'.V rtf W«afW wmiktf BM 'v’T- i ■ ^HE PONTIAC PRESS TONT^IAC, kiCHIOAN," TUESDAY, I^BBRUARY 20, 1962 -26 PAGES Horn# Edition m VOL. 120 NO. 11 if/it it tnnnt^%i2«*mSM(KiOMAi. Here's How the BiQ Day Passed By CAPE CAI^AVERAL (UPI) -Diary of Jain Gknii'a day in 3:20 a.m.—Awakened by perianal phyaician for a hearty break-fhat of two Kramblod eoi, fliet mlgnon, onbiKe Juice, tout, Jelly and a coffee wbotitute. 3 a.m.—Underwent final phyiical I aenaon to bis^t^. a.m.—Donned/hii silvery preaaure^heCked by technicians. 5:02 a.m.—Emerfed from (|ua^ ten at hancar g and waved three times to small crowd. Glenn walked 14 steps to a waiting transfer van and slapped a security trip to launcidng pad. 1:83 a.m.-Entered FHendship 7 vator up his triangular gantry at. 1auncMi« pad 14. I:2S a.m.-Gantry wheeled Ipcfc, leaving gleaming white rocket standing alone. CTewa started delicate Job of fuelli« Atlas lOBD. »t« “An 9:47 a.m.—BeicMtlg smoke and fire, the Atlas nee slowly from a dear blue sky atop an orange ball of flame, and leveled off to- Scores Stunning Victory for U.S. Despite Trouble CAPE CANAVERAL, Fit. (AP)-A*tro-naut John H. Glemi ended a hiatory making three^rbit flifht around tiie earth today m hie Mercury apace capaule aplaahed into the Atlantic Ocean, aontheaat of Florida. 9: S3 up, reported In loud, dear voice: "I fod fine ... the desr la tre- about 17,548 miles per hour between 100 and 160 miles above the earth. 10:25 g.m. - Triad his first food In space. Boarlng over Kano, HI- Gienn U:« a.a die el gl "brIgM lights" el oHy el Pastt. 10:30 a.m. — (hround control said Glem's heartbeat and reepiratkm " and the astronaut aa^ he prablmna.” U:09 a.m.-FrieBdsliip 7 poitsed over Guaymas, Mexico and headed back across North American continent. Glenn sttU In voice contact with ground stattons. 11:30 a.m.-Completed first orWt (Oantlnued on Page 3, OA. 3) ARUNCnW, Va. (P — "A tre-lendous note of Joy.” That was a frimd’s description of the atmosphere in the home of ronaut John H. Glem Jr. today fast-flowing reporti showed full success in the eariy stages of ~ launching of the husband father Into space flight. As for the tense early moim d the lift-off, the Rev. Frank A. Erwin, pastor of the Little Falls United Presbyterian Church whid) Joy for Wednesday; Cloudy but Wanner expect lair skies and colder temperatures tonilht. the weatherman says. The thermometer will drop to a low of 15. Partly Oloady and wa the Ugh ciimHag to a fraealag M Is Wedaeaday’s fore- is the oatloak tor Thursday. Morning westerly winds at 5 miles per hour will become 10 to 30 miles northwesterly late today and southerly Wednesdajr. Eighteen cording in downtown Pontiac preceding 8 a.m. The mercury had Jumped to 32 at 2 p.m. ASTRONAUT JOHN GLENN JR. Glenn Family So Proud ae^ They Smiliiigly Wait was a deep silenoe, then a mighty cheer In ' kingum College as Glenn's rocket Bid In the last second 1 flame at the base of the great rodtet signaled the actual start, another friend reported, the spaceman’s wife voiced her aasurancr how be met the grea I know John'i really smiling Mrs. Thomas H. MiOrt quoted her. wore “a great Mg sndle’’ as her husband reekeled skyward. Mrs. Glettn and the two , teenage children, David, 16, and Lyn, m; with several friends and neighbors watchM all the proceedings on three television sets in the living room. _________ Reporters, photogradiers and TV crewmen gathered on the lawn to watch the launch on two TV Rev. Erwin came out to report the lowest re- what was going on inside. He said as the launch proceeded nobody said anything — “It wai no time to lay anything.” In New Comnrd, Ohio, there flrBt[blocki away,'^ attronaut’a par- ents, Mr. and Mrs. John H. Cflemi, ■at before a bank of three telewatch their son’ I from the Gleim borne. A newa-n who called got only this ' |from Mr. Qenn: "Juat relax. We’ll have aome-thelr modest home a tew thing to say when it’s all over.’’ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ Pontiac Meht!at Recovery Area Orbit Thrilk local Families Excitement mounted for two Pontiac fomiUea 'with each mhiate Lt John H. Glenn Jr. stayed aloft in apace today. Mrs. Clara Reynolds df 1041 Oxford Road and hw six children had more than a casual intartfst in the space flight by the American astro- Ing,” Mrs. Reynolds said. “The children are resJly excited. They’re tie daqw and aonvenira he sent ne head ef the family. Chief Petty Officer Cerleton F. Reya-oMS, 41, Is staltoMd ahewd the Carrier IHW Rendelph, entf^ the^ sMpe Boheduled fo pick np Ohnw after hj:^ third srMt Reyholda,' an 18-ycar Navy veteran, is in charge of maintenance of the helioipters which were to pluck the astronaut from the Atlantic Ocean on comidetloii of the tri^orbltal trip. ”We saw my huaband’a ship on ^MUao aboard the USS Randolph is Jerry L. Barnett, 19, a radar-man whose parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ted Barnett, live at B75 Union St. raOERE BD GORfit Spectatora watch from a sandy beach the OoesB today as astrcaiaut John derm, riding put into Mbit from the CAi>i CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP)~Astronaut John H. Glenn Jr. winked at minor difficulties in his space capsiile system and went ahead with a third orbit of the earth today, scoring a stunning space triumph for the United States. Despite the dtfficultj^ ,Glenn rejiprted he was in good condition and anidous to complete his full three^rbit mission. ^iln offidali ware eonsiderinf the poeeibility of imniiietiiiK the flifht after two orbite, tho aetronaat toM the Kmoai Trackinf Station 1r Hawaii that he waa in food ahape and was havinf no troabk con-trolllnf his craft. Asked how he felt about a third orbit, Olenn repiied: “Affirmative. I am *Ck>’ for the third oibit.*' Ilia Hawaii station confinned Gl^'a jadfment, advised Merciu7 Control Center at Cape Caaaveral, nd Glenn was fivea the freen lifht pe continue, omm said the roll of his ciweule “aMina to be about 30 degreea off." There are three waya the spacecraft can be controlled. Qne Is the regular automi^tlc ayatem, one la all manual, and the third la the fb-by-wln system which la a combination of the I trouble waa hi the\ auto. B ayatem and he the fly-by-wire imUnd Friendship 7 to earth after three sweeps the earth at 17,530 miles an hour. This would bring GlenS down for a landing near Grand ’Turk Mor* Pktuns, Sfories on Page 15 d in the Bahamas about ii37 p. m. (ESD. . Glanchig dohrn at the earth at ■hitudea ranging from 100 to 100 milea, Gleim Iwd a breath-taking pamnanmic view sbetching 1,800 miles from horizon to horizon. He Tears streamed down tl of many women. mu’’ and “a beautiful sight.” Oa the fadtiai erMt. Oleu ate a apace meal el beef aad vege- eoamaed the attUade of Ms When he passed over Australia, he skated the iigbte of the dty of pAth. Neariy Ml lights IumI been turned on by residents of the dty as a good will gesture to flfo "Make it. John!” “God blesa you!” Around New York, millions dua-nred before television sets or ghwd their ears to portable radios as the great moment came. bem on,” Glenn fold fellow aatro-(Oootlnudl on Page 2, Col. 4) In Today's Press No Help Conaidlne reports Soviets apparently learned little from Powers — PAGE 7. Jackie Fearless First Lady daring in White House entertaining — PAGE The Old Pros GOP unhappy with any one of four top men — PAGE 9. Wofeh If, Dad Parents mi]k reqwet their ebUdren-PAGB 14. <5 ■ir* It it it Millions Cheer as 'John' Soars Worldly Novf Yorkers l^y. Cross Fingers, Crk "Go, Go, Go!" K (IH-Women dropped NEW to their biees and prayed. Men removed their hats, uid the movemenf of thdr lips MKHwed they were offoring prayers also. I be aael| Then there was a great ro “Go, go, go,’’ they cried. bearable la each plaoee as Graad • paraeaa stood la the mes-lae to watoh j hege tele-ijgaereea ae( ap la the mala shake the building aa Lt. Ool. John H. Glenn Jr.'a apace ship ap-pei^ successfully ttUnched. Long before, the blastoff, commuters arriving on trains from thdr homes hMted in the station and remained to watch devdop- They, like counties others, were ite getting to work. Nobody, however, semied to Business activity all but came to a standstill as office workers feverishly awaited the countdowti. House Likely to OK $2-Billion Debt Hike WASHING’TON (AP) - The House la expeded to approve h' wide margin today President Kennedy’i request for a S2-bil-increase in the temporai*y na-tfonM debt ceiling to 8300 biUioh. fleeretary ef the Trchaary ■Me for a further fS-bUllM la- He has contended the 82-biUion Increaat will meet oidy essential debt raqulremento up to that tete.. ..ANDAtAYl ...GOING UP... TttK PONTIAC 1»M8& TUESDAY.-J'EBHtf^Y W, liw The Pay fa Bimiinghain -Sr Invite Lea of Plans BIRMINGHAM - Leaden ol 35 organlutlou In Birminghaqni and wi, whoae com- ORBITAL. FUOHT BLAN Black linea IL *r rk.WM lustrate the projected orbital flight path* of the' . this tracking lUtlon* which maintained contact capsule carrying aitronaut John H. Glenn Jr. with the ipace ship on its trip* around the on his flight into apace. SmaU cirdea kwate ' globe. invited to an open teust Tliundey to eodtMdnt them with the plan* for the 1962 Community Houae Fund. Drive, March ■15. oj^ home, will Jy held at BTTwme' oT cimp^ Edward H. Lerdrni. IBT ‘ Cburt. Bloomfield Hills, from 5 ik> p.m. Mr*. C. Theroa Van Dusen R CQChairman. ~ Larehea h a DetroH Baak and Tin*t Co, vice prcaident aad •apervlMr *f Its operatlou la the In additloh to the four . frgen each organisation, the may- WimNO FOR NEWB — The childien of a ship schedul^to pick up the astronaut after Chief Petty Officer and Mr*. Oarleton F. Rey- his third orblt.’Wi^>^ (from left) in front are nolds. 1041 Oxford Road, had more than aver- Cristina, 5; Maty, 3; and Carieton Jr., I. In . ^ jp[ce shot which i§iit “Lf.“ fop row are Anne, 10; MoDy; Hi ihd John, 13. Col. John H. Glenn Jr. aloft today. Their father The children proudly display a pennant from b in cbdrge of helicopter maintenance aboard the USS Randolph, their father’s ship. ors, council i^denU and vbors of the surroonding dtles also have been Invited. ‘The Community House, wdmnit the generosity of redder^, b an ImpMtant asset to thb grea as r~ acUvltles cpnter.” L^dien said. THE wic*L THiNO — Astronaut. John ^lenn climbs Into hb Friendship 7 capsule 0>1> morning, and unlike previous attempb he stayed in and was blasted Into orbit at 9:47 a.m. He coin- AP raaMM pleted hb first orbit at 11:21. The success ended . weeks of frwtration for the Unitad States’ first ' in orbit acters to lot Fun Hear Fund Drive Arthur E. Moore wQl be the gueet speaker at the Thursday meeting of the Child Study dub of tha Ooi^regaboMl Churoh M Bb- keM Ut« p. aa at the heme M Mrs. Oesrge Oraoipnaa. IMl NortHawa fit / ~judpi»mw wnr'Wk wtsr^ subject “DUfleulfias m School “ ■ “ tty lUkvety, Dope ahd . . .^ow Serious Is This Drinking . 1 supe^ Qpnui^ det» Robert H. WMts, 71, of White Plains, N.Y., were held yesterday In that city. Mr. White died Friday fbOowlng a cerebral hamorrfaag*. * He had se^ In the advertiaing depaitnenb of the Chevrolet and Potiibe Motor Dlvblons of General “The continued fdpport of organ-itlons represented by those Invited b easen^ If It b to main-th|s lm/pog.tant role," he Broadcasting do. as a sales e tivein 19G. "There sriU be no speeches Thured^ ’Ibe ITrmembcr Coro- Yorfc and Detroit offiosa of NBC. He retired In IMS. Surviving are three dauWMars, Mary Line of New York, Mrs. John Brainerd of Fullerton, Calif., and Mrs. Clifford H. Paiket of Whits Plains, N.Y.; and seven grandcfal)- aad lb Omd drive.’’ The Community House, 310 Bates St., was esteUbhed In 1923: ’The 10-room, twowtory structure was in 1961. during that ,pe^ and approximately 2,000 persons enrolled in the n craft and hobby clasee* offered during the spring, laU and winter Seasons. ’The Btrmlngham Chamber !qt Conuneroe will hold a special mseting at S p. m. tonaorrow in the Community House to review -----.----(or the org^Blza tkm. Also, the board of dlrectoM will introduce an amendment /to the bybws rriating to dues an bership classification. T^~ ,r--posed amendment Will ge voted on at the meeting. MO VINO SPAOEWdR^ XtljM rodeet moves skyward from Ita bunch pad at the Cape Ca-navnal mbsUe test ewiter carrying astronaut John Glenn inside the Mercury capsule Into orbit around the earth. Other bunch sites ft' the test center are shown b the foreground. Echo Dub This Evening Thb evening at 1:36 the Echo I satellite will drift across Pon-tbc iiea skies for two mbutes, oondng out of the south 12 Prince Granted Divorce LOtIDON m - Prince AndreJ of Yuog^vb was granted a dlvotce today on the grouM of .adultery by wife. Princess Christina, niece ii« to the southeast. 16 degrees over the horizon, mov- of Queen Elizabeth’s husband. Prince Philip. The Weather Full UJI. Weather Bnrean Bepsrt PONTIAC AND VICOfltT ParUy eloudy aad a Utile solder today with few snWlHifthflea likely tUs mooting. High today M. Mootty fair and eoldor tonight, low IS. Partly cloudy and a Uttb warmer Wednesday, ^h 14. Wind porthwostorlF 16 to X9 mUsfr beeoming southerly Wednes-, day.. T*4st b rmUM Sob mu TuMdar st l:U m. SjMi rt— —-•*- - • •• * John Glenn's Diary on His Historic Day Khntbued From Page One) of earth, 92 mbutes after bunch. 11:28 A. M. — Glenn reported ’minor difficulties’’ with altitude Control system — the one us* ' keep capsule b right position dur-tng orbits. U:32 A. M.-fiwltchod to "Ilyhy wire’’ manual control system. U:4t A. M.-4ileMi made < r second fime. Told 11:50 A.M,-^round sbtlon* said Glenn had seen "thousands of luminous piuSl5iu_la_iRi» Jirt: side hb capsub and that, besides control dlfUculHes, these were “the only really umuual problems” of British and Russians Pleased Over Glenn NATfONAL WEATHER - Cold weathpr ViU oonfinue to-idght ta the eastern third of the nation and b the Northern Plat— If win be w[armer ta the Central and Southern Plains md to the Mbsisshipf VgUey. Scattered wiow flurries arp tors-cast for the Lower Greto Lakes region. Showers are expected to Nodheni CMMoepto and Nevada. •Let’s ‘Go’for Third Orbit ^ Congo to Receive $33 Million in Aid From America (Oontbued From Page One) naut Gordqn Cooper, who was monitoring the flight at the Muchea, Auatralb, tracking sta- MlUtons of proud AmerieSas laetadlng PiesMeot Kennedy and Olensrs iMvIly watahed on teis- Shepard made the first of two UB. suborMtal space flights last year to pave the way tor Glenn’s rocket roared to lie at pad 14 on Cape Canaveral and karlod Another astronaut monitoring fiis flight here was Donald Sbyton, who has been picked to make America’s second orbital flight, probably b about two months. year-old Olena on the start of Showing no signs of the fuel tank trouUes which plagued it last month and caused one ol 10 postpoiMments of the bunching, be Atba performed with pre- n aS ‘........ ......... keybob b the sky” at the Glehn reported he was having no difficulty p^ormtog tasks or mak-bg observatbns b/the world of weightlessness which he entered igto orbit —■ b which the earth’s atmosphere^ ’ WWW Russian comonaut Gherman Ti- proper speed and altitude 100 miles above Bermuda. CRAFT or ORBIT Aimes fanmadbtely the Barma- slcknest, or dizziness, on 17-orhit trip bst August. He said da station confirmed the akft was ta orbit. b swift succession, trackbgout-posb on a ship ip mid-Atlantic, on the Chnary Mands, at Kano, ML geria, and 2bnzlbar made volet contact with the s|MKe traveler ag he passed when he turned hb head, shandy or observed fast-moving objects outside hb cabb. I as he passed mere than tiDes over Cape Canaveral Dr.-.WilUam Dou^as, the astro-tuts’ idiysicbn, reported that medical instruments to the oontrol emter itoo«P« Obf b ”b I completely normal situation and LONdJI^N (B — The people of Britain and Western Europe shared today the tenston, relief and pride of America over Lt. Col. Jolm H Glenn Jr.’a epic leap Into orbtt. The 'radio play-by-play ^m Cape Canaveral as tbe West’s .first true astronaut blasted oft and began whirling around the globe was canted,', b full by the Broadciurtbg Corp. Riisaiana seem to be very aym-pathetic toward American efforts, although Bometlmr about U.S. failures. or LONDON Meanwhile, BBC televblan broke bto lb regi^ programs for spot repute and curled an Interview with Glcrai taped several weeks IN MOSCOW In Moscow, American* and Rus- uw iappea^ to be happy about B bundii^ .ot Qlenn bto orbit today. Only the Americans here teem to be foUowbg .the news on the radio. Htey heard the voice of Gbnn Miying, ’^R's a ImutlfUl The first Russian to whom PreS-ton Groover, the AP bureau dibf Moacow talked to. had not haaid about the flight ”1 ho)^ be gatarhack.” die Bua- Richafd Diihbleby. BBCs top TV commentator, said dte Marine Corps flier b ”as cool, level-headed and well-trstaed a man as you could Imagine for a job Uhl Hr GERMANY Apt official sptacesman for the ____ German _ scribed ti» orbitbg ss ”sn eml- Ihe otflcbl Soviet news at . Tass transmitted ta English and Ruasfam a New Yoric-datod item giving a facltaal account of ttw blast-off in 7i words. Shepard Jr., whs manned the Im portae* capsule eemmenieetor poet In the Merenry Ocefiel Oen- Africa. I have the Canariea through the window but-they are partly obacured by clouds.” He said hb view of .Ahica also clouds, which gradually thinned but as he passed out over the In- President Kennedy was reported as very pleased that the flight as going off successfully. While Gleim widted b the capsule for the firing, be talked to wife and two teen-age chB-by As the Atbs blasted off. a friend with Mrs. Glenn quoted her. as saying, ‘.J know John's really MW.” The astronaut’s 10 wore ”a great Mg smile,” Mrs. Thomas H. OpOD Glenn said be felt no sudi db- The British Broadcast Corp. broke bto its regular grogram* for spot reports. Sir Bernard Lovell, director ol Britab’s JodreU Bank radb telescope, which has tradeed moat of the United States space bunchbgs, congratulated “ oonoemed b thb great en- Aa to dayHght again, making the (Henn repcHl^ entWlng the first period of darkness ovar the Xb> dbn Ocean. It was (bring this dark sigl^ tl period that be ■ of I He also passed from winter in the United Statee to Austrpdb, and he jumped tram Tueqdsy (b Wetaieeday and back to Tuesday when he crossed the' -- --- Gagarb — have had such a stunning look St fiM esrth. Over the Canary Islands, he said lat the horizon appeared to be a briUbnt blue. WONDERFUL VIEW ‘fl mm very comtorteble.’| he ■a^. "Lhave a wcoderfiil view ol was partially blocked by heavy end of Jmm. WASHINGTON (AP) — nitod States has given the Congo MS milUoo mors b kid aad promised another fl8 million by the aoBthem United States as M passed over oa eomplettoa of Us The Ageiicy for btemetional Developmmit said Monday that the 115-million grant - to be cha»-nebd through tbe United Natkme — wtU be need for pwchaaes of American goods, including ladua-trbl equipment, vehicles, ^ food and tecbnica); Wife Dies, Then Mote PHILADELPHIA (AP) — Anto-nietta DeFeUce, 68, of suburban Bryn Mawr, died Monday night of a heart attack. A few mbutes bter her husband, John, 72, ool-bpsed ^ died. Ip Mesoow, it V fkat os^y Ameiteaas seen^ to be tolloi^ too ffight OB radio dtedalnlUL One saM, ”Toa will eatek up — but then the Soviet UaioB WtU be dotag sametblng A pby-by-pby. report was cer^ led on Japanese TV and radb. Gbnn reported to the Cape control center that the trouble appeared to be too mudi timiat b a hydrogen peroxide Jet oantnl.i fing tbe left yaw, so that *- * — * over slightly. ★ W He said when he switched to M fly-lv-wtre method be. . nrleoced no trouble the oraft. “It’s very smooth end easy.” he Only two other men b history ^ As Gbnn sosred awsy from _Js spaesport, he wsa to dose contact wifli tbe Mercury Oontrol Ctoitar end reported almost Im-j, "I fed fine end the view b tremtadous.” Indict Teamster Officioli mortals be made ^ tbe’Mlciilgan Sought by Bill State Senote Passage Near for Addition of Wayne County Benches LANSING IB-DeSpite objections uit the county b already mora than 620 million b the red, a b|U to provide five addttbaal Circuit Court judges tor Wayne County was moved up for p^hb find passage ta the Sanata today. The mssaure would bcreai num^ of Orcuit Court j from IS to 33. A I bin ai ”It’s si shame we have to take lat long to get o caae to trial,” Monded Sen. Baall W. Brown. D-DdroM, an attorney. "Wayne County b already more than ^ mlUbn b the hole,” ob-m. Stanley F. Rozyckl^ bOotrolt. "They just don’t hevR the money to pay for these judga- "ThU win mean five man poetical jobs," he said. "It would, bb more sensible if the judges they have now put b a full day and a “ --------feek."' See French-Rebel Pact; k OJiS GircK for Rght PARIS (AP) - The 7H-year Algerian rebellion moved swiftly to(by towsm' T climax. France and Al^an rebeb were reported ready hr peace, but the ridit^wing Secret Army Organization, pledged to keep Algeria Frendi. aeemed prepared for a major baurrectloh. Rebel sources predicted ceasefire may be proclaimed b Algeria earjy next week followbg two-step approval by the Algerian nationaliste of the tentative peace agreement reached with the French and a poeslbb bst-mimite French-rebel meeting to Iron out The rtafitbt Secret Army, bow- the Algerian Revolution, -jThe council had been called toy meet Wetawsday ta Tripoli, Libya, but rebel eduroes said to a peace pect with I the Secret Army seemed preparing for a major uprising to block Presidait Charles ds OauDe’s plans tor Algerian peace. The rebel Cabinet arranged to nteet b Tunb today to take ito the tentative accord which runs to about 100 pages, rebel inform-ente(aald. They said tbe accord b complete except for same minor points concendng the pro- govem Algeib pendbg a sdf-de-batian - referen^im. De b fifBy expects such a* vote fo. dedde b favor of Independ- TO SUBMIT AOCORO Following expected (bbiflet ap-prwi^Um toMnnts add, the accord br sulinitted to the garb cbtoM at least 20 1 60-member National CSoundj oiHIitonday. b tbe accord b the designation - inoampbte point it be oomposi- ' tien Of the local security toroes e * at Its dkvosal tor toabtabbg TO MEET AGADtr French and ,yabd negotbtors ' may have to toeet agato to re- . solve these IssoMir Y^ btombnta ■aid. But by thb Urn, they add- ^ ed, the negotbtors Hwuld be e powered to go ahead a|gi sign final pe»a Af h^ies~tor peace rose French government and rebel y Tl^E PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 20, 1962 THREE SHORTHAl No lym^ no m^cMtiot, «mi AlCi SPHDWIITINO SMIioiidl ...«•«•» •M of 0 dvH ratrtbM )eb wlfhMt a funira. and M M aoty la Mo dial bi«y-poyint man Man*Nn« oodHan yaaia oKm^ woMadI And in only -aaabi How can yaa da » w qafcfclyT lacoaia yaa OM Ilia AK'i yaa oiraady KNOW. Na fafaign lyaWab la Koid yaa back. SKCOWMTINO oHat yaa a 79K haod dwi. VoaH taka 120 ward* par Mbiala-* 90% fodar ikan CMI Santo raqakta aMota Ovar 300.0Q0 fradaoto bava New Claw Begins March 12 (talk Day and irmlmf, faaatoaa) Pontiac Business Institute 18 W. Uwrtnco FE 8-7028^ Father, 7 Children' Perish in Ohio Fire mONTON, Ohk) (AP)-A chemical wDiiter and hia aeven dill-(ban biinwd to death today in their rural home near here. The moth# waa burned and cut trying to arouae the alecplng fai^ By- \ ^ Sheriff Carl E'. Roae identified le victlroi u Walter (Dkk) VU-lara, 34, and his children; Bonnie, 10; Linda, 9; Kathy. S; Lim Ann, 5; Walter. 4; Edward, 2 The mother Mae, 29. wa oondltkm at Lawrence County General Hospital Mrs. Villars said she awoke at 12:23 a.m. and the house was engulfed in flaniM. She said she tried to waken her husband and the children, but they were all TOUBBD PLAKt-Three outstanding science students representing Pontiac Northern High School visiM Enrico Fermi Atomic Power Plant at kfonroe recently as part of Sdenoe YouOi Dsy activities. Shown are (left 1o right) Dave Bihl of 944 Emerion St., xaU Id 394 Alberta St., and Bi Ffench Lead^ Wants Big 4 Digarmament Confab Unfted States itfUl plans to attend French f>resident' Charles le Ims called for a nudear disarmament meeting by Just the Big Four atomic powers, UJ. authorities said tod^. Ad* The United States and the So- (|jCa»ypV()U OOinaHOME ASK lOR DETAIIS A liHlt ikrift oil your party plus our financing plait, can aqual homo owntrthip ..frta apd^claar. I^OHicrSpaM in Our Building Capitol Saviags & Loaa Assa. Ettabliihed 1890 75 W. Huron St., Pontioe FE M561 cssToni ruins n lui w raiiDns U.S. Goinslo Geneva Despite De Gaulle ^ASmNCrrON (AP) '- The The countries involved are com- noHce to Kfiimdichev-anr''^ mitted to attend. _ France ia oM of the IS, De Gaulle suggeated in a mea-sage to Soviet Premier Khrush-ch^ that nuclear arms redvKtlon could better be accomplished by a gd-together of the four nations the United States, Britain, the U.S.SJI. and France. The m sage was made public Monday. ‘FRANCE WANTS 1N‘ Officials hem were inclined to view ^ mess^ as I> Gf^ Hits Swainson's 'Fiscal fantasy' OOP's Puart Hangi Wishful-Thinking LaM on Some Budgets THREE RIVERS W) - Gov. Skainaon is living “in a world of fikcal fantasy,” Itoise Speaker Don Pears, R-Buchanah, said last e Democratic governor, “is embarked on a program edit card government copied the Kennedy dan that is placing a burden of stag^ring proportions upon ( “In considering needs, rather than amounts required, it has been the experience of the legidatiire *iat eome of theee budgets reflect lahful thinking,” he eeld. Enrollment at state cdleges and universities has climbed 144 per cent in the last decade and appropriations have gonb up 312 per cent, he said. “Higher education is in for some increases,” he said. “I am convinced, however, that the story is not as desperate ai'some pi pidure it.” Pears, a candidate fw the Re- in the 4th Dietrict, also criticiaed the governor’s proposal for an 8 per cent across-thb-board increase in state aid to public schools. These, he said, would assist not only poor ifistricts needing more money but wealthier districts as I it, a The way the cynic m penny saved is taxable . small toWik' are so dull that it doesn't pa;^ to buy . a newmaper, unless you want to know what’a ■‘V . . . One new bank ia so in the suburbs that aomt crooks tried to rob It by phone. Earl WUaon. ROAST CENtE>4;UT m CHUCK ^ I9< ROAST « OU> lEST M HOUND £ 19- ROAST Ivie Diet in Fall; Was Wed to Late Jimmy Dorsey GLENDALE, Calif. (AP>-Jane Poder Dorsey, divorced wife ot| the late bandleader Jimmy Don sey, died from injuries receive^ in a fall, according to pQUee. Mrs. Dorsey, SO, died Sunday in Glendale Suiitarium from an Intercranial hemorrhage. Police Invieitlgated when it appeared she might have' btan. struck on the rectiy to the Western allies—that France wants to be in on the stills exclusive “atomic dub” in inter-natfonal dedaian making. Mu<^ of the negotiating so far has been done by the United States. Great Britain and the Soviet Union. France consulted with her allies before the message waa sent to the Kremlin. A copy was made made available Sunday to offidals noted that De Gaulle ignored Khfushchey*y propowd~ to start off the Geneva conference at the summit leval. Waahingtdri and London Iwl rejeded Khruah-i chev'a request. i ♦ A A Otherwise, much of the French leader’s message was regarded as| reiteration of his views. These include his concept of big^ power dominance in worid sf-tairs, distaste for the multination Geneva parley, and deotnidkm of atomic stocks plus control over delivery systems ia the way to achieve nudear dia- head. Officers said It^lMbn* was no foul play. Mrs. Dorsey lived alone and apparently fell at her bom Sat-ur^. Actor Van Heflin Sued Over Death LOS ANGELES (AP) - Actor Van Heflin has been sued (or 3500.000 damages by the husband of a woman who was killed when a 90-foot pine tree fell on her car. Dr. Ramon J. Spriztler, whose ’ife Natalie was killed in the accident during a rainstorm last Feb. 8, filed the suit, charging wrongful death. Mra. Spriztler was the daughter of New ; York The complaint said the tree was on Heflin’s Beverly Mils koperly and was In a "dangerous c tion.” , nolr ptant tedUSUdes 4y bx 82 mlllian i !d to crops .in Is said to be BENEFICIAL FINANCE CO OF DITROIT FE 2*9249 WIDNISOAY—2 ta 9:90 pja. REMINGTON llcctric SIravar REOONDITIONED Dedde Shovan -Mala Floe, SINUS CONGESTION iMlMsiAtoMw nittiTMFjniHa jl|8 N. Oogfasaw M. -Mata /h>ta| Lot/i/ OpGrating Cost / Loi/y MaintGnancG ! AMERICA'S LOWEST-PRICED CAR WITH AN ALUMINUM V-8 _standard at no extra oast! A j. III/VOUkXoCAL AUTHORIZto" OLDSMOtlll OUAllVr DIMI^-r— JERblAE MOT0R SALES CO. ibuth Soginow Strott Fontioc, Micltigon Below ff>r ONE-DAY SUPER DISCOUNTS Found Only at SIMMS —Tomorrow 9 A.M. to 6 9.M. SALE of Wanted PLASTIC HOUSEWARES Unbraokoble FOlYETHYlENE lauiKbif Basktt Voiv« $1.00 58’ • Lightweight PLASTIC : utility Tub 1 »97' 2 Uie k bi the MaW. ih«p ar geiap, a buHMn hoadto, leoliaroaf wnI * preet. Ceien, tMiMIAtMti Has. large POLY PLASTIC Wailfubasket $2.00 "|3d< DIVIDED COMPAKTAAEMT : Walk V Mass Pal 38 $2.00 Valw* 1 W« hove oMortad ceM* bt Mi lerg* 39-qt... 13" AoiMfar wMi built-in eSfryinO h :actr a * --- .a • ^PolyothylAiM FUSTIC Wash VRinst Pam $3.00 Voluf-NOW 38 UHR iaVkiAlnchw. As- 1 2nd Floor HARDWARE DISCOUNTS CUT-TO-AAEASURE Whila Yew Wait WMDOW SHADES wHb Roller Whita—Ivory—Tan 0 Rooiilor^mmW^ $1.19 MW voiuo m ||H Standard 6-foot length, ihada* cut up to 36-inch widths. Genuino 'HARTSHORN' brand thado* of woshobla fibre. Ready lo horlji^^ limit. 36-Inch Emboired ta ge 48-Inch Embotsed dMO pusnesmoES I” pusneshades g H Inzide ond OuMde, Fr. 1 SNADEI ■ • OIANT SIZE IPtrtoi fFili : Box 30^ Keep Lite Out DUE SHADES weWimmw o • • ‘ 24-ln. RUBSa Stair Trooeb Rag. -^9c Each far tMR.. ctnai r.Ss£ttrt: 29 own-r|ui JitMli bex «M| ta(k.and e kny. Index divider te •keep peper* ""4 • bendy. With -(!2aiide 0«unberlin, 107 S. Washington St., died 10 p.m. yesterday at Pontiac General Has- BURROUGH’S ELECTRIC ADDIRG MACHINES Rog.»209vne^^ Gets Liquor License FYank Syron, owner of the PoB-tiac Country Qub and propsaont of a new championship g^ counw layout in tha northm hecthn of the townsMp, was awarded Ur only tvmaiidiig Claas C liquor license in Waterford by « qolit vote of the township board Mon- James L. Taylor, 35, 4S3Vi'High- 'The four Democrats on the ; bd&M cast-awir^rpies following a Itngtfay diacuision during wMch five of tha eIgM ap-plicanU for the license pisaded their cases. I, Syro^said he has been a realdent of the township for many I to Uva the rei ol my life Oven irid dla there. On the other hand, he said, others the year. The ClaN 0 Heaaaa. H approved the MfoUgHi Liquor Ooutral Oanmdaatoa. will bo beM to eocniw peadiag the comptotton to ^hoot five years of the prepseed geU eotree to-eeted en a- RW-aero rite elf Dtoto Highway between Eagle and WoodhaU Lakee. The Clase C Uccnoe was issued to Syron by the towueMp'board last Blsrch arxl designated to replace the reeort license at.the Pontiac Country Oub. The Liquor Control Ompdaslen, however, denied approval pf the reoom-mendalion because the clubhoSae is within 500 feet of the schooL A 1948 law prohibits new liceniei ing issued within this distance of Gendienson. one of the developers Ot the Mall who spCke in bshalf of obtaining the Ikmse for Tad’s, cited the large amount of acbool revenue furnished by the development without adding more puiGto to Waterford Schods. He addsd that the IMI hoa greatly enhanced the value of the su^ rounding area and that velopment will amploy over 2,000 Representatives of Dobski'* Bar I Cooley Lake Road, Howard Johnson’s on Loon Lake and flw Thrift Court Motel on Dixie Highway also spoke. An ordinam!e which would, in effect, ”lax’’ merchants who ,0^ erate businesses in Pontiac for too Aort a time, to be placed on the tax assessment rolls, was introduced for a llrst reading on the City Commisaion floor lost night. ’The ordinance wa^ requested Inst memth by Commissioner WU-Ilam H. Taylor Jr. and M»y1-Icctloa of the Archduchess RsnaU-Maria of ^ Austrian House of tor the Claas C, The aoetton, supported by Johnnen, failed’to earry. Trustee John Cbleman moved that Syron to; granted the license. Support by (UMtee Joseph McGee. Treuurer mM Dorothy Olson and Clerk ^Aoms SeeterUn-carried the ^nMrtlon; llWposed were Johnson. Aj^raon luld trustee Byron Cble; aili^^blicaiis. Following-the vote, Gerehenson submit'a* lAed the board to accept Ted's as alternate in the event the Iicel|to dioidd be denied by the Liquor dtelrbl Oommlasion. Other license isekers quickly followed laU^tes. aSto on I The board deferred ihg action by the state eonunis- AU the cosmic rays bombarding the dhrtb in a year would weigh only an ounce or two. Oqly their energy maksa them important. the atato, wfll hb olewaed 4 M at r “ “ ‘ ^ entry to 1^ NUss UnlvwrM eous- "t-- ----- 2 Stand Mute at Arraignment for Assault Two men arrested Iteturday on a charge of tekmious assault stood tore Wa(ertoed/TownsMp Justice of the fWce John E. McOroth. Both aril being held at the Oakland Coimty JaU'awal(ing trial Feti^ 27. LeRoy Butler, 33, of 4111 MUIer Road, North Branch and Biv-ley Gillette, 35, of 132 W. New Yon Street were apprehended by Waterford TownsMp Police for car early Saturday morning at Saahabaw and Walton Al Gaal, MU Aquartaa and DcmU Btaod. Ml W. Stralhnwre had arguad wMh BuMert OUtatto and two ef their eanpasloas to a Waterford bar eariBer. aeesrd-Ing to peOoe. Btaad left the bar ahead H OaW and was aitaeked vton hs stopped at the Hghl at WaeNahaw aad Waltaa police saU- A pasaerby found him walking 6ii the aide of the road and took him to Pentiac Osteopathic Hospital wiiere he was treated for told police he wpa btt on the head with a full beer bottle, beaten, WHEN irs TIME TO ACT Went I* ftieke e An insuronca program dq* signed to ma«t'prosant and future domonds goas a long way to proporo yoO for any linforsaan ovonf. Wa'ra oxparts on oH types of PhMwSai-OMI Try DeWitt’s Pills SSffSiu bfih, et froH Slok. dMklM tBS wE WttiilUoc fMt ElUft eowfhii DO YOU K>OW ABOUT MEDICAL ASSISTANCE TO THE AGED THAT IS AVAHABLE NOW! The KenvBlills lAw went into effect in Michigan in Octo-^ her, 1961^ Tliis is the program to help people over 65 ' ^ years of age and of limited financial means to pay for their health care. The medical profession woriced for its passage through Congress and has promoted its implementation in Michigan. m BiD Provides rinancial AM With theloUowiiil 1. Hospitalization ,(as long aa Required) 2. Surgeon's fees ' 3. Physician’s fees ; •T' . : { r Home Nutting (as touch as needed) ^ ',( 5. Nursing homes (90 days after hospital stay) ' 6. Pre- and post-hospital outpatient care 7. X-ray and lab services It w not necessary .to be eligible for Sodal Security in order to qualify for medical assistance, nor does the applicant have to be welfare client. In order to reserve the benefits for those ne^ing help, however, the following income and asset limitations have been established: Audi Income . . Property . Up to $1,500 (single); Up to $2,500 (mar^) Up to $1,500 (single); Up to $2,000 (mai%d) j AppUcafiVs homcetcad, honaehold and personal effecta and cash Minender ! value of life inanrimce arc exempt from personal pnqpcrty. However the above eligibility requirements of Annual Income and Personal l^ropmty, do not apphr for the first 80 DAYS of any Hospitalization! T^te desiring help under the provUions of this program should . . . (1) Apply to, the ,county Bureau of Social Aid m lilted below and (2) preaent authorization ^rm to peraonal physidaa or to hospital OAKUND COUNTY BUREAU OF SOQAL AID 1260 WEST BOULEVARD, PONTUC — FE 2^51 MISS 0. L. HINCKLEY, Supervisor • MR. GEORGE H. BURT, Director Those found to be eligible by the Bureau of Social Aid win receive treatment within the provisions. de6M:rib^ above. ‘ « OAKLAND COUNTY MEDICAL SOCIETY ./ THE PONTIAC PRgSS, TUESDAY, FEBRUABY 20> 1982 FIVE fUa Vtry HopeM ^ » 7 Will Nil Not0 Dr/iNter WilhNfiiy/te NBir YORK (AP)~TIm dty ■chool ontem, with 5,000 pi ot them badly out of of Bdurotlon’i dlredtor of an|fe, in’t expocthv a flood of thM fw the piaiKMttner omni-Bothm May 2. The Job roqnlna yean of ocperienoe and haa a atartlBt wlory of 13.750. House With $333,338 Windup Tab Ir Was^lon to tye iMTajhi BI«W*5pa«MSf«£ LANSING -Mlch., rmn FROM PONTIAC TO DErROIT^CLEVElAND daily servicd — ' convenient connections with ail airlines SAGINAW/BAY CITY/MIDIAND ALPENA. PELLSTON SAULT STE. MARIL nortfibound daily For information and reservations call your travel agent or ORIando 4-0487 Whin you man business fly NOETBCEMTBML wm of. n ofmt IN im AND CANAM m MIOWT fTAm AND CANAM lAVB A uns - with the Ule Of UUiao Caah, S3. In tholr keepiiv. Police Sgt William Barber Mght) and Patrolman Charlea Muaante hold her head oat water with the aid of a Ufe preaerver at Cananle Pier at the foot of Rockar Brooklyn. An off-duty policeman, Thomaa Gultan, alongalde the trio and aided In the re^. Mlaa Caah plunged off the pier into Jamaica Bay. She waa taken to a hoapHal and kept there for treatment for ahock and aUBmenlon. | Mkaway Farb in, bntoght a Doctor to Lift Ban on Sewer Use If... LANSING W - Dr. Albert E. er, haa notified U downrteer Wayne County oommunltiea of the I under which he would lift a ban on additional uae of e tag aewen and anatroctioa of Dr. Stanley W. Block Optometrisi 3513 ilisabafti Uka M. Camar af Caaa Laka R4. Evening*, fry Appointment PImni* FE 2-23«2 CIPMd'Wfld. ment on the flnanctag of a pro-pooed SaO-miUlon aewor project. Heller Predicts ' New EcoDdmic Highs for 1982 DETROIT — Communist Ro- to'i em announort^ today. signed at Buahoreat bcftween rap-reacnutlves of the two gaiwa- LAI^SING UB-FIve state m vre to meet with fMer la Waahingloa today ) . - Gov. Swataaon’s order to dtaoan> iM^pUal Monday alter a caoe of "nue toOa on the Blue Water ridge linking Par ■rata. Ont. San. Prank D. Beudic. R-SL Clair, chalrnun of the group, aaid w^rthar fadeyal highway funda wUttU ba loat Chnada coaUinai .......... ......... Y, . Mfe fldala that the state . . MIT mlUkSh in federal highway money unkaa It Uvee up to a U87 teMUt to romove toila at the bridge when the bonds ftutadng nictton were paid off. Thf The people of thle state have an investment of nearly f2 rnilUon in the new oonMltution, and they muat have tea Opportunity to Itatf out What’s in it. , . whether some of ua agree with it or not." Vudor the bUlgrt. the mmoste-rim wduld apead abwrt $lt«,M dtelributiowaf aa "addreoa to tee people.” Another 171,000 will be apent for jdmtaialration and bouaekeeptag dutieo, with m.ODO to be uoed to reotore the aouth wing of Laratag's dvlc center, which waa into Cbnatltution Hall. W * Ike budgp calla for the eimndi-tun of anSher S103.000 fo/prtat-tag of the official conventioa record. Offloers of the convention may tun into further opposition to the pooboonivewCita project when , they try to get approval of the plan from the Legislature, poesildy this Cohen Back hi. Out of Jail Fdllowing Fight of county Jail again Monday. The former gambling figure' latest trip home required only i S1.Q50 bond—practically unnoti^ able compared' to the. 5100,000 ond it Bometlroca takes to gel Im free. - W dr ★ ^ complaint chargea Cohen two counts of battery and two oouate of disturbing the peace. ______Union picket with the ’ll own oIm Saturday aad ’’TUi is too ridiculoua to even Ptcint lintf There warn’ fekrt line." But police called it "aa entirely The remarkahle ncwcomfoTt that is built intothel962 Cadillac ii a ddight even to long-time Cadillac owners. And it’s an even more marvelousexperience to those who are learning the luxury of the “car of can” for the first time. Nowhere in motordom «re seats more buoyant... space more generous... handling so satisfying ... or roads so.smooth. Your Cadillac dealer will be pleased and proud to arrange the luxury drive of your life. will be worth your time for the revelation alone. rrSIT YOUR WCAL AVTHdRIZEf) QEALER JEROME MOTOR SALES COMPANY’ 2T«.2M SOUTH SA6INAW STMn • rOtWIAC, MICHMAN \V T toed poisoning, told her producere today she is ready to go back to lb on the film "Cleopatn." Her Site Oeatary roq afllee j HIARINQ rm - oiMB mat • to • Aisw « kv amtotonis HIARING AIM 25% Off M*. t» mmrj. a««tor rrtM M-M-Mov MJi > MIDTOWN HIAMNO alMK 'We at« riioMing outdoor ecenee In which she doei not appear. had not been scheduled to . go before the Cafneras again until" the •ud of this week ", ' Abb The 25-yaar-old LoiMon - btea meriean film star fainted at her 01% Saturday after suffering oe-: ven paiiis Iroiti eating tidnted PERRY DRUGS mlLDlvd. mikaMHlfi •I froy 0 YosSotH . 333-7152 I 333-7057 2-Pc. Polka Dot Ensemble Looks Lovely, Lives Effortlessly in DuPont Nylon Jersey spring fa the *eo»n for going placoi end dofng things. Wear your ewobrty scooped Stroller solo or wltfi Its perky, notched collar |ackeW As an onieitiblo, B gives you the crisp, slim trim look .,. ps o dross, tho shirred cotlddess neckline makes a perfect setting for your string of pearls whether ~ . you ore dining fashionably In town or frovellng coolly even in the tropics. Washoble, it drtps dry fast, sheds wrinkles, needs likie or no Ironing. Noyyi cinnamon toost or dove grey; sizes 10 to 20 and J2Vf> to 22Vi- $17SS PhoM FE 4^251 T or Moll Your Ordar-Wolti'd Doytimo Drassaa... Third Floof k' THE PONTIAC PkESS t. « Wnt Huron Street TUESDAY. FEBRUARY 1162 BircMIf* Tic* PrttldM *o4 o Mimpiu, jmmm. Local MTcHMaa We’re Proud of RMords The nhi^ Pontiac is flashing around the^^untry these days in a 1^ manner thatN^hould make all area ^ ( residents sit up^d take notice. Most <»r Us tsohM settle for one record over the wee^d, but not the JPontiac car. First of kH, it was an-nounced by E. M. (I^)"^ti8 that ^' the Pontiac car officiall3^flnished . third in the 1961 sales derby. \ vested in such snrplusei^ and their carrying cost exceeded |1 billion annually. ^ This is probably the greatest single sales achieveBient in thr\ ' history of the Pontiac Motor Di- ^ " vision. For a medium price car to finish ahead of all others except €hevrolet and Ford is something to holler about. ★ ★ ★ ^ Topping off the sales record, a 1962 Pontiac,8tock car finished first in the NASCAR &00 mile race at Daytona Beach Sunday. While finishing first in this grueling test of speed and dependability, Olxnn (FntXBAU.) Rob-xBTs established a new world’s record of )52.529 for a continuous 5U0 mile race. “(3) The President’s recommendations represent the most extensive And rigorous system of planninjg And wontrm over farming imovm m tor history. Mr. Kxmnxdt bellevea that only such a radical prograiR can mmee the drastic adjustments needed to cut production, reduce surpluses and the OMts they incur and, over the long run, shift 50 million excess acres from farming to grass, trees and recreational uses. OMtoents .w^ no doubt stress the socialistic features of this program, though it differs only in degree an life foaiuraly different these days in Washington —at the Whits House, and toi gov- there. eminent circles, .. .^ryj^Kiy fo on his good “T havior. but he (the President) «,.n ----- will imve to be ^ he doesn’t bold uf ‘hen* He *«••“ «’hen whether tt is bet- fo the White House, arhere for the tiiW tlihe in many decades there’s ' a little 1-yearold son and a S^yeaW old daughter. but tha taxpayers iBdn’t pay tar tbam. R'f up to ’lbs Prem to inform the peo^ more thoroughly. B. L. Tabks ptey haiBra belag laUe Is the When eampaIgniBg far the prestdeney ki llM, Keaaedy said .a great deal aboirt getUag iha You need eomeone to help cleeir, put In atock, ete.^ But most young awake? This new Jet airport is moving in on you.. Was the Qty of Rmtiae repreaswted at a recent meeting to Lake O0an? Don’t leave this up to the out-* lying communities. ’TMa 1st as close to you aa it Ja to us. Let pour dty. < how ypu feel. ter or worse as iSte’of^Inmes^n^Ttake! ' “Huy 1 And boys are not taught compared to ^ ** ** *** »x«mple.of an at home to evfoep a floor daan, what has bwn '**"• oIBcialdom that is doing a lot of warii-wkidows or find things to the custom 1^ ^ moving arounA Maybe the old do to make themeelvUI useful, tofoie. For now «vei^ one enters the speculative slogan ’Join the Navy and see the Add the yearly tax you pay on Us there certainly «®bn of politics — tt la a ropriate euphemism Ibe work youraeM or your profit has included rone with *"®™ voters—among In an atomic age, "Eat, drink and is so low you haven’t enough to Japanese chlldrerand Snging Hi!? ^ «toTy. tor tomorrow—’’? barbs with Indonerian students- "“f morr about the family life be said his Journey was intended keep your o«lr housed poing. for Ualtai Prsoo latoinaMsaal~ Ibday fo TtHadap, Feb. 20. 'tile Slat diQr of the year with 314 to Dr. William Brady Says: ‘fbe moon Is appraacMng Hb Witch Hazel Good Agent to Help Varicose Veins One of the baffling problems this Nation faces lies in the increasin| farm production with diminishing •cres. I The New York fhnes dl^usses this in a current editorial: "The complex program for increased Government economic control over agriculture, which President Kxnnedy unveiled represents the latest effort to cope with the problems created by one of the great success stories of recent Amencan hlstoi^. I^t success story is the incrodibie productivity, efficiency and abundance ot our farm economy. AAA ‘ "While Premier Khrushchev harangues his collective farmers almost fruitlessly for more pro-duMion, President Kennedy predicted that in 1980 we shall be able to feed a population of 65 million additional people while twing 50.million acres. The problems of ab(indan»—eccumu-mted surpluses dM**TOeir price-depressing effects pins the international political compUcations of an export subsidy program—are far pleasanter and mmre manageable than Khniahchsv’s problem of acarcity. A .. A ' A "A Presidential message makes clear that Mr. IpfNNKDT sees essentially three main alternatives before us to handle the present and'future problems of farm abundance: ; "(1) * One alternative: la to scrap the present complex of f a r m programs, end the huge governmental role In agriculture and let\the free market forces of supply and neniand take ctmtrol. This would undtobted-ly produce sharply lower pricM for food and other farm products and greatly improve the competitive posl'-tion of American-farm exports on the world market. the President believes that the dbonomic damage to farmers* iitcoiho—and the probable bankruptcy of many less efficient •farmers—makes this solution unde-'^ slrable. „ A A . A \ «(2) The second alternative would be ceseniially to keep the farm program—cxcluaive of last jrear’s emergency meatoree es H was when President Eisenhbwer left office. This would avoid s»f Increase of governmental eentrel over airienltare, though leaving intact tkfo great measure of control that already existed in IMO. Prasident Kennedy beiieves that this course would mban building up still moEf snrphmes. He pMnta out that a yatf ago tha Government hj^ 0 billion In- Wben 8t. Peter scans hla list of softies, he won’t find the nione of Art Scott. ’The evening jrosbeain have surely added the Pontiac area to their migration, schedule. Now of'430 LakealdS Drive repots ovot 50 making a 15-mlnute noonda^ stop at her >lrd, feeding board. Here/s our congratulations to Bdltors JolU Candler and BUee Geode fbr their magnificent wortc on the current edition of Tentiaetlon,’* official organ of the Pontiac Chamber of Commerce. Something p( the same impression is conveyed the all-night parties they have in the White House. Joe Tumulty, President WUaon’s private adcretary, used to say that he regularly read the women’s pagea of the Washington newspapers because "it was the I" * pamphlet, "Variooae Veins for the three conditions are fUnda-only way to find out what waa Varicoae Ulcer,’’ available ment^y weak, dilated, iwoUai, really going on.’’ free if you provide me with *a enlarged veins. Maybe, therefore, an excerpt «tamped. aelf-addieeaed envelope. By the aame token it Ja reaaon-fr^ the -pen of Eletty Beale, a recommend witch hazel inter- able to expect that regular prac- Sbeiety reporter for the Waahlng- n*Uy aa a rem- “-----' *•-- —• —----------- ton "Star,’’ would net be andaa; «ly f* varicoee Fnan here on In It haa no ptaoe ^ vari- coee ulcer. "The lady who did tt srith Secre. TJih medical tary of Defoiae Robert McNamara name^^ witch at the White House dinner dance hazel ts hamame-last week waa noit| other than Us and the ptop-Jacqueline Kennedy. AmI accord- aration for in}e^ ing to the other gUasto;’She does tt nal use Is the! beautifully!’ and ‘He sma terrifle.’ fMdextract of Portraits for gonv C METCALFE A littla girl is waittog for . . Hec distant smiling sailor boy . log Stan. On tUs dv In hlstoiy: In ITM. Presldsnt Geosg* I In (he whole wide srorld . . . <>)uld I greater Joy . . . He ie to hef the •un that shinee . . . Upon the sky. And douda of white on heaven's blue . . . His uniform has come to be . . . And wMn at velvet eventide . . . ’Hie gende svtnd la blowing by My farmer friends teli'me tbat It Isn’t a had winter. Mod at the anew which, has fallen did nat ae-cumulate In drlfta, bat ramainad where it fell, thoa glvtng |he prap-er protection to wheat, hay and .faraga frojN.. ......— A pair of aqulrrela who have several bushels of nuts and acorns storetj under ttielt garage floor chewed a hole Into the kitchen of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Fedeway Of Waterford, and began carrying away some outs In a d I have received so help ^ drew aid rebred at 3 a.m. tom you and are so truly grate- unsolved coittUcts "But the President, who had dte- fo* we want you to know tbat after dcohoHam. appeared from time to time fw reading about hamartteBs in your ..up crane.’ consultations in his private apart- coldmn our doctor^ wrote a pre- ,^ ments upstairs with -sotat of his scription tor it. and'to the past . confessed A phone call from Mn. Jacqueline Ranawell of Waterford) ezpreasea pride 4hat another Ja^eque^e takes her place as a great television star. In showing us around the White HiAse. All that was lacking waa a view of one Caroline Kennedy, „ everv if when aatoep. own officials present kept tt going three months 1 have given up the Iargely| iintil 5 a.m when M went to ' ------------^ ' goodnight to his ‘As usual, Lester J^anln and his orchestra played to their red coato. Lester describes it in his own idea of using a Wheel chair. •The - Although mowfall has not been above average in the PoAtlac area, Graham Engelman, who has a gas station on the Dixie Highway about Jen mllea northwest of here, claims the highest snow bank.. Accumulated. In keej^ hlh grounds clear. It'is tra ieet deep. “ They are as totoartol aad as gay aad as Rgnlflad a putj aa yM wBI itad fnsn coast» esaat. la havhfo taa bat - -- The CouRtiy Parson a platonie one foal aeverel yean; al-1 though my hii.a-band to only 42. "And I have been scared when be 40 on my nexi “1 don’t want to and'unattractive ai "I have beeenM free fren Mr ter^ ror abeto be lag. physically ear attractive after 46. , And the booklet “How to Prevent Impotence,’’ could have ban- Vejbal Orchicb to- Arthar C. Rieh of 104 Ihwnklln Blvd.’, OSth birthday. Mr. and Idra. Gordon Lennex of a^Bitobabaw Road; 64th wedding iui-niversaiT. Mr. and Mrs. John Zimmerman of Flint; 6Sth wedding anniversary. Mr. aad Mrs. Barry C. Narion •of Durand; 6Sth wedding anniversary. ’’Thank yquWtoi tar *»*Pl«« «» *«*»«»* 5*“ to better health." P*““- ^ ' Mr. pnd BIrs. — '“And if some N«,' Ma’am, I don’t doubt peo- mskas passes pie. I’m Jurt^skeptlcsl of tostt- sclenoe doe-" mohials. In your case, tar Instance, dito to toe nature of her marriage within 24 hours. Don’t get the mistaken notion that this newspaper makes any money on the broad educational work accoinpltttMNf iia these TO cent non-profit booklets. NEWSPAPER EDUCATION It doeM!! make a cent, nor doer the ayquciwtoat otfen the booklets. ' And I have walvAl all royalties therson to help thelh keep the booklet aervioe -from going too for to toe rqd. E(ren so, we stin gp in*the red the shelf 'every year oa the mail service. __________ ^ onun. In so | must donate all my speaking, desperation, Ihere^, I seek a -^foes. to make up the deficits, or tavern and .start ( rlnkfaig. J'Om fydneiate would cancel this "For when I an hall infmA- mail aervioe. I get aome ^lef tom toy ^ AmertoaaB. lacludliig they will obtain max Imam dls-tribatlon, lor the goat cd' tMs edncatlaaai maU servlee is ton; ply to reSevo worries and can-IHcts that nps0 happy homes. —It you wish to save .money by mlUloas tt dollan In ptw Mother’s dub ,or chiirch group, fine and dandy. Many leading phyi^dans, -dentists, and divorce laiwyen, plus over 2,500 clersymen each year, order "These bradets id quantity Just to help their pdHenti| or cUents 'juid paiiahicnerB to avoM divorce, Dorn's 4 4 In ntosHgal MeMral 1 B and In IsMsrs Ikna p AO l.kaew nboM It to And Dorn her alcohoUam, and unhapplim' her childrni, V si column reguldriy. fa faOt. -non-jAnllt If fluidextract of hamanwlis ia ney»P*P*r good for variooae (enSuxe^l piy)^, veins, k to only reasonaMet to Ihfaik Far eacanipk. _ it must be good also for beroonv far toe booklet oa holds (piles) nmr lor varicocele, " ‘ ‘ e totok-tog tract M l and montoig' for 'a tow manths. 1 kaow It can de aa haim. at any- They Just are naive about nsMK . era. overhead costa. A leading In. , to typical M ' siiranee company recently N-encounJer ported t^ It oasts 12 for every 'brass penonM letter than an caiicative Ics. sends out tor his firm, have avoided dr ★ ★ shame Our mall doesn’t ran thM hl^ :, has caused for tot bulk of tt doesn’t require had read this \personal dictation. But the labor charges alone foe the 20 dent, opening letter*, checking the ra-red by tMs turn addresses, tabitoi^g the mail nfaped her and crediting it . to each ..paper, bud, etc., exceeds the tom 30 cents we tok per *>eoldet. That’s why we aige yea to pass 4beae booUeto aronad ee -awii IS » ssr9,.t! awlM la Q*klsB<«. (Mat***, UtIbs-■tOB. Mieiunb, L«B**r Md Wuh- tea*« CoiBii** N u nsai • r*or; •Iwvbtr* In Ulchl*«nl*ad all otaw ptaiic* IB th* Bb^ Itot** 4M.M • ...... *^A^. ' THE PONTIAt: PRESS, TUESDAY. FEBRU. J^Y 20, : SEVEN RAKER HANSEN Russians Apparently Learned Little From Pgwers INSURANCE -ALL FORIMS- BY BOB CXmaiDINB NEW YORK-U the truth wen known the Ruutane did net gtve ^ IVanda Gary Powen a» a goodwill geature to thaw the Cold War. They probably aent him back becauae he bored them atUt. That aeema to be what he’a jdo-Int to the CIA, FBI, State Depart- CIA’a plan/to chooae ao Uand| a hiL OmNO TO CUUN? . The RiHaiana would never have mt him* back if they auapaeted. tor an inatant, that he could bring back with him anything ot even renote hO^ to our intetltgenue. nOUGE NUCT ESRCUm what he toM the Sovieta after be< ii«- alwt-dow»m^«aaV-why he aeemed to agree with every word the proaecntor beDowed at hla trial, why be emerged from prlaon looking better than the day he entered, wh hia plane or 1 figated he’d be thanked fer aaeh •erviceo aa he midered 10 the OU, eeUeei hB aixty er aevealy piMtn 4-mt 7i4Connnan MinoMu uun bldc. rOMTIAC e the pleaanre danea of Pound, Va. Now it'a likely that Congreaa g|^ want to have at him. Some of Ha oommHtecnMn can’t believe a fellow who did what Powera did. in a machine aa exotic aa the U2. could poaolbly be aa empty aa he appeared to be at the trial, during Incarceration, and now that Iwo FonLCoupk-Give Yale $2 Million NEW HAVEN, Coon. » -* Yale Unlveraity haa receive* » pnilUon from Mr. »td Mra. Walter Buhl Ford and Mr. ind Mra. WlUlam Oay Ford of Detroit. The glfU of $1 million from each couple were made to Yale’a Pro-graiha for the Ar& and Sdaneea. but Fra^ 0. H. Willlama, nattond chalmum of were divided in their outlook. <”If I bad a gun I’d aboot ——a coUeagua muttered to me aa we lat in the preaa bal-c^ of the crowded and ornate o( Commons. Almoat almul-taneoudy/kthe reporter on my other aide whlapered, "Poor guy’s been in sdltary for lOt days.’’) have not yet designated which specific, projects will benefit. * ' ♦ ■ w William aay Ford, vice president of the Ford Motor Co., and Walter Ford, president of an In- At his trial in August of IMO in a small cell for a month, two months, wKh nothing td i nothing to do. Food is passed to him through a small opening in aaaaf ean aay, from the downy aalety of fmedani, hoar ha hh» aaM wopM have acted, there waa one olae as to why be la a aahdued sort at way, dM^ aappBed by aa M Moaeew haad. ’’iron notloe he keeps saying ii« and so iDctbT’* he pointed whoa are awaited the verdlol the ooort cafeteria. "I knoi little about how they can get v^v-opemllon out of a witness. / ♦ W / "They don’t have to torture him, starve him, or anything like that They Just leave a GENEBAL TAUL "Then one day a Russian walks in, probaUy a Russian of hla own Good English, affable man. He has dgarettes, almost inythhv idle ihe guy MiDeen hlMdttng far. The taUi is general. Powers first inteirogators could have been pUoU. Lot In common, those guys. So, at^ a time, te talk gets down to specifics. The guy must have said, ‘Well pal, you were over the U.S5.R. Yea, yon could put It that Way. ‘Let’s go for a afee walk to the yard: IPs a beaatlfnl day.’ was a strange scene, when the verdict was handed down by the chairman of the three dffi-' bench. That half of the courtroom reserved tor Russian bureaucrats and their families burst into almost deafening ap-pjauae. The other side of the room—the side reserved for the diplomatic corps—sat on its hands. In an anteroom, where the flier said a sad farewell to his family, there were growls and snorts from his father, who had pffted with hia daughter^Iaw. over ths whole scene loomed the Imperious Luce man whp had purdwaad, tor cash on the li^, the intimata ds-of a drjM)ber page la our f About 27.000) Americana lost thsir sight this yejff. t you f you?’ Powers has to agree. "And you ware flying over us without our pcmtlasion, right?’ Right. i ‘Wwl^’t you be angry and alarmed If a Soviet plane flew over Chicago or Oak Ridge?’ Sure udd. "‘You lOMW sew the aunaintt ea» ParHTbrake up ever GdB, dnPt your Ysah,'! guera B did. ‘In ether words, ysu ______toe break-up of thto great aftort to and toe CMdT Wart’ ^ imi '0 \ ; i| DOUBLE HOLDEN % o.^L TRADING STAMPS* IB- WEDNESDAY^ Thrifty PHARMACISTS Charge LESS for Filling > PRESCRIPTIONS f ■ f ■ f]^E PONTJAC PRESS. TUJ^^^jpAY, FKBKUAfiY 20. 1962 Apathy, Weather Cut Voter Turnout^ in Area Voter apathy and bad weather «ere blamed tor generaUy poor eight area primary hataa In l■ftlnn^ aw DHy a aihaU percentage ot the registered voters In the villages Of Milford, Holly and Romeo afid the dte of lioy 'cast ballots, Which toe the most part, saw aU tnonmbei^ nominated to positions lajipooinki electhms. Omn whcR 300 of the 800 legMewd voIm cost ballots in ty prilnuy. of the running were James Jtey> nolds, 91 votes, and Bernard T. Desmond, T6. Unopposed in the primary were Village President Wayne N. Black, 20T votes: aerk Mrs. Dorothy Carl, 229: Treasurer Mrs. Elafaie Hosner. 230: Assessor Dgin J. Anger Sr., 21S; and library board members, Mrs. Coleman U Davld-son. 197, and Mrs. qyde Spencer, m..:JULaEe Incnmhents. -------- vttages of Leonard, Ahnosl aad Election officials said interest was low because there were im issues to be decided nor were there any large fields of candi- AB the general elections will be •eonduoted March 12, with the exception of the vote in Troy which will be held April 2. Four candidates, including the incumbents, were nominated Milford to oppose one another in the, general election lor the two expiring three-year terms on the council. Seven candidates vied.^ for the four positions. ■aeambeats joha Murphy apd^ Maxwell Kelley win be ehal-by Stealey OOsk of 1«N Romeo ,^1Wo incumbent councilmen, Jack >feFadden anl TOny P. Galan, and Norman L. Engel were nominated on the Republican ticket for the three expiring posts in ttomeo’s primary election yester- , Five candidatea. all Republicans, were seeking the nominations. Murphy polled iS3 votes, followed by Kelley, 131; Cook, 102; and Plotzer, 96. The other three candidates and ^Ir votes were Phil Moore, 63; Einard Kauppi, 33; and James A. V MeFaddea leeelved IN votes: Oalsu. m; and Ei«el, Ml. ^ The other two candidates ou' Incumbent Councilman John Dodd will be opposed for the one-year-term on the council by Ronald McGrath of 203 HUI St. Dodd garnered 195 votes agalnit 91 for McGrath. PEltKlNS Plan Workshop oh^Appliances foi W^nesday With the exception-of the clerk’s post, there were only two candidates, one from each party, vying Velda V. Perkins, home laundry specialist and home economist vi Fidgldaire division of General Mo-togs, win discuss the selection and use of modem launmy equipment ' ‘ Pontiac Public Libri^ to- the aecond and d County Extension agent j. Mary A. Hardy, chairman of ( workshop, will discusa com-' I waaherdryers. The sst-1 last from 9:30 a, m. to by Gordon Lowe, electric distribution superintendent of Consumers Power, Poidiac. HharfieSiifhts Or drinUns ofay be a of udd, but aniioyint bladder ‘ ' you fed refUeia ifortable. And if Tiiie to 01-------------------- JDom'S POs act 3 ways for > r&ii. 1 -They have a eootbhis edect . on Madder iirfoaiooi: 2 - A fait pailk •aefevini aetioa oa aanfos bdckaclic. * lauilr-'tr- BHiaoalar.achee aiid paint. T-A wooderfolly nild diuretic action thru the kJdaeya lendins to mcreaae IauMut af the 15 milM of kidney fM *e. eaiw happy. rei»f ioni Mire' eajoyed for over 60 MilM for the high vote in yesterday’s primary. Mrs. Evelyn Mae Aiwold al 47f Park Iilaad Road deleaM Leon O. Joaea wWh a vsto af IS to M to win the Village party ■omlaalioa to ehelleage attaea’a party iaeumbeat Mrs. Mary Parkiaaaa la the general eJec-tloa. Mrs. ParkiBsoB polM IM 191 N. Shore Drive, 112, tipas-iner; and Kenneth M. Ferguson of 54 EUxabefli St. 106, asset on the village party tlclcft. Almont Donald Helm; an incumbent village trustee, ams Dominated to the village praaidant on Village party ticket at a t^Ser 1ncaiiBeiS~o^^ the Cltixen’a P*riy.[/^Mfttor CfteMMe st^wy. and their votes are mage Presl-| They wiU-be oppoeed by Rotert 0^ the Almont Villafe | dent Irviifo J, Uhger, 152; ’Treas- D. Stokea of 421 Lake St.. U2. c urer Geraldine Campl^, 149; and preaident; Jmie Van Winkle of oSb« The Almont ppurty did not have a lacanbeat Clark Verne B. Peter Bents and Incumbent J, H. LaMar ea candidates for the three two-yearteima on the board of Unoppoaad candidatea for other poato were John F. Oldwd, -jfp 'votea^r and ________ John Ndsoa wfw jwmlnatod~4o elerkCaorgs Patterson, 286; ttW the one-yearterm on the board. Leonard a Part Ptotaer of «8 B. Mala 24. Lake Orion ’The three incumbent Citiren’s party coundlmen were nominated for places on the March brttot along with three of the four Village party candidatea. After i? years as village clerk, John Lobzien turned down the domination for the post and the nomination went to Mra. Marlene Mallfo nt Ihe caodis here .last niSht. / . beat Peertdeal Ijiwsoa Obsik aad thq^ Itioard Of trustees were incumbents Frank Bore and Eugene Mallla, along with Raymond Green. All nominees are members of the atlzen’s party. Holly ’The three councilmen whose terms ^are expiring were the top vote-gotters among the six candidates seeking nomination in yaa-teiday'a prUnary In Holly. Keitoa polM the Mgbert 1 O. Obertwha. Ms And Mm M. The/ win be oppoaed by Samyel Wright, 122 votea: Clare HubbeU; 107; and Paul 0. Cobee. 93. The challenged aU are former cqun- Grant Hulet, 225. Troy The Citizen’s PartjM Mrs„..^^oi]g Masl^d Sbrttnfte^'toGm aark, gaassdr; am Ho ble, Ooidan Im and , Ribble, tnist^A / In Troy, incumbent city corn- years. NIneb persons attended the., Metai VincMt •i McAvoy wtU be opposed In the April 2 general elei^-tkm by James E, Blair, pla 8t, and Carlia R. ' 169 Ottawa St. MeAvay palled MS towed by MT: and I Robert L. Doolln ^ed to gain a nomination by poUmg the> lowest total of votes qrhong the five candidates. He cent of the city’s registi^ cast ballots. itamoro All Progressive party ineum- the exception of two board of trustees, at a caucus here yesterday. A fun slate of candidates was nominated by the Otixen's party The three incumbents polled the highest number of votes from among a field of five on the Citl-sen’s party ticket. ’They are Thomas Arthur. 115 votes; Hugh Galloway Sr., Ill; and Dr. Richard A. McNeil, 77. CARTS BAIXOT — Harold Ingram, 20 N: Axford St., was one of the 300 voters who went to the polls yesterday in Lake Orion to pick candidates for public office in a two-party primary election. Shown checking his re|d>tra- tion are Mrs. Eddie Wittier Oeft) and Mrs. Mabel Griggs. There are sonM 900 registered voters In Lake Orion and yesterday's turnout is only slightly less than In the last two-party primary in I960. ROCHESrrtR -Ddnald E. Bishop, 1818 Ansal Drive, has been Ike alher two OMsm’s eandt-datoa were B. Raasea OUman, n; nad VclMid O. PIaiMy. 8L ’Ike Incumbents will be challenged tor their council poets by Village party members William V. Shoup of 109 Axford SL. 94 votes; Fled C. Oole of 233 N. Lapeer St., 93; and J. Lewis Ross-num, 99. Fslllng to gain a position to the >undl was Lawrence Marlin who loeived 40 votes. He belongs to the Village party. ROCHESTER - A auggeaUon from Board Member Victor M. 2ink that certain plans in the West Junior High School be revised was discussed at length at last nlSht’s board meeting. Reject Issues in Holly Ballot Bonding Program ond Tax Extension Refused in School District The $1.1 mUlkm fndUty la being built on a 31-acre site west of Old Perch Road, midway between Avon Road and West Unl-veriity Drive. Linn the school to be birtt in two to accommodate la slated to opM HOLLY — A proposed bonding ^rogram tor new eonatructian and an extension of current foxes plus terday by voteri in the Hrtly School District. Rejected wtn a $950,000 bond In other buaineas, th boaid decided to partidpato in the Oakland County Cooperative Bus Purct^ase Plan, and will order five hew bodies. tax pro- two of which ANlnaitol Imsa# ujiMJiwi levy. . The bond issue was defeated with a vote of 474 to 331 and 6te millage turned, down 479 to 'Hie funds hum the bond Jssue jouM have been used to const ‘ a ISroom rtementary school, rooms to the Holly Junior High School and to the high school. ’The defert of the mUlage extension m^bns a kMB to the sdiool district of abrtit $100,000 araraally, Supt. Raymond Barber. The provided another $40,000 yrtuly. Barker added that the sdiool Mud will study the millage proposal and iNubdMy schedule an election on it in April or May. I Machinery Show * at Lapeer to : ■ LAPEER »EEr1- Tke 10th Annual Lapver County Farm Machinery Short rtffl open at the Lapeer County Center Building at March 1, and run for two and nights. Eleven dealers will display rtne different lines of farm equipment, occupying almost 15,000 square feet of exhibit apace. This is the Isignt indoor dkqSay of fsm ma-chtoety in Blidilgan. Ike Crtrtff ASOB OawUtoe in man n baoOi at flto rtMw to Km IMI feed grain. AGP and On opening night at 7:30, movies will be shown followed by a free lunch, sponaored and served by the Cbunty Banker’s Aaaoda- aupport Lapm County's industry, the machinery dealers will spotnor free milk all durii«1he ahrw period. No admis-vfll be charged.' At Rochester Board Meeting Discuss School Changes the Avon Township area of the Republican Committee of (jrtkland County, Charles L. Lyle, OOP Couity chairman, amnui^ to-day. 1 lahap has bean n'fMisat al ef taertly members aad dtlaena The cooperative plan has been set up to ask for package blda on bus bodies at a lower cost, acconliiv to Richard F. Huizenga, who la in charge of RochMer •ritool transporfotton. "We hope to have at least 24 bus bids in the county,” he said. ■olwoltow 1 be ordered from local com- Jamea Lndwtek was aaked to of instruction and apeclal services nder one root At the present time the business office and central adminia-tration are in and the house on Walton Boulevard which now is the main board office is not adaptable for board kieetlngs, SdMols Supt. Doiiald C Baldwin. ’The matter Birmingham arebitecla O’Dell, Of the tor aystem aehaale, SJM an tnaapertod by baa. With study and recommenda-tioM the board hopes to eliminate Baker Junior High PTA Plans Talk by Judge ‘Hie board approved a request from Zink to pay in advance any schort personnel pent to a oonfer- At the caocluakrt of the meeting, board members toured the Hatrimn Buildli« In artldpntlaa of oocrelating all the administration offices, the department ’TROY-Members of the Baker Junior High School Parint-Teacher Atoodation will maat at 9 o’dock this evening in the school audL tarium to hear a talk by Probate Court Judge Donald'E. Adams. Lohg active In youth guidance wok, Judge Adams’ topic is to be simed at aU parents, who havO been urged to attend, PTA otO- Paradox in Dairy Industry Featured in Support Talks EAST LANSING (UPD»A para-m and it might hinder needed dok in the dairy Industry has brou^ to the limelight In n weeks by federal considerations of support programs for dairy products. MSU dairy department head Charles Lassiter said other ap-shes might eliminate the difference between demand and *up-ply in the industry. other dairy products is teamed the constantly improving methods of feed and care of cows, which tend to increase inodue-tivity. |i/, per eeat In IMl while mlea deoHned t per eert,'* aeoordtag to Aveiy Voae, an DHaela dairy. a M of irtik per dollar af profit adrtag to the anrplm.’* Cows averaging leas than 9,000 pounds of milk at« generally losingmoney for thefr owners, Las- MSU agricultaiHir^ Glyta McBride said per capita eonsumplfon at dairy products has decreased throughout the tor several years. Unta last yedr, however, the nation’s poprtation grew enough to boost the total Fanners must soon choosr be-,veen accepting production Unjlts and lower price , wpiforts, said Glen Lake, L^wer County dairyman who is president eft the Midi-in Milk Producers’ Association. 'Despite price drops, a majority of Midiigan dairymen appear efff^ posed to production* quotas or freezing of base prices',” Lake MiOltr HINDER CUTS In a maU ttirvey of the association members, Lake said many perHple Mt Ireeziqg bfue prices until milk consumptipin increfeses would help only established tarm- 'In Michigan, a herd of 18 t producing 13,700 pounds of milk eadi retuma aa much profit as a herd ot 46 aninials profoicing only 8,500 pounds,” aald Lassiter. "This is true despite the fact that ^ ler. hlghepiiroducing I 140,000 pounds less mUI James KlI, previous campaign Irector, resigned from that.position to take the Job as assistant director. Hill is president of the Rocbeste^A^ea Republican Gub. Biihop, 29, is mSrried to the former Nancy Michael of Syco-more, Dl. They have three children, Rebecca, 4, Stisan, 2, and Judith Ann, 1. CAROL ANH SIRATTON Mr. and Mrs. Joseph C. Stratton of 8880 Oakside Road, merce Townahip. announce the engagement of their daughter, Carol Ann to Marine Pfc. Ronald J. Webster, ton of. Mr. and Mrs. Alvah Webster Sr. of 5215 Cllntonville Road, Independence Tortnship. No wedding date has been set. with the exception of a village prea-dert. Named an Km Piegraartva ftoket wars Parqy Oaik, psaaL . dent; Giava C. MOrae, etorki / Vkitor MartiB, aasaamn iaeambert Oaavge W. Day/ . 'Joha DaOntt aad Al F To Head GOP Drive in Avon Twp. Area HURON THEATER NOWI •» 7tOO • ilOtU BBBl wH|ll*HMRE inB% •COMINO niOAY Susan HAYWARD **BACK STRUT** and r af the Reehcatar-Area Repak- A graduate of Almont High School In 1»1. Biihop entered Oberlin College and graduated with a B. A. in political adence in 1965. In 1968-59, he " sive graduate study at Michigan State Urtversity in East Lansing. Veterans Groups Set Meeting Thursday The new campaign director is branch manager of the First Na-tioltal Bank of Lapeer with his Dryden. offices In I Preshyterian Club Plans SOUTHFIELD-A Joint maetlag of the Vetenns of Foreign Wars, Dunham Ray, Port 9553, the South-flrtd Antorican Lvghm Ifost 407 and tU JewWi War Veterai^ Lt Hoy F. (keen Fust 939 wUl be held at 9:30 p.m. Thurvday at the Michi- Marriage Talk TROY - Hie Men’s Gub of First PteMyterian Cburdi here sponsor a talk on marriage at 7 p. m: Sunday following a dc dinner to be served in Oaest speaker win be Rev. selar at the First PieMyteriaa afarah. Btnnlagham. RIb tali Is ertfOed Mart Important Unit la Saeiety." ... Rev: Scott has received degrees from Maryville CVdiege and Temple and Princeton univrtfolties.’ He served as pastor of churches tat Kentaicky and Pennsylvania befpK coming to Birmingham. The Men's Gub will provide the leat dUi, coffee, rolls, milk and butter for the dinner to be served buffet, style at 6 p. m. Members and friends are asked to bring salOds, vegatables, potatoes, d«s- DONAIJ) E. BUHOP CTililKEEGO CHUnY CHKKIR *TWIST AROUND THE CLOCK" "JAZZ iOAT" Stailf TOMORROW RHIMES DELICATESSEN AT NYE DAIRY rwMirtBC Ow raawn KOSNU CORN8D IMT SIICUL LUNCHEON EVDYDAY A Him. "Oae OH” bUI rftowa hy mwhsrs al llw Raand-tabto rt r-------- * *— iSKi'ini Chairman for the affair is John Nemon, post commander of the I JWV. Cochairmen a r e Arthur! Becker, Junior vice” commander, and Mel SOner, oommante of the IFIRST-RilMIIITS Oakland County prose* George Taylor will act aa master of ceremonies and will be 01 the guest speakers. Odpper minea near Butte, Mon-font, prhduce odedMrd hte tlon’s output. EAGLE Mm WAYNE Dan DAILEY MaHi^ O’HARA ^mWGSDfEAGUr , wMstoVteriBOND^liitt&Nr A A COMEDY RIOT! REAL ENTERTAINMENT! “DON’T GO NEAR THE WATER” n COLOR With GLENN FORD AYQADMMY'R JOTOUS UUSICAL LOVe STOftYI RODGERStHAMMKSfEINlS -AND- iCuwSS ONLY R 6aYS MORI! Shews I :I5> 9:50 - 8:29 - 9100 3^1 rand • SYARYS nkOAY K "TENDCR Is fhe NIGHT’ tHfi PONtiAC PRESS, TUESDAY. FEBRUAjtV 20, m mm. Say No to Romney^ NixgnrO^ldwater, Rockefeller The Panua for Mrviot h The lake trout la the latgeat o(| e foout family. » - lv Republican Party old Pros Dislike Present Leaders maverickk • regiatared Rapubltcan I hy chanoe than by choloe. proa of the Republican party avfTlM old pro RepnbUcana do not 1^ w tu im in tlMlr dUUkt of expoct Roinna^ to be elected preai- Michigan’e Ga^ga Romney that dent of the United Statea, ever. happened a la Willkie and Tbomaa E. Dealey of New Terit < twlwbeat off the conaarvative ooo-ventiap fotcea and twice kwt the to him aa anotb Ua ta Attended to 1 ■ dSp^, I But they foreaee a ] lee a poaaiUllty he may be dectetf lomim ^ am WendeU U ^lUkle. the late^pqllth- i of Michigan and them after _______ , ite 1964 iRepiubUcu preeidenlial RepubUdm party in 1»40 and ba> came its preridential nominee. Willkie came roaring out of the 1940 Republican Natioiial Oaoven-tion declaiming that he wanted to Romney has made it plain enough that he caree^not a hoot about the Republican party, or the The Chaaep was Pmakihi He was unable to after, politically, and t four years later RapiAlfean tlOn? Finbi PlObably not. J I pros da net have « id Dewey get aanrirrihi Dwight D. Eleenhower Richard M. Nixon is enmerted in CalUnnia politics and« is not counted a factor in the 1194 nomi-rt. Nixon'i not be w 1! date tor the party nomination must be accepted as valid and salt veaDea’s oholee. ^ It is of moment, however, because the future direction, of the development of Republican' party -policy will be very greatly deter- Demwtte pai^r either. «* is,have no man of tbi;& -1 ta . ,-Hv ^ Goidwater. ft- For the old pros the 1964 choice lema to lie between Romney, Thai is part of their frultratlon,l»naybe. •«* Gov. Nelson A. Rodw-- feUer of New York. That is a Hob-apti’s choloe for the old pros who dion’t want either ot them. The old pros iwlieve Nixon loot in I960 because he was not Republican enough—was not suftid Arlz., could be their could they win for , Maee tt Is'aot Hkely that the the Nomination of eithpr Romney Or Rockefeller would move the Re- ' publican party further Ic^, toward Romney also is a politics Tltsdld, Taft men and what they fear now is a nvetition of '' WARNING Powers Agrees to Face Lie Detector in Quiz It has comt to tht atterttion of the association that many, mony people in our area hove been victimized, gouged, inisled, ond just plain tricked into signing controcts for gas heating by smooth talking salesmen who ore at the door or on the phone almost before the ink is^ on their gas space heating permit. - / t th« longth WASHINGTON (AP) - U2 pOof Francis Gary Powers has agfoed to take lie detector teste during interrogation by UJ6. InteUiganoe his release by ths Soviets Feb. 10. MAY TARS LONOEB of inteiTogatioh may take longer! than bad been expected. Officials at first figured the guestian' would last about two weeks. Use of a polygraph, or lie detector. is JM unusual in such ses-aions, the sources reported. The tnSirwfnt. «iao said that could take longer than Powers is not being injected with of time their companies hove bean In businsH, clalmino up to as much as tSOi years. : If they gat In the house they start by. quoting prices double what the . .job it actually worth. Than comas all the special concastlont to trap the unwary Into signing a contract. Ridiculous allowances for old furrtqpa. Special dit-count because the customer It to recommend their company to friends. If that doesn't work then comes a call to the president; another special discount in If you are irttsmstsd In W new furnace corwarslon, pt complete heating Job; (I) Obtain at Mast two estimates from ) local her reliable i >r healing contractors. I^f Check the reputation and resportsi-y blllty of these contractors through your bank, or city inspection department and Belter Business Bureau. e pietpre of erhat caused his high-flying recosmals-to go down during a the Soviet Unkm Some .agreements look harmless, but the next day a furnace Is delivered to the house because what actually was signed Was a corrtract for complete furnace installation. If the customer tries to refuse (3) If possible insist that thepi com--panies give you the names and addresses of completed Jobs and ask to see at least one sample of Iheir workmanship. Commutes Sentence of Man in Slaying LANSING ID - The llte aen-tencp of Andrew Uko. S3, who was coRvteted of a boldiip slaying tat Detroit 3T years ago. was muted by Gov. Swalnaon Monday, a f ★ The cornmutaiion makes eligible for Immediate parole. Leko and two companions held up the Scotten Dillon Tobacco factory Dec. 4, 1934. and slfei the payraO guard, Lqnte P. Smith. Hie robbery netted them H50. Ing his llbstemd flight because of the question whether the Soviets had developed a higb-alti-ide antiaircraft rocket. The iSovteta said they had i _ rocket and that they had ahot Posvera out the aky at a height of 68.000 feet. U.S. officiate challenged that claim, bdievlng the plane wa of reach of any Soviet wet. They were inclined to think the U2. svaa fefled by mechanical trouble. for violation of contract and other dire consequences. (4) Know the people you do business with end sign no papers unleu you have read them Carefully and are assured that thiinr are what the ulasman claitns, and nothing more. OAKLAND INDOOR COMFORT BUF Lem wui ovt wiui nii in Mn. UanrLeko. tnDetipit. Isradli Work«rs Stage 1-Hour Warning Strike JERUSALEM » - Tbouianda of Israeli factory wottan ataged a ___<«ene^-nlna^> mMkm Mmi. Nonci one BOUT -waiwmg euw mm-day In protest agaiiist the govern-inent’s new aoanoratc policy, wh^ the strikers data will bring No Business Will Be Transacted eooui omaomi. They are demanding an immediate moirthly readjustment of wages In rdatkm to the cost of The Unlveralty ot Notre Dame waa founded fo 1M2. Thursday, February 22nd Ugol Holiday ' SILENT EPIDEMIC f ISoctin Gilt h- simidv meant soft, eislc « caused bgr lack of activ- ity or « And hypoUnetials ipiwuliog like a silent among our children-IncieasInglyJlurgenuBt-bers of them now five such ii^ active Uvea that tb^ can't perform simple tests requirii^ • minioiam of strength and VSISHIHSTON'S BIRTH DAY ___&bytbeFiwident’tCoun- di onYouth Fitness—will help put a istop to our diildren's physicsl weakness. . ^ your.child’sj^^ l»vj such a program? If not, t out why. If# «uy to cany ota It costs your school very Uttta Act at your next FTA meetingl ' ' Regular Banking Hours Will Resume FRIMY, FaRIURY.23nl ftwknmm PONTIAC STATE BANK COMMUNITY NATldlbtt. BANK THE rONTIAC FEESl DON'T FACE ANOTHER ^VINTER WASHDAY | WITHOUT A DEPENDABLE, ECONOMICAL OA8 DRYIR...Giwdrfebleins on Abby, care of The Pontiac Press. For Abby’s booklet, “How To Have A Lovely Wedding." ..send 50 cents to Abby, care of The Pontiac Press. I wanted to gd to her and tell her how much I Wed her DAR Turns Down Request by Jackie Medical Aides Set Classes Tomorrow “The Oakland County Medical Assistants Workshop" will •vetting at the Royal Oak of-fioe of Dr. John P. Flick. Tto first in a series of instructions in dmerent phases of laboratory and office procedure will be presented at S p. m. Mias Beth CarpeMer, BS. University of Detroit and M.T, from Grace Hospital^ will conduct the first class. him aihqr tram her* but wanted to be a daughter to her, but she refused to see me. How can I win her over IGNORED DEAR IGNORED: You can’t If she ever wakes up and realizes how foolish she has been, she'll come to you. In the meanthne. learn to live without her. She's the loser. For informafion uMR^Ft WortMey of DEAR ABBY; After 10 years of marriage my husband and i still disagree on one minor qu<^n. Is the large hem of a bed sheet supposed to go at the foot of the bed? Or does it go on the top? I think it goes on the Plan Music. Program at Temple Social Hall loan the articles. In honor of Jewish Music Month, a musical progrem wfli . be praaented at the Februaiy meeting of Temple Beth Jacob Sistertwod. at 8:30 this evening In the Temple Social Hall, Barbara SkuDy, harpist and pianist, and Jeon Huttula, vl-oUmat, will give the program. . Both began their musical stud-' let whUe stUl in grade school. Tliey have partldpated In higji acbool, dty and state youth'br-dwatras and music fesUvala, and met -while attending Na-ttonal Music Chmp at Inter-lochen where they first played the Hayden-C;. Major Concerto, one of the works to be heard at the concert. Miss Skplly, a Mumtord High School senior, is the daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Edward Skully of Detroit. Miss Huttula. daughter of tfie Charlet 0. Hut-tulai c|f Pontiac is a senior at ♦ * Pontiac Oen^ Ifigh School. ^Ttound and square dancing 1 The muslcale is open to the are planned and refreshments public. will be served. Organization to Mark 50 Years. Mrs. Janies A. Corwin was hostess to the members of the Pontiac Symphony Women’s Assodatlon Monday afternoon to her Bloomfield Hills home on Marblehead Drive, The coffee' hour, preceding -tbs mtfting iBid pi^ - gram, was In diarge of Mri. ^ Arthur A. Young, social chairman, assisted by Mrs. Milo J. Cross and Mrs. Clifford T. Ekelund. . Mrs, Paid Gorman, president. officiated at the table decorated with a spring bouquet of daffodils and iris. During the biBtoess meeting a nominating committee was . appointed by Mrs. Gorbum. Selected were Mrs. Maxwell L. Shadley, Mrs. K N. Rapaport and Mrs. Joseph L. Bennett, dr W dr Guest speaker tor the day was George H. Putnam, supervisor of vocakand instrumental music in Pontiac secondary DEiOt STILL: Your husbAnd is right. V The large hem goes on top. At leaet that’s the way my mother taught me to make a bed in Iowa. ' LUBEC, Maine (UPD-The - DaiBfitcrs of the American RevidutioD has turned down Mrs. John F. Kennedy's request for a portrait and a chair for her White House Interior decoration project. Mrs. Ashmead White, president general of the-DAR, said Mrs. Kennedy had asked tor a portrait of President Andrew J^kson and a doulange Room of the DAR Oantteental Mrs. White explained that the Tennessee DAR chapter owned the portrait and the chair was only on loan from the Maryland DAR. She said “ 1 not have any right to Widows, Widowers to Honor /George' Widow and Widowers Club will sponsor an opm house and Washington birthtoy party this evening at Malta Hall on Perkins Street. Almost vows are planned by Darlene Mae Miller, daughter of the Russell V. Milltrs of Jackson, to Jerry D. Ryan, son of the James Ryans of Spokane Drive. Both attend Eastern Michigan University. A May *26 wedding date has been named by Patricia Ann ^ Murphy, ‘ i daughter J-oftheP.M. Murphys of East Madison ' Avenue. She svill be married to Vernon L. Miller, son of the Lloyd Millers of Canal Winchester, Ohio. DARLENE MAE M^UER PATRICIA ANN MURPHY informative outline of the symphony program to be heard March 6. News From Cdlleges About Area Students AAUW Branch Holds a Tea at Pontiac School Felbc ResniCk and gi^ conductor Olia Merrill Turner, will luesent on that date Concerto Grosso, Op. 6, No. 8 by (torelli and Mosart’s Symphony No. 40 in G Minor, with the guest conducting. Aboard the Italian liner from New York City tost week were some 28 stutents from CoUege, Fairfield, To Following the Intermiasion, Mr. Resnick will direct the orchestra in Knightsbridge March from London Suite,by Coates, Adagio by'Barber, and Romeo and Juliet by Tsdiaikowsky. An exhibition of oil paintings from classes sponsored by the Parks and Recreation Depart-iment, taught by William Shirley, will be on display that I evening. Mrs. F. A. Voelker, chairman of the second annupl Oranium Sale, named the committees for the May 18 and 19 event to be held«bt the Ottawa Drive home of Mrs. Harold B. Euler. Mrs. Ferdinand Gaensbauer * will serve as analyst tor the association's next gathering April 9. The group will arrive to Italy, will visit Rome, Flo^ ence and Venice and then proceed to home stays with individual families in Lausanne, Switzerland and Vienna. John Rice, son of the R..G. Rices of Birmingham, one of the group, will live with an Austrian family. \ Travels through \Germany, France and a final ^ weeks in England will clMtox the three months of study and international living for the Susan I. Wotila, daughter of the FeUx WotilAs of Pontiac Drive was initiated recently into the Eurodelphlan Ganuna Society, one of sevqn social and service organizations at Kalamazoo College.. Start Rehearsal of Maugham Play Guild has started rehearsing Somerset Maugham’s ’’The Constant Wite." Directed by Franklyn A. Donegan and produced b;;^ Ifrs. Darrell Roberts, the play" is schtduled to open April 6. Proceeds from the tonefit -performance April.l2 will #o to Friends of the Baldwin Public Ubrary. Donald H. Shaw, son of Mrs. H. I. Shaw of Delaware Drive and the late Mr. Shaw has been elected treasurer of Sigma Epsilon, Society for busi- PTAs in Action student lunch programs, phypical fitness and safety are it-Teacher associations will discuss at! their respective meetings this week.' WASHINGTON IRVINO Washington Irving Parent-Teacher Organization will hold its Wednesday meeting begin-tong at 7:30 to the school’s activities room. Margaret Johnston, food services consultant for the Pontiac schools, will serve'as guest speaker for the occasion. New types of schod lunch pragranu and how they will tie in with the National Food Pro-giwn will be the subject tor the evening. Miss Johnston will shote slides on the subject to be k^wed by a question and MArch 21. Proceeds wiU be-used'to purchase playground equipment for the school. Mrs. R^rt De Haan is chairman of the event. ★ A Members of Mrs. Terence Cantrell’s first and second grade room will host a bake sole following the PTO meeting. Mrs. Rudolph Buchman, home room mother for Mrs. Benjamin ^weeney’s room, will be in charge of refreshments. Plans are being formulated for a benefit bridge party PONTIAC CENTRAL HIOH The topic “How Physically Fit Are Pontiac Central Students?" will be explored at the meeting of Pontiac Central High School’s PTA Thursday to the boys’ gymnastam. Students will present demonstrations of the physical education classre’ activities, followed by their Inatructors' commento on the objectives and importance erf this phase of the school curriculum at the J: 30 p.m. gathering. OWEN 8CBOOL The annual'filler and Son banquet sponsored Iqr Owen School’s PTA'is slated for 6:15 p.m. Thursday. Speaker tor the evedlng will be Richard Fell, who will talk while shewing pictures on Okinawa.' 'Others participating in the prbgram ktelude Michael Young, toastmaster. The invocation will he given by Bev. Thomas Guest, and the toast to fathers will, be presented by. Dennis Gartur. OeatuS Garner in turn wQl lead the toast to the sons, foDowed by Roland Bakto entertaining with a song. I., it * * Hadassah h Preparing ‘Chlden Tea ’ Reading Teachei? Talks to Sorority Hadassah is preparing ito “Golden Tea" for Thursday at Tempie Beth Jacob, to commemorate the foumfing of its SO-yeaiMild organlzatioa. The event is open to the public. Members of Onega Alpha Sonrity met fids month at the home of Mrs. George Morrow.' Mrs. Theodore Wiersema, ipeed writing instructor at Michigan State Univereity Oakland, was guest speaker. food derqoastnitkfi snmers Power 0>. .. xOtber bustoesk included .a Mrs. H. Malcolm Kahn, praa-Ident of Pontiac’s Hadassah, will open the meetlnt following a 1 o’clock tea. Idrs. Keoneth Hoardr program chairman, an-notmees that the inogram’s "entertainment will he provided Avrim Rooenthat singing Jewish folk songs, in addition to accompanying hlmaelf with various instrumen|s- CHAIRMAN TO SPEAK Main speaker tor the event Mrs.> ^athon O. (Florence) Perintoh^ national chairman of ) [Hadassah Medical Organ-ion (tommittee, who has I Hadassah positions on a f level tor more than 25 meeting , p.m. in the to accepting her preo-post, Mrs. Pnknan was natloiud vocational education chairman of Hadassah. She has also been chairman of the former national vice president. As natkmal HMO chairman, she is charged with directing Hadassah's largest erderpriae in Israel—a network of hospitals. medical and nuratog MRS. NATHAN D. tories, sdon to.be housed in thb Hadassah • Hebrew University Mwfical CtoHcr recently dedi- - ■ ). ’ -Id'- Suzanne Field of ^th Avery Road, Waterford Township. has enrolled to Central Michigan' University, Mogint Pleasant, studying etementary-educatton. She is residing to Barnard HalL membeiuhip chairman of the Young Women's Christian Association tor the 1962-3 tann. American Aaaprtotkw of Unl-vaniiy Women, meaobeniilp tea. Presiding at the tea service were Mrs. Tom Rceae aad ' Viola Krueger. \ WWW \Susan E. Smith, daughter of toe Floyd H. Smiths of North Jc^pson Arenue teas recently ete«^ correqiondlhg secretary Of Sledariitog Residence HaU,\ at Western Michigan Univ^ty, to Xatomazoo. She teto Akm pledged as a charier ntomber of Delta The-to Goiony of Alpha PU Sorority Ute toll eemester and was elected a charter officer in colony of Alpha Phi on WMU's campua. Tis recording ageretary. Miss Smith, a sophomore, is a national honor society member aad Is studying psychology and English Iti the'fl«nentary Linda Stickney, music major at Eastern Michigan University, was installed as an ofll-«er OP Eptilon Lambda Choiker, Mu PM Epsilon. rA-tlonal honorary protoasional music sorority on campus. Her parents are the Leon Stlckneya of North Francis Street Music major Cknlyn Kunae. daughter of Harry W. Kunoea of Sooth Joaephine Street, has taken offtoe as vice president of the torority. Both giila are Poetera were displayed by Donald UVire, Mn. Frank Voight and I^ra. Faye Donelsau and Mn. •d’ by Amy aad Ooca Khmuct and Mrs. RumII Tliitntan M the reglstratioa deok. Others Mrs. Fraada Me- Oirfries D. Hinds of Pontiac is among some 335 undergraduates at the Untversity of Mis-Bisrippi to be Itoted to the 1962 Dowell and Mrs. A. L. Mac- faU Diane Kay AUmon, daughter of the John W. AOmono. Bloomfield Hills, hu entered Barbara Hobart of Birmingham, art history major at Wellesley . College, Wellesley. Maas., was one of the student artists represented in a recent 2-day exMbtt by the eenkir doss at the Jewett Arts Center. She ia the daughter of the Lawrence C. Hobarte, Bir- i as a sccond-aemeeter Among the guests were Mrs. Chariee A. Oolbcig; Beverly Dornhoadi, Mrs. Wayne A. Yager, Mrs. I. Joseph Devis, Kay Funnaii, Mn. Robert Irwto, Mrs. Cumi Porritt. Ifn. William F. Mbortomse, Magdalen Dally, daughter of the T. J. DailyS of Berkley Avenue, was named to the aemester bonors list at Mary-grove college, Detroit. Junior. She previously attend- man, Mrs. Robert Hdan W< rt Ottw, Mrs. ed Untversity oF'Midiigan tor^ Rkfaard Zimmerman and Mrs. five semesters. w>,4nim Gerald Fterlchs. Daniel H. RUey, son of the W. A. RUeys, Bkxtoifieid Hills, has recently won admission to the honors college at MSU. Dr. Stanley Idzerda is director of the new honors college program. Also admitted to the honon college is Lamlee Sherwood, daughter of Laurence Sber-vrood, Elsinare DHvrf, Water-told fn Binningham Theater Writer at Town Hall Gary Perido, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ei«ene Perido of Rivlara into membentoip by Delta Sigma PM fraternity on the Hillsdale Cdlege campus, after completing 13 weeks of pledge training. He is a sepb- At Iowa State University. Ames, Iowa, Mary Rl^iter, daughter of the R. Verne RigMers, Bloomfieid Hills, has been Installed as Oredt E»c Sevareid. o uTownHaU audiences Ttotraday and Friday a^ a-m. to the Binning-ham Theater. Speab^ on 'The Shape of Thtogs to Ctent," Sevardd to the final celebrity to appear M tbe omtt aeries. Mrs. Donald 8. Bay. Town Dainty Dos (NEA) — If baada are small, rings in small, fcmtotoe, de-aignean best J-eave the big rings tor the girls with big Women s Section The program will precei}e the regular PTA meeting to be conducted by John Newman, lather vice j^l’esident. With student "safety" as the topic for Wlaner fehod PTA at 7:30 Sergeant Donald Kratt of tito' Oakland County Sheriff’s department will narrate and present two films, "Strangers" and “Dangerous Strangers.” A brief bustoeis meeting will fallow. Child care wlU be pro-vtoied to Hden Mercar’a room. Refreriimento will be served by home room mothers of Flora Owens’ and Aileeit Reyn-oMa’ rooma. Mrs. klartln Bacak to chalr-.nan of the •nominating com-Inlttee lor next year’s school , Committee chairmen pictured here making plans for^ mmsal Carl refreshments, ^^adungton's^ birthday board officers, asristed by Mr*. James ktorse, Mias Mrs. Paul Wdwter. buTg School PTA card party Thursday are, left to e^, Mrs, Allan Cunning-hdm, decorations; Mrs. Homer Peterson, tickets; and Mrs. C^istian Greve, ' : - ' ■-/ '■ wilt be the theme of the 7:30 to II p.m. party. Mrs. Donald Jacobs is genertU chairman and Mts. Frederick Poole is cochairman. "-4 / ■' .. ■" ■ 'i" " , , PONTIAC PRESS. TUBSDAY, FEBRUARY 20. 1962 ELE\Ti:X Cut^Pangcr of Heart Attack Avoid Becoming Chilled By JOBBraiNE LOWMAN Heart trouU* la om; o( the greateet tlireats to life, and it Is fspeciall^ dangerous to men. Women seem to have* special protection untlj after menopause; aft-this they are about as susceptible as men. .........A................ There are things we can dq IcMon the danger. Everyone ehould have a oomplcte and thorough physical examination onoe a y ar. Everyone should lose excess l^iundage and remain at their Ideal weight for the rest of their lives. If your Mood dMlealenil is high. . Yon ritoald take n«a- ACCffTB IT MMiYI Model of New Miniature Hearing Aid Given * ."-A there are eendttiaaa and happenings which can trigger a heart attack. We are warned against undue expoeure to cold because this places a seven bi dsn on the drculstory system. BODY; PBOTBCM mUEUr .Ths|bedy is a^Wenderfut anism. It does Its very best to keep us altve\snd tai gotxl health. We human bdhfs ed animals and, clothes to reduce the amount surface aMn exposed to the sir; addition te this, when we nt of % This warms us,up. U w tmmkt eoU. amall Moed vMehli alMe dawn )aat aader the sarthee sf the hedy. ne hmi« faster and *e Uaod s. AB el tteae am TrrJSntT?‘S3 __________________J. hm alM «f ISIS ClMlWM is Si^ M of iU IBW fMtarss. n walilw Ism Uim s ISM ol so ssncs sad It's an st tsr IrfsI. M SM^ no srtTM Issd trSM bods ts hsad. Mses Is tralr as* hopi for tiM bsrd sf bssrlM. ThsH awdste srt INS •bus «as MIDTOWN HEARIM CLINIO 151 N. . rONTIAC, MICH, rt S-TSII S to I FLY TODAY See SOS* Travding by air ■tvoi tin* . . . M 4bm mIh AAA’i Complete TRAVEL BUREAU Service AgeaU far afl Air Unaa NO BXTIU COST TO YOU Also Headqaartcni for: • Fordga DociuocBta awl Road Guidan • Auto Shipnenta, roaG ab and parehsno b Gnided and Independent Foreign Tours and Cmines 76 WUUams Street FE 5-4151 Alwoyt GOOD COFFIE aim rouirriiii S7 W. Haren The Amerinn Heart Aaaodation adviiea anyone with an 11 which causes poor circulation to ' JTAen we're col^, the heart must work h^der in an attempt to keep us warm. Help your heart and yourself by dressing warmly when you go outdoors. Eastern Star Is Planning Card Party No. S of the Easteih Star, has plans for a March 3 card pwty-* * * Sylvan Oath la gwen chahnnan of the affair acbedala for 7:30 p m. in the dob rooms « Dress wsnnly when yoa go out, but not so wiuiniy that you per-spire. Keep dry. Dampness oondnets cM. ‘'cover up well in wind with muffs and scarvea. Wools or synthetica which are springy are beet because Oxy are fi^ hiaulators. :> Veer appetUe laeraaaH |hi Lm weather. Bat a gaW dM Ut da nst take yew hwwaeed I exeww to eat a [ toad, shwe aver- Aaaodatton of OakUnd. Otnamittoe members are Mrs. Eart Roas, tiek-; Oakland Ceapty ; N%ht, rah. M, and the a ‘ Oud-O- BeoneveH Temple. Mrs, Fredriek delaiid of aon gave a patriotic tribute in ol Abraham ' ‘ Worthy Matron. Mrs. Joseph Min-„n, presented red camatioM to the birthday members who then cut a Bwdal Valentine ipAe. Mrs. - ■ 1 Tleken New Citizens Plan Program Tw executive board of the New atliem' Lw^pie completed ptans tor the JMth an- In the WatMns Lake the John Noblet. Pontiac central High School cafeteria wlU be the setting tor the event icheduled to begin at 8 p. m. Thursday. Bridge Club Meets Seven tobletiWere in play at the weekly bridge tournament at the Wednesday Duplicate aub in the Eiki Tem-ple. Winners were Ml*. Paul Potter and Mrs. Arnold lUohaids; Em^ L. Guy; Mrs. Earl Wright; Mrs. LeMer HamUton and Mrs. Dan MaePherson. ene In a naarby dty. «r write to EaM 3Sm It.. New York 10. N.Y. Have Sfoii^Trled IhkT Open-Face Cherry Torte Will Serve Large Group By JANET ODELL PMtfae Frees Hoiiie Editor This ia another food week for dierry recipes. We've had this one Iota Httle while, tust ting lorihe'piuper Someone served It to u evening and we liked It to well we traced it down. Mrs. WUliam Newhall says she got the recipe (rom a tllendi Ute mother at little girts 6 and 3, Mrs. Newhall is chair-huuvot Maceday Garden Extension group. She does some Church work, likes to play, hrMli and to iew. FEBNCH OBFJUIV PIE T By Mrs. U 1 cup butter (can be halt shortening) 1 package (I oz.) cream cheaae 1 cup confectionm sugar 1 teaspoon vanilla 3 packages dessert topping mix 1 can- cherry pip filling Mix ehepue, sugar and vanilla together. Beat desseit Uftting mix according to di-reettons and add cheese mixture. Pour oAo cn»t. Top with cherry pl$ Oiling. Chfll at least 12 hqjirs. Jierves 16 to 18. Conference Feb. 28 on Youth Meeting at MSUO to Concentrate on^ Eating Habits Teenageni and tbeif eating habits will be the subject of a conference Wednesday. _ Feb. a, 'at TaStKJ SRiWWt Omter from $:30 a.m. to S p.hi. ■ Sponsored by* the Oakland County llonte Economica Extension Oouirll. .the day^oiy meeting will include films, addresses by food and teen experts, discussion group* *"inAtio& of Senioes Fciced at 115.00 for • Snpeili Salon Permanent ^ si (Wdmirninf Siunmpoo S Cream Rinse „ • Fashion Cnt ExtraoidinatF Speeislt Reg. $25 Pemiipent NOW 61^1 SO No Appolatamat Neeied—Opeat FrUap *019. PJf• OUFSTAMDINC STAfF OF experts TO SERVF YOU ' - BEAUTY ^SA1A)N • fe 5«»7 11,N. SACINAV Between Lawrimca and P*fco St . iMid^ the Tules had moral fiber. We figured he was a spoil-sport-and good riddance. Marrh meettag n soS reaaerva-Noa. A film ’’Out of the North,” life story of ducks, will be shown at an open meeting In Apfil. Details will be announ^ later. Mrs. Martha Larson apd Mary Robert served refreshments. Guests were the Charles Fricks. Martha Frick. Wayne Wilson. Gordon Grant and Louise Buricitt. Presbyterian Unit Conducts Meeting Berean Fellowshlk/CTass '^f Oakland Avenue United Pre ' rtan Church held its monthly fog Friday night at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Waiter HQI of Morgan Road. . Mrs. Walter Napersky led devo-tiona before the busfoesa meeting. Retreshn followed. Concem over the poor eating . habits of young people prompted the council to plan this con-torence. Young people are being married at an earlier *ige than ever before; and the teen-ase girt la often the Mast writ ted roamber at the family. Roberta Herahey. extension spectallst on foods and nutrition" at MSU. will be the morning speaker on ’’Teen-Age Food Folblee." Alter a low-rslorie hmcheon Dr. Richard K. Kerchoff of Merrill Palmer Institute will taik-OT "Life Among Our Teen-Ag*rs. ” A a .a Small group discussions will be led by Mrs. Mary Slater Kern, school lunch coordinator for Oakland County schoote; Mrs. Lillian Alderson. home economist for the Dairy Council of Detroit: Mrs. Katherine Claus, nutritionist. Oakland County Health Department: Mrs. WllUam Porter, district,director^ the Michigan Ctongrem of Parents and Teachers: and Mrs. Gladys Chalmers, nutritionist. Detroit Chapter, American Red Oois. To cioae Ihe day’s pragr**" a group of local teen-agers will participate fo a panel diacusaion titled. ’’Where la the Problem?” To be moderated by Van Braldwood. Pontiac District executive tor the Boy Scouts of America, the panel will consist of Geoffrey Trost. Troy; Susan Sheardv. Lake Orion; Jav Ward. Milford; Shirley LIpMrd and Sid Bortors. Pontlacy and Nanry Cowan, MSUO. Hixrt OOUiCTU IT- M It’s a new kind of indapendsaee tot baby wkaa ka pulls bifflself to hit feet for the Ant lime. However, while getting up it reMrttvely easy, it’s a bk harder to catch Iha k^k at Us-_«»I down Sgaio. if you siKMeily. on to play pen ban for dear life, lake Ms bands aad lai him down gently. After you come 10 hie rescue a few liaee, bell plop down on Me own. Aad srben he bade a "eit.riown strike” doaaa't hurt per-lieularly, your baby will oiove on coanMnalione» Add to this extra meal, tht lavorful goodame of gantoa vegstablaB and you get I irWous main dhlws citoulaled briag eooe at approval freea aay MbMc . . . boy as girl. lies. . . , pan pubiton. As soon as baby begins to creep^or stand tbc lime d’s wise to ' follow tooM kind of routine . . aad katp the pea a piaisurabic pUwe loeomc home to, • If you put baby in Ms pea about the same limee each day, hc1l come to accept iMs routiiie. • A busy baby is a conleated baby. By pforiding difanal do-eomathiag toys each day. yoa keep Ms homaaiead a bap^ oaw. ciahs, nurses land any adults woricifig whhtyouth groupa are Invited to BUs meeting. Further Information and reservations ma>ybe had from Mrs. Mary Hardy. Oakland Cbunty extension service E. CnifWy Circle firive. Building. E Chicken Dinner w Help College ' Pontiac Chapter of the Wom-'en’s AssociatM of Michigan Christian Junior College. Roch-aster. will sponsor a chicken dinner 6 p.m. Saturday at the First FedMl Savings and Loan Association of Oakland. The public is invited. Pn^m chairman la Mrs. Argyl Allen; decorktions, Mrs. Hugh Vick: ticket sales, Mrs. Rossie Coe. Proceeds from the dinner will be given to the Associates college work. 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CLEMENS STREET-PHON|!: FE 4-0553 •-. y ■ ; TWELVE ;■ f-- THB^ PONTIAC PRESS. TtJESPAY. FEBRiIaRY 20. 1062 Aff/cA/gra/)^ State Lose Loop Road Games ¥t9m Ov N«w. WtTM *Sut the Wolverinei couldn’t find Michigan haa Wiaconain'a num-the comblnatkm against Indiana night and dropped an 86-77 the tfily number In the Wolverines’j. , . little Mack book. decision. # ' Michigan knocked oft Wisconsin ibn Sayl ciaeketf the Big Tea twice, the last time Saturday at record for coaseoottve free Ann Arbor, lor two of the three thrawa. hlttlBg «aiie last night Wolverine victories in the-Big Ten befsra mlastag. - He started his this year. The games Just about string iriti 4* pofats of it laidcfciM surprising Wiscbiirin dit throws Wisoonsin and of the league race. ' added ll straight against Iowa. He wound tip with 34 points last night. Michigan State spent n bad Ight in Iowa last night Iowa whipped the Spartans 56-51. The slender 6-foot-2 Rayl broke the league mark with S:15 remaining in the first half last when he bagged the first of a one-Jlliddaig fLwaid.,{nm.tbe fouLIine: PUT *M' AHEAD Michigan trailed 43-38 at the half ot John Oosterbann hit a 12-foot Jumper for a 57-S6 lead wltb 13:37 left to play. The score was tied at 67-all. aSrall and 61-all before MlcUgaa AP Photoloi COMINO THBOVGH — Indiana’s Tom Bolyard (45) comes down with a rebound as Michigan’s Bob Cantrell (30) diicks out of the way. Ernie Wilholt (32) of the HoosicTS and Michigan’s John Oostohaan (34) stand ready. Indiana won, 86-77. Nascar Race Protest Remains Unsettled DAYTONA BEACH, Fla, (AP) —BUI Frahce, Nascar president, said Monday no decision can be expected untU Wednesday on a protest made against Glenn (Fireball) Roberts’ record smashing victory in the Daytona SOOmile stock car race Sunday. “We are awaiting'additional In-formatloil, which Lee Petty claimed he Would submit," said France, who also 4s president of Daytona International Speedww. Petty., of Randleman. N.C., is the father of Richard Petty, who finished the race , in second plwe, 27 seconds behind Roberts. The elder Petty based Ms official protest on a technicality. 8CK Nascar allows only a maldmum of six pit crew men to croak the pit wall and wotit on a car daring a pit stop. Petty, dalmed there were more than six crewmen working on Roberts’ car. France said the Nascar com-missiion would oonvene as soa as “aU InfOnnatlon is available. Henry (Smokey) Yunlck, chief mechanic for Roberts, submitted a notarized statement Monday that he only had a total of six in the piU, France France said the tire experts aid all drivers in a race and do not count as trew members. ‘Neither can you count unauthorized persons such as fans, photographers or anyone else not connected with the crew as. pit workers, just because they cron the wall,” France said. Roberts established a world record of 152.529 m.p.h. for a continuous SOO-mUe automobile race of any kind. Roberts drove a 1962 Pontiac whUe Petty drove a 1962 Plymouth. not COUNTED A Daytona Beach NewsJoiunal pictore of a Roberts’ pit stop shows six of Yunlck’s crew and two tire technicians over the ,waU in one pit stop. task anoOMr brief lead at 6i4L Bari then Ut the first ef twe tree throws and Om ifent Ik froiit to slay. J(lm HaiTls led the l^olveiines with 29 points. Capt. Jon HaU cMpped in with IS and Ooaterbann added 12. The Hawkeyes couldn’t find the range-Jn thir'necoiid half bot'stifi 'held on to an early lead to down Michigan State. The win. upped Iowa’s oonfer-.jice mark to 44 while the Spartans took their ninth >l^p loos, gainst two wim. . The game snapped a five-ganoe fosing streak for the Hawkeyes who played^a alow son scored a ftoe threw to break the Isog *7 epeB and iae Bed-diBgtoa htt toe first IMd goal of the halt tor lewa with efght Nelson led aU scorers with 21 points, 13 in the second half. Mat Szykowny. contributed 14. , Sophomore Pete Gent led Mich^ igan State with 10 pointa and Ted Williams added 9. Wisconsin grabbed its eighth victory against two kwaes, beating fiUnols, liB-lOi, and needs only a pair of triumphs in ks last four es to assure itsdf of at least a tie for second place. The Badgers led by U nelato with lean thaa five mlMta to play when Tsos Haghbaaka foaled eot„< IIHaels pot an a strong Md which fell, short Kea Riebel led the 'Badgers Wftth 88 polats sad Haghhaaks added 17. Hoaors, hawever, went to Ull- Terty Diachingcrs 35 polnU were instrumental in Pindue’s record 11560 win over Notra Dame at Fort WayfiO, Ind. Purdue’s pee-vtous .taam high was 100 petnts ogalnat Bradley in 19GI. The game marked the last time a Big Ten team will face a nontoagut opponent In regular season ploy. ...t:, * ... Ohio State returns to action Si|turday. ‘Tbe Buctawto boat Illinois in a regionally televiaed matinee. Other Satui^ games find Indiana at Michigan State, Michigan at Iowa, Minnesota at Purdue and, Wieouneto at Nortb- i i 1 i AP Poll Unanimous as Usual for OSU By The For the 10th straight week. Ohio State’s brilliant Buckeyes are the unanimous choice today as major college basketball’s No. 1 team. it it It 'The' Bucks, who pushed their record to 204 with two more victories last week, drew all 43 first-place votes; again in the 11th weekly balloting by the membeip of the Asaodated Press' nationwide panel of sportswrltera and Ohio State wound up with a 60-potnt edge over Cincinnati, which moved up to second place after the runner-up of the last few weeks, Kentucky, was beaten by Missigsippi State. Kentucky fell to third, Just ahead pf Kansas State, Which held its pdsition of last week, MORE SHUFFUNO Behind them, there was a general reshuffling as a result of losses that Mt 4eams like ~ State, Duke and Duquesne as as Kentucky. Mississippi State moved up to fifth, Bradley dropped one iwtch to sixth, Bowling Grben jund^ from lOtb to seventh, Duke utp-ped onp position to eighth, Colorado—on A 10-game winning rireak after losing five of its first nine games—entered tlk top ten in and Oregon State fell from aixth to toith. Duquesne, beaten by Westminster. Pa., and Red Countries “^Quit Ice Meet Former Great Runyan PGA Seniors Champion DUNEDIN, Fla. (AP) Old timers will remember Paul-Ryn- And it was far better than the 75 by Denuuret and 74 by Joe BOX The World Speed Skating Cham-pioasMps will be held In Japan next year. WWW Jim Rivera, former American mg 10 under par for 72 holes, tied the record he set in this tournament for pros 50 and over last year. In four tries he has never finished worse than second. TOUGH COURSE The I PGA National played to a tougti par 72 in the J final tound and not many of toe veteran proh cracked it, Runyan closed with 33-37—70 lor a foumey card of 71-6048-70—278. Monday by the IndtanapoHs Indians ri the American Aaaoein-tion ns a ptayto-oonch. K * ir ★ ; _ South Africa’s Stormvogel, owned and skippered by C. Bniyn-zeel of jlhpetown, has s^ a record for me 200-mile Buenos Aires to Rio de Janiero yacht race in 191 hours 37 minuti the Western Collegiate Hockey Assodalloa playoffs will be March 1-3 at the Universi^ of Michigan. Pontiac Stars Triumph A Poatiae all-star team ppoved too Strang for the newly formed Michigaa State UMversity Oakland Table Temiis Club Mon^ Mght. The Pontiac stars won 12-2. Otuy Acker and KatM Berry wen the MSUO Jian as one of the greatest ,nlf- Brown of West Des M(^s, Iowa, ers, hut at the age of 53 he m who were fading after 54 holea. just earned the biggest prize bf Harrison, who started the final Ms life—12,000 first money « “ PGA Seniors Champkyi. h repeat performance for the 142-pound, 5fbot-7 Runyan, who Is a tiger on. the golf course. He Is n former PGA champion tpp money Wiimer on the pro tour. But tbm the days before Wtudd War n when prize money was sttaU. it it it The U Jolla, Calif., veteran flMshed in front of a star-studded field, including such experienced tournament players as Jimmy ifo! Itousfon, Tex., and E. 14 Teams Remain for Hockey Battle ot 'World' MONTREAL (AP)-New schedules for the 14 remaining teams in the event were being drawn up today tor the Worid Amateur Ice Hockey Tournament following the withdrawal of five Iron Curtain countries. The schedules probably will be ready within the next two days, officials indicated. W *• The tournament is ^pheduled for Colorado Springs, Colo. March 7-18 and it will be com posed of ItHind two strokes behind leaders and ofle stroke back of Runyan, made a Md but faded when Ms. bold ‘strokes for the pin overshot the 13th and 14th greena. He bogeyed both, scored 72 and Runyan was home in front, playing it safe on the late holes. A ★ ★ Brown Harrison and Errie Ball of Oak Paric, lU., finished for second at 281. Demaret ahd Charlie Sheppard of Pittsfield, Mass., had 282, and Ellaworth Vines of Palm Springs, Calif., 283. "This was,the most significant thing I have ever done in golf,’’ Runyan said. “I wanted to win worse than anything.’’ \ Ahearoe, president of the pean association, indicated that the promoton' did not give up hope that the Iron Curtain teams would enter until Monday ■ night. PROTEST BAN Rusiia, Czechoslovakia, Roman- refused travel perrhits from the Allied Travd Bureau In West Ber lln In retaliation for the Cbmmu-Mst Wall between East and West Berlin. Hie championship field will include Canada, Sweden, the United States, Finland; WindiGemumy, Norway, Great Britalvand Austria or Switzerland. The last two will meet in a playoff to determine which team gets in. He said he is looking toward to 'M' Skaters Clinch 2nd trip 4o Europe for an this summer. If, for some reason, Runyan cut make it, toe U.S. ative will be Ball. He won the alternate choice by n flip of the coin from Harrlaon and Brown. ANN ARBOR (UPI) - Gordon match against Britain’s champioa go-ahead goal at 6:43 of the third period last night helped Michigan dinch second place in the Westm OuUegiate Hockey As. soclation and kept tbe Wdverlnes unbeaten-at-home record 1 n t a i a 53 victoiy over Denver. Will Take Telephone Vote ABl May Expel Cleveland Toda CHICAGO (AP) The infant and troubled American Basketball League will take a telephone Vote today on whether or not the Oeveland Pipers wlU be expelled tnxn the league. ♦ * Commissioner Abe Saperstein made the annoucement Monday night fdlowing a lengthy confe^ *Ufe with George Steinbrenner, Qtor of the Qeveland franchise. , ^Saperstein,’s - statement was made after George McKeon, president ot the San TVaMdsco Saints, San Francisco Monday that the Pipers had been expdled from the league. Saperstein, who also is owner of the Chicago Majors, said a telephone vote will be taken today to deterniine aevelaad's future in the league, CHARGES FILED^ Last weekend^tw Apt held a Saperstein said Qevdand failed > cooperate with the league by not filing required gamejBtatistics and final records of first half playofis. He also said the had been guilty U "a series of acU detrimental to the circuit." it -it it Saperstein said last Sunday that the Pipers hsd until Feb. 24 Pipera were jfiveh'six days notice to answer a list of charges or face expqlsion from the league. ' - that was before McKeon held his news conference in San Fran-ctooo, where he stated the Pipers «re definitf^ out of the lesgue. McKeon said the San Frandsco firancMse initiated the complsinis gainst Cleveland, one d wl ’ ' induded the Pipera’ refusal honor playing dates in San Tritn-and Honolulu, WILL oo.vmuE McKeon Said the leaguV would - proceed with two 3-team divisions and that it would be expanded to eight and potolbly nine tqams ext season. ; V' / ' * A (toiginally, the ABL started out s an eight-team league with Pittsburgh, V Claveland and Eastern Division ! City, Los Angeles, knd Honolulu Division. The chlse was later shifted ... Yi|ric and last month Los Angelet ' ed operations with tt ad-loss of 3188.000. Y Pittsburgh Rens, ww leagubscorihg leader Goimie HawUns making 34 points, took over first plnea In the Eastern Dtvisioa'Monday night, beating Hawaii 14507 at PHtsburgh in the only ABL fame. Tbe Rend have a 12-13 redtfdj and a leafi of six percentage points over mcago, runner-up In the tightly-knft Eastern race with 51(j recoro. New York and Cleveland, th^, other ^ern teams'Trail the leader by ctaly a half game. Hawa^ in last blace in the Westam Vivlston, fell 8 garijes behind first place Kansas aiy. NEW POfiinON - Don Weri, Amcriem Association batting champkxi at Denver last season, starts Ms throw to first base as he works out at shortstop at Tlgertown in Lakeland, Fla. Frank Jadnk, second baseman from Wyandotte,, has tossed to Wert as Rick Ferrell, director of Detroit Tiger personnel, tutors the rookies. For Mets, A*s; More Vets Sign East Five Among Three Others to Accept Bids ^ Trio Picked for NIT; Cinci Ceti Revenge on Bradley DETROIT ID—The University ot etroH, twice s first-round flop in the Nattonal Invitational baskri-ball tournament, has decided to see If pickings are better in the NCAA tourney. The Titans wasted no time yesterday in accepting a bid to the NCAA post-season championship leet as an at-large entry. A n ■ n U-D haa a 14-7 record with five garnet left. It wiU play in the first round of tbe NCAA March r 13. but until other at large berths are assigned, the regional ilte won’t be known. Ibe Titans wll be nmiag to Csri rsmpnny In Ike NCAA, whM has a field of 16 major Others accepting NCAA bids yes-iday were Vlllsnovs (164), Oregon State (17-3) and (^reighhui (164). A ♦ ♦ John R. Mulroy, U-D’s chairman of the faculty committee on athletic sftaira, said ho bid was received fnjp the NTT but thst U-D would have preferred the NCAA tournament anyway. QUICKLY OUSTED Tlw Titans were ousted in tbe first round of the 1969 NIT tow'-ney by VUIanova, and last year by Holy Crosa. Leaders Stress Hustle By Untied Preos Intora Casey Stengel has been managing baseball teams since 1925 while Hank Bauer haa leu than a year of managerial experience — yet both nun agree there’s no substitute tor hustle. A A - A When Stengel greeted members o( the New York Mets at their first official workout at St. Petersburg. Fla., yesterday he reminded them that ‘la lot of Jobs are open and if you hustle I personally will see to it that you get A raise becatue my owners have money.” Baner didn’t promise any raises Kumos aty AtUetlw the Minnesota Twins for a salary that club president Calvin Griffith as "the highest In the history of the team." Although Griffith declined to state the figure, it was estimated at 338,000. KUlebrew batted .288, hit 46 homers and knocked in runs last year. Tbe 8( rigned Felipe Akw bat still eaa’t eural Ua brother Matty. Felipe batted AM and hit 16 hsme nuu last season whito ohariiM right floM with Malty. A1 Smith, NeUie Fox and Floyd Robinson came to terms with the Chicafo White Sox. leaving only Turk Lown and Billy Goo signed. Fox took a pay cut after suffering through one of Ms poorest seasons lost year when f' batting average slfoped to .251. A A BaltiiU« C outfielder Jackie Brandt fielder Willard Oplinger, who Mt .364 for Blpefield ot the Appalachian Rookie League last year. That left four Orioles unsigned— Billy Hoeft, Charlie Ljtu, Marv Breeding and WMtey Herzog. “These fellows lore paid well and they’re going to put out or else," said Bauer, a fori^er Stengel protege who relieved Joe Gordon as ci(y’f _ nwnwsr,Ja nAl- is(» lut year. 'There’ll be no loafing on. club,’’ the former Yankee outfielder added. “I want a lot of hustle. That’s’the way I always played and that's the way my (earn will play.” flORK AHEAD Both Bauer and Stengel have their work cut out for them—and they know It. Tbe A’g finished in a last-place ^ie with Washington in the American League last season while the Mets have rounded up a collection of oldsters and youngsters (mostly oldsters) for their first season In the National League. them how to throw and hew built. Ole Case then advised Ms pisyera fo be ready for two *‘You could train on a railroad track K you’ve got guyi%ho can throw bullets and Mt the ball,” he said. "But there’s nice grass here, and I lUfo grass, so we’il work twice a w.” ' The Yal^s, Steiigel’s old dub. staged th«r official camp opening at Fort Lauderdale, Fla., by engaging in 4 simulated intra-squad game. The only absentee among toe 23f battcfjnnen was relief star Luis ^Toyo. who was detained in Ms natl(« Puerto Rico, ; Harmon KUlebrew signed with FsUr rq he NG^A Defending diampton Pravklenee, Duquesne and &mnla of Chicago were picked today as the first entries in the 2Sth National Invlta- These developments opened the mad scramble to fill B spots In tlie two major post-obaaon college ■svenla. Twelve teams will be ehesan for the NTT St Msdison Sqnare Garden March 1H4. fMeetloa of ProvUeaee (164), Ihmdma. (164) and Loyola of Ohioago (16-8) wan annoaiioed by flie tounament ehalniiaB. Ken Norton. Ever since last March, the University of Cindnnstl haa been pointing to the current basketball season with Mst one thought in mind-to get another shot at OMo State in the NCAA post-season tournament. AAA The Bearcats have had their ups scared tea*r to roll ovw and play dead when they lost to areh-rival Bradley in the Missouri Valley Conference. ON Rfcnr ROAD But thpy’re back In the running ' today, and. In fact, unless toe fates go against them they should tnoke the NCAA tournament again. , to«T laraed the fowes an Bradley, 78-61, on their banw eourt and polled Into n Bo with the Braves for the con- ■« townre hod, oneh wUh 8-8 i«d-oeio. Eneh has one mare lengno gam^ If both win, they will wind ap «>«Mnod«d for the title and *a P^ff game wlU be necessary. Without 64 nbounder Joe Straw-who was dismiaaed from school last week, Bradley has loot much of Hs punch. , Oldtlm«r Flris 1st Ace In 47 Golfing Yeari ’:3} SALEM. Ore. (B - The son BW Dnaean, «, ®Mhs. Ore., a aatlire at 8ea5 a rsoad el fto OU Kaon golf eoane Monday. Bh efohs were a set be bought Ir n kardwnro ttoro la 1816. * Da Ihe third iro be drove with a Ne. 6 bon. orlgtasBy kaowo as s rnasWc aibUch. The ball wmB to the greea. Wt sad rolled laio toe US yards away. It was Doaeaa’s flrat hole-fo. •ne h 47 years of golfl^. % THIRTKEK Saginaw and Capac Take Poll Leads Into Final Weeks River Rouge, Champion lop •Other Classes Pontiac Control Sixth on AP Lilt; Northvilie 3rd ond Imlay 4th By Thti AMMtaM Ptmw Two weeKi to' fo before tod tnent-time and it lookt igiMW, Rhw Rquk*, Capoc and P, River Rouge, Ca| W HfMl ontier the thr as the toaiaa to I founonw dung to sodated Preaa high school basketball pons - CIM) 1 ‘J^ad ra«My la Claas A tetti t I (It-*). River Rouge U^l) lethiaed Us the top-ranking ■ Holy m Namt am ‘’oSae (IM) dl*hi was tape In Qass C with Chainpkm (IMI) hold-as Oam O’s No. 1 quintet. MOVK VP Grand Rapida South (IM) retained Hs grasp on the No. 'S poal-Uon te the slightly JijiM Oa« nnldivi. Benton Harlxr OM) Moved up a notch to fourth after --------------------- (IM). KC Whiz in Minora fen from fourth to ainth. Grand Year Makes a Big Difference (IM), 1 OwtaMan (U-I); I Bey pert (I»-l) teB te eIgMh. SauR Ste. Marie Loretto 04-1) with Unlay City (14-1) again hdng ^l^lnrled the No. 4 team. Sebewalng 04-1) Joined Delroit An Saints 04-2) in a flttNiilaoe Us, a cUmb fnxndghth. Last weak AU Sainte PMnte St Pad (H-1), « dropped to SB olgbtMilaoo tit with Jackson St Mary 02-1). St Mary Flint St Matthew 04-1) replaced •attona Bay aa the No^ 2 team hi OasaD. St. Matthew was tied teat waek fbr tktard with Britton. Today Suttona Bay (14A) wa third wRIi Button OM) fourth. The poU readts on the basis of » poiate for a flrit-pteca vpte, 9 ter a aposnd on through 1 for a IDth-pteoB vote: • V; (gei I ss;-rxrpu“?ii^r i M*"*1£5!25 k: Waterford Cage Howe Needs 3 Goals to Reach 500 Mark Detroit — GonUo ijowe is headed for 1^ first 30«)d eotaon te three years and needs but three goals for a career total of SOO. But the Red Wing captain has only Iwo goals' against Chicago, the he leads the Wings against te two of three games this week. On the strength of two wins last week, the Wings made up a two* point deficit and now are tied for fourth place with New York. With live weeka left, Detroit has dayed 55 games and has tw« games in hapd on the Rangers. Wedneedsy the Red Wlsgs are HOCKEY RinAB AGAIN > Here arc the *‘Utt|a” Mountain Vtew Rangers, champions of the diy’s Natisnnl Lsagua hockey competition for the 3rd Straight yvar. Back row (from left) an Otenager Dkfc Kii«, Bob Vandmere, Teny t)qfo, Bob flehaafar, Larry Lewte, Buddy Blopk-tnan, MBn Gcrheefc, Dave Parker, Mika Kerr, Ron Steuber, and manager Ralph iMocock, IVont row (from lefO are Steve Parker, Tom McManus, Ride King. Keith LeDue. end BUl^ Moeock. Mtestav from the picture Is Nick An-dsrsen. The Ranters, oomprtesd of bdys U-15 yaan of aft, wera- unbeaten during the 19te WERT PALM (VPl) - Hit haae h over today fr Krauaoe. Probably -you remonber him. took a 1125,090 banua from the la aty A’s, stepped right out of Ugh acboot at If'and boat tha Lea Angelsa Angela, 4 to 0. LnigilirAClBaB 4 rirenB whieh la IhTM glaal etepa Aewa the It is. the way the A’a have it Igured, only a detour to gn;a6iess. p Urn in the big time but "He haa to pitch and pUch r Ed np here. So for Urn Itll be oft to Binghamton. If he bums Albuqnmqne a double-A dub, or even up to Portland In triple-A. But first he’s got to have the LOT TO UCABN Hie ptens draw a abrdg 1 2 Changes at Eagles, Local Elks Top State Two leads were taken over by Detrdt area kcglers at the Michigan f«i|tegles tournament here while Pontiac men' lost place but gained another to still pact three dhrietena at the Elks State at Lansing over “ ^ Young Tom Lowry and J. 7^ gait took top honors at Lakewood Lanea In the Baldwto hBsed Pontiac’s Dick Carmtehad of new throe pteoea led by Hasetton Lettering with 3.016 featuring 2,681 actual. Eamon Electric, No. 3, has the best actual of the trio of lll6. The toad lost at the Elks was te doubles where two Muskegon duos bettered the previous Ugh of 1,325 of Chuck Baker and Ed Linn. Joe SerreD of Pontiac continued 1st in stegies actual and 2nd to Bob Tucker, Farmtegton. to hand- At eAlrway date and C. 9 the top ptaee to ■* U7 OVER AYBAOE . The Lowry^TUggart I averages. Lowry tod the men with 107 over average and had high d aeriaa of 576. Oi^ Pa^ had n average In a game Howard. Flelda of Pontiac re-pteood Farmtegtan’a Lea Pennell atop the all events actual stand-1^ at Lansing with 1439. City teams conthnwd to hold.Bie ringto of m. Rank Roinsr hit m C Bendw headed wimin’s acinal witeo at 04, Iv HUtioek ? i ,ar;*s!Sii.p |5pU-C0U ^ ^ Carmichsel was a big gun in the 3479 top handiean and 8,0M No. 2 aetaO acom loiwr ty F. ET of P. with, 883-1491 in aU events. He tit 637 twice and 909. Tepm actual games' were. 90-L,06O«89 ted by Bob Lowry Jr. with 651, Cari Behrick 643, Csr-itichael 4QB, Bob Gormong 585 and Ed Avadenka 536. iS'^ CarnddMiel and Avadenka oombteed tor i,Ml handteap In Ttnoag sad Oeoe l,tl9 and Lewry-1411- Lewry Ut IN to and M67 al evento hand-leap, Bekrtek OS and IJN, Oor- maof.tOsdnd UO. ShsB 07 and Avadf^Oa M9 ta ate- n knew new her naneh I renl-ly have te team,’* e|ga the I feel I oaa pHeh to the malera. week aad 1 naad a lot of work en ft. WMh oeOral. PO City Five Hag 13 Straight Who’s goteg to beat 300 .Lo|ungef ’That was the queatton In the aty Saafcetball League’s /6nerican loop liesdquarfert today after the Lounge cagers chalked up their 13th triumph of the eeason Mo-day emdng. at Pontiac COhtnl. his six emergency starts. Bsasen hasn’t teced Chlcsgo this yesr,.JSawdHik. ? ‘ playing the previous 10 games. In ”2”“^ fact, the test time Hank want "" against the Hswiia was the final game of the Cup finals test spring. Detroit’s dismal road record got ■light lift te the teat two away games, with the Wings gitining ties The mark is now tour wins. I four ties and 18 Iobms in The nari road month’ back and te live games since, there are the two ties and three loeaes. have a doable header at home, Satarday aftor-naen at < p.m. wMfi the Black and iteaday at 1:0 p.im Teroato. Bnaday Is the I of the aenaen UNBEATEN STRING In Saturday’s matinee, the Wings will be backed by an dlgU-gsme undefeated string. Detroit has not lost an afternoon game at home te eight tries (seven wins, one tie). ★ ★ ★ befere the lee show eon Of Howe’s 28 tallies, he haa scored eight on Toronto each against Boston, New York and 51ontr^al. Glenn Hall has been his hardest mark for the test two years, qllowteg Um only three goals test year plus one in the playotts. Howe’s career total of 497 pute him within a ‘‘hat trtek’^ of attaining the coveted mark of SOO goals; only Rocket Richard haa accom-pUi^ this fea^^ tor tee Wtegs as he Is oaheaten ta all six gamee riaee he took ever fsr aa tejored Terry Saw-ehak. The M-yearald eophesnere te teal streteh and only U In II starto fsr a 8 Ji avenge. He is 6-4-3 aU year and has four At II, woridw banklii ■a after dteady banklii V35.000, baa to| of a In high school, the weU-epoken Lew pitched iSnoUt gamea over two-year van. Then, winning hte first start in the major leagues couldn’t be expected to mske bin figure he hod to toU like a peon. *1 mlgU have gotten a little oodty," the boy admits boneatly. your first game like that might do It to anybody. I had an ft was all just like In Ugh >1. What a shock I got." Lew was shelled from the mound Id win Us test game of the n, a 3 to 2 six-utter agUnat WasUngton. But he ended np with a record of only two wins against five loeeee. Woridng only 56 in-igs in Uguntea he ataggered In ih a 4 J5 earned run average. ‘I had no kfen what it meant be In tbape,” Lew confeeaed as he reported for the vening of the A'a training camp. ‘T kr “ and I’m working.’’ DES MOINES, Iowa (AP)-Bill Pace, the firat profeaslonal to appear te the 59th American Bowling C 0 n g r e a s tournai waa outrpinned by dozens of bowling duffers >Monday. Pace, star of the defunct Kan-u aty Stars of the Bowling League, rolled a 178-1 221-610 seifes competing a Butch’s Market of KSnsas Ctty-. Butch's posted a medkxre 2711 total and did not challenge the regular division leiUers. ♦. A ‘ ft ' ' ^ Regular divisian teams are allowed one professional on theii Liftler Retains lead on Tour; Palmer 3rd DUNEDW, Fto, (AP) - Gmte Littler still leads the pack among profeaalonal golfs top money winners, thanks to a thinl-piKe fln-Irii In test week’s Tucson Open. Hie 81,175 payoff gave Uttler a total of 115.381 for the year. PWl Rodgers, who wop at Tucson, jumped a notch in the stand-ing^from third to aecond. 12,800 victory check gave Um a total of H3.633. Arnold Pi£iker is tUrd with 112,05. Rounding out the top 10 are Tommy Jacobs 88,283; Doug Ford 86.646: BUI (fesner' Jr., 86448r "Ait Wan Jr. 86,020;-Porr Jsnuaiy 85.795; Jay Hebert 85,^; and Fred Hawkins 85,525. ABC Duffers Show UjyPro; State Man 1st beaten, handed Clarfcatea aa O-n trwmeta« test sight beWad KMiteg spree of for-Larry Feet. Rod Hwaia.. another ex-ffOl ace, swished 19 potets and Felix Broolcs added 17. Don Piemann tallied 13 lor Oarkston. tna. iioui i games away, from Olympia. Scoring Battle TightJnNHL Howe and Hull Gain on Bathgate; PTahte Eyes Vezina Trophy MONTREAL (AP)-The race far the National Hockey League' title among Andy Bath-New York, five-time champion (Sordle Howe of Detroit and young Bobby HuU of Oticago seems destined to go right down to the last week of the season. Weekly statistics from the NHL office today show that wUle Efalh- although. the Ranger itar had four ' HuU three and How: during the week. Aa a result Bathgste, with 23 goals and 49 asstets, has 72 points, Howe haa 66 on 28 goals and 38 aaaista and HuU 63 on a league-leading 35 goals end 28 assists. HoWe also has two more games to play than Bathgate. A pair of Kanaaa farmers who had never before bmyled ii ABC meet were among Mqn scene stealers. Wayne Dodio and (>>tdon Bruiting of Hiaw Kan., combined for a 1264 total which eaniled the doubles lead in three^sy old tournameiti. Brunteg, 21, AKo parries only s 174 average fai league ptey, set the pace wtth 677. He had never Bsaists test week, he stil ground. Both Howe and picked up one point on Bathgate, accumulating five prints Cat finy Team Beat Powerful 300 Lounge? at the faul tine. Allen Manley netted 21 Ina losing cause. la Clam D aettoa at Ijacshi Larry Blackburpand Pete Lswry Ut 25 and 21 poiris, respectively, tor the Trotters, Tuck’s Gene Lup-pteo eontrtbuted IT end Bob Fsrms notched 14 for Ktwsitii. Runnerup Newman AME dealt do Local 596 an 8668 walloping In another AL contest. Once IS s former PCH flash who lead the way as John Bandy collected 26 potets. Jerry WiUlams. also a PCH alumnus, scored 22 for the winners and Fred Davis totaled the same number fo^ CIO. Yesterday's greatest point production waa amassed by ex-Avon-dole star Jerry Paul, who pouepd 45 points through the hoop aa Buckner Finance defeated Southwest Trojans, 9662. bagged 20 field goals and 3)-tor-7 JoJo’s, the front-running Gasa D outfit, had no trouble btesttegx the Bombers, 72-49, in the other loop contest. WiUie Peck scored 23 prints, Ron Lewis 16 and Milford HUIfe 14 for the victors. Ernie Pickett tallied 14 for the ont-ctessed Bombers. AAat Action Resumos for Area Prep Teams Area wrestlers are looldnt ward district tournament ptey u they head into the final matches of the season. Lake wUl travel to Detroit Catholic Central and Berkley vs. Hssel Park tonight. Crsn-braok was st Royal Oak Dondeto this afternoon. Waterford will be at Davisioa Wedneaday. easy SS-t7 High. Trak’s tote Bri.rteee n vtote^ over .nsTc MM yonniaiitit beneeigisl RNANCE CO. OF biTROIT FE 2-9249 goaUes, Jacques Plante ri the Csna" sre/u CAS! RELIABLE TRANSMISSION 4T N. Park St. PONTIAC FE 4-0701 SERVICE V tire y SPECIAL THOROUQH 5 WAY TIRE ROTATION AND INSPECTION SAVES TIRES ... BUILDS MILEAGE 98' GENERAL JETMR first premium-quality tire iu the ihw-price field! ★ FREE MouunuG ★ FREE PARiaNG including toreign end sports can. E-Z TERMS TIRE DISCOlmT^ ED WILLIAMS WHEFL ALIGNMENT BALANCING BRAKES MUFFLERS 4S1 SOUTH SAGINAW AT RAEBUKN PONTiAC THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY. FEBRUARY 20,^ 1^ Help Yqiif Child Succeed in Scl^l DRIFt MARLO By br, I. M. Twa Cook* •aA PhU By«f Youngsters Deserve Parents^ Respect By LMUB i. UMMOS, D, ED. Pieleww •< Biwtfle^ VmvwiMy oC SMikm OkUtonI From the moment a child is bom, he is,an individual. . Treat him like one! At birth, the doctor lifts the newborn by the heels and administers a swift spank. The baby yells. Al- And he h«« as miidi light to it as he has ta his body. It should be respected Ufe. It is not rigbtj for a,|Mirent re^ gar4 a xhild as "my very own baby." It Js even worse to regard^ him or her as DB. NASON “Henry’s little brother" or "Sally’i little sister." How kis personality developo depends In large degree oa bow M Is regarded as an.............. at hane and abroad. I know a busy mother of five who takes time every day to sit down with each.diild and discuss and crying when he did not get Ms way. Mild dhclpUne, llwn boy on the Even the mother had introduoea Chris as "Ken's little brother.!’ 1^ mother, a wise woman, sat down beside Chris. Each child is secure lit her love. Uttle effect. ' Chris came home one day and Mother, the coach keew asking me adiy I can't bfi more like, ray. brother Kea JWiy_do I; have W be like Ken?" The tpiestion shocked the mother. Chris, she realized, was living In the shadow of his 10-year-old brother, Ken, who got good grades at school, stood high at h o Oiiicei Disagrees That It's Any Port in a Storm 43, drove to a high school to pick up her son. It bt^gan raining heavily, so she invite a few of 'rlei never realized there were so many," 'she said when police officer Thomas Stead stopped the car Monday. He said, "I couldn’ see who was driving there were so many kids." "You are our boy," 'and we love you very niuch. We like you because you are you. We want you to be Just like yourself, and not try to be like Ken. * We like Km too, bnt yon to be yoniselt. Ten are oipS boy no matter how yon act, bnt ¥onld Bke to hove yon net and b^ a happy, sneoeoalal boy." J* reCVlUV III MM •^rilSny passengers to obstr^ her vK buTlrt her keep six of thent. The other 11 had tojvalk. Bag Miail(lMs)man TAIPEI, \ Formosa (AP)-WU Kum-fa, 17, Tost his Job as postman his first day at work and landed in Jail. Wu was arrested after a passer-by saw him dump the contents of his mail bag, more than 300 letters, into a worthwhile effort. He is an individual. But there was a time when things ware different in this household. A PROBLEM The 8-year-old son, Chris, who had been happy, cooperative, a good learner in school, suddenly became a problem. He quit learning and portended that he had forgotten what he already had learned. Astrological Foretiast . By SYDNEY OMARR "Th0 wl$€ man controlf hU destiny . . . Astrology points the vay." AMES (March 21 to April 19); Excellent time for attending to de-Laiis ... for reinforcing contacts which are Infportant to future security, Try to avoid the senaa-lionu. Be sane, practical. This ap-IKoach best today. .TAVRUB (April 30 to May 30): Tendency lor you to wait too long. luay BlIUKUUWs . a , a*m.aa - >me to conchmion and ACT, (Xb-rwlse. the favorable chart could us. Don’t srorry about past. link of TODAY. GEMINI (May 2t to June 21): sten carefully ... you could get valuable idm as a result of ASUAL CONVERSATION. Best to ntertaln at home ... to ) loved ones . . . to invite frtrti® ) contribute suggestions. Ustm! CANCER (June 22 to July 21>: ime to experiment ... to ry many paths, rnther thm per-altting yourself to be bogg^ lown. If you have chplce of speak-ng up . . . hr beingjgioi^ ake course whldi SPOTLIGHTS "tiGO (July 22 to Aug. il): Get lown to buslneos today. Say ^ mean ... and mean wtat jiou say. Not the time for pipe dreams. Now time to produce . . . lo show capabilities. Push forward with creative activity. VIRGO (Aug. 22 to Sept. 22): Cycle remains up. You could leant much today by teaching. Cooperate in community projects ... be willing to share knowledge. Don't be offended by questions . come sincere skeptics. LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22): Could be kind of day which gen-crates excitement . . . puts 5rtl m the brii* of obtaining answers to vital questions. Be willing to est. experiment, tiy new foods meSWpei^wns. Be AWARE. SCORPIO (Oct. 1 to Nov. 22 o Nov. 1): By giving of your-■" . . . you eventually gam. I api^ to relations wito those you.'Dc ' . take point of view hich leads to greater juMUng. Be APPRECIATIVE. SAORTARIUS (Nov, 22 ID D^ ,); Aooeid diaDenges. NW ™ > back down. Thoee in au^ty «y be testing, watching. If you , your b^ . . - avoid excessive midlty .*. . odds are in yw - • ■ • - '“*ay, Ob- CAnuOORN (Dec. 22 to Jan scheme of today’s activity. Be frank^ honest . , . express true emotions. Others may find this » refreshing ... that you gain more than you thought possible. AqVAMXm (Jan. 21 to Feb. 10): like Taurus, it would be wise for you to resrtve to fight tendency to worry over past. Today could be time for you to take step FOIL WARD. Maintain sense pf hurtor . . . welcome new ideas. pnOBg (Feb. 30 to Mar. 30): Much In your favor . .. if ypu can control urge to act strictly on impulse. Best to ask questions, to read ... to know what you are doing. Easier to Just ride akwg. But WIfflER to watch road. .\* ♦ ★ ir WEDNBBDAY » YOUR BIRTHDAY , . . year could be a very exciting one . . . opp^-ties open up for change, travel, romanoe. now Ideas. Yon begin to emerge from iheU orrut. You arc THg PONTIAC 1>RESS TUESDAY, FEBRj^ARY 80. 1»62 FiFTEBy wr ^ .,a Familiar^RouHn€ mnDE TB4mrat -TAi) ~ Joha GIm Iwlds • flight no# M Ma lap «■ be rtdei la a traaafer Y*n today from Hangar 8 to the ilte o( hi* launching Into apace. The map dwwa a portion of ! APPhi«rf»« : the I>iclfie OoM and the Caribbean Sea In relation to the lathiiun of Panama. * ' PAD — The Atlaa misaile which booated Astronaut John Glenn Into sjwe tia^toy atanda on Ita pad early this morning as workmen make last PTfiparationa. The miasilc la surrounded by a aervloe gantry. Cramped Cabin Cott $5 Million Glenn’s Capsule Expensive ■ BY BEM PUCE CAPE CANAVERAU Ha. « -When astronaut John Hcradiel Glenn Jr. takes hto trip through the dark of space he will travel It's an expensive way to travd. though the quarters are cramped. His new tfsct dilp, built by fhe McDonnell Aircraft Oorp. of St. LoUls, cost 15 minkn. OIBM to I He Win also swing his capaule around tram time to time, whUe passing asBOSB . the nlght-diaded part of the earth to take a look at the stars. The time tor each of the three planned orbits of the KAELT BBEB Aptraiant John Glam’s steady hand whisks a rasor Over his iac« ro> ' fleeted in a hrirror thto monilng in Hangar S at Gape Canaveral. Later Glam got Into his apace suit and rode to- the launching pad. Hospitals, Many Doctors Stand By fo Oieck Glenn strapped to a mesial rokhar poddi«*flherglam ean* eapod-aDy entoiorn to m hto 1» poang Dame. On Us Journey the Mtive of New Ooncord. Ohio, wiU scarody have dbow room since Us beO-ahaped sky cabin Is only dx toet .to dlameler across Ha ' stands nine feet Ugh. WOd, LOBE WEIOinr At lift-off the whole thing wfll weigh 4J00 pounds. As it travds along It win Jetflaon equipment no longer needed and when it is once more upon the earth, it wfll wdd> 2,400 poimds. U. OsL Okan^ the Mailae Osrpo to gdag to be a bumr naan, eapsala to Jam In brief, Gtonn wiU spend most of Us tilp kwfcing toward where he has been instead of where he is going. IAS IDEAT SBOBLD The broad, biuBt end of the oap-sulo contains a heat sbleid made of a plastic compound wUch un- peels away in fine layers to dissipate the ^.OOOdegree heat genei^ ated by passage throuid^ the earth’s atmosphere as darn •s in for a landing. toM wlU be able to see the CAPE CANAVERAL (UPI) -The minute astronaut John H. Glenn Jr., to picked up at sea doctors aad sdeUisto plan to put him if it Must Find Keyhole in the Sky every aspect of US phyalcd condi-0 tion with opocid enqihasis on what eflleet homns of weightleoaMoa on the human body. Glenn also will recount at ^— lengthilsr a tape recorder all his mories of Us But Project Mercury Officials are Ity that Glenn Bright be injured A quartermillion doUars wortli CAPE CANAVERAL. FU. IE -Just how does an astronaut manage'£>. go into orbit, stay there, and come down safe!/? ^ Speed and exquisite conlrois are „ the keK And a.touch ef rodiit medical .. . brakea plac^ in strategic locations John HL Glcnh |r. bad to hit ' ' what be balls “the keyhole in the Sky.” Itoeket power M to fUag kUs np to a tpmi of IT^iie nriies per land and at- sea around the glol|s. two HOfirtTAtii READY Two hospitals that woUld match faculties any in the world are set to conduct the examrinatkm of their I flying parallel to thsengk This is the keyhole, where his bttog him falling back to eirtb. Overshooting would send him tots a Midier orUtThan planned. ★ ★ ★ Alemandoiis acgiracy .to Irack- amaU jacket naounted chute Is supposed to fall sway in Older to avoid dragging the space craft through the water by acting t into to ite kUl < At MS seeoals past laomh. Otona shooM be traveto« free Upon .touchdown a small radlp begtns aendtog out a signal for the recovery ah^ to home upon. There la a si^ auxOiaiy unit in the caUn wUrti Glenn Can use in evoit toe autamstle device fails. H the eapaalWabenM «itag a and emwb toe roeket rier arrive, two frogmen wUl leap into the eea Shd attach a flototton device, something like a huge to-nertube to the capsule, to keep It from atoktog to the ownt the mneea » leak. v-.... Jilmaelf will be drawn into one of the hovering helicopters by a sling attached to a vide enough oaygen for 38 boun. k ★ ★ Ahr .presaure Inside the esWa la natotaln^ af six pounds per rectal thermometer, wfll keep tab throughout the flight on Us ree-perutfon rate and depth. Us hourt action and body temperature. When toe Ikne eemes to toad, OtaoB wig lira a package af braktag raeketo attacked to Ike btant end el toe oMsale. Ms ■peed wn diep tfOB 11409 > Dcaamg rocaea are Jsttifmwd. At |1 parachute Is ds| At IWlOO feet, the 63-foot diam- Mmvm mvomymi «a^ urw ^ waww —wmen tern WC «nun|WIHCC, nwu MthWtod hem ribi af It greand «ter mato 'chute epou aulamatio- ^ ^ lemlaute flight torough any (there are two to case one ripa.) If It doeor’t work automatically Glenn can pop It out with hand ewiteh. . Alter sidai^down, toe big para- ★ ★ ' ★ Glenn's Aim One Thing Only: His bate With the Unknown tonHb a bate* la tbS aeek of toe erafl. Immediately after the rescue Should slDmething go wrong, however, and then are no belicq;i-ten around and (Bom Is confronted with a leaking spaoe craft, he can launch a'small rubber raft which weighs only three pounds, ____,_______________law. a first aU Ut airt a desalttog Ut to pro- ^ _ J^ which toe qrtro-naut can inflate if he has to tske This Isndiiv bustoeis is not exactly a soft touch. Tlw capwile wUch sent the sUmpanzee. Ham. 31,1961, sprang a leak, qpon Impact and wa> pulled from the water oiJty to the nick U time, k k k The capsule wUch carried astronaut Vlrga I. Griaaom to an altitude of 118 miles on July 21 last year had worw tnxiblss.*i«,, Upon tending the nine explosive .oils holding the side hatdi blew j»emstuiUy end the capsule was flooded, stoktog to nearly five mllea of ocean. Grissom himself barely escaped drowning. BOARDB VAN — l). fl. spaceman John Glenn hurriee up a ladder Into thq transfer van which carried ^Jm from Hangar S to tha launching pad today prior to Mb ride Into space. Special plastic coverings protect his fly HOWARD BENEDICT CAPE CANAVERAL. Fla. (AP) -John H. Glenn Jr. today kept a peraona^ date with deattay, a date he walked unswervingly for a kxig ttom. ways stoee Ut aelectlon ger than anytUng the workniaa diwe •dici^ and \let< to ride totqrsnce and contribute to man’s ImowIedRia. So far as anyone couldMdl, otoilto could corrode Us me. AU thoaa .portponota _mUu^ the h^breaker of Jaa 27, when he . spent 9 boun and 13 mtoutea atrao^ down to a capsule that wamT gotog any-when, ooidd have mhinged a teaman. But not Gterni. .odesty ateo stood out all ovrt Glamte makeup during Ua long tratol^. In Vain, ha pleaded with the worid to take, the «otligU oce capsule whW-iiig about the iJobc at 17,500 date Stroet '•We’ve got to do **.“ “•*«> laid, ’ire’re gotog into an age of exptecatioo that (vUi be Ug- "People are afraid of the future, of the unknown. If a mart faces up to it and takes the (ten of the future, he can have apme control oyer Ua destiny. Thars tn excitiiH idea to me, better than waittog to see what’s going to happen." Glenn, a boldtog 4D-ycarold Mar^ UeUteMtot 'ccrionel, wanted desperatdy to be the first American space pilot. He test the aril fib the first two flifdits to Aten B. Shepard Jr. and* VirgU I. Gria-■om. For ea 18g St saus'.ft assrT.?*33*"' ‘18^ 2^ L* iGbio MM lb Iasi'S? .us^ __________ 1 3144 11% 31444- ; Erlo LMk ^,3 444 4% 4«* ' s r gli • Wor 1.31 11 34 3344 S344 Druf IN I 33% S3 H ( BtoTon*. JP 1.33 3 30»4 33*4 Sgi: —. u (S 344 ... ----- ..J ,17 3344 3344 33444 <4 awlft a Co 1.H 4 G44 G'4 41444 44 —T— Tonn OM l.U IG 34 3344 34 ., ■ A» ,o.«d"4»J SRSK* aifcaoiM ^ S’* 115 i S5 S5 itssgts®®f i 'U44 |344 4 3444 34V. 34444 ' J 85 S44 3844 M444 gjSfrr im MOM ?* „ K AmAoT 84 0344 G% '**' ' ’*' MIt 1,11 7 61^ oa 1# w 8555lp® IF^r - ii,. ^dW Igiig ■evspi B ip5 3--- " I 3 8 ______' Ji Tta‘4 I ^133' Ti 3344 1- - . * S -5.'> -5”* -2!^ Prod a O 1.»‘*'411l!f* ‘X *lSSl^ a7514*7 5 (Ml 3 S 3744 3744 3M OU 1.30 3 M 3344 334^44 U 3044 1 0 Bh 1 wt: S £ 85 375 I 85 85 & : : U 3044 SOV. StaO-f G 7144 7744 7144-f 1 U44 1044 1044- 3 G% G44 G44-f II GV4 G44.G44- 4 »44 3344 33%4 373 Wh 3744 3744-T Dohner And Ctordoa said that GM defense aali^ in 1961 accounted for 3 per cent of the company's business and that mearch and development activities to thoK fields being eitoahtjed and 4vUl become inqreasiiigly impm^t. Mitchell to Pay $120; Placed on'Protetion It Pop .38 b ALRR 1 S S5 SI _ . - IZ s-« S5I T44TO years probation. |20 restitution and $100 court coats 4#cre part of the aentcoice imposed this morning on termer Royal Oak Townahtp Fife Chief Sginuel D. MitcheU. 4 U44 U44 U44-44 ,U 30 3344 M44 334«T V< .TOd » 17 U% IT 4 44 8 S5 £4*85:5 0 1U44 lU US —I 8 85 85 8515 _______ 3 7144 7144 71V*- % SSSSSeSL,m 8gS5Sr ■oulhom Oo ua 3 14% 1444 I4%4 Sou N O * ■ — " Slnclnlr 3 Stator Ml 3 Boiltti. AO .3S( ------ Cor .BN ___PM! 1.31 sd 33 33 XryLd‘7.U( 8 044 SSJSR‘{>“i. 7 8% %85:5 »»S ia%-l> 44 podonrd On CnrMdo 3.11 Un Xloo l.M " - OU CG 3b tad Cp. JS| 4 Prult .00 On* cn too -...1 uku i ns Born* .00 •■1 Prolghl ISTS^ 85: 1444 3444 . US% M44 M4*:.™ St St:t 'i’M S.lOo 3 U3% m si 3 85 854 % a 81 M44 oa44 ^ 17 7144 7144 Vn XlbPoir 1 -144 GV« 48 * I ** I 7 tl% *144 _w— rM^^^Um LUn 4 l*5 Tt5 IT^-1' ---- ' 3 3444 3444 3444-- 1 37 37 tl + ..;*8S5S5SS= iMts B1 IJI M 3* .:5b. ^‘s* 4 85 4VU*anAiCO I.M 3 35 ------- ... ,1, —Y— TGo a Tow JOr 7 3044 3* 3* ---- - * T 5 O 1N%‘1S* 13* S%75 jT^ot bi 'tuU eld-CGIod: Id-____________ UotrUiutBn. sr—BE litbta. iv rnirnA. v«-4m vtmnta. i Kite flying has ahoi^ been a national pastime in Japan, China ' Mntnyn «nd the East bdiss. Kit^ tone sJao fknm by tiie Mo-;}«ris of New Znland. For the first full oreek in February, however, GM hit a taa|taa-tlc 96.4 per cent and laat week dropped off Oidy aUghOy, to 96.1 per ceiR, despite higher actual volutne. ^ ' 46 DAT IVI^tT by Ward's teporis showed that the Jan. 31 inveirtory ot unaold cars ter General Motora repreaented a 4May supply at then current telling ratss. The I, a 9#.^ ■ "The automobile industry was affected by the decline in consumer buying of durable gooda earily in The year, but the trend 4vas abarply reversed during the latter'^ part of the year ivith the meoit rob. i by a Ciretot Odor* Jury. He was charged with using asphalt bekNigiiig to the Oakland County Road Commission for the driveway of his home last .ytar. A ★ A Circuit Judge Clark J. Adama sentenced Mitchell, lorho wu suspend from his township post after disdosure of the uae ot the material. Groin Prices (WAlto Gj^W_ ' rolD prieot: 1.N44 iut:" 18 SSJ ; ....... J.ll Sop. . St BusInessNotes Mr. and Mrs. Walter H. Jackson, wners ot Jackson Equipment Rentals of 62 W. Montcalm, are attending the American Rental Aaaociation annual convention to be held Monday througR Friday in CSiicago. W-MNB8 NOON AVEBAOBA S: ai ^k«' BONDS 8J;S:J;8 U biduotrtato . / CootaSo* by Tbo ioitilotoS Prooo /' 00 lA I* 10 10 BaSo bM. onto. Pf* L.TA ... CbMIfO —.1 Nooo Tuao. 70.7 1*1.1 ai.S H.0 *1.4 i^T. ttay 74.0 ui.i ai.3 ai.o ti.< WMk As* TiJ U1.4 MJ ao.7 OU Utalb AS* 7*J 104.1 IfJ ao.i. tu Tom An 77.0 N.| 17.7 *4.4 01.1 IMl-asrHISb 70.7 U0.7 0*1 WJ 01.4 iMi-as i«* S'l NA *4J n.o oi.i ---mff 7i.O MX S7.1 H.4 oil hrm 7p.i lu ai.a ai.7 nj M U U E*. BGta DM. I . -J -.3 .874J IM.1 Ml.t MU .374* 13*3 141.1 311.4 .374.* IMS IMS 3SU :iS:S.i8:S81:li:i .3M.1 13*X 1G.3 SNA .313.3 lUJ mj 313.4 .3143 IMS m.7 snt .3N.4 U*.* 33.0 301.3 American Stock Exch. GM Builds of Cais Than Ever Before AP AafeiMeife WHIsr , tBd^prabfeiiis oohioh art tevolved DETROIT - Gpeend liotan fe la te araa of an oveMJl eoonqnlc ' non M AgHrtea'E egee aafifcflMMt.’' they said. I model year than at aagr have Higer luveatorisa due to the Bw siaoe 1996. Apd aince Jaa. ttbe pnduetiao rate of tho auloinotive giant had total than in any pnvtous y bailihe divfefeaa of Maton kave MH 4 te 6,gTMn aoor ME. Tar Iha feiun lar OM laak aaly 41.7 ro, -> Ckdllaa, other Geenral Motora can —Pontiac Tempeot, Oldo FM and Buick Special — were in the 45-tGSf) day inventory range, along Trith the Fonl Galaxle, Fairlane, FAlcon and Hmnderblrd. omnu moHER Buick and Cheiiir H’were in the Sl-to-60 day clav with Comet and Lincoln. A|1 other namopUtes were above 60 days. Ward'i said oiMf Chrysler Carp, brand, which It did not name, had an toiventory equal to 111 days'at then current seosMd to OMoeral MstooE at 40 days lollawed by Amettoaa Mst-sn and Madebaker. bsfb Matl* plaat ptadaeera, at fto aai tor at « deya. Single plant producers normally Steel Industry Hopes for Contrxt March 1 PITTSBURGH (UPD-The steel industry 4las set an official target date M March 1 for a new contract agreement with the United Steel- R. Oialrail Oaaper of VA. gtMl Oorp., 4iktof aegatlatM' far the *%lg rr steel oompatoois, sad DavU J. McOmorM, pferidMA ot the V8W. toMoed a Jaiat alale- meat toiltoootaf MoadaF* EMOfMi to Toblob tbay aaM feey are bepefal of a aettleoaoMt belaie March 1. Cboper and McDonald aaid tha talks last ovedi were devoted to 'summarizing the rei^o of the various subcommittees” ol the human relations research commit- !With those ne go Mat to arranged and 74wll under way, we have now turned our deliberatims BusInessNotes John C.,Ba^ has been pillied manager of the feurth Hade Shoe ■tore to be opened ter bustneM March.1 at 235^ Pierce St., Wr-T mingham. Hoick shoe fitter since July 1968, Btofe George W. Combs, ager of the main, idore and buyer of women's sbM,' for the past year. Seio Sagiinen's Only Skyscraper NEW YORK (UPI) - The only ikyscraper ever designed by the late Em Saarinen of Birmingham, Mich., 4vlll be ciniBtructed near Rockefeller Center here for the Cblun^ Broadcasting Sy». No stsrtlag late ooas iiuo- lag. tort It Is MihedBtod fer osni-ptoltoa ia 1M4. Saarinfh, one of the wortd*s fofAmoat architects, 4lied Sept. 1. The biHldlng arill be locatM on Ixth Ave. betTveen 52nd and S3rd Streets, a block north of ,^ocketd-tor Center. The building toOI Muse most ot the tUvisions operated by awnbir of ears la transtt IndUEtiy peodnetton rebomded last^Mak wHb the retun to aetton vFmmaiut^rtieb boupd sliioe Jaa. L totatod 136,236 units Mtotwt 3^ "*,4|to pravfoos week. Cbmmissioners OK Sewer Plan Authoriz* Preparation of Contract for Study in 2 Soctions of City Oomnitostoners autboriaed Qty Manogcr Robert A. Sttorv to A waUama, Ctonmltlng BagiiMers, for a aewer study to the north and east aecHons of Pontiac. They also la areas-aat bavtog sacA aandea Work is expected to begin In heae areas ovlth the opening this ot Poatlac’s new H2- ndilllon M _ Studies are ssttmated to coEt about $35,000. The final contract Trill be aubjMt to approval ot the The toamahlp had requested sp-piovsl of pisns tor a $4S-foot ex-tenatea ot a santtary aewer la the area already under contract far dty. ___________mbe extended east I Edgefield frain Cotomaa Ave- SheperrdtsMom Just as Proud as Over Son Alan DERRY, N. H, (AP)—Mrs. Alan B. Shepard »., the mother ot Americs’s first artfewnt. said fe-dsy she had Just about the same tocUngs watching John H. Glenn Jr. rocket Ito space as arhn she iw her son btost c«. H * it ”Tlito aasma a completion ot a her soa, Alan B. Shepard Jr., Anntn’9 Ptm hspard said. •*B*f Just remsiksbie,” she jddid. Glenn "Is. over ^rta right this minute. How vrandetful ter this ewmtiy.’' BIrt. Shepard said rtm and her iMibaid awoke euly and star tioaed thpihaelvis In frooit of a tetovtolon set in-tKe living room ol their colonial home in thia to4om Gets Prison Term; Disanned Deputy James McCracken Jr.. 16, ol ./Wto Lake TowiaWp. waa aen-fenced to 1% to 4 yeara -to Jack- rtierifri deputy and pofaiUng the revdver at the officer. CIreuif Judge Frederick C. Ztom impooed the aentencean McOack-en. lOM Schuyler Road. McCracken pleaded guilty Feb. 5 to felontous amault. He was Srrsll-ed alter a acutOe irith officers s call to sastot s heart attack victim. A companion twid a $90 fine for ha pdlce offloer. Board to Air Proposalf in Indopoodonct Twp. INDEPENDENCE TOWNSHIP- poM uwiTMce prognun lor wmr rti^mployea pt thejfegnlar board msetlM tonigM. Ataotob«dia-cussed to a proposed mausoleum at der cotMidiwattnn 'The proponent of the npuMideum Pontiac City Affairs Approve land Trade for Parking Space aty commisskmers -last night olcay^ a "trade” irith Automobile Equipment Co., 145 E. Pike St., whereby the dty vriU get a. 23024N|uare-loot ptooe of property prepared for presentation in the neor future. OK VACATINO ALLEY CoBuntosioners gave final ap-pioval to the vacatlag of aa alley tral fire stattea. The auto parts company is. lo-itod ^ ot the station under MMtnictkm. The property Uei betiOBCB the two bolldiiieL Par lbs titaagslar pM sf land, (he dty Trin gtv« the esMopnay 6466 and a saaaller ptooe af toad at IhB roar at Ibe prspetty, add OKy Attavasy TVOllam L Borait. AHbough both parties had agreed Oiureh site at Bagtoy and Brash Streets. The aSey rana nortoer-ly from Brash along the eourt Me of the EHe. The move will tkden the site so as to accommodate a church. It bad previously been too narrow to hold a church building and suit-parking space. passed s 4vas needed before, the deal could be closed. The area wUl b dty official partdiig. ★ ★ ★ No objectioois Toerc voiced at on four stieets in Kennett Gardens subdivision. Work toss Kced on the project. The eewere loffl be baBt Total coat ot the project la estimated at $10S,OOa n witi be figured aa port of the 1963 pidilic improvement program now being Take $85 In Holdup af Tfoy'Grocery TROY — T>ro men entered a Troy grocery store last night, forced one of the owners to the flow at gun poiijt and escaped irith some $85 from the cash regto-■ or. Frederick Hohner, co-owner of the Forsyth A Hohner grocery ■tore St 39669 Dcqulndre Road tdd Tfey poUbe that he 4vas atone in back of ttie meat counter at the rear of the bulkfing iriscB two len entered the front door. Ordered to “Get 4fo«m on your Bees," Habner iratdied as the men scooped all of the from the cash register ai UAW Postponos Strike at AUis-Chalmers G>. MILWAUKEE (AP)’ - 'Hie United Auto Workws Umon Ms xied a strike schechded -to start at U a.m. today at* six plants of the AUto^Oialmera Mfg. One of J the safety of hilaiito i cifiatan ihat »■ planned tinup Mcotiations orith the oc pi^ on a dajModay basis.' News In Brief Doaald B. Kemp, UU6 Dndtoy St., Is one of 35 agents Who attended a recent trafailng program conducted by Natiomride Iiu0<- Tho MtoMgaa Uqser OEatni bmmisalon has ordered Ralpli Spadafore, otvnler of the Westomi S«gwr Marint. 7M W- Huron St. to pay a $100 Ilpo for allowing a the recent deatt of John F. Stewart of Pontiac. The 'reeolutioa 4vaa ed by ComnitoUoner WlUiam H. TSylarTr. Sight Recovery by Wheat Futures' CHKAGO W - Wheat futures XNved a tendency toward re-coveiy, but other grains and soy- today In falrty active eaiiy dealings on the board of trade. Wheat moved up major frac-tfetu Infrpots during the jfrnt several minutes credited tb short fnerdal biadiig toward mhintoin-CDOs of inventories and flour milU. Wheat cloaed Monday irithln frac-tinu of Ita season lours on sqiim contracts and a cept or so on one T tiro others. Declines in other commodities 4*ere small and the market showed more resistance after Monday’s broad setbacks. Named Receiver of Lansing Firm LANSING (|) — state hunirance Commissioner Sherwood Colburn has beim named receiver of the Midilgan Surety Co. of Landing, apparantly em^ a Imw court tilht over the fate of'the 47-year-old firm. :.a: graatod Col-■Bfwa pennon ant he ba nussd lepatoer of the fliin. Osfeem baa w Oxnpany attorneys had contended an offer of purchase by Charles Zinuoerman, Detroit insuranee executive, could keep the company in vised him he was gointa to iirlth-— **“ offer. The insqrance oom-■ald he Toaa still open to-aegotiirions orith ponAda pur- i THE PONTIAC PR]RSS, T^UESDAY. FEBRUARY jo, 18^ SEVENTEEN 6K Resolution on Court Site G>imrtiMiontre Go For Plon to Ufo Land at GM Show Placo Hm Oty CommtMloii lait ni^ approved a rea^km offered bjr Oommteekwr Bobart A. Lai^ ^ CiUtaB.Jlf.tlM' Ota .«>d-saunta naa the old county ooorthouae p a ahoML plaoe for General Motore produeta nanufactured in Pontiac. Other iMiry'a i In Ua noolution, Landry re-queata the Oakland County Board Of SupervlaorB to ‘lake stepd to make avaUable the old eouit houaa dta aa i location to dia- rtetUa city." The raaotadan akto plediea Pa»> ttae participation aith the cooto ty "In the COM of tMs worth-widla community project" Copioa of tha raaolution wera aent to coiaity ofBelala and, o<-flclala of the three GM ptanta and an InvitatSm to Geoite Romney to apeak before the Sen- Gommlmianen hope to meet to ate. and GM eMcuttvea tq diacuM the propocal and any other idaaa which the oounty might have tor lieainBki invited Romney, Republican candidate for the nomination for ■ovemor, to explnin fala tax program to aither the Senate Landry aaid he thought ouch a dlrtdny would "atinnflatc lUte-wide and iocM brtereit In our in-, duatrtaa and piwido a tfngitat aymbol o( copununity appreda-tioo of the prMhieta produced by local hataatry. right here hi Penthto and we MMdd ha tha lliot te aaa them enah year. It wertd —he an '61 Gas Usage Breaks Record The resolution waa drafted In view of the fnet that the county hnd no Wdi on the old caortboam at their aekiiig price of abouf MOO.OOO and, laat week, approved ‘ •dvertieing for bide to have the As to exactly hew the site would be uaad, no one had an Recorde compiled by Conaumera ower Oo. and Datrait Edtam Op. show gaa consumption at an all-time high in the Fonlinc a— in m. that the city and county ihould coopemte in dearbig the Mte and gtvtng it to General Motors tor coMtnietion of a display i Borer on 6ixi« Hwy. Gets SDM License 'The Waterford TownaMp Board Monday night granted an SIM licenae to Raymond P.^ Borer tor the aalc of beer and wine at 3M0 Dixie Highway. The location waa Inspected during the paat week by the police departmeit, fire dapartfient and recommended approval to the mwm FACE TMt MZMtt. MT- Aa a homeewnar you may not face the eaHM haaarda aa aa Bekkno, hot thare ( a greet i_____ . home: wind, fire. UabiUtv^to name a few. Protect yonreelf a-galnet ttaaaclal toee with a modem Horaeownere , PeUey. ______ H. W. mrrTBNLOCHU MnCT 320 Ml— BMg. FI 4-1551 What’s the FINANCIAL HEALTH 9 of your stocks* Straai lee queationT 'mveatorabouk It*S MS ■elf peilodicMIy beoa— stock values can and do chiinga. New developmanta in corn-panic* ... industries ... tha aooaooic .outlook can make one or more of your stocki leaa deslrahle in terms of your particular ohjcclivea. It is iin-portent that you reappraise roar portfolio to defwinine how your holdings may be affected by eunaat—-and future trenM. _ Lercben A Co. will be gladTo review your pre—t holdlngi at yeiv r^ueat. Thereof no coat or obligation. Vitliif,lirdiiil Cl. Launching Seen by President WASHINGTOff (AP) -lent Kennedy aratched the 1 Ing pf aMroMUit'John H.- Glenn ir. into drUt-today and wap de- MBDUAL VnjAOB - Soon to be buttt at this medical village deeigned with office —ce for 25 doctor! in six individual buildinge. and a central building. John S. Hillock, president j ol Hillock, Ecrieetene and Go., and general buUden, eaid ground would be broken 10 dSya. In edition to phyaiciana’ offices, the central building will contain a''prM^pban'phar- , RiSCy, X-ray,and lab facllitieB and a hearing first phase of the flight had g— vrty iucceeatuUy. Lesinrid Sayg; Talk to Senate The Preahlent, with Mrs. Kea-nedy at hia ride, began watching the launching prellmtaarica at 7:15 a.m. on »»televJalon art hi hia bedroom. Kennedy continued to watch In hia bedroom until 1:90 h.m. Romney Asked io 'Spell Oul' Tax Plan He went then to the imall din-room on the flrrt floor of the White Ho— to Join Oemo- LAN8ING m- Lt. Gov. T. John tag tor a ootpaento — pare—I ' ■ tax. ■ RepnbUcan party, a taller explanation of your preferencea in the realm of taxattao would seem to treditlonally aatMaoome tax and oonndhig of aenlhnent thia yei rtuwed the GOP majority there " won’t ge along with it. WPOJL FT our "Hie plan you have endorsed ly or in detaU." Lartnrtd aaid in a letter to Romney, ‘‘Yet, baea— »l» now a qwkeaman tar the Panhandle Pipe to Hike Delivery of Qas Into State .Aroa Hfh All-Timo High; PoHM 4 Billion Cu. F>. Of EloctricHy Slips LANSING ero Pipe Line Cb. baa announced ' it will to— deliveries of nat-nml gas to Michigan by H per ont a year under revtaed tarme ef filAd today with the Federal Power Oomkata- » to Matsey. aeateniare n eabte feet af gaa to renttoe tart This wee nearly a btUion a the I960 trtal’of 3JM.SK.7D0 cubic feet. The torirc— la eapedally BlgaUteant elnee h smpaa— total toore— of gaa conaumption from 1956 to IMO. * A * * Ihe large volume deliveries to Michigan COnaolidatad are due to rtait to April cf'iMS. PanbAndle prppoeei to deliver aboOt a.4 bll-lioo cubic feat of gaa to Michigan CrtiaoHdntad wNh eidrttog tadU-tiea. itarttog aboot April 1. Total a 1 a c t r i cal conaumptloa houra-from S78.311JM to 19S0 to 3» J73.ae& tart ycnr. the flgeroe, Can- receive a supply Incre— of » million cubic feet a day itarttog in December from Trunkline Gas CO., I Thonb Forth for Lights rt alsetrlcity tort to anjta,tn to ifsa- Detroit Edison Co. experienced a rtmilar decline. Edi sumpOon was 1M.SC.M6 kilowatt hours to 19S1 as compared to 147,-MBJS7 the year baton. It waa the first decline to local ctaotrical-oan- CAPE CANAVERAL (UPI) -AstroMUt John Glenn reported from over AuatraUa today that he > the "fartaht Ughta’’ — apparent of the city of Perth. ‘Thank eveiybody tor tinhtog and elactrJc conaumption droppad. Snow Moves Out asCold Edges in From North By The AsseeUted pi— leavy mowsHwUch whipped the Midwart into the cold air apread act— northern More rain doused th __________jas of Southern Calfc torida but tapered eff after Monday’! heavy downpoura. The beh^of mow or n riaa extended frqjni IwUana and the eastern upper Gfeat Lakes to the Atlantic Coast from Mary- into New England. 96 mostly clear to the mklwert mow MAINE COVERED ' The storm abated New England but falriy hmvy aniw continued in ttona pf Maine, The storm dumped ■now ranging Wi 8 to 13 toches atop tort Thursday’s heavy covering of up to 30 Inches. New York State, i amounta ranged up to 20 techet on the ground in Glena'Walla in the northeast, 18-to Albany and 7 in Plattsburgh. Roads streets were generally elid Cheysbr of Canada, UAW Try to End Strike, WINDSOR » - Negotiatom toij ChryUer Oorp. of Canada and the united 4pto Wwl^m^ ^ today in u eflort to aettle a stflke of J,000 Chry^ workers titalibto gan Sunday ^midnight. The strik* began alter lAtanre to tree on a new contract to to-I— — which expired Nov. 15. ■ nday-to- "Parhaps ha can’t do it. But he can. he owes It r ‘ of iMIcUgan to try. of iMIcUgan to try. feiW to ^ my cemmMtaei" objected Sen. ebihman of the taxatian mtttae. "Mr. Romney can oo— t my committee any time and horn hecamea next yaarmgovw lanindeil la the expanllm — tariMtsa to deivar 48,4 hOfim euhle laal af gas aannaly to MkUgMS OmeeltdBted Oae Oe. participating in r Cb. while i Explaining the letter tarther, I %mm —mm rnwm/ ■■■■ ' imUl; inlOyi p— te Itoa— — Age needs rt Meidgaa. he can’t do it. But U L*™ Fifteen minutes before the blast-.ff, a direct telephone line wM opraed to Cape Canaveral, Fla. Flrrt Salinger talked with 0. p. Uoyd. information officer of Agmcy, who wu at Cape ' h—quartets. took over phone about three minutes before tfc tai "I don't need the sK the Iknlanrtit governor to trying to do," mid Geetfinga, emban—nt be-of tha West Holds Fast 1o Berlin Lanes Two Hurt in Crash ' oh Cass lake Road _TI*o pen— were inju day when a car driven by Beverly Golding, 30, of 2200 Beachwood, Keago Harhor, want Out of control Ica-covcrad Cast Lake Road and aUd acr— tha middle line 4 aa auto driven by Wniia Powril, 39. of 47 Crawford, bead pDwril wu treated at Pontiac General Hospital tor laearattona ised. Mrs. Itawell wu with \ facial moerattoni and tnetmod ribs. Her condRlon is reportad 'good. The accident occurred at 8: 40 .m. near Otteb Beach Drive. Lake Road and Mrs. GoMtor* Stall Member Is Made Assistant City Manage! One staff promMion and thrse oalary hi—wen approved by the City Cbmmiaatan last night. Adrotoiatiative Assistant David S. Teri degree in political science from marten degree to governmental admtoiatntlon from University of Northeast dlmlnlihed today u ^ assiatant dty manager and f^v- en a HJK annual aatary tacn—. City aad iUbirt—r^Atteney 8her- Tbel, 38, waa named amistant hr <3ty MaaagW partremt to flie 19® appropriatton Robert A. ~SUerar. He will taka over file, poet occupied by Sfierar before the retirement Dec. Si cf former City Manager Walter K. Willman. Wllhnan appointed Ted admtoia-tratlve aaeiatant in January 1961. ago, wffl BlrnkryiL internship at city DUTIE8 EXPANDED His duties will now be expanded, yntil now he had apaetaltoad in urban renewal and dyil dafa—. Teel, ng DaSota Place, holds a Each wiU get a |1,189 incre—. Rwart will go from SU J71 to HSr 440 yearly and Birnknnt from |7,-821 to 88.900.' All \«y hiker are affective M of Jon. 1 thia yew- r TsaTs 88.U4 a—si salary wlU be toon—d to 87JN ■—a>^ tokaepllhilaewltiirtalfml-arim la athar cMea rt oompan- So—S3 JQO transferred from the * ■ jM Jegal de- be apiit by Ewart and Hep, Law to Ask $125J)00 to Erect Prison Chapel AUl^toi Report JFK PiBatod With SuccMt of First PhoM of Flight a noh(lanomlnatkn»ii ebapd at Marquette, Priaon la betog readied by Rap. Artjnv J, Law, D-Pon- -ftandrt-benaldi weuki ee—taaps the atate'p gmeral fund. It ia the ■acond tibia Law — sought such ger ssM Ki—dy loilewad the "Tto prisoners need rdiabiilta-tion. and rellg^ plays’^* big part,” Urges Increase in Federal Pay the Prertdent. A mull pert^ TV eel wu "*i the —ad , launching. Lloyd filled in Ken- ____y on aome of the details. At — pofait. Kennedy heard Glemi’s voice over the ph— but Salinger ■aid the Praaident did not speak WASHINGTON (AP)-Prealdent Kennedy urged Oongr— today to provide a blllioiHloUar pay ralae over tiirsf years for the government’s Mrhlte collar workers. The he said, is to put federal pay OB a par with that outside so that oompetoit people can afford to work for Uncle Sato. The Presldefit aaid to a medal nessage that he wu proj—tag 'federal pay reform^ — ihnpiy a federal pay raise." iHor the whole field of white ooUar workers, the would amount to 10 per cent raiaaa would range from 3.7 per to about 33 per cent fm- file three-year period. The first ere— would come Jan. 1. Kennedy said he ie propoeiiig a wholly new, common ac— approach to the problem of putting federal aalariea on a basis comm- RmIs TbII Allies Tht/ll Continue Hdrattlng Acts Against Planei BERLIN (UPI) - WestaM offi-ctala said today the Western AL Itaa win maintain their Berlin ffigfaU dmptte Soviet threats to .★ Tlwy rejected a Riuntan dalm to the right to monppoilae the Berlin air la— through uturatlon flights by Soviet military aircraft. is ready to provide fighter escorts trueporta carrying pa—n- Tbe Ruart— did not attempt to restrict Western flights to the SOmUa ^n ' lEart Griman) t the Rinlatoiia, to a nota re- Waaterp Alltaa they would oontteue their haraiptog flights in the corridors. Russian fighters made such flights to back a Soviet demand that Western akcralt keep out of porthms of the corridors at ce^ tain tb—. The Russian note tokj the United States, Britain and Jta— it wonid have to heedjidL Buiilatt Staff Road Toll at 136 EAST LANSING III — Traffic aeddents have killed 136 pe in Midiigan so tar tiile year, pro-vlsloittl figures compiled by state prtice showed today. Hie toll at this dale lart year wu 178. Appoint 2, Rename Third to Crty Board ol Review Two new ipember*. were pointed to the board ottoview laat night by the City Commlesion and a third wu teappoiittcd. Waddell could not serve another term becauee of ill health.. BlM, iMUlmtod by Osmnfle- Hu tiuree-tnan board is appointed each year at this ttoto to advance of March hearings on 1963 prop-aly aesessments. Dmh sTm^OttaWn Drive aad 0«— Bim el 9M Natau §L teem Is Jai— F. 8pe— ef lU president of United Auto Warh— Local 863 at Pontiac Motor Divi. ■ion took too much el his time. a Psaltao rertdeat for n ymrs aad to prasMaat rt Chief PMitae Oredit VrtoB. He Ie a FoBliae DmAt, a farmer executive OMCTTuck A Oaadi Divlrtan. la a Pontiac real ertate salesman. He ie a native of the city and graduate rt Pontiac Central High Schort and B^igUi State Univentty. * Jr ★ , -A veteran member of the board, Spence flrrt served in 1938 and from 1938 to date. He la tradi-be reappofnlfd tiiice Us duttoe w tional board chairman. t .. . . ..^r. , . ------------III Hu 1961 tax rate the board detenni— the dty’a an—ed valuatloa this year. Law aaH he visited Marqaette JFK Asks $1 Billion fpr Whitf Collar Mon Over Thrff Yoors e to tl ice. Thia would be d— for al the highest-level otflctals. And tor them, Kennedy said, the moot vital aliigle element In the pro-poaal la pay adJustmenU for top executive and profeaalonal poei-ttona. Many of these top-rank emptoyu, he said, are F ' drawn away by Ugher-pay o^ aide. Low government wages endanger national oecurity, said Kennedy. The pay reform would apply 1 l,640;0tt) employes spread thrOui^t the whrid. It would affect approximately 660,000 collar workers to skilled trades and crafts. \ ’ Rain Stops Golf Gomf for Ikf and Guest Dick PALM SPRINGS, Calif. (AP)-Rain at Palm Desert'a Eldorado Country Club washed ou plannad golf match Monday between former Praaident Dwight D. Etoenhower hnd former Vice t Richard M. Nixon, and his wife, Pat, flew tha ex-pmi—t and hia Death Notices s?jcn!.w ro. il. am. mt txvlfht, Wat^rtud ToWMhls: •» IS: »tW*d dMwh-Ur of Xntrat J. sod Manas Pow- flaUu. PuBtral Mrvlss M .usEUr of U r^Bumlat M I* Flail*: daj flsUu. PuBtral Mrvta* «1U b* bald Tharidsy. Fbb. U. it It • "> at Our Udy of tho Lakta Cnuroh s.5..risri!5b“sis:a!;: V MlRii Rom*. HIM W. MoNlehoIf. Kb^iiWp^ O'NalU will Tl* la iiait rt »* Tad' C. auUlTOa Foatral Bodi*. 14D0 W. McMIobala, Oatrolt. Tti* Caneor ImimdtUaa. ^ ALcorm.IB:'------------- (U«). 3111 Daaloy, A*oa Tava-ihip: att M: boloTOd^huibud of Itbtl AlMrat dttr fathar at Un. Harp Bartlatt, Mr*, nobtrta Mow. .... _______41 Jioor* Chapal Of Sparki-OrlttlB ruaorol Bomo. b* takoB jo tho gurg^to n* la Xt rt."uko'^'dsr w If: dear fothor of Mro. Alfred • (kartaa) Boaoh, Ua r aM Pw W. BaUi; *too_^ounrlT*d W tV* bart A. dohao ^(eUtlai. lator- 8 tat la Baotlawa CMaataiy. Uk* naa. Mr. BtUt vfllj* & otfla at AUaa't. naaial paiu. Uk* . _l. 17, Uto. l.„--- t Drydon Road, Dry don; i; doar brawn *f 'M ARE DEBTS WORRYING YOU? OM wgM« awt aa a pita paa “;*n»pfs«n,rS5i... . MICHIGAN CREOIT COUNCE1.LORS SUto Baak “ ^ M4N PAY OFF YOUR BILLS WITHOOT A i04M! Arraato la pay aU yoar bUia AS LOW A.'- *.... SLOW AS $10 WEEK SERVICE FE 5-9281 S%IOSItS^ADI .KlR*4yJRd Maabar af -aiamboT at O 1116 — rarspUM halall 7, U, 14. K> 6L n. tt, L_,L-i'ki:------- ' D. Ei Pursley SPARKS-GRIFFiri Mrtj Voorhees-Siple ^ MW nnauTirDL vert. Moaat Park Orotitr- " S a m rn Hirt._ Tl is to—■■■ "li'a U)0T: IMALL SROWIt A WHIT* maU wytri io duiM. .. LOST: t MALC BalTTAHfS Uirit'w'jLi KMaM. I Hig blaok. atodo trin. ravard. OR ,-Loiro: TOY Tnmhisa. blacE «:00 p.m. Rtwaid. • ^ Wolmaraaor. vhtt* opcH ^ otraybdlieB. Draytaa 1 roOND: YOnNO MaU ttoo. " marklafi, part bUck « Spanlol. 9^ A PART Tmn joi Maadad at OMf-l moa iBr rra- -DESIGNERS Par JItf. flriuroi aad mMhInti L(XKHA8'f%RIGHT CNomncRiMO snRvtcn W!S IndUnmood **7 J”* No Sales Experience „ Necessary. w* will nuy trata a .awa »l«t lb* toUwrUit an—arttoao. lUr- dopondablo sar.'phoao, M|h oobaai odiioaUoa bad mhol b* a aotf- rtty ftr fo^otlarrllapJtf^ raneamoBla for pradattro. on 3-wn for tetarrlaw oaeolnf oat. A Pookol ran of Ufaap Whoa Tok •aU .Tsar larpla* R4|f ««M iuk Graciuate Engineers,. AUTOMOTIVE ENGINEERING STAFF CHRYSLER , “'XJor^ralion ^ ; [ Mechanictalr ^ Fuel Supply Systems Lssis Compo Chassis Compments Stress Analysis Body Structure Power Train ‘ Hydraulics Research and Development on Mechanical Items Electrical Ignition Systems Windshield Wipers Car Air Conditioning and Heating Related Electrical Components Metallurgical Wear Welding* High Temperature Alloys Truck Engineers Our eq>anding truck pro-. gram creates real growth opportunities^for graduate engineers with experi-enpe in truck design and developmeht. CaU Detroit CJollect, TUlsa 3-45Q0 Ext. 3828, or write; TECHNICAL RECRUITMENT 12800 Oakland Highland Park, Mich. aiodoi AIM Of out mm mwm* paaiu’ln'M^rt^ n— sr»*.^ S?rvp%“r^ i&V/!St .. Ml® mS5i.*«S ft QSL®" ESiiiErlfaiSriOTSBHt rSrVnST* *“ “*■ **•** OPENING - far rttiaa^o yoau &dy Ri j ; vweoiaSr'SlIYw a saad KIGHtfeEN THE PONTIAC PRESS> TUESDAV, FEBRUARY 20, 1962 , MAJESTIC hatmk . i^S^5rS83. Blood D(mor« Needed 4-9W7 I ijMlwcHtM IpBi^ 'H HZZY U JMtoUd. S’ WlfMhllkWavMMIK SALESLADIES paWA'^.s:'*^ b pcrMl. »«««■*. n M. Ugh Ml* M b *> ■>< ap P*< RTS. SISKS.: ifelarlM. raqli^B* T jlvki pta*. _________ «, A^la St, nunob. Iw^hifh bMt^bJSl* gat Srlp^ wMswi «3b AhiairMui •umtl Plum, tiera •»* IM OUlRelUble Ptaamf OllMr pmMIb* bate MBplorai. rrlTPto ««MUn. aCw l»l4 or II inSni ImBM. Wad*, al-lanBMlia. a&. Moat haaa trwM. -SrAff.y*- m A ^rti ^^TwiSi »gg*m£%nakiiM, "SECRET^yff?’ [ 4SMi. j ..r« ^ URGENTLY NEEDED l| 7*ara aad aid** lor aar ordar danaitBaal. falan and boaiu. CALL33^-2333. cmpiCnter J£Om. nbw and taRtbr ho tfn. MBOilooki Si. Jg- iMiMM SMTVIm WOMAN FOR UOHT ROUPE-I wyb^^ babrattuna to »»* B j tk»» work ort H*»a a»|^“ aontactlni. Call FB ^AN NEEDS STEADT WORE N OR 3-MM HARR>1D idAN WANTS WORE OF. ^k Uj^ ^Dd^ daUTOT. U Airport li 'Irxm 1* WOMAN FOR OENERAL OmeS^ work. Mbat Rki SStiaeTO__________.^--. ‘aSl '. Boa 1(H. flv»*, aur DbIm Lakt. ApproalBatalr 4.1 aeraa wMb IraH traaa. bl| ‘■-try patehaa, lalg* gardaa araa Id Raid at ailAa. Sniar ttras*. r-..— ...--- tr U* abad. lld.lM MODEL AT 873 Kettering F* i-irN 1. B t BtniaDBBB gl£ Sa^T PARTRIDGE r UST ’ *-nE t-SMt lacaWtax Sarvka Finish High School - rapid profraat, pra- for ooUofO. Stady -• S ebUdraa, t aad A After ad latU t;M. Mora tor bm* k —---------------1 aftor 1 p.B oart BOW lor ooUofO. siatiy M. 1314. DatroM K MIetilsan. ■ UILDINO MODERNIZATION < ^Roa* iBProaaaanl Toaiv at low - k ralM and •HP*' tue I^M Book. FE 4-IMl. BZFBRnSHCBD - :. ^LIN aaownUns Sarvl** l “Oh, Phil borrdWed HIS father’s car. AU he wants from you is to borrow a gaUan of gailpline!” v. Clark Raal SMal*. lUl W. Raron. Opaa I to t. lyriijiy UITEST NEWS IS LUTED ON THESE i^FAOESI Newa of What Faopl* Rat* U BELL.i RENT Or WANT TO SOT. Order yonr A sifViS^;n.S Baay walk-up. Oa, Ira cloa* U acbooU and aU APARTMENT.IN BRICK RANCH duplei, rafiMaratir and- k irom gnl cj^br______ UM Norton.” - ^ U*6M cLstAft MOU fdm OW tIoM. prl*sl^aMmaao.'iM Hot- ‘ aSi^Tnllafafi I Day. Low coat F!aa . . MALE OR nbUI^ Roa* LaiM CoCT*l***#llt 1 Roa* L*n| CoCToIi FE MMT. Private'H au Biuiua* lumwiaa a*, uoaiu paraon prafarrad. 1*0 M. Parry. I ROOMS. Iir HATCKERT ROdi at WIUUbi Lab*. I ROOMS. PRIVATE RATH. MW-ly deeorat^eloa* la. FE S-JSU, C O Z T little AFI.— Bent. 3 roaBi, eanlraUy U catad. AU radaaaralM and with axtraa. CaU PS l-dtSI *jypfe^‘msr ITbar obhbral jidsFfiiAL ^ ablld ear*. 11* iofiaaon. FE ASads. . ■ -,iry^M0 hooM. *■_* FEeTTa" Working Immediate Possession * -Ido, aoot I rodBA *0 . rorB* nr— )NTIAC RotpoUt-Wblrlpool - JCoDBoro Waabar rapnir aarr. Wa-fJlUM* .|l ^ wwi ajasi OAKLAI I S. Cnaa iRD AOTO •VmT ETOWA TbU Inolada* Tala* g Bookkaeping R Tag Saralo*. OR iSSo. Hw Saahabaw > WaMon. 'ALL WORKINO FBbFI^._TAEB8 ‘%niuV All ‘msinm^t and Bagrauad. AU work aanranUad — fra* uw-Ini. 11 Ml. at staTanaon. Royal Oak, M t-MSO.____________________ REBUILT MOTORS BOAT - TRUCK - ADTOMOBILB U.N Ekehans*. Onnrnntaad Kar-ufe ba’ttbrt 00.,,. BDMA'S BBAOTT SALON FanaananU M.M SbaBpoo and War* 11.11 ChaBbarUIn________FB 1-1 nr^Too _py MID syr EVINROOB MOTORS Ironswick boats Tour Balamda Daalar Harrington Boat Works MM E yairapb Rd--------- 1-A MODBRNBATIOR. BIDIRa aUna wBdowa. donnara abal ban***, ba**B*ate aad altleai 0< By bid nrrt. FHA ----- “ t-lMO. Era*. gSS-SIM. |. Oarntaa. Coo. arou Work. Notblnj Down. FAUL ORATES COHTRACTINO Frao BatiBato* — --- lUg. 0 itblng CONI wwawv _______________ OR l-Ull OOMPLEfB IT6 D khNfZATlON aarrle*. Raaldaatlal and eoBBar-oinl. AU work guaranleod. FRA ----- -------1-bondod-lr------- ion_____FB oiSS"!' cSSinieSim_L.^ , _I^0bjtL OR JpOI^LLTi' ALUMntOM STEF AHD EXTEM- ifjpwitry _______ HOCKIRO STOKER COAL oloastoSrV ^rWRACE COAL /ientdcky launp. atg and aWkar. BLATLOCK OOAL i SUFPLT CO. II Orchard Lak* At*_FE Mill C«hi iMBdriM u-vVash-it. SSI B. WEB AT MARITA BLOOMFIELD HIU . SARtTARlOM ' OLBN ACRES NUilStRa ROME ' Vacancy lor boo or woBan It* W. SUrerban FE t-SMI -It HOUR CARE" ART MBTAL PLATERS wislaL. wee# *MM iRMERTB. A-Iltl. BXFBBTLT DOWS. WILL W- K-*iSr Ebctrkil CMrtrocton t CUMN X------ C L B i M BBALTBT RVrlRBI BXCELLBRT FOOD FE K - T D N I N O ARD BEFAnUHO. boar larTio*, aU worS gaar*"**"* by UcUr^^traUj^B*.^ Ill R. SAOINAW FE »*M» ( TONIHO AND BlFAmiNO raUa. UL t-IIM. MVtIll. ■I MOViNQ BErVicIC. REASON-abla raUa. n S-jW ROOMS FOR 8IHOIE L^t’ 111 waiik. IS Eolaon, FE *-M*L 5oSr*ni %**iio rasdtrad. ^ 0,H*i a;,r *• ^ PiiirtiHf A DMMWtiag 23 ROOMS, Farry. II , 3-ROOM CTIUTlkS," OFF n. A-1 FLA8TBRIMO AHDtlUCFAlRS Baaa. Fat La*. FE t-TWI. ptiBSr* "*** ATTENTION! painting M rary low pricti. . ■k euarairtood. Frtt oatUaMoa. 3 Modern 5 Ro6m apartment STOVE AND K1 ^RHMI«D. IDEAL OFFICE OR RBBTAUR- ----- . ---------laaail, —jad u yard. si.lM dawn. Toko NO MONPY IX)WN NO MORTOAOE COSTS - Brand s«rBi "Young-Bilt Homes” -------------------- rB*nU MS.1S BW. n I NO MONEY DOWN MOOEL^'FBN daily IBS ' ~ Baarea Rd. MSdSIl FLATTLET EOILOER AAA FAINTING AND DECORAT- 3 Ing. M yean axp. Raai. Fra* *»-tlidataa Fhon* DL 3-13M. Drayton. IM bo. OR 3-UW. “’"NEAR PON-HaC mall NEWLYWEDS W. VooBf ■ - - Rebuilt Pumps Jet — Piston — Sump Rebuilt Motors and rSit.' ________________ r LADY INTERIOR DECORATOR. — Mm Fapering. FE M34L_______________ dkiFFIS iROTHERB. INTERIOR axterlor. Doeoratora town. >E mil._____________ 3-RObM AFARTMBNT, PARTLY farnlehad, TV. * **“ 3 ROOMS. PBIVAIE BATH. REAR Oeneral Hoap .AW. Huron wnar IIOR AND EXTERIOR palntloi Wall waahlnt. Fra* eiU-' inatee. FE M3II. FAINTINO AND DECORATIRa 3 ROOIfS ALL FRITAfE, LOWER. ) FLOOR SANDERS - POLISHES WALL PAPER STEAMERS ^ILLS, POWER SAWS S iSKvi UctiMsd . HEIDRICK BUILDINO SERVICE ‘ Hoaa, gnmia, enblnata, ndiUtloos. FHA 1---------■*- ' — , Wallpaper Steamer Floor eandari. pollihara. b a „ _ aobdata, .furnace tocuub dlaa^ era. OaklnSd^ Fual A Paint '** ' Shopping' Crntar. Rant nUlillM lurnlil^ MO. 0 T l^^rtrldga. lOSO W. H r'Rooiii'T 11 Ward on. FE OR i-bbdrOou laebfbobt a Waterford. oSiiul. [ BNOINB AIRLINER NON-STOP Lot Aogrlea, San Francisco. Ban Diego, |7I |6 Hawaii, r“ —— *“ MlaBl, 3-13M. ________and antmnea. Pfc MMt. I roou7 clean, near oro ---• Hoapllal. prefer adaUa. F ROOFS: NEW. REPAIR -ITEBTaOtfOHlNO FE 4-0444 tsf Csllsctors Wawted OiHirs* ts Isowd M CHILD CARE IN HOME BY DAT t and aloraa. M k Rof*- I 29 parklnr Apply S I NICARAOOA LUT lulrral Btamp Shop Auburn Halghta r furaltura and ^ajmancai. I AIRWAY FURNmmB “ 3V* ID ban .... Mo lU IM - I R. at aaah 40* WatErford Lumber Oaa^iad Carry^ Johnson s Radio & TV Oood uaad TV’l. BuyoBall-Tradt. 41 E. Walton PE A4MI *"• AluirtlM:-----'OBI-IW COMPLETE STOCK Building Materials -frioed bioht-SURPLUS LUMBER MIC KEY STRAKA TV SERVICE DAY OR ETRB.. FE i-lIH MSPSort_Rd_^_OR_ "TancT 1.M , Fearspn'i FE 4-IMl.__ LET Vk BUT IT OR SELL IT FW TOD OXFORD COMMpNlTT AUCTION. OA i-aMir WILL BUT ODD LOTS houaafull of furniture, toola, r Holly. TALBOTT LUMBER PLYWObD DISTRIBUTOR JBJLjaae___'iF.ism TrM Trii*iiiliig ^jea ACE TBEI __________fOVAL Traa ranoTil. trlBmli^ Oat onr bid. dM-MIS or FE MIM. iiiCRT TREE SERVICE. FREE aaUmatat. FE HAM er OR 3-300I. Ja tout li OM SALARIEDJppi^YJp_AND ................ ___________AFARTMEI Dtlllle* him. Adults, IM a mo. Md up. 1330 -Htfbland Road. OR General Tree Service 3^ts**^V”t ,T 1^'^ ” WInaton. Detroit 3 MtOOM EFFICIENCY Alberta ApartBanta^ m V. Paddock Ft I____ AMD MED ROOM. LAKE-front a^. Partly turn. OB 3HlW. 1ST FLO^ 4 JlOOi VAL-U-WAY RENTAI SERVICE SHIRLEY APTS. tCCORDION OROAH, F1A*2> »M0M________j--------- Naw-aM lhad fV TSSSSS?* a* |UI vk. ^Q|dD^BTOTICE TrEck laatal _ Trucks to Rent I CLEAI^ Rooits' atora and nlrlgantor _________ „ Upper M Union. CMl M3-1043. B 3-ROOIC LOWXR. Ill THORPi. ND BATH r funUtbad. %g2*^S;^r.**”Eyi*St PE Pontiac Farm and' Industrial Tractor Cor^ 331 a. WOOOWABjD , ALL CASH 1 OR Flt'A ' BOUmES I are leavtait atate or i ty ouleklT call us for lata depoait. R.I WICKER8HAU lilt W. Mapla MAyfaL- t*M0 CA§H a M n 1. Fitr a| Orchard Court Apartments ^ 1 and 3 bedrooms “ Air eoDdltlooad MOPERM IM EVERT DETAIL ___ _ _____■ Ha1B> ' saaa. ^ ~ ■ floora^piMtorad' laEt lEalEaat frayarty 4i-k ■ ------- weal aid*, main FE 1-34)1 *r FE oFPkn ahiLaibO. ttn iALb- wklATe.. OR 3-IMI.______________ ______l*^. :^%RfSFfc. JiS ANNETT Pontiac Mall Araa ■ r‘.5SBir*ssK‘*»fla! ?B**r3reeBeWB. 3 I balb sp. FWU ^atint. dad baib SP. FWU ^b«dI. 5T haaC In sulalanaae* . IMM. R- ---------- Lm** apIM. I Smalk ParmV^Cloaa to Lovely ibadnb. bB**I|W iMUy* ?B”*Wltt tlwiae*. Ml dlTldOd bnaamarf^^ Eik.Vdfii^YMrs artUabl*. miOdrtarBt 15 Acres, Brick Ranch I rms.. bum to INI. MarM* flraptoe* to HVloi ro«. 3 badnna.. It* aatoBk k^. full b***B*nl. *U baal. ANNETT INC. Realtors FE 8-0466 COLORED 3 Bedroom Homes "O" DOWN NO COSfS NO NOTHING Ov»r IS loaaUana la ebaoa* f West l&uhurban JSCJ aSuT-'-SS: i^vsToSgiJiria--' Home and Income i&ist: r*Siaiioi*“jru5 5S?%b^'!Ku*52.S!S Small Farm I aeraa at land wMh 3-b*dr*oa aS'Tto.*'^* wYShd*^ seedVrdw aaSTrira Sw Sr^fr*f*M*^ JSSc K*L*w dawn paymant, OR 4-lMS. (evenings MI l-EHSI S-BBDROOM ROME. F B R C B D OVER Ml . . . II* bovnt I I I Hie* Ibadroam. nvtag roam, db tag raoB. ba**B*nt, ga* baai garagal I I M« bou yo 3MS1 M ------- • adnlto, FE 1-4371. XBOO HARBOR. ON CAU LARET Wear around 1 bodrooms, g “ t MILES WEST ping Canter. --- rmu*. Sift. IfeBUr k nTliTtaf nrwTaiy towara^lM ft. • MODERN 3CT Auburn •^2K“^*d"OTE“^V.nV Orchard Lak* Rd. ModeU OPEN 11-7 31 daily aaeapt ——— ROCHESTER. S-EEDH :droom brIck ■ow"nrr%r?r itrsM. O' Rhoiti - BRtF-SHAFB 1-itOOto bya.JLM.U- -------------------- 2-BEDROOM DUPLEX AstomaUa bani — Pah Vasaesaad S'ViSt'^oVSf FE 4-7833 M4 East ElTd. R. at Talaneto ------^-nm Econ-O-Tri 3-Btdroom *Tri-Level $8,995 - $995 DOWN WIU'W gg ----- '^ADEX fair eoodltlon. will laag* tor year 9 MODEL; Union L Eltoabatb Lak* Rd. **Tradad and IBsebnnsae*' OPENING SOON! 1 ■»A1 RualMMaS CwAflOR -- Mil Wrairan Lew Hiletrtan Realtor WfeST SUBURBAN Peterson Real Estate MY 3-1681 JOHNSON & SONS . mATE - UWBAMCE tIM S. TBLEORAFR FE 4-2533. HEAT I. H.R tloa. Ursa tot. Ito b*i _.wd paymant to qttaSflad bUTM. WATERWRD realty or 3-4*34 3 BjEDROOMK NIWLIMpl^MT- llM'^Caaa Lak* Read IW-Utl wiu. skil OH lbaU 6^i'ii5ii 3-badreoB Bodem. Rawly ^ oratad. Lars* ennrooB. new hr RdOM DUPLEX. Near airport, att s ------— “waiter. irom, neaiwr, ww Rlgblai (M-lk). OR 449M. Mtor SBDROOMS. N. ifiSH Cbaap rant. FE 4MM. dWDRC^ FULL tint- Mlj^ Burdle, Troy Mlcb. UL ■*«3rd*JS5?^"s?fi2sa ssr-Lffirp's! rc**" legs2*"W WM. T. fTUMI REAGAN PROOll TERRACE OFF AtfibRN : ' RSi^T'ViJSS ROOMS, Niw~piS^i fro* rant. Wtroams and it W W. Fk d-WM. 2-Bctfroom on Raabutn St. Oood coodlUan, Immediate ^ ^^saesalw. ^^r Mb A if O M T H. rao^ naviy daaorasmi. u ■ toscad yard!. NEWINGHAM laot. gat has I, total to raoi H.OM. No mprtgag*. rockCote paints MM Colort — Flat-S*Bl or Lat SSa«r!!84.Wrf‘*IKl BUILDER ORB Font— 1 b^ buyer. U. BATH, (UA^AOErraSr: COLUMBIA NEAR BALOlltN. IM furn., W. aide, FE t-IIM. ggo- Ouvnaa. 1-badroom, naw. MS, clean for col- FB Mill. 13 td I. ATallabla aeon. -.1 - ------ —---------. S.toi. Bulldara. __________ OA1E HOUSE OAft HEAT, ILAROB ROOMS AND BATH UP- HEED6 1 OR MORE Vacanl Lott. City of I—" Any araa. Faat AcUen CASH official passport, idemtifi- callosi—wallat ptaotot. Low prun fatt - vhllt you watt aarTlca. Kraasa'a — Downtown FonUae. OPFiaAL HOOVER SERVICE Fart* - SorTleas all mtkat BARNES hEARORAVE T43 W. Huron FE MlOl I ROOMS, UFPERv,H*AT FUR-iilabad^ ehlldrtS}* Call aftor I I^^MS. IND*^OOlt. REfRfO- DORRIS f1«M tolitBi befbrt ^aho tuning Ey Matter CrafUinaB iMMEOUn SERVICE Wiegattd Music Cen/ier Fhon* FBdaral 3toSM p YOU ARE CONBIOERIMO SELLINO OR TRADINO, Ml tor oar profattlanal opinion. Do not w leal obllgatod. Oear II yairt In 3 H^Cfltow ‘st*^ ro TiV* tfLliUKJ* •• “*• *••'.***'■■ ----DORRU AND SON. REALTOR 3131 Dixie Hwy._____ HAYS BUYER. DSSIRB8 t-OR x>UM%td> batR dis BiAi, Wifr PIpt Sfrvtw HAVE EQUIPMENT TO «AW out froaan vntar ttnai P.E 1-1*1. , '' PIAI H24II HELP . Wa aaad HMaat a froB do;------- _______wator^rn. Rotop. required, lit mo. Hollo B. ________RaaltOT. FB 3-7IM. AVAILABLE FEBRUARY tt, S- I ^ bath in Drayton, snt I lamant, 111. OR P|M4 i ARCADIA il ' HEAT, COM--redeeoratad, gNandt . msmimiotj^ldeiji^^r mU|h«, 1130 I i&k^R ucAn. BkAunVm - bl-leT*l, tontompo " ---- exalnslT* Roeheatc. ---------- .nla^^ or unfaratohod. Fhopt OL «frrpoi‘.*wl?ii’Xw;n.,«£ , ptv«d drlvt. fW opooiM^ $9,500 ' HOMES FOR •gnisssss: RENT. 141 Frankllt Bird. FE Mdt3 6r WUl ^eM PONTIAC AREA SPOTLlii; BUILDINO 00. iWTreFTmDRoon MODBRM smell ROtiSk. 'GAE haat. Can ha taen batween^l and d p.B. IS SUntoera. Ponttoa. Attention, Retirees Naat at a pin, Madroom mod-, era. OoBplotoly tuMabad. Oood turnltor*. oloetrlo rtfrigorator, !?&.%arJ»vt5“rS!S^ Waterfront gy^SjkadrooB. Medora. H.HS. Dorothy Snyder Lavender It m W per BO. a«all*ble Mall PACE RBALTY or 4*4M 1 BOILDEft I ana oadi In well heated i ^ V. , within vtlkbto dittonee i /t- Bedrooffi Boae. north gUa a churelMi. AU c1«m «od loriM. Oood Delfhoort. ObJlp| __ -------—“■“T S:| "Bud? Nicholie. Realtor Mempatead. RaaKor. FB AMH *fter,,A p.l •*vtss V«1 West Suburban Acreage C?a w«uato-d afta naar Flare* Jr. RIsh. C- WAif-'Vxe5s&ba‘r;_ ■dWon. now ovnUablt baom M CARL W. BIRD. Realtor Ml OoBBualty RiS^ Sank BWr FE Mill Eva*. FE I-I3B3 w you MUST SEK ■S.SCHUETT ■■To Undo, boy, i You too can bo a proM o of lhl*_b*(raly now brink n ------------ Bcbaolt. 3-ba< ■ ^ 'glaamlni oak floort. larg* «n -M«-. H iT^omtST RtaHor. 4NS Rlfhlaod Rond ^.m. OR A.*“to *orr wo Boy talT tbla Pfaaily I n-.., k.. 3 bedrooma, uUUty room. -------------tooalt. kllcb- afeif^biaS. r IRDUH VILLAOB Fumlabod or unfurnlahod Ihla la lb* boB* lor »M. I lari* rooBS. fuU batamtai eft lumtea, t!ra“ Fud prlaa II1.IM wNh tB*U down Bvtotost atari oall Mr. Whaaton FB 4A1M A_JfOHNSON &'1SONS WEST SIDE — CITY 1-rooB colonial - Bxlellant con- SS IMS'. RON abopplnir cantor nnd aehool. enU tor SppeitBtnt to^Mov. 2-FAMILY INCOME CTTT NORTH Italui iito* 3 4-rooB apart-baOu, Mparata fur-naeti aad vator haator. Oak noon, plattorad walla. Aluminum eoiUlaaUon ttormt und tertena. «oUT UMrtmanta rentod LET raERtorr make you* fay- EAST SIDE PROOM BUNOALOW In axoulltnt condition .SMITH , WIDEMAN OPEN ^,S.”fE7^526 WAWIWWi' AMa - A REAL FAMILY LAROK ROOMS. Tory eouy boBo, IEIOR*pRBb(k ftneh. itU to ' bandy kttnben. SShna-ffl' arW' ’ TED OFBlS^M****’’ ""“**‘*SunSIJ IM PHONE 682-2211 ROOF OYER FICNIC^ABLE. WORKSHOP,, CAR BE USED TO fTB U accept'YOUh EQUl. -1.IM on 1-SEDRM RAok- fn-iVL\WI52f*8ft; ?YLSgfe’'«V1Sr*"^'^“ womiwoOD WAL. grrATjr^ THE PONTIAC pjRESfS. TUESDAY. AfitoARY 20. 1962 -^T NiyETEgjr O'NEIL .Min.Tinia unwo URnca gi rtMAmmx im> Br»t«d to Kft DMtoU, •n jr* kept. AB mnOim kitohas. oo-of cablBita, saplt toM* WfM. CarMBia bath. BATEMAN Traders W« Are LAST CHANCE ' Lake Fronts: Winter Prices. ^wSSStSBIKi * ^*bSnM.. sw •‘ntbi. » R. liviw rai. «tth •Aap*. fM h«M BBd »«Br iTMt. Lo£d«d wih Tft* At. ovB«r ^ him tnat- «Mf OB tbn W**^ Mrp^C BBd drapcrlM brtalah ar* Ib-clBdad aa U Ibt jat InalB-aralsr. Oaar-aiaa tH-ear ta- fSKid'w'.SJ’VSfT: caapMa aa raril a«ar tlad at StkMO. OaeMr «IU ARK TOO M COHSCTOUSt Wall, tba aecaat at aalut la Balatai. It'a Um aiaat iar fta laait wa baaa taan la waar a Saj. Laria ilv-lag nmm, fuR baacmaal. All tba awR^orta of attk^Ualag dum w. WT mt t ........ vWa m mWmm, rMaV. priwS rwscas with fleer ptaa tbat^ dWaitnt. iRaaimiBl laka vlaw aad laadad with aitra taaturM. Price re- S. ORERIT LAE*; meat dcalrad a r • A JuiauUCiiUi - liadMapad ' fliopSi'l* TSed^ with baacaiaBl aad bear pa- ecat doaa pliu aMa. I. BI-lirpilL wtlh raaraattaa na. I. SPXCTAL; I lela, raaiadalad STOUTS Best Buys Today OOOHTRT XSTATn — saaal« t aera rattai paraal. emtaai Aral, raaeh baaa. P^atoraa MiaiMd Urtat raaae. flrepUMa, aaparaM dlnlap raoaa, aauaa ipaaa la klleb- »,.-*b.SS£! •&TJ earaaaad aim petch, flalahad lam-llr taam. laraa atUllp wUh aU SSS. aatlam draparlaa. earpatlai, ROaOSTBR Tn. a sar'aASt"" daaS* wUl* rnSldl?**' baUia. raa, room'^iAA - ik r " rapir— iaaf«5yrj!'.'; aiS a Ibw .dawa parmeat. tael RORTHBRM HI ARXA. X<-cellaat acbaela nMrby, jweU bap>^ l^badraiaa^ bmmv llb-car lataaa. patla, baa^ raT>M Wil like, aaw lae fBraaae. H dam. Wra aa a eaU aa tbU aoe niM away. PRODsnrr wviwmEirr. Tbia bama la ita ^ytaa CITY FARMERS 1. APPROX; >14 aama wM an yr. aid Irak traaa. : raaabar wttb attaehad tlS.NS wMh IS par aa Trading Is Our Business IT PC t-aam Opaa M MPtnPI______________ FARMS—ACRfeAGE lb ACRCd - larta (arm bauaa, $U.(N. lead larma. *^ar-mare?,*!?‘arurK?. BCDROOMS — Weak aabarbaa leeaUaa, ooe-aere paraal at lead. lUBURIt'WonTC - W.(M lam prtM ibr Ihia aoU Aroam and baSI* c£i!^'%Sdiad*1^a^ earn aad wead aldli^ danttalaraa. PaymenU aaiy 111 par manlh. m DOWR — Meraa yaa OPEN 702 CORWIN <1 bloab aaet of tMtolaad, 1 bl< north of •MoBtcalid,) ' Erai. enU PE AUM or PE STfll DORRIS BEDllOOM ERtOK RARCm Exeluleo locnOon to OtotoeU and nut 3 btoeka from eehool 3 lull batoa. 3 car att^e caraca. Inctoaad patio, 13ul4. far eummar enfoymant. 3 ACRES OP LAEBPBONT: your eicluelTe uao to m> lake EcUtee. Wc arc oh tola eicelleni 1 badroom I raneb bama wito full baaa-- marble etoa throaihaut. beantl-tnl modera kitohra other teatiraa lound to toe ^ tar than ararafa bama. |I3,r** ______ WB4- tMuib himlt hew Htoa t Mnem. Paatoae bama aa pared SI. for tori# oMtrhma to ^ClarkMaa ar Raahaatar Mtool Want to Trade" Around? Bass rm.. enack bar to kNehei bato with ebowar. Laka CUrketeo eeboato. IS.IIU wt HI dn. pAEE AHOBLUS-Buqulella fiaat raeldanec. If you apprae^ a loraly home, eiealtonl a^-borhoad. finaet cooetracUoa. tola elfbt room HU bathe, brtek. aU on ana ttoor la worth taainc today. Halit only 3 yaara ago. wood dtotoa rm„ doable etooe tlreplae* to torge llrlna cm, larf e dea. Indirect Ufhtfnc torouMioat. aim porch aPd paUo. I Trtde-$43,000 Home NEW HOUSES $00 Down $75 OPEN U TO I DAILT SPtJfU^RUI^IHQ CO. AUBURH HElOHTt S-ra«a ^ Lm"^!!fbto!ritori- aar aarsaa. And batoal aU^only ivKSJXiarw&’fe;.® MP tat wUh aaaal at,^_baik. AUEDlUi ATBHDB QOMimCUL rroauTb^V toiM. fttoaUaat eala tur aal lypa .kMjSSf**-good buy to only (IS.iM, aa torma. dr wUl trade for free a ctoar bama ar toaama pnpar GILES REALTY CO. PE Akin S31 B^wia A; ACRE atoda baaamaat, gai ha. atom, awato^ C. SCHUETT •THE TRACOUHTT B16ALTOR" COLORED to!to* hUwtoito” home AMD WCOMi badmlii bama 1**^ teatarlnt carpatad U«T jssis'aaiiJCtoSJiii wHb laa Cat. Saraml i.—. -Aada treat. Total j^a SMN., jou^ara a 01 (4* urto do I) CaU Mre. Howard. Huron Gardens $L500 Down, «r. Atoo woald be good In-;ment lor rental unH. I4.4W I prtee. Laljefront . . . Oood beaeta. beaaUlal Ito. M Urtof room toto iloiM fireplac lS?*,J!Sr.%&*r'b!Sfro£L ^ REAktoARUCPklO^OW^^ SLIM DOWN I . 'iSS Sar.T=... ■ list WITH eacrillce price - Large Urtof ^ ^ , Humphries A P«Ar- BUT: JIVk reame to I TSiSi bom4 *to-tlto baaam. brataaway attaehad 3 ear ia ta‘wartVbnrta2**4'“'lM*‘* ”7«tSfA.*^r“5JTar%rS^ ; VACANT MODERN BUNOAIOW; 47,140 - flOO dOwn^I you Uk. the aanotry toto prtraay. aoa thte homo, fuU baeament. nm PA oil lumaca. nlea eufrouwL toga., LITTLE BEAUTT; M.IM. 14gM ra loundatlon, lUl baaamaot. Oak noora, aliuatad oo a waU DORRIS a Val-ll-Way Wa Trade au Any Homo Sharpie, $950 Down OutcUndlUf Aroom home l— - PooUue Matora. Attaehad garagu. rem nlea kllchaa and muum bath, oU fumaee. Tradaa wtl-aumt. , Northern High Area Aroom olf Joalyn. Taa^ Vm largo room. Automatle heat. (IM down, ar trade. Waterford Area l-badroom home. Mg rama. toad Msrniw MsHsy to iM «1 SeIb HtondlsU 6«Mb «S Sdt IWsciImswi Necfl $25 to $500? See Seaboard Phone FE 3-7D17 1185 N. Perry St. > PROBLEM' by IronrtU. ,bal. n par ; A. dctWVMMr w. Bl-« • "s.r«!J!*ai'5s.*8aE PBARBONa^l^^kTdU. Ara. : **a,ar'tSS25lU^SS5*S ahUt. Data ilaow MP*^ Vn- toe. ^ : wito fiwaad m par took Ek SuppK Oo.. am Oribaed ggr*' KAREN CARPET LOANS TEAGUE FINANCE CO. aw Si MAIN 214 E. ST. CLAIR ROCHESTER ROMEO Berry G«ragi^oor Factory Seconds ' ^''Sola fitoX'wmto^ —Sa A103P ------------------- iREAK#ACr sir. tabLe ANd'^ ... .try Utile IN. 4A4i^itl.aa' ' ANfciffiit fWdH • FHA aporored. Rp magay down. ----- aetlmataa. n LONg. Ji ‘^-^“FETisrg*^ |ltort|E|E Lmms to eei^^t? an°yaur MIto laE pay attyaar toad oontraet aad mortfafo. prarldiat you ' ' iatidarotf. . ai Orehara Lake A _ COAL OR WdoB CIRCULAR hraUng .tare, PE A4»il. blAL-A-MATlC kl6 BAO MflMd WfVV“-J!KrMj^*b5: tor oaeb CaU PE AMfl Capllol Sawing Center lor uppafnlmant. DEEP-mEE» ir. USED 3W faUa mee. glM. PE t-Nll.____ UUd ------- — iEi Kar*«.iS' ill N: marrad It s^jisinnoii Gim. sTtM. ooi te--llU.lt. wkUe I ‘Oh, they’ve already agreed upon what they can do for HIMI Now they're deciding upon what he can do for THEM!” IN.MS WORTH lor S1I.IM., aCCTLLBIH^iniHnfO, SW*^-mlN. kuN docka. U ptoataa Poo- Dele Brian ~~ ___^^LUaiVE II.................. front borne, 3 bedroonu,.ceramic clone fircpiaee, paneled den nad lull bneemanl. Picture wlndowe ----•--•-•af lake and palle. A bargain at tU.SN wBh g> o®” jaig*** 54 ACRES OH CLAHESTOH-QRig Road nagt m RrebaU at Saababa iACRES Rochester Area OROW IN THE OIL INDUSTRY wttb Staadard Oil to too eapaelly ol aa ladtpaiidant bnatoaaa man. M rr.r» Vb.‘fl; • IMS. TnUnlnf, ftouMtet mmI guiduc* proTMtd to th« mdn §#• s^abSKi. h fD^L itdriBL sfri. is 1 on MW nnd lakalroot. Oig- NUR8INO Hosts to cmnU ~ MIchtgno eommunlly, Alwnre rlu with 13 paueoti. |U,-WIU contidar trade. TAVERN to the baamtog Rochee-ter area. Eioallant laeatlon. Oroce tn.tN per year. Good egulpmern. rcaenabto rent, fuet ST.SW down. “ PARTRIDGE ' b Aaaac.. Rauian ^ BwtoM^thruoul Mle^ 3DBRN. ! ----- —. aqnippad. ----- Super Market A Mortgage Problem? your"ra!|*atoa^KSr An^torty! any aRnunt. Prompt dapaadabla utrritT Rtmodallag aad — fflfjattr r- Por Hoeu Ownareblp and ‘ Price. Pbnna Conmer^l MortngeLoan. APARTMENT New Term. FI 3-llTI 3 burner $600 to$2,000 Daktond OMUtty |maM, ■3" burner S^^rali^ gU^ ecralched. Se»eral ftto -alee terllK Oae Michigan PUorceeaDl, 3N Or- Factory Reconditioned ra aato. bam. NulltoA bam. REFRIGERATORS ",a"«sihA'5r_ !• °!S?®JS ISST TOUR choice . “* Family Acceptance Coi;p. in Matloaal Bl^. MORTOAOE Wf OHB ACltl bp, wito ISS-lool fraataia. Ho aprnl» graph. PE SdSM. _ $wy____________________ - 1 LOTt. LAEB PRIVILBOBg POT a portable 1 ‘*"ha^'*VV-; "#i1I iatt- P^iLiiTi fcrSto’S U Orchard Lb. Art. OONCOAUTOMATIO t_ _ dlM.‘Aiy^y StS2 ^ i«a a.ri!»Tr ” * CEMENT STEPS, all ctast. Bpiath ahlmney eapa. I Co.^ W. R |y^^eT^rt3htog!"^^ 8Sr„Sfe.5^ ~ $m4 ^iMst fiU? 3t ACHES; SW 1 Road near BaMt rolliSg and parUj lent lor email ---------- — will dtrlde readily toto eereral •uburbaa aatata elUa — Waal tor pioilo wttb aadtfa bortaa. (My aSTvor aerTEaty, torma. Leslie R. Tripp, Realtor n Watt Bnraa SInat PE S41S1 acres ot HuyrnNo laiM. .____L STORE, UTINO QUARTERS — OaragaToae. Owner MA SJOOO. 1 small restaurant! bquip- liw (SSllS) TRAILER. 3 BiS roam, front kttmao. WUl Uadt S3.M tquttr Aa dawn paymant on 3 to 4 Badroom auburbaa r--- or 47M eaeh, Atauma U mant. of STl.M. MT t-lUg, SPEEDWAY Modern two-bay aUUon for laata at 1431 South Wppd-wurd to CRapla lallrmteg-hum. Blgh gaUanaga. Oood potanlUl. 3^ tralntof. Pt-aanclal aid . araltobla If qnaUfled. HMl Informatlaa Sto. %f ro^*ra!’cS iiSSi BTANDAItO OAS STATION p6r laaee. Ot4ag a g^ buetoatc. I0l» Baldwte.____■ STATIONS FOR LEASE ‘*WtoS**wn‘toe]Sti*^ly^ tohaJ'buUdJSIi. hSff eat& jma. NACRE orchard toto g b^a, sa *,5“rt2SXnm g ACRES wito »®^®,"Li:My'£®®,“ log homo, g btohe. l.olo- V.a. 10 road frontage, trawl itraamTi^r lattrehaaga for X-way. SgRUN, , SCEIfic ROLUNO » "-I trout atream, W.7M, 1 TRADEX OPENING §®*! 1 LOCA'n^**--^11 V*'“HJutB Lew Hileman Realtor C PICEUP. WILL SWl car, 301 Seward altar t._ HOLDEM-8 red 8TAMIW POR Paid BaU etampa. OR »04>4. “gS!S%WWy“HT8S'=' ALUMINUM SIDING - WILL TRADE MH CAR - HODSE-TRAILER OR VACANT LOT OR WHAT HAVE YOU OP REASONABLE VALUE AS DOWH PAT-MEMT. N^j^T^TCOTA^" ^^“Vat^£?{?‘ ot V?lT T**5AS15r‘*Lg?^*t}{S? Id.. Dartoburt. iST-4gSa. LIQUIDATING minltpi sTOcR Mkan. lampa and taUM. REDBOOM*r«* taSaftf^Ttoia. •-----Tabard Laiu - * I SdsCtoifetai ~ MEN’S BUira. TOTS’ CLOIIIMB. RSi5*2’; afa-mJ^orJr*’ lOHNK. IRWIN SCHRAM MILLER HOME or TRE week. Brt tUigla etory toto orar I3N M. of gracloue inrtog eoaca. Coi try 'ttmoapherr nearly an na... 4 raamc tout flalchtd two. raom. Large porch. 3 badreome and den, nU earned. Heatolntor . log burning firtptoea. alum, atormc and teraana. 1 ear garaga. Pared drlra, and plenty of room — c^rea to ramp. Toar ra S-tonsS(u.““ ssr*aM furnitura toeluded. Naadi ‘- raptor. STMS aaly NW dto 01 TBRStB s roemg aamf S4N T®^Ur, you to™ William Miller Realtor FE 2-0263 STS W. Huron. Open t ta t KAMPSEN REALTOR - BUILDER Let’s Trade Houses Drayton Plains ■- -nueb for your money— ‘'bSKltlM "tnl "bX ,SM SQUARE PEBT rLOOR ^lE iJOBWAX - SRATTON ROCHESTER $rar eontraat can ba tradr' taca rtoua on the butlni real aatata of year ebat sx.‘*SJT.ai:y'W.J toe facte abor*-- LEW JuMStT’ •u ilsEsslnM 8tsfh a iTpRraTLr'REJE^^ chR^' hliftTO 4grh: ,'g eembla youreelf. eara. Pour ehtore and table, SM.N ralaa, SM.M. Naw INl dcitgna. tormiao tape. Michigan gl^aacanl, 3S3 Orehard PANELING lam°i^rry*!?^^!3!!"jkM ____rtona Mahagbag .. N.N til Brown Aeh ...I.-.. Sf.M H Baldwta Art. PE MS4I with good butldlu. In tort ‘-rsALT:’'o^sdm . . Maurice Watson, Realtor. Ml W. UtorertUy Dr., Roehaalar tfHibN Labe villaob-w • aemmeTCtol property. Cih after r^SPEtaALm * A-1 .Sunoco eluding aaw IN pMad I regular priead guao^. now to our tow dealer tr^ng center. Bchoel etarte.Mareh N. Reqtorcmanta l-Completa, S-wer paid trtoaing eauree, g-Modera t^eitment for merctondle aal T-NSt Ere. CaU t:3S to I pm, available at Once pot ■ leaee. Sarriee etaUon doing good ^T|M Star ir*— ------ FORBES PRIN ^ Buptd^ Bito On a etr NON mi fcMijl yard. M* Wfjtoga. pared etreet. V3S0 Down Plug Mortgage CoeU. AM DOflDUTB B LandOTitrato oi 3-13U. • ABILITY TO get ceeh lor y4ur L tr^. equiUee Sad N Don't loco tost home. —-..r^ Tm.JF.gUUgU.^^ SlU CniukEltonhoto R ACTION ^ roUNMl ON LAND CONTRA^ BATHER, REALTOR. PS IMMEDIATE ACTION gggNN. gggi Orehard Lake Rd. LAND COKTRACT* BOUQBT ANV. where to Michigan. Earl Oamla EM 3^011/ ■ • .______ ifiMwy ts Lmm ^61 ,s~JiJ£5!5JSS, S!S5SUJ55SSISL~ WHEN YOU NEED $25 TO $500 STATe’^F^ANoS •lint, Vit. taa arviwrs, m w •^^•^TRADS 1 apartment OAB RANOB, SlU China eablnel. $34; Elea, dryer. Ml: M bargaliia an alaan, guaranteed clorae, retrir aad waahare, all altea. tW to NS. iCoel her— tit: Duo-Therm olMteetar, tSi *^dromn ***'$N-***^reel che'alc, odd bedf, epring*, ra &«5to!!rL*:;:Jsv_ NEW ‘lthno*”nSoSlt; beS ROOMS, dlnattot, rage aad mto- i PIECE UVlMO BOOM ».-70.^1’.-Katirf LSka Are,____________ nil RUOB ......... 13.1 WALL TILE. M’- .. 3SC { OBIUNO TILE . . . ; Ite eq, « "BUTLO" TlVm. IM g. SAOIMAI VWU OWCMW ■•BU* ...... 5S5i“«:'rrw'2K’r*.‘'‘: Crump Electric, It 34M AnUurn Rd.____ P*------ baED hroTE, sis. oiEDRi-IrigarMor, SM. Oead waiklag eon- dlOmi. oL’ SSMT._________ VACUUM CLiAN^ - A BRAND «w INI tank typo wito aU eebmanta. Clrajj-emto. SU. V lum Cantor. CaU PE 4 ISN. WYMAN'S USED TRADE-IN DEPT. S^burnar ’ ’ lec.^ltairigi S w—^-.togar waabar ... S* S-Pa. Ur. roam ratta . SL Urtag rama totor^^ . . . . I ’ U W. Pika_________E-E Tarme • Ptrit Ttoe to Mtehli H^cTA S^- AU NtoTonelly edrerileed bmda. ?i?t.-iiSp.“;?,Vr.^'u».,« batter, etod mil, cereaL eey. fe'as’wrS'i’i! GfA,-*'!----------------- Inform toloB. I tAte'oSii tm-------------- waahor ------ OOODT1 : LUhibfeR ^XRiSms: drafUag taEStotoMi OT Indag B omeo Sa^ IVAN W. SCHRAM REALTOR ’ FE 5-9471 4-Bedroom Brick S43 30SLTN COR. MAN8PIBLD OPEN ETENIMOS AND 8UNDATB MULTIPLE LlBTINO SERVICE CLARK S4N DOWN, Rodaeod to SU.S Modern t beto^ brtek art. to<«ng _Croecant _ Imke.^^Patoad VaSSg" ILUIOE iM^rai . wm.2 Hi? (two with itou^ ahowor), center antranea haU. atoto foyer, ntourel llropIoM. preftotihad kltebaa oaplneU with bum-tee, baaement, gee heet. two ear piaatorad gu- ar trade wr toaama prop-, •rtf 3-Bedrohm Brick PuU price I13.3M.., Small down payment Ba firet on es^a.jwf.stS: .RrL’rLrES“iJ"a: Joy Ufa. Immaditoa peaaee'- DIXIE CREAM a. Oood loeaUon. E« SaerUloa for M.OM on MICHIGAN BUSINESS. SALES CORPORATION Mr REitT - MODEhN iBAT Sunoco Statton. mealltto gallon-aga and back roam. Vltowood «4iN. Bat. SB4. S:M a.m. to l POR BALE RETAli MIILB ROUTE. dlatribnUng nationally adrerticed FE 4-1574 BUCKNER FINANCE COMPANY WHERE TOU CAM BORROW UP TO $500 OFFICES IN _ ?^'dofi^ L& g WYMAN'S IGCBRCART SALE DAYS Erery Item to our etoree dre out entire atoek to earpaliag. up- | pUaacea, Urtog raom and bed- PE 4- It W. PtoeSt.E< Tarme PE 1- sa.'Tsis'^idrX'sJsr ‘~ . tANDEM TlS^. fi'gfrfftt brakea, S4H. NM Oummuuu lUL --MN1. I 03 y. Huron. PE 4-113S, ?*£.r® wlak WTm "*srcS£«??**JS?jSi.^- SSSfeherbu*? .*iarL._ ,g‘5!’.!ilc*e‘’* U^.E jgS" ■ S-roem hone, laundry. ilSl_ ^5ur( Signature ’^prio*krrE"2-® OAKLAND Loan Company 33 ^Uto S^ dato fldfc_ $25 to $500 on Your SIGNATURE PAST, TONVENlENT M moaliie to repay Home & Xuto Loan Co. g H. Parry St. d lor MX'Or wymenta to SIJIS ,_JUT ANTTHlHO f8S,n7% L“a“S siia. We’buy^^eil'or Iradq. Come OPiiN MON.4AT. I-’Ip I M MONTHS TO PAT 4 mUea B. to Pantiaa or 1 jalto E. ; MkB, $vA i Johnson Radio & TV (food need TV’i ■ PATHE STEREO M-r* 5^:5^553 - nd. PE gdUM._ ikd$Qa«s ~ ___radio. PE g-tlN. ZENITH blond OMSOfjg — Hf-Pl. ^ *> *» —....... Sals MtsetdoMan a. oima T#ENTY THE POXTIAC i»RESS, TUESDAY. FEBRUARY gO, 1962 AOMniltt. rt&nMKm. \ MOTbkOL* TV. ^ I GRINN^______ It «■ fc«to»w ___3S3H! O^AN ftARGAlkS iMliy SSIdw^Ij’itSiaPW^ W iJinSSTaiMiwt. W■oBlh •” Mahogany Console 0*M la good eoadWaa wlQi brat Mura Sra dtUrand MM. MORRIS MUSIC OnCKSNS, i OR 1,SMl Mb CACR. XTL S-Ml*.________________ u AFnJB._ A L_a O POOD cRitn CRAPT vmsn i MM or bdit oOtv. pr^ei. ’^■Xw»^'V«ir boit AfiOORDlOH 8Atf. ALL I Ace^lou lokiwd trra to PRACTICE ORGAN Oulbraaira \(tu> AaplUlBr |1M t MORRIS MUSIC M a. TolBfrafb Road « . iboroBB froBB TakHuroo) SOHMER PIANOS EXCLUSIVE DEALER tLT unaic CO. . Special On Pianos: W eoo« Special On Organs loiBBad chord organ MM^ aura organ M.tSf no* ll.JM Lowrn FruUwood GALLAGHER’S RnroB rm »«M iegtst, OUARAWTmcpr TYfVlf KJ\ 137 g. Saglnatr Sr“"B2loS-'“r7bJ{|"rSS ?.W. 13 a OFatlSrMt. rtrairaB. HOar- ard*X»l __— nSE^DDINO.............. MI>*w!*Suron**"~~~ ~~ra~»nit Staw MpwMrt . ^ OROCBRT arORE TOUtndtRT (or •ale, Bheap. FE HIM. 11 (UnOE AOTOIf AT . Ing, fftoHiin, UkT .a KELLY HARDWARE New and Used Guns ConplBtB Um at banting SEii4--!i»‘d“Aerl"nrjl“r*pJ dag I Over N t uaad I lad pneai ?^Sr2S2.“ Bob Hutchinson Mobile Home Sales. Inc. 4301 Dixie Hwr OR MMI OPEN t DATS A------- 1962 CREES "ARE NOW ON DISPLAY" Truck Campers and Travel Coaches STOP ODT TODAY Holly Marine & Coach lUlO HOLLY RD. BANE RATES OPEN aONDATS Ventura — Bwldg Quality I Giant Savings Now Sale — _.ii — ■ PINTER'S ^ , SPECIAL Boat trailer wlnebaa, UM lb. ‘**Owao V *Marlna 8u|»Ilea 304 Orchard Late Aae. PE___ TONY'S MARINE POB EVINItUDB; Yoata Motora — luppllaa a par cant labor guaranteed lekad Iv M yeara atparlanca Orahard Attention Students and Private-Pilots Need matructlone or renew on the computer,, attend Barber’a i;ateT:?s. yt"b‘'»“ai 7:30. subject: Plight ' emputer. Coat 04 Including teat book tend teA. Pootlno Munlclpnl --- OR 4-0330. WEEtad CBrs-Trucks "ALWAYS BOTtNO' MJUNK CARS - PRBB TOWM TOP Ml - CALL PE 5-0141 BAM ALLEN E aON INC. rtNEBRa.JJpTAL]^A01O^BTS ^ CASH ' CASH rote (or Into modtii, .......matoe no dIKerence. Tap prlete lor woetern martet. aUCET AUTO SALES 103 a BAOINAW_______PE 4-3114 POR THAT "TOP DOLLAR " 0 SHARP LATE MODEL CARS Averill's HI DOLLAR. JUNE CARS AND truck. PE 3-IOM daye, truninge. TOP BDCE-3DNK CAR, TRUCii PONTIAC WAITE. PR * ' We Need Your Clean Used Car Now! One HUe North at D.l. 10 on Mis CLAREaiON ._________MA 5-ttOO JUNK CARS AND TRUCKS. Free tdWIng. OB 3-3030. $25 MORE at high grade uaad (ora yau aall. H. 1540 DUla Highway. Pbooa ’60 CADIU-AC SEDaI^ DeVILLE with E-Z aye glaaa. full power, beautiful rose llnlah. aad "" .$3495. JEROME "Bright Spot" rVK ' UOSeU WAno GLENN'S Bob Hutchinson Mobile Home Sales, Inc. 1-1300 SHORTS MOBILE HOME*., Oood uera home ttrpc trallere. 10 PER CENT DOWN, Oam trar-el trallere. Walrerloe truck eaup- ■0l CARS. Ellsworth AUTO SALES 0177 DUla Hwy. MA 5-1400 We Need Cars EXPERT--------------------- aanrloa. (re a aatlmataa. Alao, ............................ W119 lunnv oaivE. «o«. • Hwy. Drafton mint. Oxford Trailer Sales and Court Tagabaad. Paramaant, (%ainplo^ .aaoaral, Tallowatona and iKawart —** *loor plAOi. raUt. Wa VTrain. I aold on Oxford Trailer Balea Mila S' oLLaka Qrloo on M-3 TEXEPltONE MT 5-0731 TRAVEL TRAILERS — Winter Rates ■— F. E. Howland, Rentals 33M Dixie Highway QH 3-14M JAdOBSON TRAILER SALES Qpoa buya on dtaiJay modala. Barvlca aod ^arta. WInUr prieaa ALL MODL_ “TOP DOLLAR” BRINO TITLE See Bill or Nick AT Suburban-Olds Used Cars 405 B. WOODWARD B’HAM. MI 4-4485 Ntw EMl UMd Tnlcto BRAND PEW BPACyS.,PONTIAC Mobile Homa Park PE 5-0003. TkM-AEtB-TrEA 92 1 SET 7.50gl4 Whltawalla__ OOODTEAR SERVICE OTORE MS. Caaa _____ PE Ti»da*£*on*Oanaral »aMj Ttm Sara up to W ol Mtg.'i >“* price. Blaot or whttawaDa. ED WILLIAMS ICE________ PE 4-0075. _____________..BBS EUHN Al?TO WtnVJCE,,.,, W. Huron ^ PE JjllO HEW WHITE WALL WRES sp of 4 aa .low aa MO.M plua Ux •xehange. Lila Uma rora hax- OOOO CONDITION lOM FORD ton truck, 1300. PE 4-1013. , 4 POHD DUMP TRUCE, PAl condition. OA 0-25M.________ Ml H-TON CHEVY PICEUP,-PlaaUlda with 0x0 box. Opcyllo-dar. haary-duty clutch and tprinn — 4500 mtlea. Ilka new,, Jra ehanga ra^trea aala; San Pb. 470-31W.________________ IMl CORVAIR 00 PICE-UP. BEST "rr. OR 3-7300. CHEVY ^•TOM PICE-OP -it offer. OB 3-0003. ■H POBD H PICE-OP. A-l. PE 3-4403. ___________ « CHEVROLET PANEU lAw mllee. 174 Jamea E. Bird. •40 CHEVROLET- Si ??.PXt OoolJL'RK Houae, 451 S. Baftnaw. hair pup NA 7-M31 __________ BXT 01 in^ALE hounds fob SALip, ..jj)#* to OOod home. PE 4-0141__________ [^aaeoc HlS E*5?0Pt?al! I. 440. PE 4-0074. ____ _____.48HDND rV. -. doHS. Jabelaa'e' PE 0-3434. BA8%. 1 TEAR. AEC. HODIe-btoken Call PE 4-M13. 14 H. Walker'a Bird Houae mo let St.. Roeheeter, OL 1M373. fcppai RAiiifS ALL PET Shoo. 44 WllUtme. PE 4AU3. ’ rvim wunl akc REdiSTERip TaJkINo''8TRA1N paraeeets. irMrTSs:* _____ DAYS BfElK 4-1 ir-aaLL-RKTAnTDAILT PRIZES EVERT ADCTION 44M DIXIE HIOHWAT 7 warn PIOS AND PAT BENS POR •ala. OR 1-4M4. BEEP. BPaFUcR. RAt>. DiMted jaork. OA 4^31TQ. EXOlkLLENT 1ST AND 3ND CUT-'-OM^aVi^B bay, ig bale ar mb. ^SALE BORfdl AND COW f, OL OHQ744. ■ ,_____ 1 tiMOTEd BAY POR . GENERAL DUAL N whltcwalle. 4,(K‘ laaonable PE 4-40M. DINO W. THE odf ^SoSm f* NEW - USED CUSHMAN AND Vet|» winter PRICES ON BECONDI-tloned need bloyclaa. Searletta Wka k “»bby_Bhra M E. Uwranca PE 3-7043 iMts—AcessMriti ~raECK OUK DEALS BEFORE YOU BUY1' Boata from S' to V- Obboard ouMoard. ttnrjJteaailMti Duratach-WIniier. SCOTT Motora to 74 b.p. Ineeroeptor anglnae to 130 bp. Buy now—Saro—and gat OAEUtND*\S'ARINE EXOTANOB Ml S. Saginaw St, PE 0-410t DETROIT BOAT SHOW SEE THE SCOTT FLEET ------------------^ oirtgSirt Sbci^ (or rdl^ TOAVs®!i^*MOTOllKr‘¥BA KESSLER’S MARINA 10 N. Waahtngton, OA 0-I4W Oxfon __EY1NHUD^M^R^_ **'^'HARD to ' FIND" ** MAZURFJC.MARINE Inntci you to rlelt uf at tto Owaoi ditpli- t t^ TOP DOLLAR M 6c M Motor Sales N. of PonUai 1457 Dixia I WE NEED 100 CARS __CADILLAC The popular coupe, excellent tlree, power iteerlDg aod brakeal Neat interior and a lot of Idxury lor 4744. BIRMINGHAM -Chrysler - Plymouth 13 a: Saginaw__Ml 7-3511 '44 CHEVROLET. 4 CYUI door, full price of 4304./ MOTORS, 341 OAKLAl — b-Wlt- 1000 CHEVROLET BEL AIR 4-door VO engine, powergllde, power iteeiini sod hrakei. radio, heater, wbitewalle. -Solid white flnleh. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO. 1000 0. WOODWARD AVE, BIRMINOHAM. Ml 4-5734. hardtop, with raaio, nvebvr, natic tranemTeelon. Soa-mlei iinian. Excellent buy at $1595 ^JEROME "Bright Spot" '^ehard Lake at Caai ,FE 8-0488 1401 CORVAIR 3-DOOB „»»DAN. •landard ebin. heaUr wbluwalle, light' blue flnleh. Only 4M04. Raiy terme. PATTERSON CHEV-ROLET CO . 1000 a WTODWARD AVE . BIRMINOHAM Ml 4-5734. 1444 CHEVROLET IMPALA. The Popular 5 TJoor Hardtop with Oleamlng Cream flnleh. Excellent Urae. Full power, radio, heater, powerillde trani-mleeloo. Immaculate intorjor, one owner. 41.149. BIRMINGHAM Chrysler - Plymouth 15 8. Sa'glHkw ' • Ml 7-3511 CORVAIR 1H4 ^DOOR 700 AUTO- eliop SUBUBBAN’ANb SAVE. 444M0U. Stark-Hickey, Gawson Ob 14 Mile. Road, bdtwerh Male and Crooka. acroe/i from the Claweon Shopping ^nter.__ 1144 CHEVROLET- i-DOOR. RA-—O. HSIATER ^D AUTOMAT-TRANSMISSKW. ABSOLUTE-NO MONpY DOWN. ________•7»r^.y»ur*ili,.?oiy 1N4 CHEVROLET, 4 CYLINDER, auto trane.. radio, beater. 5-tooa - paint lor only 4744. Van Camp Chevrolet, Inc.' ___* aiJ[***wlnSowi 1 mllei. Solid «>»t-.CR80N CHEVROyST J. WOODWARD AVE., __________tm. Ml 4-5734. UM CHEVROLET IMPALA 5-—' hardtop, tri-powar. ■ 11 c k I. Poeliraotibn. Only 41,-PATTERSON CHEVROLET GMC PORK TRUCKS. SUITABLE POR beer warebouia or work In and out of eaml-tratlari and Utht man-ulacturlng. PE 4-4133. 104 ALL TYPES SAFE DRIVER - J£*MT RATOD POR THE SAFE ‘DRIVER LOW RATES-W^ COVBRAOB CANCELED^ -REPOBBD PINANaAL RE8PON8IBILITT TOUNO DRIVER — TERMS Call Today, FE 4-3556 Chock WI& Be On All PRANK’^r\NDKRMN”%KNCT ILM3. nr g iSK“ SS;“iUT--chi.r i57u IIM Olde eonrerttble . 0 744 IMT Pontiac SMr Chief .4IM4 1405 Tampeat LeMana --- 1140 Plymouth Wagon Fsrtiia Cars 105 -M BNOLIBH FORD. OOOD COOf-ditlon. UL 5-5074 altar 4 p.m. ■^FINK USED CAR.S— HitiLMAN ' '40> MARK Automobile Imiiort Co. 'Tour Aulhorlied BMC Dealer" SALES SERVICE _ PARTS 511 B. Saginaw________PE 3-7040 IMPORT - SPORT CAR SERVICE Olde Stone Prbot Sarvlea, 0010 Orchard Lk. Cor Maple Superior Auto Sale.s. lUTHOfclZBO TRIUMPH DEALEI SALES -- PART8 — SWVICE WARD-McELROY, INC. Dew 4441W. HUroB TRUCKS TRY 14 BUICK CENToSt! PO'lL price 4144. %4 down. MimVEL MOTO^ 541 OAKLAND ATE. •-“"c'aP;> at Ml 4-7 1444 CHEVROLET 5-DOOR. RADIO, HEATER. AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION AND TPUITEWALL TIRES. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Aeeuma paymenU ot 433.14 per month: CaU Credit Mgr. Mr. Pxrb^t Ml 4-7400, Harold „„ CHEVROLET. TAKE OVER paymenU. PE 4-lOM afUr 0 p.m. INI CORVAIR. 7M 8ERIBS.~ radio a 4-1741. 041 CHiVROLET IMPALA 4-door hardtop, TO angloa, automatic. power etoarlng. brakee, window! an#,4-way aaata. Solid WOODWARp AVE., BlkMINO-HAM. Ml . 4-1730. 7>, iNl CHEVROLET IMPALA COh-verttble. Power brakaa. aUarinf and windwoa. Auto, tranamlaalon. aaT oSy*"!!.*: Call EM 3-5431. ’58 Chevrolet Bel Air ........ Iter and tranimleelon. bmutllul beige llnlral $995 John McAuIHfe, Ford $» OAKLAND ATK. FE 5-4101 ilH CRETitOLkT KINOSWOOD 4-paeaengar aUUoa wagon. V4 angina, nowargUda. radio, healer. Tutuuolee and white (Inlib. Extra elaan. Only 41.4N Eaey terme. PATTERSON CHEVRO. LET CO. 1000 8. WOODWARD AVE., BIRMINOHAM. T"----- lOM CORVAIR 4-DOOR BE DAN. Powergllde, radio, beater, wbitewalle Extra clean. Ooly 41.344 Eaey Urme. PATTERSON CHEVROLET 00., 1000 8 WOODWARD AVE., BIRMINOHAM Ml 4-5734. 10l4 CHEVROLET HARDTOP. V4. RADIO AND HEATER ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN — £r.r&r'c"r‘.‘dtt“'ii‘.v"fi*r' Parke at MI 4-7400, Harold Turner, Pord;^j___________________ THIS WEEK SPECIAL 1960 PLYMOUTH »;We’S'-X.' , $1245 1959 DODGE y-O, O-door hardtop, auto.. . nlo and taaaler, 1-ownar and very ’ $1195 : A lot full of no# ear trai to ebooao from R&R MOTORS Liquidation Lot IM 8. Sailnaw PE PUBLIC NOTICE Ford. Paloon. T-Blrd. "Mike Mk at yaante Pyd to Ortonvnie Sara. Phone HA 7-5704. >U47 CROWN IMPERIAL. ALL while, 4-door hardtop with Power atoarinf ara hrakat, white alda-walla, naalar anO radio. A-l eon- dttloD. Q1.5M. OR 5A411.____ riLLYS JEEP. 'M, WITH ONdW plow, tUO. Toko orar paymenU. ftt isOOl. MM. Cor' Airport Rd. PRIVATE OWNER. 1400 FORD 4. -------- --anamUilon. I bt—*•* r aad la to Exo. baaur. rndle, brakea. 41,174 tiraa am 050-1114. / $995 John McAuliffe, Ford 450 OAKLAND AVE. FE 5-4101 fW. Tittt U a naw ear trado-to. SURPLUS MOTORS 71 B. Satlnaw. PB SAP 040 FORD 3-DOOR RADIO AN— heater. Pord-OMa^. tlree, 1-owner, JO.OM toUlc. Sn down and 4M a nonth. LLOYD MOTORS. Ltneoiii. --- fegiyrkE^ai! ______PE 5-0131.____________ DON'T BUY ANY NEW OR USED CAR until you get our deal 11 Completely reconditioned uaed : '"ViomurHUiiiT MOTORS INC. CHEVROLET-PQNTIAC-BUICK OXFORD ______________OS A5»5g INI CHEVROLET BROOKWOOO ^cylinder engine, 9lo, beater, wntte- ......... ..,Jl blua Hnleh Only inas Eaey terms. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO,, 1000 8 WOODWARD aye.. BIRMINOHAM. Ml '01 CORVAIR 700 CLUB COuM. Radio. haaUr, whitewall tlree, am tomaUc, a:i. O.ON mllee. -PB> L(X)K! BUY! SAVE! 52404 .42354 IMI PoDtIac Catalina . |54M S|)ecials This Week! 41444 .m tieM SHELTON PONTIAC-BUICK ROCHESTER OL 1-8133 Aoroaa from new care aale Cloetd Wed . Prl.. Bat., .at 4 p.m. HASKINS Low Overhead SAVINGS 17 CHEVROLET BEL AIR 5-DOQR with V4 engine. Pdwerglldc trahe-mlsslon, radio, like new — and white ntoabl 4044 W PLYMOUTH 3-DOOR Wl- .. engtoc and ■ Automatio, tranemle- 'H OLDB "tr' CONTERTIBLE Hydramatle tranaultslnn. Power, showroom new thre HASKINS Chevrolbt-Olds REPOSSESSED CARs NO CASH NEEDED Juct taka oxer paymenU let payment due April 1 1444 PONTIAC HARDTOP 144 414 30 Mo. 1944 CHEVROLET HARDTOP •4 433.33 Mo. 1444 UNCOLH *'** 1449 PORD'SnCE* 4 " ***' 4334 413.17 Mo. 1447 FORD PICKUP 1444 137.14 Mo. / 1444 FORD 'gl04 411 44 Mo. 1494 FORD CONTER’nBLE 1444 437 34 Mo- LAKE8IDB MOTORS 313 W Montcalm: 338-7101 iolld White .. .... Eaey Urmi. PATTERSON____ ROLET CO. 1000 8. WOODWARD AVE.. BlRMUi^AM. Ml 4-3734. HIIUHIAI CHEVROLET, Standard lr'ane.7’nohr bTuo. --- good condition. 41.140. OL 1-0230. IMl CORVAIR MONZA SPORT r*h..«itii HAM. Ml 4-373S: SELECT USED CARS « FORD FAIRLANE 3-Door au. Coupe, with 4 cyl. itandard trana-mlsalon, •Semlnole^'vBej^ llnlah. '41 CHEVROLET IMPALA 3-DOOR Hardtop, with radio, h e • ‘ -wbitewalle, ealety belU, S White wtth Red trim I 43.IM eimre. 'ciar£*BlUo Tioia-ing noun I 43.3|I9. 'MMfeRCURY MONTEREY 4-Dodr with radio. haaUr. auto-matte tranemlecton - sparkling bronic with whitewalls, ipotlees condition. *• '41 RAMBLER SUPER 4-doo hto^ftS--^**'»>'"•• ■M chBl — - ----nwniniiaaion, m Whtttwalls. gLMI. ■H CHEVROLlhr STATION WAOON • eyl. stondard kbtftl naiio. heat-, ar^l^aojr^whltewalla. Mtorp aa a 'M PONTIAC 4-DOOn SUPER-CHIEF with full power, beautiful Red and White flnleh I A SHARP CAB THROOeHOUTI ISM.' ^ BILL SPENCjk , RAMBLER 33 8. MAIN STREET CLARKBTON MA SMIl 1960 FORD Country Squirt 4 patarager. Torn-er brakaa, power eUeriog, rodio, luater, whitewalls. Only It.IN. Easy Urme. JEROME-FERGUSON Rochester Ford Dealer _________OL 1J711 FORD IMl COUNTRY SEDaI cylinder wtth automaUe. I — •quipped 43.101. Your old ear diw?. SKOP SUBURBAN AND SATE. 44A0011. Stark-Hicke^y, Clawson On, 14 MUe Kd.. hMwean Metto And Crooks aerou from' the Clawara i^&S^irniii-EOT • '..Ciss fordo” 1M7 RANCH WAOON. nice. 0404 MA A4470. , ii^ORDADOM, BADIOJ^Af; ... TftounKLY NO ioo«^^ IWN. Aseumo naymonU at 1.79 par month. Call C«dlt Mgr. ■. Parke at MI 4-7IM. HarSd FALCONS Storting, PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO. 1000 S. woodward^. - Don't Bring Any Money Just bring your title. Your oh car wlU^ make lha down payman 1962 Pontiac Tempest ■ OR A 1962 Rambler American Wagon.Sale 1000 Cheyrolet % pateengar wagon T-g engine, power etoarlng. .glTH UM Rambler wagon, anptr cylinder, ana ownari Sharp. 0 UM Ford wagon. I cyUndar, i lt’T.“ai V-g raglne, itand- USED CAR BARGAINS UM Ford Moor With I eyllnder ^gtoo and itandard tranan^ IMT Plymouth 4-door aodan. y-l •ngtna, automaUe tranamlaalra ‘•S2ld"V^5Wwrtr«SS YOUR CHOICE $145 INI Butok BMlaa 1044 PonUae Hardtop U43 Chevre’-* -lOU Packa miss lOHNSON •““IK, NMswrf VNdiCii^ Sspattor ABMi. ISO OokloaB. WE HAVE TW6 '60 FALCONS A 2-Door and 4-Door Oua If • glewtos blue, and a tpai kilns fiara on tha albar. ipficbd to Sell! BEATTIE AT the stopuoht OR 3-1291 Harold Tnrnar, Ford. -N'T PORit> WAOON.. 17061 RBATU and AlhOMAT TRANSMISaiON ABSOLUTE! NO MCMET DOWN. Aaauma ~ mobU W 034.71 per month. Credit Mgi " - " 4-74M. ...... _______ 05.105 Ban tormi. PA7 CHBYROLET ----.---, ______ jti'KhsoS CHBYROLtr CO.. IJN S WOODWARD ATE. BnUlINO-HAM. MI *-rm. SSgy-R'&tg: WHtTBWALL MATIC-------- HEATER AND------------- TIRES. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Aaauma paymenU at 4M.H par manth. CaU Cradtt Msr. Mr. Parka ai MI 4-7IM, Harold Turner, Ford. 'M K5RD PAIRLANB CLU: dan. 1 owMr Uka haw. -UR a BOB BOPST Lincoln - Mercury aa block north of U Milt on US U MI 6-4538 ’56 LINCOLN 2 DOOR HARDTOP CAPRI wtth radio, haat-•r. automatic tranamlaalon. power aUering power brakaa. Olaam- $695 JEROME "Bright Spot" Eaay toi RG^ET ^ ---------------- ATE . BIRMINOHAM Ml 4-5714. UM MBRCUHT MONTEREY 4-door. radio and healer power brakee and jaower itearini, fuU priee gl,3M LLOYD MOTORS. Lincola. Mercnry, Cbmet, Metoor, 533 S. Saginaw, PE 5-im. ioOE — EXCELLENT 'M,|IeR- WILSON'S 196lV'ADILLAC CONVEK'riBLE Rmi Wtth whIU top- Rad and wblU toUrtar. PuU power, all tha toctory aceasaorlae. a real Jaw^t $4395 1961 PONTIAC CATAUNA STATION WAOON. I paeeanger. Capa Irory to eotor. Power etaartns. power brakaa, radio baaur, automatic Iranj^le-flon and arhiuwau Urae. Other •keaerarias. A rare anal $2695 1961 BONNEVILLE SPOKTS OOUPB. Fewer aqulppwl plus an tha aeaaaaoriaa. Sharp I Care Ilia Ihia ara ecarcal $2695, 1961 OLDS P-H SEDAN. PUIU aquipra to-eludlos VS angtoa. automaUe tranamtaaloB. power eUartog. radio and'baator. A beauty I ^ $1995 1959 THUNDERBIRD SPORTS COUPE, sorer with rad and whBa 1 n t a r I o r. Power equlppml. radio, baatar. antomaUa tranamlealou pluf wbItawnU Urae. A allek anal $2095 1960 PONTIAC CATALINA TITA. BeauUlol blue wltti matching Interior.' P o p a r ■Ueriog. power brakee. All the! acceetortes. . $2095 1959 PONTIAC STAR CHIEF SEDAN. Power ataer-tog, power brakaa. li^ad with aceaaiortaa Thig ear 4i Immacu- $1695 1957 OLDS. UPER M HOUDAT SEDAN. Buckakln beige. Power eteering. ^wer brakpi. Mai^ ooeeiaories. '■“■$995 1958 PONTIAC ®BlS?tod "htte® -'*-* — Interior. AuiOmL-. - radjo, beater and whiuwaU . $1095, 1957 BUICK ' BTOBTB/OOUPE. w^Hel $895 m FALCO standard ehlft lauty that la tllcl " $1195- 7 1 Y«ar GW-Warranty WILSON, PONJIAC - CADILLAC 1350 N. \ Woodvrard' NSW EEd Ussd Cdft llH 'M MERCURY BAE010». AUfO-natto Uwna.. nowar at— brakap and amtia. 3-lwa Crake Motor Sales People’s Auto Sales •R $ra3ae.*1lai^i Pull Pawar. 1956 NASH F-lOO 'Uoo. Only MIS. laeg tanne. — Special — 1961 PONTIAC $2795 tar. FE 4-7114 prarar^krakoa 'and* iWartoa, full KSUIlEri^atffc PONTIAC RETAIL STORE 65 MT. CLEMENS FE 3-7954 iXOTDM^RS. k-iriL.*"*- — •tl.'sSie ,sil*ra!y OLDSMOi __rartlhla. ...___ , Aiaartog aad brakaa. maroon Ito-lah with matching leather tetm. B WOODWARD AYE.. BIKMINO-HAM. MI 4.573S.____ 1961 OLDSMOBILES ?Ia£V7sy' g^SPAuViffAm FACTORY OPPIOIAL CARS DYNAMIC M'S, SUPER tas^ANDN 4-DOOR HARDIN. PRICED PROM r $2595 Suburban-Olds USED CARS 555 S. Wo^ward MI 4-4485 " B*ham door hardtop. 1 dramatic, powa brakaa, laal OR Um* ai ties OLbtWoRILE .. ‘‘Sr’ 4 Door HaUday SPhrUtog coodlUon lhroul|outl Excallrat ■'uui T%tlSS.^ “ BIRMINGHAM Chrysler - Plymouth m g Saginaw_______1C T-ISU VI Auto tranamlaalan. Power •Uarlra, radlorbraur. MM mUaa. 15, IM. if A AMM. ■M PlymonUi Wagao SparU auburban. T-f automaUe, radio. haaUr. Real ^al Rad and BOB TTaRT motors S4g Orchard Lake at YoothaU PE4MM r I at IC 4-IMSi with Power and aitra Clara I 0 •wdbr. law mllaaga AatamoMl Compare at •olyil.tM. ,, BIRMINGHAM Oiryslcr ^ Plymouth * BIRICNORAM BUY YOUR NEW RAMBLER HOUGHtI^ & SON M N. Mato. Rochaator OL l-sm ’60 RAMBLER 4-DOOR CUSTOM, wHh radio. hMtor. auto-maUa tranamlaalon, l^S B y 0 ■float, acooomy baMrtyl $1695 JEROME "Bright Spot" I960 RAMBLER 5 to Choose Froih All Classic 4-Doors AUTOMATIC, SCTLIEDBR RADIOS AliP HEATERS RrHITBWALL TIRES All Very Low Mileage FROM $1195 36 MONTHS TO PAY vert uttlb oowr BIRMINGHAM RAMBLER .666 S; Woodward Ave. MI 6-3900 No Money Down!! JUST ASSUME THE PAYMENTS ON ALMOST 150 REPOSSESSIONS, BANKRUPTCIES. STORAGE CARS. ETC. AT KING •. AUTO SALES — LIQUIDATORS CHOOSE from eiIamplbs such a ■M Mercury S-Patecasar i ■M Buick Hanltop ........ ■M Ford S-Door .......... ■4T Desoto Hardtop '47 Studabakar Wagon ■M Old! Super "M’‘ HoUdi •44 CbarroM .............. ••KaYy‘;j5^« Y-. •44 *iSS"si^S^op ^ PLUS MANY OTHERS — TWO GIANT LOCATIONS Opm t A.M. . f P.M. Dally - 3 A.M. -1 P.M. Sat. OLIVER BUICK DOUBLE / / CHE^bKED • > USED CARS ’62 BUICK Special Sedan 4-Door ....$2585 ’61 BUICK LeSabre 4-Door Sedan..$2585 ’61 BUICK Special Sedan, V8 engine ....;. .$2185 ’60 BUICK LeSabre 4-Door Sedan..3»5 ’60 T-BIRD Convittible, ftiU power.. .$2585 ’60 FALCON Wagon, automatic, white.$1495 ’59 DODGE Suburban, steering and brakes . .$1385 ’58 OLDS 2-Door Sed^n, automatic ^ .$ 895 ’58 DQDGE 2-Door Sedan, custom engine ..$ 795 ’57 BQldK Sp^ial 2-Door Hardtop.$895 •57 PONTIAC 2-Door Catalina, automatic .,.$ 795 ’57 CHEVROLET ^-Door, stick 795 •57 BUICK Special 4-Door Sedan..$875 •56 BUICK Special 4-Poor Hardtop . ,$ 695 ’56 CHEVROLET Bel Air 4-Door, ajitomitic $ 695 OUVER BUICK 210 Orchard Lake Ave. -PE 2-9101 THE POlVTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, FEBRltARY 80,1M2 TWEJnPY-ONE * 'Today's Television Programs- - ■ IM ■■HMt to »-WntoTT CkMMi i »-on.W-TT OhMMl M-W1 CiN O) Mmrlt (oont.) (OWytotEup (D amanwaoont.) (!) Eapqw uto Pito (coat) XM) 0«Mnl Owntotiy •tW (D WMflwr (T) JMkm 8b«i •til (3) Mwt (4) Ntwi ;(Tri«fwi' . (9) Qiilck Draw McGraw 9tm (3) Sports (4) Sports Sttf (3) Ntws (4) r • . (T) 1 (86) 1>N (3) 8«t. niko (4) Two Fsoii wcsc (7) SOoiit Serrtes (9) Man and the‘(Aallencc (96) (kaatOeetokDsUS: 7(69 (3) Sea Hunt (4) (Ookir) ID BapB 6:96 (3) Oa the Vton lYoat 6:96 (3) Collsge e( the Air 09C). Dtnecr and boy b ritom adieal tty to aid 0 ha« aiaitoftasd. Lao (kr> eey, ItonS^Stoin. Sheldon (3) B^ealM (4) Today (7) funew 7:69 (7) Johmy (Singer 9t99 (3)Chptohi" (96) Germai 9:96 a) Jack (96) Story of Hooey 9:99 (3) Movie: “The Xoof (96) Afo ol Kinta 9:99 (3) Klnt «< Diamonds (4) Laramie (oont.) (7) Badielor Fathar (9) Movie (Oon^) 9:19 (3) Dohto (SUUb (4) Aitoad Hitchoeek (7) New Breed (9) Movie (oont) 9:99 (3) Red Mnlton (4) DIek PoweO (7) New Breed (oont) (9) Men Inlo Space 9:99 (3) lehabod and Me (4) DIek Powell (oont.) (7) Yoars for a Song (9) rront Page Challenge M:69 (3) Gany Moore (4) OMa’s Hundred (7) r ■ (9) U:99 (3) Gany Moore (eonl.) (4) Cain’t Hundrad (oont.) (7) Mill (9) Dr. Hi 11:09 (3) News (4) ^ (7) > ll:U (7) News. Spa U:U (3) Weather (4) 7 UAW 11:99 (3) (4) (9) . U:96 (3) Movie: “StariUt" (190). Hollywood stara man at It Itavla Air Bone Base. iDaria Day, Gordon Madtao, Tlrilala Mayo. (7) Woathar 11:99 (4) (Oolar) Jack Poor (7) Movie: “Cocvotto X33F’1:« (4) XOyo Dihabedi (1MB). Brttiah oorvette to 9:19 (3) Password . North Atlantle Is monaeed by ahemy. Randolph Soott, Robert mteham. : (9) I Man” (ISM). Nick and Nora Charlas are requested to find frland's huabi^ WQlisni Powell, Myma Loy, James » ^4) (Color) (3) (4) (Color) Iil9 (3) Verdlet Is Yotn (4) Qm Five Daughters (7) Who Do You Tmat? (96) Memo to TeacMne t (3) Newa 4:91 (3) Brighter Day (4) Blake Room lor Daddy (7) Amarlooa Bandstano (86) Commonwealth at Na- 4:16 (3) Seeret Storm 4:19 O) Edge of Night (4) Hare’s Hollywood (9) RaiBe Dasdo (96) rrsneh Throogh Tele- (4) Uvlag (7) b (86) S 4:69 (7) Amerlean Newsstand 4:BI (4) News (3) Movla: “Mtsde for M 9:99 (96) Art for Everyday Use 9:66 (9) Billboard 19:99 (4) (Color) Say Whan (9) Natlanal School Show (96) Our Setantlfle Worid 19:99 (7) Tips And THcks 19:96 (7) News 16:99 (3) I Love Lney (4) (Color) Play Tour Hnneh (7) Lito of RBey (9) Chet Hsiane (96) BttUMi VI M9) Nuraety School Time 11:69 (3) Video Village (4) (Color) Price Is Right (t) Texan (9) Romper Room', (96) Spaitoh Laaoon 11:16 (96) German Lesson U:96 (3) December Bride (4) OoncentratloB (7) Yours for A Song (96) Commomrealth of No- (4) (Color) Oeotgo Pierrot (T) Johmy Gingar (9) Popeye And Pab (96) What’s New? (7) Rlvcihoat (96) TVavrt 6:46 (96) News Magazine 6:16 (4) Kukla and OUe By VnNei Preas iiCBKUW FAnOR, 6 p.m. (7). “Summar Kelly Gregg (Noreen Corcoran) 1:69 (3) Star (4) Groneho • (7) Day in Court (9) Movie “ 1(19 (96) new 1196 (7) News (3) Aathi (4) Paoph (7) Howl (96) 9 (4) (Color) Job (7) Jane Wyman , (66) Adventtties in Seienoe (4) News (3) HoumPorty (4) Loretta Young (7) Sevan Keys (96) French Lesson ) Youi« I>r: b (9) (96) l:19 (9) Movie; ”The Chinese No. 2 Untouchable fhs a Gang TV Features teriude in Yellowstone Park. MITOIOOCKPII 6:10 p.m. (4). “TlwTbat' RMth star In drama of lawyer who d e f a n d a teen-ager dmrgad lammy Davis Jr. plays a former a return to gloty are-shattered whan a drunken reporter usss to blackmail a crooked fight < OADTS HDNDRBD, 10 p.in. (4). "Bluoo lor a Junkman.” Dorothy Dandridgge makes her TV dramatie debut as a nightclub siligar who trios a oomeback after years of )BJE glow, 10 p.m. (3). Sbiger Jo Stafford and comedian BoMqr Ramsm Join ragulars Carol Burnett, Durward Kiitqr and Marlon Lome. "That Wonderful Year, ” the weekly i taiile lookback, is 1965, when . mmas in the news Included Nikolai Bulganin, Group Capt- Peter Townsend and Davy Crockett—and cha dia was as popular as the twist is today. ManyTVAdj Too^epetitive' Says Uttars (d jenyeys tndicatlog ibat the viewers really like contmereiala, a television cohmist must be permitted to doub( their aheura«y. cause 10 many aiinoyad. frustrat-ad and apgry letters about commercials rtmtlnually flow in from readers. LOiT RACE — Richard 0. Bonelli, 23. of Daly aty, Calif., blood etreamlng from a cut on hU face, la ahown aftar eraahing hia car In a futile effort to lave hia-daughter Ghiul Diane, 33 ipontha, who had fallen from her crib and DriU aaid, "I muat have been dota« TO," in a race to the homltal. He ket central of te car on a rakwwept street and crashed Into a houm. Jurt a few blocks short of the hoRi^. Docton pranounoed the (Aw Ibng-etanding 'complaint is that commercials - are b^uently mtertalnrnent programa aurroundlng them. This has been denied officially and re-paatadly, but my own eara tell mb it la true. Another frequent complaint Is tha daadly rapetltku). Aa one viewer putt it, "Does it make the hospital. thouaanda of dcdliri (m a program that attraeto regular vlewen>-and then have It repeat, repaat Actor*B Family Numbere 8 Children By BOB THOMAS AP RSovle-TT WHtar HOLLYWOOD - One couple liw eight kids equals duwa? Not the way Paul Pioen^ nm five axtra blowa bacanae of that "Wo also havt reg^ laapao-ni of our rooms,'’ reported in tha play^ he’s the No. 3 after Robert Stack -| but the rert of us athersl would| glv.e medal of valor, with dusters, for (adng what he when be got I The Picemlf InhaUt a nmbUng house which Paul expanded from rooms to five. Tere’s plenty of yard to race around in, and a dwltar for the hone. ____ . _ If they would raise 690 to buy a horse. Ifeanlng: Nlcd, 13: Paul Vto* ^ 13; (tomma, U, Tugboat Catches Sub OH Florida in Freak Mishap id; Owiles PhlUp (Ose-I; lOka, 7; Phimp, 6; Gina, m, , •, 9. ’my span tha kindergarten. mlssiDg IBpjn. (7),_______ ^ AU. HAVE DUTUg ’Tlwy'ra prsRy 6«»fl kids," iald off from terto. "1^^ “We alao have a system of ptasaes thehr psre^ above and beyond their regular dwna. ’Tin of them an worth a dollar. "On the other band, 35 demerits an worth a trip to tha woodshed, when thdr tether usee the leatber strap. Corns to think of it. tbsre haven’t been any tripe to the The last wpoN u wwj. nm CELW. r.jUvU CELW. i •.-SS-WA. S.------ ZSS:ii*W siss-wwv. Wws siwisni SMW-WJK. BNttMIlMiMI WXTE S. tobMUaa WWA Ktate WCML Art CaotMT wxrx. Ptol aarT.7. WoU OEL^ M*wa David siss-wja, Jort Banit iStaa-wjiL San xom ISi: SteSt Otera WJBK, iiirA Avwy itiaa-cELW. Hvrtte umiu WJBX, nnro. BNd ^eiM-wra. WaankinM xan ^^ssaa au,m. Jra vS UlSS-WJa. TIM tor garti WXYX. Prtw Itora rnDNSSaAT anSMOOR itiae-Wja, nrai, Pwai •str&^Bksr Utat. DavMI wo5a! WCAR.' nw Pan* 3^ SSL saa. WPCM. IteTTO, Lrau ahow WAX. Wowt. Avwr tica-wra. nawA Ntirtr WWJ, »rtw. iiarteaa Hisa-WJIL note tor Man* WXTS. MiManar, Ntwi WWJ. E0«a HAiaon / w%eI m?v7^ iSsTu. WOAE WMrtSsa WPOH. Dob1i£«^ Sigt-WA Matte Bon WWI. Itewi. Mmw.U Ntwt. Ctork •M'Ssss WPON. Dow MoLmM Optimist Says Pay TV May Reduce Our Taxes Fear 400 Lives Lost in Floods Toll in Germany af 232, but 200 Bodies May Be Found in Hamburg HAMBURG. Germany (l» - German reacue workers expressed fear today flood! whieh ravaged north Germany over ths weaksnd may havt claimed more than 400 lives. The official count fvmalned at 333, but Informants at Hamburg aty Hall said as many in tha dty alone during the night. Officials said prtverty damask migiguEoaed 1390 million slowly racodod from lltterad dtlsa WMto targw seeiioM af I hvg ware abla to trtm to waters had not yet reeeded. Btartiag at dawn, Oennan I aad drtakiH to too- As many as 30,000 pertons were totlmated to be living in' oentena or with frle: able yrt to return to their flooded By BABL WILSON HEW YORK — Pay TV--toeildee multiplying actors’ tries 9 to 10 times — will lower all of ua nice people’s taxes (due to Increased world 'markets). Bo we’r# aU for pay TV— N’est-co-Ws? Ralph Bellamy, imsidsnt of Actors’ Equity.,si^s “Pay TV Is practically here” — and ad^ that one pay TV company propomd: /“Actora work the first three yeara for nothing." An actor hlmtoU. BeUamy gave an answqr that waia quite graidficr. “I asked them," he ■aye, “whether ATtoT and RCA would do their work for nothing.” ^ Onee pay TV to here and under way, WILSON Bellamy feels that Garry Meers, John Daly. Gene Bayiss, cte„ wUl be heussbeld words aU over tl|e world. Bellamy, here to da CBS’ TV “Safnrday’e ChUdren." remembered to he dleereet "You know I’m asked to visit all the N.Yjjjiubs," he-sald. ‘1 was reminded of the gag told when I was a boy ...” Of the story about the thw major wlubs. "The Lambe are actors trying to be gentlemen, the Players are gsntlemen trying to be aotors, and tha IWars are neither trying to be both.” But nowadays, it Isnt so. The ITiars are both!) -★ ★ ★ the MIDNIGHT EAieL... . „ , Nancy Oleen couldn’t make an entrance In "Mary, Mary the other day — the door Jammed tUl Barry Neleea battered it open. Mexican clown Cantlnllae may make his UB. cafe bow In September In Laa Vegas ... Tammy Grimes Is treating bereelf to a mink coat... IWends will erect a statue to Brrrt Flynn In Jamaica. \ S TODArs BEIit LAUGH: At the echool for children of the theater, the kids nevei: say they were left back. They eay tbey*ve been "held over." WISH I’D SAID THAT: The modem housewife Has all kinds of labor-saving devlees-rbut no money-saving devices. ' BARLIB PEARLS: Many a man has tried to pull the' WObl over his wife’s eyes by using the wrong yam. Mickey Freeman tried to buy tickets for 9 hit Broadway musical, and oopplalned: “For this much monsy, a oOuple of ysars ago I could have been a backer!" ... that’s earl, brather. (Oap^t, 1963) Bill Would Let Local Units Build Shelters ... traffic to the hariwr area and to the stlU flooded WUhcmriiurg section lying between fWo branch-ee of dw Elbe River. Police hoped to evrtd the tllM(p that Uodred Monday. Men and aquipment from UJL and Brttiah military units in Ge^ many continued to Work with German civilians and Army par-----" to bring relief and 11^ gency repairs. LANSING (UPI) - SUte Rep. Walter Nakkula. Monday night propoaed a bill to penult local units of government to construct community fallout ihelters. Under the msasurc, a majority of the local governing body in Michigan communities could approve plans for the shelters. Financing a ahelter could be we or a special tax, up to 1 if the bonds or assessments were approved by the people. Ex-Turkith Protident is Rtturnod fo Priibn KAYSERI, Turkey (I) Depeeed Preiidiirt Cdal Bayar has bean returned to prison here aftar three4lay stay in Ankara for medical checkup followtng an Intestinal bemoRhage. y -Bayar. 71, la serving a life term tor crimee against, Bm tk» duiW bli 10. yeert in office. PNH to Host Meeting ; of Driving Students . An ceUmatcd M- eindente end""^^ Viawarg Annoy^ by Commarcials dbUnty are expected to attend tUn Saturn’s fourth annual OaUand County Teen-Age Traffic gaiety v By OYNTRU UIWRY AP TV-Badto Wrttor\ NEW YORK (AP) - AltimugH The conference is scheduled to in from 8:30 a.m. to noon at Poik-tiac Northern High School, to hear exp^a on hew to awK vIve In todigr’e ttalBe. Among tl|e apenken wfil be edn> acton and police otflcials, including J^ontiac Police Chief Joseph Koren. Sgt. Michael J. Sibnl ol the Michigiui State Police and Pontiac Mayor Philip E. Roweton. for a company to 1 Whan Johnny Carson moves Into Jack Paar’e spot next toU, the aanm of tho NBC program ivlU revert to its origi^ "The 1V)olght Show, ’etarrtng Johnny Chreon.’* The true meesure of Johmy’i Mooeo will he shown in tho ep^ 1th which NBC changes the amt to ’’The Johnny Canon U,S. Is Seeking Help From NATO in Cuba Embargo NOW YOU CAN DIAL THE HUMIDITY YOU WAOT . AUTOMATIC HUMIDIFtER i ■ (SitlsrpMTlSM r far hatUi b O’BMEN HEATING and SUPPLY CO. 371 VoorlMig Rd. ' FE 2-2919 PARIS IB ~ A U. 8. Btote Do-partment envoy sought today cooperation of NATO natlone for a >int cutback in trade with Cuba. Walt W. Roetow, a member of the State Department Planning Obundl, mat with the NATO Permanent Council in BMclal eaieion. The United States wants cooperation of Its NATO suits in cutting off of sms shipments to well as goods of possible strategic importance. Rortow was ures adopted against CUba cently fay tbs Organization of American States (OA8) at Punta Rostow’a matting with the ooun-dl was ascrot and no dotaUs ware expeetsd to bo dttclaood either by U. 8. or NATO dtfidals. Members of ths oouncU osnnot rtspon the U. S. requsst untfl th^ confer with their governnwnta. > TV Enough for Actor; Didn't Nood His Famil/ LOS ANGELES (AP) - "He didn’t seep to need tho famUy any nKirp,’’ aaid Elizabeth (Connors aa she divorced actos-Oiuck Oonnora, 6 former major loague bsMball player. She blamed his Inattenfiob of transitian from the diamond to on’a "Tbt Rifloman" ae-H, T gueai aU the adulation -and stuff was what he ne n US," said Mrs. Connors, 33,' at the hearing Monday. FORCED-AIR GAS FURNACE •«r IistaUtd MICHIGAN HEATING CO. I Newbwrv 8». FS 1-6621 • RENTAL • SOFT WATER ^3 LINDSAY SOFT WATER CO. II Newbofiy S». FI 6-6621 BOB SAYS: Call Vi Nov aoS Bata NS W Aar lal^r Hmi» I»K———te FNA TiMi^ Msaty Down NfN CoaitnctiM C#. EM 3-3690 r-. Guard Pat Boone's Home After $2300 It Stolen L(M>ON (AP)-Movie Pat Boone has s 34-hour Brttiih poUeo fuard anund hia London Tba j naldenes was ransacked by firieves who made oft with about 63,800 in personal effects. Bod^ and his 1 here about a month. He la working on a British movie with ^-Nancy Kwan. Start Labor Offensive TOKYO (AP)-8ome 13,000 Jap- a demonstration today tor higher wages and better working oondi-tions to start off labor’s annual spring offenrtve tor 1963. RCA COLOR TV Soles and Service Sweet's Radio TV Ponttec I Oaly Aothomrt TV SAKS and SERVICE SONOTONE House of Hearing Free Haarinf Ti^ Prat tart'tU •fpm BeasAy A/poiummt^ US Oakland FEderal 2-122S SAVE TAXSS GET ALL LEGAL DEDUCTIONS • Guaranteed Accuracy • Free CoiuuUation if Required to prove deducttqm OFEN IVINtNGS and SATURDAYS We R. BOUM INCOMI TAX aad ACCOUNTINO - 49 lest Hka fti99», FoaHac W ^ ■BHHHHHHHHHHilHHBBHiHHiiilHHIlllHgJiHDDDR PI 4^1 If ■f T^YENTYTWO THE POXTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY. FEBRUARY 20, lgB2 li^rs. Kennedy as Daizling jxs Our FtrKnox Gold Supply (EMtoft Note — WhaVs tke big ehanffe wrought by the White House in the Ufe el Jackie Kennedy? This is the second of a series of articles spotlighting the First Lady as wife, mother. White House hostess and as the informal ambassador who will visit India and Pakistan riext month.) By Binv MONTOOMKRY . . I^ASUINCXONr^ 'Jn -the space at a yisr JacfquellM l^n-hu become 9 tangible na-th»Bl uaet, ai dazzling as the rt Knox gold iuppl:|i and aa •ought after u our loans. She has hnught unprecedented dash and edat to the White House sodal Scene. Her friends say she "loves'’ her new role, and thrives OB the crowid adulation and foreign travel. . postponed trip to Ma and Pakistan la .March bat 1 and private" to olai,” beeaase W the eageraeas of state Iting head, of state required originality, artistry, and daring. Jackie has ad adfMNhle supply of all This IS undenitandable, Jackie did ibuch to midce their recent vigits to America memorable as as important. The state din-tA which she staged for J^istan muned Ayub Khan on q. starlight night last July was one of the most brilliant and die-ahdcal in the history of White liklHte.enteriaii^. TRBEE YACHTS l^iety dance bands ^ played aboard each of three official ytehts which transpoi^ the gay party down the Potomac to Mount Vernon, where a fleet of limousines waited to sweep the disembarking guests up the hill to America’s most historic shrine. q)iitf|ie, and a symphonic orchea-tre •alted under p. Tiffany-bedecked tent on the sweeping lawn of'the estate. Jo plan such a soiree for a vis- The First Lady drew her inspiration for the extravaganza from the breathtaking party which President Charies de Gaulle hosted for the Kennedys at fabulous Versailles, but the courage to face down economy-minded GOP legls-lators was strictly her own. stdieoB was served en faaulle. Subaequeidly the K^medys gave a private dinner in his hoixMr at the White House, with an unusually selective guest list. Jackie's trip to India and Pakistan bad been scheduled tor late November, and she reportedly resented it bitteriy wlien presi stories pointed out the obvious; Tlwt iheTraaldItw absent ftnr tSir-oUne’s fourth birthday cetelration,' The entertainment for Into's Premier Jawahariaj; Nehru ’ less lavish, but flatteringly intimate. The .Kennedys personally 1 met him in Newport, although he is not the official head of state, and escorted him by boat to the Jackie’s stepfather, were temporarily va- e.sf e they s A 8INOIJG ROSE Carefully coached in advance, little Caroline presented Nehnf 3 New Yorkers Eye House Seat 1 of 2 Dems Favored fo Win Special Election for Congress Post NEW YORK (AP)-A Republican and two Democrats contested today for a vacant neat in the House of Representatives. The special election was in the 8th Congressional District in Queens where enrolled Democrats outnumber Republicans by about 2H to 1. One of the Democratic candidates, Benjamin S. Rosenthal, 38, Elmhurst attorney, has the blessing of President Kennedy, Mayor R^rt F. Wagner, and the Liberal party as well aa his party. The other Democrat, Emil Levin, 56. a Flushing lawyer, is running as an independent. Republican candidate Thomas F. Galvin. 35, a Flushldg architect, is making his first try for public office. He received a telegram Monday from Republicim Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller wishing him luck in the election. BLECTED A8 JUDGE The' House seat in cohtentiort{ was made vacant when Rep. Lester Holizman, a Democrat-Liberal, was elected to the State Supreme Court. Rosenthal is regarded as a heavy .favorite. State Sen. Seymour R. Thaler, a Democrat running as an independent, was disqualified when his nominating petitions wefc ruled invalid because they failed to name a commlfleei on vacan- Jamqs Barton, 71, best known for his long run as Jetter Lester ‘Tobacco Road," died in Nassau Hospital In Mineola, N. Y., after suffering a heart attack Monday. Barton played the leading role in the play from 1934 through 1939.' It was the second longest running play on Broadway. < Portugal, despite "the loss of three enclaves in India, retains foreign possessions 23 times > its own size. * . ’ , JFK's Appointments disapproval at and seisure bf PortngneM Goa. Jacl^e expects now to bb gone the first three weeks of March, WASHINGTON (AP)-The Senate confirmed by unanimous voice vote Monday President K|mnedy’i nominations of W. Averell Harri-man to be assistant secretary of state and Walt Whitman Rostow to bC State Department counselor. The senate also confirmed the appointment of Walter P. McCon-aughy of Alabaqia as Pakistan, succeeding William M. Rountree. Vice Adm. Edward Nelson Pan ker of Pennsyivdnia and Jacob D. Beam, of New Jersey were confirmed as assistant directors Of the U.S. Arms Controrand Disarmament Agency. Report InfiJ^otors Arrested itlMria DAMASCUS, Syria m - Damascus newspapers said Monday a number of Infiltrators have been arrested in Syria after crossing Lebanese frontier. The papers said they were carrying leaflets hostile to Syria’s new regime and committed for trial. One paper, Al Naer. described them as 'Nasserite agents." witii B single ted rase for for John Jr.’s first birthday, i Thanksglviti i for the family I Immediately after Nehru's visit •he postponed her trip until January, explaining that the Indian leader had suggested she should have more time for sight-feeing. Another unmentloned raasOB may have been Nehru’s disclosure Russian spaceman Yuri Gagarin would simultaneoualy be paying an eight-day visit to India. In Jaasary the trip haliTo be ] to take social and press sec-B «mh he;;, besides her sis- retaries Princess Lee Radziwell. LIKE DOLLEY iSaDUON The quality of presidential entertainment under the Kennedys soared to heights seldom achieved since Dolley Madl gra.ced the Executive Mansion. President Eisenhower’s M^a of a big evening was a state'pinner, followed by a musicale featuring the light music of Fred Waring. The tastes at file TVumans and Roosevelts were little more sopUs-ticated. naaks ddefly to Jaekla, the playara, ehoraagraphers aai Their guest lists gutter with such previously neglected "irefts’’ as pqgts Robert FYpst and Carl Sandburg, composers Igor Stravinsky and Aaron Copland, conductors Leonard Bern-stetai and Leopold Stokowski, and many other stars of stage and concert hall. * k 4.ei Those who know Jackie best were at first surprised that the seemingly shy young woman could threw herself so wholeheartedly into the organization of huge soirees. Durihg the previous seven years of married life, she had adamantly turned a deaf ear to her husband’s pleas to give large, infor- was the only kind that she gave. A MIND OP HER OWN The First Lady has always had a mind of her own. While she wra inquiring camera girl on tlte old Washington TimesJIerald. a fellow reporter asked the dty editor wheUwr he bellevad rumors that bachelor Sen. Kennedy was going to wed Jackie., Because Jackie entertains with such a flare, foreign ambassadors in Washington do not conceal their disappointment that she has not seen fit to reinstate the traditional diplomatic dinners in their honor. OnCe, after a roDicking evening at brother Bobby Kennedy’s big country house in nearby Virginia, where 50 or in guests danced the rock-and-rcAl, Bobby broiled steaks in the. music, room, and someone brought the pet burro in from the barn, JFK sighed to a fellow senator: '"I wish I coaid get MY wife lUive parties like that. It was The only parties Jackie enjoyed giving were intimate, candle-lit dinners for eight or ten close friends. She f^ that these best Slated their I8th century Geprge- for the diplomatle corps, the mtli- This year, as last, the Kennedys scheduled only a reception for ambassadors, and telescoped the dinners for vice president, speaker and chief justice into one lone affair. Why? No one I a guess. Perhaps in tUs jet age, when the Kennedys find it com- paratively easy to visit back and forth wMh other headi dt states, the wiglBg and dining of mere am-‘ assadors seegU to them passe. And Jackie,'who grew in's •tauncldy Reppbli^ household, has never felt patficulariy com-foitabfo, in the company of poU. . ticians of eKfair party. (NoKti The >Flfst liMy weifcs hart aai jpleyb hard.) : the editor grlBBidi "AH I eaa say Is, If she sraato te Buury White House dinners tor foreign envoys have always been the ool-orful highspot of the Washington social season, because the dlplo- native costumes, and their wives don their most sparkling tianui and spectacular ballgowna k k * Mrs. Kennedy loves pageantry, and for that reason it seenu strange that she, of all first ladies, has thus far declined to continue the time-honored custom. STEREOTYPED DINNRR8 In previous administrations the First Family has customarily entertained with separate dir each season honoring the diplomatic corps, the chief justlct, the vice president, and the speaker of the House, in addition to hosting state dinners for visiting heads of nations, and numerous receptions GOLD CREST The Rambler American Fire Hits Burmese City RANGOON, Burma Wt - A fire which started in a restaurant in Akyab (Arakan) raged through the center of that west coast port city Monday, causing damages estimated to total S600,000. There were no reports of.casualties. DO IT TODAYI HEMPSTEAD Ph. FE 4-8284 BIG BEAR con Add a Room “Fve never met a Rambler owner who wasn't SBtisRed...a statement tcant matm about any other car” TOM MoOAHIU^tVieCHANIXtUJUSTRATED BIQ tom McCAHILL has b«en testing o all kinds of cars-for years. In the March 1962 MECHANIX illOSTRATEO, Tom McCahill reports on his tests of the 1962 Rambler American "400” Convertible. What he says about this Rambler would certainly make you want to own one. The way hq says if is fun to read-and mb i^e you to read ILLMifRATE the article in MECHANIX iLLMrRATEO. But so powerfully persuasive is his closing sentence, that we want tb quote It again: “I’ve never met # Rambler owner who wasn’t satisfied—a statement I can’t make about any' othercar.’’ What’s behind this auto expert’s powerhouse statement? The entire Rambler Idea..." rfto /#M of body and frame welded into one solid-strength integral unit. Pioneered by American Motors ovSr 22 years ago, and Copied by every new car foitroducad in the past three years. . The l#M of big-cz^ performance, room gnd comfort Dlus compact-car economy and ease of handling. Only Rambler-no other car in the world-gives you the best of both. TAt Uee of cars that stay new looking far longer because they resist rust. Where most U.S. cars today have rustproofing sprayed on, RgmUer (foes that and takes 13 other steps-induding Deep-Dip rustproofing. TAt Mm of styling continuity. Instead of spending millions for radicel design chi merely for the sake of change—Rami vests its money to bring buyers important 1 benefits. This 1s what we mean by sharing progreas with consumers. For example, the Ceramic-Armored muffler ;hanges— imbim in-irtantiW and tailpipe. Either will bo rephqed {[$$ for the original buyer as long as ha ovms his Rambler, in case of rust-out, by going to a Rambler dealer-collision dama^ excepted. For axamfrie^ Double-Safety Brake System with tandem master cylinders, dual hydraulic . systems. Self-adjusting brakes, standard. When you consider Rambler's consistent reputation for quality, for trouble-free opera-^n. for safety, for economy, fo? low prices and for high tradShin value-it’s not surprising to team that RaMibler salea hmm Increased over 800% In the past flve yeareaiona. See why—for yourself. All this week your Rambler dealer Is offering sales-auocest specials on all 1962 models. Visit him liow for an obviously batter value in product and pricel ' ^RAMBLER WORID .STANDARD OF COMPACT CAR EXCELLENCE ' CLARKSTON Bin Spence, Inc. HIGHLAND Wilsen Ante Sales, Irtc. LAKE ORION Russ Jiaknson Meter Seles ROCHESTER Heiiffifen b Sen, , Inc. UNION UKE R flr C M^er Seles THE POHTIAC JBESS, TUESDAY, FEBBUAEY 1M2 MONARCH BRAIND ORANHIUiCf > NORTHERN TOP’S BiRAND \ , JERCENS TOILIY ^ LI^IIID , ,m^m TISSIII SOAP - H . More ' AH *<>jert Purpose Bottle . Why KatH lUNCHEON NAPKINS HART BRAND Halv0s Of Slhid X FREESTONE PEACNES ■|« twwf ■v.\, y-t pogTliM; nuts$,2fffESDA¥rralHV ■-- ^Wfwy VASELINE Dial SHAMPOO Ipwta ..10c Off Labal TOOTH PASTE ftkOH 8*ooe. Bol. lie Off ¥hodburt—^/i Prka Sala 1.00 Valua HAND LOTION 39* 89^ *50' '52^ 73' GREEN GIANT GRiEN PEAS 5-1®^ GREEN GIANT GREEN CUT Dainty Lunch Xhoke of Flawrt” PURE FOOD CLU9 PRUNE JUKE PRICES EPFECTIVE THROUGH MONDAY, FiRRUARY 26. 1962 1*1 ■ffMWi.lk.tiitLfi IH»j Jor* [)UinlM I y,nij WYLER'S FMato • OiWhn • B—i Pay TOP^S BRAND SNYDER’S LIQUID CHOCGLGII DITIRGINT GYGUG ^ Por ^AC Why Dishas §m^m W Qt. Moro k 49^*: ' V~ FOUR ~THB"FOy«Ae ]WMB9Sr TO»S^¥rra»»UARY^i THRJBOyjIAC PRBSg: TURSDA B’ ■ ' BqH ^EAH M^TY Young Oven Ready TENDER PLUMP RIBS 2 to 3 Pound Average fURKEYS Always Lean and Fresh GROUND BHF Lb. Why Pay More? Your Choko 14to20 Pound Average Many to Choose from Lb. t ■ MSSS^ I MICH. GRADE ) SUCED BOlOQMA A n FRESH BONELESS PAN READY ^ 3^51 BiunsH HlUIS boneless PAN READY FRESH or SMOKED lUVERSAUSACE ANY SIZE PIECE I beer salami IZESTEES I TINY BABY LINKS keakfast I GERMAN STYLE KNACKWURS1 Saslwip-AniiEis 55S 49s t r^lak.HERRIMC 39S' 69s1e1h«'^“ow si^ 58s lii«»«<» '“*“ 49!|»imci - r. . .. -V. ,■; :-V, l■.'■‘■ iorvwtt^'' ■’ i.: 'S' I . Top-Spred ^ margarine Pound Pkg. In W% ■'K- Big Valu's Low, Low Price VAiy Pay More? No Coupon Needed MELO-CRUST i^|>OIIUTS; ^ Plain or Sugared •S For Soft Skin , < ^ IVORY SOAP - r 3 ^ial CASCADE - - - Pink Liquid SWAN..............- All Purpose HANDY ANDY - - Lauixiry Special BREEZE - - - . - Special' LIQUID LUX - - •33‘ SuperRinw 'all' DETERGENT - 20-ot jr>e Ammonia Liquid Cleaner 4y AJAX - - - - - - ’^^79* ”^ 63‘ - Pla«or-K6» Oookiei M remv-Aor vjookiee o-"6y LADY FINGERS.. riMTOfwn ^ 20 Goo6TM» CRACKERS....................•- 25 Pound f\ IOf\t AAARGARINE ■ in(Xiertori 3/89* MEXICORN - . - 2 C-. 4y Green‘Giant Spears •*<<» 300 ’‘c:^35^SiuJlNEs ----------- No 300 ASPARAGUS - - - BIGVALU . 10<.« Anr? INSTANT COFFEE - - 99^: rtm M mm»» erra Coueon e«ww Clorolene or White Swan ' Gallon BLEACH - - 4? •*l' -r' Ria»T THE POI^TIAC PRESS, jrURS0AY, mam » COURTEOUS SERVKI « NMiE BRANO fOODS ¥ lARGE, VARIETIES ¥ nussoiiii beustarips' Mill. I" The Weather Bmntt I Ptrtijr cloiMly, wanner Wedneadly (Dtuul M r>t* S) THE PONTIAC VOL. 120 Np. 11 ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ PONTIAC. MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 20. 1902 -26 PAGES ABSociATto nuaa UmriD -PRK88 INTIIINATIONAL Feel Fine, View Tremendous,' Says Glenn From Earth Orbit Blasts Off at 9:47 A.M.; Will Try for Three Trips AP Pkatolai THE REAL THING — Weeks of frustration are over for astronaut John Gleim. He was shot into orbit around the earth this morning after many delays. The National Aeronautics John Glenn's Diary for His Historic Day CAPE CANAVERAL (UPI)—Diary of John Glenn’ day in space: 2:20 a.m. — Awakened by personal physician for a hearty breakfast of two scrambled eggs, filet mlgnon, orange Juice, toast, jelly and a coffee substitute. 3 ajn.—Underwent final physical examination and scientists attached sensors to his body. 4:30 a.m.—Donned his silvery form-fitting space suit ^ pressuTe- checked by techniciahs. and Space Administration confirmed the orbit at 10 this morning, 13 minutes after an Atlas missile rumbled off a -Cape Canaveral launching pad under Glenn in his Friendship 7 capsule. NASA officials said they would try for three orbits which are expected to last fpur hours and 50 minutes. In the picture at the left, Glenn's fixed eyes and rippled brow show the preshot tension he went through in Hangar S as he prepared for the flight. At right, he slips into the capsule atop the Atlas. ★ ★ Youngster Shows Glenn How to Get Job Done CAPE CANAVERAL. Fla. « -Shortly before astronaut John H. Glenn^Jr., entered his space capsule today, the public address system announced the birth of a baby to a technician working at the pad. ♦ w . "Well.” a worker remarked, least somebody got launchM today.” Thanks Perth for Lights CAPE CANAVERAL (UPI) -Astronaut John Glenn reported from over Australia today that he could" see the "bright lights” — apparently of the city of Perth. "Thank everybody for turning them on,” he said. In Today's Press No Help Considine reports Soviets apparently learned little from Powers — PAGE 7. • Jackie Fearhss First Lady daring in White House entertaining — PAGE . The Old Pros GOP unhappy with any one of four top men — PAGES. Watch It, Dad Parents must jespect their children—PAGE 14. Area News ...... — 8 Astrolog Comics Is ......... • —r............M es .........: 4 .. u-u ..... 8 sdio Programs .. tl Eari ........SI ..iiu 5:02 a.m.—Emerged from quarters at hangar S and waved three Glenn walked 14 steps to a waiting transfer van and slapped a security officer on the shoulder before ducking into van for trip to launching pad. -Entered Friendship 7 space capsule after riding an elevator up his triangular gantry at launching pad 14. 8:25 a.m.—Gantry wheeled back, leaving gleaming white rocket standing alone. Crews started delicate Job of fueling Atlha 109D. •:M a.m.—Reported from capsule on pad: "All systems Rre go” 9:48 a.m.—Belching smoke and Are, the Atlas rose slowly from the pad, climbed straight up injo a clear blue sky atop an orange ball oP flame, and leveled off toward the East. 9:53 a.m.—More than 100 miles up. reported in loud, clear voicer^ I feel fine ... the view is tremendous.” -Became firat American launched inJo^DfSit, traveling at about 17,545 miles ^ per hour between 100 and 160 miles above the RTtn. 10:25 a.m. — Tried his first food (Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) WASHINGTON (AP) - President Kennedy watched the launching of astronaut John H. Glenn Jr. into orbit today and was described as very pleased that the first phase of the flight had gone off -very succesduUy. Press Secretary Perm SaUn-ger said Kennedy followed the Launching Seen by President Report JFK Pleased With Success of First Phase of Flight Gtobal Network Enables Contact Track Spaceman on Flight The President, with Mrs. Kennedy at his side, began watching the launching preliminaries at 7:15 a.m. on a television set in his bedroom. Kennedy continued to watch in his bedroom until 8:50 a.m.. He went then to the .small dining room on the first floor of the White House to join Democratic congressional leaders who were there for their usual Tuesday morning breakfast-conference with the President. conferred with the legislative leaden. Fifteen minutes before the blastoff, a direct telephone line was opened to Cape Canaveral, Fla. First, Sfilinger . talked with O. B. (Bill) Lloyd, information officer of Space A^ncy, who was at Cape Canaveral headquarters. The Pfesident took over the phone about three minutes before the launching. Lloyd filled in Kennedy on some of the details. At one point, Kennedy heard Glenn’s voice vore the phone but Salinger said the President did not speak with Glenn. tors, engineers and other spe- Flight Center ji,t‘ Greenbelt, Md. ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ Glenn Family Watching Quietly and So Proudly ARLINO’TON, Va. Gft—"A tremendous note of joy.” ’That was a friend’s description of the atmosphere in the home of astronaut John H. Olenp Jr. today as fast-flowlng reports showed full success in the early stages Lake Orion Is Exception Voter Turnouts Poor Poor turnouts were recorded In all but one of eight. Area communities that held primary elections or caucuses yesterday to pick nominees for public office In the spring general elections. ★ ★ fk Only a, small percentage of the registered voters cast ballots In Oie vUlageaof Holly, Milford and the city of Troy because of bad weather and viHer apathy. . Hie sole exception was Lake Orion where 300 of the some 800 registered voters went to the polls In a two-party election. « Attendance also wds small ait the caucuses last night ill Leonard, Metamora and Almont. ' In most Instances incumbents were nomihated. CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) —To track John H. Glenn Jr. of the local security forces a' provisional executive would have at Its disposal for maintaining TO Meet again? French and rebel negotiators may have to meet again to re- JFK Asks $1 BIIMon for White Collar Men Over Three Years WASHINGTON (APl-President Kennedy urged Congress today to provide a billion-dollar pay raise over three years for the government's white collar workers. The I a par with that outside M that competent people can afford to work for Uncle Sam. The President said in a special message that he was pro^ng "federal pay reform, w ' a federal pay raise." For the whole field of white collar workers, the would amount to 10 per cent of the present fllMtllllon annual pay-raises would range from 3.7 per cent to about 33 per cent for the three-year period. The first Increase would come Jan. 'NEW APPROACH* Kennedy said he is proposing a wholly new, common sense ^ proach to the problem of putting federal salaries on a basis comparable to thbse in nonfederal service. This would be done for all but the highest-level officials. And tor them, Kennedy said, the moat vital single element In die proposal is pay a^stments for top tions. Many of these top-rank employes, he said, a ' _ drawn away by higher pay out- The pay reform would apply to i,M,IIOO employes s|- ' not affect approximately 860,000 blue collar workers ii trades and crafts. said. But by this time, they added, the negotiators should be empowered to go ahead and sign a final peace agreement. As hopes tor peace rose French government and rebel quarters, terrorist attacks in Algeria claimed at least 30 lives Monday. Snow Moves Out as Cold Edges in From North ■ By The Associated Press Heavy snows whl5T whipped across the Midwest into the Northeast diminished today cold air spread across northern More rain doused the water-soaked areas of Southern Cali-tomla but tapered oft after Monday's heavy downpours. The belt of snow or snow flurries extended from Indiana and the eutem upper Great Lakes to the Atlantic Coast from Maryland and New Jersey northward into New England. Skies were mostly clear in the midwest snow Mi^E COVERED ITie storm abated in southern New England but fairly heavy snow continued in coastal sections of Maine. The shHrm dumped snow ranging from 8 to 13 Inches atop last Thursday's heavy covering of up to 30 Inches. New York Stole, amounts ranged up to 20 inches the ground in Glens Falls in the northeast, 16 in Albany and 7 in Plattsburgh. Roads and streets were generally slick or The Weather FuU U.8. Weather B^u Beport ININTIAC AND VlCINirr'^sThrily elendy and a UtUe colder today with few snow flurries likely this morning. HlghAoday SO. Meetly fair anv colder tonight, low 15. Partly cloudy and A little warmer Wednesday. High SO. Wind northwesterly 10 to SO miles becoming southerly Wednesday. Dtrt«U«e—WtiUrlj Sun MU Tuudnr st I’.l* p.ni. Sun rlM> WMlDMdsr nt 1:t$ s.m. Mooa mU WudDMdny st |:M n.m. MMn rlM( Tuuadsr *t 1:tl p.m. ...n HlfbMt Umpuntura .............33 Lo«Mt Unpurnturt .............II M*u Uupurnturu ...............ItS WMthOT-l-ineh MMW On* TMr Ac* In rmlUt MIcbMt Umptntur* .......... Lo*t«« Ump«rntur* ......... Mmd Umptrnidr*............. mckMl saS L*«mI T*aip*nlnr* TSU D»U la SS Ttan la UM -S la 1134 MaaSsp'* Tnaparatar* Ckart k » 11 lAWAB|tlU M 47 -Jisba II I tUamllcaeli 71 71 aaba U S SOlvaukM M t 1D| " 37 It N*« Orltsa* 71 SS |u*iU 13 14 N**Tork ^ 33 SO UiMkesoB 37 S3 Omaha ** “ PlIMoa II 3 PhoMkU Trnv.Cltp S3 -4 ntUburib AlbueutrqM M SS SI. LmUi ------------- S4 . 8 It W si ii WaifSislaB S Sa*w 0*pth* SInchu M'rquatu 31 laebu lachM isaikacon IS laebn - 7 Inch** MUton SO lasht* I InelMs Tra. City SO ladu* to track Ms father’s flight. Mrs. Glenn. 41. a petite brunette in a red wool skirt and black Jersey blouse, sat port of the time in a child's rocking chair watching the TV screen. APpbatalau NATIONAL WEATHER - Cold weather will continue to-niidit bt the eastern thlnf of the nation and in the Northern Plains. It will be wanner in the Central and Southern Plains and in die Mississippi Valley. Scattered snow flurries are forecast tor the Lower Great Lakes region. Showers are expected in Northern Calitomia and Nevada. MONORAIL ARRIVES - The first car of a monorail train for the Seattle World's Fair is checked after being hoisted on a concrete track at the fairgrounds. Two monorail trains will . ar PkMttti transport visitors back and forth from the giant exposition to downtown — a mile away — In 90 seconds. The fair opens a six-month run In April. Informed sources said the West is ready to provide fighter escorts for transports carrying passengers. THEY THREATEN Astronaut Glenn in Orbit The Russians did not attempt to restrict Western flights in the three 30-mile Berlin air corridors above East Germany today. West- (Continued From Page One) reported Glenn's voice coming in 800 mUes southeast pf Cape Cluaveral at approximately 3:37 p.m. eral frustrating pestponements dating back to Deo. M. Several teohaical delays today shpped the soheduled 7>W a.m. toaaeh- The gravity forces which gripped Glenn on liftoff, making his lean, trim body feel plght tlmm, heavier ‘ normal 165 pounds, vanished suddenly when the capsule entered orbit. Hie pressure was gone and Glenn became weightleu — the buoyant feeling that results when a delicate balance is achieved be-tivecn the outward pull of centrifugal force and the downward pull of the earth's gravity. At 10:09 a,m., the Kano, Nigeria, station made contact and reported that thy mission seemed to be going as planned. The Kano statio^ said Glenn was In' “excellent voice’’ as he passed overhead. It also eaten Us first meal la space at In the capsule. Glenn carried two tubes of mixture, of beef and vegetables which he squeezed into his mouth through an opening in his helmet. He was high over the Indian Ocean trackinif ship at 10:30 There, he passed suddenly from daylight into darknera and in a period of about 45 minutes he had traveled from winter in the United States fd^:qimmer oyer the Indian Ocean. ’ OK Resolution on Court Site Halfway through the first orbit. Dr. William Douglas, medical officer at the control center at the Cape, reported Glenn was In s “completdy normal situation and procekllng in excellent condition.” As he passed over the Muchea, Australia, station, Glenn conversed with fellow astronaut Leroy Gordon Cooper Jr., who was foUowlng progress of the flight in Australia. Glenn tol^ Cooper that everything was going well and he also reported seeing much cloud cover over the Indian Ocean. He told Cooper he observed a ohuter at vary bright lights below. He assumed these were the lights ol Perth, where everybody la town planned to turn on thefr lamps In hopes that Glenn would see them as he whlssed over- Glenn said: ’'Thank everybody for turning them on.” 6lenn Family Quiet as They Watch TV (Continued From Page One) globe, charts and a stopwatch Asked about his own feelings. Rev. Erwin said: "My feelings were those of real humility and profound gratitude and absolute ■ance, and I am particularly impressed with the way the family ind a faith in John Glenn — 'He’s reflected .^auch exuberance and assurance in the whole thing.' The astronaut talked to his wife and children by telephone from the space capsule itself waited out the countdown for his orbital flight. Technical troubles and cloudy, skies delayed the launching. Glenn was to be In this mysterious weightless condition for most of the remainder of his until Friendship 7 re-entered the atmosphere en route back to earth. A major gral of today's flight was ta^^d^rmine man's capabilities and iimitationB I that weightlefs environment. It Is a sensatidfi future space travelers must learn to cope with for days and weeks at a time. Putting Glenn Into orbit does not necessarily make the mission success, however. John Glenn's Diary on His Historic Day (Continued From Page One) in space. Soaring over Kano, Nigeria, in a weightless condition, Glenn squirted food into his mouth from a tube. 10:M a.m. — On darkened (ar side of globe reported sighting "bright lights" of city of Perth, Australia. Told ground stations to “thank everybody (or turning them on.’’ 10:50 a.m. — Ground control said Glenn’s heartbeat and respiration were "completely normal" and the astronaut said he was "having problems.” 11:09 a.m.—Friendship 7 passed vcT Guaymas. Mexico and headed back across North American tinent. Glenn still in voice contact with ground stations. 11:20 a m.—Completed first orbit ol earth. 92 minutes alter launch. Still ahead lay n critical period of re-entry at completion of the three orbltai A trio of reverse rockets at the Iwse of the capsule were to be fired by n signal from an antomaHc clock aboard the craft as It approached the West Coast of the United States near the end of the third drcalt. If all fire properly, speed will be reduced enough to take the capsule out of orbit and enable it to descend gradually to a land-ihg near Grand Turk Island in the Bahamas. Because Friendship 7 was traveling five miles a second, it would miss the intended impact zone by five miles every second of error In the clock. Or, if only one or two of the rockets fired, he would miss the area by hundreds of miles and recovery would more difficult. MUST RELY ON CHUTE After firing of the retroe, Glenn then had to rely' on the complex spacecraft control parachute and landing, systems and the far-flung recovery forces for his salvation. Or, as in the case of the orbital flight of Enos, the chimpanzee, last November, trouble could develop in the capsule and the flight be terminated early. The huge missile spilled a torrent of flame over the launching pad. Ponderously, the 135-ton mon-er rose slowly from the launch- Commissioners Go For Plan to Uie Land as GM Show Place llie (}it$’ Conunisslon last night approved a resolution offered by Commissioner Robert A. Landry calling for the city and county to use the old county courthouse site at Saginaw and Huron Streets for a show place for General Motors products manufactured in Pontiac. Other commissioners gave Landry’s resolution enthusisstio In his resolution, Landry requests the Oakland County Board of Supervisors to "take steps to make available the old court house site as a location to display the‘three principal automotive products manufactured in this city.” The resolution also pledges Pontiac participation with the county "in the cost of this worth-^le xommunlty project.” Copies of the resolution were „»nt to county officials and officials of the three GM plants and divisions here. Commissioners hope to the near future with supervisors and GM executives to discuss the proposal and any other ideas which the county might h*e for the site. ^ the site. PROVIDE SYMBOL’ Landry said he thought such a display would “stimulatje statewide and local Interest fn our industries ^ and provide a tangible symbol of community ,^pprecia- tion of the products produced by local industry. “We have the finest _ In the automotive world made right hero In Pontiac and we should be the first to see them each year- It would make an Ideal glokoff for our downtown urban renewal program," he ’The resolution was drafted in view ol the fact that the county had no bids on the old courthouse at their asking price of about 5400,(XX) and, last Week, approved advertising for bids to have the structure torn down. Ax to exactly how the si(e would be used, no one had any official comment. Unofficial opinion was that the cUv and county should cooperate in clearing the site and giving it to General Motors (or construction of a display building. . But the Russians, in a note released Monday night, told the Western Allies they would continue their harassing flights In the cor- Tbe note rejected a Western Allied protest , made In Moscow ’Thursday against “aggressive and dangerous’’ RuSslaa fighter flights In the corridors above East Germany. Russian fighters made such flights to back a Soviet demand that Western aircraft keep out of portions of the corridors at certain times. The Russian note told the United States, Britain and France it would have to heed such RuMlan demands or face "unpleasant consequences.” n Intended' rendesvons with the This first attempt to put an American astronaut into orbit came after a series of frustrating postponements dating back lo Dec. 30. Technical troubles involving the Atlas guidance system, a faulty respiration sensor in Glenn’s helmet. a broken bolt on the capsule hatch cover and a fueling problem today delayed the- launching past its intended 7:% a.m. time. BRILLIANT LIGHT As the rocket was ignited, grpat billows of smoke poured out of the bottord of the tall Atlas shot through with flashes of brilliant light. Jetting from the bottom was a lonf tongue of bright orange flame, looking much like a Fourth of July fireworks flare. Two small rocket engines, used for minor course corrections, biased on either side of the long, pencil-like silver rocket. In seconds, a great roar barreled across the Cape and struck the ears of reporters and other observers nearly two miles away. Less than two minutes alter blastoff, which was 9:47 a.m. Eastern Standard Time, systems in the spaceship were "go.” He confirmed booster engine cutoff about two minutes after liftoff was reading his instruments, reporting back on cabin pressure and ” the gradual buildup - of the' pressure of gravity that were forcing him back into his contoui seat. West Holds Fast to Berlin Lanes The Day in Birmingham Rads TaH Aliias Tha/tl Continua Harassing Acts Against Planas Invite Leaders to Hear ot Plans for Fund Drive BIRMINGHAM — Leaders of 35 offered during the spring, toll and organisations Iq Birmingham and*li BERUN (UPI) — Western officials said, today the Western Al-wiU maintain their Berlin flights despite Soviet threats to interfere with them. surrounding areas, whose combined membership tptols nearly 5,000, have been Invited to an p|>en house Thursday to acquaint them with the plans for the 1962 Community House Fund Driye, March They rejected a Russlpn claim to the right to monopolize the Berlin air lanes through saturation flights by Soviet military aircraft. . The West said lK|(s2 BAKER and HANSEN IiUttiBct Coapaiy INSURANCE -ALL FORMS- HONE OWNERS PRCKR6E POLICY h SPECIALTY FE 4.1S6S 714 COMMUNin NATIONAL lANK ILOG. PONTIAC KENDALE STUDIO 45 WEST HURON ST. Russians Apparently Learned Little BV BOB C0N8IDINE NEW YORK-lf the truth known the Ruulans ttid not give up Francin Gary Powen as a goodwill gesture to thaw the Ipold War. They probably sent him back because he bored them stltf. That seems to be what he’s doing to the CIA, FBI, State Department and other people trying to wring from him information on what he toid the Soviets after being shot down (if ho was), why hie seemed to .igree with every word the prosecutor bellowed at his trial, why he emerged from prison looking better than the day he entered, why he didn't destroy ds plane or h' When he fl Him red he’d be thanked for mm* servtcee as he rendered to the CM, eelleet hla sixty or seventy thouund In back pay an^yetlro to the pteasore domes of Ponad, NOTHINO TO GAOtr The Russians would never have sent him back if they suspected, for an instant, that he could bring back with him anything of even remote help to our intelligence. Two Ford Couples Give Yale $2 Million Va. Now it’s likely ^t Congress will want tp havp^t him. Some of its committeethen can’t believe fellow who did what Powers did, in a macl^ as exotic as the U2, could ^Ibly be as empty he’s. :arceration, and now that Open I A. Id. to 9 M. OaUy Saoday triple 5 EUHN AUT6 wash it is easy to guess that the Russians questioned him endlessly on the operation of his particular arm of the CIA. They were probably baffled to learn how Uttle he knew about M, He seems to have been 2 per cent spy and 98 per cent chauffeur, following a road map, reading a clock, and punching this or that button at the times some^ one had written for him on a check list. Could have been the At his trial in August of l^iin a small cell for a month, two the regular Moacow ^oorrespon-months, «dth nothing to read, dents •were divided in tbelr out-j nothing to do. Food is passed to look. (”I^ I had a gun I'd shoot i him through a small opening in ” a colleague muttered I the door. ,The guard does not NEW HAVEN, Conn. » - Yale University has received $2 million from Mr. and Mrs. Walter Buhl Ford and Mr. and Mrs. William aay Ford of Detroit. The gifts of |1 million from each couple were .made to Yale's Programs for the Arts and Sciences, but Frank 0. H. Williams, national chairman of the special tund-raislpg campaigns, said the donors have not yet designated which specific proj^s will benefit. William Qky Ford, vice president of the Pord Motor Co., and Walter Buhl Ford, president of an industrial design firm In Detroit, are brother-in-laws. Both are Yale alumni. To Study Mechanization of Postal Processing U.S. Postmaster General J. Edward Day and an abvisory board will meet beginning today in Detroit to study the present and future application of mechanization of postal processing. The Detroit Post Office is unique in Its modern mechanized mail-handling equipment. Yes, you cqold put It that way. ’Let’s go for a nice walk in the yard: It’s a beautiful day.’ bureaucrats and theiri families burst into almo.st deafening applause. to me as we sat in tlw press balcony of the crowded and ornate Hall of Commons. Almost simultaneously, the reporter on my other side whispered, “Poor guy’s been in solitary for 106 days.”) Ns man not la sach a predtra-meat can say, from the downy safely of freedom, how be himself would have acted. There was one clue as to why he might have been so agre^le. In a snhdn<4 sort of way, during the charges and hi Us short achooBwyioh confession.. It was supplied by aa old Moscow hand. ’’You notice be keeps saying ho# nice everybody treated him . . . cigarettes, candy, no beating and so forth?” he pointed out w^ we awaited the verdict in the court cafeteria. "I know a little about how they can get cooperation out of ’’They don’t have to torture n, starve him, or s that. They Just leave a speak to him. OENEBAL TALK •Then one day a Russian walks in, probably a Russian of his own age. Good English, affable manner. He has cigarettes, almost anything else the guy has been bleeding (pf. The talk is general. Powers’ find interrogators could have been pilots. Lot in common, those guys. So, after a time, the talk get* dawn to specifics. The g\^ must have said, ‘Well, pal, you were over the UJS.S.R. when we shot you down, wereh’t you?’ Powers has to agree. ’And you were flying over us without Pur permission, right?’ Right. 'Wouldn’t you be angry and alarmed if a Soviet plane flew over Chicago or Oak Ridge?’ Sure would. It was a strange scene, when the veidict was handed down by the chairman of the three officers’ bench. That half of the courtrdom reserved for Ru.ssian fereace at Paris broke up over tMs, don’t you?’ Yeah, I guess It dU. *la other words, you caused the break-up of Ihb great effort to end the Gold Wart’ The othci' side of the loom—the de reserved lor the diplomatic corps—sat on its h;inds. , In an anteroom, where the flier] said a sad farewell to his family, t were growls and snorts from j his father, who had pffted with his daughter-in-law. And over the whole scene loomed the imperious I Luce man who had purcha^, for j rash on the line, the Intimate details of a drabber page in our iuinals. I About 27.0(io Americans lost their sight this year. m double HOLDEN ^ i ..Si,,. TRADING STAMPSi I iii: WEDNESDAY! Thrifty PHARMACISTS Charge LESS for Filling W I PRESCRIPTIONS! ■ ‘Y, why drive out to pdy bills? You'll be glad for the convenience • of a checking account To pay bills, just drop your checks in Sie mail You have a record of what has been paid and receipts when your cancelled checks are returneit " Checks are safer than cash— no need to worry over loss. NOW ON 12 MONTH PAYING ^ /O SAVING CERTIFICATES for my money... it's / PONTIAC STATE BANK Saginaw at Lawrence liglits Auburn Heights Baldwin atYale Drayton Plains Miracle Mile M-59 Plaza 9 to 6,4 E. Lawrence nrember FJ).I.C. • V . / THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY. FEBRUARY ^0, 1062 Saginaw and Capaci Take Poll Leads Into Final Weeks River Rouge, Ctiampion lop Other Classes Pontiac Central Sixth on AP List; Northville 3rd and imiay 4th SEESEBiMfc, By Thr ^mioototed Ptm* Two weeks to go before touma-■- ment-lime and It looks like • Saginaw, River Rouge, Capac and • Champion will enter the three-week • struggle as the teams to beat. • * * ★ ♦ This fearsome foursome clung to the lead today in the weekly As-sedated Press high school basket-> ball polls of Michigan sports • • ■writers and sportscasters. ftagfnaw (lt-«) renuliwd high and mighty In Class A with a • slight bulge over Detroit North-' western (ll-l). River Rouge,(14-1) retained its . geason-kMig hold on the top-ranking >"in Class B with Escanaba Holy Name (14-0) sticking in second place. , Capac (IVO) again was tops in Class C with Champion (ISO) holding on as dans D's No. 1 quintet. MOVE UP “ Grand Rapids South (12-0) retained its grasp on the No. 3 position in the slightly Juggled Class A rankings. Benton Harbor (10^) moved up a notch to fourth after beating Muskegon (10-2), which fell from fourth to ninth. Grand Rapids South and Muskegon meet tonight. posliloM. roUosrtpg Blver Rouge and Ewsanaba Holy Name are NorthMUe (IM), Mason (lS-«), Holland Christian (14-1) and BuehMian (11-1). Detroit VlslU-tipn (U-S) moved up two plaoes Into seventh while Klkton-Pigeon-Bay Port (M-1) fe» to eighth. Sault Ste. MaMe Loretto (14-1). held onto third pUce In dass C with Imiay dty (14-1) again being named the No. 4 team. Sebewaing .(14-1) Joined Detroit All Saints ' (14-2) in a fifth-place tie, a climb from eigl^ Last week All Saints was tied for fifth with Grosse Pointe St. Paul (11-1), which dropped to an eighth-place tie with Jaokson St. Mary (12-1), St. Mary lost to Albion and fell from seventh. Flint St. Matthew (14-1) replaced Suttons Bay as the No. 2 team in dass D. St. Matthew was tied last week lor third with Britton. Today Suttons Bay (14-2) wa third with Britton (134)) fourth. The poll resulU on the basis of 10 p^ts lor a first-place vote, lor a second on tbrwgh 1 for a lOth-placc vote: L SSTreuT N<^wnUrs iu-e> J. Orsod lupldi aoutti (U-*) *; oSSoSt KuWni ’(lO-U • S. P«sUm CMUrsI Ul-*l ...... 7. Em( Lmlof (11-S) I. OrwM PolM <11-11 . ». Uuikeioa llO-ll 10. Hlfhlsod Psrt ,ril-^ Tmb. moMrd 1 L bIwo^Imi^Nsdio (104) S. N»r • T (11-1) It is. the way the A’s have it figured, only a detour to greatness. | eyes and blond hair. 4 .71 t Clkton-Pit*on*B»y Port (11-1) *' £m*« SS. Petor wd Paul (11-0 ROdlord «. To.(a. Booord Poll I. Copoo (l»-0) .................. 3. slul7 sl«^*Moi1o Lorotto' (14-ii 4. later car & Toinoirra oambs Tewnehip High): ------------i.- Steee'e ~ japan’a faat BuVSrjud",. '........ growing automoMle Indue try plana .njaa 28-per-cent production booat In “! flacal 1963 over tbe preceding 13 B««u. toppw; ........... CUbsf*. earlr. ta. ..... Cehtafw, r«0. ,U. • C»bb««*. ftMterd vaiMr CarraU, mUo pak ......... Carrot*. toppaO. M. ------ SSSfja v;;;:v;r; S Lttkj *“ om«lr Aerospace Issues Make Gains Gaina.and loeaea of fractions id about a point were tbe Tide for moat key stocks. News of the suooeuful orbiting of UJI. Astronaut John H. Glenn Jr. bought buying (o some of the space age stocks. General Dynamics, prime contractor lor the Atlas missile which llcnn Into space, rose 1% to 3514 on 7,000 khares. MePennfll Alreratt, maker of April 1. The Japan Automobile Industry M Association said recently the production target lor the coming fiscal year U 734,000 vehicles. %Sp*. Poultry and Eggs ^LvtVV* !>«• »-»: IWI #-l»; bMiry typ* ro*ft*ri trp* reaitir* e**r I Ik*. W-N: krel ■Bd (rytr* 1-4 lb*., vhll* 11-11. |M typ* him ar»iwil by"“ " • .O’**-. - UAWPoslpoiws strike at Allis-Cholmers Co. BIILWAUKEE (AP) - T United Auto Workers Union h postponed a strike scheduled to start at 11 ajn. today at six planU of the AlliaOialmera Mfg. 6>. It * * The union informed federal conciliators that it planned to continue negotiations with the company on a day-to-day buls. • point. North AnMri-oaa Aviatlsn spurted about 9 pohUs. Other .stocks in the group did not Oft well. Republic Aviation lost about a point while Douglas and Ublted Aircraft dropped fractions. Sr ★ A Steeb were steady to sUghtly higher. Big three motors leaned to the upside, with Ford up about a point and Chrysler a fraction. scrambled. Amerada dropped more than 3. Opening blocks Indoded: Bon-gnet. nnchaaged at IH on IB,Ml shares: Oeaeral motors, bp H at m* on S.8SB; ‘ “ " SB% on S,BB«, Monday thie Associated eragp of 60 stocks dipped .50 to 361.40. Prices on the American Stock Exchange were mostly higher. Among the gaii^ were M**d Johnson, Sherwin-Williams, Cubic Corp., Syntax and Hardeman. Technicolor, General Plywood and Gulton Industries lost ground. Board to Air Proposals in Independei^e Twp. INDEPENDENCE TOWNSHIP-The Independence Township Board will hear presentations on a proposed insurance program for township employes at the regular board meetii« tonight. Also to be discussed Is a proposed mausoleum at Lakevlew Cemetery. '61 Dollar^s 3rd Best for GM $1T,396yOOO Figure Is Topped Only by Totals in 1955y 1960 At present township Chemicals, nonferrous metaU^ gnjup hospitalization cov- electrical equipments and oite W5f*|erage, but some plans arf----------- ^ ^ der consideration. The proponent of the mausoleum the municipal cemetery has been before the board previously, but no action on the prcfiosal has Mivtrt ilaelndiai - WtUU*—Or*a* A ittwa* T.— tort* M-4«; tort* J«ir*w«iM» »>-»; "Vrava*—Itort* I4-I4; ■•Siam ll-JJ; clMoki M-ntb CHmAO§-«n/»T; •PMIBI lad WbM* hMk in CUICAOO HBBCSI.-- caicAoo. m. it '*« — The New York Stock Exchange Livestock ------- I. a and 1 1 aad I 4' II. W-ll.M. Vtaltr* IIS. taeUUoB* Sbira IJW. .»r?rr2jrsfe2*“ CHICACX). - . actiT*. butetow*^ n TUI SS; II# bb*d at U.dS; ^ai 1I0-»I ibi l-I 3W-4S0 lb. *ow» 14.IS-ll.TI: s-l tss lb*. I3JS-I4.** CatUa II.SSS: -.......4.SS-u3S; law toaS* aaS toto rtf an SSJS-IT.I*; Zt W: paeufs BJadlUBi ai •took hallar eAlvaa U.SS. Stiaap TSS; Mthar aauU Maadsy amply; BMdarataty aeHy*, atoagkta* laab* fad Waitara voatod -mab* ISAS; toad cholc* aad pffBM ISt lb. with wat ftoaeaa lI M; toad at- ----------— ll.N-ll.0S; cal awat l.tMAS. f»it% -__'priTr j‘5tb‘2S‘sr* ssstohi&d iSto Svb nt Btaal U UJb UVb n»+. Patorold .M M 1MV4 111 IN +1 Piaet * O I N e Mto KV, «}^ % PubSv KhO I.N U •T'b F" ........ Publick lad Nf 1 lib < fDETROrr. 1*1 -- General Motors Corp.’s annual report Monds, showed that 1961 dollar sales were the third highest in GM history, exeseded only by those of 1996 ind 1960. ' The 19B1 sales were $UJBi,B9B-la 19«. they totaled 9U,78I,BN aad In 19H 8U,44S,BN. Chairman Frederic G. Downer and President John Gordon laid GM dividends of 13.50 per share on common stock tai 1961 “repre-sented the highest total ever paid in a single year. A A * Earnings on GM common stock n 1961 Tvere equivalent to V " share, comparH arith $3.35 Reviewing economic conditions in 1961, the two GM leaders said in the report to more than 885,000 stockholders; 'The country recovered rapidly from the mild recession which was in progress as the year begaa. • "The automobile industry was affected by the decline in sumer buying of durable goods early in the year, but the trend wu sharply reversed during the latter part of the year, with the recovery in business as a whole." NEW YORK -N. It's tax time again—both for figuring up what you may owe federal and i“ ‘ lunents on last year’s and for federal and m«ny legislative bodies to debate or new kinda .ot taxes to hit yw with next time. Ik A A Congress is^uorrying about vision that wiil affect , many bualneases and tndhd^ls. Legia-laturca of 16 sUtea ^1 coraider tax measurea-moatly toNincrease but some, .strangely enough, to cut it. TO SPEND MORE one thing'si for sure. Most government uniU In the nation will be ipendlng more this year — and looking for. more revenue, from Put off as of now until next year ia a more general revtakm of the federal tax laws, with the hope of some relief tor individuals. AAA Hie one now under discussion In Cjongrees which individuals take most Interest *ln is the plan to withhold 20 per cent of divi-denda and some kinds of interest at source. The Treasury says will give It a much belter idea of^ the total amount being paid aiM$ to Tvboro. It hopes this way to pick-up a lot of taxes on ' OpposttSon—that Is, that of tbe open kind—centers mostly on the coats of the withholding and on the deprivation of Individuala of this income, which might not be enough to call for a tax, while they wait for months to file for' refund. AAA . Many bualneaamen are cloaely / watching the Treasury'a battle to allow bualneaamen to claim tax deductioM for only half of their costs of entertaining custwmera. In the financial field, there’s stiff opposition to- the plan to increase taxes paid by mutual savings banks and savings and loan associations. Other increases GM Builds Bigger Share of Cars Than Ever Before Donner and Gordon said that GM defense sales in 1961 accounted for 3 per cent of the company’s business and that rbaearch and development activities to those are being expanded Bnd will become increasingly Important. I NV* «V* N S5b TTVb TTtb-lV ist: •Mi. •RBI. •RBL ^ Mitchell to Pay $120; Placed on Probation ’Two years probation, $20 restitution and $100 court costs were part ol the sentence imposed this morning on fonner Royal Oak ’Township Fire Chief Samuel D. MitcheU. MItehell, H, of M7M ! dale 8(.. Royal Oak Township, was fowid guilty of emhessle-ment Feb. > by a Ctrcalt ConH Jwy. He was charged with using asphalt belonging to the Oakland County Road Commission for the driveway of his home last year. Circuit Judge Clark J. Adams sentenced Mitchell, who was suspended from his township post after disclosure of the use of the material. Groin Prices CHtCAOO OBAm CHICAOO, r*b. N ed off only slightly, per cent, despite higher actual volume. M DAY SUPPLY survey by Ward’s reports showed that tha Jan. 31 inventory of unsold cars for General Motors represented a 4May anpply_at then current idling rates. Industry average was a 50.5-day supply. Five OM Car# — (MdsmobOe — had a 4d-day In- only namepUlM mider W days. Thre other Geenral Motors cars —Pontiac Tempest, Olds F85 and Bulck Spedal — were in the 45-to-50 day inventory range, along with the Ford Oalaxie. Falrlane, Falcon and ’Thuijderbbd. Buick and Chevy H we 51-toM) day class with Comet and Lincoln. All other nameplates were above 60 days. Ward’s said one Chrysler Corp. brand, which it did not name, had an inventory equal to 111 days at then current selling«rateB. By eorporattons. Ford •MMmd to Oeraral Motors st 49 Stocks of Local Intonst niarai attar dacimal pota Alltod Suparmarkato ... Atroqulp Oerp. JJ! Arkta*** Leidirtm Oa* Oo. . .N.4 40.0 BaMwla-Moat. |Kai. Co. #fd. Ij.J JJ.T Boraian IVMd llorai .......IJ.J IJ J Itovldioa Bro*....._ . .... pNaral Nofui-Bovar Baartaga IS rarvtj Alumtoum ^ H Hoover Ball A B litonard Ranalag Zto^lBU*^maDdBrd Th* toUovins dUotoUoo* — ^ :::::: i:::::!, Mobd*^ Hwaa* ......U-S Mr. and Mrs. Walter H. Jackson, w n e r 8 of Jackson Equipment Rentals, of 62* W. Montcalm, are attending the Atnerican Retilal Association annuai convention be held Monday through Friday Chicago. ■ Freeman to Explain ; New Farm Program WASHINGTON (UPD - Agrl-culturq Secretary Orville L. Freeman goes back to Capitol Hill today for another explanation of hia tough new farm program. There were warnings, that i parts of the wide-ranging new administration farm ,blll are facing defeat. William Prosmlre, D-normally a strong sap- _____ , jTMterday told a news Mnierenoe that many .Wisconsin dairy farmers oppose a sec-tton of tbe bill which would pro-vido markcltag cbntrols tor nilh. He said the dairy plan la n serious trouble. Freeman is scheduled to appear before the Senate Agriculture CommittM- The House Agriculture Committee, will continue Its own hearings on the farm bill today, questioning some of Freeman’s aides about details of the The bill includes new production control program^ for wheat, feed grains, and dairy products. It also Includes a broad plan authorizing the government to help farmers turn cropland into grass, trees, or recreation areas. In addition the bill Tvould provide federal aid to help develop low-bi-come farm areas and broaden the government’s . (oad-fo^peace program. MS Freeman appeared before the H o p s e eommitlee yesterday where hiS program got « mlxe4l reception. Hiere was sharp disagreement with the feed grain section’of the 1, a plan under which feed grain supports would be eliminated unless growers accepted production controls. The ranlring committee Republican Rep. Charles B. Hoeven of Iowa, called It a ’’blackjack” program. He said Congress long ago rejected mandatory production contra for feed gnilnB as un-urorkable. days foUasrod by Ansericaa Mot- tor at 91 days. Single plant producers normally have larger Inventories due to the number of cars in transit. * t * Industry production rebopncled last week with the return to action Studebaknr - Packard, strikebound since Jan. 1. Assemblies totaled 136,230 units against 138,-456 the previous week. CBS Will Erect Eero Saarinen's Only Skyscraper NEW YORK (UPD - The only tkyscraper ever designed by the late Eero Saarinen of Birmingham, Mich., will be constructed near Rockefeller Center here for the Columbia Broadcasting System. No starting date was sn-noimced tor the IS-story bsUd-lag. bat It Is achedalsd tor com-pletloB la 19M. Saarinen, one of the world’ foremost arc)|ltects, died Sept. AAA 'The building wiU be located on Sixth Ave. between 53nd and 53rd Streets, a block north of Rockefeller Center. ’The buUdlng wUl house most of the divisions operated%y Steel Industry Hopes for Contract March PITTSBURGH (UPD-The steel industry has set an official target date of March 1 for a new contract agreement with the United Steelworkers. R. Conrad Cooper of U.8. Steel Corp., chief negotiator tor the "big U" steel compaaler, and David J. McDonald, president of the U8W, Issued a joint stote- which they said they hopeful of a settlement before March 1. Cooper and McDonald said the ’summarizing the reports of the various subcommittees’’ of the human relations research, committee. With those negotiations arranged and well under way, we have now turned our deKberatlora .. the dlHicult and highly Important problems which are involved in the area of an over-all economic settlement," they said. Named Receiver of Lansing Firm . LANSING « — state Insurance commissioner Sherwood Colburn has been nam^ receiver of the Michigan Surety Co. of Lansing, apparently ending a long court fight over the fate of the 47-year-old firm. Ingham County Circuit Judge Louts E. Coash graatod Colburn’s petition that he be named receiver of (he firm. Colburn has cont4«ded the company Is Insol-vent. Com^'ify attorneys had contend-j an offer of purchase by CTtarles Zimmerman, Detroit insurance ecutive, could keep the company in business. AAA Colburn said Zimmerman > (le was going to withdraw the offer. ’The insurance commissioner said he was still open negotiations with possible pur- sought in taxation ol c(x>peratives and of mutual fire and casualty Inauranre companies. SHOULD PROFIT Businessmen planning to spend tor new plant and e4]uipment should profit from the proposed tax credit of up to 8 per cent new purchases. StilT more nessmen think the real chahge in the law should be la favor o( taster depreciation allowances 4pr an capital assets. A'. A f At the statA. level, the Tax Foundation, Ina,. A private research organigafion, 16 legislatures will consider tills year 28 proposals that would Increase taxes by an estimated $921'tnil-Uon to $1 billion, and 15 meagunq that would cut taxes an estimated , $458 million to $462 mUllon. In 10 of th# atateB the proposals Involve, either the sales .tax or the IndU vidual Income tax, or changes In, both. CON8IDERINO REPEAL In one state, Kentucky, there's' _ move to repeal the Income tax, and In two others, Colorado and Hawaii, proposals to lighten the load with additional tax credits and exemptiora. A A A But moat legislatures are looking for more revenue. Expenditures tend to keep rising, although the Foundation sayf state tax coUectiora as a whole have been increasing by 8.5 pei cent a year since 1958 and last year reached $19 bilUon. Committee Hits at Tax Claims Firms Owning Yachts May Not B« Able to Write Off Fun Costs WASHINGTON (UPD - Yacht owning buainenmen would have trouble writing off any of the coatf of a pleasure cruise on their tax returra under terms of legislation approved by the House Wayi A Means Committee. AAA ' The committee, after wreetllng 1th the issues for months. finall> agreed Thuraday on a plan designed to curb abuses *of businesi tax deductions for entertainment of tbe 4wet of entertelnmenl, the eommittee adapted a plaa aimed al barriag lllegithnale lax cialnM About one million new homes are being built in the U.S. each noi^ mal year, acemding to estimates. Chrysler of Canada, UAW Try to End Strike WINDSOR m — Negotiators for (3irysler Corp. of Canada apd the United Auto Workers met agalia ioday in an effort to settle a strike of 3,(W0 Chrysler wnrfcers that began Sunday midnight. The strike began after faUure to agree on a new contract to replace one which expired Nov. 15. It had been condnu^^n a day-to-day basis until the strike caUed. entcrtotomcat expeaBas. Undilr the new approach, busi nessmen ctnild write off as muct _____per cent of the coet of enter- tolnment — provided they couW prove the outlays were directl) related to the conduct of their bus! V- Special rules would govern d* ductiom for club dues and thi operation and maintenance a yachts, hunting lodges and similai faculties. AAA No tax deductions would be per mitted lor ^ch expenses, unle« taxpayer could show that tiM club, the yacht or other lacttitj was used primarUy lor busineu For example, a firm which used yacht jo entertain customen could claim no deduction at all il it was used 49 per cent to enter tain customers and 51 per cent t( entertain company executives. Business Notes John C. Batte has been named manager of the fourth Hack Shoe store to be opened for busineu March 1 at 235 ^...-* ^ . Pierce St., mingham. Hack shoe i fitter since Julyj 1958, Batte assisted Georgh > I, manager of the main, store and huyerj of women’s shoes, past year. New Edison Directors . DETROIT IB — Joacfph L. Hudson Jr., president of tha J. L* Hudson Oo., and MhJ. Ggn. Km-neth D. Nichols, fanner general manager M the Atomic Energy. Commi^on, were elected Blonday as directors of Detroit Ediao* Cow / y THE PONTIAC PHESS, TUfel^DAV. FEBllUARY h, 1902 5 More Judges Sought by Bill State Senate Passage Near for Addition of Wayne County Benches LANSING (f>—Despite objections thJit the county is already than $20 roillion in the nni, i to provide five additional Circuit Court judftes (or Wayne Cbunty was moved up (Or possible final p in the Senate today. The meusure would increas*- the number of Circuit Court judgeships from 18 to 23. A similar Mouse bill asks four additional circuit court judges for the county. Hen. Carlton H. MorrlM. K-Kalamaioo, the ■ p o n n u r and chairman of the Senate Judiciary ('ommlttec. Maid there -has been no IncreaM* in wuch Judgeship* In the county lor SS year* while the |M»|Niiatlon and the number of ' jury trial* have doublt-d. II now take* U niunlh* lor IIm- average Jury case to come to trial, he [> to take ••It’s a 'shame that long to gel a case to liial," seconded .Sen. Biisil W. Brown, D-Detroit, an attorney "Wayne County is already more than $20 million in the hole." ob-lecied fven. Stanley F. Rozyeki, D-Detroil. "They just don't have the money to pay for these judge-ships. ‘ This will mean fjve more political Jobs,” he said. "It would be more sensible if the judges they have now pul in a full day and a 40-hour week” . • Sen. John P. Smeekens, K-Cold-water, objected the measure would cost the stale, $62,500, adding up the, state contribution of $12,500 to the salary of each judge. Smeekens made an unsuccessful attempt to kill the bill by s<-nding it to committee. Ask $300,000 Dowry ATHENS (APi-Thc Greek Cabinet asked Parliament Monday night to increase the national budget by nine million drachmas $;{00.000 — to provide Princess >phie with that much dowry. Th^ . Wess and Don Juan Carlos of SpainNme to be married in Athens Mhv ICx May 14N SQI'ASHEU — there was no one in the car. The truck trailer used the parked auto as its brakes after a solo trip along a heavily traveled Atlanta, Ga.. stref^ The trailer also had been parked, then suddenly went into motion on its own. There vvere no injuries but the car went to the jvink yard. 'Labor Unions Need to Expand' Carey Claim$ 'Suicide' Certain Unle$s They Get More Members MIAMI BEACH iUPIl AFL-CIO Vice President James B. Carey said today that organized labor U inviting "suicide” unless It takes drastic action to expand un-m membership. Carey said that the AFL-CIO must admit that it has failed to solve .the problems presented by a last-changing work force or over^ come intensified employer opposi- He called for renewal of the “single-minded enneentrstlon on organising Ihe unorganised” that sparked Ihe growth of both Ihe AFI. and the ao in. the ItSOs. Carey, president of the International Union of Electrical Workers (lUE), said in an interview that industrial union forces would present a new .organizing program for approval by the AFL^O executive CbuncU this week. Auto Workers President Walter . Reuther, who heads a special council committee on this fw»-gram,, will carry out the plan thrmi^ the AFL-CIO industrial un-ion^epartment even if it does not gri lederaMonwide support, Carey said. The department consists mostly of unions that belonged to the old CTO. 'Viet Nam War toGoOnandOn' — Mrs. Dagmar APPKAUI Wilson the Woman's Strike for Peace organlzatkiD Monday urged Mrs. Jacqueline Kennedy to fallow Mrs. Nina Khrushchev's lead and broadcast a .peace sp-' itiAilVi. Ulttrt I Ntilp WmM Malt « McNamara Back From' Hawaii Meting, Sett Slow-Up Only PEARL HARBOR, Hawaii (AP) —U.S. Defense Secretary Robert S. McNamara wamg that guerrilla warfare In South Viet Nam may continue for years. McNamara Dew back to Waab-ington today after'nine houra behind closed doors in top-lqvd talks with 22 military and diplomatic leaders called to Hgtyaii to meet him! He said on departure the situation in the troubled Southeast Asia republic “at to be stabilized io^ar as Communist advances are concerned," but the end Is not in sight. ARE DEBTS WORRYING YOU.? MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNCEI.LORS ----wsiairT SAPtLy *iB •mnoaUesUr with aealjr ralMiM Ou^-OM MbtoO. N eeatoii# 'ilson takes credit for helping promote Mrs. Khrushchev’s broadcast to America. 61 Gas Usage Breaks Record Area Hits All-Time High; Passe$ 4 Billion Cu. Ft. as Electricity Slips Congo to Receive $33 Million in Aid From America WA.SHING'TON (APi -United Slates has given Ihe Congo! $15 million more in aid and promised another $18 miljion by the end of- June, JFK Proposal Near Test Vote I think you will find that George Meany is as enthusiastic about this as Reuther,” Carey said. "It is not divisive and should strengthen the entire labor movemept.” N.J. Governor Fails to Solve Transport'Strike Motion to Kill Urban Dept. Expected Today in Senate The Agenc^\^r International Developmeni saioNlfonday that the $15-mtllion grant -NJo ehan-neled through Ihe Unila^ Nations will be used for pur American goods, including trial equipment, vehieles, food and technical assistance. ’ ‘W^ASIIINGTON .Sr'nate moves Icxlay lowai vote on President Kent ban affairs department proposal. NEWARK. N.J. (API - A strike against the million-passenger-a-day public .service Coordinated Transport Bus Company entered its second day as Gov. Richard J. Hughes threw in the sponge in his effort to settle the walkout. Hughes bow<*d out of tlatlon* late Monday, ti ■men: "I’ve had It." r Negro Singer Thrilled Invited by Kennedys The outcome was in doubt on motion expected to lx' made by Hickey, D-Wyo. foreeSwt of the Government Op-eratlonsX^mmlttee and bring before Ihe .SKoate a resolution dis-ganization pi WASHINGTpN (UPIt - Negro mezzo-soprano Grace Bumbry will he President and Mrs John F. Kennedy’s guest entertainer tonight at a state dinner honoring Ihe vice president, the sja-ak-er and the ehief'justiee.'T .The 24-year-old singer broke off an engagement to sing in Paris for the thrill ^pf p«'t1orm-ing at the White House: Calif., The Santa Barbara, ......... singer has b(>en a seiiagtipn in her appearances in Europe. Last summer she brought down the house when she sang the role of Venui in Tannhausmte approval of the — It they ran get It Either House can veto such a reorganization plan. Developments n d a y forced administration lieutenants info some twist in their efforts to gel a roll call I each house. Senate leaders had agreed to delay a vole until next week. But Rep. George Meader, R-Mich., notified the House he would call disapproval resolution there Wednesday. FACE Till MZARD, lUT- As s homtownor you may not face the same hazards ' as an Eakimo, but there ^ are a great many perila I that do threatan your home: wind, fire, theft, vandalism and pertoi^l liability, to name pnly'a few. Protect youraelf a-gainit financial loaa With a modern Homeowners ^ Policy. H. W. HUnENL&CHER AGENCY 320 Riker Bldg. FE 4-1551 Miss Bumbry said in New York Monday that she was "very excited’! aiioul singing in Ihe White Hou.se. She saidji would be an ’’understatement" to call her neivous. Reflect Mayor, Add Square Mile \in Grand Rapids What’s the FINANCIAL HEALTH of your stocks • Strange question? It's one every invator should ask himself periodically because stock values can and do change. New developments in companies . . . industries . . . the economic outlook can make one or (nore of your stocks lets doable in terms of your particular objectives, It is important that you reappraise your portfolio to determine how your holdings may be affected by current —and treodL Lerchen & Co. will be gUnTto review your present holdings at your request. Tbew’s DO cost or obligation. Vitlne, Lerchen & Co. JV«* y«r* aioct Btchanff tju PwtiM BUU Bank Bld| aoch. *r ptaoo* n 2421 I GRAND RAPID.S - This city was larger by about one .squaiv jmilc today and Mayor Stanley J, Davis was set lor his third straight I term in office as the result of primary elections. The vote Monday drew 30,759 to I the polls from among 93,281 voters registered in Grand Rapids.'' Uavik won re-election over long-time pollUral toe John M. Brower by a count of 16,583 to I’our of six suburban areas approved pro|X)sed annexation ’to the city. it adds a stiuarc n)ilc of territory and $2,479,129 in slate «iual-ized valuation. The four annexing areas were part of Parii Township and all are involved in a superior court case over schtHil district boundaries. Independent bu.ses, traffic police and railroad lines meanwhile into expanded operations again today to accommodate the dtsplaceif. bus riders. The strike of 5,600 public service drivers and mechanics idled 2,500 buses serving 2O0 routes in all but two of New Jersey’s 21 counties. However the feared major tie-j)8, delays and widespread abt senteeism at jobs failed to develop. ~now and bad road conditions londay held down sonfe of the licipated increase in auto traffic. Alteriiqte bus and rail transit managed to get most comrihijers to their Jobs, although House Likel^OK $2-Billion Debt I WASHINGTON (API - The e by as imminent rejection'of by the House, the administration reversed its course in a desperate attempt to get possible Senate approval 'before there was nothing left for Ihe latter body to act upon This maneuvering brought from Sen. Karl Mundt. R-S. D., a member of the government operationi committee, the, charge that "political hokus-pokus” In an tempt to put Republicans 6h" a spot. House is expected to approve a wide margin today President Kennedy's request for a $2-bil-lion Increase in the temporary national debt ceiling to $300 billion. Secretary I has s Treasury ask tor a further |6-bilUon in-creane before June SO. He.has contended the $2-bil|ion increase will meet only essential debt requirements up to that date. He has forecast peaks in the debt of $297.9 billion March 15 apd $229.2 bilUon June 15. Records compiled by Consumer! Power Co. and Detroit Edison Co. show gas consumption at ar time high in the Pontiac area in 1961, while electrical consumption declined. ‘ For the first time In history, Consumers ga* consnmptlon broke the lonr blUlun cubic feet 'mark. The company reported cualomera used 4.6M,tOO,50O cubic feet of ga* bi Pontlar last year. This was nearly a billion above the I960 total of 3.663.696,700 cubic feet. The increase is especially significant since it surpasses the total increase of gas consumpti^ from 1996 to 1960. Total e 1 e c t r i cal consumption dropped some 51 million kilowatt hours-from 578,314,890 in 1960 to 526.873,855 last year. According to the figures, Consumer* produced 3»2,1N,M7 kilowatt hours of electricity last year a* compared to 6SIJM8,in In I960. Detroit Edison Co. experienced 1 similar decline. Edison consumption was 134,482,858 kilowatt hours in 1961 as compared to 147,-266,667 the year before. It was the first decline in local electrioai'oon-sumption since 1958 when both gas and electric consumption dropped. Hla meeting, the third in the past two months for which officials have gathered here from Washington 'and Viet Nam, was termed earlier as a "checkup on our progress in stopping communism.” At planeside he released a written statement which amounted to a general summary of the situation in Sout^ Viet Nam-. He said, in part: "With ou sistance and advice, Viet Nam has been able to equip and train armed forces. "We have assigned S| forces who have experience and knowledge of counterguerrilla warfare to train Vietnamese forces''In this type of warfare. 'This type of warfare is a and hard struggle because it is not full-scale warfare but guerrilla warfare. Some of these wars have lasted for as long as 10 years in other parts of the world, but ^ am hopeful this will not be the case in South Viet Nam.” Bob Kennedy to See Pope, Italian leaders ROME (AP)-U.S. Atty. Gen. Robert F. Kennedy arrived today tot- fez two-day visit during which he will have a private audience with Pope John XXIII and see top Italian governmental leaders. The U.S. Embassy described Kennedy’s visit here as private, but said he will make courtesy calls on Prime Minister Amli Fanfani, Foreign Minister Antonio Segni and Justice Minister Guido Gonella before leaving for Berlin Thursday. Kennedy's polniment' with the Pope is for Wednesday. 13 New Flu Fatalities Up Toll to 93 in Tokyo TOKYO (AP)-Health officials today reported 13 new-flu fatalities, bringing the total number of deaths from Tokyo's currenti epidemic 1o 93. They said 1,203 ^schools in the rapital are totally' or partially his wife, Ethel, prealdentlal riser Arthur Schlesinger Jr. and a party of 15 on the flight here from Bangkok, Thailand, via Beirut, Lebanon. Wife Dies, Then Mate I because of the epidemic. Borer^ Dixie Hwy. Gets SDM License The Waterford'sTpwnship Board Monday night grabM aif SOM license ^ Raymond l\Borer for the sale of beer and wim^^at 3440 Dixie Highway. The location was inspected ing the past week by the polk department, fire department and building department and each unit recommended a p p r o v a I to the board. Koreans Sent Home NAGASAKI, Japan (AP)-A Japanese ship 'sailld (pj. South Korea today with Kt Koreans who had been detained in Japan fpr illegal entry. The group, which Included 40 women, was the 40th such shipment of illegal entrants sent back to Korea. Appoint 2, Rename Third to City Board of Review Two nqjv members were ap- The three-man board is appointed pointed to Ihe board of review last each year at this time in advance night by the CTty Commission and of March hearings on 1962 prop- i third was reappointed. erty assessments. Two More N-6lasls Reported in Nevada WASHINGTON lAPi - The Aiomii' Energy Commission has riled two more’ underground tert shots. The two blasts Monday at the NevaJla lest site were described 'as or low yield, meaning the ex-' j plosive force was less than that !from detonation of 20.000 tons, of TNT The test^ were the 15th and 16th announced in the curreat .series, , New memben are Maxwell H. Doerr of 174 Ottawa Drive and Gordon Rice of SSS Nelson 8t. Reappointed to another one-year term Is James F. Spence of 111 Doerr and Rice will be replacing Cecil C. Mullinix and John Q. Waddell. Mullinix requested he not reapixiinted since his duties as president of United Auto Workers Local 653 at Pontiac Motor Division took too much of his time. Waddell could not serve another term because of ill health. Rice, nominated by Oommls-sionez John A. Dugan, has been a Pontiac resident for SI year* and b president of Chief Pontine Credit Union. He is a Pontiac Motor Division employe. PHILADELPHIA (AP) — Anto-nietta DeFelice, 68, of suburban Bryn Mawr, died Monday night of a heart attack. A few minutes later her husband, John, 72, collapsed and died. .k. Death Notices PotmNiKR. pan. ii. im. skakoM ANN. »14» DfVizht Wstertord ________ It: iMloTtd dsufb- t«r of Sugeni J. and Norni* Poui-alor: dt*r iliUr of ChrltUnt Koy. rsuUBo o*u. Carol J«*a, Jotfonr Joromc and Daniel lufcn* Pour-. nior: dear franddauchier of Ur. Naod Mrs. Xusene W. Pournler and Ur. .and Urt. Clyde Flake: dear Kal-tranddauthter of U. W. Ek Parieti Rotary will be Wednbday, Feb. tl, at • O-m- •» tbe Cotta Funeral Rome, Drayton Flalne. FwertI eervlce wUl be held Thurt^. F*b..22. at 11 a.si. at Our Lady a tbe Latte Churtb with Fr. F. J. DbLanty ofRcUUnf. Interment In Ut. HoM Oemetery. Sharon Ann wtU lie bi itate at "-e Coat* Funeral RoS>e, Drayton ____l», IK----------- I Woodbine; ate U: _____ .J u e b a a d of Katlu_____ O’Neill: dear father of Oerald and Patricia O'Neill; dier brother of.. John. Oerald. lilt^L btb-lean and tUees O’NtUT and-lya Smiley: alio euryWed by tbree ----j-j-..,.— icjtlke Lodge ----- Smiley: alio i tiandehlldrtn. I of Sorrow will Sulllrao Funoral Home. 141M UcNlcholi, Detroit. RodUtlon the Roiary will be----------- II be Wedaetday, reo. di, ai e p.m. at the fuaspai fcda»“W,‘II‘t“..Ti;S..5t at. Benedict CathoUc Church. Ur. O’Neill -... - leeju w. Mcoicnoje, ui family fugzeyte that tributea be made to Cantor FoundatloB. e tl; beloved hutband of Mjiry «re J. R. Ruth, Katy, euu nj- Ian Alcorn: dear brother of Prod. Welter, Thurman and Herman Alcorn and Uri. Hattie Oarner: 'ao^urrlyed by II grandchildren Wedneaday, Feb. 31. l**wltS"B ________ .. the church to llo in Itate until thn* of wrylee. BATES. hCB. II. 11*3, OBOROB V.. Doerr, a former executive at CIMC Truck A (foach Division, is a Pontiac real estate salesman. He is a native of the city and graduate of Pontiac Ontral High School and Michigan State University. ' AP Fhaiofag A Veteran member of the board, ______ _________________Former Prealdertt and Mrs. Eisen- Spence first s^ed in 1936 and (right) pose with formers Vice President and Mrs. Richard Nixon in Palm Desert, Calif. The. Nixons visited the Eisenhowers * chairman. \ixms GO VISITING - ^ J * The 1962 tax Irate will be set aT their winter heune in the Califoijnia des^ area for one night. boarq determines tlte then returned to Angeles. city’s assessed, valuation this year. II, 1163, a: .. ..._t St., uke________________ W; dear father ef Ure. Alfred iklerlaot Beach. Lee F. and Itoy trandchlldren. Funeral eervlce will be held Wcdneiday, Feb. 31, at 3 p.m. at Allen't Funerai Home,^ Lake Orion, with Rov. aL Bert k. Johns offletatlng. Int^ mint In Bastlawn Cemetery. Lake Orion. Ur. Betet wUJ Ue - at AUm’e ---------' Ortoo. W.. SMS Dryden Road, Dndon; Leonard Cafeow; Mar brothte of Earl W., Bruot H. and RoyWer* den and Ure. John SntUlns: alto eVry'TS.Wr'^ WednMdfty. *.......w- ,t th« Vc arifr. i •" Vi). Yoorb**itolpl*"FJi- PAY OFF YOUR BILLS WmOOT A 4t>ANI jlSTTe^rSU^'Slirkly nyruent you esa afford. AS LOW AS $10 WEEK Avoid lamlBhaasI And Ranoieoselone OW OR CALL “-onrruBNT FOR A HOUR AFFOnr CITY ADJUSTMENT COATS .JNERAL HT -DRATTON FLAOtl D. E. Pursley FDimUL IKIMB Donelson-Iohns FUNERAL BOm •Deelsnod tor .FuBoral>“ 'HUNTOON n Oaklin SCHUTT FUNERALS FROU MO* 111 Auburn Avo. FE 3-34N SPARKS-GRIFFIN FUNERAL ^ HOU^ . •Thoughtful 6 Voorhees-Siple BEAUTIFOL LOT. FXRRT l-llll afur 3 ps». no an- liu JMly °Feb*'i*. iidi’T r?r.i"X.,-thin -yeetf. Jamei " JohntMn. 31M lake Drive, HlghUnd, Ulchlsan. Ly|t —<1 f—B<1 ^ LOST: aUALL BROWN S WHITE ■Ale dot. aniwert to Juno. Re-ward FE 44*43 LOST: 3 UALE RRri ________ vicinity papere"lnel3o. Row'a'id. FE ^UW. LOST: FOli tERRDER Waterford. OR 2 I UEXICAN WAL- ________ _ drta. Rei FE 3-6MI LOST: UALE POODLE. * Mfik. •: TOT TiKRlER. iuici I vhlU. 4fuw«ra to tbo M'aio Tim. Vicinity Of Jee^^gd rourth airoou. fS 4:00 p.m. Roword. LOST: UAlM. SILVER Welmeraner. whito ^tngred Uon. Prart POUND: YOUNO UALE DOO. marUnfi, part UUFFLBR INSTALLER UAR-ried. Uuet bo azporloneed. to — .Apply Oreat Lakes v No Sales Experience Necessary - We WtU fully train ■ man with the foUowIni ouaUftcaUone. Uar- d'eSindabta^car.'p^M, ^*IchS education and muet bo a telf-lUcter. til* fuarantoed, during trunln, nte fog producort. OR T. InUrVlf-----——-* A fockol P«n at Uonoy Whan You BoU Tour SnrplM il Whan Raonlto At* ’ DIAL PE 34131 Graduate Engineers AUTOMOTIVE ENGINEERING STAFF >c;hrysler oration M^hanii Fuel Supply System .Chassis CompOTtmta Electrical Ignition Syttema Windahield Wipers Car Air Conditioning and Heating Related Electrical Componenta Metallurgical Wear Welding High Temperature Alloyi Truck Engineers Our expanding truck program creates real growth opixirtunitics f()r graduate engineers with experience in truck design and development. Call Detroit Collect. TUlsa 3-4500 Ext. 3828. or write: TECHNICAL RECRUITMENT 12800 OakUnd ' Highland Park, Mich. we eeek ibodU l^e a. el CATHOLIC TAN 0 TRUCEUX. exferienc INEXFERIE WANTED 1 ■Ml In ______ Fhooe UI 4-3(tt* of FE t BSTtUATE WOULD LIEX 1 U to, JplB w Mr aicouant tarn-wflte FO ^^'Sr^farartos Flalny BABYSIT'rmO AlfD UOHT housework. live In. Call after 4. 6T3-M73. COOES, CARHOPS FOR A S Drlvt la *t Rochttter, Lake 0 Ion and Warron. Write Y. I* Brinker. Oretnwoodi Rd.. Lapeer, Uloh. Personal lalorvleirt will Vanl^ke. UUea, sat. Fob. ELDERLY WOUAN FOR ROUSE-worE. Uore tor home Ihon wagoe. FE S-TIT3. ixPEHiENcfb gaAuWr 0*^kT. tor with tome fctowins In Dray- xxPERncNCio NIGHT c66e. Apply 5TI A EXPERIENCED WOUAN FOR goneral boueework, cooking. Live In. NotouiUry, l^ay aiU Uon-day off *31. .Can attor * p.n.. General Staff Nurses IdtertetlM’*Mretr**p«Klone with County of Oakland and medical WIM U1%I**B. 'i^Unt tween p:jo a.m. »°n ».»» OIRL OR WOUAN FOB tlOIlT boueework and ear* of 1 ohitd. • housework and oar* of 3 ehll-dron. Live-In. WeMende„off If desired. Roeheeter aTOd. 6II-FT42. UATUBE vVoilAlt elttln* and U|bt boMtwork, Lake ................. S-day week. » p.n. OPENING for attidctlvs younk lady U with _M- ker, FE AdMItor a