralph Brisk-I Michigan got bounced around ^er. pretty good in the Wisconsin game, but Elliott says R's countdown to tipoff for Xavier and St. Bonaventure, all enough touchdowns, coach Bob Caliban’s 20th season during January. | MSU has 18 touchdowns in Notre Dame returns the visit, nine games. Four of the five Feb. 3, followed by ViUanova, times Pruiett didn’t kick, MSU Hiiisdale, Western Michigan and tried for ^o pointers and made DePaul. A road game at MAr^ tiyo and missed two. Another quette and one at Canisius, Mar. kicker xnissed the remaining 2, close out the regular season, conversioh. Canadian Six Defeats U. S. DULUTH, Minn. (AP) - The Canadian Nationals, passing well and checking hard, downed the U.S. Nationals hockey team 5-2 at the Arena Thursday night. The Canadians avenged a 54 defeat at the hands of the Amer-ans just haven’t been making i leans in an exhibition in France OB Oct. 13. SEATTLE (AP) -halfback Billy Houghton scored two touchdowns and rushed for 117 yards Thursday to lead his Ingraham High School football team to a 44-13 victory over Garfield and the Seattle Metro League Championship. I It was kind of a specialj Thanksgiving for Billy, who is legaUy blind. “I didn’t know I had a problem until the sixth grade,” Billy said the other day. Then, he was asked to read a line on the blackboard and from his back row seat he couldn’t see the writing. “So, it hit me all of a sudden At first, I bawled about it, ther I began to adjust. I found I still could play football, was the big thing.” Billy has only 20-200 vision caused, his father says, by macular degeneration of the retina. “That means the cones and rods in your eyes are dying,' Billy explained. “I see nothing, almost nothing, to the front. But I see to the sides.” And to the sides is where Billy carries the football. He’s considered one of the best slanting backs Coach Tony Gasparovich has seen. He’s Uie team’s leading rusher and gained 681 yards this year. thinks most of his key players will be ready for the Buckeyes Brown, who had the wind knocked out of him twice while being tossed for 81 yards in {losses against the Badgers, was back in action this week. Despite the beating, he managed a net 42 yards rushing and 232 Senior yards passing in the game. Sophomore defensive end Phil Waterford Touch Title Is Decided The Red Raiders have won the Waterford Township men’s touch football league, clinching the title with a 304 win this week over the Eagle Boosters under the lights at the Drayton Plains park. Four touchdown passes by Bob Casteel decided the big victory. The Raiders finished with a 6-0-1- mark. The other game was a 254 triumph for the Nurds over the Stage Coach Bandits with Jim Swain tossing three scoring aerials. The Nurds are 3-1-2. Although two games remain on the regular schedule, they will be cancelled if the hockey rink is set up on the field ahead of time. SIFT for the HOME BERRY AUTOMAHC Optiu, guragt Inolcb y^tur ear DICKIE LUMBER 24N OROHAIIO UKC RD. RHONE M2-1MI NMIMi1iNA.M.to6'pjL-Srfwdsy1i3tAjlLfelRJII. T ^ 1 Individual Honors for 2 Grid Stars NEW YORK (AP) - 0. J Simpson of Southern California and Leroy Keyes of Purdue, two of the nation’s top college running backs, have virtually wrapped up Individual titles among major college players. Acceding to the latest figims released Tuesday by the National Collegiate Sports Services, Simpson gained 1,415 yards in Southern Cal’s 10 regular season games and has a healthy lead over his closest competitors. Keyes, with one game leR has scored 114 points, 29 more than Houston’s Ken Hebert, who has the best statistical chance of catching him. Two .Detroiters Among Top Ten in PBA Tourney ^ ^ , CAMDEN, N.J. (AP) - Two, Saici averaged 16.3 ppg a yew Detroit bowiers are among thei ago and could better the all- te„ after two rounds of the time career mark for a guard profgssionai Bowlers Associa-' another good season. Brisk-| yon’s 330,500 Camden Open. | So Pruiett hasn’t had a fair shot at the MSU extra point record, 39 by George Smith in 1947. , State’s 18 touchdowns thisi year don’t stack up to last: year’s 41 through the season. I er was Detroit’s leading scorer (19.9 ppg) after nine games last winter but the academic axe fell and he sat out the final 16 Femdale sophomore, Dwight Dunlap, the top freshman scorer last year, appears to be capable relief for either of them, if needed. Tlie forwards are set. Captain Bruce Rodwan, 6-5 Femdale product, will hold forth at one and 64 Chicagoan, Vyto Abramavicius, an adequate scorer and excellent defensive player, the other. Rodwan was Detroit’s scoring runner-up last year and led the club in rebounding with a 16.4 mark. Center, a problem last year, is still a problem. Tommy Ricb-ardson, a 6-7 Detroit Southwestern product, is rebounding as well or better than a year ago when he was second only to Rodwan. He didn’t shoot well last year, though, and still doesn’t. * w * Jerry Swartzfager, on the other hand, is scoring better than ever but still can’t do the job on the backboards. The 64 DeLaSalle grad led U-D In sdbr-feg last year with a 17.0 ppg mark. The paradoxical pair will play or sit as the situation dictates unless one suddenly develops the other phase of the game. The schedule, tough in December with the above idus Calvin Murphy and Niagara in the 16th Motor City Tournament, doesn’t get any easier after New Year’s. Indiana, defending Big Ten co-chanipion, Duquesne, Eastern Michigan and Marquette pay Detroit cails and the Titans travel to Notre Dame, Dayton, Bob Strampe with 2,589 holds down the sixth spot while George Howard is ninth his 2,543. The field of 128 shoots another six games today with the top 64 advancing to the semifinals After another six games, the top 16 will compete for the $3,000 first prize in Saturday’s match game finals. Leading after the first 12 games are Bud Home, Los Angeles, 2,691; Bobby Knipple, Long Beach, Calif., 2,640, and Ernie Schlegel, Hackensack, N.J., 2,611. AAMCO TRANSMISSION 150 W. Maiitca Oakland and laMwin, 33449S1 Czech Gets Grid Honor TORONTO (fl — Mike Eben a 6-foot-2, 200-pound split end for the University of Toronto, was named Canada’s top college football player Thursday The 21-year-old Eben is a native of &tec, Czechoslovakia. FAST MUFFLER and PIPE SERVICE for aa long as you own your car. Ro-placod H nocoaoary for only a aarvica chaVga at any Midas Muffler Shop in the U.S. and Canadal 435 SMith Ssfinaw 3 SLOCKS SOUTH OF WIOI TRACK DRIVI FE 2-1010 non annanT TOAMiMisstoN snnvicni MIDAS TRANSMISSION SHOP, 334-4727 Frank B» AudeUe f h. OUNT PONTIAC BIG SAVINGS! Him • Tnmk llflita • MUb NM • 400 Mblc hKh MO H.r. V.0.Mtliw • SbImv iMMni • Or. ..0 M uat, SMCIALPINANCINO *2858 Ease ABOUT MIDEITE'S nouiiinl ■ SKClXLFIIUNOim I I CREDIT ARfllCATION ■ OIR ON DUTY. Wm m AUDETTE eOfOTIAC . . . OPPOSITE BERZ AIRPORT-IN TROT loOU JO6-1380 JSrSi Hi 2-1600 OVTOrTOWHBVTBRSMXXPTXO Oaken Bucket Game Purdue's Ticket to Title Boilermakers Favored to Ruin Indiana Bid for Rose Bowl CHICAGO (fl — Midwest football stars get their final chance to enhance All-America bids this weekend, but Purdue’s sensational 1-eroy Keyes probably will be just gilding the lily in the Old 0^lken Bucket classic' with Indiana. Keyes has been a season long standout, not only a gold-plated All-America prospect, but also a ranking candidate for the Heis man Trophy. * * * He will be a marked man, as usual, as the nationally third-ranked Purdue Boilermakers try to win their first clear-cut Big Ten title since 1929 and also extinguish any Rose Bowl hope for arch-rival Indiana. ★ * * The sophomore-inspired Hoo-aiers, tripped for the first tinife this season in a 33-7 loss at Minnesota last Saturday, will find their top All-America prospects under tremendous pressure against the free-wheeling Boilermakers. THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 24, m? C—8 TOP GUARDS These include offensive guards Gary Cassells and Bob Russell and linebackers Ken Kaczmarek and Jim Sniadecki, who have done yeoman work despite the plaudits gained by the Hoosier sophomore trio of quarterback Harry Gonso, halfback John I Baekstrom Is Spark j in Montreal Surge I By TTie Associated Press i Boston Bruins downed the New j Speedy Ralph Baekstrom has York Rangers 4-2. j become the center of attraction The results lifted the Bruins for the Montreal Canadians,; into a first-place tie with Tordn-who’ve suddenly caught fire in to in the circuit’s East Division the National Hockey League. while the Canadians took over I With star centers Jean Beli-'fourth place from the Rangers. Iveau and Henri Richard on the Detroit is third and Chicago injured list, Baekstrom, another sixth. veteran center, scored three Baekstrom, who scored one goals and assisted on two others goal Wednesday night when in leading the Canadians to a 7-! Montreal beat St. Louis 3-1, reg-0 victory over the Chicago I istered twice in the opening pe-Black Hawks 'Thursday night. i riod and once in the second ses-The setback was the Hawks' sion at Chicago. He now has first in 10 games. ! seven goals for the season. In the only other game, the SOCCER STARS — Pictured above are mem^r^of the 1967 Ail-Area Soccer team selected “this week by The Pontiac Press. In .front row (1-r) are: Louis Raden, Detroit Country Day; Raljlh Margulis, Cranbrook; Steve Vartanian, Birmingham Groves: Rick Hale, Birmingham Seaholm; Mike Cotter, In Oakland County Bloomfield Hills Andover. In the back row (1-r) are: Guy Neff, Cranbrook; Paul Nee-son, Ferndale; Ron Trapp, Bloomfield Hills Lahser; Fred Van Vurst, Bloomfield Hills Andover; Nabil Abdel-Sayed, Detroit Country Day; Rudy Zeller, Cranbrook. Pick Soccer All-Stars Racing Groupsj Discuss Autos Soccer ’TWO GOALS i Bobby Rousseau with two goals and Claude Larose and Yvan Cournoyer with one apiece were the other Canadiens’ scorers. Baekstrom assisted on the' iLarose and Cournoyer tallies.! The Hawks, who had won five! and tied four of their previous' ___________ |nine games, had only 15 shots CHARLOTTE, N. C. (AP) — on net. Gump Worsley turned in The sanctioning bodies have the shutout, gotten together on engine speci-: johnnv Bucyk was the Bruins’ fications for the small sedan star. He scored twice in the category for the 1968 auto rac- opening period at Boston after mg season Larry Jeffrey’s tally had given A final determination of 305 the Rangers an earlier lead, cubic inches maximum was ^ : worked out by Sports Car Club si„n nf.pku of Am#»rirfl IT ^ Anin pinK Tommy Williams and Phil fnoihoi. 1 .1, line at the right halfback I “"“X" Am New York in football in these parts, but the sented by two players, Bloom-spot. the third period. Gilles Villem- game’s influence continues to field Hills Andover picked spread and increased activity in two positions, while Bloomfield! Also Hale, the sport was noticable locally Hills Lasher, Ferndale, Birming-L„„|®’, ! Se»he™.| this year at the high s c h 0 01 ham Seaholm and Birmingham I? ----- - lr.r«v«. #««ir i Day at center halfback andluons are basic level. I Groves took one spot apiece. ,.l.h a maxta™ «?Sl„cS wS the Uae are RIeklon wheelbases. .re, wto replaced Ed Giacoinin j as the Rangers’ starting goalie, ! made 43 saves while Boston net-While these new specifica-i minder turned beck 21 shots, soohomore Ron/iTrann f r o m *’^**‘^ had started each of Sevjh oLl^td’ C»;.y hl|hWSSk"!;^a?ta^ schools fielded soccer squads, igft teammate Guy! Tending goal for the all-star I committee will designate the and to give some recognition to jgkes the inside right po- 1® Groves’ Steve Vartan- cars eligible for the division Isenbarger and flanker Jade !‘’® P • e r s from these gition. Zeller, a junior, scored « senior who posted four and will include some that will Butcher. ® teams. The Press this week se-J5 gggjg gggson while Neff during the season. ;noi be eligible for the SCCA’s jlected the first All-Area Soccer Team. iTiiuwcsi iraiiuiuiuesi I who Wli; try to add final game Cranbrook placed three play-luster to AlFAnjerica bids in- c* •»" fhe 11-man squad. De- Other top Midwest candidates 111 try I to AlF elude Bob Stein, Minnesota’s rugged defensive end; Tom Schoen, Notre Dame’s flashy safety man; middle guard Chuck Kyle of Purdue; halfback Ron Johnson of Michigan Bruce Gunstra, Northwestern offensive guard, and Tom Dem-bres, a tremendous defensive ! for winless Wisconsin picked up nine. They sparked the Cranes to an 8-2-2 record. i prestigious Trans-American se- FJOTBALL SCORES Tam Ends Season With '68 Election Raden and teammate Sandy The Cranes’ other nominee, SSr^Tluable^PU yeVawTrd -----------— — I Ralph Margulis, takes a posi-'given at a banquet Tuesday-g r-wand Naiional^ onrT” tion on the line at left fullback, night. Grand National cars, , m, vm.nov. * France said. “But we will give m 7 m « a y n ^ such as Barracuda and Joining Neff and teller u p B.mjn«h^ their smaller en-j sV’o front are Paul Neeson, a Fern-| country D»y" sandy Rbsimon, goaii./ K'nes 283 cubic inches, an op-| ' dale senior at inside left, Fred|*mrmrn9hiri'"sMhoirn: jim Abbott, bring displacement, Mo7rii*B^own"2)/^^^^ |VanVurst of Andover at center„„ |up to the 305 limit. We will not'. Nrway flashers, fide-view and day and night mirrors. Believe it or not, come in and drive this Youngmobile for a new lease on youth. MERRY OLDSMORILE-GMC, INC. 528 N. Main St., Rochester, Mich. 651-9761 University. Gymnasts' Clinic I Set for Western KALAMAZOO (AP)-A gymnastics clinic for high school . , , boys and coaches is scheduled Batfara oivitian Dinghy SailOfS to Race Saturday at Western Michigan g.w votk * 2'" 77a 2M ?o« University’s intramural gymna- toXn'' 3 7 I 300 226 277 UHICAGO (AP) — Skippcrs sium. The clinic will bo siipcr- ail'm" ? I 0 m w Michigan State, the Uni- vised by WMU gymnastics waatarn Diviiian versity of Michigan, Wayn^ coach Fred Orlofsky and will in- ian o'lew) a 1 I :a8* 267 2M State and 14 other universities elude coaches Newt Loken of t.nj« city 6^5 « .MS 326 open three days of dinghy sail- the University of Michigan, s«n oiaoo^2""D*,T«r''2«"'" '"8 "vcr a one-mile course in George Szypula of Michigan Oakland 44.^ cHj^22 Bclmont Ha^bor today in the State, Marv Johnson of Eastern annual Time Angsten Me-Michigan and Tony Miohle of '"’"'York byT' Imorial Regatta. Central Michigan. Give the elegant 8 year old in the elegant gift wrap Walker’s DeLiixe Bourbon Holiday decanter or regular fifth, both gift wrapped at no extra charge • 'U.j $^36 $238 f/5 QT. •nAIGHI lOURUN WHISKEY • II mOOF • HIMM WUKEK I S0l(8 INC., PEORIA, I InclutfM Alt Taxai EVERYTHING FOR THE HOME Build your own backyard ice skating rink. WITH OUAUTY MATERIALS/mm BURKE GET THE MATERIALS AND EXPERT ADVICE, TODAY! 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RELIABLE TRANSMISSION COMPANY 922 Ookland Avenue BEATTY'S TRANSMISSION SERVICE 197 5outh Saginow StrMt THURSDAY RESULTS FIRST RACE, S1,«M; CLAIMIN0 FACE; ONE MILE: ....... 70 3.40 00 2.60 14.00 SECOND RACE, $1,000; CLAIMING PACE; ONE MILE: Maud's Boy 7.20 4.70 3.50 Magella 7.80 4.90 Wee Lady Gee 3.50 DAILY DOUBLE (2-2) PAID Sdl.YI. _ THIRD RACE. $1,408; CLAIMING PACE; ONE MILE: Duchess Lady 6-90 3.40 2.70 Southern Pixie Chief Melody -------- RACE, FOURTH 3.20 2.50 3.20 _____ INVITATION- «THE TURKEY TROT;" ONE MILE Guy Yates 16.20 a. 10 a.ao Tapdean 5.20 3.50 Date Grove 3.70 FIFTH RACE. $2,280; CONDITIONED PACE; ONE MILE: Pluto Prince 3.50 2.80 2.30 Dandy Scott 4.00 2.80 Winsocki Wick 2.80 OUINBLLA (2-6) PAID $9.28. SIXTH RACE, $888; CONDITIONED PACE; ONE MILE: Frisco Phil 2.90 2.60 2.40 Tilda's Lad 11.80 5.10 Doc Rogers 3.80 SEVEinH RACE, $1,008; CONDITIONED PACE; ONE MILE: J. J. Mohawk 3.90 2.60 2.30 Bonnie' Todd C QUIh EIGHTH RACI TROT, 280; CONDITIONED 8.50 4..S0 4.30 3.401 4.80 RACE, $1,200; CONDITIONED 33.30 9.50 4.40; TROT; ONE MILE Birth Day Follow Suit I ending Victory NINTH RACE, PACE; ONE MILE Mickey Suprei Timmy North Dr. Lindsey EXACTOR Two Big Incentives Prod Indiana Eleven CHICAGO (AP) - There’s Yale and Harvard, and Princeton and Dartmouth, but nothing, nowhere, according to Indiana Coach Johnny Pont, rates with the Purdue-Indiana rivalry. That, plus the 51-« luting *T know there are some great and old rivalries like Yale and Harvard and Princeton and (1-6) PAID Dayton 7. Port Huron 4 Co’umbus 4, Des Moines Muskegon 5, Toledo 5, tie Thursday's ResuM* Fort Wayne 3. Des Moines C Muskegon 3. Toledo 1 Dayton 5, Port Huron 5, tie AP Wirephote AGONY AND ECSTACY — Seattle Sonic fan Gaye Hill’s face shows alternate hope, as the Sonics shoot; terror, as the opposition shoots; anguish, as the opposition scores; anger, at a call by the referee; and jubilation as the Sonics win the recent National Basketball Association game. The opposition was the Lakers. • Indiana has squedeed through,great passer but he doesn’t have seven of its eight victories and Gmso’s quickness. Gphso is a was smashed by Minnesota 33-7; great passer, too, but I alsc one week after Purdue had tak- think he’s a better runner than en the Gophers to task. Phipps. In each case, theii Coach Murray Wat-math.l coaches are utilizing them per-whose Minnesota Gophers can'fectly.” Purdue handed Indiana last'clalm the bowl bid if they beatl * * * year, is all the stimulaUon un- Wisconsin and Indiana loses toj Purdue Coach Jack MollenkopI derdog Indiana needs Saturday | Purdue, evaluated the two tried to minimize Minnesota’s in its battle for a share of the teams along with sophomore one-sided triumph over Indiana. Big Ten title and the Rose Bowl quarterbacks Harry Gonso ofjpp.pKirn opfim • ■ Indiana and Mike Phipps of Purdue. “It was a lot closer than the ★ * * 'score indicates,’’ said Mollen- “Purdue is bigger, stronger kopf. “It was 13-7 in the third and more experienced,” said quarter but the game finally Dartmouth ” said Pont “ButiWarmath. “Indiana is flashy, cracked open and Minnesota got I honestly’don’t think anything dash»ng and daring. Phipps is a some easy scores.______________ compares with this one.” | The saying goes that you can throw out past performances when such rivals meet but it is a difficult thing to do under the circumstances. Purdue is 6-0 in the Big Ten and 8-1 overall. Indiana is 5-1 in the conference and 8-1 overall. There the similarly ends. Except for its 22-14 loss to Oregon State, third-ranked Purdue, led by the fabulous Leroy, Keyes, has bombed most of its opponents and blistered Rose Bowl hopeful Minnesota, 41-12.: Wisconsin 'Fly' in Gopher 'Ointment' i MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — Wis- who have not won a game thisiPurdue for the Big Ten cham-consin, the fly in Minnesota’s Season. jtionship all at 6-1. This, again. Big Ten championship ointment, ★ ★ ★ |is assuming Minnesota can han- more times in the past dozen! If Minnesota defeats Wiscon-jdle Wisconsin, years than Gopher Coach Mur-'sin and Purdue beats Indiana,! Indiana would get the Rose ray Warmath cares to remem-the Gophers go to Pasadena. Bowl trip in event of any tie be-ber, lies between the Gophers; And that’s what the G6phers cause the Hoosiers have never and a Rose Bowl trip or a share; would rather do. been to Pasadena, of the conference title Saturday. ★ ★ ★ : One or the other of the prizes awaits the Gophers — if they !can beat the pesky Badgers, If, however, Indiana upsets NOTHING TO LOSE third-ranked Purdue Saturday, then the Hoosiers will make the; Rose Bowl scene Jan. 1 because] they and Minnesota will tie with Ifs time to be thinking Christmas and .... PH ^1^ IP pp ipi SHOP OUR MANY DEPTS. HAS IT! NEW FIXTURE DEPARTMENT Choose now from our large selection for every port of your home. Sale priced for savings. avai|a^lE in Black or Whitt. 6" 80c ca. 8" SSc M. 10” 60c CR. 12" 67c ea. 14” 76c «a. 16” 86c ca. Floor to ceiling poles let you assemble shell units LUSTRA SHELVES snywhere in the house. Shell brockets are available vvalNUT FINISH ' 6" to 16” for varying shflf depthi Lifetime finnh aluminum shelf standards available in 1' * to 6' lengths. All metil parts come in five hand- *" x 36” 4.49 aofflo brushed finishes (Natural, Gold. Walnut. 8”x48" 5.49 Cturcoal apd White)... and you can move them 10” x 36" 5.49 from room to room whenever you wish! yo" x48" 6.95 HAGGERTY LUMBER & SUPPLY CO. 2Q55 HAGGERTY HWY. ,Wolled Lake - MA 4-4551 liolwcrn W. Maple and Pontiac Trail "MICHIGAN'S MOST MODERN LUMBER MART" Or>cn 7:30 a.m. to 6 pAn_Fri. Nito to 9 p.tn. J~ Siit. 7:30 a.m. to G p.i r*. RMUlIt Chicago 105, B.lllmore 100 Boston IJ4, San DIeoo '10 Cincinnati 123, Naw York 122 St. Louis IIS. pniladelphla 1)3 Thwrstov's RosuHs Seattia 133, Boiton lot PhlladcIpniV'lTO. San OIrao 1)7 < Chicago lot. Now York ft Togay't oomit Saattle vs. Cincinnati al Phlladalphia al Chicago San DIago tl Oelrolt Boston at Baltimora Wisconsin’s winless status is what worries Warmath most of ail. “They figure they’ve got nothing to lose, and then can salvage one whale of a whole lot by beating us,” Warmath fretted this week. “I’d rather they had won a few games, because they’re certainly not as bad a football tcamj Oajro'i't ^ as their record and they could cn*M»*^'phiiiadJli;phi. have won some with a few |an oi^'id‘’sL' lwis^"**'** breaks. We know they’ve got{ ji. louis .rTfs*’A’ng'?r«* some fine personnel, and it’s mtroit “los AMOELis just a matter of putting it to-; t eether. OeBch 4 3-4 n Bamet 0 2 2 2 ® J. J. J. I Oi»chgr 6 4-5 16 Baylor 7 9-13 23 * * \ Dove 0 0-0 0 Clark 12 6-7 30 Warmath’s respect for the {('XV.n f li'^oS^flcn I J-ioii Bddgers has a solid foundaUon.l Only two Big Ten teams have an edge on Warmath in his 14 years as Minnesota coach. One Lai'Am of them is Wisconsiq, which has g,i*,“"H.rki;r, an g_l 1 Ki.lnn , Total loula—O.lroll 35. Lot Angaiai I an 0”4-l DUlgCi. Attendanca 9,452. . I Hawkint 6 6-7 18 I Inihoff 5 4-5 14 5 2-2 12 West 2 15-17 19 4/li?n 1M Tetale 42 41-64 132 32 27 36 2$~118 here now at KING BROS. the world's best looking best performing snowmobile • new safety features • new peppier engines a new refined transmission • new quality finishing • new deep foam comfort • new all-round depandablitt/ Come in and see the NEW 1968 Ski-doos Priced as low as •69S KING BROS. PONTIAC Rd. at OPDYKE PONTIAC, MICHIGAN Phone: FE 4-1682 and FE 4-0134 In At 17 you were on top of the world. We can help you get there again. Nothing makes the world look as good as a truly good job, with an excellent salary, and bright prospects for Jkjvancement. It puts you back up on top where ybu always wanted to be. In less than twelve months you can be there, if you take advantage of the special opportunities open in the computer field now. And Control Data Institute can help you prepare^ yourself for it. Even if you’ve had no special training sincS high school. We’re the educational division of Control Data Corporation—the third largest computer manufacturer in the world. We offer courses in computer programming. And you learn on the Institute’s own major computer installation. If you would like an information packet on computer ca/eers and the courses we offer, or would like to arrange for an interview and ffee aptitude test, call or write; Control Data Institute, 23775 Northwestern Hwy., Southfield, Michigan 48075. Telephone: (313) 444-1044, day or night. CONTROL DATA INSTITUTE CONTROL DATA ceurtgt you otfgr. City______ THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 1967 C—5 Brains, Brawn, Speed on All-State Get up and go —along wooded trails, over mountains — across frozen lakes; The Alovette roams about In safety and reliability. Exceptional speed — positive steering — definite braking - all the extras - The Alouette. 1947 Ttlagroph Rd. Opts 9 to 9 Daily; Saturday 9 to 5; Sunday 12 to 6 • By The Associated Press iBay City Central and Glenp Ibe 1967 Michigan Associated Doughty of Detroit Pershing. Press Class A All-State High Hulking George Trujillo of Jack-School football team has a com-'son is the other tackle. Guard bination of brains, brawn and Doug Halliday of Royal Oak speed -which would make anyjKimball, center Bob Schaut of coach mad with power. |Escanaba, quarterback Ken j * * * ipiott of Roseville and halfback I The interior line averages 234^Harley Westfall of Adrian round pounds, two of the players are out the squad, honor students and two of the « * halfbwks are sprinters who can ^ana Coin, PonUac Northern’s “ “"‘*®>ecord breaking halfback, and end Mike Shorters of Pontiac Central were named to the second team. 10 seconds. sive star t e r, he anchored a Northern line which allowed an average of one yard per play ruling play a game. A fine blocker and two-year offensive regular. Brown has been scouted by the University of Michi-gan. Another outstanding college prsopect is Trujillo, biggest man on the team at 6-foot-5 and 282 pounds. Big, fast, agile and a good blocker, Trujillo is de- Flint Northern and Battle Creek Central each placed two men on the squad. Northern’s! Coin holds all game, season Gordon Brown is at one tackle and career rushing records at and William Wallace is one of PNH while Shorters gained his the backs. i berth because of outstanding de- Chuck Brown, Central’s great fensive play. He also turned into blocker, is a guard and team- a strong running threat when mate Andy Johnson is a halfback. The ends are Tom Huiskens of shifted to fullback the last half of the season. Huiskens, described by Coach Elmer Engle as “the complete ballplayer,” may be the best college football prospect in Michigan. He was a rare unanimous choice for Most valuable Player in the rugged Saginaw Valley Conference. I A fine blocker and defensive w L T pc». ptt. OP p 1 a y e r, Huiskens scored 45 5 I 0 MO JM SM points for Engle’s unbeaten and } i 0 m No- 1-ranked Bay City team. in 16 years. A three-year defan- sole tackes on defense and re- covered three fumbles. Schaut anchored the middle of Escanaba’s tough middle line, averaging 46 minutes a game on both offense and defense. Coach Jerome Cvengros considers Schaut the best college prospect on a team which won nine games this year without a loss. Fiott, who has led Roseville to two straight titles in the tough Eastern Michigan League, set four school passing records. He Duo Deadlocked in Golf Meet LAKE CHARLES, La. (AP)| Both carded 67s Thursday on - Babe Hiskey and Billy Lively were Ued the lead as the yard, par 36J6-7S second round opened today in Charles Country Club as the 910,060 Alvin Dark Invita-play began for the $1,500 firs! tional Golf Tourney. prize. scribed by coaches as “aU|hit on 74 of 123 aerials for 1,315 man.” He made 70 tackles while yards and 19 touchdowns, run-p 1 a y i n g for a Jackson team ing another 604 yards and five which had a 4-4.1 record playing one of the roughest prep schedules in the state. Battle Creek’s Chuck Brown is a bruising 230-pound guard who was the bulwark of a Central line which sprung halfbacks like Johnson loose for long runs TDs. ★ Wallace has been a three-year, two-way regular at Flint Northern. A 9.9 sprinter on the track team, he averaged 7.5 yards per carry this year, scoring 13 touchdowns. He kicked Jmtymymgstwtoa WELDWOOD* BACKBOARD SET all-weather Duraply Board 36 thread hourglass aot official NCAA orango gool Easy to Handio and Install I Your youngster deserves the best! Stop in today and treat him to a Wefdwood Backboard Set. Get One Today! It Makes a GREAT Christmas Gift! Lions Statistics Totil Flrit Downs T5 FIrol Downs Ruihlng t «M ?J4 MJ KEY CATCHES His statistics are not overly impressive, but as ^gle points OP out, “he was asked to catch the iM l«|ball on six key fourth down 2 0 2 2S0 1H 213 pass plays this year and we •‘*'J'*2^.ooo 305 12. [made every one of them.’’ ^ 5 5 I MO i»2 2»l Student with a B- 1 a I .'ill 106 31. plus average, Huiskens is pres- ident of the Student Council and gg-a member of the National Honor j{|g Society. i”b * * * I Doughty is the youngest play- j er on the team at 16 and hasj c been a starter at Pershing for three years. He caught 13 pas- hb ses for 245 yards and f o u r sl touchdowns as the u n b e a t e n week after week. A two-w a y player. Brown was the key man pomf®- on a defensive line which ^Johnson, another 9.9 sprinter, allowed only two touchdowns all 109 times for 816 yards year. He has good pursuit, is a touchdowns depsite the good tackier and is described ^e was out one game by coaches as “hard to take ® out” on defense. ‘he best of a bevy of swift Battle Creek backs who lifted HONOR STUDENT Bearcats to a 17-1 record Another honor student, Haiti- in the iast two years, day has started three seasons at Westfall, son of former Uni-Kimball, never missing practice versity of Michigan fullback Bob or a game. During that time, Westfall, is an all-around good Kimball rolled up a 21-5^1 won, football player who punts, kicks lost, tied record. A great block- off and averaged seven tackles er on offense, Halliday made 21 a game on 1.67 MIChlMil High School All-Sli FIRST TEAM Ngmo School Tom Huiskont, Bay City Central Glenn Doughty, Pershing ................... Gordon Brown, Flint Northern .............. George Trujillo, Jackson .................. Football Team ?2'- X Bob S_______ _________ Doug Holliday. Royal Oak Kimball ......................... 6-2 21S Sr, Chuck Brown, Battle Creek Central ...................... 60 230 Sr. Ken Fiott, Roseville ...................... s-lO 162 Sr. William Wallace, Flint Northern ........................ 5-10 175 Sr. ................. Andy Johnson, Battle Creek Central ...................... 6-1 165 Sr. Harley Westfall, Adrian — — " ■ SECOND TEAM Paul Burrell, YpsllantI ......... Mike Shorters, Pontiac Central ........... Mike Kadish, Grand Rapids Catholic Ken Otto, Kalamazoo Central Joe Oeming, Saginaw Arthur HIM............................ 6-1 204 Sr. i rX Bob Baldwin, Port Huron 6-0 200 Sr. | ,*> Hank Garrison, Jackson Parkside 5-11 195 Sr. I tX Ted Grignon, Dearborn Edsel Ford 6-2 218 Sr. i ly. Jack DlGlovannl, Detroit Denby 6-1 202 Sr. X* Dennis Plecuck, Center Line 6 i 195 Sr. ^X Dana Coin, Pontiac Northern 6-2 200 Sr. , CLASS A HONORABLE MENTION [X Butch LaBay, Escahaba; John Ewing, Bay City Central; Jim Vandarberg, Bay Ibr Failaroiind ^skiing fun, we’vegot yournumben The Head 360. It’i only the most versatile ski we’ve ever sold. A baU for many intermediates. A relaxing pleasure ski for experts. A totally adaptable ski for instructors, young racers, one-pair travellers... for any speed on any snow. Our customers call the 360 the Head Super Cheater. Let ui show you why. Ch.8<@olbenRam 139 N. Main St. Rochester 651-8525 /0/\ Doughboys won six games in iTy’^Sliy-'Std^yrroS;' =•' abreviated schedule, cut Larry Persh»y, SagInaw, Bob Weliein, Sagipaw Arthur Hill; Art D FIril Yards 4 263 Yards Gainod Passing (nat) 171 Rushing (nat) 92 ------ *--*) 171 9-21 2 Punts and Av«ragt 6-39.9 9-33.9 -------- and Yards 6-48 3-21 and No. Lost Central; Jerry _ — ........—,, \.nane9 tviorkey, SagInaw;. u t * iip .Arthur HIM;'6'arfy'Rumbauo^ M^wSnd/^Ja^^BuntVngTAAId^M 2 j short by teacher S S r I Oary Halllday, Roy«l Oak Kimball; Gene Panknor, Waterlord Kettering; Bill el Gordon Brown is . described Rose, Birmingham Brother Rice; Gar Thomas, Birmingham Seaholm; Mike Vidor.' S by coaches as the finest lineman r»e; WrMKc ^ Ito come out of the Flint area <^-g Fog.., waned Lake DTt kick) LA—FG 23 Gossett LA—Jose^son 2 rui Attendance 54,389. I 14 0 17-31 Gabriel (Gos- (Gossett kick) INDIVIDUAL RUSHING RAMS Bass Joseph son Yacht Bought for Cup Race TORONTO (iW _________ .. Three To- Nat Lang Ydi. “ vda. oaln Last TD ronlo businessmen have pur-' ‘ " ? chased the 12-meter yacht INDIVIDUAL PASSING PAIS RECEIVING 0 will stimulate new Canadian ? interest in the famed America’s 0 Cup race. ! American Eagle, purchased ' by Herb Wahl, Mike Pellegrin , and Gerry Morris, )vas built in 1 1964 for $250,000 and has twire , [failed to defeat other U.S. yachts for the right to defend U.S. Cup supremacy. ' 2s 13 i I The purchase pHce was not ** .® disclosed. 171 44 2 Yartt Lang TDi Yard! Lang TO, ; Pontiac Prass Photo FIRST TEAM-Guard Doug Halliday of Royal Oak Kimball today was named to the Associated Press’ Class A Ail-State first team. 10 Roces Nighlty Ram or Shine lexcepi Sundoys) Dine in our new Sulky Lounge October 9 thru December 9 JACKSON HARNESS RACEWAY Roblee Boots 342 pair formerly priced to $18 Specially | Priced I • To Sell For Only | BEAlVrSCHOICE ISTOOGOODTOGET “BOMBEETON. r-- We go lo a lot of tiouble to make a gcN>d Bouiboa. Aging it eight long yean. Charcoal filteiing it after aging. The result is a ^urbon that's loo good to waste on people who intend to overindulge. Beam's Choice deserves an appreciabve audience. It's not intended for children. No matter how old they are. $536 NOVEMBER SPECIAL 50 GALLONS OF GAS FREE with each NEW or USED CAR delivered this month CY OWENS Says: Sell them while they are new. 150 NEW CARS TO CHOOSE FROAA CHRYSLERS, PLYAAOUTHS, BARRACUDAS, VALIANTS - and the all new BELVEDERE ROAD RUNNER. •k if Come on in and test drive one of these beautiful new automobiles. YES, we still hove fifteen new '67 AAodels. AAake us an offer. We inust sell 100 cars this month. Cy Owens Oakland Chrysler 724 OAKLAND AVENUE PONTIAC, AAICHIGAN W*'v« mod* a smart buy and w*'r« patting thn savings on to youl Right in soaton —ruggad, handtom* boots idaal for sports and casual wnar, sporting avants, or just stylos and got big savings. SQUAW VALLEY THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 24, 1967 Cotton Bowl Spot for Texas Aggies By The Associated Eress No one gave Texas A&M a ghost of a chance to win the Southwest Ckniference football chanu>ionship when the Aggies lost their first four games of the season to Southern Methodist; Purdue, Louisiana State and Florida State. But they didn’t reckon with the heroics of quarterback Edd Hargett from the little Texas town of Linden. * * * He beat Texas Tech by run-! tory for the Rockets, co-champi-(MIS of the Mid>American Conference. OTHER RIVALRIES Southern Kfississii^i walkmed Louisiana Tech 58-7, Idaho State edged Portland State 22^1, Middle Tennessee downed Tennessee Tech 33-20 and Hi^tra blanked C. W- Post 194 in other Turkey Day rivalries, Coliege Station, Tex., cheered Hargett after his wiiming TD pass to Bob Long that pulled the Aggies from behind a 10-7 deficit to beat Texas in the 74tb game of the storied series. j ★ * ★ The Aggies had the ball on their own 20 vdien Hargett faded bacb and threw the ball far down field. Long grabbed it on the Texas 36 and ran the rest of Spartans Skate to 7^4 Victory CANTON, N.Y. i* - Tom Mikkola slapped home two goals and p(»ted twct assists Thursday night as Michigan State whip^ St. Lawrence’s hoekey team, 7-4. Short one man because of a penalty, Michigan "State stormed into the lead early in the se<:ond period, breaking a 2-2 tie on goals i^y Mikkola and Nino CristofoB. With a 4-2 lead, they kept command the rest of the, way. A capacity crowd of 60,000 at I Nebraska had rallied from behind a 134 score to lead Okla- Hopes'Mp-i.J?lS.K ROLLS AWAY - Oklahoma’s Bob War-mack rolls out on a run-pass option as Nebraska defensive end Mike Wynn hits the dirt after being blocked in yesterday’s Big AP wiraphpto Eight game. Oklahoma won, 21-14, to cUnch its first undisputed conference title in five years. to Disprove Bowl Choices Losers Get Less Letters Mail More Scarce for Duffy By DUFFY DAUGHERTY Head Football Coach Michigan State University One of my musts as a college footbaU coach is that each letter that can be answered must be answered. If a coach doesn’t first to lead a team to three ^ even though you will find it straight outright Big Ten cham- listed as the No. 1 choice in the pionships. | official NCAA footbaU rules. But one letter which deals POSITION rr Z .."t- r r, „ tS. hS,'. answer his maU he may never I ^ We do this in order to gain good know when some proud parent J^eive * * " ” ™ ? ^ame last quarter. A short Nebraska punt gavel Oklahoma the ball on the Husk-' er 33. A 10-yard pass. Bob Warmack to Steve Zabel, preceded Hin-| ton’s 23-yard sprint for the win-MIAMI, Fla. (AP) - The Unl-'ning TD. i tsr. s ,^'Sry“^roii£: also nut the Universitv of Miami against Notre Dame ma, but the Huskers’ defeat did Hurricanes in the Luebonnet a one-touchdown under- not definitely eliminate them of — ^ Coach the chance to, meet Georgia at against Colorado Dec. 23^^| Hurri-| Memphis Dec. 16. , canes have three factors in their “I wouldn’t say the loss to ORANGE BERTH ^favor. lOklahoma' eliminated Nebras-| Oklahoma, fifth-ranked in Thei “There are three reasons ka,’’ said A. F. “Bud” Dudley,^ Associated Press poll and al-aside from personnel why Mi-1president of the Liberty Bowl.; ready picked to oppose second-jami will have an advantage,”!“Nebraska put up a great ranked Tennessee in the Orangejsaid Parseghian. “'The heat fac-|game.’ passes to beat Arkansas, hurled two TD passes to beat Baylor and on Thursday hurled an 80-yard pass in the last quarter that beat Texas 10-7. ★ * * Their sixth straight victory not only gave the Aggies the Bowl at Houston tor is one. It’s a night game,! and Notre Dame has not played a night game all season. And! Miami has had two weeks to prepare while we have had less of a high school football star is putting him to the test. This season I wish I had more of these letters. ★ ★ ★ Since writing this cedumn we’ye received mail from many places. Some of it’s compUmen- when our oppiment would have There are many fans and ^ against the mnd, rTdiSS ^ »,«s “* -in' S »!»< •' ^ They feel that the toss is i !l!f ----------------made to decide which team wiU m nunt ac^nstttfe tary because we’ve trl^ to be kick and which team will re- them to punt agaiwt the Wind. Our strategy worked be- missed our goal to become the the loser receives. But when he fails to get his offen-|sive In gear on the first series ’of plays he must eventually kick and all punters bate to kick into the wind. It not only lowers their ki(dc-ing average but, more important, puts their teiun in a nerable position. It is easier to run and easier to pass with the wind rather than fl^t it. ★ * ★ Before the start of the second half the loser of the toss shall choose one of the options. The team traiUng by two touchdowns often wiU elect to fe-ceive. Bowl at Miami, also came fi-om behind to down Nebraska 21-14. A crowd ol 60,048 at Lincoln, Neb. plus-a national television audience saw the Sooners beat the Ckirnhuskers on a 23-yard run by Eddie Hinton. The victo-1 ★ * ★ I ry cUnched the undisputed Big in two of the last three years,| Eight crown f(»r the Sooners, Notre Dame has failed warm-j who end their regular season weather November tests. In next week against Oklahoma 1964, the previously undefeated SUte. .Irish lost at Southern Cal, 20-17,1 * * * |in their final game of the sea-| Virginia Militaiy edged Vir- son. They wound up 1965 with a| ginia Tech 12-10 in the 63rd re- scoreless tie against Miami in newal of the Military Classic of the Orange Bowl. | the South at Roanoke, Va., andi However, iast year Notre Toledo crushed Villanova 524 at.Dame trounced Southern Cal 51-Toledo in other major games onlo without breaking into a sweat. Thanksgiving Day. A seven-yard pass from Hnss B^L MoonligM DouUm Jockpet at $510.00 Every Sot. Night, 12:15 no other tractor moves snow like The Horse The biggest selection of home snow remoyal equipment. Eight great tractors from 6 to 12 hp. Snow dozers and snow throwers with capacity up to 42". Choose from 3-speed, 6-speed and automatic models. New automatie traction feature lessens chance of wheel spinning. Safety headlights and taillights let you do the job long after the short winter day ends. Before you decide on any snow removal equipment—let ns give you our deal. KING BROS. PONTIAC RD. at OPDYKE PONTIAC, MICH. TELEPHONE FE 4-1622 and FE 4-6724 Quay to John Hince with 2V4 minutes left gave the VMI Key-dets their winning TD over VPI. John Schneider hurled touch- knocking the heat jinx. BIG CROWD The crowd for the game — over 76,000 — could be the greatest ever to see a football Tennessee sends you its holiday best Layaway NOW for Christmas Gifts for the WHOLE FAMILY Bowling Bails BRUNSWICK - AMF COLUMBIA - MANHATTAN DON CARTER - RANDOLPH All Waighta ond Colon 19" Bowling Bags All Stylos and Colon $A95 ■f and up BOWLING SHOES *5" ARony Styhsa In All SixM HURDS BOWL tm luuiiTN UL no. fei^iii Cago Officials Gather The Pontiac Officials’ Association will have a general meeting 7:15 p.m. Monday at the recreation department office in CityHaU. * ♦ ★ Basketball assignments will be SAVOfS MOONLIGHT DOUBLES Saturday Nights Bowling - Prizes - Food SIGN UP EARLY e e e See Our Wide Selection of BALLS - BAGS - SHOES In Our Pro Shop SAVOY LANES 130 S. Tolograph Rd. 333-7121 CKEY RESULTS down passes of 51 and 63 yardslRame Florida. It aim wW be and Roland Moss scored three'^® largest to see a Notre Dame TDs to lead Toledo war VffleiDO-l8”™e season, va. It was the ninth straight vlc-| The previous high for the Ir- ------------------------^lish — some 71,227 watched their 47-7 pasting of Illinois — was . . restrsdned only by the size of Aussie NetterS the arenas in which they appeared. Have Problems ^®^® ®""® ^® iiurcr rtuuivmi nent on Miami’s schedule this I Tamm season with a physical advan- I 'Or V.L/p / earn .tagg oyer the Hurricanes I SYDNEY (AP) - Australia’s Davis Cup selectors face a king, sized problem with the nouncement today by Tony Roche he has been bothered by a knee muscle injury for weeks Roche’s injury leaves veteran Roy Emerson as the only completely fit emmber of Australia’s possible Davis Cup Challenge Round team. * * t John Newcombe retired firom the New South Wales Tennis Championships Thursday with a shoulder injury incurred when playing Emerson in the (Queensland Tournament last week. * * * Following Newcombe’s withdrawal, Australia’s Davis Cup (hptain Harry Hopman decided to pair Roche and Emerson as the Davis Cup doubles team. This now is very much in doubt. The cup seledors are expected to announce Australia’s squad of six for the cup Saturday. w L T nhoeoA 10 7 a » <5 ^ 10 S 2 tt M 44 .......... » 4 1 71 34 M MonlrMI ........... 0 7 4 70 40 47 SJJIJ its ^ : T^ UifS $ t i ii m 4S S 7 4 14 34 47 4 n 4 12 43 4 11 2 10 37 49 ________^ J RMUltl 3. St. Lovit 1 Toronto 3, MInnosoto 0 Ctikogo 7, Now York i Plttiburph 4, Boston 1 Philadolphio 4, Detroit 3 U. AAontroal 7, Chicago o Boston 4, Now York 3 Totems Oamo Chicm at MInnMota PhlloJiilplitA •( $1. LmiK ». Loult It Nmr York Oolrolt ot Bo.ton Mlnn^o at Chicoo Lo. Ang.l*. at Phliadalptila George Dickel Tennessee Sourl Mash Whisky for festive'holiday giving-end pouring-ln its unique Powderhom decanter, following the design of the powderhoms Tennessee mountain men used to wear. And there’s no extra charge. Powderhom decanter and regular bottle. 4/5 QUART S652 Spring water filtered by nature through Tennessee limestone, and every drop of whisky gentled elowly down through ten feet of sugar maple charcoal for flavor you Just don't get with any other QEO. A. DICKEL A CO.. 90 PROOF. TULLAHOMA. TENNESSEE BENSON Bim BAVntBB IN CASH Construetian and Batlar Fir V r 16' 12» 14» ir ir 2T 2x4 44 41 46 142 1.11 141 141 146 2x6 46 1.11 144 1.14 241 241 8.11 2x6 144 1.1t 2.12 246 241 244 146 1x16 141 24S 246 141 1.11 446 646 2x12 244 246 1.16 1.12 441 6.14 646 4x4 146 141 244 241 2.N 146 8.11 K4THM DMl CMUM Mnsm ltt£S Huidiia SERVICE LICtNSEO CONTRACTORS. 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Building and Romodoling Supplios and Matoriols 149 North Stfinaw Straat •'-“"'SJl’ffr. re«52i THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 24. 1967 C—7 I Jacoby on Bridge j NORTH A 6 S VQlOBti ♦ A52 «9832 ’PAST , AK1072 AJ943 ¥32 ¥75 ♦ Q9743 ♦J108 «AQ ♦K765 SOUTH (D) AAQS ¥AKJ9 4 ♦ K6 «J104 East-West vulnerable West North East South Pass 2¥ Pass Pass Pass Pass Opening lead—¥ 3 2 Drown in State Pl6iEON (AP) - Two JK3--sons, bound for> a hunting expedition, drowned Thursday when „ K 1 j u „ *heir boat capsized in Saginaw ners, while a background chorus | “nice play”, we must agree with of “ts-ts” came from the tsts-him. West made a remarkably, ★ * * ifjne play when he led/out his „ .. All «e. JustlM•iSnr.'? T-— ““ “ MSS'lreSln, S; South really should have made h=.,.|and Paul Cameron Jr., 24, both By Oswald and James Jacoby People who watch bridge games are divided into three classes. The kibitzers who sit right back of the players, theia chance to go wrong with ace-dibitzers who sit back of the | queen of clubs. West would be kibitzers and the tstsers who .in with the queen and might just stand way back_____________get desperate and shift to a and go ts-ts af- his contract. He had two ways to do it. Onn way would have been to play three rounds of diamonds after drawing trumps so as to strip his hand and dummy of that suit. Then a club lead would have stuck West in. A more elegant line would have been for South to play the diamonds before playing the second trump, then enter dummy with the second trump and lead a club from dummy to his jack. This play would be expensive if the second diamond were ruffed, it wouldn’t work any better against the actual Eas^West holding, but it would give West not done this. South would have! stripped spades and end-played West' Two other persons in the boat in that club suit. when it tipped over were hospi- ) Italized. THE BERRYS By Cnrl Grnberf ter a bad South drew rounds trumps took the finessR. We w«s in with king andAfter ai lot 9f thought proofed to cash his ace and queen of clubs. Then he got out with a spade and eventually South had to lose anotherdnb trick. “Nice defense, partner,” remarked East. "Terrible dummy play I kibitzers and JACOBY As for East’s comment o f 2 A 2 y Pass ? You, South, hold: AAQ 107 6 ¥KJ4 4K32 AJ 7 What do you do now? A—Bid four hearts. If want to be extra conservative Just bid three. strological Forecast Sy SYDNEY OMARR Fsr tsturtfsv 'The wlH msn csnlrslt hli . . . Ashrslsfy pcini, the wi ARIES (Mar. }I-Apr. W): Good and ratullt conncclad with work, I menav (ram craatlva andaavorv Avoid axcatt. Ba modarstfi Halp Ihosa who tatk^ answer,. Make Irlend, through TAURUS (Apr. »,Moy 10); You moy Iry to hondio more than I, practical. Ap-plla, awiaclallv In romantlE area. Find out what you want. Yo ovaryttiing at one,. Know this. Act cordlnoly. GEMINI (May llrJuna »): What own couM go up In value. Appllei praparty, stock. Your Mni blllty I, tnled. You could •at chance, lor graaltr Wccot,. CANCER (Junt ll July ll): Soma livtt appear expentive and txpoi You might have to holt a ipoclal act. conitdaratlon. Door clota. In area but open. In another. LEO (July IS-Aug 11): Streii wll-exprcaaion. Creele and orlglnite. Lead money ellorta. But bey follow. You gel mo la to nmantum. Push ahead. Bo Id authoritative. VIRGO (Aug. Zl.sepl. 22): b ol at paraonsl-proltialonal a rellnaulah re)na to other,, then yw I &'«IM^’V(^ey. Good LIMA^Vipt. JJOCI. 22): Be others. But actuoMy thara canla^rt ol la nothing to tear, what Is unknown today toon will be available, uielul. SCORPIO (Oct. 23 Nov. 21): Good received regarding (rlend and al»> In connection with oersonal desire. F Int night for celebration. Soma today aak gutlandlah favors. Bt lair but firm. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): You •it promoted, honored or rocognized for urrylng out special dullea. Let othi know your cepobllltlea. achlovemer Don't hide light under bushel. Speak. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 Jen. if): Y korn, gain, achieve greeter degree proficient. Much ol thia comas thro »^l^a(w*"rep ^n^nt'oT Daily Almanac By United Press International Today is Friday, Nov. 24, the 328th day of 1967 with 37 to follow. The moon is in its last ^quarter. *4 The morning stars are Mercury, Venus and Jupiter. The evening stars are Mars and Saturn. On this day in history: In 1869, women from 21 atates met in Cleveland to draw up plans for the organization of the American Women Suffrage Association. In 1844, superfortresses of the U. S. Army Air Corps took off from Saipan for their first raids on Tokyo. In 1961, the U. N. Security Council gave Secretary Gen-wal U Thant permission to use force, if necessary, to settle the Congo crisis. In 1863, Ike Harvey Oswald, accused assassin of President Kennedy, was shot to death by Jadi Ruby in a Dallas jail. Tne ahooting was seen by ! millions of persons on tele- I Liquor Hearing .LANSING (AP) - The State Liquor Control Commission will hold a public hearing Dec. 12 at Lansing tb hear complaints and receive the views of the public On administration of the Liquor Control Act. The hearing is /me of two required each year by c—« THE Pby^AC PRESS. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 1967 FIML CLaMNCE SATURDAY and SUmUY mr V2 Off ON ALL NURSERY STOCK • Shade & Ornamental Trees • ALL EVERGREENS Quantities Limited TOWN & COUNTRY GARDEN CENTER 5812 Highland Rd.,(M-59) OR3-T14T Just East of the Airport OPEN SUNDAY Gower's 'Happy Time'\ Was Worth Waiting For By BOB THOMAS , AP Movie-Television Writer LOS ANGELES (AP) -'Ilw stage is bare except for a pair of baby spotlights which Robert determinate age, possibly as a sexagenarian. TEEN-AGE BOLGER Of equal importance; to the plot is Bibi Bonnard, the boy Goulet'fo^s on a bouquet of I who i^ks to follow the footsteps flowers. He snaps the shutter of Of a dashing uncle. He is played his camera, and the image of with amazing stage presence by the bouquet flashes in ful) color Mike Rupert, a student at near-on a screen at the back of the by San Marino High School, who [sings, dances and looks like a ’iSl "he's »• «i >r- tutes a rose and photographs it. * lovely ^tress with a fme lacks the definition of the color- IfUl Bonnards. I “The Happy Time’’ is Gower I Champion’s show, as were “Bye 'Bye Birdie,’’ “Carnival,” “Hel-'lo, Dolly” and “I Do, I Do!” performed with athletic zest by the staging is the thing, and he has again provided a show-stopping number in “Without Me,” Bibi and his classmates. AMERICAN MUSIC STORES. INC MUSIC-MJNDED GIFTS by NEW BPANASONIC Use Our Christmas Layaway Plan! Fine Panasonic FM-AM Table Radio Battery-Operated Panasonic Tape Recorder Enjoy good listening on either FM or AM with this smortiv-stvied Ponosonlc toble rodio! Full-ronge 4" dynamic soeoker. slide rule diol tor occurote tunirrg, built-in FM-AM ontennos tor superior reception! 24« Lightweight ond compoct, this oll-tronslitor, battery-operated tope recorder operates anywhere — foke It to the meeting, the office, the classroom! Automatic Level Control, 2 speeds, remote mike. Batteries IrKluded. 29 95 Come in or Phone GRINNELL'S, Pontiac Moll, 682-0422, Open Every Night 'til 9 Use Your Charge, 4-Pay Plan (90 days same as cash). Budget Plan or Christmas Layaway • FHA Specification • Strong Roinforcod Casting • Avoid Messy Installation Ohaok Thasa Faaturas for a Step in Baaufy • On* Ploco Construction • Permonont Boouty • Ruggod Dopondobility FREE ESTIMATES SriMyTmod Reduces.sKpptng Wo Dolivar Anywharo Manufactured and Sold By: CONGBETE SHP CO. 649T Highland Road (M59) 6T3-01T5 Add aeouty to Your Homu With Concrete Slept end Ratling. Opon 8 til 12 Saturdays WILD BIRD FEED 20tt.Bag... *1®® 40 a. Bag.. Whole Com - Cracked Com Large Plump Sunflower Fine Selection of Squash, Winter Potatoes APPLES Johnny's and GQC Macs WWPk- GRAVE BLANKETS - WREATHS CEDAR ROPING - BOUGHS All Hand Mode From Fieth Bolsm and Cedar Cuttin|)i RIOTER’S Faimllarktts 3226 W. Huron St. 338-3911 68T6 Dixia Hwy., Clarkston - 625-4140 , ucio uv- THOMAS • Don’t serve hamburgers in i cause oTteSal problems, it cold rolls-split, toast and but-| was worth the wait. The show ter them generously' seems Certain to add one more hit to the perfect string of musicals directed and choreographed by Gower Champion. The show is derived from the Broadway comedy of the same name which in turn came froi a book by Robert L. Fontaine. The setting is a small French-Canadian town to which b successful photographer returns for a visit with his uninhibited family. The screened flashes of his[ photographs are carried through the show with marvelous results, adding beauty to the otherwise stark setting' and providing warm evocation of memory. ACROBA'nC BEAUTIES The photographic device is not the only novelty in “The Happy Time.” Instead of the usual line of showgirls and dancers. Champion employs six acrobatic beauties who figure in the plot as part of a vaudeville act. And midWay in the first act he brings onstage no less than 30 boys of varying Age and Size who sing and dance as members of a boys’ school. Such razzle-dazzle might be wasted without a strong book tn Fortunately, N. Richard Nash has provided one. He interweaves the lives of the, Bonnard family in affecting! style. Only in the second act does the plot become diffuse, but that is likely to be remedied by the time the David Merrick show opens at New York’s Broadway Theater Jan. 2. * * * I Making his first return to Broadway since his sensational debut in 1960 with “Camclot,” Goulet has a role ideally suited to his talents. As the wayward son Jacques, he creates a character that is warm and robust. Composer John Kander and lyricist Fred Ebb have provided songs he can belt, notably the title tune and “Being alive.” David Wayne occupies costar billing as grandpere Bonnard, the unreconstructed patriarch who collects photos of naked women and courts a nearby widow. He provides humor and spice and-is made up for an in- BUY! SELLi TRADE! ... USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! REGAL WILD BIRD FEED with 20% Sunflower Seed 26 lb. bag ■ • • 2” 10 lb. bag . . , r* 5 lb. bag .... 59* ECOMIIV FEED for BIRDS 25 lb. bag..................1.60 a mixtora ofCx, Corn, Milomaizt, and Whaat PLUMP SUaFLOWER SEED 25c lb..........3 lbs. for 72c CORN naeked or whole 25 lbs for 1" SALT for W6TER-S0FTEHERS We Deliver — Phone OR 3-2441 REGAL Feed and Lawn Supply Co, 4211 Dixia Nwy., Drayton Flaini, Michigan 3 Mite$ North of Pontiac_ SOMETHING SPECIAL FROM LEONARD... DIAL YOUR WORRIES AWAY CAU THIS MUMBfH for care-free, trouble-free home heating service. WATERFORD FUEL <1 SUPPLY 3943 AIRPORT RD. At Wotarford Dapot j 623-0222 i ■y THE PONTIAC PRKSS. FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 24, 1967 C--9 do MOREW\\ra LESS wo rk^“''^^^work Soun^ irnposslbte? Simplicity mokes It hoppen-eosily-with THREE greot riding tractors to save your time and energy while speeding yard ond garden jobs every season. Come in and see them now! FAR EAST STUDY — This might be a scene in Japan, but it is at Earlham College in Richmond, Ind., where studies of Far Eastern Culture centering on Japan inspired this section of Lilly Library. Far East Culture Studied in the Heartland of America By AILEEN SNODDY Newspaper Enterprise Assn. NEW YORK (NEA) — Four Russian women, members of the Committee of Soviet Women, recently passed through the city on their way to the hinterlands. “We are going to Indianapolis,’’ one of the women said, “We were told this is the heaii-land of America. What does igins, nestles in a semi-indus-,ing on Japanese studies on the trial, rural area known to many campus and abroad, music buffs as a 1920s-’30s hub] in addition to learning the »>«=«"SManguage, the study of Asian S i^.hL 1 P™f.“‘*jculture weaves itself into Eng-arv history, economics ary times Earlham would beL^j nolitical s^ienre cla(;c:e^ i considered liberal although it ® I draws a bulk of its more than' P* studies,” according to 1,000 students from the “isola-l®®*’®^’ ‘“‘^ted re- Uonist • conservative” country-1 projects. The program mean?-We were told the'Mid:!side. A ».*s, wt: s: - ^ ^ components of non-Western American to non-Americans, es> ‘ lEE’S UWR AND GARDEN CENnR pecially Russians? "ional programs springing ^ up. Bailey is director of the Of- ^ exposed. A partial answer to her ques-fice of Education Center for, * * ★ tion of whether the heartland East Asian Languages and Area There is an exchange prohides from the rest of the world Studies at the college. gram with Japanese students or is found a few miles from thel „ , . instructors taking nart in Earl- Indiana capital A special Prc^l. ham activte lleldr Srl- gram in Far Eastern studies emphasizing Japan is picking up . . steam at Earlham College in professors concentrat- Richmond. j ' I The school with Quaker or-; 4 FrostBd Cones, Red Ribbon Door Hanger 49c Handsome Dark Qreen 15" Holly Wreath .. 98c 25*Ft. Tinsel Qarland, 4" diameter.$1.95 Pearlescent Fruit Clusters, all colors, ea... 69c 3-Bell Burlap Door Ringer...............$1.19 5000 Christmas Candles, All Sizes and Shapes Chritlmt Swag From Our HoMay Pag^ In our pagoda you'll loo dozont of oxquititoly booutiful twogt that you con nnako your-•olf or purchaso complotod. And wo havo all tho trimmings for original and traditional do* signs. Our floral dosignors, Joan and Loo, will bo happy to holp you with artistic suggos* tions. tOR A STOCKING STUFFER . . . Santa Drinking Cup ..49‘ Just on# of hundrodt of odoroblo gifts for stockings, 19e to SSo Gifts and Trimmings From Dur Basket Hut Hundrodt of wickor boskoti of all tizos and thapot. Wickor Christmas bolls, wickor hamport, wickor chairs . . . you’ll lovo this ditplayl ir Box wroatb Frame... 2So Advent Calendars Choirboy Flgurino.....Dio 29- to 98- Tiny Long Halrod Doll... 7lo Pi*'* ■ • • *®c Advont Oalondart, 2le to Mo Styro Star... 39c Olittoro^ Bold Boll...»o SP«ol Wirt, 29c .. 4Do Bollod Door .... 29c Woodtn Slid.... 19c .......12 lor 29o Qoid Bows.. 4 for 39e Groon or bluo grssn. 119 branch dolus Dotach-ot for oosy stor- FRESH CEDAR ROPIMG12* ft New It the Time to Cover Your Rose Bushes JI0SE OOLURS, 9 for 99o STYROFOA^ ROSE ^ w WWW. ------------ Shelter, 14" high, 69e hMM Um yoor oHsr ysor. )*" hloh, 99e Attract the Winter Birds to Your Garden Fino BIRO FEED Mixturo of Sroint, tanflewor Sttdt 5 lbs., 59c 25 lbs., $2.49 SUET SEED CAKE, 1 lb., Slo 144 Iba., SSc BIRD FEEDERS, Larga Aaaortmant, $I.M to $3.M BRAVE BIANKETS, •3.9S to M2JK OPEN EVERY DAY NCLUDING SUNDAY 9 AM. to 6 P.M. (FrMs, Until t p.M.) BORDIIVIE'S BicBoms WEMSHiliiV Nursery • Greenhouse • Garden Store • Florist 1835 S. Rochester Road • 1 Mile North of Auburn Road • Phone 651-9000 Scientist Gets a Potent on Ruby Loser FUNDS ARE WORRY A major worry now is to get additional funds to widen “this broad scope of interest. There thin layer of schools, By Science Service WASHINGTON - The man who first successfully amplified Bailey says, “which have made a beginning. This type of learning exchange Is ripe for small schools.” He mentioned Ober-lin with a Chinese program and Antioch with a Portuguese concentration. In the last five years Bailey -- laser light of a ruby has «>e notices it is easier to received a intent on the operat- ‘“r”’ ing system. cer ain campus personnel Dr, Theodore H. Majman. now f T president of Korad Corp. in San- ta Monica. C a 1 i f . assigned ^ rights to Hughes Aircraft Co., " * Culver dty, Calif., where he A really heartening result was working at the time of the which even the most rigid iso-development in 1960. lationist cannot fault is that 21''?.;?“ "< Townes, now a Nobclist and pro-’ discovered that students fessor at large at the Univer- I’eco'ne more Interested in our sity of California, and Arthur because they are L. Schawlow, chairman of the questions by foreign physics department at Stanford visitors and don’t know the an-Universtty, swers. They appreciate our cul- ..... . . lure in their lives as they learn Many scientists immediately about another ” started working to see if they„^„ could build a laser, Dr. Mai- TOTAL EXPERIENCE man among them. I The Far Eastern program at Dr. Maiman was convinced Earlham fits the scheme of that synthetic ruby was the pro-j other schools where the goal is per material for a laser, while for total educational experience hiB competitors experimented and not just a lock-step to a with different materials. 'bachelor’s degree. Tom's Hardware TOYLAND SERGEANT Q-2 Walkie-Talkie Games Guns-Trucks Paint by Number Sets 905 Orchard Lk. Ave. FE 5-2424 SAVE MEUBERS OF Hardwara WHOIESAIERSI Fomiirly Big 4 lURDWARE STORES KEEGO Keego Hardware No. 1 3041 Orchard Lak* Road 682-2660 PONTIAC Tom’s Hardwaro 90S Orchard Lak* Av*. FE 5-2424 RENT 'EM! > Flaar Sanders • Floor o Floor Foliohoro OPEN SUNDAY 9 to 2 K BOYS’ and MEN’S INSUUTED BOOTS All Rubber • Cleated Sole • Steel Shank • Full Lace Prices Start At »5St Ska^way,.. INSULATED CLOTHING THE SENSATIONAL NEW WASH’N’WEAR WATER REPELLENT INSULATED WITH DACRON R8 Red Coveralls FEATURES • ln.ul.Mm .1 100% Vii«li, ImM D«I t)«c w<-' •(, In N,lwi. • Owforthell. ruftod but seft, water repel weah 'n'weev Perke PepHn. e 4 reemy peehets, eee wNb dpper eleaeea • li-Dwtnp beck fee ectleneedeemfeit • bulky ImitceHereiid tuffs. 29.95 NOW ^13®® $1 HOLDS IN UY-A-WAY SUPER DELUXE INSULATED RED COVERALLS Above Features Plus Theset Rolldovim Hood Undor Collar Corduroy Cpllor Drop Soot with Valero Faittnar _ „ Outer Shell -100% Water RepallanI "•E* W4.W Cotton Gabardine lnsulation-100% Virgin Bonded Dacron"88" Inner Shell-)00% 70x70 Denier Nylon $2588 Now In Stock SNOW SHOVELS & PUSHERS Good Selection Boys’ 4-Buckle Boot or Men’s Zipper Boots $499 gfapr. Your Choice Fall Weather Special FORHUNTERS-OUTDOORSMEN INSULATED UNDERWEAR for thost “ALASKAN” winds snow a cold wtathtr • Dacron Insulation • Full Zipper Front Reg. ’17” NOW $1288 Keep Your Walks Clean This Winter THAWING SALT PRES-TO-LOGS WILD BIRD FOOD •.i> \ C—10 THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAV, NOVEMBER 24, 1967 Children Find Live Teddies Naturalists Outdone in Koala Bear Hunt By Science Service SYDNEY, Australia-------Chil- dren can find living teddy bears better than naturalists can. In New South Wales 250,000 school children have tracked down koala bears — small furry i fellows who resemble nursery j toys — to secret haunts where naturalists didn’t believe they' existed. The school children found the; hears in colonies west of the' Darting River, in the center of the State, and in different groups in the far northwest. The children have even discovered that the bears eat other foods besides the gum leaves which were believed to be their only source of food. w ★ ★ The children helped in a survey conducted duri^ Conservation Week. Thousands of forms were distributed to schools. The children were asked to note locations of koalas in their immediate vicinity and the type of food they were eating. EXTINCTION FEARED The survey is the first major effort ever undertaken to collect data on the kaola^ which has frequently been reported facing axtinctioa Conservatioiiists now find koalas more widely scattered than they thought. It Is now planned to move bears from overpopulated areas, such as the northeast comer of the State, places where they no longer exist The name koala is derived from an oboriginal word implying that the animal seldom drinks. Apparently it derives sufficient liquid from the dew and the moisture in gum leaves. ★ ★ ★ The New South Wales survey has had more than one beneficial result. Wheat and cattle ranchers (graziers) in the Ban-do area of the northwest have asked that thousands of their acres be declared wildlife reserves. This would give graziers much njore power to deal with) poachers on their properties. RESmVEiLAW TIGHTER A spokesman for the National Parks and Wildlife Service said in the norpiai course of events a grazier could only sue a huht-er for trespassing. WWW If the land were declared a Wildlife Reserve, a hunter could be arrested if found on the land with a gun. i The reserved lands could be used as regeneration areas for bears to be transplanted from other areas. I Its slow breeding rate has prevented the species from replacing the enormous numbers that have been killed since the time of early settlement by diseases, by trappers seeking the skins apd by bushfires. w w • w In 1906 about 60,000 pelts went through the Sydney market alone, while in 1024 about two million were exported from the eastern states. Although this had almost exterminated the koala in Victoria and New South Wales, another open season was declared in Queensland in 1627, and some 500,000 skins were exported. Total protection has now been enforced, but except in special sanctuaries survival of the southern koala has been .. doubt for some years. In recent years strong efforts have been, made to reestablish the species. Mtro Heios lie thristiiias leitioi willi Thlms fria Friik's Transplants for Pregnancy By Science Service Women with abnormal or non-) functioning ovaries may event- , ually be able tp bear children, a Temple University professor reports. WWW Dr. Hector A. Castellanos says that by transplanting healthy ovarian tissue from women b^ ing sterilized, barren women could achieve desired pregnancy. WWW Already he has done trans-' plant operations on 12 young women — not with the immediate idea of making pregnancy possible, but to remove symp- BtAUlW MORC huge SEIECTWHS to Choose From Frank's hot many booutifully styled memoriols in original designs by "Jon", Frank's well known design coordinator. Each memorial is avoll* able in o wide choice of bloom varieties ond colors. Rose Memorial VASE *2.95 A iorge bouquet of weather resistant roses tastefully arranged In a spiked plostlc vose. Choice of colors. POINSITTA VASE $4.95 Large traditional poinset* tio blooms against o bock* ground of realistic ferns. A large ribbon bow odds o lovely accent. HEARTS or CROSSES $2.95 Your choice of mony varieties of colorful, weather resistant blooms on memorial hearts or crosses. 30" FOLDINB EASEL TO DISPLAY THEM. ...39$ Weather Resistant BLANKETS LARGE MEMORIALS OF REALISTIC BLOOMS AND FOLIAGE. PRICEO AT ^So95uP Eoch oif fh.i. iov*-ly bldrik.1* i» truly o baoutiful remam-bronc. . . . ond tho baouty (t lasting bacousa oil motar-iol$ ora raslttont to tha waothar. Boxad. 14" dip. voriagotad holly wruoth with traditional condlus. MAKE YOUR OWN ADVENT WREATH irDia.Rlng..............59F Std. 10" Candles....2for29C CARDS AND GIFT WRAPS UP TO 1/2 OFF Publisher's Prices CHARGE YOUR MEMORIALS AT ANY FRANK'S FRESH EVERDREEN MEMORIAL^ BUNKETS *6.95 Made full and Wshy >wltjh fresh cut evergreens ond, decoroted with realistic blooms and a big bow. Undaidbroted Evergreen | Wankbh . $4M» t Oral contraceptives not only | seem not to cause cancer but | they apparently prevent least one type cancer from ] developing, that of the endro-1 metrlum, or lining of tha womb.| J SHOP EVERY FRANK’S TILL 10 P.M. —CHARGE ALL OF YOUR TREES & TRIMS FRANK'S NURSERY SALES 5919 HIGHLAND fiD. (M-59) at AIRPORT RD. 31590 GRAND RIVER, FARMINGTON » 6575 TELEGRAPH at AAAPIE • 14 MILE at CR(X)KS RD. OPEN 1 DAYS • to 10 P.M. FREE PARKING CHARQE IT THE TONTIAC PljESS. FRIDAY. NOyEMBER 24, 1967 C—11 Shop Your Nearby Frank’s this Very Day for Bigger Values! charge-it^ FRANK’S NURSERY SALES ----OF ALL KINDS •LIGHTS •STANDS •ORNAMENTS •GARLANDS D04T-Y0URSELF TRIMS OF ALL KINDS •PIXIES, DEER, SANTAS, ANGELS, OTHER FIGURES OUTDOOR TRIMS •ROPING •WREATHS •NATIVITIES Christmas at Frank's Is a year around activity. Our buyers are purchasing all through the year, and from all over the world, to make your Cnrlst-mas more enjoyable. These efforts bring together what we proudly proclaim to be ^'The World's Largest Selection of Christmas Trees and Trims." STOP AT A FRANK'S TONIGHT AND JUST SAY "CHARGE IT " MORE TREES • OVER SO STYLES to Choose From 73 Americans Are Listed as Killed in Viet WASraNGTON (AP) - The Defense 1 Departnient has announced the deaths of 13 serv-Ipemen who were killed as a Tesult of hostile action in the ,Vietnam war. Killed as a result of hostile action; CALIFORNIA Rlitoon Sgt. Wllll, C. '*■ rPBNWSYLVANIA-Irt Lt. Lirry WM, ^TEXAS'— SUN Sal. Jlmml* D. Re«rt. ■»»Wlf,; $Mc. 4 frirKli Lr/Ki|J2ru. WISCONSIN ->0 RtteIgN L. Hmvitt ^4 hrl0hl OMidoPr lights. Indoor tights, ^Iny mini ;l*0l»t* that blink on and off ,* ,w and great In c^or, cord eolor^oiid set steei^o . whhli^set boy. If one lamp goes Put 3S LAMP SET OF more st% • OVER 25 STANDS to Choose from lust walHIII you see the selection we All kinds, shapes, sizes and styles of tree stands at Frank's .. . revolving stands, ones for fresh cut trees, musical stands and many more. REVOLVING STAND *14.99 A large, snovy white stand that revolves your aluminum or vinyl tree. No. R200 with on - off switch. have for you this year! "Scotch Pines' look fresh from the v:;r«w SWM#PSV SflVf IVVH, ITWR TrOIH ¥n* forest, ’Tir" trees, “Saisom", "Spruce", "Silver ^Ine", "Reyol Pine" . . , and many mare hteloding glooming alumi-n«m and flockod traas. All sizes and Complete with lamp. cmoRWHia E5.99 Use It to bothe a tree In ever-changing color or to illuminate any indoor Christmas scene. No. CWP/B complete with flood lamp. Expect the New and Unusual at Frank too! HAVE "SNOW" FALLING ON YOUR TREE - CONTINUALLY! THE SNOWMAKER *24.95 Just set your tree (fresh cut or artificial) on the base. Insert the tube and _ In ... "snow" will fall from the angel treetop and be recirculated over and over again. Truly spectacular ... see It work at any HERE'S THE JOLLY GENTLEMAN IN FULL NATURAL COLOR SAMTA When you see him, you'll almost expect him to say "Ho Ho Ho ... Merry Christmosl " He's In full natural color and complete with light and base. The kids will love himi RANK'S NURSERY SALE: 5919 HIGHLAND RD. (AA-59) at AIRPORT RD. 31590 GRAND RIVER, FARMINGTON • 6575 TELEGRAPH ol MAPLE -/14 MILE ol CROOK5 RD. INDIANA Lincp OH. Francis ikoniano. oneoma. H. Y«rtinymyk, Frt*ma ' Died of wounds: NEW JERSEY-pfe. AlphwiM L. Atlantic City. Missing to dead—hostile; ARMY y, — pr William H. Richard- MARYLAND - staN Sot. Jamai L. Bayerlino, Baltlmora. NEW VORK - Pfc. Robart J. BIcktl, Rochaatar; Pfc. Richard F. Laird. Sa- Mlllar, Croton. Missing action: ARMY Col. Robart G. KImmtl a result of hostile Mai. Garard M. Caot. Abraham L.*Hwdy Ut. LL Randall D. Shaffer WO Frank A. Platoon Sgt. haroio Sgt. Dan S. Allan II Sgt. Harold r.^Couct Soec 4 John**.‘cofirns. Sooe. 4 Danfel W. Footor Sooc. 4 Vomon J. JohnoM Sooc. 4 Jorry C. Kotloy .— . ...---- .. . f ?!'c; rirf c!5sr ■" Chariot Jr. E-Tc. Bruce A. wagnor Pfc. Chariot J. wllllami Missing to captured or in- terned; AIR FORCa Mol. Richard D. VosU Died not as a result of hostile action; ARMY .CALIFORNIA-Soac. 4 Robart C. Maltn-PUERTO *f co - Pie. Vidor R. vglai- Missing to dead—nonhostile: ARMY LOUISIANA — Pfc Eugano AAorrIa Jr. 'Child Inherits Acquired Trait' New Theory Supports Discredited Dogma NEW YORK (UPI) - You’ll find it hard to believe that what happens to a female in her infancy can influence her descend-ents through at least two generations. Just the same, two scientists have “documented" that it is so. And if it is so, science has !w and very hard nut to crack in its efforts to understand fully and precisely how h e characteristics of parents are transmitted to offspring. What’s more, it would give comfort to the late Troflm D. Lysenko, favorite scientist of the dictator Joseff Stalin, who for years Imposed on Russian science the false dogma that acquired characteristhw of parents are passed to offspring by the ordinary genetic means. These means are the now-countless genes in the chromosomes of the merged parental germ cells of whatever species, from cabbage to man. ★ ★ . Each one is a specification and, taken together, they comprise an enormously complex recipe for both the making and operation of the new individual. MERGED CELLS Parents pass on only the spec- ifications they themselves celve from their parents in the merged germ cells from which they originated. The dictated Lysenko Dogmas, this one among others, disgraced Russian science, which lost little Ume in throwing them off one* it got out of the Stalin viser Now Dn. Victor H. Denen-berg and Kenneth M. Rosenberg of P u r d n e University, Lafayette, Ind., have '‘documented’’ that “informatioB" acquired by a parent is “transmitted” at least to grandchildren. However, they were careful to say it was “nongenetic transmission” and so were in no sense supporting discredited Ly-senkoism. But they acknowledged that as of now “the nature of the mechanisms underlying these effects is not known.” c—la THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 24, 1967 aiOW PRICES and THIS YEAR YOUaii^DO BE1TER mth HIGinANIKS Shop Friday and Saturday, 8 A.M. to 9 P. Open^^unday, 11 A.M. to 6 P.M FREE DELIVERY SERVICE • NO MONEY PERFECT FOR GIFT GIVING iLlCTRIC 4-SPEED AUTOMATIC STEREO PORTABIE GENERAL ELECTRIC ARVIN MINI-TV MOTOROU BIG ZENITH 12" DIA. 12" PORTABLE BATTERY OPERATED SCREEN PORTABLE UHF/VHF PORTABLE *Slara»-mal«~ portabU. MM ilal* $77 $39S8 $9988 $9988 ,avteiwlic tocord ctgyor. Sim w'0 GENERAL ELECTRIC RCA VICTOR It" PHILCO COLOR COLOR TV RCA VICTOR COLOR COMB. »I9* »337 »S69“ »89T ■I 10-DAY HOMI TRIAL FKI 10-DAY HOMi TRIAL FRII lO-DAV HOMi TRIAL . FRil lO-OAY HOMI TRUI t-TRANSISTOR 6-TRANSISTOR AM-FM RADIO POCKET RADIO $1J»7 $1388 $1^97 MAKE YOURS A COLORFUL CHRISTMAS! Admiral COLOR TV 265 SQ. IN. FIX ^ *297 Horo'i fomoui quality Admiral Color TV et o now low prico. 1967 Modol. Automatic color cloriliRr. All 82-chonnol UHF/VHF tuning. 265 iq. in pix. Roro-Earth phot-phor* picturo tub# crootoi moro brillionco in oil colon. Top porformanco and GENERAL ELECTRIC DEPENDABLE SDLID STATE STEREO HI-FI COMBINATION Free dalfvtry, set-up and 90-day service. HAMILTON BEACH SUNBEAM BLENDER MIXMASTER •IMwI.. « .vn|!<-l 'oM AWot»^i. PwM y*l* UmIm. Whita M.IH.L Df b.«fU Gtnaral Elaetrio SLICING KNIFE *16”* *7** *10*' Fro* dilivory and 90-day sarviea .in honia •138«» PMI S«f 0f 5 Bt«r»G alkwm racGidi frM vritK 9lil» pvrchoBG Gt Nifhtondo DETROIT JEWEL PHILCO SO" ELEC. Fratt-Quaan 6 Cu. 12. CU. FT. 10" QAS RANGE INSTALLED FREE Ft. REFRIGERATOR a£5-ri££ PHILC014 CU. FT. ADMIRAL 20' RCA VICTOR ZENITH STEREO MAGNUS ELECTRIC RCA VICTOR „ . _____ , msS ilpsa 'll lUf >90“ »147 »137 •S90 *147 *199“ *67“ *151 WHIRLPOOL 2-SPEED AUTOMATIC WASHER Vw couldn't pay Ion Ikon HlgMoad't focfc-boltani ptl» . . . chMk HI 2 .pood., nomwl ond fonllo tor •ilm com tobrici. 2 cyclof. OionI 14-lb. copoclly. 3 woth and rinn tompomlufot. IxcluAivo 9 rinni. Suij||llbler action agitator lor brightor, cloonof *159 WHIRLPOOL 14 CU. PT. 2-DOOR RIPRIOIRAYOR ^ni to Mlo«. pntina Ihl. doluM Wkkipool at IM. Im. pdcol Hm’. big 14 cu. it. copoclly tor big lomlly iwod.. R.lri.«4^ere ordered. The sale will continup'^til all that candy, and the reordqp^nave been sold. A Star Is Born at Oxford High By CLARA CALLAHAN Popular at Oxford High School, “It” could never be homecoming queen or quarterback of the football team but is fast becoming Oxford’s favorite mascot. As the transparent man used to teach anatomy to OHS .students, its chief function Is educational, but with a skirt, cape and turban, a star Is born. It is only one of tbe far-ranging objects of interest to be found in the biology room. Biology, now a required course at OHS, leads students to a wider knowledge of the world around them. Eighteen members of'the junior and senior classes were inducted into the Freda Quayle chapter of the National Honor Society. Seniors were Jim Wallace, Kathy Marlowe, Mike Milosch, Ellen Garrettaon, Judy Rumball and CIndly Baiger, Juniors were Chris Farrell, Tena Howell, Randy Shepard, Martha Ricketts, Jim Acheson, Dolly Sanday, Nancy Hall, Gara Callahan, Karen Palmer, VlcU Barrett, Penny Houck and Barbara Specht. Nancy Hall and Debbie Skibowskl have been chosten to tour with the Musical Yo»rth International. They will tour Central America, Mexico and the western part of the United States. HAPPY HAZING - Lake Orion High School senior Buttons (standing, from left) Chris Ross and Diane ’Theobald initiate underdassmen (kneeling, from left) Iheresa Vincent i ' ‘V, pmimc Pmi PM* kv as vmswww* and Bonnie Workman into membership in the school’s service New Cheerleader Togs ’The Emmanuel Christian High School cheerleaders displayed new uniforms at the first ba.sketball game Tuesday night. The uniforrhs, designed by Jean l^e, are white wool pleated skirts with maroon inserts topp^ by white wool sweaters and maroon dickies. Seniors made bows, candles, center-pieces and ornaments for sale at Tuesday’s Parent Teacher Fellowship night. More holiday trims will be oh sale at the December PTF meeting. MASCOT — Dan Valentine, president of Oxford High School’s sophomore class, tops “It’s” bare cranhim with a turban. It is the anatomy class’s full-scale modetv which has progressed from a teaching tool to the high school’s unofficial mascot. D—2 THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 24. 1987 At the Auto Show: Woody Herman, Bobby Vinton, The Debutantes emd the world’s most exciting cars. Cars & Stars,^1bo Hall, Detroit Two shows daily: 4Jli) and 830 P.M. Now through ^ domestic cars. Imports. Motor ®SCHOOL NEWS >.-«^ROUNDUP Pontiac Catholic By DEBBIE ROCHON Pontiac Catholic High School’s Junior class sponsored a computer dsnca W^nesday, which featured the Tribe as entertainment. To many students’ delight, and others’ dismay, each found himself matched with the computer’s choice. ' Thoe was an average of two or three dates to choose from, bat some stndents were found compatible with as many as U dates. Tonight the Teen Club will sponsor a dance from 8:30 to 11:30 p.m. featuring the Unrelated Segments, a popular recording group. ★ ’The choir, under the direction of Sister Mary de Lima, performed ft the National Honor Society’s program this REPEAT OF COMEDY The cast of “The Palmer Way’’—JUdy Holdsworth, Dennis Womack, Rick Land. Rosemary Quinn, and Joe Nurek — gave a repeat performance of the comedy for the student body this week. The Pep Ciub is spurring enthusiasm among the students for Pontiac Catholic’s first basketball game, to be Tuesday against Redford St. Mary’s. “El Nibblenook’’ has been the dinner site of tl» ^>ani8h Club members this week. Due to tiie large membership, third and fourth year Spanish studoits ate there one evening and the second year students another. Latin Club recently opened the doors of the gym to all language clubs for a fun night 'Ilte Rubber Band entmlained during the activities. Troy th^Sondbo/i Appearing Every Thurs., Fri., & Sat. RONNIE WOLFE and His RUNAWAYS M-59 and Elizabeth Lk. Rd. 338-7879 THE OYNAMIO DAVISSON DUO Thursday, Friday and Saturday • ORSIII • PUNO • DRUMS aiM le aa aveatog af anieifainawiit wMb BanSr and Wwaalalba The Royal Lounge at The Jtoyol Reoreoliois DOWNTOWN UKE ORION SI B. Front St. 691-8411 Avondale By JAN MALANE Tuesday Avondale High School students had an assembly program, not just one assemble but two, one in the morning for juniors and seniors mid one in the afternoon for freshman and soph-mores. William Glavan will meet with the coop students to discuss their jobs Monday. Three senior girls will act as secretaries for the Health Department Thursday. The elementary jchool students wUI be getting TB tests then. The girls are Diana Sage, Vicki Sheldon, and Vicki UrbOnovic. The AHS Spirit Risers Qub recently helds its awaids banquet at the Big Boy in Rochester. Awards were given to the officers and other outstanding members of the pep club. ★ ★ * The All-Oakland County Pep Club Conference will be held on Dec. 2 at 10 ajn. The - conference, at Pontiac Northern, is sponsored by the AHS Spirit Risdrs and the Pontiac Northern Pep Club. By UNDA SWEET The Troy High School Frmidi Club' meets each Tuesday after school. The sponsor is Anthony Comellier, Frmich teacher, and the officers are Sunni Schneyer, president; Mlckl Momingstar, vice president; Sandy Lavoidar, secretary; and Marie Ku<^k, secret^. The National Honw Society held a board meeting. It is con^dering a January rather than May induction for new members. _______ of the student body Jier- fmrmed Wednesday evening in two separate appearances in the Detroit Auto Show at Coho Hall in connection with Sing-Ont Detroit. Sing-Out Detroit is a local branch of the worldwide “Up With People’’ organization. A national cast performed at many of the area high schools last year. ★ ★ ★ “Up With People" is based on Moral Re-Armament, an ideolc^ created by the late Frank Buchman. Novi By 'raOM HOLMES Mother Nature did it to Novi High School’s student body again! Last Friday, because of the icy roads in Novi, school was called off and the cooperative dinner and dance was canceled. It was tentatively rescheduled for Wednesday. Hie second annual band variety show Thursday was a success with standing room only. son, Ramsey;, Jane Kier, indigmit hippie, Cecily; Steve Krantz, musician; and Linda La^imet, Guinevere. SULL OTHERS still others are Joe Lozier, Kelly; Bill McDonald, Guru; Sharon Lundquist, Mrs. Stevens: Colleen Murphy, Lenore; Maureen Murpt^, Mrs. Stanky; Brenda Owen, Romola; Virginia Palshan, Alex; Peg Shepard, Marguerite; and Duane Stowell, Roy. Concluding the cast are Thm Tiefry, Harry Delivery Boy; Barry Tilton, Diogmies; Lisa ’Troyer, Mifed; Janet Smith, Finger BeU; John Spencer, Conrad Brotherhood; and Carol Wudarcki, Tambourine. Margaret Stevens is the student director. Pm FooA anil LiqjMWA CATERING TO ALL TYPE PARTIES AND BANQUETS *'Mak9 Your BimUng Bamquet R^rvatiom* JV®w” < FRIDAY & SATURDAY "S diidete Mew Fwa S^nf T> 0»p8/i ALL YOU CAN EAT SMORGASBORD SATURDAY 6 TO 10 P.M. Children Under 12-12.50 tO “EXPANDED PARKING NOW AVAILABLE” Wide Track at West Huron FE 2-1170 Jay. sons Holly By MARHA CLARK The annual Holly High School Athletic Awards Assembly Thesday honored varsity and junior varsity football players and the cross country track team. Cross country coach Duane Raffin introduced the members of the team to Uie student body. Jim COok received the most valuable runner award. The most improved runner went to Doug Montaqne. This given by the coach to the coach feels has improved the ing the past season. Elmer Rose, varsity football introduced the varsity team. ★ ★ , ★ The award for most improved went to Carroll Edwards. MOST VALUABLE Tom Hayes received the moat valuable player award. The gag award went to Dave Rhoades for being squad cheerleader. The schoolwide magazine sales have ^n going well with $10 prizes awarded to Laura Bebee, Julie IVlea and Novia Newman. Brandon Andover Anend our gala NEW YEAR’S EVE PARTY Make Your Retervationt Now! ____ IN PERSON PLEASE Deltd Inn By GAYLE WHJJBNBERG The Girls’ Athletic Association of Bloomfield Hills Andover High School gave the girls a chance to ask the boy of their dreams out for a dinner, hay-ride and dance Wednesday. The psychology classes recently visited the psychiatric wards at Northville State Hospital under the direction of Mrs. Maxine Baumhart, psychology and sociology teacher. By MICHAEL COOPER Two of Brandon High School’s senior choral members. Beryl Austin and Connie Leece, were accepted to State Honors Choir. Tlie girls are from the choral classes of Lewis Wilson. Wilson, who doubles as director of the all-MhooI play, announced the cast of “Hip Hippie Hnrray’’: Beryl Austin, Lavinia Gazelle; Sharon Banda, Lottie; Rodney Bradford, TomTom; Randy Cooper, Terry Hippie; Marlene Feathmton, ^zy; Richvd Flanders, Will; and John Guisbert, Launcelot. Others are Vicki Hitchcock, Brandar and Trydy; Leanne Hoffman, Millicent; David Homan, Mr. Stevens; Gregg Jack- Dominican By CYNDI WYZGOSKI Everyone has a class project at Dominican Academy, and all the drugstore owners in Oxford and Lake Orion are beaming because of the recent boom in magazines, paper, glue and scissor sales. Whether it’s a poetry book for English, a collage for religion, a political cartoon booklet for history, a mj^ology book for Latin or a geography book for French, everyone needs pictures to put into some kind of project. ★ ★ ★ Storekeepers are ecstatic, mothers frantic, teachers proud and students weary, wondMng if its all worth the time and effort. 3 Attend Cancer Seminar Attending the Michigan Cancer Foundation’s recent seminar wera Christina Plalcer of Waterford Township High Corner Elizabeth Lake And Cass Lake Roads 1 BLOCK WEST Of HURON V School, Peggy CToherty of Marian High School and Christine Zube of West Bloomfield High School. The girls earned scholarships in the foundation’s summer science program. Everything from the reaction of white mice to wall-paper cages to the regenerative powers of a tadpole were discussed at this year’s seminar marking the close of the foundation’s summer scholarship program. Anirozinialely 2N persona attended the seminar held at the anditorinm of the Cancer Center at John R and Hancock. Dr. Michael J. Brennan, president of the foundation, addressed the audience with an illustrated talk on “Immunity in Cancer,’’ and papers r^resentative of the wi^ areas of research undertaken by the scholarship winners were given by Richard Robb, Charles Wilson and Sarrflor Zirubiik, Detroit; Madeleine Ruessmann, Bloomfield Hllb; and Brenda Fortunate, St. Clair Shores. Certificates of achievement were presented to the 57 echolarship partidpants. This summer marked the fourth annual sdence scholarship program sponsored by the Foundation as part of its career incentive curriculum. WINNERS — Peggy Cloherty (center) shows Christina Plaicer (left) and Christine Zube laboratory mice. ITie three girls were among the 57 winners in the Michigan Cancer Foundation’s I rmrmrfy?TrrrrriTrrrrrnnr ■ Tmdmr, Vounm. Vmh, Plump I CHICKtNS ... D»tp FrUd in Fr0$h The Exciting HAWAIIAN GARDENS Saturday, November 25 ROYAL HAWAIIAN LUAU BnhBi Ward and hit Orehatira Linda Howa and her Hawaiian-Ma Exhibition Friday, November 24 Dumciugand SimgmdjpHgteUk THE MIKE OROS DUO No Cover Cbarfo NEW YEAR’S EVE RESERVATIONS AND DECEMBER PARTIES NOW BEING BOOKED IfOM Your Party Uaumilan SlyU 4501 Orange Hall Rood Holly, Michigon 44442 RESERVATIONS: 634-8231 from Dotrait 1-78 to Penlen ExR From Flint 1-75 tO Ortonville Exit o Pnro VegutahU Oil fitr the Mott ■ Delightful CMeken Dinner Ever e D..^ fa B4’hV Wl SnOULIZi IN UM8I QUANTITY ONDiRti ; For Yoof CoHvonlonco, Pionto Call In Quantity Oidort In Advoneol DAWN DONUTS Araaoi Tko Olaak ^ Opmn 7 Day - 5 AM. to 12 Midnight 98 NORTH TELEQRAPH 1. ADieUiaaafDamtDenuU 8S5-2444 PHONE 836-0101 H CHHEttmiLUEl I mRlU.E.EA»mAAJUAAAJULlA A AU AM ».EJ I t.E mUtP i 4195 Dixie Hwy. Dtisyton Plains Phone 67.3-7900 NOW . . . Wednesday through Saturday The JERRY LIBBY Trio o COCKTAILS o LUNCHE.S • DINNER o DANCING “The Vandals” Wendy—on Drums Floyd—on Boss Guitar Denny—on Load Guitor-Orgon THEY'RE WILDI THEY'RE GREAT! OPEN MON. thru SAT. Serving Luncheon, Dinner, . and Cocktails — Dinner Served Until Midnight— for Reservations — CoH 623*0060 ENTERTAINMENT-Wed. thru Sat. "IRENE & IRV" at the ODlb ^tll tEaiJCnt WATERroRD.*InOT6Ati CLOSED THANKSGIVING WEEKEND Best of Thanksgiving Withot to All Our Patrono. SooYou Nixt Wook "Playing for thm Frat Crdtvd^’ IIN Dixit Nwy. BOHAm MS miY4mBP mea ______ mBSBBUSIBtUfiB wHoiB mm iV: Reel Amnge Your DInnor Fartieo in ggr Ignanig Room, ttating ter 40 pla In gragiout $ur- Banalaaa Choioa Dinner STRIP STEAK $1(9 Toxat Toiot, Salad and Baked Potato OtimVimm OA fooF OA BORANZAaiRkoiN PIT, Kmart Qlenwood Plaza , Oenier Menweea Open 7 Days a Weak 11 AJM.-9,Frl.aMlSat.‘MJ0 OaSN 8IMMYSTIU • PkM.__________ ,1 TUB PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY> NOVEMBER 24. 1967 jy-r9 Indian Musician's Rise Not Without Sour Note By DICK KLEINER . . At home, in India, Shankar is HI, comix. Ravi Shankar’s pleasure over!®'“°"®’ performances on his sudden popularity withi‘"® *" and American audiences is not an e" All-India Radio have made unmitigated joy. It has its thor-ney side for the world-respected Indian musician. PLUS SeuPH sales ly^COLUMBIACOLOR PUITTEB BOX Back by Popular Demand Prophonics Recording Stars • • • The Sons of Sound of Fomdalo, Michifan at the C.A.I. 5640 Williams Laka Rd. Waterford, Mich. EVERY SUNDAY 6 P.M. to 9:30 P.M. ADM. $1.50 him a national idol. Shankar is risking the loss of this respect to stay in the United States and tackle the problem which has erupted here. “I am being criticized at home,” he says, “for spending so much time away from India. ★ Hr ★ “I earn plenty of money there, by God’s grace, and I could stay there and have a fine life. But I feel a responsibility to stay here now.” RELIGIOUS DEDICATION The small man, the color of wet sand, tucked his legs under him on the chair. He was wearing a loose white tunic and white pants and his shining hlack hair curled thickly down his neck. He has an air of seriousness of purpose, of almost religious dedication to his RAVI SHANKAR “India has become 'in’ all of a sudden here,” he says. “Per- Rock Peril in Space Feared Greater Than Previously Believed New Critifcism Magazine Grows With Rock 'n' Roll [1 On the debit side, the youth I of the writers and editor shows Now at The Airwaus GEPRGE JWARTIN and Vhe Cruisers Dancing and Listening Entertainment 6 Nights a Week 4isioay Lour^ 4852 W. Huron (M59) 674-0425 No Entertainment Sunday BUY! SELL! TRADE! CAPE KENNEDY (UPI) -New studies by space agency haps because of me, the sitari researchers indicate there may is very popular. So is the way;be more solid rock flying around we Indians wear our hair. Oth-lin space than previously be- er things — nirvana, yoga, joss sticks — are also popular. ★ ★ * “And it is all very superficial It doesn’t make me happy because I see its shallowness. lieved. If so, the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) said extra protection against cosmic debris may be needed for future manned ships making long voyages to the planets. “Such added precautions i would be reflected in the de- FEELS RESPONSIBLE “It hurts me very much, it makes me feel responsible, when I see these hippies with, the acid and the flowers in theirl*‘8" spacecraft and in prohair using our sitar. , space suits for men in ... space,” NASA said. “These people think they are , . creating, but the sitar is a dll- of objects slam into ficult instrument. I have not®®''^"® atmosphere yet mastered it.” speeds up to 35,- ^ ^ . 'WO miles an hour, and nearly Not only Is the sitar a hard all of this space debris burns instrument to learn, but it is up in the air and never reaches a painful one to play. the ground. Shankar showed the callous at the side of the index finger on his right hand, and the iodine For every pound-sized meteoroid entering earth’s atmosphere, there are tens or hundreds of covering the almost-perpetual ounce-sized projecUles and mil cuts on the tips of the first two lions of smaller ones fingers of his left hand. GAVE UP EVERYTHING To achieve his degree of perfection took Shankar many years. HOLLY THEATRE HOLLY - TONIQHT FREE COFFEE FOR OUR PATRO^S 12 NORTH SAGINAW IN DOWNTOWN PONTIAC MATINEES DAILY OPEN 11:45 A.M. Show Starts 12:00 Noon Continuous 334-4436 NOW SHOWING FOR MATURE ADULTS fe.,MONOO ...a mm tf ribaUar aid thhaea tram dm jaiea aHihl PluaZndBigHit **Bachelor*$Dream** Op«n Sun. 3:45 Continuous AAEfllECDAE DRIVE-IN THEATER uOMMERuE! Mautrty Rd. FRii ILI0THI0 HIATERS' 3-W41—Ihow Starts at FRU BLIOTHIC RBATERS. Ousk-Adulti 61.25 NOW IROWIRO thru SUN. URLYBIRD SNOW SUN. Sill P.M. NOW THRU TUESDAY ONLY! “ONE OF THE HINNIESTfilim out of Hollywood in a long time.' “A GAG4-SEaiBDC0MEDY...i laughed almost continuously throughout the picture.” VISIBLE AT NIGHT The burning particles are often visible at night as meteors. NASA said measurements of meteoric light and studies of m e t e 0 r s’ courses previously have suggested that most are loose mixtures of sand-like material that rapidly disintegrate and disperse when they hit the atmosphere. The idea that most meteors are sand-like, combined with studies of their trajectories, led to the conclusion that most meteoroids are remains of bro-ken-up comets. “This fits the current theory that comets are like ‘dirty snowballs’ made mostly of ice, frozen ammonia and methane with some rock and sand,” NASA said. ★ * ★ But recent experiments by a group of scientists at NASA’s Ames Research Center, Mountain View, Calif., suggested that all meteoroids don’t fit the “space snowball” theory. ENTRY SIMULATED The Ames scientists experimented with chunks of dense earth rock in high speed, high temperature wind tunnels to simulate the entry of meteoroids into the atmosphere. They found that the heat caused by air friction melted the surfaces of the test' rocks, boiled off what water they contained and expanded other gases in the rock into a layer of foam. As the rock continued to be exposed to the tremendous entry heat, the foam acted as a blunt heat shield and allowed part of the froth to solidify around the rock. ★ ★ * NASA said the rock foam was two to 20 times less dense than the rest of the rock. This would account for the reduced density observed as meteors plunge deeper into the atmosphere and which led scientists to believe most meteors were aggregates of sand. ROCK-LIKE METEORS But with the new findings, Ames scientists reasoned that a majority of meteoroids may be composed of hard rock rather than sand-like material. NASA said the recsearchers further speculated that, contrary to old theories, many more meteors originate in the rocky By JEFF COX NEA Special Writer NEW YORK — Rock ’n’ roll up jn the thick seeding of the has grown up. The pr^f thaU„rd “wow” throughout the rock has lost its Cleafasil magazine, anmia can be found in the, great, gray New York Tiines, I ttlost important, though, is which has lately been affecting WlUlams’ attempt to “get to adult-aimed commentary on wk®* a magazine should look The Beatles. I Uke.” He uses layout for its own With adulthood, rock has to's*ke. | take the rap for its excesses Crawdaddy’s photography is and its triumphs. And, for the [never representational — faces first time, people are taking are portraits, not mug shots. this music seriously. jCroups are shown in moody (JSE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! one takes it more serious-1®®®““®-ly than a New York-based mag-called Crawdaddy, 50 pages of psychedelicate design and insightful criticism of the best rock groups. Without any outside backing, its editor has made it the most respected magazine now dissecting rock. ★ ★ ★ Crawdaddy’s editor looks like he just wandered into the magazine’s shabby second-floor office in Greenwich Village searching for some fellow hippie’s pad. He’s Paul Williams,! just turned 19, and a Swarth-more dropout. DRIVES CREW A wispy-looking young man, he treads barefoot around the office, speaks softly and articu-lately, works 15 hours a day on the magazine, and drives his crew of six just as hard as himself. “Crawdaddy is the first magazine of rock criticism,” Williams says, “and I’m trying to make it into the very best kind of critical facility.” Rock is suddenly the most active art form in America, he says, and deserves much more than the marshmallow-goo treatment it gets from the Self-Employed? HERE’S HOW YOU CAN GET A $2,500 TAX BREAK NEXT YEAR. AND HALF THAT MUCH THIS YEAR. Not only will a Keogh plan bring you substantial tax savings avary yaar until you retire, It will also mean a substantial retirement fund when you do. There are various ways this can be handled. For full details, costs, risks and special advantages of each method, call, drop by our offices, or complata the attached coupon. No cost or obligation, of course. teenybopping pre^s. Williams talks about Crawdaddy’s birth: “I was in my first year at Swarthmore in 1965 —’ — I was 17 then — and interested in magazine work. “I knew that a successful WATLING LERCHEN & CO im tnum s.Vu. il i, . Members New York Stock Exchange, 2 North Saginaw Street, Pontiac, Michigan FE 4 asteroid belts ib the solar tem or that materials in clouds J®®‘ ®'®® covering. It of comets contain much more "'® ®"® solid rock than once believed. seriously about America’s newest art form — rock. Based on this new informa- ,, , tion,” NASA said, “the probabil-, ^ I** * ty of meteoroids puncturingthe. ««e (Yaiidaddy from spacecraft is about six times English club of the same greater than previous estimates from observation of meteors.” name where The Rolling Stones ~ land ’The Yardbirds used to be S 'bouse musicians, and for “If indications prove correct, y®®® “"•* * that rock-like debris occurs t**® n»®g®**n® »" ® m«»»®-more o f t e n in space than pre- “graph from my home in viously calculated, plans fori Cambridge, Mass.” space missions extending into | Williams moved the operation many months may need re- to New York six months ago vision.” land j,as built his circulation up ------------- to 18,500 ... all but about 1,000 Jsf Use as Svmboh°^^ bookstores and r record shops. St. Francis first created the! ★ ★ w j creche as a Christmas symbol' The magazine isn’t tightly ed-' in the Middle Ages. ited — each writer’s own idiom ------------------- [shows through — but it is co-| Four U.S. presidents were hesive and the criticism is often | born west of the Mississippi — illuminating. Graphically, a Hoover, Truman, Eisenhower young designer named David and Johnson. [Flooke does exciting things. DRIVE IN 7033 Dmf HIGHWAY tU I FC 5 4500 I HOCK N TEUGtARH tD BOX OFFICE OPENS 7:00 mp iHnm ‘ms mpifiTY 1 COLOR j IS : _ COOLHaND UIKE Elllllllllillilllllll IN-CAR HEATERS ‘ MAGNIFICENT! ff - CHICAGO AMERICAN ff “An Achievement Of Mighty Proportions!" - NEW YORK POST STUPENDOUS! - nOSTON GLOBE "A Grendiose Epic! Has Greatness And Beauty!" - BOSTON HEKALO BREATHTAKING!” t) TORONTO STAR MON., TUES., THURS., FBI. at 8:00 only WED., SAT., SUN. at 1:30>4:45-8:00 PRICE^ Encagamtnt Only inillTC NHet a Sunday................$2.00 MVULIO Wad. 4 Saturday Mat...........$1.25 CHILDREN UNDER 12 $1.M giniiii BLUE SKY OPDVKE 10. AT WAirON BIVD "STEVE McQUEEM • = ATWS BEST!” 5 5 / riMt 'S r il OVE^ s: , 2^S/G ss / 25 i IflEKMCOUEEi ls:sBS.«a 2III1IIIIIIIIIIIII" IN-CAR HEATERS mill MIAACLE 023 omvi IN so teieciath at so lake >o H 2 1000 I MIlE W WOODWAIO BOX OFFICE OPENS 7:QD P M • MltlO WHY GET BRUISED. MAN ? LET TONY ROME DO IT... HE GETS PAID FOR IT! 1 The action is so fast »toti ronj il ...it’s a wonder Tony Rome stays alive V -and V, single! >! COLOR ^wmmimimELECTRIC in-c^r heaters D-hI THE PONTIAC PRKSS.^^FRIDAy, NOVEMBER 24, 1967 kefer Busmeisss Over-All Mart Declines The following are top prices | covering sales of locally grown! produce by growers and sold by them in wholesale package lots. Gold Mining Stocks Strong . , new YORK (AP) — G#d| Glamor stocks were sharp'mining stocks, Goldfield, Day Quotations are furnished by the I mining stocks were strong early losers on the Big Board. The Mines and Lake Shore Idines Detroit. Bureau of Markets as'this afternoon while the over- roster of blue chips, however, rose about a point each. of Tuesday. Produce i, Cortlant BRUITS Apples, Cider, 4-oal. case ... Apples, McIntosh Apples, Northern Spy, Pu. ... Apples, Red Delicious, bu. Apples, Golden Delicious, bu. VEGETABLES i, topped, bu.......... age, Curly, bu....... ;all stock market declined in ac-'gave ground grudgingly. Some] I tive trading. of the nonferrous metal stocks 1 The Dow Jones industrial av- aside from gold mining issues,' M JO erage at noon was off 1.68 at showed strength. j 275 8TO.34 paring its earlier decline. AVERAGES OFF Losses outnumbered gains byi f S about 2 to I on the'New-York Associated Press average of the Green. Tavern, 1225 CtKrvlr ^ of 60 stocks at noon was off .6 at Baldwin, owner Stella Ann War-' Stbck Exchange. Obbaaa, ( Carrots, Cello Pak. JhIi. . , Siangan Carrots, tc Caulifiowar, «............ Celery, root, ‘/i bu. ... Horseradish, pk. bskt. . Leeks, dz. bchs.......... , Black, Va bu. . 1313.1 with industrials off 1.6,]rlngton, 57, of 2482 Winkelman, I rails unchanged and utilities up reported to PonUac police yes-I 'S; A rush for gold in the world’s .2. bullion markets constituted a, In a generally lower market threat on the value of the dollar'on the American Stock Ek* ■ 3 03 in foreign exchange, it was re- change, gold mining and other . 3.00 ported, and led to enthusiastic j natural resources stocks were roo buying of gold mining stocks prominent. Trading was active. Ig which were already strength-' Giant Yellowknife topped the 3.M ened by Britain’s devaluation of list on volume, gaining a frac-^.»o the pound sterling. ‘tion. Also active, among the I Devalued Pound Stirs Confusion Money: What Is It? By JOHN CUNNIFF AP Business Analyst NEW YORK (AP) - Money is the root of all evil, somebody once SAid, and after the British pound devaluation there are many who are quite willing to believe It. Not by a fraction, however, do they compare with the millions of functions. It creates middlemen who really don’t want to consume your> goods but who wish to store them or resell them elsewhere. It also eliminates the urgency of time, for money can be saved. It is unlikely that trade would . rosper if the owner of 100 pounds of wheat, desiring to ex- News in Brief An undetermined amount of , liquor was stolen in a break-] T now confused by the subject, {change it for an equal amount Clear up the confusion and it be- of com, was forced to seek oitt {comes clear also that money, the specific individual capable rather than being evil, is essen- of filling his needs, tial to economic health. * terday. Robert FntreU of 3050 Old Orchard, Waterford Township,] reported to township police yes- —■ x terday the larceny of a stereo] / YY ill iQSt tape player valued at |137 from | Protest of The New York Stock Exchange Viet, Poverty By The Associated Press But what is it? Money is a convenience toi facilitate trade. It is a symbol of a nation’s economic health or illneOs. It is a symbol of productivity, a claim.on goods, a device th a t| helps you convert your labor into something you desire. BARTERING SOOE'nES Some primitive societies have CUNNIFF 1 He mi^t find a seller of corn, 'but not in the right amount. And I the com seller might refuse to .take wheat in return. Maybe he , wants barley instead, and so the ; barter could not be completed. -I Tbe wheat seller therefore is 'willing to accept an equivalent iin money. This money can be j anything society designates, including pebbles if it wishes. But 'everyone in society must be convinced these pebbles are acceptable and that their value will. remain unchanged. Otherwise they are just little rocks. CHORE HALVED If the wheat seller accepts now, and so that is what he buys with his mmiey. The j^t he saves, or lends or rents out. Three of the. most itttportant factions of mcmey have been shown in this transaction; money as a medium of exchange, as a measure of value, and as a storer of value — savings — for possible use later. ' PUBUC CONFIDENCE Now, as long as the society’s Supply of money continues to grow in relation 4o its productivity, most people remain confi- ' dent that they can exchange their money for an equivalent in products and services. Poultry and Eggs lExcl ACF Ind 3.30 DBTROIT eOULTIIV DETROIT (AP)-(USDA)— PrIcM pold 0«r pound lor No. I llw poultry; • Abbott Lob t Hono hoovy type, 1X20 eantt, tieoyy|ABC Con .00 lypo roMlers, 24-27; brollori ond Iryori. Abcx Cp 1.60 whlitt, 12-21. DRTROIT eeos DETROIT (AP)-(USDA)- Eoo pricts nr doion paid by lint rocolvori (Includ- Lblto'’'Grado A I •xiro lorn. JS-STW; dium, OMOWi Soldi Not I (lids.l Hloh low lilt Chi. I 22 72',4 II'.. 72'., + flVocTAT 07 26 aS’/j 36'-^ -1 - ■ 4 1514 15'/y 15V, S3 50H 50'/4 50'/, - '/< 37'/, 26'^ 2614 —1'/4 S 6714 47''4 4714 t 3910 30'A 3»'/b — U CHICAGO (AP) - Chicago Ml EKhang*—Buttor otoodyi wholou Ing pricoa unchanged; 03 icora An w.,.mcoa i.ov 02 A 66W; 00 B 65Vk; 10 C 64V1; cart'Amorodo 3 00 B 66'4; 00 C 66. Am Alrlln .00 Eggi about iteady; wholesale buying'Am Bosch .M Brices unchanged; 75 per cent or-bettor AmBdctt l.Oo Grkdo A whites 32 ;mlaad 31; mediums Am Can 2.30 Vi standerds 25V5i checks ITVi. .AmCrySuo I CHICAGO POOtTRY J JSlYJ" VS CHICAGO (AP) - (USDA) - Llva Vjg poultry; wholesale buying prices changed; mstert 25-20; special fed “ Rock (ryers lOIVlOW; young h— *• 24-16; young tom. turkeys 13-3 ......................... Slock' ■not selected noon prices; Salas Net FlaPwLt 1.74 (hds.) High Lew Last Chg. FMC Cp .75 ______A_____ FoodFair .90 30 44314 4344 45 63 604^ 63'/4 — H 46 48 6iH 66%^ —1H Gam Sko t .30 26 30 W/k W/9 -a V« GAccapt 1.40 V 2P/k 35>A 35V4 GanAnllF .40 97 34^ 34H 24H + Vk Gen CIg 1.20 11 12 12 12 — Va GenDynam 1 .. . , ....................Vi Gen Elec 2.40 173 104514 lOl’/i 102'/^ —2’A | 9JA M 48 47 47H + H ' A6. . -«*Adk. X-™. -kS 21?* 21 22.. T I-* 243 36 14 77'4 741. 741S — '/I CPubSv .4(0 54 75',4 741. 75'/. + H GPubUt 1.56 CHICAGO — Dick Grecorv Np- gotten along without money for money he has immediately cut S ciSJdian Sive awhile. The^y barter. ,ust as the h« chore half. Nowjlhe - white settlers of America bar- needs to do is find someone irRedtn 1.50 12 12 — V% GenDyn: A VG 66 66V4 + Vi Gen Elec .. 7 22 22 22 — 46 Gen Fds 2.^^ 58 3944 39 39*A + Gen Mills .80 36314 3696 ~ 44 GenMot 3.B0g 4 2796 27»/6 2796 - V6 4 2796 27Vg 27V4 ... 43 19H 191/6 19'b 3 2194 2194 3194 + '/» I 5796 56 . ... Am .40 PinhEP 1.60 ParkeDav ir PaabCea‘ * PannDix Ptnney i PaPwlt R 2.40 il 1.40 iOQ 747 e0'>i 80 113 32«/s 31V4 3194 — H GTel El 1 13 619k i —196 Gen Tire 68Vg 68'/i , 696 696 21 2796 27Vg 27»A 4496 43V 2496 24V 189 4496 43V« 63 2496 24V4 33 57 5694 57 1 3196 319' 37 10394 103 24V» - '*,PubSv^cColb^ 3ili 3IH ■“ 103 IDS -55'A 55H- Livestock DBTROir LIVBtTOCK DETROIT (AP)r-(USDA)- Caltla 250; ---- lots choice l,00(F1,150 ■“ .— steers 20.25-27.25; good 24.5X25.75. Hogs 100; U.S, 1 end 2 20e’-“ *• pnd gilts io.OX1f.50; 1-3 21___________ 10.00; 1-3 30X400 lb sows 14.75-15. Vsettrs 75; high choice end pr'~ ^ n 3540; good 3X35. iheep mirfcei *^ICA«0 LIVESTOCK CHICAGO (API - (USDA) - •M4S. 0...*^... 25 higr tart 1150 - 19.50. 16 30>/4 w. ..a. 34 557 jr-*. ■». ,/ . oj 133112% 109% m% -1% mas dioDcr," he said. 9 17 16% 16% I ■" ■ Gregory said be will maintain J! ii? gS! + ^ *>'s schedule of personal appear-ances during the fast, appearing j0j4 , . in 26 cities for lectures and con-34W + - % Kroo«r 1 36 43 4196 4196 % 30 43% 4196 41% — V6 . ' . ! 'ft 'ft 'ft - 1? .‘■2I5.J2S 5I>* 51x4 51’* — '* ., 24V*-24'* 24'* _ 21 ^ 2»'* 204* - H « 44X4 44'* 44X4 + '/. 32 25'* 24X4 25V. 4- <* X'U 4m MX* ^ 77 135 113'* 133X4 + X4 ?5 as r asis 16 70% 71% 71% -9 % 248 66 Slerl Drug 1 St«v8nsJ 3.25 ^ Oil lb Ounray i.M Tampa El ,tt 17 9%------ . , , I . Vt wvt vtiiioi jr UIVUIIIV VI . wk.. k« (. « v wei^t he will lose by months of 1966. fr J3S 15! US ;p,?^|Christmas Day. , current net Income per share * 55X* 45'* 55V* - V* normal duties at WPON, said j . nreferred dividends ^1 SS Si* SSTS'the food he normally w^mld eat-«^“;^ J 33 M'* 30'* 30V* - V* will hp Biven to needv families. ™ ~ vexciuo -T- in P«.- <"'tr..nli.»rr Incom. M An underwater “t e 1 e-| ««"»"•< Jy ' phone booth” for use by scuba diving archaeologists will be nw Fr^.® *4.7 used this summer in excavating wiSik aU S.4 iij 7o.» ti.i lin'/Hlgl? 537 r* 0X4 HoornarW .02 -. . 511 .00 1 ,r Chat Ohio 4 21 •;* jv, «*» + V* cwMii SIP 1 T K lls fiS-H s?; ?- 14 21 20% 21 + HIcit Fin 160 4 1796 17% 17% ~ %|; |Lw'Vt an A 1 lEsSiil 4 iT* ift 35v*-'*i8issroo SS ^,4 fL. 4. c5 o',f*i.44 a 3ft SS •4 35% 35 3596 % Con Edit 1 iO nivH .mi 477 76% 75% 76 -* % ramFmwi t M chnicol .40 39 34% 34% 24%~%!cmNa% 166 ».3V rt ------------ 1% • t 'Corn In, 3 30 Treasury Position jSK • Corn Pd 1 70 15 17% 17% 1796 9 64% 64% 64% 18 38% 37% 37% 11 44% ......... 5 33% LOPGIii 2.80 WHVI WHW, -r ^ U^CM .36» Si* Sxozswr.i 30V* 30y* -- 1* U**w^3.4W^^ 57 47 44W 444* -f V* LIvlMitn oil 17 34 35X, 35M - X* ' LockttM 2.20 I, 131X4 131 131 +3 |L«*w»Tli .35y 31 41X4 41X4 41>* Serry I SignilOl 'LontSO 4 4IH 41'* 411* _ 4* 'Li>ngl,Lt 1.14 115 50'4 47X4 4»X4 - H Larniird 1.10 34 241* 24X4 24’* -F V* LTV 1.11 14 31'* 31X* 31V* + X* Lucky Sir .00 14 34'* 13X4 34 4- HiLuktnt Sll 1 10 SI as S0V4 s r 27 21V* 20'* 211* —L.- ......... „ SS 17X4 37 37>* - 1* Tax PLd .3Sg 7 11*4 )!'* nv* - V* I**!!?" -W 130 SI* OH »* - 1* -40 113 20 1,'* 1,’* + H 11 40'* 4SX* 4SH - '* I''«1»WAIr I 10 IK. 11X4 13X4 -F '* IranianHrll 10 70X1 70'* 70'* - '* ,!i ,Sv*.5S i5:u,S .44 sx* 1X4 OV* + '* TwanCanI .10 no MH 40<* 40X* - 1*1 "• — 107'* — 15 S3’* 52'* 52'* I.IK 1*2 132X4 130 133 I.M 54 24’* MV* 34H — <* 3.40* 154 001* 10 00'* - V* X 1.20 20 21X4 21'* 21X4 ul 4b 120 133X* 120’* 131H -I *2 IllVk 100H IlOH 4-IX( 23 11X4 17X4 lP -f '* 53 44 MX4 44 X- V* 40 114* 1l<* 1IX* 14 40'* 30'* 40'* tiac would do the same. I 55 551* a Roman ship that sank in th^!%i?’*^ V.i Rl 2* Hi VA JM47 1.. |IM7 Low Aegean Sea about 1,500 years 73.0 *5.4 14.* *3.5 0*4 44.4 14.1 71.7 fO.S 7*1 7*.5 101.4 14.1 fl.l *0.7 **- 7*J *0.4 03.7 10 ITX* 17X4 17X4 — 14 20 23'* 23 23'* 30 M'* 24'* 24X* -F V* 7 4*X* 4*X* 4*H _ 1* UMC ll Un Cart Un eia< UnOIICi MackrCo .10 44 4*'* 4* 4* SO 75'* 75X* 75'* — '*lf;*''U''Wa’ ' a»'4a‘I 4 4*X4 4*X4 -F •* ! 152 liatiS * 44V* 44X* — 4* *Sft ?ft=:2g| tri? i5!» ' * 43 41 - 1* ,US UnTank 3.30 Unirwal 1.30 UnttAIrLm I UnItAIre 1.40 Unit Cp .500 Un Fruit MO UGatCp 1.70 Unit MM 1.Io i? -ISO 47X* 44X4 47X4 104 1SX* 141* IS'* - V* 14 20X4 27’/i 30X* -F X*; . 30 *1X4 *1X* *11* + '*' AMT X41 24'* M'A 24 - 1* IAW- —U— cm! 34 1*H 1*X* 1*H — 1* Dair 174 asr* 45'* 45X4 + 14 DIar *30 22V* 22'* 22'* .... 114 SO'* 4*X4 50 . . 37 31 371* 37H — 1* 4 74>* 74V* 74’* 14 44'* 41Vk 43’/* — 1* 110 jVA OSH 471* -F V* 44 ItH tIH OIH-IV* * II II II —H .......tan S'*-.'* Stocks of Local Interest '='«“SkvnMir(!5s'Nri‘5vaKr"’* Quotattoif from th* NASD art rtprp-•twiSlvt lirtor-dtalar wiMX.o* mately 11 a.m. Int*r*l**l*r ~rl(*h s5rr.J^y.®{ar'n:.^^u^’'m.r» llS^Tr 1 EnalTM USOvPim 3a U8 Ind .70 WASHINGTON (AP) Tha •Itlon of lha Traatury r-- ra.p.nd.nj^d.N a^a ' Ta». I r., Coxbdeat .50 ‘ CrouioHlnd i Crow Coll 7t -nw.w.ww Crown Cork f 7(4214329.886 52 8 3,938.053,355.49 ?-20 DopolUi Fiical Yaar July 1- Sfl 1.30 S$,i37MM.4S 53.965,679.319.44 Cudahy Co Withdrawals Fl*eal Yaar- ;CurM* l^b 71.304.854.590.51 16,442.831,897.61 Cortlu Wr I (x)-Tot* ‘ “ - T!5! 1M MH ... ... ........'ZiS MWtBs' ljfi * WH 17H 37H r.-.-HmJ T’ 17 42'* 42V* 42'* McCair OP 51 311* 20'* MV* - '* '■ 42 1*H ISXt MX* - 232 4*>* 47'* 40 -2H,UnlPtin MO 14 151 111 351? - V* M*A« Cp '« " »>V* 37'* 37'* 25 14 I3X. 14' + >* Mtiv sll 1.40 2 7»X* 7*'* 7*'* ... I wix. 5JI* 5J1* + ,* MarckC 1.40* 14 04 l5'* 14 -F 37'* 32'* + V* Chap t 1 25 35 i 35 I 47'* 47X4 + H MOM I Mb 13 54 55H 53’* - '* '•= 41'* 41'* Tl MldSpUIII .12 50 MH »H W -f H - - rr.'S fci r... E - ^ W?r"i«rnb 16 8% ............. . 5 37% 37% 27% -- V 16 72% 7196 71% -.19 S3 33 32 33 11 38% 39% 37% 8 46% 46% 46V> 60 56% 55% 5696 + 9 115 41 4096 40% + 9 7 8696 8596 16% -f V 13 90 #96 49% - 20 47A« 4 17 6? 6 74 43% 4 65 30% 3 1 12% 1 II 12 1196 11% . .59 327.32S Sold AMts- Dan RIv l.a 13.903,619,779.96 13,2S7.#Mli.lS DaycoCp l.l —B&r................................. Dllt**Air' ” '!L ’H.. 'Hi* ->!* Otnlow' 32 35H 25'* 2SH I MV* Sx* - SIH IlH 4 30H 30H — SSLiDi" 2' u MphtKP I ^ a.',* 74 lOH 2t'* 2tX* - >1 ^ r 51h- Mpnrp* Aul^EquIpr Npiih Cpniral Alrflr Satran Printing Scrl^ 0Bi44»u*4B4.- VnWfnilnOI MUTUAL PUNDf Putnam Growth Talavltipn EMctrpnlc, wallinglon Fund ......... WIndior Fund Hospital Release afsr,: Motors 1 MtStTT 1.14 n iri!: lilt ......... M.15 rails .........^.81 305.52-0.41 pi»t 1**0 1 'hrlTlJO ill 40.01'D UO-0.02 « rw viywwiq DKiarM „ B.i« MBiwZrU a£n EKodak lio* HpdBPOPrd rti* .............g eiLpnds mi ijgfeFEs w s! E r i'v 'S«,a.,£.r'8SS?S! 160 42% 41% 41% S ilai* JT 2:?“^ wnbanc 1.20 *? S5! 8h ift 21 27'* 27 27'* 4 1* {SrS;!: 40 22 2IH ilH - H Whirl CD 14P 1 'Ift ’S,* XIJ '» “***"*■*■'* w«»h»«F*h' to MV* MIX M14 — 1* 10 4S'* 45 45 — H 4 33>* 11'* »1* 4 H 37 1141* till* 11)1* -2 pi fill!! 'NPIT-JP .1 Ift 24H - V* 1.30 2 21V* 31X* 31’* — V* 101 251* .. —iLprmupl OKlr* dividiindt - »!Sli4i‘ dividpnd. d-DKI*r*d pr »MV* MH Mjj+i?! Soon for Lion Cub 75% 74 74% — io nv* n% sS?* “ BELLE GLADE, Fla. (UPI) ' ^ ^ + H — “Lucky,” a rare white lion cub, may be removed today from a sterile hospital incubator which saved his life when his conventionaliy coated mother rejected him. The one-of-a-kind cub is initely looking better,” said Dr. Ciarence I^idder, the veterin-in th* arian who has been watching !■ (^A«ny*j|over the two-pound “Lucky” •X—Y. 8 ’mh TtS Toil X*H % 285% -2 SnSM*'*tbJ^ pf dlvl- VARIETY SHOP - Decorator Daisy Dowling views the variety of antique and Square Lake, Troy. AnUkues are bought and hand-painted Hems available at Art and An- so|d by Mrs. Dowling and her daughter and tiques, a recently opened shop at S$ E. son-in-law, Mr, and Mrs. James Schidtz. New Shop Features Antiques . . , . Antiques and hand-painted the’^store. Specialties Include oU| The building, near TetearapIC trunks and tins are the items paintings and frames, candle-and Loni » »i.. ro-j -11* M!b\i"u**w''*S?5(iyd*5^ir*l5ii I ij ,u . I, *1. I available at Art and Antiques, sticks, lamps, and other wall y,. ’ -.w ...... Kidder s^d that If the prog-,a recently opened shop at 59 hangings. Many accessories to -BacurMj^pc^epirMs noted ovcr thc ^anks- E. Square Lake, Troy. main pieces of furniture areS^J^J ^ ECUmulAtl^ ISSM i ctIw Inw t«Ali#lo%. RBaLn.* m«KI . w. flMtrnNvAfl in n Bern ffk» I for 1 slock split subiKt to Sp' OCCWMlIOl POtf •UDitcf IO $ EiPaioNG 19 SA 19 Kmof El 1 * End JotMis 40 S3 51% I ’fs 1*4. nails um. sipcki I 34'* 24 M TV* 7X. . . 9 37'* 3I>« l|x, _ V* IS 74'* 75'* Ml* -I S DV* 171* I7V* — H 74 Si’* 47'* *1 7 SPH SO'* M>* 4 V* 11 40H MH S'* 43H 4« 411* 41V* - H m div -Paid 1 yppr. b-V, IvMmd ar , Ivldandt In *rr**r*. n—Nfw ® destroyed in a fire before llg|P or no action takan Foircom .50h, 193 U 19M 7^ -Npw'i4«I?|f*^*"tt holiday while the cnb xhe shop is oWn^ by Mrs. available. _____________________iWiJSrPP?*. “P P""- Daisy Dowling, a decorator con-j 4 ^1^ J» 044 100H S4H MH-IH IKni*!d^':iT.i5 ‘ "h “ by hcr daughter Mrs. Dowling owned a shop. . - ^ ^ SnS'giE' f ! Ift Lft son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. i„ Troy Comers for four years.so . tnany accessories ^ §?il5K2*,'i!» i? ift Is? JS - '‘I irJ5?JiJ3 box this james Schultz. »«***«» ^ 'terested in accessorlziiig hornet shop opened. [;sultant, and i»y her daughter' Mrs. Dowling owned a shop' D»wiIng (Claims tbqc I A**#l Ri4MH_tM_tnm AJg* M**4l Ailg*« m. .fh • • llBVdfe '90% niDmi aiUlnAAIII ilia llAaB sissiiiiTinE.. .. M0.0 I41.S IM.3 24SJ FI* Paw 1.44 1* Ilu ul! ’■!? M m* 70H 71H "‘•’''MiM. Y-Ek diuLLfi-rnoon M iu? S'* ~V *•*" 4 27 341* 241* - liikl •***4 M Ml. ».dl*-Srdl4lrlbo- 1! Sv! ^ »v*7i’‘fc'5ir’i H m uS! M -nirSv. *• ‘be only all-white 5 iTJ 3*?? ** J ItilKSlv n*"krup(cr pr rpCPiyarshlF .ar|the Only One lo the wcirkl. AI- L. ffii - H CKoe. I « g gj Mg - H all white, the cub is not if r a" t ? Xl«!?.£sasr,ir - •^lan alWqp. Kidder said. 8 c h n 111 teaches at Detroit Country Day School, while his wife is M art teacher In Bhwni- All three buy antiiiues for HlTBYnRE SciVeral years ago, she had with antiques, movied ail of her antiques hitol * * w . . a 17^year-old barn converted to In January, she will epnduct a shop for a grand opening the a class titled “Living with An-loUowing week.' 1 tiques.” V. *1 THB PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 24. 1967 D—^5 'Christmas Carol' Spoofs Original Like the Dickens By ROBERT WELLS The Milwaukee Journal Ebenezik' Scrooge IV was not a man who did much reading or watched television often, so he had never heard of a story by Charles Dickens called “A Christmas Carol” until his public relations adviser tossed it on his desk. “Imagewise, this could hurt, Eb,” the press ^ent said. “Christmas seasonwise, it does us no good.” was president of a comj^ny that made hammock grommets and a busy man, but he sat right down and-read the botdc. He was immediate-ly struck by the similarity of names — not only his name but the name of of his clerks. He considered suing this Dickens fellow, vdioever he was, but he thought better of it. “If I sue, it only gives us more bad publicity,” he toid Miss Flang, his secretary. “Get me Bob Cratchit.” "But it’s only 9:15, chief. He never gets here befwe 10.” “Everybody goes on a coffee break at 10.” ‘1 might line you up with an appointment about 11:15 as long as It won’t take too long - the wasb«p period for lunch starts at ll:a.’> “Well see what you can do, Miss Flang. And could I ask you a personal question? Am I a mean old hardhearted skinflint who would go around saying *Bah, humbug’?” “Oh, you’re not so old,” Miss Flang said ami swept out of the office. QUITTING HME Cratchit didn’t show up that morning, but along toward quitting time he came into Scrooge’s office. 10-room cottage in one of the better suburbs. The family was just sitting down to dinner when Scrooge came bursting in, his arms loaded with food and presents, and swept the family’s TV dinners from the table. FINE, FAT GOOSE He thrust the fine, fat Christmas goose into Mrs. Cratchit’s arms, “Here, madame,” he cried, “A fine, fat Christmas goose straight out of Dickens.” “And just full of cholesterol no doubt,” Mrs. Cratchit said, throwing the bird back to him. “If you think I’m going to slave over a hot stove cooking a monster like that, you’re crazy. Pick up those TV dinners I went to all the trouble to defrost. Tiny ’Dm.” Scrooge pivoted on his heel to get a good look at Tim, who limped forward to do his mother’s bidding. 259-POUNDER The lad weighed 250 pounds and was 6 feet 4. “I Scrooge said. “»ai ’m willing to send him to Johns Hopkins to fix that limp.” “John Hopkins?” Cratchit said. “They, don’t even have a football team. ’Tiny plays guard for Notre Dame — that’s how he got his Charley horse.” ★ * Scrooge left, but only after Cratchit had agreed to take his raise in salary even though it put him in a higher tax bracket. Outside the house Ebenezer ran into the president of the clerks’ union. “The grommet works is on stiike, Scrooge,” the president said, “Yon can’t go around doubling one man’s salary without giving the other boys the same increase. “Labor relationswise, you’ve really raised the dickens.” “Dickens,” Ebenezer said; bitterly. “Bah, humbug.” * ★ ★ And then he stomped off to his office and became a mean old hardhearted skinflint and everbody treated him with was expecting someone [more respect. Scrooge Arrived, Feast In Hand, At Cratchit's Modest 10-Room Pad burden. I’m not one to bother Scrooge cried out in his dream, land dialed Bob Cratchit’s num- You know it’s only half past 6 another man with my troubles.’’ “Or eke what?” her. him to sit down, handed him a cigar and lit it for him. “J u 81 now got back from! lunch,” Cratchit said. “I cut it a little short when I heard you wanted me. What’s on your mind?” * * ★ Do you have a family. Bob? A son, perhaps?” “You mean Tiny TItn” AN OLD PLOT? ..r. 4 i.-... o j 1 .r, 1 J J i “What is the idea waking CratchiL Scrooge said lean-; Or else it’ll do you no go^, Lp this hour on Christmas mg forward anxiously, I sup-.imagewise, Eb. baby, thel, pose you’re planning a real feast[ghgst said, and vanished, on Christmas day?” in the a.m.?” “But I’m full of the Christmas spirit, boy.” “I’ll just bet you are.” morning, Scrooge?” the clerk ^ demanded. “fii I OUT OF BED TV DINNERS / i Scrooge leaped out of bed! “Mercy Christmas,” Ebenezer » * * In my house? I guess it’ll trembling. He threw open the shouted, rolling the r’s.| “And I wanted you to know be TV dinners as usual. Well, I got to go, chief. I want to beat the rush nour traffic.” Scrooge watched him leave. He wished he had never heard of Dickens or Cratchit or the holiday season itself “Christmas,” he said. “Bah, humbug.” the feeling that he was coming trapped in the plot of an old Lionel Barrymore movie. “What’s the matter, chief” Cratchit asked. “You don’t look so good. You’re as pale as the ghost of Christmas past.” * ★ w “This son of yours — I don’t suppose Tim limps, does he?” OFFHAND REMARKS window, breathing deep of the i‘‘Mer-r-ry Christmas.” ji’m doubling your salary. And crisp December air. icHlRSTMAS SPIRIT j don’t you worry about Christ- Then he ran to the telephone i “You been drinking Scrooge? mas dinner or Tiny Tim’s leg. Push-Button Ease Fingered by Santa for Every Home That night he had no sooner; dropped off to sleep than he began to dream. A dim figure: came clanking its chains into his I room and claiming to be his “Push-button case” is not just New dishwashers do the dead partner. la phrase but a happy reality —dishes, automatically, and IT’S STRANGE ;iu the gifted array of modern,'cleanup chores practically van- T h i s was strange, Scrooge "'aj®'’ appliances. jsh, especially when an auto- thought. He’s inherited Ihei New ranges with automatic matic garbage disposer is addeij grommet business from his features can do almost every- * * ★ father and had never had a thing but follow a recipe. They New automatic washers and “Now how did vou knowl‘’“''‘"®'' cooking chores, and dryers are taking the word that’” r r a t c h i I ackwi siir' "Phiy Tim to J o b n s,leave the creative joys of cook- “washday” right out of the lan- ^ised. ^ ‘ I Hopkins,” the ghost advise ipg to Mom. ,guage. Even ’’ironing ” is be- “And sits in the chimney corner making little offhand remarks that tug at your heartstrings?” “Yes, the boy does bug me sometimes, chief. But he’s my Ebenezer Scrooge has seen the light.” . “Well, turn it off s to sleep,” Cratchit told him, and hung up. Scrooge hurried to the window again and threw a shilling to passing urchin, ordering him to run down to the corner and buy a Christmas goose, three puddings, plenty of sprouts and keep the change himself. The urchin dropped the hubcaps from Scrooge’s convertible and threw the shilling back. “None of that funny money, buddy. Throw me a double saw-buck pnd I’ll see what I can ido.” WHITE LAKE LEVEL CONTROL NOTICE OF LETTING OF LAKE LEVEL CONTROL CONTRACT AND REVIEW OF ASSESSMENTS hereby given tiut I, Daniel “ • ":ornmlssloner of * of Mlchl-Countv of I 2:00 W. Barry, County Drain Contm the County ot Oaklaiui, State acting as Agent for •' ind. will, on Thursda icember, 1007, at the office of Jounty Drain Commissioner, iSO I Teinraph Road, Pontiac, MIcN aaon, receive sealed bids until (Eastern Standard Time) at eld bids will be opened and luncad for the construction - ----- proiect known and desig- nated as the White Lake Level Control I be located and established In ttia Dwnship of White Lake In aakf County. The quantities Involved In said protect insist pricipally of ftie foUowIng; Greyer Wall Well, .pump and motor, electrical, work, piping and appurte-nanc^stte^wrk, (feeing, and reinforced of’^xlsting o1»ervat laid lob will be Ic ____________ I date of completion and terms of pay-int all in accordance with the plans Icatlons now on file wllh the raiico^Wc^rfrTl'n and at lhe"off lce of * ohn^ AnderMn! Inc., Consulting Engineers, 2300 Dixie ilchlgan, 480S5, to Subdivision, line. Parf of SE Intersection of N extension of N ' and N of S tine of Lot 13, : thence W'ly e 103.74 feet to Duck Lake Road, thence SEMy line said Road to intern t part of the water t of NW I beginning at et from 5 W|W,g thence S VW W 1C3.20 feet to ^het Mrt ot E W of SE W lying under -lefers of White Leke, TM following Is In^Secflon 13 of Hlgh-■nd Township end Section It ot Whilo .eka Township: Lots 1 thru 107 Inclusivo of "WhHe .ekt Highlands Subdivision." /5rhr»T',LJi"u,iSr'"’* ‘ ' -e^eMlWMsl'Sf'lfr,.’? The following ere In Section 7 of White -eke Township: . Inclusive and Lena gf received accordingly. Contracts will be made with the lowest responsible bidder giving adequate security for the performance of the work In Iho sum then and there to be fixed by me, reserving to myself Ihe right to re|ect any end ail bids and to adjourn such letting to time and place as t shall publicly nounce. Any person desiring to bid on --------------- ^ re<(uir«43’ E ............. ' Imorovement In eccordance with the 74*^.* plan, prolile and estimate, and Itet the 337.40 imi ,0 beginning, cost Ihereol shall be delrayed by spa-1 part of S '/> oI NE <1, be frontBQQ co^nsr thQrsof. thiincB S f4.w ttoi, m© ...............W 79.45 fett. thenct S 43®4I' M * ' ), thenci Plat No ....... . . ica N 30” 6 S34 laat to be- shall constitute ginning. e .... ................ _ strict to defrav ^ of NE 'u beginning •») ihlSfl'*uu ranch stay after a family-style thence 'nI{"[’ jj®"® corvp^to distance 99°29'3r - W 174 I mated cost of $21,420.00. plan, profile and astimafe of saM Im-provamenf Is on file for public Inspection. It is further-------------------------------- ‘ and parcels of, s 14 Inclusive of "Supervlt- 58 Inclusive, A & B of "Supervisor's Pla or's Plat No. 2.' Sarasota from 2," thence N 79O20’31K' family^Johnson is S6ttling line Railroad; major appliance. ‘he work routine of a e?,essmmrdwlict tTdiitre^ ::p?.rt:ot s "Plenwit Subdivision." l.J Incluilvo, Sandy ■each. Alleys of "Smlfh «nd Brmvn tub-on," ' fhru I Inclusiva and Welkp of ' *** Lots 1 thru 15 Inclusivo of "Supaiyle-or’s Plot oi Big J Peninsula." i3.St iJ. ’lV.“3f, WVL'Sd'r.’nli 0“*'^ A of "Supervisor's pTef Lot, 3; Part ot Lots 6 and 7 described inning on ?'ly_Mne pt Lot 7 diZ rung, lot 8; lot f , ______________________ Grove Subdivision." Par^"' “ Inclusivo of "White Lake That part of NW fractional W lying lll’.'Jf.'; ond W of "While Lake Grove Subdivision." n Ban-ln-xIofA miV nuHAr Woplr nhnnn />o11e f/x ' November 21; mix paper work, phone calls to Washington officials and recreation. ‘ up-to-date kitchens 61-ten do not have a dishwasher. With the Variety of new models to fit every kitchen, every need — and including versatile portables — a dish- officials-his renewed But what about the new no- drive for a 10 per cent income fashday wonders of matic washers and driers? In dead, the tax bill got a new many homes, Santa will find lease on life because of last that the automatic washer is .weekend’s devaluation of the but the dryer is still [British pound ORDINANCE NO. 81 inance to req opening of tidewal N'/4 corner, thence S 8j»M^" w 200 leal, thence N 0“JI’24" S 0"“y34 'T'375*A!fV®beo*nn ®?_NW 1/4, beginning at SE comer ’*i - ..,,...4, .4 .4 ,. ,4 -,-..80 It*-'* *•**’ w so feet to btgln- curtH teel, thence N 33'>14' E 17.80 (eet to be-, , .erlne olnninn ’ ®I NW 'A beg nn ng at W s4 feet end I Ip be art ot S Vj ot lion line diilai OLGA BAHKELEY. NE corner said S ‘ Y Clerk 543.18 leel, Iheno NOV. 34, 1M7 538 le»t to E S«cl . 88«43' E 745.16 foot, Thonco S along ordinance Ip 112S 'y. fining . . ^ beginning on E distance S 234,> feet from _____ - aid S 'a. thenca 5 74‘»53' W City Clerk 542.14 feet, thence S 55.08 feet, thence B V. 24, 1947 526 f^t to E Section line, thence N 178 11 -------- .feet to beginning. * * W the VILLAGE OF WOLVERINE LAKE '5*^4^,'™,'"jJjJJl ORDAINS: I Nw corner of SW of NE 'A. There was the possibility, too,: „dm?n«'Mu.M°e- me remove. fi*:e";,r................... that before returning to Wash- - ®P®n.n® v^'^Vr^oVTiJiiv^r^nl Xin’; ,, ... ington early next week Johnson Like. . p«n - I washer might well go at the might try to dramatize-per- n''’.»87 head of Santa’s list. haps with a ranch conference of ' **'''^cieVk ntonT'/J im^'i ★ * *. high officials-his renewed No«mbiV™ Sw; -----..4. NOTICE OF PRIVATE SALE ^nc^^N 0"3r ot SW '4 ol NE '4, Ihence s' ®' ; 810 left, thence S alono 'V line I. thence N 74»53' W i7» leel, ' po Rom t77 H W®14' E 150 fa*t to baglnnlno. I xnaik-a V ^8? ®«"HUMw*n7hlo":®''’'""‘ ” NOV. 34, 35. 27, iVer . , , , V 'A corner ol NE 'A, ®,®;',N .'4. corner, llwnct S 774.80 teal, thenca S “J "® 'f.®'’.,*'*!'®* » WfO' W taet, Ihence N 78<’43'i J!**:, 'iAISA.S* ^ 'TO foot, N 23»I4' E 80 leel to'«>•«• » t‘wli Serial Number 15*80 will be sold i>t a prlvaie sale (siqned) NATIONAl ROCHESTER FEDERAL CREDIT UNION corner Lot 34 "Ro . ;e N 0"38- W 100 feet, ' leel, Ihence S 0"38' E IM W 308 lent to beginning. Part ol E 'i ot NW iling Acros," lhaneo E 300 bMinnIng I349,)6''(*ei' from***N*' Ihenc* S 0*»38’38’ W 170 lacking. And some hoipes need both. SANTA AIMS HIGH Virtually every kitchen and every family, could “get by” its present range and refrigerator. Santa, however, has higher ideals of living comfort and convenience than merely “getting by.” The labor-saving lift of automatic gas or electric range ease of Administration officials will. present a revised tax plan to the I NOTICE OF HEARING ON NECESSITY and INTENTION TO CONSTRUCT House Ways and Means Com- columbYa^avenue"extension mlttee next Wednesday. !r,™iar mlai'’"*'^ ’*"* "* ' ------ ■——— ------- ‘City of Pont! NMC Expansion .r^ •ntor’i Plat No. 144 to Iho txltllng TRAVERSE CITY (AP) -1^" J®'®,%®&'; ‘ Northwestern Michigan Collegelond as'iimaia ot .aid imp 4 " 4 .. iflla lor public Inipoctlon. announced a spring construction it u tunhar Loll » thru 13 Inclusiva and Outlol Ai'**"®®, It "Villa Nova." Part ol W "J ot SE 'A ol Sactlon 13 and Start on a $500,000 physical education facility with comple-, tion scheduled by winter of ] r"ll’h.« Wsutt hs.« ijtrlxsi's'r}? plattod Into "VIHa Novo." The following oro In loctlon 13 of Highland Township: Lots 1 Ihru 8 Inclusive • at ”aalir-kaoiT’s Subdivision.’’ Lolt 1 thru 81 Inci "Kings Row Sub ‘ Ldfs 1 Ihru 28L ___________ and Walks of "LaSatio Cordons. Lots I thru 27 Inclusive, Oullols n ana B, and Park of "White Oak Beach Sub- d»' ol Iho lots and parcels ?f .S3 1969. The building is part of a Avenue extension (rom Assessor' of Columblei SW 0“31’24’’ W 718.52 leet to I ■ Pertrol E of NW 'A beginning SE corner lot 78 "Rolling Aerts No. 1 •’“WM" C 35J38 (oef, thenco S 0“3r24 - e 4*0.54 feet, thence N 5V>4f Ihence S 0»31’34" E 8*3.57 illtng Acres 35J3I To' 379.74 w 307 *3 {LrH,ss;Wji^'rj2s; E 81.51 fwl, 100 fMt. --------- 73^09 rtioncb N 47*SV 5^29' W 344.47 f bQglnnlng • •ch Submvli -. _ .. ............. . 'ii-in 243.80 fMt, thtnCQ N 17*44' E 183.50 fMte thtncQ S 89»5r E 1089.25 fMt* thOiKQ S 34*34 E 506 fMt, fMnct N 89*51' W to W Section lino, lh«nc« N'ly 8long W Soe-tlon line 407 feet to beginning. Pert of SW ‘ * beginning fence S 89*51' E 15T M fi ner "England Beacf......... S 57*00' E 195 30 fMt, Ihence E 108 51 feel, thence N 89®5V a modern refrigerator - freeaer Plel < Subdivision" under wetert of Wf $5 million college expansion S”„.J'',h7.i'’?onVi'ir i'S?'"s^'c.;r':S.r i H;.?htr*n'CvX"'’La%‘^!"'p".'r7o. la«advantage.that,probably,'program approved by Grand most Older home, need righl^Ttaverse County votqrs •l® lettW^'ly lo.N'^end f -A Hn,. _ . /. L.k:^, ol SW 'A hsolnnlng dls-l« (eet from SW *»r-*• Subdivision,’T thence thence S S7®0ir E NOTICE IS hereby GIVEN 'Change Your Image,' Ghost Advises A Fearful Scrooge . I * ti For newer homes, too, the| Twenty-six large 6iUes con-J-'X^ rapid developments of recent taking less than one-fifth ofi'w years in the range and refrig- the U.S. population account for pwiin Mernied. Dated erator-freezer fields tend to more than half of \ all major!”*'’ olga barkeley. make even relatively recentlcrimes. j nov."Im,Sn^ *He^h|, fat I All lends undsr Ihp D-6 THE PONTIAC PRESS. FlUDAy, NOVEMBER 24, 1007 w A N T FAST R E S U L T S USE PRESS W A N T A D S 3^2 8 1 8 1 Deoth Notiees ........ - : COATS SIrert; a«t Wj Iwtomd Wlh of C. -I... OOOHAKPT PUI Jofin Alsxandar; door mothor of _•£■•“ HartMr. Ph. Mrs. Dtloris Whitt. Mn. Gloria Rogart and LIIMa Johntoni daar;> •Istar of Vlrdla Gordon; also wr- ' vivtd by nina grandchlldran and four graal.grandchlldran. Tha Waka will ba at tha homa of r Rogars, a daughter, at Drive. Funeral tarvica w... ... ..... Tuaiday, Novamkar M at 1 p.m. at tha Macedonia Baptist Church,* with Rev. L.^ R. Miner, Pastor, officiating. Interment In Oak Hill' Cemetery. Mrs. Alexander will lie In state after 3 p.m. Sunday at tha _-_______________ Voorhees-Siple! 4 Hdp WBiitH Mwh Mir Waiit«4 NMt Serving Pontiac for SO vOars 7» Oakland Ava. _____FE ^Olll SPARKS-6RIFFIN GOOD PAY GOOD WORKING CONDITIONS AND A CHANCE P^R PER NS.NT.CAR|ER^,Ef^PUOjrM, Gratchan Crellay and Floyd Cral- ~ (Laure“'^( &aV S'aMjr’lJC: TAIUORYd W^OR-mCOME Till.in?a?:, £9i!.«El:0« FE KU54 j In’ Dr^en Center Ctmatary,' __________________ Ttoy D.m!) * ^ 3 to 5 2-5133 before 5 p.m. Confldantlal OONNEC~ANNA~M.i Mmnmiw 09. ®HTTr?J. "'•£ } NovBiTibjr 23 AiUr i»'i Ld. WhltaLnk. f.A-?"*.'?'.' lovely 4-350/. UNITED PARCEL SERVICE 6061 Cicotte Warren napr LIvarnols, Detroit -....34 from 10 . to 0 p.m. at: i UNITED PARCEL SERVICE | 30100 Ryen Rd. A. Donner, ' Lao F. r^,„ Schons; dear sister of'Mrs. David ■ .q. ..r\ lji c cadso (Loretta) Johnson, Leonard and UPLAND HILLS FARM Edward Barbarich) alto survived pian your fall t by 15 grandchildren and 23 great- ------------ grandchildren. Funeral service will It the Voorhees-SIple XI 23 great- jours for the w w»l Ing milking of e pet lamb, calves, DRIVERS It and diesel trucks, good wages d frlitge benefits, tfiady year wind wnployment. Call 33M300. pc. I.m», b.iv.a, pt«i. ^ ful horsedrawn hay i DESIGNERS & DETAILERS ' Ic ' ieetlon'^JSt,'?l™'^st?“^ At tsGSt 5'6" Six.r'^wW 6‘n^ran^^r. T^Mifyi fr"i>w"-"AuS,'rn‘Tsr « High'School Grodootos visits Sunday only u-o-til Michigan. 05^3a47. i • visiting NW. 1,. Take Waltw; E.. to -------piE pESiGNER Michigan Bell HAS IMMEDIATE OPENINGS FOR . stcx:kmen TELEPHONE INSTALLERS annaw/pwk Camaieiy! Mr. Ooolln will Ijo to slate at the funeral home. (Svgi^ad visiting I hours 3 to 5 and 7^f.)____ i,., HOGLl^D, MICHAEl SOT.; No-i A DEBT PROBkEMT we can help voulwith a plan you can attord. DEBT (SONSULTANTS OF PONTIAC, INC. •14 Pontiac State Bank Bldg. STATE LIcIn^BONDEd" Open Saturday M2 e.m. preferred paid apply NOW Between 8:30 ____ ._ .. ___a.m. and 5 p.m„ Monday ------, thru Friday at: ROOMA-172, I 1365 CASS. DETROIT PER i!^si»«,5rSi LAinr FOR REAL ESTATE^aikfcES-woman. Inouira Brawar Real Cn, fate. 734 rBst Bide. FE *dir - MAIDS Win i^ARS clerks, weekends, to retell bakery on Baldwin. Excallant wages. Ap- bn salary tor right man. Autobahn Motors Used Car Dapf. FE TV SERVICE ROAD MAR SECRETARY AWAY MANPOWEt^^°°*^ 332-MI4 „ 1 TO 50 •om» nlc^tie IfTKl rei ficatlont to Pontiac No. C4._________________ MOTEL CLERk ________rViHu'" SIDING OAKLAND UNIVERSITY NOW HAS S5S;"pSS!l2f ffil'HSh'W^00f‘NG HEATING & COOLING DO YOU HAVE KNOWLEDGE OF SPORTING GOODS, CAMERAS? ull time opening for mr- ■— OR Salary Commansurala with know- LeSt and Feiind 5 Ratiremant program, purchase --------- ---------------—- discount, paid vacations, Ufa In- FOUNO POODLE FRIDAY, COR- suranca, and many < --------------------‘ - '■= Iw^ic^wTS K^iimiltol 'Lo;ig"Laky il’ •?r .ef^-latoas LOST: NOVEMBER 12, FEMALEJ md and DallU MoalUMlIl Bs«.a.Lw UUlwasaea MsAStowdl DmIfsK' Cynthia, Alf and Qragory Hoglur-Funaral sarvka will bp held S< a}^&W5,."ba?.s’fu.£; Homa, Auburn Haights. Full M nary vaveside' sarvice will condu^ a* White Chanal N rnorlal Cemetery. Sgt. Hoglundw IRIsn SETTER, FEMALE,' -* — —-r, Mlddtolwlt,l ard. «^134.' 225 S. Troy, Royal Oak Michigan Bell r. Drayton Plalnse RO 3-2368. ^ Huidson's PONTIAC MALL A ESTIMATER, GREAT FUTURE tringeJenrtlh,^ ‘ M^ssTrS; ?a?i »'ci.?l!: I — — Mfujr"■“ ---- WANTED SALESMAN We ere tooking tar a salea who Intandt to make SI5,I» to Incraasa his earnings, can qubll-ty tor this position, soiling now gnd usod cars, to o inodam, pro-Sroaalva GM itoalorshliK M«nyf "fringe btoWtlto, Including, hospttaltl atlon, protn sharing plan, dtmo ond vactlon. Sao Mr. Joo Galor-dl or Mr. Tommy Thoiiwsan at Shelton Pontiac Bufek, US sTRocii-aster Rd., Rwhastar. _ WANTED 25 MEN SATURDAY, 6:30 A.M. SHARP Report to 125 N. Saginaw St. REAR ENTRANCE WE pay DAILY KELLY LABOR DIVISION Equal Opportunity Etnployor WOOD MODEL MAKER I Flastic plant raquiros wood motel pi* makor nr tooling dopaiimant. In- —^ toresting work Inclutea motels, EEatl plastic protofy^ and tooling olds.: Parmonont employinont to tha rapidly axpandin- ^ Call JO 5-2447. aril larvica Thomatd ‘ ‘ Holy Waimd fawala ____7 ^*"7“ Ltu?!L!' T my yna. B5IM37A KS'USh*? ...... skills are na—... ,, werWne.|^jindltltes^ u alf " l’i^*'i£^%agSiBATH MODERNIZATION MODERNIZATION fSTia? aia!“in?l3te WATER HEATERS WARREN STOUT, Realtor I45b N. opdytto Rd. FE S-1155 Urgifitly naad^tor^Immadlata Satol multIfle lIUtInJ service mini 1 quick call f*n result In an accurate appraisal and cash for your oquity. C^oH MCCULLOUGH REALTY 674-2356 An approlsar will bo right out to : housas sarvlco UlTANT ond many othor homo lmprovo-i_ . ^ to MO eik.,' monts. CMvonlont crodit torms; no For homos any Placo In Oi Vrs. collogo, chargt tor astbnatos. All work oc- County, monay In 34 houiit. TntERNaTio'nA^ tonNiin 3U or '343.' Hudson's PONTIAC MALL Crodt AdifiBars 16-A GASH 48 HOURS LAND CONTRACTS—HOMES WRIGHT 1MI41 RECEPTIONIST, SHARP OAL, k rhMiriui hollo Is tht koy to this call Kathy King, 334-; Adams, 334-3471. R.N. Supervisors and LPN HEAD NURSES GET OUT OF DEBT AVOID GARNISHMENTS, REPOSSESSIONS. BAD CREDIT. HA-: RASSMENT, BANKRUPTCY AND LOSS OF JOB. Wa havt helped, thpusante ol people with ciedHw prablams by piwMIng a Plannjjl manaotd, oroanM program. LET US CONSOLIDATE YCHJR DEBTSj WITH ONE LOW PAYMENT YOU CAN AFFORD. TIO Nmlt as to amount owod ond numbtr ot cradi-! ,..„.aNT RE-! CAN'T BORR&fTYoUlflm^ OUtI ,unn nailing A Snail- Hento^ggtenl|OI^ ' li! hSuRS to7 P,M..-:5AT. M p.m. gnston^ihMlIl'^ter.l!!,* MW cash. Call Mrs. Batts OR 4-M22 or OR 3-302i._____ LISTING^ NEEDED HAVE CASH BUYER FOR SMALL HOUSE lAVE A PUR...,,______ N CASH FOR A START- ..—- ... OAKUkr"' ..... A 01^1 YORK AT 574-15W S'lsw-.S'-, 23, 1M7; _____________ Orchard Lake; age II; beloved son of Mr. and Mrs. Prescott Jordan ^ hrethar ot Susan J., William P., John F. ond Robert $400-$600 FEE PAID MANAGEMENT TRAINEES In office, finance, retail, talas INTE^ATIGNA™ERS^NEL Pontiac. FE 54tU William R. Hamilton Co.. 130 El *1*fi!*' eirmlnohom. (Suggest visfilng hours 3 to 4 and Ho L.,, Tha tomKy auggeats memorial con- hat a llmllad trlbutloni may ba mate to Camp In Detroit an Oakland, ?30 East Drahnar, Oxtord. I qualHiad ala JUDO, MADELEINE 0.; Nevambar 23. 1W; 370 Townsend Siraaf, BIr- **/,?JJJ5*'** A.T.6cT number of openings', Sra™VVtc.™i d Kalamanw, lor jlmo oftor 5 a. Opdyka R tor Intarvll Factory Workers i|j|«)d IP cement potentials. Ci ir, 57>3l3rattar 7 p.m. . LNO UNIVERSITY IS NOW, Woodhull I .u,wrtlng appUcolWns for the tol- 57357M a... —_____________________________ Igwing openings: Ntahl totophona bar IMAID,'ALSO, WAITRESS.~AP- WAITRESS, EXPERIENCED, WITH I ^ratorjrequlres light clerical Au- BOOd retorancat, morning or aftor- dutias. Shipping and recaiving Clark { burn Rd nr Adams'Rd* i noon shllt. Park ton Rattaurant, _ ttesia* Kte 91 wp« teM ^rid n«vt a ----------< PAlflTlN0'^Nb' 'pA pr(« i’F THAN I Ygu-ra next, Orya. Otocumb. E 0 30 am*to*4 pm ®B^*‘**'*?f_______________ -N_fOR_.iL.TDj «Wt7e^^ furniture Mat, Avon Cantor Rauphoittortd, bettor than new at ______________half the price. Big tavingt -‘— sMOfeS. PART, on carpet and draparlas. (fall - • - I7IW tor FREE asilmala In SMALL FARM OR WOODS WITH pond, or small lako tor hunt club. Writo BILL JENNINOS, 37411 Grand RWar, Farmh flan er coll 475-5W0. mln^rn; ago n.. ______ ______ .. John S. Juddi alto turvivtd it . Ihroo grwidchlldr~> a.ritMi«. ^ B tha Rotary will I p. m. at_tha Be Wima. :J0 L.„. Ihurch. Ir Itola. Mr chaUang^Ing^ ai Employsrs Tamporory SarvicB 35117 ig record. Grounds k^ landscaping par- ___ ________I Unlvarslty olfart I Tina fringe benefits and o tacura „ future. Apply at the Partonnal ONIca, Oakland Unlvartity. Roch-I ester, Michigan. An Equal Op-j portunlty Emplp— OFFICE M A ?'appIv In pw^; WANTED bENTAL aSIsTANT - «"<>. r«Jurn at jlS P Wl“ll»b!lhn[5k;, Fytlac, apply Pontiac Prau Box! wete.^^ r^laa to I WANTED TO BUY HOUSE ON LAND controct, rapoirt OK, tSN deem or bw im*il tquify. Private party lARMAlb—FAMILY—BAR—lRf5.'W05L PRESSBR. PAST flM!| dltagad.’Exp. Staady-doyi. Altai 22r""*«i " ..—■_—------ .l!'H.mm«,‘=SS*'wElS tetord^'Nowam^M?*at P i Khool RaOtord but not GAS *' x;hanical tel_______ ------ il25-t175 weak. Tima OBk TRAINEE. ------ ------------ ----- loam, new alflca, — — 55 S Main 54C. co. banafits. 15.000, call Helen girl. B. emte Rl'ar Adams, 334-^, Snalllng B Snail- l-syoi. ^OPWIRTimitTPlUS II lie to tl CALL 393-5921 SIRIONAI.......... 5t Kamo Street; husband of Baalrh fathar of Mrs. I................... Johnston, Mrs. Atarvto (Virginia) McRtynoMs, Robert and Richard Surra; alto turvivad by )1 grand-chlldran and era graat-grandijilld. Funeral aarvica wni ba held Mon-Novambar 27, at 1:30 p.m. at —‘■ly of God Church. the FIret I. Donald fMaxI i par wk. Shall Service. I Lahaer, Birmingham. , OAS aTATION ATTENDANT, parlancad, mechanically Im local rtfarancat, full or part --It, Telegraph and Maple. 'tlill.wSS^'!^™" WANTED^ ^Tph’Xxl^uri “ *'•»" «Slli'V,^ii^to''9i.^^'''747 |Mi^^W1iMa4 M. W F. •'••M clJSvSr .*'“.llfiili'"toiJ2I."*&»to? noy. hF^Pj^galjn.3. CaTRuth,?::^^ A PART-TIME JOB $2WyNfgNTH I ACCOUNTANT FOR COST ANdI »-"<■ and I >.in. wxl 3 ganaral offlea tvork. InduafrlallGENBRAL SERVICE, Tl planl. Exc. opportunity. Sand rev pattangar tira. axjMrIi uma to Pontiac Proas Box C-33 tmploymanl banafits. Pontiac, Michigan. I Storat, 145 W. Huron. Group Itadir in the fabrico-•nd commitiion no expert^ n#c.| tion department. After- Murv. w tran. ^74-2273. . .V. .. . . PORTER To Buy, Rent, Sell or Trodi Ust Pontiac Preu WANT ADS ^ Office Hoursi 8 am. to 5 p.m. CancBlIation Deodlina 9 am. Day Followinq Flnt Insortion AUTO DEALER SHELTON PONTIAC, US 5. R ,atlar Rd.__________________ ^ Auto Body Shop Manager CM Oaaltr. Busy shop, good pay. and many fringe banetlTs. Apply In parson, tea Dal Wanktl to par ■on. No phono calls plaata. Shelton Pontiac Buick 155 5. Rochattar Rd. i noon shift. Must have hod U E. Prinetton. FE 5GI34 or C 3-75U._________________________ E E R PROCESSED, SKINNED, CASHIER - “ KS.A CHAMPS Nt Bl '• tor uihort, coth..._ -------, I a;:''ii«^^.nyrT:iao*?a. d-e^f-idc^v BLOOD DONORS | cuSS. Froinor w URGENTLY NEEDED .o^S^r » •mWet : id. 407 ~ Winkelman's experience on presses and tel-huron ihofpino center die set up also obility to teiviJV*ucante"«i®i no: lead employes in the fobri-l «• •v>. fb basti. osk 543-7500. cation deportment. Applyip,ojuj^j„„ j,,|p"Apply-’i„ SJJkwfc in person, 7 a.m. to 3:30 narenn 7 nm tn 1.10 WAITRESSES p.m. Monday through Fri-, pTSondoy Through FH- ^ELE-TRAY OPERATORS day. BOrry boors. Division J„y a,„y of the Stanley Works. 2400 E. Lincoln, Birmingham. NESTOR'S 5445 Ce-*— •- ............ 02.50 HAV SeH-Serviee Drive-tn jAixr*®u-ul o^TFE^sSIff OB w. htopio. T,^-----«M«J, W, e-nte- amwo- *]fSKitl4lb, cUf-'iMb #kil2#R CASHIER r’^’MicHioAN community I ’ ' ’ "■..... 5 nights o Wfik. Moturo womon' BLOOD CENTEX__ proforrad. Raataurant < or will Iroki. Big Boy R Totogroph B Huron. CHRISTIAN WOMAN. FOR .SALES ______, g ^ ICAjfl FOR FURNITURE AND AP- feVa^Tiffi***------------- y Rostiurint. BLOOD CENTEX. uuC t— —™ 1353 WMo Trock Dr. W. rnTtlirv FrI., f •.m.A p.m. ________Wod. 1 p.m.-7 p.m.______ 05MI3L CARETAKER COUPLE, SOBER. ------ rtspontiblo, married couple for malntenanca. no cMItean or poto. SPOT CASH FOR YOUR EQUITY, VA, FHA. OR OTHER. FOR QuIcK ACTION CALL NOW. HAOSTRQM REALTOR. OR 50350 OR BVENINOO FE A7M». VON REALTY 1 CLEAN WARM ROOM. WhlS _______________ ______70 Otek. 3' R()^t. OU WElK. ItMUlXB 3M F Johnaon. 1 koonAi Lower: ’OATH, SAHAI, — pr'alarrad. 53 ClarfcSt.’” of the Stanley Works, 2400 E. Lincoln, Birming- BIG BfiS'^RE^TAOPANT 20 S. Talagraph -Huron tho^ng Ca rcitete..--------m -----,------------------- j ROOMS aniTTath. iiM a CASH FOR GOOD USED HOUSE- nxmth. Utllltlas extra. Call 5»a ____ _________________ I hold goote- Hell's Auction Sales. 7552. - roUPLE WANTED FOR MoTELI **^J»-lt7l---^----------^ 3 ROOMS, WEST SIDE. S30 PLUS msnagemant, rsl.. apartmanl plus HIGHEST PRICES PAID P OTI deposit, boby wotoomo. FE 1-0553. wogts. Sovoy Motol, FE 50334, ^ tornBum ond tppllincos. Or 3-ROOMS "AND BATHTADULtS. --------------- w--Yr AUCTION 'i^^^rTH-UTiUtlE. f DIxlo Hwy. OR 332)7: turnisbod. 520 wtskly. 42 Augusta WE BUY ANYTHING ' Auto Body Shop Manoger CM Dealer. Busy shop, good poir, •nd mtny trlngo bonoflfs. Apply to porson, soo Dol WanksI Iq psr-son. No phono colls ptooso. Shelton Pontiac Buick ^!L l^hoslte Rd. AUTOMOBILE MECHANICS AND GUARD For Utka, Mt. Clemons and Detroit irto. Top Union scolo Fold Blue Cross. Vacation and holiday btnaflts. Call us colloct. Boixlsd Ouord Mrvlcos - 441 i. Grind BM. DETROIT LO B4IS0. -------jA~Nlf6R’SERVl6fe------- PORTER STEADY YEAR ROUND EM- i PLOYMENT. Soo Mr. EmsI. WII- * ■ ion Cadlll: ...... BIrmInghi PORTER Day shift. Apply to psrson. Big By Drivo In. 2470 Dixie Hwy. ’C," 'hMitoi bUSlMSS mliqp^m portoMo -wRh-' patM otatomont S’! BRANCHEAU JR. IN LOVING 'liyw'orao, Bl-l_ ! Brt^ioou**Jr.”who*w'iM kmodlfto BA-TENDER' P vembte 04. I»53. port timt, ox- Wo do not notd a sptclal day ntcossa To brino you to our mln^ 5hWl- Apply to 1 For Itio day wo do not think of you Airway Linos, iJ ,7.7h.?2Jx*rdrm to,rs « * To give, wo'd give It, Yos, ond moro, to soo The loco ot our tear son, "— -nlling Itirough to "•efc'ir-" -***'• *'"' this yoor. Wo naod txporloocod solw porsonnol. ExeMtonl mlsalon rotas paid ond banuo DORRIS B SOtLREALTORS I^RN ttCTilA* (MOnJv, HOUSE-wlvfs. sludsnts. churchss, ch^, bOollIng Bosllint Products. 5» ROOM APARTMENT P U-R N pnSirS!’“.sic**»!:’«3-R^j^ Sosolo Shots, 3354232 Of 135-2042. ?_ fTlf-*?: iWwcaltaaaaai 30^ IIDDLEAOED .COUPLE TO Mj^ X. iffVSmr t BARBBli. J(3URNEYMAN FOR year oitibllsht ‘ - “ — Whn. “ — MONEY I r'„PL*?a,*'iJtr3s, LABORERS WANTED - UNION ROOFERS.’' BXPRRIBNCED. TOP OFFICE, TyF*, I BAV,',^ ^ rABCtO lU DCAI KTATE SMTdi. I rs^ggiiiifek^fEbrapply at salary plus teht^O: totorsitoa. 7001 Pow.ll Rd.. R» COMMISSION l®^r^°wimM':Il®di!tel. S. '!Sll '.to**yo2'^te ----------- COMMISSION Full frln0t btnuflte. C«rt«r op-' I portunlty In Mitt fteW. Soiling . bockground proforroda but not noc* —iry. Coll W. C. Buckinohmi Solurdoy. An Eqvol Oppor- SSinJ:* siteHste^boSS’ piS vyY voywg moiwy. Coll J5ck Rotoh - PE jHbgrt IM— flEmllll M The sorrow, that Is. Ir ladly misste by Mem ond Pod, cAfPy I Town Colllslan. 5SS S. a s. saeiiu 15 TO» TiWlks I UM of cor. Coll 3 r pfSLs.iSi®ailr®i ' CARPENTER---------------------- Fret trodiufS. 330-2072, inytlms. undir 35, tor Sdiwral contractor. ACID INDIOESTION? PAINFUL Form Wk bloekino. Hm dotes. I t«T Oil now PH5 tobWs. Fast Is liquids. Only M cants. SImm's «*»»I4I- -------- ' iroft. ---- oggroftivo soloo onqinoor. « ostobliihod terriotry With Ml cl... ^ MAis NEE^Bb FOR Electrical dtportmont, exp. holpl--' ■- — cltliw tool wiring, 02,1M Clark, 3M-3471,Tnollino IWAN To WORK l¥“Atf tor Elk^odgs. 5W>’unlt^MlIV Corpontry Inc.___ iTbR NfeEbiiT’’ DEBT AID, IML.. 711 RIKE-R BlDO ' r:Lrs''’l4!A "***' ** CHURCH JANITl.„ --------------- . - ---------------:—__ molnlain building and grounds. GUINN'S BANQUET HALL - BUti- Long Lokt ond Adorns Rd. orao. non motllng. parties and raw inlarvlawlno W'"* — * *- llan tacllllln. Accommodating 22J. noon. Ml ^1. ' ^ill 334-7471 or 321-3571. ......... CARPENTERS . . ____ .sugtwrs, work on Crosctnl MAN WHb-w5uLb~il~INTei(roY-' . _ 22«ntgL „— Lake__Rd. .n^h pi M-S2. Call ad_ In .Narntog lurnitura .repair Prater yparjwwa to "P| tT6 U < E X t.j P t R, . Spot Welders Prater : Day anc bet. 5 a. 'and ,5 aciwol ago d , privan roonv i SnTSJ-J! » WAHtlUdt-LiAhN leal Eatola now. For Information ' 70 MVE IN sasH* OTM AilAflfapiillBi. I66Mi tbMPLfetlllV 'AtiCibb-atad. New luapandad calltog, flooring, blr^ gmalbig, formica cob-toSii, MtelHo both, IM dip. 034.50 wk. Mature porsOn or coupli. Rat. 574-IMI. 3’i'66Mi aWB kATHr’(:H([B-WK-cemt - IM. par weak, 075 tea. Inylro at 273 Btldwjn. Call 325- rAN^’bSia 'taler AMCTbLl’AN, woIMm dlotanco ol FINwr Body and Anitoc Motors, W Mock to I Wads ond PrI. 2 to MAN TO DELIVER A . dCfRKTP"AifT YiMf,’’i9l«V-bTH-I. tr night, 5 p.m. to 10 p,m. Evtry Snowmobilers r&!!t •.5"-b.SS.’wW WITH MANY STEEP SLOPiP I - Rnc# on our tmooMi roll-tog Mlrwoyo — W mito oIroIgM awaVt or oval track. On yogr onowmobllo or rant ont ol aura. u-Jtssr 1 — Club Houn Opin. BRAMBL^OO COUNTRY CLUBS WINTER IPORTI DIR: FROM HbLLY 1 Mill's — 4-5BS CHIEF AUDITOR-CPA WITH M YRS. EXPERIENCE TO ' HEAD AUDIT DEPT. AND SYSTEMS RESPONSIBILITIES. IN-TBBiSTINO AND CHALLBNO-INO POSITION IN A OROWINO' UNIVERSITY. M^rlcal oppllsncss snd wo lor. sefisnors. Musi bs mschonically to-* cllnod and have own hand looto. Jab Includes rapairing soma tmoll (I ■ppllartcas. Muat be abla to li -nlsh ralarancaa. For Intorvlaw, i jjy a^^Cryn^ Eltelric, * Employers Temporary Service 3IS4 MINER. RD. ^ BOX REPLIES \ A( le a.m. today there ; v» p replies it The Preep (Office ia the fol|ewia| Maintenance I Mechanic - CONTRAa ' ^ADMINISTRATOR Requires City of Detroit and A°c'*c« «- SIA^CH ORAMf’AotesTSt tiDN. lib^ral^rInm if^NB- time beyond 40 hours. Enjoy 5l.\^?e9irFE‘R|gg/oV“*“ benefits such os purchM TNtSgSliSY.^'R^EHiYT^IHdiicounts, life Insuronce, «y*SSpC8y5«®*'- hospItalaoHon retirement vocotion plon. las prtsanlly subsWIarlss cf a growing NYSE llttod paranl. Musi --------.. .^gfnnnamt prap- ward. ■ STOCK MAN ^ULL fiMR, RETAIL Sll3i Company, ilaemflald Plan. Tala-graph and Atepto Rd. 53M010. TOOL & DIE MAKER For monuficturlM giant, to El: TOOLRbOM 4 iLANT Maintenance Supervisor Jaurnoymoiy toolmakir or dit Own quartor 51 A44jt. dlHjvar*'yiHto^^{rgati'^tel dart ntte hema. Earn S15S up hourhf. ^ N. ot MS2 jMna Mr, Kratl 1155501 1. at 5550 pfint Mr. dsraii, 5MT55123 In-Service Instructor srsn.sra'Xr’Ta.stt^ SS&tol1Sri?Sa'?5to.*'5^ SratoMg pragrama tor nynta da-parlmant partonnal. SVFirvlaofy ss.iss^iis^'iisSditei: CAN YOU SELL? It to, wt hava an opanin JyWK;nilrSl£l"f KHES lilvlr!"'SH*'^ MrrYaylor, OR 5005, Evaa. BM F7S45, CARETAKth -CbuKt ’.TB-SOa- PUiriCg. TSg srSisSi'- - Help Wanted M. er F. I Help WaateB M. er 7. • a good I otiroc- TRAINEE MAINTENANCE MAN 11, 24, 17. ton, tovontory c^ral. I and admtolnramn. Si __ mMsuroti with txparianca. Accounting dograo prafatroblo but ' Ptonty at ayanima, axtellan EMPlWeNt'oFFICE i K2--RaSi,Mtoh. " INIBRVIKWB MU te Htftt t7l MrmMfit, tell iSS!S3*^ IMTft CLIANI I dr«£nr Achltvg It I teny doctor tS2S co toolilf^ li t Hudson's PONTIAC MALL TRAINEE Machine Operator 1, Snalllng a Snalllne. KELLY'SERVICES IKONINM I teiiM. B» DO YOU HAVE A NEED FOR EXTRA MONEY NOW THAT CHRISTMAS TIME IS NEAR? WHY NOT WORK PART-TIME FOR US AS A SALESPERSON, CATALOG CLERK, OR IN ONE OF OUR MANY SERVICE DEPARTMENTS. WE HAVE SCHEDULES FOR DAY, EVENING, OR WEEKEND HOURS OF EMPLOYMENT. IMMEDIATE EMPLOYEE DISCOUNT. APPLY NOW PERSONNEL DEPT. MONTGOMERY WARD THE P0N|IAC MALL THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 2«, 1»67 farnMied 37|ApErlEMEii, UnfnniisliMl 31 ApniliiBEli, UEfErEiitEd |S "t^TLY FURNISHED' 3 ROOMS and bathf clean raaMnaibtt aduH couple, ret, dep. 33835/ 1 BEDROOM WITH CARPETING, drepte, kRcben epgltaneea end swimming Ml, cer. 14 Mile-Crooks Rd. Cell 54M336. NEW UPPER DUPLEX, 3 BED-roema, 2 bottit, largt living mom, dining oil, klfchon with oatbig PARTLY FURNISHED 3 ROCMMS ?i3ited‘r'i;;.rr.!!g„iS!i"%S * ROOAK AND bathe hnhv EMlrMna. CM uab <«4M> •roa, refrlgarator, olactric tiovt, dMiwathor arid dlsgosal, cariieted throughout, altachad garogo, gaa hoot, cantml air cantjnkxiliw Std ioparate roc room In bnsment. CloM to Shrine Parish and all adwols. Dhone owner, 332-3413. 1-BEDROOM ON LAKE, NO CHIU r ^--swi’".7rirsr^sj driniceri. 7 Alllion. 2 BEDROOM UPPER, m. UTILI-tlM fMrnbhwl FE 1-2703. 2 BEoit^a Ui^PEtt, "oiT 7H Poftlind. Pontlie. A|NwtMMrtt» Farniihtd 37 4 ROOW^yULTI ONLY. OA t-2013 PARLIWO COUrV apartments. :ra.frte'TSr;'Sni7h.§'« *«»«>« OERLY OR'WARM UPPER* 4 REnonnu ________________ BEDROBMj^gro^. Ap«rtiiwirtt,Uirfprnt«h»d 38 Aportminti. UnfarnUKtd atl- AduiS i» ****'”' ■------------------- - BEDROOM, - ----------------------------------- chlMran or i * p.m. QUICK OCCUPANCY YOll'LL ENJOY life MORE IN A BEAUTIFUL NEW APARTMENT BETWEEN 2 LOVELY LAKES. COME OUT TODAY. • • ’’’’'VATE balcony or PATIO • appliances included • EXTRA STORAGE SPACE • PRIVATE PARKING • PRIVATE BEACH AND BOATING FACILITIES • 7 MINUTES TO PONTIAC, 35 MINUTES TO DETROIT • RENTALS FROM 1152 TO SI77 MONTHLY • OPEN FOR INSPECTION: SAT. and SUN., NOON-4 P.M. MON.-FRI.V 4-7 P.M. PHONE M2-44S0 or 357-4300 ' right on Ctu Ltko Rd. SYLVAN ON THE LAKES on Cass Lokt Rd.. between Cass and Sylvan Lakes DIRECTIONS; P™" Po"*'dc,, tjko Elliabolh Lako Rd. to Cait Laka Orchard Lako Rd. to Cau Pfo™ Dotrolt, taka MIddIo Balt to Orchard Laka Rd., and turn left. D—7 Grand Prix Apartments 1-2 Bedroom Apts, from $125 Per Month Inc. Gas Heat, Water, and Carpeting • Private Pool and Recreation Areo • Huge Walk-in and Wardrobe Closets • Insulated, Sound-Proof Walls • Electric Kitchens • Ceramic Tile Baths • Private Parking • RCA Master Antenna • Air Conditioning • Aluminum Sliding Windows 315 S. Telegraph Rd.-Pontiac See Manager Apt. No. 1 Phone 334-7171 Rating, firoplaco, diireonSMttmlng. Patio and balconv. S175.M and up. EM 3-2SIS Apt. 144 SUnIt Vtaw Court. Rochester Ludlow Apartments S37 LUDLOW, ROCHESTER 3 BEDROOM APARTMENT, 4SS44»3 Country llvli after 4:30.__________' ; and streani expreeaway, lent shoppifi carpeted, pi IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY Resident Manag*'' 451-7270 or (Det.l sS-l AMERICAN HERITAGE APARTMENTS ovtrloolUng woods ninutes away from a|w hotpitale txcal-Air condltlonadd full t carports i rant. No chlldran or jylvAN ON THE LAKES 1 AND 2 bedraoma Irani 2152 4S2-44SE OR 457-4300, BLOOMFIELD ORCHARDS APARTMENTS Ideally situated In I Orion. 547-7W5. 1 BEDROOM HOUSE Heights near schools 451-Mia cupancy 403-1010. per moi Hotpoint, . ”*'SlS*Upt -eiectnc. N, detail of luxury has been over looked In Bloomfield Orchard Apt) located on South Blvd. (20 MIk Rd.l, between Opdyke and 1-75 ex pressway. Open dally. » to 0 p.m Sunday, 12 to 0 p.m. For Informa tion: UN 441303. Mgr. 335-5470 FE 0-0770.___________________________ CLARKSTON 3 ROOMS. STOVE refrigerator, adults, evenings. 425 1045._________________________________ DARLING COURT APARTMENTS. New, modern, luxury aurtments. 1 and 2 bodrooms. Each unit Includes: central alr-condltlonlij — 4 ROOM, 1 BEDROOM HOUSE ^thrj^rnlshed. 127 W. Rutgers, ELIZABETH LAKE aAEA, COZY for 2 children, avail, throughout the year, 0130 monthly. 353-9315 or 353-33W. HOUSE FOR RENT. 3 BEDROOMS on acreage. Priv. lake. Near si area. Mt. Hollyy 634^11. 3 MODELS OPEN DAILY AND SUNDAY Drive out MSe lust west of Cass Lake Rd. to CandeMIck. Directly 3 Bedrooms LOW DOWN PAYMENT NO MORTGAGE COSTS MODEL OPEN 2S5 Fisher :30 to S p.m. — May week WESTOWN REALTY FE S-2743 days After 7.-30 P.m. - LI S4477 3 BEDROOM BRICK IN WASHING- qulck safe. FE 5-2204. 3-BEDROOM-$395 DOWN room, 3 bedrooms, dining area, kitchen with bullt-lns and formica cupboards, family room with fire-mace. 2W-car garage, and many fine extras suoi as an Intercom system, carpeting aod drapes. 474- S^lt Nwsm HIGHUND AREA edroom ranch wl Ing, attochad gari acre. Will VA Town & Country, Inc. Highland Branch Office PHONE; 313-6B5-1585 CLARKSTON AREA HIITER Sob Heesm 49 Srie Heems 49 MIDDLE STRAITS LAKE FRONT befhs.'^ml^? ear MMdwd m '^'SSSS!^ « fa horn. TAKE OVER LAND CONTRACT Neff Mbestoi tfatlor homo with 2 IvniLER AARON BAUGHEY REALTOR bedmoma, garage on larBO lei. Call YORK 1 $1,000 I^N NORTH SIDE Doll house. Ideal for couple boglnnlng or iM'ring 4 roomt, full bSml., auto LSliL.'^L.NIo, 4713 Dixie Hwy. Drnyto^^MirS TUCKER REALTY CO. skm. 00,500, land r*wn'o? WEST SIDE - CROSS REALTY AND INVESTMENT CO. SI2.200 WE BUILD 3407 Sashabaw Rd. OR 44101 We pay cash tor used homes INVESTORS LOOKI Perfect lor lEST SIDE - large 2 family In-««>• »!• ♦ roOT home, In Not coma. 2 baths, fulTbassment, gas'}'*^®* city. Nice condition w heat, cloae In. 014,900, land ^ .1*^' ."•* Incomes, g tract terms. I full basmt. phis lots more. B. C. HIITER, REALTOR. CLARKSTON AREA Hath, fresh- HOL^. BY OWNER. 4-BEDROOM KIAN D23-U/U21 5904 Dixie Hwy-. Waterford I BEDROOMS, 1W BATHS, 22x22) Large comer -I ooms. i-ivlnp room 14' x a firoplaco. ^mlly room si mud room. Close to schools. I M«- 702 Cogshall, 434-9023 NORTHERN HI AREA Tri-Level like ,-------------------- xn, UVkxlO »tS17,500. FE 2-0262 470 W. HURON OPEN 9 TO 9 0 MWN PaYmInT. 09,950 COA4-ggj, 55, 7®Vf-l»>*^ ART DANIELS full basement. House 2 yrs. old. I Paved drive plus many other ex-1 tras. In Pontiac Township. S20,900.i 4-H REAL ESTATE NEAR WATERFORD HIGH I or 3 bedroom ranch, carpeting, enclosed car- — 2 . .. . iclosed car- port, blacktop street, excellent area, close to schools. Can be bought furnished — Price $12,000 — $1000 down. Can be arranged on down ^yment. Monthly payments DIXIE HWY. AFTER 5 P.N OR 34N55 EM 30I4S 4231400 OR 32391 LAKE FRONT 2 FAMILY, UPPER and loxver, partially furnished. Im----------- Call J. A. Tay 4 BEDROOM QUAD-LEVEL HOME 'sill Near M-24 near Oxford, large family room with fireplace, ivy baths, modern kitchen with modern cupboards, aluminum sMIng, fireplaces, large living room, bi In range and oven, full basenm On large lot. The Rolfe H. Smith Co. SHELDON B. SMITH. Realtor 244 S. Telegraph 333-7040 ________Office open COLONIAL 9 ROOM BRICK AND Lakes. Fully carpeted, •rapes. Hot water heat, .arge attached garage, d. TO montion only a IDEAL FOR TRICYCLE SET ! It's tucked away from busy traf-, fic. 2, could be 3 bedrooms, base-mentless ranch, no stops to climb. I ilTund^y-l KB ■ f-TSoS lit. %}fy _K_B 7»y»6. NOWA?f?N07 r/i baths. Fireplace. Fenced yar few of the S12r900 - NO DOWN Gl. | HAGSTROM REALTOR 4900 W. HURON MLS OR 4-0350_______EVES. FE 4-7005 I, 02700 iSwfl iR. ___ ciMing costs. New 3 basest, OTton area, lloUffi'. Ne|! son Bldg. Ca, OR 30191. NOT ONE PENNY DOWN AND FREE CLOSING COSTS IN THE CITY Drive by this older three bad- IN GULF MANOR $UB. OPEN 2-5 8692 WARBONNET N. of Commaree Rd. W. of Union Lk. Rd. Brick 3 bodrooms, with ivy.belhs. corpotlng, draptrlos, o roally vsry oxgutoRe thorougl ka“pius”'f„«j. ■! "Jir'in C. Schuett that Is fully and landscaped. By _ only through the ^ 1<4 on Sun. Call 623-0973 after: COUNTRY LIVINGf NO DOWN payment, no age limit, no credit M*oblem. ART DANIELS REALTY, 31000 Ford. KE 7-7500, KE LARGE HOME vonla. 425-4693. MOBILE HOME, ADULTS ONLY house is 1-year-oid. $28,500. C. A. WEBSTER, Realtor garbage dis ifrigorator — boat. Furnlahi I A.M. end 4 PAS.. 474-3134.___________ ELIZABETH LAKE SHORE APART- furn. $145 m no pels. Bo 5375 Cooley I NOW TAKING APPLICATIONS, 2 bedroom homo. Includes geragt, $120 per month. Ask for Mary "-'1. A. J. RHODES, REALTOR. 10% DOWN NEW HOMES COUNTRY ESTATE OPEN SUNDAY 2 TD 5 8661 HIGHLAND RD. M-59 »ath takingly beautiful 4-bad- IRWIN NORTH END 3bedrcx>m bungalow with living room end kitchen. Auto heat, hot water, carport, other extros. Located easy Ing distance to stores and Monthly poyi OWNER. WOLVERINE LAKE prlvlltgos. 3 bedroom ranch, ge-roga. bastmant. firaplact. 424.3091. OWNER TRANSFERRED ffl.f'sinCitss: 3531 Percy ■ call 4744)112. UNION LAKE FRONT 3 tMdroomt — fuH baaemont — 2 car garage — lam glaas-anclosad porch — a fma poach - $22500. Torma. 2 BEDROOM RANCH Poasibla 3, flropiaca, ga$ ihaat, large lot on canal. Blacktop atroot, llvina room 14'x2r. tKr 000, torma. FLATTLEY REALTY can ba aeon 3531 Percy King, I all 4744)112. ;ford township country! I zv. I aiid lake, many axtraa. acres. 2 fliepla out basamont, 2 FF a-UM |3BEDR00M TRILEVEL, finished —m75—family room, IWcar garage. 113,-OXBOW LAKE. 9472 ELIZA- am dIui lot 1 Lako Rd., got heat, 0125 plua uHlItloa, in June 1. Amll- 3BEDR00M RANCH i ) later at Summer rates. Can mant. 3-car oarana. . seen Sunday. Call PI 1-2940. , | SS, Sll:^ ptis ioL 3BED-I. EMBASSY EAST APARTMENTS Crestbrook MODEL OPEN DAILY 12-8 illy room end 2-car at only 114,400 plua peted living rooi kitchen and i sirabla features. Located on Williams Lk. Will taka trade. LAKE FRONT 3bedroom brick ranch type bungalow with largo carpelod living room, fireplace with bar-b-quo grllt, covortd patio, overlooking Ook-land Lk. Priced at 223,950. GEORGE IRWItI, REALTOR MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE 290 W. Walton__________PE 37003 $20,400. 420-1574. gorago. large ftrmt, $2000 down. GREEN ACRES 1449 5. Lapeer Rd. La ___________MY 34342 OXFORD ARltA. COZV^ possaulon. 4 BAd- nmMtoie Nix, RMltor; 451-eaL Apartments, 5347 Highland Riiit Noam, Unfurnishtd 401 i®f- 4-BEDROOM colonial,^, *rt*himily ' $130. ,!* |,5’5f“'ii>-BEOROOM. UTILITIES FURN ■’ --- weak, $90 dapotit. 4033477 area. $10,500, plus' strsets, curb, guitar, sWawalks and A ^ A city water. Drive out M59 to Cros- r 11 f~\ IVl ' cont Lake Road, turn right to -LX LX^IVX "PARTRIDGE IS THE BIRD TO SEE" ASK FOR NEW CATALOG PARTRIDGE REALTORS 1010 W. Huron St., FE 4-3501 OPEN WEEK NITE8 TIl”m LAKE VISTA APAAtMENTS 3 rooms and bath, carpoted. Sto' refrlgarator, uttlltlaa. Adults on 5344 Cooley Lake Rd. 2 BEDROOM HOUSES AS LOW Asj S90 • month, now 3 bodroom homes with gas hoot In Pontiac and Orton-villo araa. Call 687-2825. Evo. calls 585-2018. 3 BEDROOMS, 2*/^-CAR ATTACHED garage, walk-out basement, ref. per mo. 625-2128. ON couple. C. HAYDEN, Realtor I mile west of Oxbow Lake 10735 Highland Rd. (M59i ,j.age.. $11,590 BRAND NEW. 3-badrm. ranch, on; your lot, full basement fully IN-SUL..........................' "S!»o GIROUX REAL ESTATE 1 Highland Road (M59) 673-71 DAILY A PLUS D'LUX ALL TRIM JOB IW I R i h for you brick homo ownort who etc. Ni ore tired of peintbig your trim) 44)273. and sMuld like to hove It cov-1 orod with booullful whilo tkim- Inum. Cell Johnny On The Spot, - ........... DIvlaIgn ot the John S. Voorhooa.|, Coll TwIwnP **«™'®V lor sorvicaa. Condra. FE 30443. through Frl^y, A4A BACKHOE, LOADER WOAK, DRY- ALUMINUM SIDINO, ROOFING IN I „p,|e {leMt. lootings. COZY 2 BEDROOM, WHITE LAKE privlirges, proltr couple, but will lake 1 child only. Holly. 434-4475 ' aitor 7 p.m.________________________| HOUSE foA rent near PON-tlac Motors. $135 mo. Dop. ro- I quirod. 3434722._____________________ ! HOUSE WITH 3 BEDROOMS - 1 acre lot, modm, oil hoot. 351 N. Squirrel Rd., Auburn Heights. S175 per me. Apply Nov. 25. 35 p.m. NEWLY bECORATED INSIDE AND out, 1 bedroom home, stove end relrigeratar, lerge fenced yard, lake privllegn, 1 child prefer, 2 ok 495 0 ntKmth, $95 S4C. dop. 424-4350. RANCH HOME ON LAKE ORION =.isr."'*iyr '®^« 12' living room it porch — part allent lake prtvi- ALL BRICK I 3-bedroom ranch with 12 x living end dining tree, I I kitchen, full basement with heat, close to Northern H 11 $1200 will move you In. HANDYMAN'S SPECIAL I 2 bedrooms, 10x12 each, llv and dining area. 17x19, on ( nor lot »xl40. In need of I pair. Bast oflar takas. I OPEN EVES. AND SUNDAY List With SCHRAM I And Call tht Van OSL REALTOR , PONTIAC-VACANT 3badroom Cape Cod, full mont, gos hoot, full dining drive In garogo 10 down. room. about PONTIAC AREA mW on this 3 bedroom aaboaloi bun-Bo.low. Full baaamont—2 car garac sailing lor only $7,900. Call ; YORK 4713 Dixie Hxyy. Draytoh Plains ''Ambling ranch Mil '"•''’•®l®«® possession on this_ ---Mk» r^, ranch with Mocoday Lake IRWIN - »P®rts on Hi Asking $11,900 with farms 1111 JOSLYN AVE. lots and lots of cupboards and tyn goo nalare bolll-ins, double vanity In tile bath,: i'eryTu -gas hast, city water, easy to convert Ini rumpus room, 75x165' CAST IRON SEWERS, WA- WALLPAPER STEAMERS ISTRE SHA SI A DAY BLUE LUSTRE SHAMPOOERS SMITH CO. 333-7S48. r_.x®«r dTtchaHITull'5s!-' “''uSrcTbnM DtAITflD I garage. References HAGSTROM REALTOR ments is too i ulr^ THE ROLFE 4900 W. HURON iR'nATA"Dr$'rfi!r'g?%|WALKING DISTANCE TO ---- , --- ‘ ^ ‘ on t 5 rooms and bath, full I OR FE 4-7005, RED BRICK, CONVENIENTLY ROCHESTER tenants prstarrad. 2 chll- 3BEDROOM BRICK RANCH PAYMENT I turn. Porch bath, kitchen living, baths, _____________________ rent plus sacurlly. UL 33444. ; ROCHESTER, ROMEO. BEAUTI-I A-l NEW, REROOF - REPAIRS - ful country oststo, 4 - bedroom) “ ‘ ■ ■ ■ 3 baths, tirsplace, lakis. paved drive and street. £) C. Schuett water I ___ ; 334-411$, NEW BIRTHDAY CAKES. SPECIAL DC- D A lul . OR 3-0179. .... ....... Pontlec. 3337 ■“ I Rd., Auburn order. Iu| Whjte Birch All kinds, ell sint. Auburn Bak-erlet. 1175 Baldwin, Pontlec. 3337 hrs., repair roots. PE 31725. CONSTRUCTION, BEAUTI- gualITY ROOFING. NEW AND Sylvan Laka, car- MILTON WEAVER, INC. Realtors In tha Villago of Rochester Universlly — FIRST IN VALUE material. Free 4$2-7514. Complete Ins, coverage. Fret metes. 331-4545. I__ ____________^. .. Sand—Graval—Dirt t. G. SNYDER, FLOOR iX^YING sbndlng aod fiwlihing. FE S-OS?!. I^.| BULLDOZING, city, naw^y decorated, chlldran SlOO 42 ’ month plus dep. Rent Rooms AUBURN HEIGHTS room. 10D'x344' lot witl berries, full ' aluminum ti bathe, 2 car garage, « RENTING TOM REAGAN REAL ESTATE Floar TWIiit CUSTOM FLOOR COVERING. HOLIDAY PARTIES Church groups, banquets, pertles 25 or loss. Call for rr JACKS DRIVE grids - top soli. Max Cook. 482-4145] yggwnh,"® cooking, 234 Mochon- * Ml?' reasonahVe eSfe'k ^2ir CIIanTwORKING MAN'0R~W0M- soll, reeiqnsjjt^prlcorjchsck nur, See of 274 Stofo Sf prices, fast delivery, 673-0049. WELL ROTTED COW MANURED yd. dal. 693-6157._________ Snow Plowing SNOW PLOWING ROOM FOR QUIET ^AN MAIL 41 E. iroquoia Rd. W. Side, FE 2-3517.____________________________ SAGAMORE MOTEL, SINGLE OO cupancy« $30 par woak. Maid larv* let, TV, tiltphoM. 789 $. Wood- Trtfl Trimming Sarvkt TREE SERVICE BY OR 2 GENTLEMEN, EXCEL-lonl maols, lunchas packed. FE ire/LuMif^PF ££ae "aXuaSo'■ RETIRED MIDDLE AGED MEN ..... Fret ostimafo. FE S-4449, 474-3SI0. home. 42S5150. FE M2II JANITORIAL AND WINDOW WASH-A-1 TREE REMOVAL, REASON,’ ----------------------------------^ service, commercial and real- able, tree sst, 4232121. A-1 INTERIOR AND EXTERIOR -Family rovms, rough or ilnlahodi dormorfc perches, rocrtatlon rooms, kllchons, bathrooms. Stole IlCtnaod. Roaa Coll after 5 p.m. COMPLETE LANDSCAPING Camont Work 47 SQUARE FEET OF OFFICE !a. Will laaM all or part. Lo- rtmwil,” YrW' Est;'siiV.il’ii ""IIS ^ rtady Fobruary, 1948. ' Forward roquiromonta lo Ponlloc Proas Box No. C IS._______________________, NEW OPPICE BUILDING, 3981 Auburn Rd. Auburn HaiBhts, 3888' up 3408' down, central beat and air conditioning, carpeting ponol- Ing all lor^i, 152-2311.________ OFPICB 32'X35' OR (2, I4'X35' OF-flces) In new building at 3301 Dixie Hwy. Will finish to Suita. FE 4-45M._______________ pXnneled office, lixu, air Free asllmatai. J TREE CUTTING AND REMOVAL. Mu! •' i^J^od Elwood EntOfprliaa. 422-3373. ATTENTION VETERANS 3-bedroom lake front homo ftalurlno Plosttrtd wells, hardwood floors, m baths, laroa kitchen with bullt-lns, pisnty of closets and larga storage araa. Immediate posl- jsi?: $t?95?.“'it down. Call OR 4^0306. J. A. Toy lor Agency, Inc. i 7372 Highland Rd. (M59) OR 30304 _____Evas. FE 37708_ Beauty Rite Homes $78 Mo. Excluding taxt4 and Inturanca ONLY $10 Deposit WITH APPLICATION 3-BEDROOM HOME GAS HEAT LARGE DINING AREA WILL ACCEPT ALL APPLICA-TIONS FROM ANY WORKERS. WIDOWS OR DIVORCEES. BUYING OR SELLING CjJLL 125 _ 5-9^ After 5 P_M. FE 5-48M KENT Esiab LAKE FRONT 6 room home. Gat $16,500 with 83,000 c LAKE PRIVILEGES lake view. Neat 2 I S8.000. terms. Floyd Kent, Inc., Realtor I drive. I 2200 Dixit Hwy. at Tel^raph ' terms. FE 2-0123 or FE 2-7342 HOMESITE8. KINZLER"^" Warden Realty Clarkaten, 847,588. W-i740L*^”^^' RETIRING SOON? See this 2-bsdroom home with full bas^nt and rKrtatlon room In qulot nolghborhood on N. aldo II has gas tioat, a wirtd IM-car garage and a lancad lot. You will DO Impreased by the outsMo i pearance when you see Ih, vli VON Pontioc-Land Contract la your pockolbeok amollT But your noodsnUrgof Sea tlili 4 room oldor homo May. Living room, 11'4" X 15'5". Dliting raom tVS-x-tl'4". 3 ploct bath. 3 badrooma. Naw gas fumOca. 1 car garage. fo.980 wHh S1J0O down an WATERFORD TOWNSHIP recent. Cepe Cod.^elum. tWIng . net. tlreplacae. full basement, ■—FKSSja YORK WB BUY OR 38343 4713 DIxIa Hwy. rRADI '«e Waterford IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY 3-badr8om rtnchtr In Clarkslon School iroo. Laka prlvIMges on Groon Like. Con Ol. or land contract with subatantlal down. Full prIco.SIlOOO. IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY bodroome. utility room, firmlaco, Woc.t£!rwm!"Mff1rJkS:^ Con Ol. 0 down. SERVICE IS OUR BUSINBI8 WATERFORD REALTY 4540 Dlxlo Hwy. 473-1273 Underwood Reel Bstilt_ 425-2415 Wideman wisi suburban INDlANVyoOD, 15 ocroB, Bconic, Loro# (amlly homo, S m, lergt living room, c --------------------------nt >—* F-ii fc.,— haat. Alio rear eurrtn. , _ _ ........tity set this iwr mo SEE IT TCwp^i. ^operty today. $30,000. 1)0,000 dn balance land contract. u/rcT Cir\C 5 MARSHALL. Nice 5 room home. "tbl blDt hardwood floori, full basament, gas Twe-tfory home featuring 3-bedroom, V/» car garage, blacktop large dining room and study. Only $13,385. FHA or VA tpaclout kitchen with new cabL OKAY WITH US. OPEN DAILY AND SAT. AND SUN. or come to 18530 W. Ten Mile Rd. Southfield REAL VALUE REALTY For Immediate Action Coll FE 5-3676 642-4220 ' A. J. RHODES, REALTOR CLASSIC RANCH "’^multiple usTiNi?seRvi«”* Colonial styling gives this ranch home an air of classic elegai and modern floor plan gives practical livability. " trance, 24' living ro Ing room, kitchen Painting nnd Decorating A-l PAINTING AND PAPER HANGING LIGHT HAULINA, BASEMENT}, gorigM cloonod. 4731242. D6ht and heavy TRUeKfNA,! from $15,998 "Buy direct from Beauty-Rite and Save" 3538 Pontiac Laka Rd. 4733134 RENT OFFICES-43S AND UP. 4548 Dixie Hwy. OR 3-1355. -u. .-i.J _____—— AYljiiATTYYWNfft 4^ Rcsn + I AtNtlMlf WORK ALLTyPES. SPE- abjle^4»;4423. _____ 1 lUCKS lO r\©ilT » CHARLES PArNflNO - bfcCOR vk-Ton Pickups IWTon Stoke -St OMilty material and tRUcPs - TRACTOIM _________ AHOEQUIPMeHT IfXPEftt f^AItTflNfe AfiD PAPER Dump Trucks - Seml-Trallart Pontiac Form and Industrial Tractor Co. ii^M-ia-iaayp'g'siSa: Rent Bwinwi property 47:a| SQ. FT. BUILDING WITH clearance, end railroad lid- Brown Realtors 8, BulMors Since 1939 formal din h builMne Wd balhg and beautiful recreation room In walk-out basement. Landscaped site 158x150 with stately frees and live stream at rear. A new offering and lust what many have been waiting for. Retired owner moving ^ ruDiCT^LT'* JOHN KINZLER, Realtor CHKIblMAb S219 Dixit Hwy. 623033S Contemporary ranch with fire- Across from Packers Store Large kitchen. Multiple Listing Service Dpen 9-8:30 and b—“•• •— -----------—^ .......*......- - ?ROYER 4 Acres Near Oxford - 314 M. age. Perk tesM. Prlcw place. 3 Gas heal. Carport yard. 108x250. $l$,980, Coll 451 WALTER'S LAKE - See this JHEPATO R!Al tSTATI ! LdUillCJGr GAYLORD ! $22,500. Tarmt. 2 FAMILY IN CITY. Just make e LAKE PRIVILEGES smell down payment, will pay for * - . - itself and put monay In youi pockat. Call MY 2-2121, FE 1-9693. Lake. 2 . Fenced yard, l OFFICE OPEN 9-9 SUN. 1-5 Waterford Twp. L k '*$2(60'''"**** ”* Waterfront Oxford araa -> Accass to 7 Fall priced. Only 10 per Christmas Tree Farm 77 acres — approximately 3fl trees. Near Holly. Terms. Basement, gas FA heat. Lerge garage. Central High and Pon-tlec General area. CALL POR APPOINTMENT. I. 0. WIDEMAN, REALTOR 412 W. HURON ST. 3334124 EVES. CALL____ 425-2059 WYMAN LEWIS REALTY 389 Whittomofo___238882S Val-U-Way NEAR BALDWIN NO RED TAPE Cute end coiy 8 bedroom home with dandy 2 car garage. 16 ft. living room, tile bath, specious closets, naw gas furnace, Insulated, tures alum, drive. Near Only $11,200. er's I—‘— $1700 • present cfoeing c 628-254B 47S2I4I *33 $. Lapotr Rd. (M24I OtIIca Hours, 9 lo 9 axcoj lords. Coll MY 2-2221, FE $-9693. GAYLORD INC. 2 W. Flint St. MY 2-2421 yrt. Exp. 423-1372. _________i atING Cement and Block Work L^' Pi 37S^'""'» L L ilni^.^opw^ramoval. B. T. ' 25,200 SQ. FT. Oslooppi lo suit ______ ________ ._______ ____ buUdlng wHh parking on alto I20x- 125 t. WOODWARD OSCAR SCHMIDT________FE 2-S217 PloetBrfcig Sanrice PI^TBRING^jPRjjl ESTIMATE!. SM.BS AND RENTALS ingatiWatar Condt. 31 wMl BLOOMFIELD WALL CLEANERS. Walla claamd. Rom. Mhltctlon fluarantaad. InaurodTFB 2-1431. .. WELL DRILLING, WELL CONDJA PLUMBmO >_HEATtMn | MM ctuMiBid. pump aorvlct. UL Otflcp Open Evanines I, Sundaya 1 lUILDII Woodv FE 84134S. Mondayt 9-5. OR OFFICES, LOW rant, 1888 aq. It. Orchard Lk. Rd., ampit parktiKi. (bll 34S-3148. DRAYTON PLAINS 4,008 SO. ft. madam oftics • or rglall atoro, air condl-tlonad, good parking, Immo-dlM omj^ncy.JLaasa avalt- **”*" alpauLy 4S14 Dixie, rear OR 3-3180 Evta. OR 1-9272 possosalon on Iwmo In No; Good ahopplno cantor clooo by and Jr. High plus grade schools It the door mokt this dor. Comploto price Is only BUILDER'S CLOSE OUT! LAST MODEL FOR SALE 3 BEDROOM RANCH $910 MOVES YOU IN. BUY NOW-ONIY ONE By fwiNlr, duo to tranolor. 4 bod-Khoett. Cell 42M441 to tako a BY CWNBR. 4'Bebft6dM BRICK ^B w iIrHo %iiw*?oksI' Tiuli beths, fai mein fibfl FE 2-3513. a cer gerege. reem carpeted, inr Lake Orion _______ “Gl SPECIAL i Price reduced on this 3 bedroom ranch homo, firoploce, garage, sll-ualad on o 190 ft. lot. All furniture ^00$ with dotl. lolling ter only tto,- I Spocious New Homes By ROSS WHY PAY RENT? this cozy 2 Inrot living dining room, will put you Into Located In end nt Pontiac, close to and stores, $11,950, on FHA ranch Hai| SOVB Ot todoys pficeS ::.T Ranches Split levels FROM lets condition. Nlm largo with planty of dining araa. Family sued living room wHti wall lo will corpotlng, plenty of closot tpoco In each Mroom, naw gas MIXED AREA II pay all your ind down paynnoi R. J. (Dick) VALUET Colonials REALTOR FE 4-3531 Tri'S 345 Oikland Avt._____Open 9 to 9 :roa lancad. Compteta-dsg kaniHls. Fancad runwayt. 429JM, 3118 Joslyn Rd. M s-n$l. Shown by appolntinonl. No real oatite doalora.______ BY OWNBR. NiAlT LINCbLfTjR. >M, 3 larga badrooma, 3 full YORK WE BUY WE TRADE OR 4-8343 OR 44)343 4713 Dixtt Hwy. DrtvSon Flalns open Oelly from 9 e.m. to 8;3Q p.m. 4626 W. Wettofw-OR 4-0301 leaving the State SPARKLING, NEAT Contemporary brick ranch, 3 bedrooms, IW baths. Saml-finishad rec room with sapor-ote ponclad batamani study. Other outstanding laaturas. BlrmlnMam schools, Ewmonlary 1W biks. Owner. $47-1431. HAROLD R. FRANKS, Realty CAPE COD Golf Manor — nnr 2 goir courMs. FIna rasidonllal araa. Only 5 years oM, oxcollont dotoll. 4 largo bedrooms (master l5Wx12, carpeted and drapfd), tell UK ctramic bath LDNGFELLDW Asbisloss Ranch, tell baMmonI, Aluminum storms and Krians. Home rtal cteon. Immadlato ec- s3!r474rA* ruoen, pretty kifclion'—''corbot'oS and wtih bullt-lns, lemliy loom has in' brick wall fireplace, pello anirence, perqual floors. 2 car oarage, baHmanI, gas haat. larga lancad lot, priced ter quick sale, owner Iranslarrtd. $3t.m Good mortgage terms avallaUa. Everett Cummings, Reoltor 2583 UNION LAKE RD. EM brkk. <-racroatlon room, tenoad sxii’.cTr^r 4 p.m., all day on wooksnd. MODEL 1 IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY 1 Open 4 to 1 Thursday end FrLi day, 2 to 4 Saturday and Sun-’ EtHy' Amarican Ranch, brkk and aluminum axiarlor, 2-car garaga. 3 badrooma, 1W balha, Ibariiw i ir'^o-iK.^urrii'n.aia Norlb of Wa»m Blvd. and Eptf *" “‘^'^PRESTDN built homes AND REALTY For InteriiMflen on bulMbis iltoi lolOBlMno 47MI11. HI-HILL iRICk ftAilCHElir 1- $28,700 INCL. BASB LAKE PRIV. LOT LAKELAND ESTATES On U.S. 10 (Dixie Hwy.) just 4-10 Mile North of Walton Blvd. Phone 623-0670 STRUBLE^ HURON CARDENS Cula alumlnun^ldad 3 bedroom homo. Ckwo to the Mell, Has Iota of potential. Only $7,950. Hurryl EXCELLENT LOCATION Lake Iro tcanic Ml DORRIS rbdTS3«rsi;: an outattndins tel wHIi I loal of trowtPM W MM- wood fioora. liVkxITW kltdian. wa heat and a 18x24 cowtd palte. Owner iraneterrod out of oroo. Priced to Mil at 817.950. WHY RENT whtn your monty can bo paying ter thit SMdroom doll houM end ghw you additlonsi kw daductlenT VofkUng kndMR wHh ooling space, luxurtouoly cargolod living roam and l-bodroom, goo hoot, car and haN garage and lancad yard. $13,908 on any FHA terms. flS3.5:%^, Jl gl IhW lettli 17. Oak floortu Pi latloA MILO STRUBLE REALTOR ^ 674-3175 non. Oagarala dining room. Full booomint with 7 gas hoot. 2 beautiful lots M a ' I Mr gorogo- 813.710 on FHA DORRIS I. SON. REALTOR AUL'I^PIjrLIBTINII SERvItP* D—8 THK PONTIAC PRESS. TODAY. NOVEMBER 24, 1967 • 49ITIZZY By Kate Osann GILES O'NEIL EASTER JR. HIGH AREA 6H’Oom. 3 bedroom borne, men), 1 Cwdi 6$ W WHAT YOU'D EXPECT TO PAY 3 ROOMS BRAND NEW FURNITURE $277 $3J0 per week , No payments durinb a strike. LITTLE JOVs Bargdin House 1441 Baldwin at WqlMn, FE $4*43 I Parkim II «. Ef Tt l|epa.^r^ of frost fresMr, 13 cii RADIO ANiTaPPUANCE, INC. 422 W. Huron f^AIR CUSTOM MADE DRAP-arles. Beige; 1 pair — 144"x$4", 1 pair — ISxSS'V exc. condition. 33$-3Wi pr 33M545. WHITE AUTOMATIC ZIG ZAG Sewing machine — deluxe fe .lures — maple Cabinat, "Ear American" design. Take over pa ments of: $5 PER MO. OR $49 CASH BAL. 5-year guarantee Universal Sewing Center FE 40905 WRINGER WASHER, SSL INSiOe JOIN THE PRICE REBELLION Come to AMCtloniand Saturday night. KENMORE VACUUM,.USED VERY 1* headboard, maG of“■662. I 1 V J I y S143 Cass-Ellzabel j—^ 'wwF J--' MLS OPE e l«r k, NI4. Iw. TJl las 0$. rw. on, , f'^//-yv or”retiFod'a>upio.' $$jo6| ‘Td lovc to stt With your three-month-old, Mrs. Jenkins it’ll be a pleasure not to have to drag him away from the TV!” 4PIECE BEDROOM SET ----- Hew) $2.50 Weekly , ____________ JRNITURE 210 E. Pike________ FE 47SI1 OPEN DAILY 9 HALL — .jngaL... . ... f room for a large .. possession. Appr— $575.00 closing oosta for .. ------- payments I to sell fast CASS LAKE CANAL FRONT family. 30 Imataly $5)............ Ijllbie Gl monthly r a 61 2 bod-; LAKE FRONT -low with forgo looking tho la vary neat ai cant tar ear lamlly rooi a. This h arly possaisl ___ with to per plus closing costs. Call appolntmanf, we have ttr CLARKSTON GARDENS this 3 bedroom all br Featuring IVi ceremlc .-f— ol ctoia room, corpatod living room, 22 ft. family mom with brk* firapfoce. 3W ear atlaehad gari paved drive. Batting on a la vacant tar early potsaialan. WATERFORD AREA - new 1 t room ronch ertlh brick front, el on boat, community watar, ti nr tlzed kllthen w^ pfo^ oating area, filed bath, bo lnlo?%'^1X9i» wSh'$1400 down plus efosmo costs. 0509 Dlxie^tttvih*fW^yiy^^lU PI I II ■**** only $if,950. No. X49 " FOR MR. FIX-IT tr u . V. a ww- ^n the North; in a'g^‘'buy"ol only*™900**'^ FOX BAY MODELS OPEN SAT. & SUN. 2-5 P.M. Drive out to Fox Bay on the Huron* River and visit our modtl homes. West on Ellz. Lska road, right on Perry Blvd., tell onto Fox Bay, -Ight to Maria Drive. Priced from I 25,500. Including choice lot. LIST WITH O'NEIL REALTY ’ For 3 Good Reasons Wa IMnk our sonu of v.iu.. list of gi tiralsss I ksyou gl RAY O'NEIL REALTY I 3510 Pontlsc Lake Road .... PE 2-<239| I, ample : heat ai ; Income Property ' off the'3 FAMILY INCOME -tip-top 2 rooms and bath, 1 — 4 spacious! 1 -- 3 rooms I, large Brings $95 per week, la, lots of! $12,950 with $3500 do< 3ms. loads! at Hollarback Auto Pan utility I _ .{Lots-Acreage 7'^has~5| HI-HILL village rooms and I Large country sized lots on and bath., paved roads from $3350.00. LADD'S OF PONTIAC . 372 geldV 3477 LAPEER RD. 54 Busiliess Oppyrtutthigt 59 3 |2 CHAIR BARBER SHOP FOR ' salt. Buafnass and equipment. $1,-•00. FE 1-7390. After • p.m. call 9x12 Linoleum Rugs $3.89 Solid^lnyl Tile 7c es vinyl Asbestos tile ■" “ nlold TIfo. 9X9 ............ Floor Shop-2255 Elizabeth Lake ''Across From the Mall'' HOMESITES BAR r TAPPAN GAS RANGE Frigidaira rtfrl^rator, big fri er $49. Others from S39.95. 3 pc. living room $39. Gat dryer likt new $49. wringer washer low as $34. Baby cribs $$.95. Bedrooms, chests, and dressers. Lots of ustd bargains at Little Joe's Trade-Ins, CLASS C e percels $3 750 3-10 acre WATERFORD TWP. . motoeoe. ,urther‘=l°lfr&.1Sn^* TassI, KE 4-0540 or VE ■ LAWNMOWER, 4'/ii,_HqRSEPOWER r 34" riding mower $50, 3 .wheal work ANTIQUES - EXCEPTIONAL IN- VO n t 0 r y. Write us your---■- Chevlllon Antiques, P.O. Bo Pontiac, Michigan._____________ CLOCKS, WALL AND MANTEL. $30 ..„ 2 Victorian beds. Up-parlor chair. GoIoIm 7 N. Rochester Rd. 753- MAIL BOX POSTS INSTAl Wood er steal. 483-0354. MAGIC CHEF, ELECTIHC COP- eartona range, 435-1710. _____ NIAGARA ELECTRIC VIBRAT^ chair, fully reclining, excellent con-dltlon, 134 Wilcox, Apt, 3M Roches- tor, 451-7100. _______________ WERHEAD GAS HEATER, iw,m0 BTU. Used 1 mo., W tan come olona hoist. 7110 Highland (M-59). PROFESSIONAL ■RIEDELL" ROLLER SKATES Women's, liza 4W. Precision wheels end IM st^ Cost $100 new - but will sell tar $30, Including carrying case. 334-3400.________- - ^ ------------------- carport PATIO COVER — ■ 10x11, while gelvenlMd irM,..-............... ESTEY PUMP ORGAN, LIGHT walnut, best otter. FE 3-0"* Hi-Fi, TV & RmHof d PLUMBING BARGAINS. P.R E E standing toilet, $14.95; SMallpn heater, $49.95; 3-pfoee bath Ml*, $59.95; laundry tray, trim, $19.95; 515 E. Walton, corner of Joslyn 35FT6NSOLE STEREO, HI-fIdBlI- ------— jhannol tpeak- tsf 103.54 cash t, 4-spaad et $0.54 monti KAMPSEN TIMES "IT'S TRADING TIME", DESIRABLE-ESTABLISHED -CONVENIENT Wa offer tar your approval fhreoJtadroam home located the dtalrabla sactlon ol Pfom Highlands. LaiGO porch at rj Is scraanad. The marbla II h bullt-lns YOU'RE IN BARGAIN COUNTRY *ri5?£k*?;ncl51r* rn'a.'Tv extra privacy. Immadlala pos-saiNOn. Ploasa coma and sea the real. $1,900 down phis mort-gtoo costa. Noor Our Lody ol Iho Lokot. STAY HOME AND LIKE IT lul PlHsant Lako. Nicely SS2S‘ cOT^Iy^carlxlfod hard to ballava Ifiay're t ORION TWP. Offers tor your early Inspection this lovely 3 bedroom ronch homo with wall to wall carpatlng, gas hoot, blacktop strati, ,1 cor gorogo, clote to shopping and schools. Oh yes, also tanc^ yard. Only $14,500 with an opportunity l»fo!Ict“"call* • 4 BEDROOM In the Waterford oi privllagos on one nicest tokos In the -...— —w Crittendon Hoi-i pllol, approximately Vi acre each, paved road. Priced et $S,500.0C "'nicholie-hudson 49 University Dr. FES-1261 ofter 6 p.m. FE2-3370 TED'S Trading THE MONEY YOU SAVE Could be your own If you should find this 4-bodroom homd with a full baseinent, family room, garage, fenced yard, in Waterford to your liking. You'll have saved a bunch. Full price $13,900, 10 STOR^ building, 40x90, rear yard fancad. Leased now lor $3001 ------1. Full price $34,900. $114100 ____ taedad to mortaaoa. Call - 473-1190 batara 5 p.m. E 0-0077. STATEWIDE REAL ESTATE ,t.t « , 2441 s. Lapiwr Rd. Lake Orion i Warren beelye REALTY ASSOCIATE MEMBER OF --------- *------XTES I Eton, Apt. 311-A. Birmingham._ ^ '.AUTOMATIC WASHER, SUD SAV-i310l » : er, $45. OR 3-5784. _____ ' “ BEAUTIFUL SINGER POWER HUMIDIFIER FACTORY SALEI Rugged, nen-rusllng, non-clogoing slaTnlass ileal power numldltlar. Brand new. Fully guaranteed. Rag. $100. Factory direct prica of $59.95. saves you 40 visit The Rooto Corp. at 330M W. 8 Mila (at Farmington Rd.) In Farmington. Phone 474-4111._________________ RUMIMAGE SALE, NOV. 35, H-5, good clolhing, forgo slioo, at the Light of the World Church of The In Tho Christ, it 334 Mld- RECORD PLAYER NEEDLES HORSE LOVERS LAKE LIVINGa PONTIAC 15 MIN-ut«s. Lot» $995. $10 mo. Privaft beaches, boat, fish, sWim, open i Sun. Bloch Bros. 623-1333. FE * 4-4509. 5660 Dixie Hwy. Water LAKE FRONT HOME THE CLOSER YOU GET, THE BETTER IT LOOKS, rom outsfdt pillars to Inside dooi n. This « BRIAN 623D702 5904 Dixit Hwy„ .Waforferd INDIANWOOD AREA Little Cedar Lake. Area ■Ivll^et^l PARTRIDGE B ABSOCfATES CONEY ISLAND Fast action coney Island on mal.. Infarsoctlon In Waterford Township. High grots, forge seating and parking capacity. Golden opportunity to step Into the high Incoma bracket for lust $10,000 rking capacity ty ta step Ir bracket for Call now. WARDEN REALTY kUTIFUL SOLID WILD CHER-ry drop leaf table with leaf and new pad. 'axe. condition $135. Sofa bad, chest reuplioMartd, M. 4 place bedroom sat, compfota tar $90. 335-T943.______________ brand lilEW END AND COFFEE 333-7157 REPOS5ESSED STEREO ONLY mos. oM. SolM state 40" walm coniola. All transistor, no lubt. to burn out- AM-FM radio, 4-tpaed starao phono. Must collect $193.$! cash or S1XJ0 cfolmt. 335- BETHANY BARGAIN BOX 43 Oakland Ave. ntxt to Poole Lumbar. Open t;00 a.m. to 4:30 „ p.m._______________________ SPRED-SATIN PAINTS. WARWICK ------ 347$ Orchard Lake. M3- ROSE TOWNSHIP ' ) 10 acre parcel that • -‘-'-■i contains 454 t—, — •—nl tor that! HDWE.-FARM IMPLEMENT In Lapaar Co. village, 34 yaar old profitabla business. Purchoiar must aualify for transfer of franchlta of ana of the most prominent deal-arsblps. Includes real astata. Compfofoly aqulpaad repair shop. Hdwa B parts sublact BRONZE OR CHROME DINETTE sale, BRAND NEW. Large and small size (round, drop-foal, rectangular) tables In 3-. t and 7-pc. sals, $34.95 up. PEARSON'S FURNITURE 310 E. Pika_____________PE 4-:WI_______________________________ WANTED. RCA COLOR TV NEED- STEREO 4334)004 _____ ..CA COLOR I major repairs. 4334)534. $9000 with terms. Warren Stout, Realtor B of $340,000. Re-1 for your pc )fi thf» brani FOR THE LARGE FAMILY On tha move wa have an brick 4 bedroom Capa Cod homo thM* Ufa BlkM kill A rage. Immadlala possession. I 50d Terms. C PANGUS INC., Realtors ' OPEN 7 D4nrs A WEEK I 630 M-1S Ortonville ! CALL COLLECT NA 7-2i15 | TIMBERLINE ESTATES Now the roads are in — avallal targe lake front canal and Ic RaliaWe bulk SOME DOCTORS SUGGEST IT WE RECOMMEND IT YOU WILL LOVE IT COUNTRY LIVING Annett Inc. Raaltors FE 5-1145 „ g j, 33,.^ Olfict Open Evtnlngs i, Sunday I- living room $47. End Mbfot $13.1, R\k*$1d00.*”Lam"pf hot heat LIppard. 559 N. Parry.__ bufIk beds Choice ol 15 ityfos, trum triple trundle bads and bi compfota, $49.50 and u SUMP PUMP OE A value, $39.95 r buys. Michigan I------- Orchard Lk„ FE 4$443-33, TALBOn LUMBER U" Black and Dtekar drill. $9,99 4'xVSl?'MlrS,.”rtW.a 4'xtxH" particle board, $4.95 aa. 135 Oakland_________PE 4.4595 THE PROVEN CARPET CLEANER s_^lan^._ Fw SakMiMUliiMMS 67 a prices. : available. To b| NURSERY GROWN SCOTCH PINES any quantP" --------- —.....—■ Christmas, palltiva wl or 401-0343. ELLIN ■ •' Draytao' of 6ixla SELLING OUT, ANTIQUES, USED "— —■ miK. also 3 100 gallon >r tanMi. Drayton GuH A OFF - ON SPECIAL BOXED isi!sr5j..“Drx‘fo, D-r-sUta-ai srxosup--------- Maple, Walnut and WMtt PEARSON'S PURNITURI 3IC E Pika___________FE CHRISTMAS SALE SIngtr Slant Naadla I-----,, NaNonat and Cab. $ 39S0| gyu. Wa or Free Weslli^houst Evtr^lng to mt Ctetblng, Fumllur . J Tafograptt. NEW GAS FURNACE. ltS,ilOS BTU. We or you Install. Pontiac Heating - 474-MI1 er 4$3-S574._ iiM w 3 WHEEL UTILITY TRAILER, 4x9 tan. 1149 W. Huran tw^ef tt! ments—3 fu plastered w_.... .......... ..... com, wtilta marble fireplace, gas heat, wall to wall carpallne, screened Florida room, atlaehad - garage, paved driv- —-This fo one ol Ih ir tha money an UirliSmas''*lt*you'*a plus axcalltnt beach tacllitlas. Full price $19,500. Terms or Iradr TEDS CORNER Trading your house Is thi EXCEPTION, your realtor i teas tha sate. His axptns similar. It It takes 90 d Mil n could cost tha rat........ lha nalghbarhood ol $300 for tha adverlltlng alone. What can you axpM If you trade? You can ex-pert nnora advertising, you ----- 10 ACRES, hilltap « „ S.D.D. licencB and oquipment ovailable for relocating in at of White Lake Twp. Write -*' Pontioc Press Box C-44. SIngtr and Cab la Olal-A-smch, n Zag Port., new > any others at similar savingi HOUSEHOLD APPLIANCE Elizabeth Lake Rd. Ponfl ________ 33503jD CHROA TIFFANY STYLE LEADED GLASS IlgM fixtures. Large salacHoni. Ttrrlflc values. MIetilgaii Fluoras-cant 393 Orchard Lk., PC 4-1443- 41._____________________________— TUB enclosures, OLAtt ONL? $33. G. A. Themtoen. 700$ AAS9 W. USED AND NEW OFFICE DESKS, chairs, tablai, fllti. typawritars, adding maCMnts, affnt priming : 9 X12' LINOLEUM I Plastic wall tile Calling Ilia - wall panalii BAG Tlla, FE 4995?. 1075 Huoi. $3.95 EA. Ic aa. ^ap ; istrl'al cafatarla tablai, aaali A DEER HUNTERS We heve many choica cabli northarn proparty available < contract terms. Call now wt) choice it the greatest. I, icanlc, setiud-SACRIFICE - MUST SELL anl^wn. ?“• •» eommarclal build V./010r 1 V S SI9.9S 1' van frallart, can be otad or tha read or tor iteraga. Start a REPOSSESSED Paymonls of $3 par weak. s attractive 3 bid- pavad drive, 3 car s^pptng cw 1 Isn't sold. MCCULLOUGH REALTY « noma REALTOR 6 of a 5440 Highland Rd. (M-59) MLS , ix^er. Opan_9^ ^-2239 * furnished - NORTHERN PEN uii iih - **<”'• 0" Ofo Highway. Ihrouoh Ho. 3 house and garage - large v Through C. PANGUS INC, Reoltors wording aaan's~WrT~g¥6ss- ovlr tlOOJXW nw vur Uliwi OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK - Call Wall Lewis, Elaine smnn. Bob Horiall. Dave Brad-lay. Kan Hall, Lao Kampsan, Lea Karr, Thurman Witt, Dick Bryan or Varn Halfonback—FOR' PROMPT, EFFICIENT SERV- g Also 3 10 4 acre h ■ m Clarkslon. SIOOMIO par year. S3SJ —wn. ..aason tor sailing—ralirli Wrila Press Box C-4._____ Sale Land Ceotroch I I TO 50 LAND CONTRACTS Goodyeor Service Store 1370 Wide Track Dr., Watt Pontiac Open Friday 'III--- McCullough realty Leto-Aerease REALTOR vou oaai l^ighiand Rd. (M59. c‘l5‘rk.?in''"s?.ISr. Estate WARREN STOUT. Realtor ---- lolal of 415 foal Ironlaga—$3,250!______________________1450 N. Opdyke Rd. FE 5-SI45 "BUZZ" '"''’^■'•'"’• TTIVTT^TPIDTAFOi/'^T^ - Ooan Evt». Ill I ga:---------------- 435-54S5 9^ oixfo" 4^5015 i On your fond contract, largt ■ -------------------------------------- small, call Mr. Hilter, FE Ml) 31 CUBIC FOOT DEEP FRBCZE BOULEVARD SUPPLY 375 GALLON OIL TANK. GOOD* 500 S. Blvd. E.__ PB $-7001 w,™..... .p ,,.. ______ iwEb6TNO~RiS5Tit, 4 months COLOTnATnDTNfN 6-5ET,-END '»W CXrmirfu'Jnl?«55{%^^ table and sma!l rocker. 4^5001. Tree* 67-A COUNTRY SPANISH FORMAL DIN- ...- CamihS!" chSl?.' *OBlif*?oo**hm'ch^ PO»w TUmWIlfors^ iMfalfod,*' rta"'NURSERY GROWN S C O.T C " 5X*n'"‘wi5J'"b«.;Sf ------------------------- raas. 451-4391.__________ ANCHOR FENCES CUSHIONS ,NO MONEY DOWN _fL .................... 'ARM CHAIR, HIGH CHAIR, tUF IP'CK YOUR - dlshas, antiques. Cone's. FE bring lha iinirr cli'ristmas;’''6na of the bast compatillva wholasafo pricat. 333- FE 574711 9703 or 401 0843. _______ ----- T TREE ON ThI stump Mattingly WATERFORD TWP. Tim©SR©alty 13 A A IVT acres. WOObE D RIVERI*'^ A«E comer parem S$90 DIXIE HIGHWAY i V .................... 433-0400 REALTOR O—' t.a a.ll. ' . Powfor, EM 59S3I.I tar 3 I dlvMadl VACANT IMMEDIATE POSSESSION „ ANNETT Northern High Area "SAYS" TRADE THE BATEMAN WAY II) ACRES FOR PRIVACYa PLBAV Invetfment. FE 2-2144. ,6.f ACRES on ^ $450 DOWN excellenl ^ blocks exctiiem ^ ^ - ________________________ rgmtac. i\ AT ROCHESTER - 120 ROLLING* horsM -•cres with plenty of rood front-i ’ — il new homey subdl- — --------*. Terms eveli- WOODED LOTS DAVENPORT-BED COMBINATION. g^ condition, cl—n. 332-5743._ ELEC. STOVE, S2S; GAS STOVE, ------------------------------ $3S; Rtfrlgertlor with top frtezar, jWaiited CeNtriict^^ JS.'fTSSm.***'"' ^ElOhT DADOED BEDROOMS —. .....-------,1,^, AI ISion' I. from i-75 r ks from Lonpfell lom rencher with I CAR OARAGE. Close to bVs V! •»fched gen lino 4 staras. SI2.$00. ...ms. H>iJ;,;rhj, Is rwsiy^" West Side—3 Bedrooms cons movts you'fn. call nowi 4-room home having living room with brick iTraplace, No. 19 dining room, kitchen, break-1 PR ircn lest nook, bedroom end fove- ^ lory on main lloor, 2 bad- JO *^L 3 todroomi. I rooms and lull bath up. Full P***!"*?' w''b Hlad lloor, glass baiemant, new gas turnaca. " wch and IV. car garage. NL. 2 car garage. $15,950. terms. | BEDROOM, —-------- ----- , "”‘*"’ 29 Acres-W. Of Pontiac Modem 2-bidroom home, re- * acres ^’leutiri *^ ill'’' ra"**ron*agrl'$W,”M'(B'wn.’ MILTON WEAVER, INC., Real In the Village of Roctiasler HI W. Univarilty____________451-1141 CLARKSTON' HOME SITE lOO-xISS' wooded lot on paved roi ---------- terms. $• 1 to 50 LAND CONTRACTS yaudeel ^ UNDERWOOD REAL ESTATE WARREN STOUT, Rcoltor $»45 Dixie Hwy. 4253415 1450 Ni Opdyke Rd. — •" I WALTERS LAKE AREA - 140' " “ lldlng site S3480. lOtT building' : JOE'S BARGA. . ildwin at Walton, PE $■ IFRr^lMlETSTl^E:. WESflNG- Dlxfo Lakt -Is — $3750 terms. E: WEST ___ Time______ $75. I9U Roaedale, BABY BED,"^TTRE$S, EXCEL- 10-SPEED SCHWINN BOY'S BIKE IN EXCELLENT CONDITION. EXTRAS. A GOOD BUY FOR CHRISTMAS. ISS. CALL AFTER 4 P.M. 4254BM. FULr~SiZE BRUNSWICK PbOL ---------- —dltlon. OR 5291- llng site M40irT20' building'NEED LAND COflTIIACTS. SMALL' - «3-m1S"“’"’ "■'•“i EWm 3n«K' "oSTiSiGErG^CSN^ITiOH^ i 61 GAS STOVE, k0LL-$izE7c6PPER-tan*. uied 3 me., 1149. G, A. Ibompsen, 7085 M$9 Wotl. CRESCENT LK. RD. d oarage, far K). Trade or la ? ton^ltal rpal, 3 car MAXIMUM OP BENEFITS with minimum ol and maintananca. Real T:uta Pioneer Highlands ’ lom brick candlllon, li AT GREEN LAKE DFFICE RICE REALTORS at 707D Commerce Rd. EM 3-7070 or EM 3-4412 7 ACRE LAKE FRONT Nr. Grain Lake. Plailared home has full basmt., IVb baths, barn to keep pony or hartas at homo. Secluded by fall tvargraans on bfocktap road. tSf.SOO. ActI GREEN LAKE FRONT North short custom brick, wido avorhong 5 badraoms, 3 baths. tPiclouf walk-oul tower lavtl, lower laval rac. rm. has huge llrapl. and extra kttclian, 24x32 pfotltrad gttaehad, hoatad garage, gas heat, crpig. and dripat Incl. Underground t^klbig threuaiwul. ------ nal dawribad. (No Imi _c.ndtt-.in' p-rrc-«t 2 LOTS, WATERFORD City watar, lake privlitgts. I •3,495. S6 Meoey te lean ' - sklctniM Monty uwn%mri LOANS I Lika area on blacktop' CASH ANYWHERE slrabfo location. Compfoltly llnishad basamant with lull bath, gas heal. Scraanad porch, garage. Prlvlfoaat on, No. 4$ «.Tn r^uIT^smsS' OWNER TRANSFERRED Wm, IMMEDIATE POSSESSION, BRIAN IN MICHIGAN 623-0702 80 to 800 ACRES In lower Michigan. Dairy, gral;v beat or hogsl Name your term naads, wt have It at one ol c»?.'’MichiK7. p";;'A/gs;i coMMS8i™i'6fN Si'rii: or®ars.7!!Si3»/?"!!^;;'y- s- Hoadouartors - Dean Realty Co.,j cr SI7-3IB4127 - nigfits._ A SCENT OF FRESH | COUNTRY AIR i HOME - 5 ACRES BLOWERS FOR SNOW SIMPLICITY 4 H.P. - S340 JACOBSEN 3 h.p. - $99 SUNBEAM ELECTRICS ROLLERSKATES Woman's, slza iW. Pracltlan wheels —' toe stops. Colt 510$ new — but sell tor 130, Incouding cerrylng cese. 3353480. Holly Ranch 3 btdroom hor Itnt condition. i If of eree. I lunity wotor on Oaklond U lionPRONfAgFWED^^ I Drej^ Woods, Approx. $3J)00,I ATTRACTiVb" iooviwnu^^^ ' —ne Lake privileges. " 'ner 473-3411,___ I lly n LOANS Its fo $1,000 niured Payment Ple (TER 4 lIvinoSTO Finance Co. mlloc Stole Bank B« FE 4-1538-9 ® LOVELAND s.ie^ e*'Xv' *■ Lovelond, Realtor minutes 3100 Cess Lake Rd. M3-I2S5 ■rdtop road and good school tys,! m. 735,530, approxlmataly $3,i00 C. PANGUS INC., Realtors * OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK M-15 Ortom-'u- CALL COLLECT NA 7-3S1S ,WE WILL TXAGEIDOiri/ DAMrurD REALTORS 28 E. HURON Ollica Open Emi^s^ Sunday 1-4 baaittiful wooded ai _________________________ OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK - ________ ________ ______BUILDING LOT - OTTIr HILLS W;'* . . _ OrK brick rancher with ■ —- -------------------------- '^4" and 3 cor garage, ns and sodM. lat 1.800 SQ. FT. BUILDING It. clearance, and rellroai — ___________... ------- 0-Neii Really. DR 44334 axcalltnl forms, j CRANBERRY LAKE E5TATES~Xt, W HURON 5T MIS and l-rs. Raeasiaaiad la 111....... w. nulwri 31. lOO'xISO'. Nothli sisrii’r. ■■ 57 LOAND TO $1,000 Usually on firsi visit. Quick, trim ly. htipful. FE 2-9206 Is the number ta call OAKLAND LOAN CO. 202 Pontiac $tata Bank BMg. M Friday -* f-7 Saf. HOUSEHOLD FURNITURE. AT 231! McCULLOCH CHAIN SAWS .... ..., --- lUB TRACTOR T ONLY $79S -----ENTER p.m, on Monday only. HOUSEHOLD SPECIAL xa . ' hardworking, big Mac IS, I , USED farmalx Cub tr, ' AND EQUIPMENT ONLT coc%ll labia, 3 labia Ti (1) 9'x13' rug hicluriid. 7-placa bedroom aulta wll " I, luIMza BRIDES --- BUY YOUR WEDDING mnouncammlt at dtecount tram, Porbat. 4580 Olxlt. Drayton, OR NO. 40 INDOX VERTICAL MILL. 51344 after 4. BRITTANNICA, SI45 tar Christmas, 3457488 _ BROTHERS SEWING MACHINE, - . _________ LUBTTlCf- oqulpnnsnt, hydraulic lacks, n claanart. WOMIng oqulp-.. Etc. Panifoc Meter Rrh, University Drive. PE 34104 INSLBY MODIl ^ L DifAO line. CxcMtonl condHIen OM 371 angina. S’ beam. M yd. bucket. 7953440, ova. 794-3749.__________ LUCAS BORING MILL Modal S43 B, alia O.D. grinders, hmctlatt‘‘li; iXy*'s!iS!{i![' E^ I'X' Lake Gall Course, i Elizabeth Lake Front ng ranch, 1 rl M; Hv. rm., 2- 11511. Cass Lake watarironi heme. Hat imarato lunfolwd apt. and Mrala miranea, atlaehad daroga. $8541. taka front. 3 badrmt., tga. lly. rm., oN. garagt. In a grove Of trat5 $$9,180. iiay terms. I. Oil f.a. MILLER 1“ AARON BAUGHEY REALTOR |TR!'.Le%L^®RS!!X'i^‘^»h laxirai and cualam laature. Peeirii. NORTHERN HI AREA IrFI new. Large carpatad lIvU 10x14 kitchen, 3 bedroor 19 family room, gat hi $17,500. 110 Ml STOP. LOOK AND YOU'LL BUYiN^w’^MOOEL tail "tHAP“" ---- - hT^nlttlaS hasrnt: "wttlT iinTthad'i' rac. room. Largo comer ■ • * car garage. Rtody tar ___ ...... licular buYer. Il7,4j0 on fond con-ibulMIng site. OPEN lAT. 4 $UN. *■■"* . . - _ gl jjo,, le Dixie Hvry., iaihina"^a"TB..’mi)?I^IH»>!'.»» Zonad..cammircfol, — — Open Sun.' . FE 4-4509, -II HOWARD T. KEATING 33840 W. 13 MIM, Birmingham 1451134 5«579g WOODED AREA ... ------------....... OPEN 4 SUN. I-S p.m. Dixie Hwy. right Walton, right to in left to Nfodata. EL RANt--------------- - - - INCHER: 1 bad- rS.7S ONEY TO LOAN - Pi 34 HOUR SERVICE JS*‘aiWbihS3^?H^ ■oi ^ paopfo with bad ihS"t Plains 71x375, on Walton ' "0. Terms. ' BRANDON TOWNSHIP ; 70 aertt an Sharwoad Road and, Sashabow Rd., claarad fond, lai^, 3 aecaplad park fotts.|. M-59 NEAR PONTIAC UKE 100 n. on M-89, also fronts on Pontiac Lake Rd., zanod comm. t9J00 BATEMAN COMMERCIAL DEPARTMENT FE 8-9641 Sal. Altar 13, Sun. 4 Evaw FE 4-r— S3’ IKYLIliE TRAVEL TRAILER with battfroafih ISOO of traM. AF sa Ifsr Oadea DoH 4 dr. wHh now tlma, 339S or fradt. Ellhar Mr BMd pMfcup or largar van ar lall. Imilh Moving Co. 401 ------ — ■>di$4. Ito * - — MILFORD ROAD 48 acral an I ‘ A.!®,*'. 'Sale er ExdMn^ ar, dinatta. laetory Inotallad lalF WANT YOUR PRICE CALL NORM RICE It t»K», Off) • With t OA Mil iR. UNION LAI^feR JEM >4171 Cimmnd EDGE OF DAVISBUR6 46 Xi acn LAKE PROPBRTietVvAiLABLE baaulllul prl-'HAVE: . . AMIHy la salve Ih Tom Botemon, Reoltor FE 8-7161 . REAL ESTATE Pebil _________ soT'ohTToft, ^...J matt rail and rnatci box spring and 3 vanity lamgi. *-«?r.-a'r.lHr'A.?rr6,,‘'’?i«r cradlt Is good at VMmin'5 WYMAN FURNITURE CO. 17 E. HURON_________FE 51581 KIRBY SWEEPER EXCELLENT CONDITION - PULL GUARANTEE —......r—aMiw Kirby Service & Supply Co. 3417 DIXIE HWY. «753$34i . LINOLiUM RUGS. MOST SIZES, „ „ $3.49 up. Paartan's Pumitura, 31$'-TiauP »aiiv~a?ir a- 5dl*4- _E.PII»$,..Fi__57j$1,.—... , , 4>IECE-$ErbP LUDwiG--6«^^^^^ E^mc^|i^fenrxY;-T6HBFl Kf.JS' zudvfo tymi»i, sin. FLOOR MObEL GATH TUB ' tars, $50. Calling haatar ___ _________ ar tar hat water real, $35. Elec. Ing Co.. ...... .......... 'rimmar, adgar. used 3, 125. 837- Mlchfom;JM12^Araa 3I54452U CoiiiertH-iehrlce' 70 CAMERA, CABINETS BY DARNALL 7f 1 MAONAVOX ELECTRIC ORGAN. 52912. _______________ Pontiac Resale Shop Buy-S«ll AnIteuH, lUmltera. d I g 1 a w a r a. REDoNPitioNto Appliances. DETROITER, W a Village Oman, lor ar f. VE 7-7738. JX*®ntt»».nm;Vrtei>.-V$Tr For Thi Finest In Top-Quality Merchandise Shop At Montgomery Word Pontiac Moll PORArrcA*TABLd ANDT^HAIRS, — • alngfo maple bad. Sarta axcalfonl condition. $48 GARASOalE: 2990 VAirzI^t. Vic. CAI BHg. 18 a.m. to $ p.m. Fri. Nov. 34 through Tuas., Nav. 23, Clothes, furnttura —' — ■n in ronriac. acrooi i ly shopaing centar. A nmarclal iquipmani, d t bvsinats. Oltiar hr______ nd ownor's lima. Can afoo MO fond and bulM^ M Ml. 417-$IM er BR 510$. SINGER ZIG ZAG Automatic "Ofoi Modal" makaa Or payments of $6 per mo. Umversol Sawing Centar FE 44)905 ’ Volf 5f^®"'**®^' 'TT-rblStoUHTI ; PONTIC MUSIC 4 SOUND 1 Wilt Huran tV 44143 cnoma Pirfead from 4MI. No gr/ry-Ta. vsr*bT'j Bevarfoy's, 7753 Auburn Ed., Uttea BALDWIN ACRpdONIc;—iuSfiS' ik>t WA^R 'bASEBOAiidniXBF j>n, (Wtem^i-Wr ®*^ ----------------- - V (SoMET^miiwriiireHo THE PONTIAC PRES^^S. FRIDAY, NOVE3IRER D—9 Alto FoiMir Flbrolux amplifier, htr^Uted, bJllI In RoverST $200. >l^6T^HfiMTO Cimiola, l-ytar-old, ucrifice, M7- Tfwtl TraUm M CARNIVAL I RETAIL » DAYS SELL — TRADE BILL COLLER M ml. E. of LBOO« Clly IlmlU ( LIKE I CONSIGNMENTS WELCOME I Spoftcroft Manufacturing • i-A POOBi B SAI nu I CASH prize EVERY AUCTION ' PICKUP SLEEPERS ANO TOPS BV "ARLEEN" - CONDI-Va dachshund PUPS, AKC, 110, OR 3-271; ! UPRIGHT PIANO, PLAYS GOOD. JAHEIM'S KENNELS. PE ORGANS ANO PIANOS INSTRUCTIONS AND INSTRUMENTS. JACK HAGAN MUSIC APISTOGRAMMA RAMIREZI, i tall sharkt, tropical fish, pets, t suppllet. Wagon Wheel Aquar-S' Wllliamt LoKe Rd. AIRDALE'S, S WEEKS, AKC, CHA^ . plon lint. Sacrifice. S«0. 625-35t4. FARMS ANO HOME SOLO AUCTION Sat., Nov. 25 — 10 a.m. . William and Anthony Smith, ownert 4057 Hill corner Sharp, Swarli Greek 4000 and Ml Ford Tractort,’ matching E ' SP AAcCormIck I STAN PERKINS AUCTIONEER Phone Swartz Creek — 435-7400 peRkins sale service AUCTIONEER PH. Swartz Creek — 435-9400 I1t2 Cooley Lake Rd. 332-0500 AKC M/NIATURE SCHNAUZERS, ---- ChrWmai. 343-30^1 Acrott from Tel-Huren ~g 2-0547 old, 540, 451-3347. IWinic lEscQRi 71-A PUBLIC AUCTION ■UNCLAIMED IMPOUNDED CARS > by The Pontiac Police Dept. 117 Lake St., AkL BRITTANY POPS. 8 wKs Pootioc, MichigoR jAK^INIATURE WHiTETOODLE AKC PEKINGESE ___________474-1442. _________, AKC BEAGLE, german SHEP-L !»rd pupt. Wormed. Shots. 420- ACCORDION, GUITAR LESSONS Salet-ServIce, Pulaneckl, OR 3-5574. _ 6fBet Equipment 72 ffj, sh6^s5~WDjam$, - --------------- , FE 4-4433, Parakeets and Finches. PR-NTING PRESSES-OFFSET AMERICAN ^KIMO PUPPIES, 4 5433 Dixie. Waterford 423-0200 U-R C. rag., purple roley Waterford 42341450 TRAILER SUPPLIES AND ACCESSORIES AT JOHNSON'S \ Walton at Joilyn FE 4-0410 PE 4-5153 TRAVEL TRAILERS uaTtoIPcorsaTr ROBINHOOO. TALLY HO 20 new and used trallart In stock ALSO CORSAIR PICK-UP CAMPERS NEW SERVICE DEPT. Ellsworth Trailer Soles 4577 Dixie Hwy. 425-4400 WE CARRY trft .-^AaAOuS“ Franklins—Crees Fans—Monitor ThunderBird, Ritz-Croft Travel Trailers I Skamper ond PleasureMate I Campers-7 & 8 Sleepers jportliig Coods 473-2445, aft. i MA 4-3252, after 4 | THERE IS NO OTHER AUCTION 'til u tee Auction I ' ' ' Every Saturday 0 p. BASSETTS, AKC, SELL OR SWAP lor 235 Chevy motor, chain saw or ? Stud service. M7-4422. __ BOXER, 17 MONTHS OLD, bIaU- used furnllure. Jack Hall _______r. Hall's Auction, 705 W. Clarkston Rd., Lake Orion. MY llfully marked, fawn, du' '« Childs allergy, AKC.' 3-1071 ____________ Terrier pupThIs. B®l*k^** A Suppllil telescoping, bumpers, ladders, racks. Lowry Camper Sales. 1325 S. Hospllal Rd., Union Lake. EM 3-3401. spare tire carriers. Bz Did. T«n,B ^64 CH side p ciaily. 9^ I Fina condition and hardlopa automatlCp full 1967 CHEVY Van Series 100 with V-0, stick, fuillyl _ ________ equipped, BRAND NEW - Only 1743 BUICK ELEtTRA 225 4-DOOR $2195 ---- ------- ■ BILL FOX CHEVROLET 755 S. Roehbster Rd. [ OL 1-: Special 1957 GMC TRACTOR GMC Factory Branch Oakland at Cass FE 5-9485 STAKES 950 FORD C-400 J942 CHEVY ■ ■ 1943 FORD I 1944 FORD F-350 9 ft. Stake 1940 FORD $1075. MIkR SAVOIE CHEVROLET, 1700 W. Maple, Troy, Michigan, 2 miles east of Woodward. Ml 4-2735. 1M4 BUICK WILDCAT CONVERTI-bla, automMIc, power new car frade In. $1375. MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET. 170b W. Maple, Troy, Michigan, 2 miles east of Woodward, Ml 4-2735.__ 1745 BUICK ELECTRA 225, 4-DOOR SAVOIE CH^VrSlET, 1700 Maple, Troy, Mldiloan, 1 mil east of Woodward. 1^4-2735. 1965 CHEVY HARDTOP NEWEST DEALER IN PONTIAC Vandeputte BUICK-OPEL m-210 Orchard Laka FE ^?165 1962 CHEVY 2 ton 14 ft. staka 1965 BUICK LaSABRE 4 DOOR. HAS 3RD F-350 12 ft. staka avarythlno. Exc. ar Full power. I will «all for fast sale $1450. 602-3647. powtr staartno, itar, wtiHawaMSp $1595 Haupt Pontiac On MIS at 1-75 Intarchangt Clarkston ________AAA 5h5500 1745 CHEVY BEL AIR WAGON, Ji^or'sisssf.' 1745 CHEVY BEL AIR WAGON, J«||5^doubl.pw«r,Ww Ini^ brakes, 327-300, T r R Ik Trx 1*45 BUICK WILDCAT ^DOOR V AINO ??I?*^’blt“" '***'"' **'*'^’*' 1754 FORD P-500 12 ft. welkin Vw-'oRIMAlSi CAR CO._1W.^ajy5nd atte 1t66 BUICK LASABRE 2 DOOR SE- 1962 GMC 2 ton, 14 ft. alum, van I danj sharps ona owner S1795. --------- KEEGO PONTIAC Kooflo Harbor 412-3400 “It would cut my work in half if the toy department would just put in a rest room!” ‘ 82 PKk. widotrack, and widetrack titc. Damonstrotlon rides In tha Scatmoblla, tha new land snow ve-, ........... _____________ hide. Take M-57 to W. Highland,' 7713.___________ MODEL AIRPLANES AND SOP- Hickory R|deoRd. to CHIHUAHUA OR YORKSmidb ax7 pHe» «l_20 service. FE 4-8793. 19 Boots-Accaisories 97 Wanted Cars-Trueks 101 DUMPS 1959 FORD 3x5 yardSi dump 1961 FORD 3x5 yds. dump 1964 FORD T-B50 dump 1966 FORD 3x5 yds. dump TRACTORS 1965 FORD C-1000 with 534 V8, 2 LATE MODEL CADILLACS ON HAND AT ALL TIMES JEROME 1740 CADILLAC SEDAN DeVILLE, 1744 CHEVY top, V4, oulomotlc. new used carl On US to Clarkston, MA 5-5071. HASKINS AUTO. SALES 1744 CHEVY Super Sport, hardtop, with VI, bluo finish. Only 01075. 4495 Dixie Hwy. (USIO) Clarkston. male, AKC, Rd. Left and follow signs 5ICO LAKElShOTe^aV;^. SABLE AND RICHARDSON DELTA S^S-T^D^ARROWS^I^^^^ I wmed'Vu'Sfi'n^e.rgLTse^S^I LIbIJ!?? cS=®^0^^AKclA^3TEs ” ^^O^ONIAL mobile HOMES whitase shots, wormed, guar tons, 4455 Highland Rd. OR Stapi 3-9991 MOBILE SERVICE, WINTER- ' now. furnace cleaned. Moving I setups. Call Barry's. 363 6739. 1-A Beauties to Choose From Farmlnolon 474-3701.___________ :OLLIE PUPPIES, AKC-SABLES. - CP siASZ sMisin laroest selections In' ',%Ld''73*1*825*7"'’**’ COLT, 1 WELCH M OPDYKE 5430 mxlE- Brbwnino. Woalh- ?{-rT-=----------Pony, 425-2004. after 3:30. Auburn Heights S. of Waterford ;S^'Smj"b-wTs1i;, Srt wrihM.!;^;. US-S!?; *' '''S.lT.i-ESSON p«ee,.klentner oxSTall alvminu/O^beoroom Try Cliff Dreyer's Gun and Sports Center 10 Hotly Rd. Holly, ME 4-4771 Open Dolly end Sundays______ HEADQUARTERS for Rupp Sno-Sport Polaris, Scorpion SNOWMOBILE, 1740 GENERAL 10x44' ON LOT.I SPANIELi REfe RIDING LESSONS WHEN 1340 GBNER — you board ywr hvse at the new; Very clean. FE 5-7M1 . S^h4l*¥ppTrs I AKC, yellow hunters, pel, and I show. Guaranteed. Ml 4-4311. . ... FRENCH FOObLE~MINI. APPLES-PEARS-CIDER o*'*™ Oakland Orchards, 2205 E. Com- Best Mobile Home Sales Open Daily-V a.m.-8 p.m. 196S GMC 9 ft. Van, Ouol 752 w. Huron St. Rear Wheels WaiMd to BUY; ionTor Im; ^ 960 GMC Heavy-Duty Dump ' 196S CADILLAC OeVllle convartible, black with black lop and matching Intarlor, 28,000 mllas. $289S BIRMINGHAM Chrysler-Plymouth ---- - ^1 y.j2,4 7 CADILLAC CALdtE COUPE with all laalhar Interior, tinted gloss, txfra sharp, low mlla-a 0 a, n a w car S-yaar-SO,000 I warranty, reatenable. ruir^jqulppw. Pamco trallari. Taka M-57 fo W. Highland. _______ _ Right on Hickory Ridge Rd. lo: HO or any one of the Chew ---_ —... .... DerrMdo Rd. Loft ond follow signs' Super Sport models. Cosh tarms. 19S7 GMC HeOVy-Duty GoS-to DAWSON'S SALES AT TIPSICO 481-0110. ' ' LAKE. Phono 4^^2177. lA/i" k..., I... ohne Tractor victor. MARLETTE EXPANOOS ON merce Rd I ml. east of Milford NEW SNOWMOBILES cocker—and-poodle “eoium |ggs, m c h.p, snow Bird snow Ihrow.r,' SSg, > -"«>••■ «'*• •=£ »-l Slir^Jd^ lSL Or'l'rfn.''' New whMl horst f Mower ottochmont i I h p. Fox Trtck. ISV^*' track. Bolen's frtctor 7 ' ___________^ _ _____________ POODLE BEAUTY'F SALON ! Pups-Slud Serulst i Pol 5uppllts-402-4401 or 802-072r I POODLE CLIPPING AND SHAM-I Pooln^ by appointment. FE S4075. I POODLE CLIPPING, REASON- jR'5;.m*:^'VjS'i-._T''*'** ' REGISTERED TOY POODLES— DISPLAY SPECIAL GGS, 28 CENTS DOZ-t * ONLY - 1748 Ch^ ---- » L12 X 60' — 84995 i/W >. L6 display AT; ---------- Cranberry Laka Mob Homa Village S7 9620 Highland Rd., (8r59) ^ Williams Lk., Rd. 2 PAT2 8ILO UNLOADERS; 3,000 a crates; 3-sectlon drag; 3 cat-i^t'^w’'*^'*' ... , self-feeders. N. of Rochester.! lafl* Green, 8^ down. 335-0155, INSIDE WINTER STORAGE KAR'S BOATS B MOTORS 405 W. CLARKSTON RD. LAKE ORION _ SAVE NOW—ACT PINTER'S We would like to buy late I model GM Cars or will accept trade-downs. Stop by today. "Quality_ _ STARCRAFT-THOMPSON-MFG JOHNSON MOTORS-SNOMBOILES ________________________STORAGE-TUNE-UPS apple"craiesT ^McTion'dTagj'I'c^iDETROITER, 18X50, ON LOT, VIL- 1370 N. Opdyka 7-4 FE 4-0724 tie Belf-feedert. N. of Rochesler, ••J* Crw. 3350 down. 33541155, (1-75 of Ooklend Unlvorslty Exit) OILRochnler Rd. 42S E. Buell Rd.. | ■ WINTER STORAGE tlAVt A IfltKKT Boats and motors. Close outs CHRISTMAS •» *>»••»• •*«"'n»n and Chry GMC Factory Branch Oaklond at Cass FE S-948S MIKE SAVOIE Birmingham's New CHEVROLET DEALER 1104 S. Woodward Ml 4-273S FISCHER I BUIC^K *"*** Insurance-Marine 104 On M24 in Lake Orion MY 2-2411 SCHNAUZER MINIATURE I Reg. --- • 2-1590. PUPS. < service evailoblt. FE CLEARANCE SALE | ON USED TRACTORS AND SNOW I BLADES - AS LOW AS I $1S0 large telecllon to chooia from. KING BROS. all 1967 ler motors. All Johnson snowmobiles in sto PAUL A. YOUNG, Inc. 4030 Dixie Hwy.. Drayton, OR 4 _________Open Mon-Sal. 7-4 S44 S. WOODWARD 647-S600 ; make you t AUTO INSURANCE Terms Available CALL TODAY! ANDERSON 8, ASSOC. I 1754 CHEVY, 2-D06R, 850. ! 482-4784. 1758 CHEVY, REAL G06d .... 1762 CHEVY II automatic, vary EVAN'S EQUIPMENT 4507 Dixie Hwy. 425-1711 Mon Frl 74 Sal. 7-5 CIOMd Sun______ ‘POLARIS SNOWMOBILES P.rryi Lawn 8 Garden. 7615 HI landJM.571. 473-4234. GUNS AND GUNS V'» WInchevler, Remington, Savage ^'OY SILVER Scope. - emmo-ac- _---------------- ““ ' 473-i I _ Ponijac Rd. at Opdyka Rd. CLARK'S TRACtORS “ I chlnary. 100 used tr ers, dozers, beckhoes SHIN TZU PUPS Rare small shaggy Chinese dog, Long silky, nonshedding coal, Champion Imported lines. These! olSiTr*" ” dogs Pave personality plus. Stud ----------- ”n'""43MF '•** ! FAMALL CUB sVnCDixu—tractor with SNOW BLADE *'?"I*** ’’UPS' hydraulic lift, elec a-nI^a- OR 3-1202 CHEROKEE - AM TRADING UP,I1, 2 JUNK CARS-TRUCKS, I will sell my 4 place Cherokee es tow enyllme. FE ^2644. ME'LL make you a bettei Offer on your used car — SEE :k I DOWNEY OLDS, INC. i, , ^ i $50 Oakland Ave._____FE 2-9101 Foreign COM 0411 Jiinli Cai*i«Triickt lbl«A _ ______!!^| 1958 VW 2 DOOR 99 1 _ 100 CARS AND TRUCKS. FREE lodon, with radio, heotor, I low iny time. FE 5-7044.____| wells. Ready fo .oo. Gun 1044 JOSLYN AVE. I (uiipric, a, u. los' LUCKY AUTO FREB 111 JUNK CARS, P.-.Y FOR SOME Open dally till 8 j ______S^ ar^ Sun, till /*p.rn._ i LOST OUR LEASE AT TOLEDO, OHIO SALES LOT $495 OAKLAND CHRYSLERrPLYMOUTH IwJ. CHEVY, STANDARD TRAN^ ■ ored Lycoming 150 servlet. OR 4-1744. sell 20j 1;e!f7I21 tr4lner. R. C. Scribner, STARTER LIGHTS, ETC. 8775 ___________' HOUGHTEN'S POWER CENTER POODLE, STUD Downtown Rocne$ler____________ML701 SPECIAL ON CLAY ' --------- IfTaa; APPROVED SCHOOL :;"i^°d^*yoVr"old'’S:n h?rJ'- *•" «*•* $»PP«..-S.r*le. 79-A : SO^'?. T.J.^rc^^SSJSS MG SALES & JcRVICE | poodle grooming, by EXPERI-''*?itSo®£l*75A"ownor''^473iS8?°°° ml«**h1s*'chbnce'*ol a I 4647 Dixie Hwy. Dreyfon Plelni' enced groomer, personallied care o*"*! . f.’jj4S8^ _ time. All sizes In stock. SEMI AUTOMATIC CARBINE. , This means BRASS used IT Tor fun and to build flying starters and hours from Canada to tha Baha-| son, OR 3-S84y.______________________ mas, etc. for only S5.61 per hour mMi/ wanted pree tow total operating cost. Exc. tor wanted, free tow FR trainc CHEVY 2-DOOR. REAL GOOD, TR-4, new tires. BATTERY.! ___________ lors, C. DIx* ,^5 ^3.7325. ,1962 CORVAIR MONZA, 4 - DOOR. l^RATrGTOO------^8397~ Elizabeth Laka Rd. 3634)349. FE 5-3620 LET’ SAM ALLEN & SONS, Cars ' 1962 CHEVROLET FE 4-2131 IMPALA 2-DOOR HARDTOP. V-l. INC. groomer, personalized care , og, 810 complete, by ■ miy, 391-2018. SKI 000, ski profeitlonal model, condition. 1925, 634-9901, I SKI-DOO SKI-DADDLER Snowmobile BUY NDW AND SAVE 1 DOORS CRUISE OUT INC. AUCTIONLAND *• ______ISOO^CrescMl Laka Rd;_ SKI-DOQS - SKI DboS AUCTION NEXT WEEK "enD^T all models In stock, tee and bi^ Oxford Community Auction the mighty Super Alpine ll’-^ HP.’ . Electric. wHh twin 15" trecke, full line of tnowmechine accetsor- TRACTOR, 1968 models elec, start, snow blade, 33" reel delivery and mower, tire chains, utility trailer, miles. We 3 mos, old. 8750. 651-0644. _ undersold. ® USED EQUiPMENf 1 Price Rebellion Auction I and'’'i'now''^bia'da. sJls* Sot., Nov. 25, 8 P.M. | h.p. Iraclor mowar and znov Bedroom; living room; wooden din- <595. Ino room; and tables; lamps; b lankats; tools; whtolbarrows-'Bolen's tractor with brand snow cai-building material; loads of ChrisM tor 1475. mas merchandise. Plus repossessed accordian. Also '62 Ford pickup 34" riding mower with snow blade tramp. I .no- Wanted Cars-Trucki 101 Ire# not knowingly Pontiac Airport. OR 4- ALL TYPES OF SCRAP STEEL ' COPPER, BRASS, ALUMINUM BATTERIES. RADIATORS. ETC. NEW LOCATION 500 COLLIER RD. BETWEEN BALDWIN and JOSLYN 335-8141 1765 VOLKSWAGEN STATION / A G O t ------ ------- 2257 Dixie Hwy. ATTENTION! John McAuliffe Ford 277 Waet Montcalm 5-4101 __________LI 3-2030 EXTRA EXTRA Dollars Paid FOR THAT EXTRA Sharp Car "Check the i el the best" it Averill VW, reas., other EE 4.9111 ....... ..... automatic, nice RADIO, HEATER,' COOPER'S 5!ir95!%*DVuTELY''No'’Mc^^^^^ Extro Cleon Used Cars EY DOWN, Assume weekly pay- 4278 Dixie Drayton Plains ................ CREDIT Open 9 to '* ’ ...... HAROLD ^ q MGR. Mr. Parks CALL dally TURNER FORD, Ml 4-7500. 5 AUSTIN HE/Oy iMTcnWy . . . ___ .WANTED JUNK CARS OR TRUCKS GRIMALDI CAR CO. 700’OAKLAND T"'"®*'..Ml Bob 482-7077, ’ E T T E, engine, r 3. Ask t ___^674-2257 HARDTOP GOOD TIRES, 100. Call 332-8419. SELL FOR PARTS. 1959 FORD ^ door hardtop. 8 cyl. auto. 850. Call 335-9685, Sun. only. USED ENGINES, TRANSMISSION, reor axle, tri powers, bell housing. body ports, etc. H t H Auto Seles, OR tsm. I ms OPEL WAGON, LIKE NEW New and Used Tracks 103 Dec. 2 I OAKLAND COUNTY'S MERC-CRUSIER DEALER Cliff Dreyer's Gun and Sparts Center 15210 Holly Rd., Molly ME 4-6771 SKl-DOO'S I trailers. Coma See and*drive tha lively ona. CREDIT TERMS AVAILABLE KING BROS. PONTIAC RO. AT OPDYKE FE 44)74________ FE 4 1442 SNOWMOBilES ' Quality, priced right lor yc HOUOHfEN'S POWER CEN _ . Open''lor conulgnmenl. ).470-2523.____ AUCTION SALE Soturday Nov. 25th 10 A.M. Lloyd W, Craft, Auctioneer PHONE 424-3143 I Crulse-AI GREAT LAKES, 10'X44^ quit farnr at Public Auction Havlnji decided 01 our personal properly. Fri...... Expressway laka Wixom Rd., north '/4 mile to West Rd., test 2 mllei to 4SSIO West Rd., or Pontiac Trail to West Rd., south Vi mlla. Farm Is located on South west cornor ol Welled Lake, HOLIDAY R ery good condl _ . ________, osf $4,400, toll tor S3,SOO. 33S-S474. , 'airStream lightweksht TRAVEL TRAILERS liter June 20, 4 yearling hsll-itelnlest steel Dart Kool - lor life. See them end get a demonstre-tlon ef Werner frailer Salat. 3070 W. Huron (plan to loin ono ol Wally Byem'e excHIng carivene). B R /Td l e y C'AMPEfrPTCK Jp, sleaperi and covers. 32S7 Seabaldl, Drayton Plelne. OR 3-7520._ CAMPERS FOR PICKUPS PHOENIX AND WINNEBAGO Amarican, Traditional or Modor ace evalleble In 4 Slat Park, n ixire charge. Alto see the lemou lightweight Winnebago Trailer. OXFORD TRAILER SALES OPEN 74, CLOSED SUNDAYS TOWN & COUNTRY MOBILE HOMES CLEARANCE SPECIALS Ideal lor dear hunting cabins NEW UNITS REESE AND DRAW-TITE HITCHES Sold ond Intlallod. i,,, , HOWLAND TRAILER SALES I*”""’*'!. . AND RENTALS S®"*"'*"' “'o"'*' 3255 Dlxlo Hwy. Pontiac OR 3-1454 15275 HELP! We need 300 sharp Cadlllact, Por. tlacs. Olds and Buickt lor c ' ' etata market. Top dollar paid. MANSFIELD AUTO SALES 1104 Baldwin Avo. FE 5-5700 ___ FE 8-002$ 1 Public Truck Auction SAT., NOV. 25, 7 P.M. '58 Ford I '42 Ford pickup, o Iransp., long box. camper. To bo auct 7 p.m. Auctlonland, cent Laka Ro«d._________ 1752 CHEVY PICK UP, Ideal tor $1295 BILL FOX CHEVROLET 1743 CHEVROLET STATIONi WAG-on, radio and healer, 8775. MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET, 1700 W. Troy, Michigan, 2 inllai ................... Ml 4-2735. 1763 CORVAIR MONZA, ORIGINAL owner, clean In and out, mechanically perfect. EM 3-0152, Call Set. only. 1763 CHEVY, NICE, ALSO 1764, Chovy, needs mile repair, SUM lor both or soil Mparately, FE S-0027, 12 Hazel. 3 TO VW STRAIGHT BACK WAGON, 1 Is extra sharp! 11575. JACK LONG FORD 1300 Cret- Rochester OL 1-7711 1746 SUNBEAM ALPINE, RACING *51 ^aklaji^Ave.___________FE 0-4077 Green, 23,000 ml., very clean. I7M CHEVROLET HARDTOP, PO\M TRANSMISSION, RADIO, HEAT- ,! Marvel Motors High Dollar Paid I757-42S FE B-9661 Star Auto ___________I $1525. M'Y'3-3571. TON „CHEVY PICKUP, |74r fRTUMPH' SPlfFm vale owner. 4.000 ml. SI700. 774-3440, eves. 774-3747. 1747 VOLKSWAGEN, WHITE, TAKE I Drafted. Must sell. Ml ! 1757 CHEVROLET WRECKER I FE 5-3420 BUT BIG PRICE Deere Iraclort, 451-7010 hey 100 SNOWMOBILES EVINRUDE ON DISPIAV ' tale. culling hay, 1600 corn, 200 bu. oils, ge In 12' Silo, many i large lewlery wag-,' for occldenis day OAKLAND CAMPER KarlboUf Tour-»-Hor Carefree toppert Open daily until 8:30 .......»nda« 1175 I LAKE ANd'seTmARINE lT.rm. _ B.r Aloodwerd el Saginaw FE 4-1517, ^e/k Kehrl, ------- ----- RB BUY, BBIl, trade GUNS. J?™'!' SfrL...”"?!?.."®**®* Browning - windheilir - R#i»«- ■- Injton. Opdyka I Hsrdwart. FE terms evalleble. Bank THE GREAT SNOWMOBILE SCORPION ullt 10 perform end endure tha lotf rugged larreln. ORDER EARLY AND SAVE STACHLER TRAILER SALES, INC. bTa C K DIRT, LOADING AND hauling, 7 deye, 120 Opdyka. O'B'DY drive-way problems? If to, now Is Ihe lima to act, not whan fhej ground Is frozen and the spring Ilhtws mike the mud deeper. Ill we Mj^lwys^you cell, OR 3 073S. ) Cozing driveway gravel and send. Ff 4-4580. ____ Fontiac Lake BuIlders sGi^ ply. Sand gravtl lill dirt. OR 2- B Bi B AUCTION Special Fri. Night 7:00 p.m. REPOSSESSED FURNITURE AND APPLIANCES Speciol Sat. Night 7:00 p.m. GROCERIES AND L UNCLAIMED FREIGHT Special Sun. 2:00 p.m. TOYS, ANTIQUES,AND . TOOLS CENTURY YELLOWSTONE FOR '40 INSPECT THE MODELS ARRIVING DAILY ,12'xS3' Bahama ..... 12'x60' Homecraft ' USED UNITS I 10‘x48' Suncraft 1966 . 82900 ,10'x53' SuncraH 1966 $3350 12'xsr Suncraft 1966 $3450 I OBLIVERCD AND SET UP I • TELEGRAPH AT DIXIE HIGHWAY I 334-6694 i WATERFORD MOBILE HOME SALES I $5195i ftALL ADJ L, _ paid for I8to modal Gale McAnncilly's AUTO SALES ono • aloopor Whool Campor Sat. 9 A.M. to 5 P.M. Closad Sun. STACHLER TRAILER SALES, INC. 771 Highland (M57) 402-7440 PIONEER CAMPER SALES •ARTH TRAILERS A CAMPERS TRAVEL QUEEN CAMPERS MERIT FIBERGLASS COVERS (l"-2r'-35" asuM-tl ALSO OVERLANC WATERFORD SALES EXCAVATING, REMODELING 1747 Cuetom deluxe, liy x 42' l-bLdroom. CofnplaMly lurnlihtO At a bargain price. U33 Highland Rd. Auto StrvicE STOP HERE LAST MAi)r. A Thanksgiving spoclal. BIRMINGHAM Chrysler-Plymouth Ml 7-2218 1966 CHRYSLER Nswport 2-door hardtop, showrooni cohiAlIcn. v-8, automatic, double power, radio, whitowelle, low mllp-age, only $2095. OAKLAND * CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 724 Oakland Ave._FE Sd42« Kessler-Hahn CffRYSLER-PLYMOUTH COMPLETE LINE OP THE New Triumphs On hand. Get your special deal now. NO FAIR OFFER OR TRADE AUSTIN HEALEYS S:30 p.m. SU7S. FE S-2727 NEW 1764 CHEVROLET 2-DOOR, car trade. 87T....... CHEVROLET, Troy, Michigan, _ of Woodward. Ml 4-2733. 1964 CHEVROLET 4-DOOR WITH automatICf radio trade. 8795. MIKE SAVOIE ‘ W. M mllas 2 miles east of Woodward, rrikee?' Bank Relas - Fl«»"rl"g Arranged , j«PALA 4-DoOR HARDtoP, GRIMALDI CAR CO. | eutom.iic. OO Oakland FE 5 7421 FINANCING ARRANGED-BANK RATES GRIMALDI NEW JEEP 1 Owner Trade Ins 1967 Chevrolet Pickup truck. 11.0 actual milat. V-8 angina with i tomatic. heavy duty. Uva. VW CENTER 85 To Choose From -All Models-—All Colors— -All Reconditioned— Autobahn mile North of Miracle Mila 1765 5. Telagraph_________FE 8-4i Ntw mni IlMd Core REASONABLE GRIMALDI CAR CO. Oakland__________FE $-9421 NEW I FINANCI '57 CHRYSLER8 8 '59 Plymouth and Pontla< 5 Cadillacs '57 to '58 '60 Ford and '60 Chevy I other late mof---- [economy CARS SI7S up S77 2235%'xiE 81175. MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET, 1788 W. Maple. Troy, Michigan. 2 mllee eptl ol Woodward. Ml 4-2735. ItoV'CHEVELLE 4-D66R. $TXN&| whitewalls. Ilka RONEY'S AU1 FE 4-4909. WOULD YOU BELIEVE NO OIMMICKS-NO GIVEAWAYS RIGHT CARS AT RIGHT PRICES '64 Chevy PIck-up ......... S7» '61 Cadillac convert....... 547' '42 T-BIrd Cpe, air ....... $77 '43 Impels Cm, auto ....... 847 '42 Pontiac Cpe ........... $37. '41 Plymouth Cm ........... SI77 MANY A6ANY MORE TO CHOOSE FROM OPDYKE MOTORS 2238 PontliC Rd. St Opdyka FE 1-7237_____________1-7231 dip, wtiitewalli, beautiful lion, only — 12075 OAKLAND CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 724 Oakland Ava._____FE 1-7434 1967 IMPERIAL Crown 4-door hardtop, full ppwor, with factory sir conditioning, vinyl rool. , $4495 BIRMINGHAM Chrysler-Plymouth 840 S. woodward Ml 7 3214 1760 dodgC iuHi PeIPect, $50. FE 2-4)47. Can be tatn at 147 wolfs St. bat. 10:30-2:30 p.m. KESSLER'S New Shipment 1968 Forci Pickups FINANCE PLAN. IF PROBLEMS, BANKRUPT, OR GARNISHEED WAGES, W E CAN GET YOUR CREDIT REESTABLISHED AGAIN. WE HASKINS AUTO. SALES 1744 CHEVY S$ super spprl vartibla, with tnaroon finleh, top. Only SII75. 4475 Dixie (USIOl Clarkston, MA S-3D2. TOM RADEMACHER CHEVV-OL08 1964 CORVAIR 3 mafic, radio, ha mow tirtt on and reody tor winter. Only 8695. On US 10 at M15. Clarkston. MA 5-5071. with auto- 1962 DODGE 7 patungor wagon, 0 automattc, ■"'''“■'$39? BIRMINGHAM Chrysler-Plymouth 848 S. Woodward______Ml 7-3214 1744 DODGE CORONET 2-DOOR. I cyl.^^^nvar. Exc. condition. 8I7S. IM7 T-BIRD, excellent COnM-lion, engine, cheulB, end Inferior rocondlllonod, no ruet. tot Mock, Ing. 824t. Cell 402-2121. 1743 FORD WAGON, g60D MO-_lor. Hre», S40. OL 14743. / I74'l FALCON, 8147. CALL bAR. Den el: FE 8-4871, CAPITOL f'Otto. SC. sat- Nov. 25 13 noon. Located N.E. a* % ■ of HowM. From tho Junction of ttte THESE VALUES TODAYi /M-59 Ofto 0. S.-23 take M-59 E. IWl vALuaa ioqati ml. to Dundy Rd. Turn. S. and Alia 7S .......“ Jocobson Trailer Sales OR 2-STtl I motorcyciat marked < kteorsrLTsini^ifirE i qd A dt A m cemperi .nd -llerp bHAll 1 AJN .HAVE DVER 80 CARS THATI 'can be PURCHASEb WITH 8475‘‘!!g-!Ht3. Vteferlai^elnuf eholrt,l kttr Cycio accoaaoritt. Taka M-5^| W. on_H1ckory| > to id Cloood Sundoya r aim TiSiC to DAWSON'S I ICO LAKE. Phono DODGE 855 Oakland Ave. Good selection on bond Many Models to select from NO'dOWN PAy'mEN^. COME IN AND SEE CREDIT Best Deal in Town! REMEMBER: Jack Long Fi Fatleil growing truck dceltr Oakland Cauidyl We have a . ol catching up to dp— and era nwan to do HI JACK LONG FORD ROCHESTER OL.1-7711 MGR. MR. IRV. LUCKY AUTO FE 4-1006 X or FE S-7IS4 1940 W. WKto Track S10M full price par month. Just liko o now cori Johtv McAuliffe For|d W Oakland Ava. FE 5^181 174S CHEW IMPALA, HARDTOP, air, lull BPwar. loadad, axe. condition, luSo, owi .... . owner, 4244)374. 1962 tHUNDEfcBIRO^CDNVlRTP bl' No monoy down. LUGKYAUTO 1748 W. Wide Trgck =E 4-1(184 or FE S-7BS4 744 FORD GALAXIB SUA t hardtnp, 42S h.p., Hurif 4 1 owntr, botl offor. 3384747. THE t>ONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 24, 1967 Wfw«w4 Uwd Cm 106|Wwf aiid UiM Can 106 Mtw mi MwJ Cwt 106 MARMAOUKi: ECONOMY CARS I gjR'L '^rsfh LUTELY no money DOWNjconv. . . .|7S «. 'i1 Rambftr—'M A$sumt wmMv Mymantt of Cadtllac . . . ta tomatic. Clean. 1964 OLDS ......................... $895 M Convartlbla with powar brakas and power steering, oulom " radio and wbltowoll tiros. 1966 PONTIAC Custom Tempest .<.....$1895 3 door hardtop. Powar sleoring, powar brekos, aulomollc. 1963 BUICK Wildcat ................$1095 Convertible, power steering, power brakes, radio, bucket sootv oon-solt. One ownar. 1965 T-BIRD .......................$1995 Convortiblo with lull power. This car la rtally sharp, 1963 FAIRLANE ..................... $695 Station wagon with radio* haaftr* whttawall tiros. Ixtra fine car. DOWNEY OLDSMOBILE, INC. 550 Oakland Ave. FE 2-8101 $2485 full price. HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. 464 S. WDDDWARD AVE, BIRMINGHAM __M^ 4-7500, 1*66 FORD 4-006r WITH ICYLIN-^ 012*3. MIKE 0?66^ FORD 1967 Fcrd Galaxie 500 Ha.dtop i 2 door, with V-B, automatic, power Sleerino. red with black trim, balance of new car warranty I $2375 ■ I BEATTIE "Your FORD DEALER Since 1930" On Dixie in Waterford at the double stoplight __ 623-0900 1965 CONTINENTAL AT MERRY OLDSMOBILE ROCHESTER, MICHIGAN root. $2395. On US 10 at M15. I VALIANT AUTOMATIC FULL rice of only $99. BUY HERE -kAY HERE! Marvel Motors 251 Oakland 4 FE $-4079 HAROLD HAROLD TURNER TURNER ^ -., 'auto. Good condition. $475. ^ _J«d262. __ ___ I 196rPLYMbUTH Sport Fury, power aquippad. malic transmission, bucket fklull price $14*3. $4* down will HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. FORD, INC. ' 464 S. WOODWARD AVE. 464 5 WOODWARD AVE. ... BIRMINGHAM^ _ Ml 4-7588 CYL. AUTOMATIC, _ ilaled Rocbesler OL 1*711 BIRMINGHAM Ml I lor 1*64 MERCURY BREE7EWAY SE- lOAA Dl VMAIITU $84 don Aulomallc, radio, haolar. 't66 PLYMOUTH i. Only $2388 lull prl„. __ «n, $1* weakly. 38,888 mile or power sleerlSo and brakes ’n Valiar ear new car warranty avail- Ideal family car. $1,8*5. Hillside radio L .. . . . 1 Uncoln-Mercury, 1238 Oakland, 33?- new e John McAuliffe Ford L ________________ _ 438 Oekleni Ave. FE 5-4181 '»« MERCURY MONTEREY TWO ------------------- ---------- Poor harAoo. Canary_yellow hi—- Thanksgiving Beauties! I *64 mustang Coup* - with vinyl top, aulomollc, matolllc biut, 188 par cent warranty. *46 TEMPEST Coupe, lull power, autometic, V-t. sunset red/ 188, * LIncoln-M Air conditioning dition. $14*5. Htllsl.. ______ cu^y, t^ OakJiind,J133-7l43^ 1*66 MERCURY MONTEREY TWO ! door hardlop. Automatic, radio, hooler, power steerinp lo.oflo nn> owner miles. Spore used. Simply gorgeous. __________ ... I Llncoln-Msrcury. 1238 0 a ■"“"'$1495 Village Rambler 666 S. Woodward Birmingham 646-3900 Sl,**5, —. ........ ..sarcury. ' l*nd,J33-7163._____ 1*5* bLOs7”2 DOOR. Wew BAf----------------------------------------------- tery. $138. FE 5-*S4*.__________1*62 PONTIAC CATALINA, REAL nt wtreenty. MUSTANG 2-plus-2 hardtop, new brekess Excet- TR'ANSMISSibN', RAdVd.^HEa'^' coiidition, ’’iuH' oriel ER, WHITEWALLS, FULL! RONEY'S AUTO., 131 Boldv PRICE $*** AllCftI IITKI V BI4\ i-i9M MONEY I, FE Autobahn Vi mile North of M CREDIT mgr. Mr. Parks HAROLD TURNER FORD. I ___4-7$00. ^ IW OLDS CUtLASS'F-M, S7ee:~ f DEPENDABLE USED CAR SELECTION I 1965 DODGE A-100 Sports Wagon, *-passanger. Ex- 1964 VW Sedan with dork pray malallc color. 1964 TEMPEST 4-Door 1963 FORD Wogon calltnt condition. Stock No. 43S2. Only - VI, auloiViatlc, radio, sharp unit throughout 1 Share. With V-l, aulomollc Md now tiros. Only - $1195 $1145 $1095 $1095 1967 DART Demo With 4kyl., automotic, now t«r 1965 CHEVY Bat Air Wagon, onaownor cor. 1966 PLYMOUTH 2-door 1966 PLYMOUTH Voliont signal iHloor hardtop, with KyL worrsnly. ShorpI V-s, automatic, powar slatrlng. New Only — with the economy S-cyl. with slick shin. Dark blut. Only - automotic. txlra sharp throughout! $1895 $1595 $1345 $1495 ABSOLUTELY _ _____________ IN, Assume weak- t**J PONTIAC CATALINA^AUTO ni ttes CALL malic, power sttoring, radio, hi iFbs •• or. An Ideal second cer and good buy. $4*s. Hillside LInct Mercury, 1258 Oaklend, 333-7163. >62 PONTIAC CONVERTIBLE, ---------__ , POWER EQUIPPED, AUTO- 1863 OLDSMOBILE "II" DYNAMIC MATIC TRANSMISSION, ~* two^loor hardtop. Automatic/ re- D'O- HEATER WHITtvlI*_ —............. FULL PRICE I6*S, ABSOLUTE- ..... ..... LY NO MONEY ...... jtl*l rR’^Uinsi..... Ml i'tsSP'"'* 1*63' ■ PO^tflAC CATAUNtr~CbN-w^lbla, doubla powar, ll*S. 674- t*63 PONT I D Pi rx/POw- condltlon, quick sala. S7S8! Chuck lay^kaS' 6^SW._ f*63 PONflAC. 2 DeoTTAUTO-matlc. 1747. Full price. No monev down. Several to choose from. LUCKY AUTO _ 1*48 W. Wldo Treck FE 4-1886 pr_ Fi >71^ SHELTON USED CAR SALES JE 8-4528 SPARTAN DODGE 855 OAKLAND (JUST NORTH OF CASS AVE.) NEW CAR SALES FE 8-9222 PONTIAC CATALINA twO- Hlllsldt Lincoln - Ooklond. 333-7163.______ *64 PONTIAC 4”5SSF1RtauFa 2-door hardtop, I owner an ihorp, priced lo sell. SI2*5. BOB BORST BIRMINGHAM 1964 frMPESf 4 DOOR $995 Haupt Pontiac On Mil at 1-71 Interchange vlertrslen^ MA 3-3100 1*65 fEMPEST S*>i5if“g5u>f. AN •It whHe beauty with biw trim. VI. automotic, power steering, brand new whiipwallt. Look llita 00* ever. $1,2*1. Hlllsid* LIncaln-Merpury, itSO Oakland, 353-^ I REPOSSESSIONS NO MONEY DOWN JUST ASSUME PAYMENTS 1962 Chevy Impalo station wogon, blue with motching interior, V-8 automatic, power steering ond brokes, radio, heater, whitewolls, full price $301.25 with weekly payments of $2.22. 1962 Ford Goloxie 500 convertible, red with white top and matching interior, V-8 automotic, power steering ond brokes, radio, heater, white-w 0 11 s, full price $329.18 with weekly payments of $2.56 per week. 1963 Ford Country Squire, 9-possenger wagon, full power, white with red interior, excellent condition, full price $507.51 with weekly payments of $4.35. 1962 T-Bird Landau, 2-door, hardtop, black with block leather interior, rodio, heater white-walls, with weekly payments of $6.01. 1961 Mercury Meteor, 2-door hardtop, metallic green with matching interior, V-8, stick, radio, heater, whitewalls, bolonce due $121.62 with payments of $2.07 per week. 1964 Comet 4-door, 6-cylinder outomotic, block with matching interior, radio, heoter, whitewalls, full price $307.34 with weekly poyments of $2.36. 1959 Chrysler Imperial, 4-door, hardtop, ivory white, full power, radio, heater, whitewalls, bolonce due $109.84, just assume poyments of $2.01 per week. 1963 Comet 2-door hardtop, bucket seats, blue with blue vinyl interior. Automatic, radio, heater, white-walls, full price $494.03 with weekly payments of $4.07. 1964 Studebaker station wagon, dork green with matching interior. 6 cylinder, automatic, radio, heoter, whitewalls. $95 with $1.27 per week. 1961 Plymouth Belvedere, 2-door hord-top, jet block with red and block inters ior, radio, heater, whitewalls, V-8, ou-tomotic, just assume payments of $3.12 per week. 1961 Pontiac Bonneville, 2-door, hardtop, chocolate with matching interior, V-8, automatic, rodio, heoter, whitewalls, just assume poyments of $4.84 per week. 1960 Chevy Impala 2-door, hardtop, brown with matching interior, V-8, outo-matic, radio, heater, whitewolls, with weekly payments of $2.37. 1963 Pontiac Coto-lino 2-door, hardtop, V-8, automatic, forest green with matching interior, power steering and brakes, radio, heoter, whitewolls, just ossume payments of $5.07 per week. 1963 Dodge Dort convertible, white with red interior, 6-cylinder automatic, power steering and brakes, rodio, heater, full price $422.63 with weekly payments of $3.68. 1960 Falcon, 2-door, 6 cylinder, ootomotic, rodio, heater, white-walls, bolonce due $87.92, just assume payments of $1.74 ' per week. 1963Vs Ford Goloxie 500 red with black lonou top, red leather interior, power steering ond brakes, whitewalls, radio, heater ^ SJlVE Paymints orronged to fit your budget. Immediate Delivery. Over , 100 cors to choose from, including mony convertibles. We occept trode-ins, handle the financing, even if you've been bonkrupt, garnished, just turned 21 «r are new in the orea, etc. ... i WALK IN—DRIVE OUT—CREDIT OK'eci FE 3275 WEST HURON Call Collect Within 50 Mile Rodius Corner MS9 and Elizobeth Lake Rood FE 8-4088 A A 7- THE POJtTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 1967 D-n —^Television Programs^^— Preorams fumishdd by ttationi lilted in this column dro lubloet to chango without notko Chotiiwit! a-WJIK-TV, 4-WWJ-tV, 7-.WXYt.tV, 9-CKLW-TV, 30-WKtD-TV; S6-WTVS TONIGHT , (2) (4) News (C) (7) Movie: “Slim Carter” (1957) Jock Mahoney, Julie Adams. (C) (9) -Pat Boone (C) (50) FUntstones (R) (C) (56) Friendly Giant 1:15 Davey and Goliath .6:30 (2) News — Cronkite (C) (4) News — Huntley, Brinkley (C) (50) McHale’s Navy (R) (56) What’s New 7:00 (2) Truth or Consequences (C) (4) Traffic Court (C) (9) GUUgan’s Island (R) (C) (50) I Love Lucy (R) (56) Continental Comment 1:30 (2) Wild Wild West - A territorial governor is ready -to defy the U.S. Cavalry in order to maintain his own domain. (C) (4) T a r z a n — Tarzan guides a widow and group of religious cultists to a promised land. First of two parts. Ethel Merman guests. (C) XI) Off to See the Wizard - “Hellcats" (1964) A trio of stunt fliers helps a girl recover the money her father left on a Latin island. George Hamilton, Barbara Eden. (C) (9) Movie: “Ten Seconds to Hell” (1959) After WW II, five Germans disarm bombs in Berlin. Jeff Chandler, Jack Palance. (R) (50) Perry Mason — "The Green-Eyed Sister” (R) (56) Medically Speaking 1:00 (50) Paris: 1900 0:30 (2) Corner Pyie, USMC-Gomer is swamped by expenses when he wins a free boat. (C) (4) (Special) Tijuana Brass — Herb Alpert and his band go on location to perform su-h hits as “Lonely F "Spanish Flea,” “M ;,ii; Trumpet” and “Mexican Shuffle” (7) Hondo r- A Boston financier has his grandson kidnaped to remove him from the influence of Hondo. (C) (50) Honeymooners (R) 9:00 (2) Movie: “Around the World Under the (1966) Scientists go beneath the sea to counter a series of earthtpiakes: Lloyd Bridges, Shirley Eaton, Brian Kelly. (C) (50) Combat! -' An orphan boy has a way of becoming friends of both sides in the war. (R) (56) Legacy 0:25 (9) News 9:30 (4) Accidental Family Jerry arrives unexpectedly, ruining Sue’s plans for Thanksgiving. (C) (7) Guns of Will Sonnett WiU and Jeff are the objects of a manhunt when a bull Jeff sold turns out to be poisoned. (C) (56) N E T Playhouse -Part 3 of “The Tale of Genjl” 10:00 (4) (Special) Bell Telephone Hour — Violinist and teacher Joseph Fuchs is profiled. (C) (7) Judd for the Defense — A woman psychic is the last hope for a youth accused of the murders of three girls. (C) (50) Movie: “Ghidrah, the Three - Headed Monster’ (Japanese, 1965) Yosuke Natsuki, Yuriko Hoshi. 11:00 (2) (4) (7) News (C) (9) News 11:30 (2) Movies: 1. “All the Fine Young Cannibals’ (1960) Natalie Wood, Robert Wagner. (C) 2. "The Story of Dr. Wassell” (1944) Gary COoper, La-raine Day. (R) (4) Johnny Carson (C) (7) Jonny Carson (C) (7) Joey Bishop (C) (9) Movie: “Inside the Mafia” (1960) Cameron TV Features Tonight TUUANA BRASS, 8:30 p-m. (4) ‘AROUND THE WORLD UNDER THE SEA,’ 9 p.m. (2) BELL TELEPHONE HOUR, 10 p.m. (4) Tomorrow OHIO STATE VS. MICHIGAN, 1:30 p.m. (7) GEORGU VS. GEORGIA TECH, 4:30 p.m. (7) 2 Newsreels to End Run NEW YORK (AP) - Universal Newsreel and News of the Day, the last two theatrical newsreels, will cease production before the year’s end. Henry H. Martin, vice president of Universal, said the demise was due mainly to “the speedy, free news coverage by television and the dwindling revenues and the rise in production costs.” ★ ★ ★ Universal, founded in 1929, will close out its 38-year run on Dec. 26. Camera Angles He 'Pictures' the Past By IRVING DESFOR AP Newsfeaturei An unusual photographic sideline has developed for John Domes, an architect, artist and antiques collector of Monroe, N.Y. He photographs people as they might have looked 100 years ago • To get “Instant tintypes,’ he used a Polaroid camera and got pictures in 10 seconds. To “fix” and preserve the prints, he develop^ a special aersol spray which dried instantly- To “age” the print, he put it under a gray acetate filter and produces the Daguerre-type and it did the trick visually. -To finish the presentation an old-fashioned gilt case. It started when Domes cre-la„a( j,, an old-fashioned-type gilt ated a photographer’s stndio of frame. 1850 for the National Arts and • Finally, to make the idea Square Garden in New York. jworthwile, there had to be ade-It contained a traditional pos- quate public response and willing chair with head-holder, stu-Iingness to pay a reasonable fee dio background of velvet hang-; He arrived at a charge of $4 for ings, accessories of marble sta-a one-person portraint and ani *:®®’<2) Movie: "The Day of MitcheU, Robert Strauss . (R) (50) Joe Pyne (C) 1:00 (4) Beat the Champ ' ' (7) Movie: “The Man Inside” (English, 1958) Jack Panance, Anita Ekberg. (R) 1:30 (4) News (C) 2:30 (7) News TOMORROW MORNING 6:05 (2) TV Chapel 6:10 (2) l!(ews (C) 0*^15 (2) Farm Scene 0:30 (2) Sunrise Semester (C) (7) Rural Report (C) 0:tg 47) Accent 6:55 (4) News (C) 7:00 (2) Captain Kangaroo (C) (4) Country Living (C) (7) Western Way 7:30 (4) Oopsy! the Clown (C) (7) Understanding Our World 8:00 (2) Woodrow the Woodsman (C) . (7) Wyatt Earp (R) 8:30 (7) Rebel (R) 9:00 (2) Frankenstein Jr. (C) (4) Super Six (C) (7) Casper (C) 9:30 (2) Herculoids (C) (4) Super President (C) (7) Fantastic Four (C) (9) Canadian Schools (50) Jungle Jim 10:00 (2) Shazzan! (C) (4) FUntstones (C) (7) Spider-Man (C) (9) Ontario Schools (50) World of Dogs 10:30 (2) Space Ghost (C) (4) Samson and Goliath (C) (7) Journey to the Center of the Earth (C) (9) William Tell (R) (50) Movie: “You Can’t Get Away With Murder’ (1939) Billy Halop, Hum phrey Bogart. (R) 11:00 (2) Moby Dick (C) (4) Birdman (C) (7) King Kong (C) (9) Window on the World 11:30 (2) Superman-Aquaman (C) (4) Ant/Squirrel (C) (7) George of the Jungle (C) 11:45 (9) Gardening (C) TOMORROW AFTERNOON 12:00 (4) Top Cat (C) (7) Beatles (C) (9) This Land of Ours (50) Movie: “Dinner J the Ritz” (1937) David Kiley, now between engagements, waiting to do a movie, told | . „ of Niven, Paul Lukas. (R) ilast night’s celebrants, “This is a bigger and much more ^ ‘ ^ ^ 12:30 (2) Jonny Quest (C) thusiastic audience than saw our first performance at East Had-jChnst^^^^ a cross was (4) CoolMcCool (C) I dam. Conn.” (7) American Bandstand ★ ★ ★ (C) (9) Country Calendar 1:00 (2) Lone Ranger (C) (4) Theater Four (9) Tennis (C) 1:15 (7) NCAA Pregame 1:30 (2) Road Runner (C) (4) Target (C) (7) College Football Ohio State (C) (50) Wre.stling (C) People in the News! By The Associated Press The first woman composer to have her vrork performed by the Boston Symphony Orchestra had her usual seat reserved in the first balcony today for the orcheslra’s performance of a piece honoring her 100th birthday Monday. She is Margaret Ruthven Lang, whose “Dramatic Overture” was performed by the orchestra in 1893, when she was 26. She is one of only five women composers whose works have been performed by the Boston Symphony. The selection that conductor Eric Leinsdorf has chosen to honor Miss Lang is an old Pilgrim standards, the 100th Psahn. Wyeth's JFK Portrait Near Completion Jamie Wyeth, 20-year-old artist son of painter Wyeth, says he has only about two more weeks of work to do on his portrait of the late President John F. Kewmdy. Wyeth said he wiU show the painting to Mrs. Kemmdy as soon as it's completed. K. Lemoyne BiUings, a friend of the Kennedy, said H Is hoped someone will bay the painting and present R either to the Kennedy Center for Performing Arts now being ballt hi Washington or to the Kennedy Library in Cambridge, Mass. Sweden Expels Russell Tribunal Aide Ralph Schoenman, U.S. secretary of the so the infants were bom deformed when the drag was taken during the seventh week of pregnancy. His research showed the Iowa woman had taken LSD — and no other drug — tour times, including during the seventh week of pregnancy. The amount taken was enough for her to experience hallucina tions, he said. “This connection between Thalidomide and LSD is the reason why we suspect there is a cause! relatimwhip between the LSD intake of the mother in this case and the malformation of the baby,” be said. A broadcast by the rebels, who proclaimed the independent republic of Biafra, said there is “still room for cooperation. It wag one of the strongest indications the civil war, which has cost thousands of lives, may be nearing an end in this most heavily populated African state. The broadcast came as four African heads of state began their second day of talks in Lagos with the military ruler of Nigeria, Maj. Gen. Yakubu Gowon. The leaders came to find a solution to the fighting. Gowon told the visiting leaders yesterday there is m possibility of the war ending unless the breakaway eastern region of Nigeria abandons secession. NOTHING SPECmC Today’s broadcast said nothing specifically ot ending the secessionist movement. ★ ★ ★ Meeting with Gowon were Emperor Haile Selassie of Ethiopia, Presidents Hamani Diori of Niger, Ahmadou Ahidjo of Camer-oun and Gen. Joseph Ankrah, Ghana’s military ruler. flint Boy, 5, Hangs Self Accidentally FLINT flJPB - A S-year-oW Flint boy apparently hanged himself accidentally in a closet at his home here on ’Thanksgiving day, police said. * * * ’The boy’s mother, Mrs. Jean Olson, said she found her son David hanged from a clothea hook in the closet, a belt tied around his neck. ★ ★ ★ A stuffed doll was hanged in the same manner next to him, police said. acceptance of the U.N. Security Council resolution on the Middle East and “puts us back at square one.” ★ ★ ★ “That’s why we want direct talks with the Arabs — not a U.N. arranged settlement,” the source said. Nasser ruled out such negotiations or an armistice with Israel in an address to his National Assembly and said the Israelis must evacuate all meas of Egypt, Jordan and Syria siezed in the June war. FORCE THREATENED “What has been taken by force cannot be recovered without force,” he warned. Optimists at U.N. headquarters in New York suggested that Nasser might be talking tough to keep his people quiet, a standard tactic of his. But Israeli Foreign Minister Abba Eban said in New York: “We take it as an authentic expression of Egyptian policy.” ★ * * Nasser, in his first public statement in four months, said he was not satisfied with the U.N. peace formula adopted on Wednesday. Israel has said it was willing to cooperate with the proposal. Birnriingham Area News^i .. ;; ; ' ■■■ -■' > School, Police Officials Will Meet Wednesday BLOOMFIELD HILLS - The board of e d u c a t i o n has announced that it was inviting neighboring police departments to meet with school officials on mutual problems next week. The superintendent and the five secondary school principals provided by some skiUed divers and swimmers. FRANKLIN WilUam White of 25860 14 MUe Road, journalism professcH’ and chairman ot the American Studies Program at Wayne State University, has will meet with representatives been awarded a grant of $17,500 I VIETNAMESE VISITORS - Daniel T. Murphy (right), chairman of the Oakland County Board of Auditors, explains county government to three South Vietnamese officials who visited the County Courthouse Wednesday. The visitors are (from left): Hoang figoc An, chief justice of Phu Yen Province; Haynh Dieu, congressman; and Phan Tuang Van, a language department expert. The men are on a State Department sponsored tour. Former Gl Claims U.S. Viet Atrocities ROSKILDE, Denmark (A The plan, sponsored by Britain, calls for appointment of a neutral peacemaker to promote a permanent settlement, Israeli withdrawal “from territories occupied in the recent conflict,” an end to the Arab state of belligerency with Israel and the recognition of all nations in the Middle East “to live in peace within secure and recognized boundaries.” ‘EGYPT’rOWAIT’ Rather than endwse this, Nasser said “Time is on our side' and that Egyptian forces should wait until ready. “When the time comes, we will not be on the defensive,” he declared. MIf we resort to military action, our friends would understand and even support us.” Gunnar Jarring, the Swedish ambassador to the Soviet Um has been named special U. N. mediator for the Middle East. He said he would probably fly from Moscow to New York Sunday for talks with U.N. Secretary General U Thant. It’s not been possible to fol the situation too closely from here,” Jarring said. “I’l not entirely in the picture, so can’t comment.” SOVIETS HOPEFUL The Soviet Union, which backed Egypt and Syria with arms during, the June war and PoUce speculated the child has been replacing some of the — A young Negro who said he was a former U.S. infantrynuin told the so-called Russ( crimes tribunal today atrocities he claimed he and other Americans committed in Vietnam. David Kenneth Tuck of Cleveland, Ohio, gave the testimony at the tribunal set up by Lord Bertrand Russell to try to show the United States is guilty of war crimes. Tuck said he had served in Vietnam as a private first class in the 33rd Infantry Regiment before returning to the United States last Felnniary and becoming a mailman in Cleveland. ♦ * * Tbck said he once saw a Japa-nese-American behead an injured Vietnamese prisoner with „„ „„„ a machete and then throw the [others after U.S. forces head downhill “as a warning to' other prisoners that we meant business.” Ibe incident occurred near a may have jumped from the chair in the closet. The Weather FnU U. S. Weather Bureau Report PONTUC AND VICINITY-Cloudy today with a few periods of light snow this mornlug changing to rain this afternoon. High 35 to 48. Rain ending this evening with partial clearing later tonight. Low 25 to 38. Partly cloudy and a little warmer Satnr^ day. South to southwest winds 5 to 15 miles per hour. Sunday outlook: Cloudy and slightly cooler. Percentage chance oi precipitation: Today 58, tonight 38, tomorrow 18. Arab losses said in the Security Council that it would have preferred another peace formula. But a prominent Soviet commentator, Viktor Mayevsky, wrote today in the Soviet Communist party newspaper Pravda that the resolution “could be a step toward a political settlement.” “The task now,” he said, “is to fulfill the decision and immediately withdraw Israeli troops from all the territories occupied by them.” ★ ★ As Israel reads the resolution, it does not have to withdraw until other provisions of the resolution are fulfilled, and the mention of “secure and recognized boundaries” means it is not to those which limited Israel before the war. Special Forces camp, he said “after the first battle involving my unit. Everybody was angry with our heavy losses.” BARBED WIRE CAGE Last January, Tuck said, he| saw a put a knife into the body of captured Vietcong who was tied up and lying on the ground. Ottawa Ending Death Penalty OTTAWA (UPI) - The House of Commons has voted the abolition of capital punishment for murder for a five-year trial period, except for killers of police-men and prison guards. I The action was taken yester-requires only the for-Vietnamese soldier approval and the traditional “royal assent' before it becomes law. Executions in Canada are by hanging. “Since he still refused to speak, he was placed in a cage made of barbed wire,” Tuck said. “He lay there on his hands and knees for a full two days He must have been a superman because he never spoke up. An American officer was present and gave the orders.” ★ ★ ★ In March 1966, ’Tuck said, he himself shot a Vietnamese woman who had not lined up with Cam- Three Diseases in Resurgence A’TLANTA (UPD—'Hiree dreaded diseases which had been on the decline in the United States for a number of years showed signs of resurgence during the last year, according to U. S. Health Department officials. ’The National Communicable Disease Center here reported noticeable increases in the rate of malaria, leprosy and diphtheria, according to its annual morbity and mortality report releas^ yesterday. Malaria cases in the United iates during, last. year, increased at the fastest rate in more than 38 years. The center said the sharp increase — from 147 in 1885 to 585 In 1961 - was caused by seiwicemen returning from Vietnam. ■Also in 1966, 109 cases of leprosy were reported in 36 states. Leprosy had declined steadily since 1963. Ten years ago, only 36 cases of leprosy were reported in this country. Hie center said although a sharp increase was noted in the number of cases of diphtheria, there was a decline in deaths attributed to that disease. rounded a village near bodian border. ‘The woman looked suspicious, an officer told me, and ordered me to shoot her,” Tuck said. “I’m sorry I did it, but it was an order.” Tuck told the tribunal of being on board a helicopter carrying two North Vietnamese prisoners in November 1966. “When one of them started talking, an American threw him out of the copter —flying at 6,000 feet altitude—in order to make the other prisoner keep quiet,” Tuck said. He said it was general practice not to take prisoners except North Vietnamese officers. “We shot them. The only good Vietnamese is a dead one, we were told.” ★ * ★ During cross«(amination. Tuck said that after a battle many American soldiers “cut off the ears of the dead ene-nies. The man with the most ears was considered the No. 1 VC killer, and when we came back to camp, he got free beer,” he explained. Tuck asserted that most infantrymen in Vietnam are Negroes, Puerto Ricans “poor whites.” A total of 106 of 117 men in his unit were Negroes and this was typical, he said. * ★ He stated he feared being killed “even by my own comrades” if he attempted to disobey orders. “They would have gotten rid of me one way or another.” fimm the B10 0 m f i e 1 d Hills, Bloomfield Township and West Bloomfield Township police forces at 9:30 a.m. Wednesday in the board offices on Andover Road. The meeting is being called to discuss methods and procednres for close cooperation regarding safety, traffic rules, vandalism all facets of which concern both the police departments and the school system, said Supt. Eugene John- The meeting will be open to the public. ★ ♦ ♦ The board recently discussed the possibility of making a future addition to tiie administration building snce office space has had to be rented outside the present building, said Johnson. SWIMMING POOL A formal dedication for the new swimming pool which was put into use this fall at the Andover High Schoof will be Dec. 10. ★ ★ w Edwin Wichert wilbe on hand to discuss pool rules and regulations. Entertainment will be by the National Endowment foi the hunianities to work on the collected writings of poet Walt Whitman. The grant comes through the Center for Editions of American Authors, a group of eight authors collaborating on writing the multivohime edition to be pubUsbed by the New York University Pr^ss. w ★ *■ White, on a gear’s leave of absence front the Wayne State, is working on three parts of Whitman’s collection including his diaries, journals and other un-publisl)^ prose; his newspaper and magazine articles; and a bibliography of all of Whitman’s writings. Excepted from the measure are the capital crimes of rape and treason. Vote on the controversial bill, a compromise measure defeat ed in Commons last year, was 114-87. Sixty-four members, including Prime Minister Lester Pearson, were absent and did not vote. Pearson last week during debate on aboliton supported the bill with an impassioned speech that included an attack on capital punishment on the grounds it is merely retaliatory and does not deter crime. Pearson said that instead of exacting ultimate punishment for murder, Canada should seek to eliminate the slums, ghettos and emotional and personality disorders he asserted are re- Blaze Rips Area Home Police Official Talks on Riots WASHINGTON (AP) - Police Commissioner Howard R. Leary of New York Gty has told President Johnson’s Advisory Com-mlssian on Civil Disorders the requisites of a riot include what he called “dry grass” conditions sparked into flame, fed by rumors and fanned by agitators. Leary’s testimony before the comniission Sept. 20 was released Thursday. The commission was set up to investigate causes of last summer’s riots and to make recommendations An estimated $20,000 damage lor dealing with the problem was done to the home of the Larry P. Bossier family at 2561 Little Trail, Commerce Township last night. Leary described dry grass conditions as “a congested urban area, inhabited largely by [persons who feel left out of the The township fire department prosperity that marks most of the contemporary American society.” “It is marked by a rising standard of living,” Leary said, “but an even more steeply rising scale of demands on society. There is generally a high level of frustration, an increasing amount of anger and almost al- estimates $15,000 damage to the house and $5,000 damage to the contents. ★ ★ ♦ Chief Clarence Kuttkuhn is investigating the cause of the fire. No one was at the home when the fire was reported at 7:48 p.m. yesterday. Firemen and sponsible for murders and other] and Walled Lake departments crimes. left the scene at 10:23 p.m. equipment from the township ways a feeling that comes from years of broken promises, and Sign-Up Deadline Near for Pageant ’The deadline is nearing for potential Junior Miss applicants. Monday is the last day that the Pontiac Area Jaycees, contest sponsors, will accept applications for the Pontiac Area Junior Miss Pageant. The pageant will be held Dec. 2, at 8 p.m. in the Pontiac Northern High School auditorium. Senior girls between the ages of 18 and 19 from the Pontiac area are eligible to compete. Scholarships of $250“ will go to the winner, and $100 scholarships to the runner-up. Merchandise awards will also be donated by local firms. ★ ★ The winner of the Pontiac Junior Miss Pageant will . compete in the State Junior Miss Pageant in January, also sponsored by the Pontiac Area Jaycees. NATIONAL FINALS The state winner will then enter the national finals in Mobile, Ala., in March. Contestants will not be judged on beauty, but on scholastic ability, mental alertness, poise and personality, along with physical fitness and creative talent. ★ ★ ★ Entry forms may be obtained at La Vergne’s Hair Fashions, 887 Woodward. ranges from mute disappointment to outspoken rage.”-POUCE ARE INVOLVED The spark usually is an incident in which the police are involved, sudh as an arrest or the policeman’s use of a gun, he continued. This is inevitably followed by rumors which magnify the original incident out of proportion, he said. Thus, Leary testified, with the condition, the incident and the rumor, “Step No. 4 begins when the agitators appear on the scene, ready to promote their own aims and ambitions and programs at the expense of the community they profess to serve.” ★ ★ ★ Leary told the commission the agitator inevitably turns his attention to teen-agers, exciting them into committing acts of vandalism. At that point, he said, a sufficient police force is required-first, to prevent further vandalism and then to head off looting, w ★ -e “This is a most critical area, because it is at this point that the agitator’s efforts to turn disturbance into a riot will succeed or fail,” Leary explained. Student Grounded—It's Time for Book Learning , (EDITOR’S NOTE — Jean Satie, a Pontiac Frees reporter, uHfe of a commercial artist and mother of six children, is taking Aging lessons. This is the 13th in a series.) By JEAN SAILE Anybody like to ask me the four strokes of a piston? Intake — compression — list 1 it:g my private duel with the landing pattern at Oakland-Pontiac Aiiport, I’ve started ground school classes. They’ll be necessary If ever I am to win a private pilot’s NATIONAL WEATHER—Snow flurries are expected to-' night in extreme northern New England and portions of the western Ukes, central Plairts and southeastern Plateau. Mixed rain and snow are forecast for the northern Plateau. Rain and showers will occur in the upper Lakes rei^n, the Ohio Vallty, tbe central Gulf Coast, southwestern Texas and the Pacific Northwest. ' t ' C Art Trowbridge is the instructor; and, while file first few classes aro devoted to a, general understandipg of the workings of an airplane, it appears that the real crux of the matter Is going to be a study of NO STRONG POINT Mathematics is about to assume an Importance greater than the weekly grocery bill. Mathematics has never been a strong point with me, but Thnrbri^ assures that I will be tested and retested until I have the material in hand or head. What this is all for, of coarse,, is the Federal Aviation Agency test which says either I know my bastes well enoagh to get a license or I don’t. While this course continues, I will also be continuing to fly. First the landing pattern, then the solo, then about three more hours of landing pattinms, about four hours in a practice area, then 10 hours of crosaouA>burRimthr WS. ot>oo 0yPoianiidCmeiw&H Today 6 p.m. to 9 p.m.-Saturday 9:30 Oam. to 3:30 p.m. . .. and you don't hava to buy a thing. Juit coma in and atk tha Polaroid Camara Girl to take your picture. And you'll laa it in full color in 60 tacondt. Sorry, limit 1 picture par parson or group. The Polaroid Comoro Girl will altoanswaronyquattionconeamingPOLAROIDcamoraaand picture taking. Polaroid Prioed So Low We Can’t Show ’em -So Come in Cheek SIMMS Prioos PDLARDID SWINGER CAMERA Taka block 'n' white pictures and see 'em in 10 seconds. Camera even tells you when to fake the picture. Regular $19.95 GOOD 210 AUTO. 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Kodachrome 35mm Color Slides 20-exposure roll of color film for indoor or outdoor slides. Limit 10 rolls. Kodachrome 8mm Color Movies KpDAK SUPER 8 CDLDR FILM FILAAS ]|37 1^59 ]|98 2 Days Dniy. Sale of KDDAKS Best Movie and Still CAMERAS and PRDJECTDRS Charge It! Major Credit Cards Honored Get Instant Credit On Purchases of $30 to $150 On Our Plan—Ask Us Now KODAK 404 INSTAMATIC FLASHCUBE BECTRIC-EYE CAMERA SET $59.95 value — electric eye sets correct exposure. Film od-vances automatically after every shot. Flashcube for 4 shots without changing bulb. Complete outfit for 39»« Automatic Jamproof ‘KDDAK’ CARDUSEL 8DD PRDJECTDR $144.98 value new, compact, quieter version of the Kodok Carousel proiector. Round 80-slida troy is torn-proof ond spillproof. Automatic slide chonge and lull remote conirol. Fine 4* inch lens, too $ I holds. 99“ Instant Loading-Electric Eye-Reflex Zoom Lens KDDAK SUPER 8 MDVIE CAMERA $ 159.96 value — deluxe way to take better movids. Drop in loading Super 8 with electric eye and battery drive for no winding. Reflex viewing thru fait fl.B len. that ZOOM from wide-angle to telephoto. Foldowoy plitol grip. $1 holds. Deluxe M6 model. 109»« SHDW NEW SUPER 8 FILM and REQUUR 8mm KDDAK M8DMDYIE PRDJECTDR 98 N. Saginaw St. $184.50 value - ihows both tha Super 8 ond regular 8mm lllms with equal eaie ot 7 ipeeib. Profector threadi automatically plu> H hot Slow MOTION - obo forward ond reverM ihowingi. With fl.5 lent. Only!I holds. SIMMS.!!* 128*« CAMERAS —Main Floor Vote Near FARMINGTON - School district voters hefe'TwiH consider Monday a ^million bond i$soe and a 5-miII (^lerating the bond issue is the second part of a total $12-million package presented to voters more than a year ago. District voters approved $3 million of the package in June 1966. The bonding program will finance a third senior high school, a fifth junior high, the 19th and 20th elementary schools, and about 50 acres for future Supt. Roderick Smith said that the administration anticipates no increase in the debt retirement tax levy. He explained that the bonds will be retired over a 30-year period and that the district can receive assistance from the State School Bond Loan Fund. The millage increase for 10 years would raise the school’s operating tax levy from the curemt 23.4 mills to 28.4 mills. The total tax levy, including the 9 mills for bonds, comes to 32.4 mills currently. Passage of the millage increase would make the totad levy 37.4 mills. Salaries, wages and fringe benefits will; take up most of the millage increase. • The superintendent also points out that enrollment, has gone up by 912 students this year to a total of 15,264. Polls will be open from 7 a.m. to 8 p.m. Monday. Voting places are Precinct 1, Farming-ton Junior High, 33000 Thomas; Precinct 2, Dunckel Junior High, 32800 12 Mile; Precinct 3, feagle Elementary, 29410 W. 14 Mile; and Precinct 4, Middle Belt Elementary, 24400 Middle Belt. ★ ★ ★ District residents permitted to vote are those who are registered voters and own property. THE PONTIAC PRESS hffJI/em FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 1907 A—4 8 Mills Asked hr District WHOO IS THAT?—The new Rochester North Hill Elementary School mascot, a former airplane hangar decoy, gets a look at student council members Mark Hugger (left) son of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Hugger, 1324 Catalpa; Ann Ungier, daughter of Mrs. Doris Ungier, 801 Plate; and Barbara Moyer, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Maynard Moyer, 5625 N. Rochester. Romeo to Decide School Levy Monday New Mascot at North Hill Is Feather in Students' Cap ROMEO — School district residents here will decide Monday whether they want to approve an 8-mill tax levy — three of which would be renewed. The school system will be faced with an anticipated $100,000 deficit by next June 30, if the election fails, according to Asst. Supt. Robert Randell. “A favorable election result will also permit us to draw up a preliminary budget for next year and begin salary negotiations with school employes and teachers," he added. Polls will be open at the Romeo Junior High School and the Washington Elementary School from 7 a m. to 8 p.m. If the millage passes, residents would be paying a total of 27.6 mills, said Randell. The residents now pay 22.6 mills. Five of the eight mills requested would be an additional tax; however, all would be assessed for five years beginning in December. 1968, he said. This would be an additional cost to the taxpayer of about $49 a year based on $5 per $1,000 of state equalized valuation. “Of the additional five mills, three would be needed to retire the debt and the remaining two would be for additional maintenance, six new school buses, some remodeling, and salary adjustments,” said Randell. ★ ★ ★ He explained that each mill was worth $33,000 each year to the school district based on 92 per cent collection of taxes. Choices for Appointments at Military Academies Set Keego Officer's Futile Bid to Save Infant Recognized KEEGO HARBOR — Auxiliary police officer David Erickson, 2955 Elam, has been recognized by the City Council for his attempt to save an infant’s life Sept. 15. Although Erickson revived the infant three times by mouth-to-mouth resuscitation on the way to the hospital, the infant died at the hospital. Also, the council has approved the renting of a building on Beachmont to bouse the City Department of Public Works machinery during the winter City Manager Gary Dickson expects the rent from December through April to amount to about $1,000. The council also approved the promotion of Mrs. Robert Ward, 2338 Willow Beach, from deputy treasurer to treas- The promotion for Mrs. Ward, who has been employed by the city for four years, includes no increase in her $5,400 yearly salary. Dickson, who is also ^ity clerk, had been treasurer. Congressman William S. Broomfield, R-18th District, has announced his nominations for appointments to the U.S. Army, Navy and Air Force academies. Five appointments will be made — two each to the Naval and Air Force academies, one to the Army academy. The nominees have passed competitive examinations for the academy of their choice. After appointed, they must pass entrance exams. Nominees are rated as principal and aUemate delegates. ' ★ ★ ★ The principal delegate for the military academy at West Point is Theodore D. Lee, son of Mr. and Mrs. Edward M. Lee, 200 Tuckahoe, Birminghart). He is a senior at Birmingham Seaholm High School. WEST POINT ALTERNATES West Point alternates include Michael M. Aldrich, son of Mr. an dMrs, Edwin M. Aldrich, 124 Glendale, Rochester: Frederick Van Vurst, son of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Van Vurst, 4889 Ardmore, Bloomfield Hills; and Roger D. Hersh-man, son of Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Hersh-' man, 3736 Thornbrier, Bloomfield Hills. One of the two principal candidates for the Naval Academy, Annapolis, is George J. 4||art, son of Mrs. Elinor H. Quart, 235 S. Glengarry, Birmingham. Annapolis alternates are Thomas E. Snyder, son of Capt. Edwin K. Snyder of Washington, D.C., formerly of Birmingham; MacGregor H. Paul, son of Mr. and Mrs. David H. Paul of Paxton, Mass., formerly of Birmingham; Keith C. Zajic, son of Mr. and Mrs. Richard C. Zajic, 3257 Wendover, Troy; and Stephen J. Hopkins, son of Mr. and Mrs. John H. Hopkins, 142^ Christian Hills, Rochester. ★ * ★ The 11 principal candidates for the Air Force Academy include Douglas R. Brower, son of Mr. and Mrs. George E. Brower, 3414 N. Adams, Troy; Michael Phillips, son of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph H. Phillips, 1085 E. Snell, Rochester; William A. Rose, son of Mr. and Mrs. Hans Rose, 6677 Timber Ridge, Birmingham. Others are Mark C. Kraetzer, son of Mr. and Mrs. Henry C. Kraetzer, 1680 Norfolk, Birmingham; and Harold L. Chambers, II, son of Mr. and Mrs. Harold L Chambers, Sr. 47 Sheffield, Troy. OU Student Teacher Is First in Avondale The Avondale School District has received the assignment of its first student teacher, Brenda J. Hamilton of Fraser. ★ ★ ★ A student at Oakland University, she will begin her teaching assignment in the Avondale elementary schools, according to Hobart H. Jenkins, superintendent of schools. Response to Detroit Hike Novi Increases Water Rate 2 Michigan Soldiers Are Killed in Vietnam WASHINGTON (AP) - The Defense Department announced yOsterday that two Michigan men were killed in action with the Army in Vietnam. They are Pfc. High D. Scott, husband of Mary E. Scott of Adrian, and Pfc. Garry L. Reichard, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ray Reichard of Newaygo. NOVI — Water rates have been raised in the village. The increase was recommended by the village manager, Harold Ackley, and passed by the Village Council in response to higher rates charged by the Detroit system, which supplies the village. The village will be absorbing a small share of the increase effective this week reported the manager. The rate hike affects the minimum quarterly bill and the rate per 1,000 gallons over the minimum volume. The increase ranges from 25 cents more eacih three months for 7,500 gallons of water with a %” main to $2.50 more each three months for 25,000 gallons with a main. Clarkston Youth Group to Feature Panel Talk CLARKSTON — A youth panel will be featured at the 8 p.m. Monday meeting of the Clarkston Area Youth Assistance Committee. ★ ★ w Robert Brumback will serve as moderator for the session which is to take place at the Township Hall Annex. 90 N. Main. Some 14 young people will participate. Refreshments will be served. Avon OKs Ambulance Funds AVON TOWNfefflP - The Township Board has voted to subsidize Fleet Ambulance Service to the cost of $500 a month on a six-month trial basis to keep the service available to the area. The decision was arrived at following a combined meeting with city of Rochester and Oakland Township representa-Uves. It was passed by the board following a short ezecatfve session during its regular meeting Wednesday night. Fleet had asked for a $1,000 a month subsidy in order to keep ambulances in the area east of Pontiac. Rochester City Manager William Sinclair said he would recommend to the council Monday night that it pay $300 a month on a six-month trial basis. The remaining $200 a month is under consideration by Oakland Township, which however is partially served by ambulances from the Oxford-Lake Orion-Romeo areas. PROPOSAL TABLED lit other business the board tabled its proposed water-and sewer operating ordinance for further study. The ordinance, introduced for the first time at a special meeting last week, would provide for^ the construction and maintenance of some $8 million worth of additional Charted as part of the township’s In- ternal Phase I development program — timed to be ready when the Clinton-Oakland Sewer Interceptor goes into use-age in about two years — the plans call for 27 mUes of additional sanitary sewers and 48 miles of additional water mains. The sewer program would encom-tion of the township and the water pro-tion of the township and th ewater program would include 26 central sections of the township. * W 0 Cost on the sewer program is estimated at $3 million.and on the water system at $5 million by Johnson and Anderson engineering firm of Waterford Township. ROCHESTER — Who’s the smartest bird in town? “The North Hill Owl - That’s Whoo!” Ask any of the elementary students who Wednesday ensconced the symbol of wisdom and knowledge as their official mascot. Done to the accompaniment of a new school song, written by Mrs. Thomas Marsh, music teacher, and sung to the tune of “The Marine’s Hymn,’’ the in-stallatiop ceremony created more excitement than has been seen in a long time in the elementary halls of learning at North Hill School. “He is very wise and loyal and foresight is his trait. Our leaders look up to the owl, and help to keep us straight,” sang the North Hill choir. ★ ★ * What they were looking up to was a Commerce Twp. OKs Land-Fill Law COMMERCE TOWNSHIP - A sanitary land-fill ordinance passed last night by the Township Board sets up controls tougher than those of the state. Some of the controls more stringent than the state law are those for fencing, green-belts and setbacks, said Township Supervisor Robert H. Long. A prospective operator of a land-fill must still obtain a permit from the township, according to a zoning ordinance already in effect. The newly passed ordinance doesn’t take effect for about 35 days. ★ ★ ★ It includes, as the state law, provisions regarding the covering of refuse. SEWER LETTER SENT The board also sent a letter to the Oakland County Department of Public Works stating the township’s interest In participating in an interceptor sewer qystem which may become available in several years. . The system may bo financed by special assessments to tn^e serviced, said the supervisor. ^ former airplane hangar decoy, contributed by an anonymous donor, and outsider in colorful felt finery. YET TO BE NAMED Presented to Ann Ungier, 11-year-old. pr^^ident of the student council, the owl is yet to be named. It had to be representative of Rochester owls, for a display in the school hall noted that while most owls hunt at night and sleep during the day, “owls that are found in Rochester are the longeared and short-eared owls and sometimes a snowy owl. The short-eared owl hunts by day and sleeps by night and eats mostly birds.” As everyone knows, no student should be a “night owl.” * * * Quite descriptive of owlish habits, the display also noted, “They eat small mammals like mice, rats and moles. When they finish eating they regurgitate the bones, fur and feathers that they can’t digest. OWL PELLETS It continues, “These are called owl pellets. They are found under roosting trees. There were some rather graphic examples of such items in the case. “Owls prefer to live in a pine grove. They use nests that other birds or small mammals make.” ★ ★ * Come to think of it — that’s probably pretty smart too, as anyone who has ever built a house can vouch. State Road Toll for Holiday Is at Least 9 So Far By ■The Associated Press At least nine persons including an Orchard Lake youth have lost their lives on Michigan roadways during this Thanksgiving holiday weekend, most in two-car collisions. Five died in collisions with other cors, three died when they lost control and ran off the road and another was a pedestrian struck down by a motorist. The Associated Press count, which began at 6 p.m. Wednesday, ends Sunday midnight. The victims: Lloyd W. Robinson, 39, of Detroit, who was killed early this morning when his auto, ran off a Detroit freeway and struck a pole. ★ ★ ★ Warren H. Thomas, 45, of Detroit, who was killed yesterday in Detroit when his auto collided with another car. William Flood, 45, of Benton Harbor, killed when he lost control of his car i«iear Benton Harbor early yesterday and ran into a tree. ★ ★ ★ Gaylord attorney Melvin Freel, killed yesterday morning when the car in which he was riding struck a utility pole, U miles south of Gaylord. Mrs. Mary Fendel, 73, of Portland, died in a Lansing hospital yesterday morning from injuries suffered Wednesday night. She was walking a half-block from her home to church when she was hit by a car. Mrs. Betty Steffen, 25, of Detroit, killed yesterday morning in a two-car accident in Detroit. Frank Heffner, 32, of Livonia, killed last night wh«i his auto crossed the center line and collided headon with another car in Bedford Township. Richard. Quinn, 22, of Detroit, killed when his car was hit by another vehicle, whicji crossed the center line in Detroit last night. Richard Jordan, 18, of 3184 Middle Belt, Orchard Lake, killed early yestet-day in a car-truck accident in Bloomfield Township. 'Here Comes Santa' to Oxford Tomorrow OXFORD — Santa comes to Oxford tomorrow in a 2 p.m. parade down Washington Street that will climax with his installation at the Santa Claus House in the Village Park. Mr. a n d Mrs. Richard Medaugh, Chamber of Commerce parade chairmen, report some 40 entries will take part. The' parade will start at the junior high school and continue to Crawford Street. 6 Youths Arrested in Shelby Twp. as Arson Suspects SHELBY TOWNSHIP - Six Shelby-Utica area youths, including three 17-year-old girls, spent last night in Macomb County Jail on suspicion of arson. They were to be arraigned today before Macomb Justice Edmond Schmidt in Mount Clemens. Held were Carol Moore, 17, 47911 Burton; Michael Prowse, 18, 8714 Pemberton; Janice Dzierblcki, 17, 44287 Merrill; Marjorie Muszyski, 17, 8260 Rhode; Frank Tobey Jr., 20, 8471 San Marco; and James Good, 18,6009 Goff. They were arrested at 10 p.m. last night on 23 Mile Road west of Hayes near the site of an abandoned barn by Shelby Police Officers David Miller and Kenneth Stevens. The two officers said the barn showed evidence of an attempt having been made to set it afire. * ♦ * The youths were picked up as officers were on their way to investigate an abandoned house fire at 23 Mile and Hayes. Another fire in an abandoned shed at 25 Mile and Mound roads had been reported previously. Officers said an investigation linked the six with all three blazes. The charge of arson is a felony and carries up to a maximum sentence of ID years in jail. SISTERLY DREAM .— Karcri, 8, and Lisa, 5, daughters the Chevrolet exhibit at the Detroit AiRo Show. The show of Mn and Mrs. Lawrence K. Shinoda, 36590 Maas, Utica, nans through Sunday at Cobo Hall, try dut a gasotine-powerad dpetm car to -be given away at r A—8_____ THB^ PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 24, 1967 _ Get Luxurious Improvements PARIS (if) — Xt its best, sub-. In rubber-tir^ silence, t h e way riding in Paris can be a two-tone blue and pastel yellow pleasant affair. It’s not always train arrives and stops with a at its best, and they’re working faint moan of the brakes. Some-on that. 1 times an intercom can be heard There are still mobs in rush!giving traffic instructions, as on hour, some stations, are dark an airliner, and odoriferous, and a lot of! If there is no regular red plas-rolling stock shows badly its tic-cushioned seat available, the passenger might find a jump-seat. If left standing, he takes a firm grip on a polished chrome upright because the acceleration can take him off his feet. When everyone is clear of the doors — a closed-circuit television monitor on the platform half-century of service. But the managers of the government-run Metro are pressing at improvements, and raising fares to pay for them. ■ ★ ★ * Today, on an ideal trip, a Parisian can descend a wi(Je stairway with white granite balustrade into a, light, airy ticket room lined with tasteful window . ■ r*j. *1 displays of modern furniture ShOrf Strike and Oriental carpets. His ticket^ may be either second class or' t a r.n ii , first class (less crowded). Will tlUrT The tunnel decor is new; enameled aluminum paneling, flint (AP) - Union mem-in, say, prairie green, autumn ,,ers at the General Motors AC brown and yellow. The commu^ g Flint will ter sees clean, up-t^date ad-.^*;^ ^^^kend in vertismg posters and perhaps ^ 3^3^ museum pieces in glass cases. 3^^^^^^ 3^3(33! p,33j3 ART REPRODUCTIONS spokesman for United Auto He may even bathe his eyes Workers’ Local 661 said t h‘ e with paintings of Van Gogh, 1 walkout was called to protest a Dufy and other masters repro-| short work week at some sec-duced in brilliant back-lighted tions of the plant, excessive ov-collages of splintered glass. ertime at others, and the lack A small box on the ceiling dif-of settlement of local plant is-fuses an aroma of pines — yes,! sues. a "perfumer.” An air-condition- The 2,800 union members will er wafts cool, filtered air over walk out Saturday and plan to him. resume work Monday. helps to verify this — the tra;n is off with little more than a whir of the electric motors. At the end of the trip, the rider may hear a clinking of hammers, but this only confirms that another station beautification or modernization job is under way. * * ★ Then, confidently, he strides aboard a “moving sidewalk” or an escalator which delivers him all the way to the street, re laxed ancl ready to face his job or his wife. Well, perhaps. These features exist on seg ments of the vast Paris system but few riders encounter all on the same trip. The perfumers and air-conditioners, for exam pie, are experimental only in a few stations. The majority of the system is still frequently stuffy and rattle-bang. PNEUMATIC TIRES Three of the 14 main lines have been placed on pneumatic tires, with two of them increasing capacity 25 to 30 per cent due to greater speed and longer trains — which also meant longer stations. Rubberization is too slow tc continue, however, there are on ly a few hours per night for work on the tire runways, and the ancient trains must be replaced faster before they wear out completely. There is more time for track alterations except possibly for one line on elevated rails. New steel-wheeled cars In production will be almost as quiet‘as the rubber-tired jobs tecause of heavier insuiation, officials say. All this costs money, 0 f course. Fares recently shot up, for example, from 11 to 18 cents a ride when a book of 10 first-class tickets is bought. PAYS FOR ITSELF But station beautification, progressing at about 30 a year. helps pay for itself, officials say! The prettier the stations, the more advertisers are willing to pay for space. And presumably, the more pleasant it is to whisk under the' city’s traffic jams, the more of-j ten people will do it. I "hdlo,dialingr. 0 Michigan Bell You know the tune. It goes: I.Diall. Z Dial the Area Code (i=f different from your own). 3. Dialthenumberyouwant Then say hello. ’vpiChi Rowan & Martin, Jefferson Airplane, Bobbie Gentry. Special Gueff Stars; Sergio Mendes & Brasil *66, in color, NBC'TV, Thurs., Nov. 30,7:30-8:30 EST; 6:30 CST. stars SEE THESE HOLIDAY SPECIAL GIFT SUGGESTIONS AT YOUR RCA VICTOR DEALER’S ^--------------------------------------—------------------------ Make a Color TV set your special gift idea— (top to bottom) The Dubois consolette features Automatic Fine Tuning. Budget-priced Hillcrest: 23" diag., 295-sq. in. rect. color picture. The Barrie: 20" diag., 227-sq. in. rect. picture. The Barrie, $419.95* RCA Victor’s stylish Headliner is a Color TV portable with excellent performance. lA" diag., 102-sq, in. rect picture, superb styling and portable convenience—at a price to please the most budget-conscious Santa. The Headliner, $329.95* Onljr $29925 The Carryette, EJ505 (,;Ki) For realism that rivals the concert hall-see RCA Victor Solid State stereo consoles, (left) Soissons, in rural French styling, has 6 speakers and 75 watts peak power, (right) Skagen: 8-speaker sound, rich 150-watt peak power stereo amplifier, Danish styling. Soissons, $409.95* Black-and-white TV in 3 screen sizes-for that Special Person, (top to bottom) Vignette: 19" diag., 184-sq. in. rect. picture plus Instant-Pic. Sport with 15" diag., 125-sq. In. rect, picture. Nimble has 11" diag., 71-sq. in. rect. picture. Nimble, $99.95'*» Give “The Gift That Keeps On Giving"—From RCA Victor, (left to right) FM-AM Coquette has perfume-box look. The low-priced, compact Oracle FM-AM and Keepsake AM pockette radios operate on on® 9-volt battery. Strato World is RCA Victor’s finest. Rollcall has FM, AM and clock convenience. Keepsake, only $6.95* Give the gift of sound, (left) Arabesque "Swingline." Solid State stereo amplifier; swing-out, detachable speaker enclosures. (right) The Solid State Magician, RCA Victor’s lowest priced monaural phono. Magician, only $19.95* RQA VICTOR DIST. CORP. - DETROIT ’Optional with dealer. MM ,RCA Victor Solid State Tape Recorders from $39.95* (left) The, Y7G42 stereo reel-to-reel 4-track recorder/player features Sound-plus-Sound, (right) The YJS13 plays anywhere on , four‘‘C” batteries. YJS13, only $39.95* Come in for your RCA VICTOR CHRISTMAS ALBUM •T-rry C oma „„ly .‘-mpi M.rry _ " ( hrialtnu ” 99^ Ihe Most T'usted Nifflt in tlfctionici SEE YOUR PARTICIPATING RCA VICTOR DEALER Drof^ in and tiim on! See America!'s B^gest.e.The Detroit Auto Shcnv. All the’68 cars 2uid exciting stars. Showing now.e.Cobo Hall,Detix>it. Cobn Hall llvetl See Woody I lerman. Bobby Vinton. Della Keese. The Detroit Wheel>.The Debutantes. The Tidal Waves. Stage shows dally at 4:00 and 8:30 P. M. All that, and ’68 Imports. Experimental cart. Motor hdmes. Recreational vehicles (or outdoor living. Plus a fashion show every evening by Saks Fifth Avenue. All tor $1.50 adults, 'S0<‘ children under twelve. Can you aHord to slay home? cars&^tars DETROIT WEST SIDE BERKLEY HAZEL PARK Good Housekeeping Shop Hockey Radio 2742 W. 12 Mile Rd. Homi6bf Television & Appl. 22830 John R and All Branches 25942 Plymouth Ned’s Firestone and All Branches Hartman Appliances 7150 W. Vernor International Radio BIRMINGHAM Bloomfield TV 6630 Telegraph LINCOLN PARK Dayton TV Service 3071 Fort 5t. EAST SIDE MARINE CITY 7530 Tireman CENTERLINE Quality Feed Co. Basso Appliance 7642 Woodward 1 & 5 Appliance George Rinkc Appliance 105 Fairbanks Better Home Shop 15144 Grand River 25410 Van Dyke MOUNT CLEMENS 14189 Gratiot Matts Radio & TV CHELSEA Rosso Stores 49 N. Walnut Brunos Appliance 21401 Fenkcll Gamble Store 17151 Harper Piedmont |ewelry 110 N. Main PONTIAC Cadillac Music Shop 16414 I. Warren 19147 |oy Road DEARBORN All City TV 2363 Drchard Lake Rd. Otto Grucnwald 14617 Harper 14400 Wyoming Adray Appliance 20219 Carlysle Good Housekeeping of Pontiac 51 W. Huron Harper Furniture 7330 Harper Taber Radio 20031 W. Seven Mile M & S Color Vue 13606 Michigan New Center Electronics 2203 S. Telegraph Hudson TV 12426 E. Sevan Mile * Wagner Electric 14235 W. McNichols Maiczek Bros. 15337 W. Warren Bill Petrusha & Sons 77 S. Telegraph and Branch lefferson TV and Branches 14410 E. lefferson Waltara Home Appl. and Branches FARMINGTON John Slefanski 1157 W. Huron Maloof Appliance 14423 Mack World Wide TV 20600 W. Seven Mile Farmington Radio 30780 Grand River Sweets Radio 422 W. Huron Righfenberg Radio FLAT ROCK RIVER ROUGE 1S40I E. Warren SUBURBAN Longton Bros. 2B669 Telegraph Trents TV 1 1066 W. Jefferson HIGHLAND PARK ANN ARBOR GROSSE POINTE ROSEVILLE S & M Appliance Heme Appl. Mart and Branches . Carlson Appliance T & W Radio & TV 5 Victor Avenue 2019 W. Stadium Btyd. 20649 Mack Avenue 28651 Gratiot SALINE H. I. lohnion TRENTON G Gr H Television 2621 W. lefferson R. C. F. Appliance 32766 Van Dyke WAYNE W. L. Gates Furniture 32449 Michigan WHITMORE LAKE Hauckt 9535 Whitmora Uke Rd. WYANDOTTA RCA VICTOR DIST. CORA—Detroit To Sing Pontiac Tuesday Musicale Chorus willa sing Vaughn Williams’ ‘^Magnificat” and Tchaikowsky’s “Nutcracker Suite,’ with the PoiUiac Sympohny Ojrchestrai The concert is sltited for 8:30 p.m. Tues-day in Pontiac Northern High School Auditorium. ★ ★ ★ Soloists for the “Magnificat” will be Alice Engram, alto, and Roger Welton, flutist. Mrs. Ferdinand Gaensbauer is chorus director. The Orchestra will be conducted by Felix Resnick. * ★ ♦ Three instrumental selections will be performed by the orchestra: “L'Arle-sienne Suite No. 2” by Bizet; “Romanza for String Orchestra” by Riegger and excerpts from Leonard Bernsteins “West Side Story.” The Tuesday Musicale Chorus was established in 1924. It is made up mainly of club members but anyone qualified may join. ★ ★ Voices range from fine soloists to untrained singers, but nearly all of the current 50 members have had previous choral experience, according to Mrs. Gaensbauer. She says “The chorus provides women ip the area an opportunity to continue musical growth and knowledge, relaxation through singing and friendship and fellowship through a mutually shared activity.” EXPERIENCED DIRECTOR Director of the chorus for 17 years, Mrs. Gaensbauer has had extensive choral work, including training with Fred Waring and Bobert Shaw. She obtained her B.A. and B.M. with a piano major, from Parsons College in Iowa and her masters in music education from Columbia University. Annually, the chorus performs in two Tuesday Musicale Club programs. presents a concert at Pontiac State Hospital apd is featured at the state con-venUon of Federated Music Oubs. Other performances are given on request. SOLOIST Alice Engram is a native of Detroit and was graduated from Hillsdale College. Following studies at Juillard School of Music in New York, she toured the United States on oratorio and concert engagements. She was with the Philadelphia Civic Opera Company and New York City School Center before coming to Oakland University four years ago. She has been on the faculty of Oak- land’s Meadow Brook School of Music for the past three years and is director-producer of the jBirmlngham Musicale Opera Workshop. FLUTIST Roger Welton is a charter member of the Pontiac Symphony. He obtained his bachelor’s degree in music from Michigan State University and his master’s from Indiana University. On the staff of Pontiac School District for the past 10 years, he is instructor in instrumental music at Pontiac Northern High Tickets for Tuesdays concert are obtainable at the door. Cinderella Ball Funds Supply Buses, Clothing By SIGNE KARLSTROM Mrs. Joseph E. Risdon, president of the Women’s Committee of the TB and Health Society,, reported at the association’s annual meeting recently that $37,-000 was realized from the Cinderella Ball. This money will go to buy more mobile X-ray buses and clothing for fhe children at the Maybury Sanatorium, as well as other equipment. ★ * ★ Attending the meeting from this area were: Mrs. Lewis D. Fykse who is social chairman, Mrs. John D. Richardson Jr. past president, and Mesdames: THE PONTIAC PRESS UIDAV. NO\ EMHER 21. 1007 M—1 MRS. JOSEPH L. B. BENNETT Today's Woman Music Highlights Life By JANET ODELL Pontiac Press Women’s Editor “They also serve who only stand and wait.” But Margery'Bennett (Mrs. Joseph L.B.) of Illinois Avenue not only stands on the sidelines of every musical event in Pontiac — she cheers on the participants with her applause and her enthusiasm. Young people presenting musical programs — and for that matter, any individual putting on a concert —have no better friend than Mr^. Bennett. * « ★ She has always been interested' in music. Before her marriage to the now-retired engineer from Pontiac Motor Division, Joseph L. B. Bennett, she taught music in the Pontiac schools. Sbe has raised her own family of three sons and now enjoys a flock of grandchildren who live in the area. She could sit back and relax, feeling that others copld do the work now. She and her husband like to travel, niese are their leisure years. leisure? As you would expect, she is a dedicated member of Pontiac Tuesday Musicale. She is on the board of directors of the Pontiac Symphony Orchestra. She^s an active member of Pon- tiac-Oakland Town Hall and a worker in the Women’s Auxiliary to Pontiac General Hospital. As corre.sponding secretary of the latter she performs the task with her usual efficiency and willingness. At the hospital she works in the gift shop. TIRELESS WORKER But over and above her contributions within the framework of an organization, Mrs. Bennett is a tireless worker for better music— for more music—for encouragement of young talent. She’s always pleading someone else's cause. Most parents, after their children have graduated from high school, breathe a relieved sigh and vow they’ll never go to another school musical event. Margery Bennett is the exception. * * ★ You’ll always find her in the audience. Furthermore, she takes the time and effort aRerward to tell the performers that she liked what they did. Or tell their parents how she enjoyed the concert. She’s a one-woman cheering section. When approached about this article, she demurred, saying “Others are more ^rthy.” But wc wrote it anyway and nominate her “Today’s ;>Woman.” an important Individual in the cul- Charles L. Bricker, M. M. Burgess, John D. Daniels, Lloyd H. Diehl, Jr., John E. Jennings, J. P. Judd, Herman E. Reichart, Lynn A. Townsend. ★ ★ ★ Newly elected officers are Mrs. Risdon, serving her second year as president, And Mrs. William R. Shaw as executive vice president. Mesdames Earl S. MaePherson and Irvin Hermanoff were welcomed in as new members of the association. GLOBE-CIRCLERS John W. Kinsey, president of the Circumnavigators Club, has announced that their 11th annual dinner will take place next Friday at the Manna Loa Restaurant in Detroit. It will be a black tie affair with dancing following the dinner. Mrs. Kinsey, who is in charge of decorations, promises something very unusual in the form of shell necklaces from Tahiti and fresh flowers from Hawaii. ★ ★ Among those who have made reservations are: Mr. a n d Mrs. Edwin 0. George, Mr. and Mrs. Vern D. Hanna, Mr. and Mrs. J. Dewey Hawthorne, the Henry C. Johnsons, and Mr. and Mrs. Harold P. Meloche. Others are Mr. and Mrs. Cecil E. Nickel, Mr. and Mrs. John L. Thornhill, Dr. and Mrs. Thomas . Y. Watson, Mr. and Mrs. Charles L. Wilson, Jr., the Edward S. Wellocks, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas C. Van Degrift and Jack A. Frost. George F. Pieirot will present the “Michigan Recognition Awards.*’" Six members of Pontiac Tuesday Musicale chorus prepare for their group’s appearance with the Pontiac Symphony Tuesday at Pontiac Northern High School. Front, left to right, are Mesdames: Fred V. Rowe of East Berkshire Drive, Girl Is Unhappy James C. Clarke of Holly, and David L. Nast of South Telegraph Road. In th,e back row, left to right, stand Mesdames Robert V. Buck of Wenonah Drive, Fred L. Puskas of Edgewood Drive, and Conrad J. Code of Goldner Street. 'Escape^ Is Bad Basis for Marriage By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: l am a 16-year-old girl who "has a very unhappy home life. My folks fight all the time. They have been fighting ever since I can remember. They treat me like dirt and I want to tell you, it is miserable and rotten. My boyfriend, Denny, is 17 and he comes from a home that’s even rot-tener if there is such a word. His folks not only fight ail the time, but his father beats his mother. Anyway, Denny has been crazy about me ever since eighth grade and we are thinking of getting married when he graduates from high school in June. ★ ★ ★ If the army doesn’t get him, he hopes to wprk dayA at a'garage and go to trade school for mechanics at night. He’s real good with cars and motors. Should I quit school and get a job when Denny graduates? I’d have only a year to go, and could finish later. We wouldn’t have much money, but we wouldn’t need much, and at least we’d have each other. I need advice. Thank you. DENNY’S GIRL DEAR GIRL: Don’t use marriage as an excuse to get out of the house — no matter how “miserable” it is. I urge you to finish high school while you have the chance. The “later” you mention rarely comes. Children usually do, instead. ★ ★ W . DEAR ABBY: Can a girl get pregnant from kissing with her mouth open? WONDERING 'DEAR WONDERING: Not if she opens it to say NO! DEAR ABBY: There is only one answer for HAMBURGER PUSS whose tender face was constantly irritated by her boyfriend’s rough beaid. She should ask him to SHAVE AGAIN! I had the same problem with my boyfriend (now my husband of 18 years). Old cactus chin used to tear up my face during those smooching sessions. Now, when I whisper, “Are you going to shave tonight, dear?” it sends him flying for his razor with flashing eyes. I wouldn’t trade my heavy-bearded man for the most handsome peach-fuzzed face in the world. ALICE ★ ★ ★ How has the world been treating you? Unload your problems on Dear Abby, care of The Pontiac Press, Dept. E-600, P.O. Box 9, Pontiac, Mich. 48056. For a personal, unpublished reply, inclose a self-addressed, stamped envelope. }\: ■ % K»' f *ff I ' #•? GENUINE TOP GRAIN LEATHER CHAIRS •• ‘I*® »"®»* thwHulilfiil Kifi «f all! Our handiiuinr, masculine leather chair with liifteil hack, curved arms and dee|t spat cusMun has all the rumrwri a man would want in his rcdaxiiiK chair. Select in Brown, Spruce Green or Red. Matching ottoman available. SELECT NOW FOR CHRISTMAS DELIVERY! ■ SPECIALLY PRICED ^229 Op«n Thursday, Friday, Monday Evanings 'til 9 CONVENIENT BUDGET T RMS 1680 S. 'rclegniph Rd. near Orchard Lake Roatl Free Parking Front and Side of Store ^ FE 2-8348 -‘'.'-nr THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 24, 1967 Jacoby on . Bridge j NORTH 24 4^65 VQ 1086 ' I ♦ A52 ' *9832 WEST east AK 1072 A J943 V32 V75 ♦ Q9743 43 10 8 * AQ AK7 65 SOUTH (D) AAQ8 ¥-AKJ9 4 ♦ K6 AJ104 East-West vulnerable West North East South 1 ¥ Pass 2¥ Pass 4¥ Pass Pass Pass Opening lead—¥ 3 zers, while a background chorus of “ts-ts” came from the tsts- By Oswald and James Jacoby People who watch bridge games are divided into three classes. The kibitzers who sit right back of the players, the dibitzers who sit back of the kibitzeris and the tstsers who stand way back and go ts-ts after a bad play. South drew two] rounds ofl trumps and took the spade finesse. West! was in with the! king and after a lot of thought proceeded t o cash his ace and queen of clubs. Then he got out with a spade and eventually South had to lose another club trick. "Nice defense, partner," remarked East. All comments were justified South really should have made his contract.'He had two ways to do it. One way would have to play three rounds of diamonds after drawing trumps so as to strip his hand and dummy of that suit. Then a club lead would have stuck West in, A more elegant line would have been for South to play the diamonds before playing ' second trump, then enter dummy with the second trump and ■ a club from dummy to his jack. This play wou|d be expensive if the second diamond were ruffed, it wouldn’t work any better against the actual East-West holding, but it would give West a chance to go wrong with ace-queen of clubs. West would be in with the queen and might Just get desperate and shift to a As for East’s comment “nice play”, we must agree with himt West iqa^e a remarkably fine play whto he led out his ace-queen of clubs after winning the king of spades. If he had not done this, South wbuld have stripped the diamonds and spades and end-played West in that club suit. 2 Drown in State PIGEON (AP) - Two per sons, bound for a hunting expedition, drowned Thursday when their boat capsized in Saginaw Bay. ROBlIl ■■■■ . By Bob Lnbbew JACOBY Q—The bidding has been: We»t* North East Sot 1 A 1 A 2 A 2 ¥ Pass ? You, South, hold: AAQ1076 ¥KJ4 4K32 AJ7 What do'you do now? A—Bid four hearts. If you want to be extra conservative just bid three. TODAY’S QUESTION Instead of bidding two hearts, I your partner bids two diamonds. “Terrible dummy play” mut-; What do you do now? tered the kibitzers and dibit-! Answer Tomorrow Astrological By SYDNEY OMARR . . . Attrolegy polnit tlw ARIES (Mar. 2I Apr. 19): Good ind reauitt connactad with woric, h nonay (ram creative endeavors. . i«ce«». Be moderete. Help lho»e IF TOMORROW IS YOUR BIRTHDAY you have keen desire to learn, lo Irans-WvouBh leaching, writing, in romantic area. FiiidlPf-WI’hlng. Voe — ' ' ------- for celebration. Some today idlsb lavor “ ......... SAGITTARIUS (Nov. »-Dec. get promoted, honori ' carrying out special duties. Lel others hX , CAPRICORN (Deer MUanr learn, gain, achieve greater prollclancy. Much of this comi reading, advertising, publishing, lo ability to grasp meanings, municale. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 181: Allenllon C'h'arad on legal satllemenis. Cycle rides In your (avor. Fine (or special ap- Daily Almanqif', By United Press International Today is Friday, Nov. 24, the 328th day of 1967 with 37 to follow. The moon is in its last quarter. The morning stars are Mercury, Venus and Jupiter. The evening stars are Mars and Saturn. On this day in history; In 1869, women from 21 states met in Cleveland to draw up plans for the organization of the American Women Suffrage Association. In 1944, superfortresses of the U. S. Army Air Corps took' off from Saipan for their first raids on Tokyo. In 1961, the U. N. Security Council gave Secretary General U Thant permission to use force, if necessary, lo settle the Congo crisis. In 1963, Lee Harvey Oswald, accused assassin of President Kennedy, was shot to death by Jack Ruby in a Dallas jail. Ibe shooting was seen by millions of persons' on tele-yision. Liquor Hearing LANSING (AP) - The State .Liquor Control Commission will hold a public hearing Dec. 12 at Lansing to hear complaints and receive the views of the public on 4ldmini8tration 61 the Liquor Control’ Act the .hearing is one of two required each year by| Charm. TAURUS (Apr. 20-May 20): You may try to handle more than It practical * pliti Otpecially in romantic ------- out what you want. You •vervthing at once. Know this. Act ac GEMINI (May 21-iune 20); What you own could 00 up In value. Applies t< property, stock. Your sense of responsi billty Is tested. You could' be promoted, - - --------------- get chance lor greater success. j for VIRGO, LIBRA. Special CANCER (June 2)-July 22): Some ’YS‘m*isr;.vVrt.T, ect. consideration. Door closes Ir area but opens in another. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22); Stress tKpretslon. Create and originate, rather than follow. You oot more r from efforts. But key is to kee momentum. Push ahead. Be con Sept. 22); Keep ------_l-professional affairs you relinquish reins to others, tharw could be blowup. Means things ter" ‘ too quickly today. Good foi But be wary. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) tile, flexible. You could be frightened by coniecture of others. But actually there Is nothing to fear, what is unknown today soon will be available, useful. .SCORPIO (Oct. 23 Nov. 21): Good news fair but firm, •ec. 21): ecognized foi Let other* achievements. D-HI THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 1967 The following are top prices covering sales of locally grown produce by growers and sold by them in wholesale package lots. Quotationa are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets as of Tuesday. Produce 3.W Apples, Cider, 4-gal. case Apples, McIntosh ...................... Apples, Northern Spy, bu.......... 4.»S Apples, Red Oellcious, bu. Apples, Golden Delicious, bu. VeoeTASLRt ^0*^,^l Cabbage. Red, bu. Variety bu. l.IO Cauliflower, dz. Celery, root, ' Horseradish, Gains, Losses Equal in Mart NEW YORK (AP)-Gains and losses were about equal at the opening of the stock market today. Trading was fairly active. Opening prices included: General Instrument, off 1% at 62>/4; Eastman Kodak, up 1 at 140%; Sunray DX Oil, up % at 36%; Union Carbide, up % at 45%; PanAmerican World Air- ways, unchanged at 25%; American Machine & Foundry, off V* at 20%; and General Telephone, off % at 43%. Chrysler drc^ped % to 51%. Up fractionally were Caterpillar, Du Pont, American Airlines and Pfizer. On Wednesday the Associated press average of 60 stocks rose 1.4 to 313.7. Prices were mixed on the American Stock Exchange Xtra Inc. lost I. Fractional gains were posted for Edo,. Shruthm Wens and Mary Carter Paints “A”. Down slightly wero BimMS Engineering, Louisiana and Falcon Seaboard Drilling. Higher Interest Hits Consumer Borrowing Cost Go4is UpmU.S. ThisWeok The New York Stock Exchange U.2S- dstroiTO/I, wvtrpi lot< bholct 1,000-1,1M lb tlv •tMrt ,Jt.2S-r.3S; good 34.3M3.73. Hogi INi U.S. I ond 2 200-230 lb b ond gllti iy.0O-iy.Mi 1-2 210-230 lb ly.OO; l-3,30^400 lb lows I4.75-15.M. mo*?ar.r' ^oSnSolfS^o-'S*, Sii ;,oi’df’h,’iii& co'-.» Bullord I Bulovo .3«b Burl Ind I.M Burroughs I 32M 1 aSSi Mwl 35W ~ 1 2yVb 2yvs 20W 20 42'/^ «>A 42Vi 33 um IMH I30H . Ibo I7.7S-I0.M< sows stoady lo 2'^ 4^580 Ite 14.0^14,75. tCampSoup 1 Cifllo 7,000, calvoi nono, ilaughtor Conlm .00 •'ws^oiM hylfr*. •••“'Y' PrlmoTTflO-ICoroTOiT io 37SO 37 37H + M 02 2440 24 34>A -l-2Vk ----- 10M lOM - 1 11 0% 0% 0% - % 34 ’JoH ’m'O ’JoH iSh;"a 42 yvo ?H yH-H|ga'p«,t 3y 24H 3444 2444 ......... 3144 31H 31H -f H — ........ +H 10 34H 3344 34 7 44 45H 44 .. 43 31 41H 4y'0—1H 41 32V. 32H 2 53 S3 53 - 14 iy 27 24H 27 -f ■ '* S'* r-T- 33 ^ 24H' 2Ih- 34 WH 47H 4414-1-14 22 73H 73H 73H - H y 72H 72H 72H - H 114 I44H 144 144H -3 13 4214 42' “ 30 34H 34 351 - . 3 I3H 13H 13H -1-'4 J gij S2 ‘ 11 47V. 4710 47>0 12 42 41H ^ S 0 13 11H 11H uiilis Wr 1 14 2344 25H 23H — H I SJi ss 3 34H 24H 24H 17 3IH 31H 51H ....... 14 31H 31H 3I'0 -I- H 14 103 102H 10314 IlH :S . ^ Vol Ind lofqIu loo LlbbMcN .34t 43H 43>0 3 37H 37H 37H -1- H MInnMM 1.30 12 04'/. Monson 1.40b ^•DUI l.to MonfPw 1.3* M"-30i 124 44'/. 5 37'0 3714 37'/i + '4 1 7444 74H 74H -i- H I St*'":: - io t"'’*'" !1 1?’^ I!’* 1)H + H JSSSU ,ZDSI,>-rW stock Sividtnd. t»pi 44 30H 34H 34H — 3 244 37 40H 34H 34H — 44 20 2010 20H 20H -f H 22 31'A 31 SI'A + 14 3y 75V0 74 7440 — ly 3444 34'0 3*10 - 10 53'/0 5314 53'0 .. 4 45'4 4444 43 — 14 WInnDIx 1.30 10 27'/0 27H 27H . Woolwrth I 04 23'/0 23H 25'A — H Worthing 1.30 3 StH 34H 34H - H —X—T —Z~— XoroxCp 1.40 3*7>A 203H 3*3'/. —4H 2y'0 20'/. 2y'4 - H 42H 4144 4IH — H d^s in Ih. h.ii.ir?;bl7'Uo’'«,SSl oxlro dlvMonds or poymortls not doslg- SIM Mis.'™ or poW 4-^JSclo STj?*i? ' in PccumuHllvo ll^ *Hn blvlgynds In orroors. n—New hsue. SOI Bloc 2 el Con .M sSil 30 21 40 43H 42 42 1 2040 20H 20H 1* 27 27 27 25 21H 2IH 21H — 10 3 42'0 42H 42'0 — A 4714 4714 — '4 4 13 14HEDHH -f '/, 2 3744 37H 3744 -f 4i 2 24’/. 24H 24H + M 21 23',4 23'0 2310 .... 34 40'/. tt 40 . News in Brief NoNGoi 2.40 Nor Poe 2.40 NoStoPw (.40 12 yiH 01 01'/. — 14 13 35H 23 35H -I- 'O 3 7IS 47'/. 47H + 10 ■ “• “I + 'A .. . 35% 36%S • An uDdetennined amoont of liquor was stolen in a break-in of the Green Tavern, 1225 Baldwin, owner Stella Ann Warrington, 57, of J482 ^Vinkdman, reported to Pontiac police yesterday. OfH -1H SI 3444 14'/. 34'A ~ 'A 33* riJS 70* Sh 2?: 22-.'' IS 33'A »4H 15 - 35 53 3144 S3 -I- —P_ 17 13H 33'0 33H . I ?52 22 221 II MH »14 M'4 — H — 4M lOH 30H -I'O Robert FutreU of ^ Old Orchard, Waterford lownship. reported to township police yesterday the larceny of a stereo tape player valued at $137 from his car parked at 941 W. Hur- NEW YORK (AP)-The individual Consumer is' going to feel the pinch of higher interest rates for car loans, home mortgages and personal loans. The cost of fiorrowing money went up in the United States this week in the wake of devaluation of the British pound and an increase in the British interest rate to 8 per cent from 6.5 per dent. The first move to higher interest charges was taken by the Federal Reserve Board when it boosted its discount rate to 4.5 per cent from 4 per cent. This rate applies to member banks who borrow money from the Federal Reserve. Then major banks in leading financial centers raised their prime interest rate to 6 per cent from 5.5 percent. BIGGEST BORROWERS The prime rate is charged the biggest and most credit-worthy borrowers—mainly big corpora- Devalued Pound Stirs Confusion Money: What Is It? ByJOHNCUNNIFP AP Buiiiess Analyst NEW YORK (AP) - Money is the root of all evil, someb^y once said, and after the British pound devaluation there are many who are quite willing to Not by a fraction, however, do they compare with the miftions confused by the subject. Clear up the confusion and it becomes clear also' that money, rather than being evil, is essen-Ual to economic health. CUNNIFF But other interest rates are scaled up from the prime rate and that’s where the consumer will be touched in the pocket- The increase in the prime rate followed the discount rate boost because banks will have to pay higher interest to the FederM Reserve and, to maintain their profit level, will have to charge their own, borrowers more. As a result of the increase, the prime rate has returned to a that prevailed from August 1966, to late last January, when it was cut by some banks 5.5 per cent and by most others to 5.75 per cent. This split rate remained in effect until last March, when an industrywide 5.5 per cent went into effect. HIGHEST LEVEL A 6 per cent prime rate is the highest level that the basic charge has reqehed since such But what is it? Money convenience to facilitate trade. It is a symbol of a n economic h^thj or illneffi. R isj a symbol ofj productivity, a claim on goods, a device that] helps you convert your labor into something you desire. BARTERING SOCTETIES Some primitive societies have gotten along without money for awhile. They barter, just as the white settlers of America bartered beads for Indian lands. But an all-barter society remains a primitive society. In a developed society, and especially in trade among devel-(H>ed societies, bartering is nearly impossible, although it does exist. Instead, symbols are used. That is, a goods or service is sold in return for a paper guaranteed to buy a certain amount of other goods and services. Money permits specialization of functious. It creates middlemen who really don’t want to consume your goods but who wish to store teem or resell teem elsewhere. It also eliminates tee urgency of time, for money can be saved. It is unlikely teat trade would IKOsper if tee owner of 106 pounds of vdieat, desiring to exchange it for an equal amount of corn, was forced to seek out t^e specific individual capable of filling his needs. ★ ,* ★ He,mig!ht find a seller of corn, but not in tee right amount. And the com seller might refuse to take wheat in return. Maybe he wants barley instead, and so the barter could not be completed. The wheat seller therefore is willing to accept an equivalent in money. This money can be anything society desi^ates, including pebbles if if wishes. But everyone in society must be convinced these pebbles are acceptable and that their value will remain unchanged. Otherwise they are just little rocks. CHORE HALVED If tee wheat seller accepts money he has immediately cut his chore in half. Now all he needs to do is find somi from whom he can buy com. In exchange, he has something far more acceptable to offer. Money, therefore, enables everyone in sdeiety to exchange his labor or products for something he needs or wants. It relieves the seller of trying to find specific someone willing to buy what he offers and willing to repay in what he needs. In addition, the wheat seller pertiaps realty couldn’t use 100 poun^ of corn aU at once. Per-he needs only 50 pounds Parent of City Firm Tells 9-Month Earnings Boost White Consolidated Industries, Inc., parent company of Briney Bushing, Inc., 454 N. Cass, today reported increased net in-ome (before extraordinary items), for the nine months ended Sept. 30, even though sales for tee period declined. The company released figures stating that Consolidated sales totaled $110,708,007, with an industrywide benchmark first net income of $7,471,635, before came into general use in the extraordinary income of $800-earty 1930s. ooo. The probable effect of the income of $1.91 per share (excluding 37 cents of extraordinary income) for the same period in 1966. Business Notes prime rate boost on corporations is that some will defer borrowing to finance new plants and equipment. This would I loss of new jobs that would have been generated. Clifford C. Saeger has been promoted to executive vice president of Prophet Foods (k>. Saeger lives at 7426 Deep Run, Birmingham. Formerly vice president of the c o m p a n y’s now, and so that is what he buys with his money., llie rest he saves, or lends or rents out. Three of tee most important fuctions of money have bepn shown in this transaction: mon-^ as a medium of exchange, as a measure of value, and. as a storer of value — savings — for possible use later. PUBLIC CONFIDENCE Now, as long as the society’s supply of money continues to grow in relation to its productivity, most people remain coniB-dent that they can exchange their mon^ for an equivalent in products and services. However — and now we apply theory to current conditions — if the supply of money is permitted by a goviernment to grow taster than its production of goods and services, as in tee United States, then the value of money is diluted. It has an inflated value. It won’t purchase as much as it did before. Confidence wanes. cut down spending. Time and confidence ran out. however. Milford Christmas Parade Tomorrow MILFORD YULE PARADE Milford will hold its annual Christmas parade tomorrow morning at 10. Afterwards, at about 10:30 m., Santa Claus will visit with youngsters at the First Federal Savings Civic Room. The parade, incloiling bands. nks are expected to raise their interest charges on home mortgages, which currratly range roughly between 6.4 per cent to 7 per cent. Addition of a half per cent to a 6.75 per cent $20,000 20-year mortgage would increase the interest cost about $100 a year. The individual who wants to buy an automobile, f television set or appliances or furnish his home on credit is likely to find he will be paying higher interest. Some banks have raised their loan rate to stock brokers from 5.5 per cent to 6 per cent. Brokerage houses usually paas along their higher borrowing costs to customers. So investors buying stock on credit will pay at least one-half percentage point more in interest. net income, respectively of $119,-458,630 and $6,999,838, befote extraordinary income of $1,268,276 for tee first nine months of 1966. Chirrent net Income per share of common stock, after provision for preferred dividends, equalled $2.01 per share (excluding extraordinary income of 24 cents per share), compared to fire engines wUl form nt 9 a.m. This compares with sales and southwestern division, Saeger oLA? will now be working in tee headlpoad ’ ® « ’Motors office in Detroit. -------------- ! At 10 a.m. the parade, start- ;ing from the corner of South An underwater “tele-!Main and Washington, will pro- phone booth” for use by scuba ceed north bn Main, diving archaeologists will be * ★ ★ used this summer in excavating ’The event is sponsored by the a Roman ship teat sank in the Milford Area Chamber of Com-Aegean Sea about 1,500 yeara rnerce, which will award prizes A On an international scale, a nation that over a long period of time imports and uses more goods than its own productivity is capable of paying for runs up bills. It inews a balance of payments deficit. It owes money abroad. Hiat was, and is, Britain’s problem; Much of the world speculated that her money wasn’t the equivalent of U.S. money or French or German mwiey. It had fallen out of its old ratios to these currencies. ECONOMIC DISORDER Britain knew its economy was in disorder and that confidence in Its pound was waning. It tried to obtain loans to pay those demanding their pounds be converted to other currencies. It tried to step up production. It Soon for lion Cub BELLE GLADE, Fla. (UPl) - “Lucky,” a rare white lion ub, may be removed today from a sterile hospital in cnbator which saved his life when his conventionally coated mother rejected Wm. The oneK)f-a-kind cub is “definitely looking better,” said Dr. : *.u M.73 Clarence Kidder, the veterin- 13.24 14J2.._|»_ ,___,_______________ arian who has been watching over the two-pound “Lucl^’ he was born nine dsffi Kidder said that if (he prog- CMpgB.WWJK«S& _ i r Ki h m m ghdng holiday while the cub lapped up milk and was i p4^ in. a human hoqdtal continued, he would take “Ldcky’ home to a cerdboerd box this afternoon. I: sJ H 'SI IB H S "Lucky” is tee only all-white m In captivity and masibbr the only ond in the world. Although aU Wtdte, the cub is not pn nUiino, Kidder said, v VARIETY SHOP — Decorator Daisy Dowling views the variety of antique and hand-painted items availaUe at Art and Antiques, a recently opened shop at 59 E. Square Lake, Troy. Antikues are bou^t and sold by Mrs. Dowling and her daughter and son-in-law, Mr. and Mr*. James Schultz. New Shop Features Antiques trunks and tins are tea Items available at Art and Antlq a recently opened shop at S9 B. Square Lake, iVoy. The shop is owned by Mrs. Daisy DowUng, a decorator oon-nt, and by her daughter son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs James Schultz. Schnitg teacher at Detroit CeoMry Day School, wiine Us wife Is an art tea^ la Blaani-lieU HUs. All three buy antiques lor tee store. Specialties include oil paintings and frames, candlesticks, lamps, and oUict wall lings. Many accessories to main pieces of furniture are available. WWW Mrs. Dowling owned a shq» In Troy Corners for four years. HIT BY FIRE * SeveraT years ago, ahe had with antlqiiea. of her . antiques Iptn 172-year-old barn converted to i shop for a grand opening the following week. the antiqnes except one pair of « brokoMlp candleettckt, were'' destroyed ia a Are belora tbe ^ shop opened. Mrs. Do w 1 ing claims tiW]r,4 have so many accessories b»> cause people today an viwy hw,” * * ♦ . In ianuary, she win conduct-a class titled “Living with An-