Th0 Weafher U. I, WMtlMT BwrMH ParMnl Showeri, Warmer (Otiiiit e*a* i) vor.. vj(] NO. Ill THE PONTIAC PRESS Home Edition ★ ★ ★ THE PONTIAC PRESS, Fill DA V. .11 NK 14. 19im .52 PAGES $80-Million Downtown Plan Hailed .V j ‘ - By BOB WISLER A proposed plan for redevelopment of 27 acres of downtown urban renewal land — involving construction of up to |80 million worth of buildings — was unveiled last night to the Pontiac Area Planning Council board of governors. The reception afforded the plan by the governors, city officials, and some 7.5 persons in the audience was unabashedly enthusiastic and optimistic. * ★ ♦ The design plan, prepared b y architects C. Don Davidson and Bruno Leon, and financial consultant Marvin D. Skelton for developers Michael Chernick and his son, Herbert of Detroit, features 11 major buildings encompassing a variety of uses. * * * The scope of the proposed project was “ noHost THTthose^amining the ^ints of the plan. It won approval from a variety of persons for its aesthetic and functional qualities, for the possible tax base it will bring the city and for its potential as a generator of new development in the downtown area and throughout the city. City Manager Josegji A. Warren said there lias been a growing feeling among those who were aware of the planning that something “really big was coming.” “It certainly looks like it’s here,” he Warren — who said first reaction to the plan might be: “It’s too good to be true”—said city officials who have been Related Stories, Pages A-II, C-1 working with Herbert Chemick and the planners are convinced that the plan is feasible and realistic. An indication of how feasible and realistic it is was provided by John H. Fleming, vice president of Kelly Mortgage ii Investment Co. of Birmingham. F’leming, a mortgage loan correspondent for Metropolitan Life Insurance Co. of New York—with assets pegged at 124 billion—said the life insurance company reviews many plans, most aesthetically endearing but unfeasible. “This one appears very feasible,” he (Continued on Page A-2, Col. 41 Housing in City Hit atHearing 07TRights By ED BLUNDEN The housing situation in Pontiac came under attack yesterday from two of the principal witnesses before the Michigan Civil Rights Commission which is BEHIND THE PLAN—Four men who worked together to formulate the Davidson-Skelton plan for redevelopment of Pontiac’s downtown urban renewal land are (from left) developer Herbert Chernick, who with his father has been Involved in a number of multimillion dollar projects; Bruno Leon, dean of the University of Detroit School of Architecture; C. Don Davidson, a Pontiac resident and designer and architect of a number of substantial community developments in the South; and Marvin D. Skelton, a Waterford Township resi-derlt who is acting as financial consultant. Sewer Cost to Dwarf Estimate By JEAN SAILE It’s going to cost considerably more than originally figured to construct the ------siirtownship CHnton-Oakland Sewer Interceptor. The county had estimated the sewer cost at $16.9 million. The lowest combined total bids opened this week put the actual figure at 1^.2 million. ★ Oakland County I>epartment of Public Works iDifector R. J. Alexander said: “We estimated low. The general trend (in costs) is up. The unions are making tremendous demands. It’s a rough job and the only true estimator is the contractor who gets out there and digs it, bores it and bids it.” Alexander said 18 bids were received on the five-part job. HOLDS OUT HOPE While aghast at the $28.2-million total cost of the bids, the director held out hope that up to $20.8 million of the total might be funded by state and federal grants. He pointed to recent state legislation which provides for a referendum in November on a $335-million bond issue. Under its provisions — in connection with the water pollution control act — the issue could help, in conjunction with the federal government, to fund up to 80 per cent of almost $2i6 million of the Clinton-Oakland cost. If the reforendum is successful and the county is successful in its application for funds, the local share of the gigantic interceptor might amount to only $8 million, Alexander said. Meanwhile the director said — if all the bids are formally accepted next week — it will become necessary to go back to the townships to obtain the authority to sell an additional $2.75 million in bonds over the $16.9 million already sold. FEDERAL GRANT Helping to bear the cost is an $8,564,622 federal grant already received by the county. Alexander said that if the Department $570,000 Grant Gives OU Start on DixtoraPPregfafn of Public Works accepts the bids, construction will probably start in 30 days. He Said if a decision was made to readvertise all or parta of the bidsTt woalcT probably be Sept. 1 before construction starts. The low bids as received were as follows: Section 1 — the general area of Avon Township — Roger J. Au Construction Co. of Manchester, Ohio — $5,198,302. Section 2 — the general area across the northern part of Pontiac Township — Weissman Excavation Co. of Redford — $3,095,776. Section 3 — the general area of northern Waterford Township towards Independence and Orion townships — Holloway and Toebe Co. of Wlxom — $6,941,154. Section 4 — generally the southeast portion of Waterford Township and the northern part of West Bloomfield Township —S. J. Healy Co. of Chicago - $7,147,056. Section 5 — a pumping station in Waterford Township — O’Laughlin Co. of Detroit - $716,000. The reBiainder of the $28.2 million — some $5 million — is set aside tor capitalized interest, engineering, inspection, easement acquisition and soil test borings, Alexander said. Oregon Girl, 7, Waits for Heart HERMISTON, Ore. (41 - The life of 7-year-old Rebecca “Becky” Howland is in some other child’s chest. Becky needs a heart transplant to stay alive. She returned to this northeastern Oregon community I Tuesday from an examination by Dr. Norman Shumwayl at Stanford University in Palo Alto, Calif. BECKY HOWLAND Shumway said after the examination if a suitable donor is found Becky will be considered for a heart transplant. Shumway' has' performed two transplants. The patients died from other complications. DIFFICULT SEARCH He said the search for a suitable heart for Becky would be difficult because she is a young child requiring a smaller heart than adults. Dr. John Bussman, a Portland, Ore., heart specialist, says the girl has a left heart ventricle which doesn’t function properly. The hearings began yesterday, are continuing today and will be held Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday next week. Yesterday’s testimony was heard in the commission chambers at city hall. The session was devoted mainly to problems of employment in the area. However, problems of housing and employment were linked by witnesses who claimed lack of suitable homes was .hurting the workers, t Ken Morris, regional director for the United Auto Workers, said that workers can’t afford to ^come to Pontiac and “give most of their pay to the landlord.” HIGH RENTS CITED ' He said high rents, due to the housing shortage, are restricting the number of people that can work here. He revealed that^ General Motors executive had told , him the company could readily expand to provide for 500 more jobs in this area, but it was feared there would be no place for them to stay. Morris said in past recruitment pro- here went back after a short time because they couldn’t find suitable housing. He also testified that the UAW is fully integrated racially and that the union was carrying out programs to upgrade the skill of disadvantaged persons. Pontiac’s Housing Commission director, Roy MacAfee, told the rights commission that studies had proven the “ eity'ffnwasng^reb!^ that as far as he knew little would be done in the immediate future to resolve the problem. PROGRAM’S HISTORY TRACED Speaking of possible low-income federally sponsored housing projects, he traced the history of the program in the city. He pointed out the 400-unit Lakeside project on the south side built in 1960 had drawn an unfavorable reaction from the community. The units are occupied almost entirely by Negroes. MacAfee said the city commission passed an ordinance in 1956 blocking any mwe public housing in the city, "nils stayed on the books until two years ago. * ★ ★ The city is now planning to build a 400-unit housing project for the elderly to be located on the east side Fort Worth 94 70 7 a!m] 58 12 ni"^' . 71 10 a.m. 44 " Houghton Houghton Lk Marquette 71 56 Kanwt City 94 70 71 55 Los Anotlos 78 61 71 54 Miami Beach 86 77 71 54 Milwaukee 67 59 74 51 New Orleans 93 67 One Year Ago In Pontiac Hlghast temperatura 72 Lowest temperatura 49 Mean temperature 80.5 Muskegon Oscoda Pellston ^' Traversa C. Albuquerque 65 54 New York 71 57 62 48 Omaha 95 64 76 49 Phoenix 103 67 69 56 Pittsburgh 61 41 94 60 St. Louis 83 68 Weather: Sunny, humid Highest and Lowest Tamparaturas This Data in as Years 94 In 1954 43 In 1946 Boston Chicago CTncInnafl 75 41 s! Francisco 68 56 69 64 S. Ste. Marie 71 47 71 64 Seattle 64 50 77 31 Tocson - 100 66 90 51 Washington 75 57 A record crowd of almost 5,000 persons watched last night as Pontiac Central’s 532 graduating seniors received diplomas in commencement exercii^es at Wisner Stadium. For the first time the school’s faculty also donned caps and gowns and led the List of Graduates" Page A-8 Class of 1968 in the processional as the PCH band played the traditional “Pomp and Circumstance:"-------------------- 'The class was presented to School Supt. Dr. Dana P. Whitmer who issued diplomas. Dr. Bufford Stefflre, professor of Guidance and Personnel Services, Michigan State University, gave the commencement address, entitled “Growing Up in Michigan.” ★ * * In his talk Dr. Stefflre related particularly to what tools education must give to the new generation. He noted that four items were especially important: tools to think; the ability to live together in society; a saleable skill and a respect for the rights of others. (Continued From Page One) said, stating that the insurance company is definitely interested in mortgaging the properties. ★ “We will do everything in our power to assure success,” he ^aid:-- 'The plan entail a design calling for use of a central plaza deck one to three stories above the ground running over Orchard Lake, Auburn and Saginaw and parking under the mlin pedestrian levels. 3 OFFICE BUILDING Main buildings planned are three office buildings, a 14-story executive facilities center (motel, convention, meeting rooms, etc.), two high-rise apartment towers, a 1200 seat theater, an art museum-theater, a sports arena, a senior citizens housing building, a convalescent hospital and specially stores and small shopping stores throughout the complex. ★ ★ ★ James L. Bates, the city’s director of planning and urban renewal, said the plan follows closely the original plan approved by the federal Department of Housing and Urban Deveopment, which provides the federal funds for the project. ★ * * Bates said he feels HUD will approve the Davidson-Skelton plan for downtown that it will receive the urban renewal redevelopment. He said he also feels design excellence award for whatever year in the nexLfeW-that the project the design, said buildings can be completed one at a time. Completion of a corner, for instance, would give the appearance of a completed project. 3 ECONOMIC GENERATORS ___He said there are three main economic generators — places which attract persons to the complex and which generate people back and forth across the complex. He said these are the executive facilities center, the sports arena and a planned railway depot for Grand Trunk and Western Railroad. ★ ★ ★ Preliminary negotiation? with the railroad have begun to relocate the depot west of West Wide Track, south of Auburn, he said. ALMOST ADULATORY The reaction to the pFahs and ideas expressed by Davidson, Chernick and Skelton was almost adulatory. The audience rose once to give the planners, especially Davidson, a standing ovation and clapped frequently. ■' * * * , Warren said the City Commission has reviewed the plans. There are important details to work out but the commission is " enthusiastic and hopeful that the plan can be brought to fruition, he said. ★ ♦ ★ • Other comments: Joseph E. Neipling director of public works and service, said: “Here is a real attempt to make the auto subservient to BIRMINGHAM — The summer vacation reading program at Baldwin Public Library will feature the HemisFair Exposition, being held this summer in San Antonio, Tex. All youngsters who have finished at least the second grade are eligible to participate, provided they have library ( cards for either Baldwin or Bloomfield Township Public Library. ★ ★ ★ The reading program, scheduled to last six weeks, will begin June 24 and end Aug. 2. Reading material and information on reading club rules will be available prior to the beginning of the program. completed. Davidson said it would take five years to complete the plan. ★ * * He allowed two years for completion of design and specifications and three years, hopefully, for all construction. Skelton, in ticking off strong points of NATIONAL weather — Showers and thundershowers are forecast from the south and central Plains through the central Mississippi, Ohio and Tennessee valleys to the Great Lakes. Rain is also likeJy to develop east of the central Rockies. Area Citizens Mark Flap Day Area citizens are marking the 181st anniversary of the official adoption of the U S. flag today. Flag Day ceremonies are being conducted throughout the nation while homes, shops and other buildings are decorated with the Stars and Stripes. ' ★ *.......■ *________ The David Belisle Post 1008 of the Veterans of Foreign Wars is planning a ceremony'^at the Pontiac Man. Many organizations will put flags on display du^ng a massing of flags at 7 p.m. Short speecheFbn the origin oOheAmerican flag are being given today. Chief Pontiac Post 337 is raismg-»-flag" at.their post at 4918 Edgewood which will stay up until thefVietham war is over. Flag Day was first observed on Jqne 14, 1877, to mark the 100th anniversary of the national banner. It was not'until 1916, however, that the observance became an annual celebration. Dr. John Ylvisaker, a surgeon and developer of apartment complexes: **’We have to applaud Don and the developer .. and give it (the plan) the proper support that it deserves,” WOULD BE BEAUTIFUL E. Eugene Russell, president of the^ Pontiac Area Chamber of Commerce and district manager of Michigan Bell Co,, said, “I think wp could have one of the most beautiful cities in the United States.” * * *■ Ken Morris, regional director of the UAW: “Obviously an extremely wonderful project, beautiful . . . nobody can deny that.” “I for one certainly thank the developer for this kind of project.” ASSET TO BUSINESS Meyer Simon, a downtown businessman: “'This will certainly be an asset to all businesses up and down Saginaw.” Chernick was publicly named as the developer last night. The city manager-said the staff has the highest respect for him. * * ■* “We’re quite sure when he says the plan is realistic he really means it and can carry it forth.” He said (3iernick’s father was founder of a firm which has broad experience in construction, one involved in large, more djmaified-and-nTOre-sopbistieatedHPTOj------- ects.” The board of directors of MacManus, John and Adams, Inc., has appointed former area resident Donald M. Mahl-meister as a senior vice president. In announcing the appointment Ernest A. Jones, board . chairman, said | Mahlmeister, manager of the company’s Chicago office for the past 18 j months, would con- ! tinue to serve in that capacity. Mahlmeister pre- [ viously worked over [ 18 years at the com-pany’s Bloomfield | Hills headquarters. MAHLMEISTER He joined the firm in 1948 as a copywriter, following graduation from the prior service as a bomber pilot in World War II. He was active in a number of community organizations, including Catholic Social Services of Oakland County, the United Foundation, and Meadow Brook Theater, School Vole Certified The Pontiac Schools Board of Canvassers has certified as correct Monday’s election results in which Christopher C. Brown was elected to the board of education. No changes were made in the individual vote totals. Autobahn Tie-Up Seen BERLIN size. Limit 6 rolls of film. So Compact, It Fits in Pop’s Pocket -Yet Takes Full Size SUPER 8 MOVIES - New KODAK M12 Every day in the U.S. some 480,000 tons of paper, cans, bottles, garbage and related items are discarded. A softly.glowing gas lamp adds a nostalgic touch wherever it is placed! A handsome gas post lamp adds beauty and charm to any home. Its soft, ever-present radiance provides a warm welcome for guests —and a reassuring protection against intruders. Gas lamps are available in a variety of styles—from the Gay Nineties to ultramodern. 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Get it on instant credit with a major credit card I Precision Camera Tripods Compact Tripod 3 Sections 479 16®* Priniz model 585 —o sturdy compact tripod for movie and still cameras. Ponder and Best #1107 tripod for movie and still comeros. Fold* into 3 sections for corrying. A regular $27.95 value - Save $12.97. 'POP' This PORTABLE RADIO ... POLICE CALLS and AM Broadcasts $29.50 Value —'Highwave' model PV208 for local police calls and AM broadcasts. Get it for DAD — he'll hear the news as it happens. Simms Has the Largest Selection of PORTABLE TRANSISTOR RADIOS 1798 SEE YOUR GAS APPLIANCE DEALER Court Bill Seems Mixed Blessing to Lapeer Area Governmental Units By TOM GRAY LAPEER—The state lower court reorganization bili; needing only Gov. Romney’s signature to come law, appears to be a mbced blessing for governmental units in this area. While city officials w<^ about the loss of revenue the bill, passed by both houses of the legislature, could cause, Lapeer County’s presiding justice, Circuit Court Judge James P. Churchill, Is pleased by its provision for an additional judge in the circuit.-- Churchill said he had detailed the need for a second judge in the overloaded circuit to Rep. Roy J. Spencer, R-Attica, who promised to seek authorization for the provision. At the city level, however, the proposed bill has thrown a roadblock in the path of an effort to create a municipal court here. City Manager Arnold Whitney had ifrged that Lapeer set up its own court, so that money received from traffic and parking cases by justices of the peace would not be lost when the justices are abolished by the district court system. But under the bill, the city would be part of a “first-class district,’’ and thus barred from having "h " municipal court. Assistant Manager Harold Rose said Lapeer should continue to get some revenue from court cases, but ^*we don’t know yet just how it’s going to be allocated. “The big problem,’’ Rose added, “is what will happen on parking meter fines.’’ The city depends on those fines, he explained, for payments on a $115,000 bond issue us^ to finance the development and paving of municipal parking lots. The two Judgn in the 40th Circuit which includes Lapeer and Tuscola Titninties, will be paid $18,000 apiece a year by the state. The new judge will be elected for a six-year term in November, with a primary in August if three or more candidates file for election. Ex-Teacher Asks bake Orion School Curricula Report Court facilities and pay for mag'' istrates named by the judges wfli be provided by the counties. Foyr Road Projects to Begin in County Nearly $1 million in road improvements will begin next week in four separate Oakland County projects. Slated to begin Monday, the County Road Commission announced that a total of 4.1 miles of pavement will be installed on roads in Bloomfield Township, Birmingham, Southfield, Lathrup Village, Novi Village and Farmington Township. Over a mile of Novi Road in the village of Novi is slated for two lanes of concrete pavement which is supposed to be completed by November. The strip, between 1-96 and 12\i Mile will also be widmed to five lanes at the 12 Mile Road intersection. , To be constructed by Sterling Garrett, it will cost almost $175,000. In Bloomfield Township and Birmingham, a half-mile stretch of Cranbrook between 14 Mile and Lincoln wil receive ? two lanes of concrete pavement. Sterling Garrett Contracting Co. will handle the $157,000 job which is scheduled for completion in October. RESURFACING, WIDENING In Southfield and Lathrup Village, 12 Mile between Southfield .Road and Greenfield will be resurfaced and widened with four-kne pavemenV curbs^—any^ of the affected roads, according t and gutters. the Road Commission. John Carlo, Inc., is expected to com- However, access for local traffic will plete the $378,000 project in November. be maintained, he said. FARMINGTON ’TOWNSHIP , ;’ lV Farmington, Powers, between 10 'M8e‘ Road and 11 Mile and 11 Mile between Powers and Orchard Lake Road will receive two lanes of asphalt surfacing. D. J. McQuestion & Son will handle the - $19SJ)^ j^ of major intersections. No detours have been established for THE PONTIAC PRESS FRIDAY. JUNE 14, 1968 LAKE ORION - Queattontlig Of Likr Orion schools policy moved Into the area of curricula this week as Mrs. Constance Krajicek, a former teacher, appeared before the board of education. She was promised an evaluation of the whole program as it pertains to college entrance requirements. w ! w ★ Supt. of Schools Lewis Mundy told Mrs, Krajicek, the lone visitor at the recent board meeting, that the schools have been accredited by the North Central Association of Secondary Schools .since 1930. Mundy said that Lake Orion students have had no trouble gaining admittance to college. PROGRAMS FOR ALL He said the curricula necessarily attempt to provide programs for all students whether they pursue college or go to work, and that the district is bound by the funds available as to the depth and variety of programs offered. Wolverine Lake Adopts Budget WOLVERINE LAKE - The Village Council has adopted the 1968-W budget proposed by Village Manager Clifford Cottrell. Although there is no hike planned in the currenUy levied 8.5 mills, expenditures and revenues are antlclpated'fo Be $41,032 more than last year. The budget goes into effect July 1. It includes the following salary increases; • village manager, $300 more for a total of $10,500; clerk, $600 more for $5,850) treasurer, $640 more for $5,040; and police chief, $1,200 more for $6,500 including benefits. An expenditure of $115 per month is earmarked for a life insurance and weekly indemnity program for village MALL NEWCOMER — While a construcUon strike has stalled progress on Bonwit Teller’s new store in Troy, the ffan» ls~m ipIace.Tle fw^^ a part of the Somerset Mall Shopping Center, was scheduled originally for completion this fall. It will include 82,000 square feet of mer- FIFTH POLICEMAN changing ^ inventony space. Also planned for the center is an interior section, to contain some 35 additional stores. Hearing Planned on Gravel-Mining Plea other Increased expenditures are for roads and a fifth full-6me policeman. The major revenue increase is $6,000 from the state income tax rebate. In°other recent action, the council approved a change in the water fees. OAKLAND 'TOWNSHIP — The question if whether sand and gravel mining will be allowed in the Dequindre-lnwood-Hixon roads area is again under consideration. , A public hearing under the township’s year-old conservation ordinance is due in the near future, according to Supervisor George Lyon. The applicant this time is Lyon Sand and Gravel (no relation tb the supervisor) of Detroit, which has reportedly purchased the 200 acres involved from Cooper Supply Co., a division of Texas I ndustries. A court case questioning the township's refusal two years ago to rezone to allow mining is still pending in the courts. 'The former owner asked the court to overrule the township board in its decision to retain residential zoning and thereby prohibit mining. LIMITED ACTIVITY The conervation ordinance provides for limited activity in the.reclamation of land. Under it the decision on whether to issue a permit is based on the findings of a public hearing. ★ ★ Richard J. Cole, 3785 Locust, has been appointed new Civil Defense director, replacing the late Clarence Williams. QUARTERLY CHARGE Gives $10,000 for Accreditatibn Study ’The ordinance amendment calls for a quarterly flat charge of $5 with an indoor meter and 16 cents for each 1,000 gallons of water used. The previous fee was $6 minimum for 16,000 gallons. ORCHARD LAKE - A $10,000 gift has been donated by an alumnus to help St. Mary’s (College obtain accreditation from the North Central Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools. Installation Near Also being considered is a fire ordinance which would prohibit open burning without a permit. It provides for penalties of up to $500. The gift will help pay personnel to make a study of the school’s program for application for accreditation. The new method of charging will benefit the resident who is away from his home for a long period, explained Cottrell. Those residents can now save $1, or not pay any charges if they have their meter taken out of their house while they are away, Cottrell said. LAND REZONED The council also rezoned 3.5 acres for multiples on the west side of South Commerce south of Glengary for developer Edward Muzyezuk. for Lions Officers New officers of the Wixom-Walled Lake Lions Club will be installed tomorrow evening at Thompson’s County Inn, 2635 E. Highland, Highland Township. Deputy District Gov. Ralph Alexander of the Birmin^am Lions Club will in- H. ' "y. -•« ' "'r ’ stall the following officers: -Herbert ^ ’ '' ^ Abrams, president; David Goodwin, first' mm ^ - vice president: Dr. I. W. Scheel, second vice president; Laula Loveless, third vice president; Robert Wicht, secretary; HISTORY GATHERERS — Mrs. Cecil Liestman (right) and Mrs. Hiram Terry {Robert Smith, treasurer; and Louis - compare notes on the information they are compiling for a Leonard information James and Benjamin Schneider, direc-sheet. Designed for presentation to newcomers, it tells the^ histoy ^n178 for Hunter; i|i2,8l4 for Blosser; $15,351 for Conklin; and $12,844 for Domalske. In other recent action, the Huron Valli^ ichool board adopted policies regaling administrates. HIGHLAND TOWNSHIP - This community’s tax bills for December will be figured by computers. This first for Highland Township costs $3,200, the fee for use of the Oakland County computers, the Township Board has learned. The Township Board also has raised Assessor Clarence Forgette’s salary from $8,400 to $9,800 including car expenses and renewed his contract Tor one-year. The board offered $6,000 for purchase of property on Livingston south of the post office for the new fire station. The parcel is vacant and owned by Roscoe Smith. The board judged that the township treasury lacks the funds and resident may have to pay through special assessments. The board designated itself to appoint the study cbminittee. No dates were set for completion of the study or for when a final decision will be made. • not more than one person on a cycle at a time, • the operator or rider to wear a crash helmet, • not more than two cycles riding in one lane. CHANGE IN SCHOOLS Sanford Burton, currently Baker prin- cipal, will head Milford Elementary School next year, with the resignation of Douglas Nichols. Walter Domalske, another administrative intern, is to be assistant HEARING PROVIDED Adopted a dismissal procedure entitling Bdndni^tors to an open or closed hearing not less than 15 days or more than 30 days after he gets formal written netiHcation, including reasons for the dismissal. The adihinistratbrs’ requests, for two-year contracts (currently contracts are one-year) were tabled until the new superintenent takes over from ’lYuman Owens, in the next month, Nine' Oakland County 4-H Club members are attending the 1968 State 4-H Youth Wdek at Michigan State University through tomorrow. ' They are Sue Butin’ and Brenda White „pf Oxford, Sue Becker, Connie McKay, Katheryn Smith and Randy lid - of Ortonvilie, Cheryl Scott of Lake Orion, Bonnie Peace of Ifolly and Biran Hoxie of Bloomfield Township. ★ ir ir The delegates, totaling 1,000 state youths, are discussing their goals and dreams, Investigating the use and abuse of drugs, and seeking ways of improving themselves. ★ * * * Area leaders assisting in the program arc Robert Huntopn of Rochester, Marlane Miller of Holly and Judy Mirakian of Lake Orion. Mrs. Harold White of Oxfwd accompanied the county group. REPORTJOTICIFATED^ NO ESTIMATES No cost estimates or constructiepwat estimates for the station Jjaw been made, said Township Glertr^frs. Norma-gean Waters. — Iwo^Bids for garbage diaposal service were tabled for a committee study of financing. The board agreed to let the Highland chapter of WHAR (Why Have Awful Roads) know when the township road committee has a report ready on. the., use of the 2 mills levied for roads In the township. The WHAR chapter had requested a public meeting on the use of the 2 mills. Violation penalties are $100 fine and/ on 90 days in jail. —lf-and-;wh^Bomfr-^-the-ordinance provisions may be declared unconstitutional by the State Supreme Court, the township will delete thern from the ordinance, said a township spokesman. Ortonvilie Holdinjg Its Garnival Days Passed was a motorcycle ordinance including provisions requiring:------^ • dealers not to rent, lease or furnish motorcycles to a nonUcensed operator; UAWMAN HIRED Hired to enforce this ordinance and all other township ordinances was Ora Jones, 3245 Central. The wages are $100 and $50 for car^xpenses per month. He Begihis a three-month trial period. ORTONVILLE - The Ortonvilie carnival days, sponsored by the local Jay-cees, are umler way in this village and will last through tomorrow. ’The traditional celebration includes kiddy rides, sidewalk sales, and helicopter rides. The copter rides are at the Ford Agency, 968 M15, outside the village. /Alsdapproved was th^Michigan Township Asfociation Retirement plan for eight township employes. The affair also features the crowning of the Ortonvilie Queen, chosen frwn area teen-age girls, tonight at 8. Model-Plane Contest Is Se#— UITCA — TBe Exchange Clubs of Michigan will hold toejr annual (Jut-1 door Mode! Aviation Contest Sunday at the Fwd Utica Test Track, located on Van Dyke between ^ and 23 Mile. Awards and trophies will be presented to each age group in the 25 events, ranging from the simple hand-launched glider to the advanced radio-controlled models. Fliers from Michigan, Ohio, Illinois and Canada will compete for trophies in the meet, the second largest in the United States. As in the past, the meet will be cosponsored by the Exchange Clubs Council of Metropolitan Detroit, Michigan District Exchahge Ciubt^ Ford Mptor Co. and the Civil ^r Patrol. ' DEMONSTRA'nON SET The meet will start at 9a.m. and end with a demonstration of model flying by the Livonia Parks and Recreation • Rib Crackers Club, scheduled from 4-5 p.m. - The-meet will be open telhcpub-iic. Refreshments will be available and there is no admission charge. -C ,, - THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, JUNE 14, 1968 1“ Fora smoshing victory, choose Dad's gift in Hudson's Men's Stove A Arrow traditional button-down collar shirt »■ with short-sleeved comfort Permanent press; polyester-and-cotton; contour-styled. White, blue, maize or green;' sizes 14'^ to 17. Hudson's Men's Furnishings............$6 i B Donegal permanent press, soil release sport ■ shirt makes a neat public appearance. Spread collar; full-cut fpr comfort. Blue, green, maize checks; polyester/cotton. S-M-L-XL Hudson's Men's Casual Furnishings.....$B CA popular choice in casual slacks. Tradi-■ tional styling, belt loops and wash-and-wear^olyester-and Jine ^maT^cotton. Blue, ^ green, orange and sun yellow. In regular waist sizes. Hudson's Men's Casual Wear.....$17 A winning combination—Puritan styling MMm and Ban-Lon* knit nylon. Mock turtleneck, short sleeves; machine-wash-and-dryable. White, black, blue, green and s^jn; S-M-L-XL. Hudson's Men's Casual Furnishings.....$9 E Hudson's own cigars of finely cut tobacco. ■ Mild, double-wrapped in a cedar box of 50. Golden Panatela, 6.25; Golden Palmas, 7^50. F English Leather by Mem is a scent that's ■ very definitely masculine but subtle. Eveiy-body enjoys it—the wearer and those around him. All-purpose lotion, $4; set of all-purpose lotion, shower soap, deodorant stick—5.75. PONTIAC MALL NORTHLAND CENTER EASTLAND CENTER Telegraph and Elizabeth Lake Road 8 Mila and Northwestern 8 Mile and Kelly Roads WESTLAND CENTER Warren and Wayne Roads DOWNTOWN DETROIT Woodward Ave. and Grand River HudsorT^Men's Accessories GPart of a comfort campaign—short-sleeved, ■ knee-length pajamas. Permanent press _polyester-and-cotton in blue, gold or green. A-B-C-D; Hudson's Men's Furnishings-----$6 HIJJ-JDS O 3NT ’ Pontiac open Monday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday till 9 P. M. THE PONTIAC PRESS it West Huron Street FRIDAY, JUNE 14, 1968 Joint W. PriMnuii SxMutIn Vic* Prti r *nd nn*oc* Pontiac, Michigan 48058 n AdvtrtUlnt Mtnti*^ William S. Downes With the death of William S. Downes at 79, the community loses a highly respected citizen whose local residence spanned r than a half- V M, \ cenfury. A naturalized American citizen born in Wakefield, ^England, Mr. I Downes had long I been identified with I the millwork indus-»try in Pontiac, and DOWNES in 1936 established The Pontiac Millwork Co. Reflecting his indomitable spirit was the decision to immediately rebuild the plant when it was destroyed by fire seven years ago. Mr. Downes’ intense preoccupation with his business, however, did not preclude active participation in civic, fraternal and ecclesiastic affairs of the City. He had also been accorded national recognition for his involvement with the Architectural Woodwork Institute. .Although his forthright, outspoken personality at times involved him in controversy, Mr. Downes’ integrity and deep interest in the public welfare were distinguishing characteristics. His passing saddens a wide circle of friends and acquaintances. McDonald Needed on Capitol Hill Don't Just; Recite It—Live It! On the premise that one good term deserves another, we give hearty approval to Congressman Jack McDonald’s an-^^ nounced candidacy for another term as representative of the 19th District. The freshman con- ^ gressman has made^ his presence felt in a positive mannerl on Capitol Hill,! standing for reduc-i tion of nonessential Government spending while supporting outlays for constructive, locally-administered solutions to major domestic problems. it it a McDonald had an earlier introduction to government prior to his becoming a member of the Nation’s legislative body, having served as chairman of the Wayne County BpardjaLSp^rt, visors. The familiarity thus gained with urban problems led to his appointment to a special Republican Task Force on Urban Affiiirs. Additionally, as a member of the House Public Works Committee, he has pushed legislative proposals aimed at tightening safety measures on Federal-aid highways. ★ ★ ★' Never has the Country stood in greater need of qualified conscientious lawmakers than in these critical times. Congressman McDonald amply reflects the specifications and is worthy the support of a well-served constituency. David Lawrence Says: YoteraAre^iii Mood for Change LAWRENCE Better Drivers Key to Better Highway Statistics “It is becoming increasingly clear that this enemy is fully as devious, ruthless and catastrophic as any our society has ever faced. This war — and it is truly a desperate war—is one that threatens far more than our front-line heroes. It threatens entire families ... everyone.^’^ The speaker is Howard Pyle, president of the National Safety Council, and he is, of course, talking about death on the highways. Fatalities for the first three months of 1968 were 6 per cent above the first quarter of 1967. ★ ★ ★ Oifly 28 statM, he cdmplains,^^ have adopted implied consent laws guaranteeing scientific evidence in court cases involving alcohol. (Michigan passed such a law last year.) Only 31 states have made periodic vehicle inspection mandatory. (Michigan passed, also last year, a watered-down inspection law based on a spot check by State Police.) Only 31 states require periodic reexamination for driver licenses. Unfortunately, Pyle’s words, for all their vivid coloration, simply will not register with most people, least of all those who do not drive safely. them too many times. And with all due respect to the Safety Council, realistically it is doubtful that even if the remaining 15 to 22 states passed all these laws there would be any startling change in the dismal statistics. ★ ★ ★ These things must be done, of cburse, plus the constant improvement of automobile and highway design. But not until some way is found to improve the quality of people driving cars, while ruling off the road those mentally and emotionally unfit for such responsibility, will there be any significant decrease in the spiraling traffic toll. WASHINGTON - In an election year, there is always talk about the votes of young people, of various ethnic and e e 0 n omic groups, and of the disadvan-t a g e d whites or Negroes. This time, it isn’t just a matter of “left wing” or ‘.‘right wing” or which candidate makes a b e 11 e r appearance on television. The real guide of what’s going to happen in the national election is to be found in the grassroots conversations that are being heard today. I the key to the mood majority of the more than 70 million voters is in a simple conversation, which again and again runs about like this; ★ * ★ “Q—Who are you going to vote for this year? “A—I don’t know who’s running. “A—Yes. And if the guys we vote into office, both for president and Congress, don’t do a good job, we’ll switch again next time.” ★ ★ * This kind of conversation is being repeated all over the country — in cities and small towns, in suburban and rural areas. It expresses a reaction which has come again and again whenever there is widespread discontent. There is no great reliance on platforms and pronouncements, and it doesn’t much matter who the nominees are. ★ ★ ★ A miracle could occur in the five months before election day. The Democrats could see their own weaknesses and realize they are going to be soundly defeated unless they stop haggling about who is responsible for the disorder and taking no action for fear of antagonizing this or that group. SINGLE-MINDEDNESS The people want a new setup, and they have been told that the “people ryle.” As many as can get to the polls this year will be voting with one mind — to get rid of the riots and disturbances and to bring safety back to their homes pen^.h^ for criminals. R. D. RUSHING 622 N. PERRY Bob Considine Says: ‘Dear Gen. Hershey,..’ Goes Letter to Newsman NEW YORK - The strangest things pop out of a reporter’s mail. “Dear Gen. Hershey,” some one recently wrote to newsman Hershey, “0—Are you a Republican or a Democrat? “Qt_i’ve been a Democrat for a long time, but with all that’s happening now — a man can’t take his family out at night Jot Jear of ^assaulU^i^ thoF of “Get robbery - the government the Boys out of ought to do somethmg about it. But it hasn’t got the guts. KNOWS NOTHING “Q—Do you know anything about the Republican candidates — who they are and whether they would do any better? “A—I haven’t the faintest idea. I hear a lot about their speeches, but when I go to the polls I’m not going to think about any names. the Trenches'’ (Pyramid Books) “Please send me one of, your books.” “She’ll get a I shock when she I learns I’m not Gen. Hershey Service,” Burnet told us at the dedication of the Edward R. Murrow Library at the Overseas Press Club.” reconstructed by Burnet (not Gen.) Hershey. Did a satirical piece for “This Week” recently about presidents I’ve lived under. At least I thought it was satirical. Running down the list I wrote that I seemed to have lost my notes on President Tom Dewey. ★ ★ * “Thomas E. Dewey was never elected president,” a lady writes tartly from San Francisco. “I’m surprised at your ignorance. He was defeated by Franklin Roosevelt and later by Harry Truman. Shame on you.” Well, you learn something ^every day. ‘User of Guns Is Responsible for Killings’ Everyone agrees that the killing of Robert Kennedy was senseless, useless and sickens any right-thinking citizen. To accuse an inahimate object such as a gun as the perpetrator is about as stupid as you can get. The way to attack the problem is through the user of a gun in crime. The parole boards return criminals to our streets to kill again. The police can’t even arrest the criminal until they read him a book about his rights. We need to go back to capital punishment for any criminal who kills in the commission of a crime. I would advocate the same medicine for thd possession of a gun during any criminal activity. * ★ ★ Foreign countries that the Communists occupied daring World War II kept registration lists of which citizens owned guns. As soon as the invaders came they picked them np. I think Communists are behind attempte to disarm the citizens so when they are ready to take over it will bo easy. ★ ★ ★ Switzerland has never been invaded. Every male citizen, upon reaching a certain age, is given a gun and a supply of ammo. He is taught to use this gun and keep It ready for instant use to defend his country. Switzerland has the lowest crime rate in the world and has never been conquered because no invader cares to face those well-manned guns. HOMER COSS 120 STARR Replies to Statement That Nation Is Sick In reply to the statement on the Nation being sick, there is only one answer—there are too many ministers that would be politicians and too many politicians that would l6ce to be Abraham Lincolns. However, they will never make It because they cannot put the words together like “Ole Abe” could. EDWARD WIER Question and Answer Will the new school aid biU signed by Gov. Romney alter the Waterford School Board’s declsioa to reduce the school day and teaching staff? MRS. M. H. LEINENGER 294 S. ASCOT REPLY Mr. Giddis at the Board office says the district will receive about $25 more per student than last year. Although part of that was anticipated, the extra amount will be enough to keep elementary schools on full days. However, secondary classes and staff will be reduced. vote. Housing Law Reflects Local Stance By biCK SAUNDERS . Pontiac voters are going to decide the fate of a iocal open housing ordinance June 24. One big question in the minds of ; many is: Why do we need a local dpen mains. What purpose does it ^erve to merely^ rubber stamp ah already adopTeTstateTa^ Isn’t it jiist worthless duplication? ★ * ★ It might be duplication to a degree, but it most certainly isn’t worthless. This may be the greatest have been adopted at the state and SAUNDERS national levels? The best answer I can think of is: Why not? It was passed in Congress, in the State Legislature, in Flint, Birmingham, Plymouth and Saginaw. Why should it be defeated here? There were enough people of good will to vote for it in these other places. There’s 0 reason to assume we don’ housing Taw opportunity that Pontiac now that open Citizens will ever have to housing laws shov/ IH^are concerheiTwith the plight of minority groups. It is our turn to stand up and be counted. With something as simple as one affirmative vote, the white citizen can prove he or she really cares about those things we call freedom and equality. population because it is the ovywhelmiiig r a c i a Ljia»-jority. This whole thing is really a massive and vital people-to-people project. ★ ★ ★ A local open housing ordinance, drafted by local government and enforced by His book is about Henry Ford’s ’‘Peace Ship,” the chartered liner Oscar II on which the industrialist and 150 professional pacifists, correspondents and assorted odd-it from the president Fown^—halls—sailed for —just as I voted four years Dec. 4, 1915. Hershey, at 19, ago for the names listed for was the youngest reporter on Paragould (Ark.) Daily Press “Q—How will you then? “A—I’ll just look for the Republican-party list on the ballot and vote for everybody on Reviewing Other Editorial Pages One Voice The juspicious Chinese bor-announcemwarnir was, looked at his plain the Corps said, “subject to Canadian passport and com- Pontiac’s Negroes need to know jwhere they stand—not -with Washington, D.C., or Lansing — but where they stand with you, their neighbors. And let’s not kid ourselves -have as many people^^..goorito flov and "IT'S , coolTum^rtime sippin' big LIET" Troatl HOMO-MILK 15" Homogenized Glass Vi Container Gal. Everyday Flus K Low Prie^^^ Dsgssit ICE CREAM SALE Strawberry AAarshmallow Reg. 79< FUDGESICLES 24 Pak 99^ . V Reg. 140 y SALE > CHOCOLATE MILK Flavorful Refroshing |c ICE CREAM HALF GAL CARTON 4^ Greamy-Rich— JUNE ^ fruit FEATURE r drinks FLAVOR Peaches 'n'Cream Ice Cream Orange — Lemon -Fruit Punch Cool & Refreshing Vt Gal. Plastic Jug Me Val. RICHARDSON.E. f)H.ld M lb Cl.ukslOM 434r’ Dime Hwy, Vib Comnu'.c.' Rn.td Dr.iyton Pl.ntv, I ISO Hifhl.ind Oicli.ird Lk, Rd M b') Pl.i/.t Ldke ,ni.l Hu.on ,.l ^'00 BoKIwm Avc, Ponti.ic (1,^. L H() 1109 Joslyn Avo, Ponti.ic had Indicated the demands he considered most Important. APPARENT IMPORTANCE Daily speeches by leaders of ethnic factions Within the campaign had made it Appear that storming the doors of the U.S. Supreme Court carried jjust as much weight as issuing free food stamps. Abernathy made clear at his news conference that he was aware of this situation when he said; ‘Within the past few weeks some confusion has arisen due to statements made or allegedly made by representatives of the Poor People’s Campaign. ★ * ★ "Because ours is a democratic people’s movement, representatives of the black, Mexican-American, Indian, Puerto Rican and white poor have felt free to express themselves to a degree not normally afforded them in our society. We thinli there is something healthy in this ... CONFUSION UNDERSTANDABLE "At the same time, we can understand how the press and the public may at Limes be confused by what may be . . . conflicting points of view.’’ Abernathy added he is the! only offiaal spokesmaa jQc..thei campaign and is trying to bring' more discipline into demonstrations and other Resurrection City activities. ★ ★ * Some of that discipline was evideflt Wednesday, when in the first demonstration in more than a week, speeches were few jand to the point, rival leaders did not feud publicly, and picket signs, telling curious bystanders what the issues were, made their first appearance. With the exception of three aimed specifically at Congress, Abernathy said, 90 per cent of them could be granted by federal agencies without new legislation. BILL PASSAGE SOUGHT Congress, original focus of the campaign, was asked to pr bill to create jobs such as the one pending by Sen. Joseph S. Clark, D-Pa., pass the pending housing bill, and repeal the 1967 Social Security amendment freezing the number of families eligible for Aid to Dependent Children. The other priority demands dealt with almost every area of government, from child care and school segregation to studying land and fishing rights claimed by Mexican-Americans and Indians. * ★ * The main emphasis was on giving more of America’s surplus food to its own poverty-stricken people. i\ vrb-.. AAen's short sleeve Penn-Prest never-iron pajamas . . . for Dads' day! choose from prints, paisleys, plaids. 65% dacron Polyetter, 35% combed cotton with contrast trims. Choose from short sleeve/long leg, long sleeve/long leg in many new handsome shades for dad. AAen's sizes s,m,l,xl. Colors of blue, maize, green, sand, med. blue. 398 498 V®!'' ''‘sKX AAen's terrycloth bath and beach robes! J98 Basic solid colors of blue, spice. It. blue, maize green, red, white. 100% cotton terrycloth with shawl collar. Sizes s, m, I. PENNEYS AAIRACLEAAILE CHARGE ITI THRin CENTER for it yourself* projects! 6-FOOT PIQNIC TABLES Need a ,,, BUILDER’S SUPPLIES for every plan and purpose! • Kiln Dried Lumber • One Set Artistic Wrought Iron Legs • All Bolts (knock down) REDWOOD *26*' B& Sure You Get Our Price BEFORE YOU BUY- Fret _E»timMt§ Chttrfiilly Given oh Site Garages—Phone a contplete package of quality material We specialize in Garage materials — our large quantity buying makes these values possible. All Kiln Dried Lumber INCLUDES; • Plates e Rafters e All Ext. Trim e Nails e No. 1 Kiln Dried Douglas Fir Studs e Roof Boards • Premium Grade No. 106 Siding e Shingles e Cross Ties * Window ALL STUDS IS” ON CENTER OABLI ROOF ALL MATUIALS VOR ABIC 22i24 2 insurance companies. Ranking by “sales’’ wouldn’t work for commercial banks, and insurance edmpanies. Ranking by “sales” wouldn’t work for commercial banks, and “profits” would be excluded by mutual life Insurance companies. American T^lephnne & Telegraph is first on this list, with $37.6 billion in assets, followed by Prudential Insurance with $25.1 billion and Metropolitan Life Insurance with $24.6 billion. GM ranks 8th with $13.3 billion assets, Jersey Standard is 7th with $15.2 bijlion and Ford is 15th with about $8 billion. -Junior Editors Quiz on QUESTION: What makes an ocean wave move? ANSWER: Waves are formed by the wind pushing up the water surface (upper left). Notice the round white spot, which represents a free floating barrel or buoy. To the right, the crest of the wave has moved on, but the buoy is still In place, showing that it is not the water which moves forward but rather the push or momentum. When the wave moves up to a shelving beach, however, the case is different (lower left). Instead of being waves of oscillation, with the water moving up and down, or in a small circle, these become translation waves, with the water actually moving ahead. But the friction of the shelving bottom slows the water layers nearest to it (lower left). The upper layers of water then peak un and become so high that they topplfjoyer wm a roar, creating masses of sudsy white foam, as shown by the main picture. Here a young man comes riding In on his surfboard. This is a thrilling sport. A surfer lies down on his board and paddles out beyond the w*ve line, then stands up and comes riding In. (You can win $10 cash plus AP's haniisome World Year-" book if your question, mailed on a postcard to Junior Editors in care of this newspaper, is selected for a prize.) 22FT. NOFROST SIDE-BY-SIDE • Hugt 312 lb. frttzar • Ejactor trays • Huga porcelain crispar • Maot kaapar & agg rack • Sliding shalvat NO MONIT Mr OVER 5,000 AIR CONDITIONERS SALE PRICED NOW! • Tamparaturp Control • Hugo Poicolain Crispar • Egg Storage • High Capacity Deer Sholvas a 103 lb. Capacity No-Frost Frooxor a Slido-butSholvos SPICIM a TwinSlido-OutCrispors laaoir aPoreolainMootPon FWCjify. a Built-In Egg Storogo a PorcolaiR*Dn-Stool4ritoriorA8falls @Westlnghouse 5,000 BTU AIR CONDITIONER a Lightweight—only 59 Ibt. a Lifotimo washable filter a 2 fan speeds for high and lew cool NOMONIYDOWN 3YIARSTOPAY. NOPAYMINYS 'TIlSiPT. @WOsHnghouse Sl'ding Window AIR CONDITIONERS a tegular 115 volt outlet a Quiet 2 speed fan a Install in minutes NOMONIYDOWN 5;500 BTU NOPAYMINYS *711 SIPY. $17995 t.000 btu^209 Emerson 115 Volt Giont 14,000 BTU AIR CONDITIONER a Largest cooling capacity in 115 volt uniti e Factory equipped installation e Push button controls e Slide-out chossis o Automatic thermostat a Permanent washable filter NOMONIYDOWN 3YIARSTOPAY NOPAYMINYS 'TIIIIPT. $ 279 Emerson 18J)00 BTU and 24,000 BYU AIR CONDITIONERS a Super cooling capacity for the big cooling jobs e Super quiet operation o Factory oquippod installation o Filters all air of all impurities 0 Automatic thermostat 11,000 BTU 24,000 BTU CAPACITY CAPACITY «259 «349 HUGE SELECTION OF AUTO. WASHERS SPECIALLY PRICED FOR QUICK SALE Miirlpool 2-Sboed, 4-Cydo Giant Automatic 1Mb. WASHER O 4 washing cycles a 2 washing speeds a 5 water temp selectiens a Magic Clean® self-cleaning lint filter FRETTER ] APPLIANCE I COMPANY A—14 THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAV. JUNE 14. 1968 3 Wounded in Holdup Try Officer, Motorist and Suspect Hit in Detroit DETROIT (AP) — Three persons were wounded Thursday in the attempted holdup of a branch of the National Bank of Detroit. Wounded were a Detroit policeman, a motorist and one of the four persons scheduled for arraignment this morning in U.S. District Court at Detroit. A bag containing $9,928 was dropped inside the bank in the exchange of gunfire. A bank spokesman said three persons entered the Russeli and Erskine branch at about 1:40 p.m. and announced the holdup. The money was taken from various tellers’ cages and placed in the bag. As the men prepared to leave one glanced outside and said, “We re surrounded” /lAOIVTGOAAERY There'll Come a day! Air Conditioning for every room! ENCIRCLE BUILDING Police, answering an alarm, had encircled the building. Sgt. ‘ Joseph Ferrick, 48, was wounded in the ieg in the exchange of gunfire which left several bullet holes in the bank buiid-ing. ! A motorist passing by outside was struck by a wiid shot. One of the four captured men was treated for two gunshot wounds after hiis capture aboirt four ; blocks from the bank, police said. None of the wounds was beiieved serious, police said. The FBI identified the menj as James Day, Alien Spears, Edward L. Spears and John Westmore, ail believed to be from Detroit. A Detroit poiice lieutenant, James Shadweil. one of the men sent in answer to .the aiarm, said it was the first time he has been actively involved in a bank robbery. “It’s rather disconcerting to i get shot at,^’ he said. L Sale! Signature 5.800 BTU model WILL FIT BOTH SLIDING AND PULL Down WINDOWS »|69*s BREWER DRAIN ------ ,...______ construcli... .. , BREWER DRAIN in the City of Pontiac, Oakland County, Michigan, will be re-J ceivcd by the DRAINAGE BOARD for] the BREWER DRAIN at the office of I Daniel W. Barry, Drain Commissioner, d^Coynty^ Mlchigan, _5S0_S. Tel^ This unit cools an area up to 265 square feet and it is the easiest-to-install model made Automatic thermostat with its handy pushbutton controls — just set and then forget it The compressor noise remains outside foi’ silent cooling, but the cool comfort is inside ' A fine furniture front panel removes for easy access to washable air filter; weighs only 68 pounds D. 9000 BTU model fits sliding or double-hung windows B. Bedroom air conditioner cools up to 200 square feet * Keeps noise outside window * Cools up to 450 square feet • 4 handy pushbutton controls • Woodgrain finish front panels for decorator touch $209’5 • 4700 BTU cools whole room With handy pushbutton controls Has washable foam air filter Compact and installs easily $11995 C. Quiet, heavy-duty 11,01X1 BTU air conditioner E. 15,000 BTU air conditioner cools several rooms at once Cools area up to 600 sq. ft. Thermostat holds set temp. Has 3 cool and 2 fan speeds Special Dual-Stat* control $24995 ' Has automatic thermostat ’ I fan with 2 cooling speeds ' Adjustable air directors $19995 BREWER DRAIN NOTICE OF MEETING TO HEAR OBJECTIONS --------------- I City of Pontiac, tivaly apportioned F. 20,000 BTU cools and dehumidifies to 1,250 sq. ft. • Set temperature control * Dehumidifies up to 18 gallons Public Corporation of Pontiac Courtty of Oakland, on aco of drainag. of county ti of moisture daily Kit for easy installation $23995 Daylight Time, on Monde of July, 1M8, in iha Offl land County Drain Con Sooth p tald E 1 estimafea of c County Drain Commissioner, 550 South Telegraph Road, In the City of Pontiac, Oakland County, Michigan. The said estimated cost Is S550.IM, but the apportionment percentages as finally establl!^hed_^by the Drainage^ Board shall hen finally completed. Notice Is further givei hearing any public cor assesaed, or any laxpay b* entitled, to be heard. Drainage'’ Board for the Chalrm Dated: May 23, 1 at IheiV ty Hall', V, oftloB of the Purchsilng ------ 450 Wide Track Drive, East, In the City of Pontiac, up to 3 P.Ad (E.D.T.) Th— day, Jun. 27, 19M, tor furnishing Pi Llabltlty and Propwty Damage In ir Public Liability Insuranct tor Waste Collection City rosarvM tha right to accept _ , bid or to mieci any or atl bTds, or any part of a bid, and to waive delects In r marked "Bid for Inturanc." tunW VIONDVV rilHU 1 10:00 A.:vi. TO 0:00 F.M, SAIT KJ)A\ Oi.'iO A.M. TO 9 l',M. •^rMlA^ 12 \0()N '!(> r.M. • M12-19IO WofHM -SefiliM FRIDAY, JUNE 14, 1908 Loves That Bike Through New 'Cycle^ By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY; My brother’s widow has taken up driving a motorcycle — at age 61! She was married to my brother for 30 years and has always been a sensible woman, so naturally when she started with this motor-< cycle business I became ' concerned. She says it’s great fun, much safer than riding a horse, and she has met^, a lot of interesting young i people through her new I hobby. Have you or any of your readers ever heard of a 61-year-old woman taking up the motorcycle just for the fun of it? but my correspondent complained that her husband was a “professional student," who preferred the security of remaining in school indefinitely to getting out and supporting his wife and starting a family. In other words, her man was losing his ambition by “degrees.” ★ ★ ★ Everybody has a problem. What’s yours? For a personal reply write to Abby, c/o The Pontiac Press, Dept. E-600, P.O. Box 9, Pontiac, Mich. 48056. and enclose a stamped, self-adressed envelope. ★ ★ ★ Women's Clubs Tell Happenings Past, Future The growth of Red China, In population, industrialization and power, was tte subject of Dr. Andrew T. Yang when he spoke before the Waterford Charter chapter, American Business Women’s A.ssoclation Wednesday. Dr. Yang is coordinator In researdi, training and clinical services for the Oakland County Juvenile Court. Mrs. John R. Johnson gave the voca- tional address, telling of her duties In the traffic department of Michigan Bell Telephone Company. Phyllis Addison, president of the group, was named Its “Woman of the Year.” Mrs. Kenneth Sabell was received Into membership. Guests for the evening at Pontiac Country Club were Mrs. August Eichhom, Mrs. Keith Gray of Tipacon chapter, and Mrs. Mary Reid. ABBY For Abby’s booklet, “How To Have a Lovely Wedding,” send $1.00 to Abby, c/o The Pontiac Press, Dept. E-600, P.O. Box 9, Pontiac, Mich. 48056. Planning is well under way jor next jail’s Pontiac Mall Flower Show. Mrs. William K. Baer of Winkleman Drive, (left) member of Waterford branch, Woman’s National Farm and Garden >ls-sociation, is chairman of horticulture for the event. Her companion on this visit to Drayton Plains Na- PvntlK er*tt eiwtM ture Center, which will receive the Mall merchants’ donation of $1,500 for the show, is Mrs. W. D. Sexauer of Ottawa Lane, chairman of conservation and member of Wing Lake Shares branch. Some 20 WNFGA branches will participate. ROCHESTER GROUP An installation luncheon at Bedell’s Restaurant is slated June 20 by Rochester Junior Woman’s Club. Heading the group for the next two years will be Mrs. John Allen, present. Other officers to be installed are: Mesdames Robert Cavan and John All-ingham, vice presidents; Walter Sddegel and Neal Pocock, secretaries; Marvin Gensler, treasurer. Others holding office will be Mrs. peter Vernia and Mrs. James King. If this woman is getting a little nutty, her lawyer ought to be advised because my brother left a sizable fortune to which she is the sole heir. Please advise me. CONCERNED New Horizons Sponsors Show DEAR CONCERNED: If you suspect that your brother’s widow is getting “a little nutty,” watch for other evidence. Are you sure you aren’t more interested in the rocks In her safety deposit box than those in her head? to Benefit Two Workshops DEAR ABBY: I take issue with your advice to “DISTRESSED,” who wanted her husband to leave graduate school and take a job so she could ^aise a family. I have seen too many impatient wives drive their husbands out of graduate school so they could enjoy their “dreams” of color TV, two new cars, a family, and a home of their own—right now. These girls don’t realize that their hu,sband’s potential income is immediately reduced as is his ability to advance profession: A fashion show featuring Virginia Graham, noted TV personality will be presented by New Horizons’ Women’s Auxiliary on June 26. B. Siegel of Birmingham will provide the array of knits by Thayer for the 1:30 Jacqueline Cross Exchanges Vows p.m. showing in Birmingham Community House. The purpose of the Auxiliary is to provide both volunteer and financial sui^rt to the two New Horizons’ Workshops for the retarded, one in Farmington, the other in Madiscm Heights. HeJiapttpbeTcustratedTprofessionally In middle age, and if he is unhappy in his work, his home life will also suffer. The couples who are willing to scrimp and work hard for a few additional years in order to complete the husband’s education to the fullest will reap benefits many times over in terms of income, professional and general satisfaction for the remainder of their lives. Sincerely yours, I. E. DAYTON Vice President for Academic Affairs Montana State U., Boseman, Montana ★ ★ ★ DEAR DR. DAYTON: Thank you for your fine letter. What you say is true, The candlelit altar of United Presbyterian Church of Oakland was the setting Saturday evening for vows spoken by Jacqueline Paula Cross and Michael D. Taylor. __________ ______ Carrying a bouquet of red and white roses, the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William Cross of Fort Street was attired in Chantilly lace and peau satin fashioned along traditional lines. A matching lace and satin train accented her attire. Open to the public, tickets for this fashion presentation are available through Mrs. Thomas Hewlett of Birmingham and B. Siegel. Auxiliary members working on the event include Mesdames: John Mintline, Karl Zint, i^idney Smith Jr., William Beresford, George Squibb and Norman Bums. More are Mesdames: James Russell, F. J. Baldwin, Loren Spakeman Jr., Thomas Bingham, Robert Tucker, Robert Appleford and Edwin Bracken. VEIL Workshop, Luncheon for Group Officers To complete her look, the bride chose an elbow length veil with crystal and pearl headpiece. Linda Collins was maid of honor, with bridesmaids Sally and Julie Cross and Mrs. June Stewart. Best man duties for the son of Mr. and Mrs. William Taylor of Petrolia Street, West Bloomfield Township, were performed by Robert Hamby. Stephen Cro.ss and Gregory Quick were ushers. Try Changing Girl's Attitude on This Trend A workshop coffee hour and luncheon for presidents Of the Federated Garden Clubs of Michigan, District I will be held on June 29 at 10 a m. in Gfosse Pointe Yacht Club. Following a reception in the Italian American Club, the couple departed for a honeymoon trip to Florida. Presidents from Wayne, Macomb, Oakland and St. Clair Counties will be present to share ideas and current information. Discuss Healy Work Names of arrangers who will participate in the Charles W. Warren exhibition on Sept. 18 will be discussed along with reports from each garden club,......_......•_....................... Mrs. I’homas Ouellette of Wyandotte will handle reservations for the day-long event. “Cissy” by Paul Healy will be review^ by Mrs. John F. Naz Monday at the meeting of the Waterford Township Book Review Club. Election of officers for the new year is on the agen- By EUZABETH L. POST Dear Mrs. Post: In our community it has always been the practice to display wedding gifts. Recently there has been a trend on the part of the young brides, particularly those who have been new to the community, to leave the presents wrapped and piled upon the display tables. They say this saves them much trouble and often broken presents. Still, it seems like a selfish practice to me. Am I wrong? My son’s fiancee, who moved here last summer, is among this number. I hate to see them get off to a poor start, as I know how they will be talked about; worse, I dislike the attitude. da. Luncheon of pot luck dishes (with accompanying recipes is slated for 11:30 a.m. at iheL Desmond Street home of Mrs. Arthur Arnold. Cohosting will be Mesdames: Glenn Sanders and Robert Haskins. The golden wedding anniversary of Mr. and Mrs. Victor H. Hancock of Illinois j__Ane/nue^wUlbiL celebrated Saturday with a family dinner. The pair was married June 15, 1918, in Pontiac. They have two daughters, Mrs. John Madoleof Lacotajkoad and Mrs. Rayniond C. Madole of Dayton, Ohio, six grandchildren and one great-granddaughter. Dear Mrs. Peters: You may use your demitasse cups after a luncheon. If you wish to serve the coffee with lunch, yoli must use large cups, but for afler-lunch (as well as dinner) coffee, the small ones are correct. If you feel I am wrong, I will just have to adjust. But if you agree with me, can you suggest a diplomatic approach to help in the girl’s change of mind? —Mrs. Stewart Dear Mrs. Stewart: If this sort of trend continued, brides would soon become too lazy to bother to open their presents at all! I cannot imagine such a lack of interest and appreciation as is shown by a bride who finds it too much trouble to open and display her presents. She is depriving her friends of the pleasure of seeing the gifts—Uiey are surely not interested in the wrappings. And how can she write her thank-you notes promptly? Ready to lend a hand when one of the boys runs through the Drayton Plains Nature Center, hooks a big one, is Mrs. Duane Miller of Masefield are brothers Steve and Tim Skillman of Lake An-Drive. She is chairman of demonstrations for The gelus on left and' right, and Michael D. Councilor Pontiac Mall Flower Show which is scheduled Oct. of Highfield Road. 14-19. Enjoying fishing in the Clinton River, which Ho-Hum, He's Just /Another Pretty Face in the Crowd —L tru.st you will be Ttble^tr^^^ your daughter-in-law that only the most thoughtless and unappreciative girl could be so callous as to put the gifts on display still In their wrappings. The only approach I can suggest is the honest one of pointing out the hurt the givers will feel, and the practical one of keeping up with her replies so that she will not be “swamped” after the wedding. CORRl^ Dear Mrs. Post; Is it perniissible to use demitasse cups at a luncheon? I have some lovely ones which I enjoy using—but my friends are mostly widows who do not go out after dark, so our entertaining is done during daylight hours. —Mrs. Peters By JEAN SPRAIN WILSON AP Fashion Editor -NEW -'VORK lAP)* - Vive la differ--ence? That’s old fashioned. At least among the avant garde this is the year of unisex. sexes, said the actor in announcing that he had become a board member of a -cosmetics firm. ....... That age-old battle of the sexes over who in the household wears the pants has come to a draw. Both do, the same style interchangeably. Just a few days earlier designer Rudi Gernreich told buyers at his fall knitwear collection that the skirt was dead. Despite efforLs of others to resuscitate the romantic .midi, the Californiari insisted thaUclOthes for men and women were now converging. sweaters and ties. Noting the trend, designers set about rescaling men’s bathrobes, nightshirts, even Trdlit^ uniforms, to suit the female framewbrk. In an effort to be Individual, mew turned^i^ Nehru jackets and cossack shirts. But the ladies are buying these too. Moreover, the really togetherness couple have a common supply of shirts, jackets, jewelry, neckties and hats. They share the same hairdresser and, while party-hopping, carry their combs and cigarettes in the same handbag. A ^vorce would leave one or the other without a thing to wear. ONI.Y PRACTICAL “it is tha only practical thing for our contemporary way of life,” said Gemt'eich, dressed in a belted tunic and belled trousers like those on his manikais. Still the knitted costumes spelled out the difference in girls as significantly .as a shrunken sweater. “Which necklace are you going to wear. dear. It doesn’t make any difference which one I wear,” is a preparty conversation of a fashionable husband and wife as reported by a New York society columnist recently. Jewelry switching is not uncommon among the rich. . “Why should they try to separate us so?” pondered Cary Grant whose screen image has made millions of women happy that men were men. “We should all just smell well and enjoy ourselves.” Gernreich, lest it be forgotten, pioneered unisex fashions by introducing bathing trunks for women five years ago. Nor is sharing the same hairdresser. Although they won’t snitch on them, stylists confide that they coif the curls of wealthy males as well as their wives. Cosmetics is a means of unifying the Yet women started it all by shopping In haberdasheries for men’s jeans. As if there ought to be some way to tell the ladies from the gentlemen, one NeW York hostess recently asked the men to coma wearing mustaches. / / B—"3 THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, JUNE 14, 1968 j ewe ru PONTIAC, MICH. 69 NORTH SAGINAW 2 Doorj North e( Woit Huron -701:7 OPEN FRIDAY EVENINGS Tt Z-//0/ special! SAUCE SET Psrfoet for mayonnaiso, aaueaa and whippad oraam...thla51i" fliitad eryatal bowl •ndfacHpbt Original Rogara Silvarplata. nhsato giva... niootoown. •%- THE INTERNATIONAL SILVER COMPANY Distant Land to Be Setting for Summer .Two area youngsters have been selected to participate in "Children’s International Summer Village." They will spend from July 11 to Aug. 12 In Sweden under sponsorship of the Greater Detroit Chapter, CISV. ★ The 11-year-olds are Kathy Irwin, and Pontiac Press car- The engagement of their da}ighter, Sandra Lee, to Kenneth John Obert, is announced by Mr. and Mrs. Richard Schaeffer of Pelham Street. The couple plans to wed Oct. 5. Miss Schaeffer’s fiance is the son of the Fred Oberts of Pelham Street. rier Jeff Wells. CISV was founded 17 years ago in Cincinnati with the ideal of furthering world peace and understanding through the 's children. The Detroit All Kinds Guilty of Drug Abuse NEW YORK (UPI) — Drug abuse no longer can be dismissed as affecting only society’s misfits, the far-out, weak or unhappy escapees from life, ter^ —been^ operating^ say experts at the State tfni- 1966. versity of New York at Buffalo. ting closer to home now, directly or indirectly affecting blue and white collar workers, some professional persons, the high school or college kids down the street and even--a-fewr^f -their professors. Edward Johansson, Royal Swedish Consul, points out the site of the Children’s Summer Village where Katy Irwin of Birmingham and Jeff Wells of Middlebury Lane will be spending four weeks this summer. Standing (rear) is adult adviser Gayle Barnes of Detroit, who will accompany them. Alabama Girl Has Choice of Many Awards The area youths will live with delegations from 11 other countries in a camp in Fransta, Sweden, near the coast city of Sundsvall. At ★ ★ ^ George Roeper, headmaster j of the Roeper City and Country' School, serves on the selection! committee for the Detroit chapter. | ★ * ★ ! Parents and teachers in-' terested in the program 'may; obtain additional information! a<^4iteratur« by- writing4o The| Greater Detroit Chapter, Chil-'* dren’s International Summer! Villages, 3855 Wabeek Road,| Bloomfield HUls 48013. i In a report on drugs, it was noted that the problem is hit- Africa has the highest death rate in the world. JOHN BULIGA Barbering Now | At KINGStETtNN 647*3741 or Ml 4-1400 BUY!SELL!TRADE! USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! AUBURN, Ala. Ufl - Susan Skelton, 22-year-old graduating senior at Auburn University, has a problem deciding which to accept of the many scholarhips and fellowships she has been awarded. Summer Dresses Among, the honors she has recently received are a Dan-forth Fellowship, one of the highest awards for scholarship in the country, for four years of graduate study at the university of her choice. * ★ ★ She also won the national Phi Kappa Phi Sparks Memorial Award in the amount of $3, as well as a National Defense Education Act grant for a full three-year scholarship at the University of Southern California. And she was one of three Auburn University Photos Decorate Shifts Young juniors • go for kicky-. oster dresses. These sleeveless A-line shifts are decorated with larger than life photos of contemporary subjects reproduced in startling black and white reality, back and front. Woodrow Wilson Fellowship [ winners. Susan, who made the highest I score in Alabama as a Nati(mal | Merit Scholarship finalist, i a number of writing and es contests while still in 1 _ school and recently won the I University of Alabama Festival I of Arts Poetry award. Feet Need Care for Sandal Debufi Feet are coming out of winter I hiding. Its’ time to groom them I for their debut of th^kafll ' Complete youp'^icu with a brisk rub of an antisej) to stimulate circulation and in-1 vigorate your skin. This cooling lotion has fresh, clean odor, in addition to I easing tired feet, clearing up I athlete’s foot and preventing I infection. What Savings... on Seconds IMPORTED CREWEL Hand Worked Wool on India Cotton Multi-Color and Black on White __________for - - • Drapery • Bedspreads • Upholstery CALICO CORNERS 1933 S. TELEGRAPH PONTIAC Open Daily 9:30-5:30, Monday Night 'til 9 FE 2-9163 Dressy Summer Dresses, perfect for everyone's summer wardrobe. Takes you to luncheons, dinners, garden parties . . . everywhere ... all summer long, *26.0*90 Cool Your Heels in Capezio'Patents L’ttie Patents with airy s’raps and Choose from cosaba orange, gra^FOft—yel-lowi:--watercress green, dry ice, a-nd- black patent.......... *18 eamexio' !• wmfM JC*r M Pontiac Telegraph at Huron Daily 10 A.M. to 6 P.M. Mon., Thurs. and Fri. till 9 P.M. Rochester 303 Main Street Daily 9:30 A.M.-' to 5:30 P.M. Fridays till 9 P.M. ODDS ’N ENDS OF NATIONALLY ADVERTISED MAHRESSES and BOX SPRINGS Reg. 139.90 Simmons or Spring Air Mattress ^ ^ and box spring. Full size. Handsome Reg. 169.95 Simmons Queen Size 60" X 80" moftress arid box spring se^^^ v|) I *s \ J construction— quilted cover. Both for.................... 1^^ / Reg. 49.50 Spring Air odd box spring ^ J v, JGw Full size. Now save $20.00, only........................ X yr Reg. 139'.95 Uniroyal 51/2" foam rubber mattress ^ AO oad matching box spring. Twin size, 'P ^ W Both for............................................... / / Reg. 149.50 Uniroyal 416" foam rubber mattress Both for ................................................ Reg. 48.50 Bunkeroo. Innerspring mattress with separate upholstered base. Twin size. ^ < k J 0 kJ Both for............................................... Reg. 59.50 Bunkee Innerspring mattress and (t' A rZ(~\ box spring. Excellent for bunk or Cp/j twin bed. Both for...................................... I Display Sample BEDSPREADS 50% bOFF FREE DELIVERY INTERIOR DECORATING SERVICE rurmixuire ».»A«INAW IT. AT ORCHARD lAKt Ayi. I6S-II74 PONTIAC OPEN FRIDAY EVENINGS THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, JUNE 14, 1068 B——8 Develops New Means for Training Retarded Alma Bfemer of Normal, 111. (left) and an"unidentified teacher ~in the Oakland scfvuots talk with a pupil about aprons. Miss Bremer is working on teacher training material for college students who are studying to teach the educable retarded- Oakland County has 182 classes of this kind. Miss Bremer Thams of Oakland Schools, she social f,.. tn trnm fpannprs in thifl fiPin By JANET ODEIl, Women's Editor, The Pontiac Press As Alma Bremer leaves the Pontiac area this month to return to her teaching duties at Illinois State University, Normal, III, she can go with a sense of satisfaction. An administrative intern who has been doing _ ^ graduate work " at Wayne State.. i University,, she-^^*^ ODELL specializes in homemaking courses for exceptional children. Under the direction of Paul Thanris of Oakland Schools, she Bremer this past schooi year. They have attempted to see an overali picture of what the retarded chiid is learning at each levei. Successfui projects in both primary and secondary fieids lave been filmed and scripts written so that the techniques may be taught to students training for this type of work. Oakland County has 2000 type A (educable retarded) children in 182 classrooms. Under this type of program they are learning social competence. Good grooming and care of the body is one of the first things taught. This leads into study of diet and foods. ★ ★ I are taught and nois State University after a year of graduate work at Wayne State University. row Old ? sleeping in a bra. However, il you do wear one to bed be sure that there are no wires which Q. I have several small moles on my face. Someone told me that if I puncture them with a neecBrth^ Witt go nway:. Is this mightiMneh-the-tissaeftr ture? A. No. Also, you should never touch or irritate a mole ol try any do-it-yourself measures. See your physician or a skin specialist. They can be easily removed, but by an expert. Q. I have a very round face and have to wear glasses. What type frames will be most becoming to me? A. Do NOT wear round ones. Select frames which emphasize the up and down lines or those that have an upward sweep. * * * Q. Will bicycle riding make my legs prettier? not classify it as a leg slimmer. ★ ★ * Q. Should I sleep in a bra? I have heard that this will preserve the bustline. A. I do not think most women would find this comfortable. Some women who have extremely large breasts prefer Q. I am 14 years old and thought that my pimples would clear up once I began my menstrual periods. My blemishes are just as bad, or worse, than ever. A. The oil glands in the skin are especially active all during adolescence. Therefore you wil probably have to fight the skin problem for some years yet. Do not allow this condition to worsen. Wash your face with soap and water several times a day. Most important, do not pick at your face. I think every teenager with crop of blackheads would be _ A. It will tirm the muscles wise^ to have them *^^”nved|^tmg^he^^gc^b^i^w^ and give them contour. I do Time, Distance Add Something to Queen's Aura Spain’s Queen Isabella had only two baths in her life, one when she was bom dnd the other when she was married. History does* not retroTt Ferdinand’s reaction, b u i today’s woman is flabbergasted. train teachers in this field. Miss Bremer says, “The retarded child someday grow to be a retarded adult. He can live a full and useful life if he has gained the social competencies to carry on everyday activities. “Chir concern graduate retarded students out of school, but rather ‘ * graduate them into society. ‘"rhe retarded child can learn best from learning experiences that are meaningful and related to his everyday experiences.’’ RESULTS Yet, from Isabella’s day to our grandmother’s time, the schedule had only increased to tre weekly Saturday night bath before church on Sunday! The idea that a woman shou.d be fresh and %htly perfumed every day is a modern one. The daily bath to achieve this freshness has been a part of our lives for only two generations. Care of Rubber Tools Rubber spatulas get soft professionally by a fatty content of most foods. Be dermatologist. N e g 1 e c t e d,careful to wash them in deter- blackheads often lead to acne. gent or soap suds after using. Don’t throw away your little boy’s overalls just because the straps on them become too short. To give him the needed length, cut the straps off and use adjustable suspeiiders. ssm Mlchigpn* Rn« Jwwwiwiw 6 GREAT GIFTS to Make Dad Happy! Hero'o lh« pn« gift dad will enjoy every day. Tremendous selections of portable styles. Lowest Prices! Electric Shavers The shavers .dad wants most! Norelco, Reming- from 39«5 ^ulova Qffts TOPS WITH POPS Accutron . . . $125 ^ The world's most precise timepiece. We guarantee monthly accuracy within 60 seconds. Waterproof, sweep second Buiova GGppor "F” 69.96 smm 24 N. SAGINAW DOWNTOWN PONTIAO Froth, Feathers Aid to Romance To activate the romantic mood, a confection of chiffon, ostrich and silk organza flowers all intermingle into a wraparound of feminine flattery. One extravagantly romantic creation is a satin capelet with tiers of ostrich feathers. A ★ * Handling of ruffles makes news as trim on scarves, in ruffled eirdets for necklines, in polka dots and coin dots and in Edwardian flavored ruffle-edged ascots. housekeeping skills are learned, iso child care and training. An important part of the course is consumer education. A sense of values is learning how to spend money wisely. Boys and girls receive much of the same training. All are taught to be open-minded about food likes and dislikes. All learn something about the care, use and repair of household equipment., ’hiere are no crafts given just as “busy work.” Miss Bremer stresses that all this is a living approach rather Ten teachers in the county‘“an a family approach. *• ★ ★ The main point of the whole program is that the retarded child can lead a satisfying and useful life in his own way, if properly trained. In Illinois, Miss Bremer teaches nutrition to special education majors and home economics to all kinds of exceptional children in the University’s laboratory school. Her work here has been undertaken as a special personal project. KRUSKIEBAGNALL A honeymoon trip to Cape Cod folloioed the recent wedding of Marilyn Jean Bagnall and Joel J. Kruskie in St. Peter’s Catholic Church, Plymouth, Mass. Honor attendants for the daughter of the William Bagnalls of Plymouth and son of the Leonard Krus-kies of Cooley Lake Road were JCathryOtAm Bagnall and William McClellan. The bride’s skimmer uxis fashioned from silk organza and lace. A Dior bow capped her veil of illusion and she held a spray of carnations and English ivy. Also attending the couple, who were feted at a reception after the vows, were Mrs. A. B. Furtade, the Michael Man-fredis, Marcia Setirky s , Charles Squillacote and Arthur Policelli. SEWINQ MACHINB TUNE-UP ^ ALL MAKEt-ALL MODELS H I POINTS SI I.AAiwI WM«K HOUSEHOLD APPLIANCE 465 ELIZABETH LAKE RD, Aorott from Pontlao Mall 316-9219 ^ 1|95 HAPPY FATHER’S DAY Knitting Needles flne^iant Sto kes If you have an accumulation of odd knitting needles and have! been wondering what to do^WlOi^ them, try using them wherever you need support for a plant.! Plastic knitting needles make! colorful and sturdy stakes fori climbing plants. | Stick the pointed end in the | soil and tie the plant to the| needle. These needles come ini such a wide variety of colors,j they add attractiveness to your: plants. ! Dad likes candy, too! Give him Pangburn’s Every man likes Pangbum’t e«rtmel-p«can-mllk chocolate Millionaires, Whatever you give Dad for Father's Day, add the extra pleesura of a box of hie ____favorite candy. ___ ____________________ $1.19 - $2J9 . $3.50 - $5.95-eWi FaNwi's •« 9K Biid Serving Greater Oakland CamtgrWUhStareelbm • PONTIAC •WATERFORD • BIRMiNOHAM • HIQHUND • TROY •LAKE ORION Girls, if you’re between the ages of 18 and 23, enter... Crowley’s and Du Font’s MODEL OF THE YEAR CONTEST A career contract in modeling amounting to $25,000 the first year. An appearance on National Television. An expense paid trip to New York City. A year' of glory and excite-m ^. ^ WIN: WIN: WIN: WIN- WIN: Dresses and make-up. Pick up your entry blank in the Junior Dress Departments at all 5 Crowley's Stores where dresses of fashion fibers by Du Pont, Dacron® polyester and Orion® acrylic, will be featured in the exciting "Model of the Year" Collection, Daadlin* for ontrioo, luly^th. CROWLEY’S DOWNTOWN WESTBONN CENTEN OMNDliyEI IIVONMMUI MIICOMO Mill FREE BOWLS with a $3.00 purchase of Ashland Gasoline These attractively textured bowls in Avpcado Green are just the thing for serving salads, cereals, soups, desserts, chip-and-dip, snacks. Withevery $3.00 purchase of Ashland Gasoline you get one small bowl FREE. The large, matching bowl can be yours for only 89

^t producing all these seven-foot-tall basketball players. It’s noise that’s doing it. ’Die evidence has been around us but we haven’t recognized it for what it was. ’Then Time magazine reported that a Canadian scientist, biologist Pearl Weinberger, has proved that various plants grow larger when treated with sound waves. Under controlled laboratory conditions she found that "sound-treated wheat seedlings grow three times as large as those given conventional care," iTime says. I I have never told this before, ibut my sister talks to flowers. I am not saying I was embarrassed by it or anything but then I didn’t look for opportu-|riities to v(prk the information I into conversations either. I have I envied her success with potted plants and nursed my ego with plastic geraniums. I laughed at her when she greeted her African violets in the morning with: Good morning, dears! Let’s turn on the stereo and listen to some music while we have breakfast!” es me my sister knows best and I’m trying it out as soon as ' get some petunias from the garden center. ★ ★ ★ What concerns me now, how-irer, is noise pollution. We complain of going deaf from Jet squeals and reports indicate the combined traffic, piped-in music and maddne vlbratitHis might possiblly drive us mad. Are we also making the children grow larger? Is the generation gap to be wider than ever? Let us consider together. Can a mother of a six-foot-tall kin-dergartner ask him to look up to her. Steer Ate Ribbon He Won in Show AUBURN, Wash. (AP)—After ribbons had been placed on the winning animals in the Northwest Junior Livestock show, John Eby, manager, was approached by Betty Wagner, 12-year-old girl. She asked if she could have purple ribbon to prove to friends that her Hereford had taken first place in the fitting and showing part of the competition When he reminded the girl he had already put a purple ribbon on the animal, she admitted her Biologist Weinberger convinc-'steer had eaten it. now- the carpet that never forgets! Jill WaU^, daughter of Mr. arKvMrs. John V. Watts of East Boulevard North, will be installed as Honor Queen of Pontiac Bethel No. 5, International Order of Job's Daughters. The ceremony will take place Saturday at 7:30 p.m. in the Masonic Temple on East Lawrence Street. The public may attend. Wenzels Host Gala for Pair Mr. and Mrs. Robert Wenzel will have his parents, the Roland Wenzels of Milwaukee, Wis., astJiouseguests- for. a.Jew The younger Wenzels will host 0 open house in their Woodland Pass home on Sunday in honor of the senior couple’s golden wedding anniversary. ’The pair was married June 17, 1918. Solve Problem of Stray Hairs No matter how attractive a SEWSIMPtE By Eunice Farmer Dear Eunice Farmer, • I recently purchased a cocktail dress wdiich is a little too low-cut in front. I know that in custom-made garments, a piece of whalebone is attached to the dress to keep It close to the body, but have no idea how this is done. Please help, Mrs. G. G. S. ★ ★ 1 ★ Dear Mrs. G. G. S.: A piece of covered whalebone (which can be purchased at most notion counters) is attached to the wrong side of the garment on the facing. Just below the edge of the neckline at center front. You will have to Judge the length you will need because you want it long enough to slip down under your bra. ’This will hold the neckline in place beautifully. Be sure to cut the whalebone off shorter than the fabric covering it and fold the fabric over the cut edge to avoid a sharp end. TAILOR TRIX WINNER Mrs. C. K. Sigmon, Mooresville, N.C., is this week’s Tailor Trix pressing board wiimerTorJter Tsewlng suggestion. ‘‘When I am trimming a little girl’s dress with rows of lace, braids, rick rack or whatever, I measure and then press a crease where the trimming will be placed before the skirt has been assembled. It is a breeze to stitch the trimming on by simply following the crease marks!” Dear Eunice Farmer, I went to a sewing lecture recently and was shocked to hear the teacher demonstrate hem finishings. She simply turned under y«-inch of the raw edge and machine stitched it, then turned up the hem and slip stitched it to the garment. There was a definite ridge at the edge of the sleeves as well as the hem, and it certainly didn’t look professional. Mrs. B. J. Dear Mrs. B. J.: This is a typical factory finish for hems and in our striving for the custom look in our clothes, I am surprised that this method of finishing would be sup^ evCT* ^ teSbh me same wSy w any You should pick up the best methods from each one. Hie only time I would finish a garment by turning under the raw edge would be in children’s play clothes or cottons that I would consider sports wear. Lists Humor Chief Asset overwhelmingly believe their husbands should be smarter and better educated than they. Reporting a survey, the trade ihair style iSrJts Iieauty canJie.i^umon paper Prace s^+d lessened by stray hairs at the Czechoslovakia’s fairer sex nape of the neck. 'This is a spe-jdemanded the male should have cial problem when setting wit and humor. They cold-shorter cuts and can be avoid- shouldered such assets as cars, Czechoslovkia’s 21-year-old girls interrupted only by the birth of Polyester Carpet by Magee ed by checking the back of your set in a three-way mirror. good positions or athletic ability. Nearly 50 per cent of all the girls were married, 8 per cent of them already divorced and 95 per cent employed. They regarded employment as a baby. HELPMATES Only ten per cent said they would be willing to dd ^ housework themselves; the husband should help. They said the liked children, would prefer to have two. ★ ★ ★ Only 16 per cent of all the newlyweds had their own apartment two years after their marriage, while 82 per cent had to live with their parents. Two to go everywhere in May, June, July and months beyond — a boat-neck skimmer and jacket with high, scalloped buttoning. Printed Pattern 4714: New Misses’ Sizes 8, 10, 12, 14, 16. Size 12 (bust 34) outfit 2% yards 45-lnch fabric. ★ i Sixty-five cents in coins for each pattem^add 15 cents for each pattern for firstclass mailing and special handling. Send to Ann Adams, care of The Pontiac Press, Pattern Dept., 243 West 17th St., New York, N. Y. 10011. Print Name, Address with Zip, Sze and Style Number. ' Fashion goes soft, pretty! Send for new Spring-Summer Pattern Catalog. Free pattern - coupon in Catalog. 50c. * ★ ★ New! INSTANT SEWING Book. Save hours — cut, fit, sew modem, expert way. Over 500 pictures. Only |1. Benefits paid under wtik-men’s compcnsatlQn rose 10 per cent in 1968 to a record of |1.9 biUion. THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, JUNE 14, 19(58 Case No. F-580 Marriages by Computer By DR. GEORGE W. CRANE CASE F-580: Marie Torre cop-ducl,s the daily one-hour CON-TACrr show in Pittsburgh over station KDKA-TV. But she was a talented newspaper writer in New York before she shifted to television. In fact, she is a modern “martyr” for free .speech for she I was held guilty' of contempt of court for refusing to reveal the CRANE source of her data for a newspaper expose, and even was sent to jail. public, are found shot to death soon thereafter. So newspaper reporters realize that they must hide the itentity of their informants or many sources of valuable facts will dry up quickly. Since newspapers are the main defender of the public’s welfare, then the average citizen would not be nearly safe, if newspapers could not expose gangsters, crooked politicians and other powerful criminals. 'Dr. Crane,” Marie began our TV program, “how did you ecximenical organization, combining Jewish, Catholic and Protestant faiths would render a splendid seryice in America. RECRUITED . In 1956, we incorporated in Illinois as a cAritable, lation tionai Foundation and soon recruited about 2,500 Rabbis, Priests and Ministers to serve as Counselors. Of some 10,000 happily married folks, there are only 11 known divorces that hawe been reported to the Home Office in our 12-year duration. i, ” u I I u tu And hundreds of formerly happen to help launch thei- , zu 5 i‘jj* ^ father6SS or mothcrless kiddiBs Scientific Marriage Foun- . ..... dation?” * bubbling over with 1 . happiness at being back in i So I explained that 1 lost my | normal two-parent home again. * * * first seven private secretaries some of these Like other stalwart newspaper to men who wrote to me viaL p g y j „ u g | y half-orphaned writers, she absolutely declined!ttys daily column, asking for ygyjjggjgpg couldn't even to jeopardize her informants. |the names of girls who might'(f,gjp fjpgj jaddy or I ® congenial wives. „,gther since the death of those And that is doubly commend-l These men were all high parents occured while thV able in this modern age of class. One was a professor, „p ,ngrg gangland reprisals. For many another an advertising man, a tgjjdigps witnesses here in Chicago, oncejthird was a dental surgeon, etc. I ..Qr. Crane," Marie Torre their names have been madei So I then decided ^" continued, “how do you match the Applicants?” Well, we use a computer machine and set 10 dials, including those pertaining to religion, age, educational background, habits (such as smoking), hobbies, ■traitsreter—-'--'------ Ruth Nurenberg Exchanges Vows Mrs, Helen F. Nurenberg of Mechanic Street announces the recent marriage of her daughter, Ruth, to Jack Orth, son of the J. Donald Orths of Lahser Road. The couple, who exchanged vows during a double ring ceremony in St. Benedict’s Catholic Church, were attended by Theresa Bellant and Richard Orth. ★ * ★ Following a reception at the Italian American dub, the newlyweds departed for honeymoon trip to Georgia. TllMTOPlEr are jmking sidewalks softer .. and loafing livelier! Loafer with ■ lively look that’s very long on comfort. Breathin’ Brushed Pigskin*. Versatile colors. Available in (iunsiuoke or Houn’ Dawg. $]199 HusK Rmpies* -•-■llAlfOCASUAU Bloomfield Miracle Mile Telegraph at Square Lk. Rd. L: Pontiac ProH Photo Steven Quick, son of the Lloyd Quicks of Packer Road and Mrs. John Collins of Mill Valley Road, Avon Township,^^hare broad smiles as Steven receives the state first prize in the American History Essay contest sponsored by General Richardson chapter. Daughters of the American Revolution. Mrs. Collins represented her chapter at the presentation. Teachers Wed Before Students PEORIA, 111. (AP)-When two teachers at Peoria Heights Grade School were married at Grace Presbyterian Church here, there were 140 guests of honor—present and former students of both. The groom, William Ropp, is a 6th grade science teacher at the school and his wife, former Sylvia Thulean, is a 1st-grade teacher. Texas has the lead in prime defense contracts, although soon California will take the lead. Stephanie J. Bennett, daughter of the Paul R. Bennetts of East Run-dell Street was awarded a BS degree Saturday front Central Michigan University. Stephanie, who has accepted a position as a graduate assistant at Kent State University, received the Woman’s Outstanding Physical Education Major Award and was among eight senior women honored with the “Chippewa Award." Judith L. Hoffman, daughter of the Carl Hoffmans of Whipple Shore Drive, Independence Township, received a BS degree from Colorado State University bn June 7. A member of Mortar Board, Judith graduated “with high distinction.” She has been awarded a fellowship to the University of Wisconsin where she will begin work on her master’s degree this fall. When a perfect match occurs, then we inform both parties and :• urge them to correspond few exchanges of letters, primarily to learn enougl each other so they cai plenty of conversationac munition” when they decide to meet in person. incidentally, most men lazy about writing that they m usually restrict us to a radius of S not more than 200 miles. In •: fact, one prominent American j: newsoaper publisher will not let g u,s mtrpduce jbim to any myta more than 100 miles distant! gx Yet he has seen one of his, wvn-feature writers,.who let uSiiyg use a 500 - mile radius, fall g!;: madly ir) love with a beautiful gji: girl. They are now happily married and with a new baby, yet the “boss” still holds us J:;::;:: down to 100 miles! ★ ★ ★ So send for the “Marriage • • Questionaire,” enclosing a long ^ stamped, return envelope, plus :':g:: 20 cents, and pass it along tO|:,-g:| any deserving person who is now unmarried. (Alway.s write to Dr. Crane in :g:: care of The Pontiac Press, I j;:;:;:: Dept. E-600, P.O. Box 9, Pontiac |:;jg Mich. 48056, enclosing a longjg'-stamped, addressed envelope : and 20 cents to cover typing and i printing costs when you send ^ for one of his booklets.) WAREHOUSE CLEARANCE SALE! George Tuson SAVE ON QUALITY BIGELOW CARPETING Regular $9.95 V alues SQ.Yl). Acrilan Twist 101 Yards.SQ.YI). “Off-White” NYLON PLUSH 85Yar.ls*G^5 SQ. Yl>. “Avocado” %loo Plush SO YU. HURRY... Limited Yardage Only atTliis Huge Savings. ERlolti (uAftite 5390 Dixie Highway Open Friday 'til 9 334-0981 A MIRACi F MILE ■ffoca QigSlODO Sunday, June 16th JjeHl rjsmemht^ iwUh filBOsur^ yaur thought-fullness when your gift is chosen from our leisurewear collection. It’s right — in style, for comfort, with color. We’ll gladly help you choose. Many Survivors BAKERSFIELD, Calif. OP) - . When Mrs. Pearl Taylor diedj:i:g: recently at the age of 85, sheig:;:: left 189 survivors, including two g " sons, seven daughters, a broth-er, two stepsisters, 43 grand-children, 113 great-grandchil- ji: dren and 21 great-great-grand- :;i children. A. Knit Shirts, by Arnold Palmer, (iary Player and other professionals. $5 and $6 B. Turtle Necks, Long and short sleeve in a variety of solid colors. $4 to $15 €. Short Sleeve Sport Shirts, Sta-press in solids and patterns. $5 to $7 D. Swimwear, Brief or Boxer style. Wide selection of cob and fabrics. $5 to $9 E. Sta-press Slacks, a wonderful selection of solids and p terns by Jarah, Levi and Hicks. Sizes 29 to 46. $7 to $12.50 Hloomiield Miracle Mile TVIcKraph at Square t.ake Rd. Open Daily 9:30 • 9:00 B—6 THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, JUNE 14, 1968 Cabot Starts Knit Habit for Fall Soroptimists Donate Gifts Approval of dmations for community projects highligbted Monday’s dinner meeting In Elks Temple of the SoropUmist Club of Pcffitlac. Recipients are The Pontiac Citizens Committee on Youth, Pontiac State HospitaTs Recreational Therapy Department, Girls’ Ranch at Camp Oaklirnd and Commerce School for Retarded Children. •k h it Mrs. Karl Schultz will be mistress of ceremonies at the installation and dinner meeting on June 25 in Devon Gables. Dr. Dorren Becks-Pltt will Install. A deceptively simple 100 per cent double kmt u'ool basic dress. It has a softly pressed pleated skirt, a V-yoked bodice and a casually tied leather belt. This is basic for modern living. Scalloped trim frames the mock turtle neckline, cuffs and high-rise inverted front pleat of this two-toned double wool knit at left. It’s available in burnished brown, bur- green. The most suit-able two-piece dress and jacket costume with antique gold button trim and self-loop closings is shown at right. It features welt seaming for a new subtle —ge&metrie line that slims your waist. Mai sasjfaa ®(D< It Doenn't Cost to Rent —It Rays M Parly NMdt fw WaddMgs, l>artiM, RMWirtiont! Evaiyttiinc from IMeii IHamis to Rue Shanpoe Conitruetion ho. b.gun on Elizoboth Loko Rood, but it', .till opon to locol traffic. 682-9100 2111 Elizabatb Laka Rd. Open Father’s Day Sun., June 16 - 10:30 - 3 P.M. • FREE GIFT WRAPPING e HALLMARK FATHER’S DAY CARDS • “CHARGE IT’ Security Bankard, RAM Need Volunteers for Office Work Many challenging and responsible general office positions in health, welfare agencies and hospitals await the volunteer interested in community services. Assignments vary from typists working on caseloads to social worker aides with emi^asis on public contact activity and desk duties. ★ *★ ★ Housewives and retired school teachers will have an opportunity to develop new careers of Interest by serving only a few hours a week. The Oakland County Volunteer Bureau in Birmingham will assign you with agency convenient to your home. Date Correction The Crown Club fashion show at Pontiac Northern High School is scheduled Sunday at 7 p.m. rather than Monday as incorrectly announced in Wednesday’s issue of The Pon-i tiac Press. | Girls on the move will love this three-piece ensemble. There is a dashing Scotch plaid jacket with a new cut . . . silver-toned buttons to decorate the smartly turned out blouse. Note the skirt and blouse are color-coordinated with the plaid tones of the straight-line, fly-front buttoned jacket. All Cabot knits shown cater to the girl who has dash and verve . . . goes places .. . Cabot line available locally. Compact Kit Buffs Quickly There is now on the market Ian instant shoeshine kit, all 'contained inasmall-sized packet ideal to carry in your I purse. It’s magic! - ★ ★ ★ Whenever your shoes need a quick buff, just tear open the container, take out a little damp piece of heavy paper and wipe your shoes with it — and they shine without rubbing. A collection of these makes a wonderfid bon-voyage gift for a traveling friend. KINNEY'S SHOES For thr WhoU Family PONTIAC MALL MIRACLE MILE . , — Saits, Tops BUY!SELL! TRADE! USB PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! A zephyr weight metallic knit shift with self-buttons and a stand-away collar. The pattern is a subtle shadow-plaid weave of diamonds. Put it in your handbag when you go to work . . . it’s non-crush-able ... wear it to your date. It’s the perfect traveler. Put Dark Socks in Case In doing a dark wash, put all the dark socks inside one pillowcase and tie it securely. Then the socks are all In one place when the wash emerges. “Modeio---- Measure Drapes to fit your windows 180 Samplesi^ Choose From Arden Shops The Pontiac Mall Open Every Evening 'til 9 More Styling, Comfort, Overnger.“ ('.onHiruclion Guaranteed for Life.” (^UKlered Base for euHy moving. BENCH BUILT... HAND TAUjOHED Yti’ll Like Ur Qialiti... Yoi’ll Uke 6v Price! Good Furniture Costs You Less at 144 OAKLAND^ FURNITURE Convenient Terms — 90 Days Same as Cash Open Monday and Friday Nighu ’til 9 P.M. Cloied Wednesday Afternoons \ Our Frrr Perkina Um, Ju.l Artiunil ihr t«r now ... Rogiitration limitod in all workthopt ProfoKionol Staff ... Spacializad instruction in all tha arts For Further Information Call: 642-6211 1 summer program of iqorksliops in the creative arts for children and youth 2 LOCATIONS: FERNDALE HIGH SCHOOL, 881 PINECREST, FERNDALE, MICH.; NORTH FARMINGTON HIGH SCHOOL, 32900 W. 13 MILE RD., FARMINGTON, MICH. MODERN DANCE Six-waak sassion (or students in gradas 7 thru 9. July 1 thru August 13, 1968 9 a.m. to 12 noon Designed for oil iludeni, interested in creative and Interpretive dance. Students will explore and creote dances using modern, jazz, ond Spanish lines and rhythms. Students will be oble to develop and solve simple ond odvanced choreogrophic problems. Limit; 15 t TUITION $60 DRAMATIC ARTS WQRKSHOP Six-wook session for students in grades 9 thru 12. July 1 thru August 13,1968 9 o.m. to 12 noon A drama workshop for beginning and advanced students integrating Instruction ond rehearsal in acting, voice, ond mimei Reheorsal of short scenes for doss presentation and critique, os well oi production work on longer ploys. Limit: 40 students TUITION $60 MUSIC COMPOSITION WORKSHOP Four-week session for students in grades 5 thru 7. July 1 thru July 30, 1968 9 o.m. to 12 noon SCULPTURE* Six-week session for students in grades 9 thru 12. July 1.thru.August .13, 1968 I 9:00 o.m. to 12 noon Students will have a choice of a wide ronge of exploratory experiences Including: costing in fibre gloss, hydroslone and metal; corving in wood and stone; building with ploster, wood ond plexiglass; ond welding. Limit; 15 students TUITiON$60 •This workshop will not be offered ot N. Farmington High School. Classes will be held at Ferndale High School and Oakland Community College, 27055 Orchard Lake Rood, Farmington, Michigan. fnst series will include four American Classics revealing the development ;inemotogropny^’s on ort form both in acting and directly The second ss will highlight four important, historicolly significant fore^ films. Brief ;re ond discussion will precede ond follow the film. FEE: $4 taeh ssriss, $1.50 singla adniission JAZZ WORKSHOP* Four -week session for students in grades 9 thru 12. July 1 thru July 30, 1968 9 o.m. to 12 noon Students will explore, write, and create jazz with particular emphasis on improvisation and experinienlotion. Guest orlisis in |c«x os well os specialists in related fields will be ovoiloble for seminars on jazz In the contem- St ferndale High School only. Music composition I highly specialized workshop for selected music elementary grades. Students in this workshop will be expected to be proficient on on Instrument and oble to write simple melodies. Original compositions will be heard in finol performance. Limifi 15 studanft TUITION $40 CREATIVE PHOTOGRAPHY Four-week session for students In grades 9 thru 12. ------- July r thru July 30, 1968 “ 9 o.m. to 12 noon For beginning oitd odvanced students Interested in pho/ogrophy os o creative art. Students will receive basic insiruction in camera technique, composition, developing, ond printing, poying special, attention to individuol needs. Students should hove adjustable camera, tripod, and exposure meter. Limit; 20 studanti TUITION $40 PAINTING AND DRAWING 2 throa-w«*k stssiont for (tudonti in grodot 5 thru 8. 1st SosisioniJuly 1 thru. July 23, 1968 2nd Sassion; July 29 thru August 16, 1968 9 o.m. to 12:00 noon Beginning and odvanced students will hove opporluiiiliW to sketch ond draw, point in water color, tempero, acrylics ond oils. A wide variety of e..psri* cnees will develop self-expression through on understanding of principles of composition, design ond the use of varied media. Limit: 15 tiudanit aaoh taiiion TUITION $$4 CREATIVE DRAMA FOR CHILDREN 3 twe-week sessions for students in grades 1 thru 6. 1st 5ession: July 1 thru July 16, 1968 2nd Session: July 18 thru July 31, 1968 3rdSession:August5thru August 16, 1968 ; 1 St and 2nd grodes — 9 o.m. to 10:30 o.m. 3rd and 4fh grodes-10:30 o.m. to 12 noon 5th and 6th grades—10:30 o.m. to 12 noon Creative drama or playmaking utilizes the natural potential of each ci:ild for creative self expression. In creolive drama, children in small grot ps will explore and creole all forms of improvised dromo, dramatic ploy, dramatizing stories and ploys, and spontaneous pontomine. Limit: 15 itudanft aaoh group aach aatiien TUITION $20 PUPPETRY WORKSHOP 2 throa-waak eaisiont for gtudonfa in grades 1 thru 6. 1st Saiiion: July 1 thru July 23, 1968 2nd Saiiion: July 29 thru August 16, 1968 lit thru 3rd gradoi—9 o.m. to 10:30 o.m. 4th thru 6th gradas—11 o.m. to 12:30 p.m. Students will Invent and construct oil types of puppets—from hand puppets to simple string puppets. Originol storie students for presetttalion and production. Limit: 18 atudanta aach group aach aattion TUITION $30 FILM CLASSICS* 2 Sarias: July 2, 9, 16, 23 August 7, 14, 21, 28 8-1 1 p.m. July Sarias — Four Amarican Film Classics 1. INTOLERANCE - a D. W. Griffith apic (1916) ^ 2. MODERN TIMES - a Charlia Chaplin graat (1936) 3. THE INFORMER - John Ford's maitarpiaca (1935) 4. CITIZEN KANE - Orson Wallas' graotaif (1941) August Sarias — Four Foraign Film Classics 1. THE PASSION OF JOAN OF ARC and BLOOD OF THE POET - Franca(l92B, 1932) 2. IVAN THE TERRIBLE, Parti -Russia (1944) 3. THE BICYCLE THIEF - Italy (1949) 4. RICHARDIII-England(1955) VOCAL MUSIC Four-waak sassion for students |n gradas 9 thru 12. July 1 thru July 30, 1968 9 a.m. to 12 noon . A workshop devoted to instruction, lelteatsol o:id pe:formnnc» in vocal music, including sight reading, iecti6nal and enjembie singitig. A wide range of music literature will be the basis for the repertoire of this workshop. Including classic, popular, ond folk songs. Limit: 38 students TUITION $40 COMMUNITY BAND* For young people and adults, Tuesday evenings. July 2, 9, 16, 23, 30 - Aug. 6, 13 7-10 p.m. Rehearsal ond performanue of oil types of bortd literature Including morchei, show tunes, closiic and cortternporary works. Public performance Is plonned. forge Insfrumenii will be loaned to participants. FEta/ie Adulta-43.»-Sttt^ FarndoU High School only. REGISTRATION FORM (as of Sept. 1968) __________________Farndala High School ___ N. Farmington High School . ... ............Oakland Comminity College Make checks poyoble to Oakland Cornmumty College Moil completed registration to: Ooklond Community College, Office of Cultural Alfoiri, 2480 Opdyke Rood, Bloomfield Hills, Michigan. B—8 THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAV. JUNE U, 1968 Hope Outlined: New Projects for Pontiac's Southwest Section ; By BOB WISLER While construction of new facilities is not expected to begin until fall, efforts of Harambee, Inc., and the Metropolitan Detroit Citizens D'e V e 10 p m e n t Authority (MDCDA) show promise that a number of new projects can be undertaken in the southwest section of Pontiac, represen-j tatives of the groups told 22 Pontiac businessmen yesterday. | ★ * * I, At that meeting, a general report was given on the ac-| tivities of the Pontiac office of| the MDCDA. The businessmen represented firms which have paid or pledged $16,300 to help maintain the MDCDA office inj the city. i ★ ★ * I William Hawkins, coordinator for the MDCDA, said funding of | Harambee, Inc., an all-Negro, n 0 n p r 6 f i t development cor-[ poratibn, has enabled the group; to hire architects and social! planners to begin designs for| complete new commercial and| reaching cohesiveness of the southwest section of the city. ★ ★ ★ Charles M. Tucker Jr., president of Harambee, said there has been some difficulty reaching coresivenesa os the! , entire community of the area,| but he is hopeful continued; „ work wUl bring ,J»bout — ' development. linked to downtown Tucker said the development and rehabilitation of housing in the southwest section — which contains the highest percentage of delapidated and deteoriated housing in the city - must be developed concurrently with the development of the downtown area. ■k * * “We could conceivably have in Pwitlac in the near future, three to five years, something nobody else in this section of the country could possibly have,’’ he said. w ★ * Tucker said Harambee Is handicapped by lack of funds and a paid staff, but he foresaw progress toward housing construction and the possibility of community-owned commercial facilities, such as a supermarket.» He said the c 0 r p 0 r a t i 0 n should soon open an office to provide visual identification. SLOW-MOVING Tucker told the businessmen^ “We won’t move as last as you would like us to move.’’ He said a prerequisite to any planning and construction is involvement of the citizens in the area in determining f o r themselves what they need and want most. He said getting that in-volvment is somewhat difficult. * * * “It is difficult to instill the philosophy of ‘It doesn’t have to be that way,’ ’’ he said. “It’s been that way for so long—the rats, the roaches, the junkyards and all the rest — that a lot of people think, ‘What’s the use? ’’ Hawkins told the businessmen In town that they have made “a minor investment that may well bring immeasurable dividends.’’ REAL PAYOFF He said the “real payoff will come if we solve the problems people have. These problems are social, economic and physical.” ★ * * ‘‘Physical and social redevelopment activities create jobs and cause money to flow. Our endeavors have all along been to make sure that as much money as possible flows within the indigenous areas,” he said. ★ . irk He said the MDCDA presence In the city provides employment for at least 10 citizens. In addition, MDCDA is currently endeavoring to set up a local construction and rehabilitation company and will shortly be 4ooking4or4B-v-e-6 t-m-e-n4-op-portunities for ghetto people.” * * ★ I Another possibility being ex‘J-plored, he said, is purcha.se of I deteriorated housing under ai government program, t h e n I rehabilitation of the housing, i with finished products that I could be owned by low-income i families for monthly payments near $70. LIKE HOVEL RENT This is as much as some people are paying rent for hovels, he said. The finished homes would probably have about $10,000 in repairs in them before purchase and would probably be the better than housing selling for $15,000. he •aid. .....* „ ,, *__.. Hawkins said a number of steps have been taken to get the name Harambee and the intent of the organization befoj-e the neighborhood people. * * *• ’The people must approve the total plan and concept, he said. The rationale behind all of this is simply to build a cohesive, continuous and competent community entity that will help the citizens in the southern part of Pontiac sustain the com-, munity once it is developed.” -★ * * Hawkins said cooperation so far from community leaders j has been all that could be ask-1 ed. He said this seems to be an! indication that plans will succeed. , The features of the area being cdhsidered for redevelopment were detailed by representatives from Urban Design Group, a Negro firm of professional Negro planners and architects from Detroit. In the area bounded roughly | by Orchard Lake, Saginaw, Golf Drive and the Clinton | River — which contains 4001 units of public housing. Philip! Rhodes, a planner, said 81 per cent of the structures need some form of repair. Thirty per cent of the housing in the sec- tion is occupant-owned, he said. i structures in that area and In the area bounded roughly about 10,500 persons. Some 32 by Wesson, Bagley, Frpnklin and|per cent of the structurres need the south city limits — 70 per j to be torn down or have major |Cent occupant owned — some 57! rehabilitation work, he said, per cent of the structures need^ * * * some form of repair, he said. | The meeting was hosted by Rhodes said there are 1,571!Edward E, Barker, president of the Pontiac State Bank; A. C, Girard, chairman Of the board of Community National Bank; land Howard H. Fitzgerald II, I publisher of The Pontiac Press. Each of the three firms contributed $1,000 toward main-tenqitfe of the MDCDA office thi^^ar. CHARGEIT ^w^FRANK S NURSERY SALES OPEN 9 to 9 GET RESULTS... OR A REFUND! K 5,000 I SQ.FT. I Regularly I $5.50.,.NOW .- . - - — UiMllfc^RAliirS NURSERY SALES<^ffi^BB 5919 HIGHLAND RD. (M-59) at AIRPORT RD. 31590 GRAND RIVER, FARMINGTON 6575 TELEGRAPH AT MAPLE C . 14 MILE AT CROOKS RD. THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, JUNE 14, 1968 B—9 Black Students Sit-In at Lansing College LANSING (AP) - A group of about 20 Negro atudents at Lan-alng Community College Thura-day itaged ui orderly sit-in in the school's administration building to back demands for Increasing the role of Negroes In the school. ★ ★ ★ Normal coUege activities con- while the students sat In the lobby. College President Philip Gannon said the students, members of the Black Students Alliance, demanded a meeting with the school’s board of trustees, and more Negro students, instructors and counselors. Gannon said he will meet with representatives of the group today and hopes a meeting between the black students aigl the. trustees can be arranged for Monday. TO AIR DEMAND He added that he has been meeting with representatives of the group to discuss their de- mand that a mandatory course in Afro-American History be established as part of the school’s currioil^. Francliise operations should generate about 10 per cent of ttie entire gross national prod- i qct this year, with sales | amounting to billion com-' Classmates Meet Dad Governor AUGUSTA, Maine (AP) Angela Curtis, 7, took 28 school friends to the State House Thursday to visit her father. They all posed for pictures with Gov. Kenneth M. Curtis, who said: “This is the best group I’ve had here in a long time. They’re all friendly, they •don’t want anything and they can’t vote.’’ Defroifer Guilty of Killing Druggist HOWELL (AP) - After five hours of deliberation, a jury Thursday convicted James E. Hayton, 25, of Detroit of the first-degree murder of Hamburg druggist George A. Reck. * * ★ A second man charged in the Jan. 7, 1987, slaying, Paul W. Coleman, also of Detroit, was found Innocent. Reck was fatally shot during a h(^up of the Hamburg drug store he owned. * * * Police said two men came into the store and told Reck and his son, George E., then 19, to lay on the floor. Both were shot in the back. The younger Reck managed to struggle to his feet, run from the store and summon h^p, police said. Hayton and Ck>leman were arrested after a State Police investigation. Sentencing of Hayton was set for June 18 in Livingston County Circuit Court. Deaf drivers have only 25 per cent as many accidents as those who can l^ear. CHARGE IT FRANK'S NURSERY SALES OPEN 9 to 9 lANDSCAPE PUNT SAIE SAVE OH EMMY MHOS OF PLANT MAURIAIS HOW AT FRAHICS VALUES TO $4.50 m WHILE THEY LAST! STILL TIME TO PLANT . . . CHOOSE FROM HYBRID TEAS, CLIMBERS, FLORIBUNDAS Container Grown RED BARBERRY %39 Plant these for the contrast of their wine-red foliage. A snimy location giyiBi hest^ : color. FTn^or hedges. GOLDEN SYRINGA $2.69 This contrast plant has velvety golden leaves. A sunny spot prodncea best ^(S*. Growing in container. SALE of EVERGREENS BAUMD IH BURLAP SPREADING YEWS (Taxus) FLOWERING ANNUALS Mix or Match Fiat of 8 Trays ... ^3#99 Each fat has 8 generous size and count trays, nux varieties as you wish. Choose from Petunias, Alyssum, Ageratum, Wax Begonias, Marigolds, Salvia, Asters, Zinnias, Coleus, Moss Rose and many more in a.wide choice of bloom or leaf colors. Yews are the dark green needle evergreens that are often called “The Aristocrats of Landscape Plants.** They thrive in sunny or shady locations, aren’t choosy as to soil, are easy to nuunlain in ideal size and are even used in topiary work. SPREADING YEWS/ UPRIGHT YEWS, UPRIGHT JUNIPERS, BOXWOOD, PYR. ARBORVITAE TOMATO PUNTS with FRUn IN LARGE 6-NKH POTS *1.19 I You won’t have to wsut long for ripe red tomatoes with this plant Each has fruit ana blooms right These are excellent values in balled in burlap landscape evergreens. At this low $2.99 price you can choose plants for sunny or shady locations, uprights and spreaders, different shades of green ... in short nearly anything for your landscape. 5 VARIETIBS OF I SPREADING Here .is a selection of spKading junipers yon just won’t find anyr-^here-dj^Hfegar^ess^ price, because we grow than on our Mt Qemens farm. Choose from low spreaders, vase shapes and everything in between. All are freshly dog and balled in burlap. BRaWLi'B^RANK^S NURSERY SALESi^iliMil 5919 HIGHLAND RD. (M-59) at AIRPORT RD. 31590 GRAND RIVER, FARMINGTON 6575 TELEGRAPH AT MAPLE 14 MILE AT CROOKS RD. B~io THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY. JUNE 14. 1968 Congressmen Flooded With Mail Urging Tight Gun Controls WASHINGTON (AP) - A del-1 uge of letters, telegrams and telephone calls urging stronger federal gun-control laws has descended on Congress since the I assassination of Sen. Robert F. Kennedy. The tide of messages is heav-| lest from urban areas, according to an Associated Press survey of 90 Congress members from representative districts. But mail from rural areas, especially in the East and Midwest, is also registering a shift In favor of stronger gun curbs. ★ * The rural South and Southwest are generating more demands for firearms control, as Is the hunting country of the Rocky Mountain states. Congress has passed legislation curbing the mail-order sale of handguns. President Johnson, who wants the ban extended to rifles and shotguns, has not signed it. STRONGER LEGISLATION Varying bills for stronger gun legislation have been proposed since the assassination. They Include Johnson’s request for ex-tensicHi of the mail-order curb to rifles and shotguns and compulsory registration and licensing of all firearms. Sen. Harrison A. Williams Jr. D-N.J., has received over 6,000 letters since Monday favoring tougher gun measures. Half enclose a newspaper advertisement placed by a Newark jeweler and addressedio Williams. “We beg you to pass strong interstate gun laws now,” the ad says. Some brown^paper bags band lettered “Ban All Guns” (BAG) have also turned up in Williams’ mail. •POP ONE’ Written on them is this message: “Pop one of these in the Senate ... Maybe the surprise might get to the senators.” Rep. Edward A. Garmatz, D-Md., whose district includes part of Baltimore, reports a jump from almost no letters on gun control to several hundred this week, 98 per cent calling for stricter curbs. Rep. William 0. Cowger, R-Ky., says mail about guns from Louisville constituents has skyrocketed from around three per week to about 360 this week, 95 per cent asking tougher laws. Rep. F. Edward Hebert, La., reports a shift in sentiment from New Orleans in favor of curbs. MIAMI, TOO Some 200 letters from Miami this week have almost all supported more controls, says Rep. Dante B. Fascell, D-Fla. Several congressional aides sounded cautionary notes on the flood of gun control mail. Itucky district Is running five to three in favor of curbs. ★ * * Rep. Watkins M. Abbitt, D-IVa., and W. S. Stuckey, D-Ga., say letters on gun control from their rural constituents have shifted from total opposition to about 50 per cent approval. The response from rural areas of South Carolina, Alabama, Louisiana, Mississippi and Arkansas has been minimal congressmen say. 12-1 MARGIN Sen. William Proxmire, D-Wis., reports a marked shift in Wisconsin mall from a trickle, almost all opposing gun curbs. to about 650 in the past week favoring new laws by a 12 to (me margin. Minnesotans are calling for curbs by a 25 to 1 ratio, says Sen. Walter F. Mondale, D-Minn. * * * , Sen. Charles H. Percy, R-111., counts 3,000 messages week, the vast majority favoring curbs. Sen. Vance Hartke, D-lnd., quoted a letter from Marengo, Ind., as an example of the 1,000 he has received. “Every type of firearm should be register^ as are automobiles. There should I be severe penalties for those who don’t comply.’' Gun-control sentiment in the West also shows signs of shifting. Mexico and Nevada members of Congress report a Sen. Peter H. Dominick, R-Colo., says the 400 letters on the subject he has received favor firearm controls by about two or three to one. Opposition is down among | The situation is unchanged In Wyoming, says Rep. James F. Battin, R-Wyo. But he reports one Wyoming envelope containing two letters on gun controls: Utah correspondents from 20 to ""® husband opposing surprisingly even split on the is-tl to 2 to 1, says Sen. Wallace F.lthem, the other from the wife sue among letter writers. |Bennett, R-Utah. |favorii^ -th«».‘^ CHARGE IT FRANK'S NURSERY S ALES®sinp^ OPEN 9 to 9 “The question in my mind is how long this is going to keep up and will people forget as soon as the Kennedy assassination is out of the headlines,” said one. “Just wait for the inflow of mail opposed to gun laws once the sportsmen’s and hunters’ groups have a chance to meet,” said another. ALMOST UNANIMOUS Telephone callers to Rep. Fletcher ’Thompson’s Atlanta office were almost one in urging new laws, said an aide to the Georgia Republican. “It was almost like hysteria, he said. Rep. Byron G. Rogers, D-Colo., reports mail from hls' Denver constituents “overwhel-t mingly in favor of some kind of; gun control.” ' | The mail from some rural; areas indicates a turnabout I from strong opposition to gun curbs to at least mild approval. Reps. Robert T. Stafford, R-Vt., and William D. Hathway, D-Maine, say the shift is marked in northern New England. ’The mail from Democratic Rep. Carl Perkins’s rur|l Ken- NOTICE OF MEETING COUNTY OF OAKLAND TOWNSHIP OF HIGHLAND FINNEY DRAIN Nolle* of iSAwLlnSlO. Beor Obloetlonj to '^ppornsftmoMl bTCost of Abov* Intro-County Drain. Nolle* Is her*by glv*n, tbat th* cost of th* Flnn*y Drain, to b* located In •— To«mslil|i of Hlgtiland, -fws been--I* Corixiratlon , of Cost Townthlp of Highland *4.000% County of Oakland, on account of drainage of county highways State of Michigan, on account of drainage of state highways Notice Is further given, that th* Drainage Board lor th* Finney Drain, will meet at 10:20 o'clock' A.M., Eastern Daylight Time, on Monday, the 1st day of July, 19U, In th* Office of th* Oakland County Drain Commissioner, SSO South Telegraph Road, Pontiac, Michigan, for fha *a!?‘apporti%*i8s*"^ oblections to Notlca la further given, that th* plans, apaclfleations and estlipates of cost of satd Ffttnay Drain and also, a descriptidh of the ard* to be served theraby are on flla In tha,pWlca of tb* Oakland County Drain Commissioner, ^ South Telegra^ Road, In th* dly of Pontiac, Oakland County, Michigan. Tha said estimated cost Is I15,0N, but the apportionment Mreentages as finally esteblfshed by the Drainage Board shall apply to th* actual cost of said drain when finally complat " Notice Is further given, that at i hearing any public corporation to be >r any taypayer thereof, to be heard. This nplIce ls given by order of the pip ---- ' DANIEL W. BARRY, -* "Id Drainage Board June 7, U, 1*M Chairman ol SELECT HIS GIFT NOW! SHOP FRANK’S TOHIGHT AMD EVERV MIGHT Till 9 O’CtOCK HAMMOCK w/Pillow and Stand 32.W Here’s sometlung any Dad can use and will sure appreciate! This hammock is complete with 4-point suspension, nontilt green- stand and 34"x8(T^'overan size green hammock with pillow and fringe. You get both at Frank’s now for oidjr. .'nTr77T7:rr7T 7^^ aOTH HAMMOCK e w/cokxt- falflowhn. CHARGE DAD’S GIFTS A T ANY FRANK’S. OPEN ALL DAY SUNDA Y! THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, JUNE 14, 1,968 B—11 Soviets Pipe Pitch for Future Accords With U.S. WASHINGTON (UPI) -Soviet sp$in* CeiMl. TrM; 1 A* IfsfFS?* w U- Samltttul r«0«aro« >14 lit TokWo ill Ctaknln^i r^^ Indian ,Oama 114 Larry Light' daniar Man 113 Invictui IlL^M^Opl. Claimingr 1 Mllai MiM Collata 114 Pummalo Amaricanita lit Turbo Add Up 115 Brumby „ Tlparullati lit Caraful Jim ItB-UMI Claiming; aw Purlongii Quaua'a Rip 11> Launch Out - T OltWir - nr Wilt ttir It Ipanny Bit 1lo Sir---------- ....... Itb-tim Cand, PKai I McKaavar ' Shadow WInga Mary Carol "irk • —' paa Oaa Knox tuac Darby Rutty Oamblar Ulai irbtrt Ouetn Hot a Klyndy Bi Chippawa PIrt Jtrlmlah Ham 11* Wharaitthallna 115: Royallan -HjISirOorwood 1ls;Eddla'i Jat Carlo Fordo ,„,EI Darno 115!worlhy Emily ... ............. 3'J.LIttla Dominion 115 Brian Slawart lljloak Croya 115 Cloduat Lamyal CIto't Draam Tret; 1 Milai 1. H. Vi Allawanca T,»..hi. 1 ol*th-*l3l)» Claiming stn’bla^Mn ’ “I M*™hall Hickory G MIkadon Volcanic Roil run and Jim Fregosi singled another across before the inning was over. The second game will be completed on CaUfomia’s next visit to Boston. AF Wlroalwlo Paul Schaal of the California clbvbland - abr ti _. 0 I 0 Cardenal ct 5 0 0 • ------ « 5010 0 2 0 FELLED BY PITCH Angels is carried from the field by teammates after being hit in the head by a pitch tossed by Boston’s Jose Santiago in the fourth inning of their game In Boston yesterday. X rays showed a hairline fracture just above the mastoid bone on the left side. e-c. r, fVWiZ’VV. r. waiivrw *tti-tlS400 Royal oak Handicap; 1 Mllai Oh Yat 104 a-Klno —* "" Windy Road •“ Cmpnarls „ , , . . Donaldsn 2b 5 0 0 0 ....... .. Cater lb 5 110 THorfon lb .... Bando 3b 4 0 11 Maya If 3 0 2 0 RudI It 3 0 10 Nelson pr 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 Sims c .JNash p 2 0 0 0 Harper rf 2000 Harshbgr ph 1 0 0 0 Davallllo rf 3 0 1c LIndblad p O 0 O 0 Kuril pr 0 0 0 0 ' FIRobtn ph 1 0 0 0 Fuller 2b 3 0 1 "I Harshbgr ph 1 0 0 0 Davallllo rf 3 0 1 : LIndblad p 0 0 0 0 Kurtz pr I FIRobsn ph 1 0 0 0 Fuller 2b Sprague p 0 0 0 0 MOowall p Title Formula Still Working 10 00 1” cSinMj'ch iiJ'Svi'o.lPam'- '“l*LL Pa« J. Decathlon 10* Coimoi 3rd 117, Sir Tru Gallant Lasilf Pact Snow Haalt 115 Prom Girl 112 Sudani Express Leader II^SrM^'HaIldlcap^ 4V? Purlangs. ,,, SoaylyCraad Pulaski Jat Old Sober Sides 10* a-B'rd Marker 117 Miss Wood TImllm Dandy 112 Big Ba;^ a-Ed's Rib 114 Judge Kllday Kid 123 Mali-W. P. Walters entry 112 Building n Kid 110 Northville Results THURSDAY . 1/U Mlittt ..J Bleacherlte 115 Roman -117 Old Cot 117 Sakiburr 117 Ardklng jShlaway Lew 4.20 2.60 2.20 le (1-6) Pi Hazel Park Results THURSDAY -SSpSOO; Clalmlnp MaM Fur- It (7-10) ^ I 51 Total 41010 fiifs, Tanfietf'ninrancT waTkef Cnerokee »r 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1- 1 boosted M. G. Collision into a one, letting just one runner Bee's^Littie^_ _________ 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 o^o^o-|0 gjjare of the top spot in the Teach third. ‘ ■—men’s fledgling baseball I A walk to Dave McDonald :: SB-Hariwr, Narsbn.'s-RJackson.'’ race. ' jleading off the game, a stolen ------ — . 1. . Campaneris 115 Yellow Beai Randolph ■■ Jerry Pic 4th—$*00; CendIHonad Pace; Hal's Guy " Fanny WII Pay Sua 3.00 2.00 2.40 Sonny B. Russall . CALIFORNIA mgsi .06 2 YANKEE’S LOW PRICED AUTO ACCESSORIES! FATHSm DAY OII>T IDBAS BON-tllE 4UT6 MND V1C8UM ClElNERSy designed nozzle reaches all the difficult areas ea s i I y. Plugs into cigarette lighter. Extra-power suction, i The defending city champions base and Willie Holloman’s two- BrMthfess Schaal 3b " VTo Andrews 2b "3 0 0“ parleyed Walt Miller’s shutout base-hit plated the only run sth^JW; aiio* ss 11 ] ? ?;rr,^?ki If i ? ? 11 hurling i"i« « 7-0 conquest of Miller needed. SfaM/r'” :: HilSSi rf 2 0 0 0 Rsmith^'' 3 0 2 ? T«lbott Lumber Thursday night Singles by the lefty hurler and ‘'t (ta?ch*dt"h 2 I i 0 m” h 0 S X ® Jaycee Park, second straight McDonald, an error and Rick|pia Hub .................................... jHaii*rt 512 0 oiiver'pR 1 0 0 0 Whitewashing of an Opponent. Pankey’s squeeze bunt added st^-ssiro Trevino cf 0 0 0 0 Petroclll ss 3 0 11; . • ts . i • xi_ ’Tth—$4,5* satriano c 4 010 EHoward c 3 0 0 0 The collision crew DOW has two insurance markers in theiNashuia Mu“hy’p 2 0 0 0 Landfs^” 0 0 0 0 17 consecutive scoreless innings third. I??'!®''..’ Rrf«’p^ ‘*'0000 Lyks”? 0 0 0 0 i® ii® credit. Last year’s titlist | ^ coll, m talbott ne of the three hits off Reynold^ was fourth-inning home run by Otto Janick. M. G. Collision, and Talbott Lumber vs Jhe Clippers, 1:30 p.m.; Unc. Chat " Rick Chidester flipped a two- t*?"?***'-*.‘J*. p - ■ ................................. pace the attack. Soccer Teams Schedule Draff far Monday hitter for Ray’s and led the attack at the plate with three hits and two RBI. HAYWARDS HIT A1 Hayward rapped out three hits and drove in four runs and his brother, Bill, collected single and triple and chased home two runs to spark the Ron’s Roost attack. Jim Smith went the distance. In a Slow pitch game. Local 596, shut out for |six innings, broke loose for eight runs in the top of the seventh to hand Dog 'N l^s an 8-6 setback. Dale Rowe led the Local 596 squad with three hits, while Jess Hart rapp^ out three Local 5*4. 7:30 p.m Fisk struck out eight and,safeties to pace the Dog & Suds yielded singles in 4he third and'attack. 4 p.m.,- Local 453 vs Entries Climb for City Event ST. IX)UIS OP) — 'The North American Soccer League will hold its first player selection meeting next Monday. The session will be part of a two-day meeting of club officials. A spokesman said the draft will be divided into three phases. Advance entries indicate record number of teama may bei on hand for the Pontiac Best-| phase one involves players Ball Tournament which i s to whom present teams were for Saturday, June 22, at assigned negotiation rights last Pontiac Municipal Course. lygar while members of the Na-Through yesterday, 70 teams tional Professional Soccer had signed up for the event. League and thb United Soccer Course officials said there is!Association and who were not plenty of starting times still signed to contracts. Both available. Contestants m a y leagues were merged inter the register by signing up at the NASL. course or calling L. C. Bamer at the club, FE 5-1702. The second phase of the draft will be selection of North American players not under contract to any team, and the final phase will be selection of foreign players not under contract to any ^team or who m-e foreign team transfer lists. Friday s:30 a.m. to i p.m. SATURDAY 8 A.M. to 4 P.M. 435 South Saginaw 3 BLOCKS SOUTH OF WIDE TRACK DRIVE FE 2-1010 Hm/PIPlS/SHOCKS/BMMS/miS ...........ASMmtDASMmioAoaminASMmiDAsilliniaASBmiluisamiOAS Ty Chief 1Mlv-^*00; ______ Lady Edgeworth J. S. Red Eagle ----- R. J. GET THE CLOSEST SHAVES! me. J /llorelco* TRIPLEHEADER 35T Independent laboratory tests prove the new, thinner, MIcrogroove™ ‘floating-head$' shave as close or closer than a stainless steel blade. That’s why we dare any blade to match It. No nicks or cuts either. And, there’s a pop-up trimmer, a more powerful motor, 110/220 AC/DC voltage selector and easy snap off cleaning. Sbg the^new^STln He handsome metal wallet at: DID YOU SUFFER FROM THE LAST HOT SPELL? BE PREPARED FOR THE NEXT ONE-NEH WEEK up INSTOCK 4000 BTU • 9000 BTU • 6500 BTU • 8000 BTU • 8300 BTU 10.000 BTU 12.000 BTU 19.000 BTU HAMPTON ELECTRIC 825 W. Huron Pontiao, Michigan FE4-252S THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY. JUNE U. 19(1H C—8 GARY PUYER’S GOLF CLASS: Where to aim in a bunker | Commission Hears Report Cardinals Pad Lead Little Debate on Deer ByDONVCKJEL I There were some minor 1 9 6 3. Department. specialisU Outdoor Editor, Pontiac Pres* variations in recommendations recommend that the hunting Has the C o rj s e r v a t i o 11 between the other five com- area for antlerless deer be In-Pepaftment’s 8 tfu®! between Chris Short of the Phils, who gained his 100th major league victory, and Hous- 36-37-^73 • 38- 35^73, Veteran reliever Roy Face| put down a ninth-inning San 454th of his career. Pittsburgh roB^pittsburgh“"l2' ................... 0 0 0 4 « 1 1 1 — 8 SanFranciico 010 202 002—2 E—Dietz, Mays, Sisk. DP—Pittsburgh 2, 23 31 .424 10 - - .411 11 Satt'F’rancfsco 2 . .. . ncinnatl 4 tiphia 3, Houston 2 St. Louis 3, Atlanta 1, 12 Innings knih Only games scheduled. .ke'**- ” Today's Games San Francisco (McCormick 5-2) at Kolb. 2. s-Hunt, __ Chicaijo (Nye 3-6) at Atlanta (Reed 6- 00 000 002—3 ^>[, . . 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0- 1 l.i I. DP-St.Louis 1, Atlanta 1| t LOB-St.Loui's to, Atlanta 2. 2B-Brock 2.1, Francisco uprismg to Praserve HR_cariton (u, ‘■'r.L* An^leJ'& Pittsburgh’s triumph. He came,P?.il? ' s^^-jat Phuadeipwa if. Stiil Unbeaten in League Play 001 001 Otx-5 _ -Rolos. DP-Phlladelphia 2. LOB-Houston 3, Philadelphia 2. 2B-R.AIIen, Murrell. HR—Watson (1), Dalrymple (U, SB^dnzOiez. S-Roras: CIncinnell . 100201 000- 38-34-74 30-36—74 36-38-24 32-32l!24i Penny Manufacturing re-iy^wlliftained undefeated in the Wall-fj^Ji'ed Lake'"industrial Softball Ihicaga P3200030x-I E—Bench/ Phillips, Cardenes. Perez. Pinson. DP—Chicago 3. LOB—Cincinnati 9, Chicago 6. 2B—Pinson, Perez. 3B— Santo. HR—Santo (11), Banks (13),I Bench (4). 40-34—2 37- 37_>4 39-3S-74 38- 34—74 37-30—75 rerry Wileo ^•William C Dave Love Jr. 3i-41-7S 37-38—75 40-35—75 Lake'"industrial League’s “B” division last night by downing Williams Research, 11-6. Penny is 9-0 and Williams 3-4. In an “AV contest, Copper Mug (4-4) made six errors in the first inning that gave Wix-om (6-2) a like number of runs. -Mug rallied for four runs in the top of the seventh, but fell short and lost, 10-9. CIncjnnatl (McCool 2-3) at St, Islnger 5-5 and Sutton 2-5) .......,„d«lnhla "■------- “ ' —' '—” 0-1), 2. ......„... Siturdty'i Oam« San Francisco at New York Los Angeles at PhtfadelPhTa, Sunday's Oomti Chicago at Atlanta Cincinnati at St. Louis Los Angeles af —" " ■ Goho Fishing Package NEW & USED OUTFITS Big 18-ft. Aluminum LONE STAR BOAT and MOTOR »895 1«; /I', a fact - y< '^OA^E BOAT CENTER 1265 S. Woodward at Adams Road_____ Fine . filFT Selections for FATHER • Golf Balls • Golf Carts • Jackets • Sweaters • Shirts • Umbrellas • Carryalls • Golf Bags • Golf Shoes • Golf Gloves • Gdlf Hats CARL’S GOLFLAND 1976 S.TaUgraph Rood Acreif fram Mtraet* Mil* ^ FES-8B9S y Netters in Semifinals BECKENHAM, England W -Kristy Pigeon of Danville, Calif., Mrs. Margaret Smith Court of Australia, Mrs. Ann! Jones of Britain and Maria Bueno of Brazil have advanced to the semifinals of the Kent’ iLawn Tennis Championships. 1HE GREAT $. Before You See Europe, See Us About Triumph's Overseas Oelivery Plan HI GRIAAALDrS TNE NEW TRIUMPH SPORTS CAR-MORE POWER THAN THE FAMOUS TR-3. EASIER SHIFTING, LIGHTER STEERING, WIDER TRACK. P.S. WINDOWS ROLL UP. DROP IN AND SEE WHY THE BEST-SELLING SPORTS CARS COME FROMTRIUMPH.lBlfflT IIFREE TEST DRIVES! DROP IN TODAY OR PHONE THIS NUMBER:™•""''•v ii' Just received a fresh shipment of 8 new cars at a SPECIAL-PURCHASE PRICE which we pass on to you. Complete Parts and Service on All Imports Good Selection of Used Cars CjiimM Imported Cfl/t Co. 900 Oakland Ave. (U.S. 10) n 5-9421 FULL 4-PLY NYLON CORD CENERAL-JET WHITEWALL $1000 Plut $2.19, $2.21 F.E.T. Sizbo 7.75x14, 7.75x1 5 tub«-Uto for Ford, Chovy, Plymouth, Romblor. ^20 lOG $22 00 Plu« $2.35, $2.36 F.E.T. Siioi 8.25x14, 8,1 5x15 tubo-Uai for Buicic, Oldi, Pontiac, , Chrytlor, Dodgo, Plymouth, Marcury. Plo. $2.56 F.E T. Siio 8 55 x14 tublcM lor Chryilor, Dodgo, Oldi, Plymouth and Pontiac, Thoro's no other tire in its |4rice field built like the General Jet. It's a safe fire with full 4 ply nylon cord blowout protection. It's a high mileage tire with long wearing Duragen >i' tread robber. And it's a troctionioction dual tread tire. The General Jet whitewall. What a tire! What a pfice! ED WILLIAMS 451 S. Saginaw OPEN MONDAY • FRIDAY 8:30 SATURDAY 8:30 - 1:1 FE 2-8303 5:30 THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY. JUNE U. 1968 Quaker Oar Teams Dominating Trials SYRACUSE, N.Y. (ffi - Penn-sylvania’s favored heavy weight crews turned spectators today after dominating the trial heats of the IntercoHegiate lowing Association Championships. The rugged, precision-drilled Quaker varsity, javvee and freshmen eights stroked to impressive victories Thursday over the 2,000-meter course on Onondaga Lake to qualify for Saturday’s finals. IVEEING Local Junior Golfers Set for Jaycee Event By FLETCHER SPEARS Interested in a hole-in-one? Local junior golfers wm ^.which is also slated forTonUac gunning for Jaycee Tournament Municipal on July 8. honors at several sites Monday. | Regional winners then move Yoting golfers in the Pontiac to Gull Lakeview near Kalama* area will tee off at 9 a.m. at zoo for the state tournament, Pontiac Municipal course, while July, 23-24, with the top four Busy Schedule for Pro Netters BROOKLII^E, Mass. (A - A busy schedule of eight flrst-rot^ma^es was on tap for is of ?^ world’s foremost players today in the rauir delayed $32,500 U. S. Pro Tennis Championships at Longwood. With a record $8,000 as top those in the Rochester-Lake Or- .from that eyent advancing to prize, officials attempted Some courses yield more than others. Likewise, area will tour the links at the national competlUon Aug. B0WL some holes on a particular course are easier than jothers from a hole-in-one standpoint, and one of the I most popular of the tricky par-3 targets in the area [is No. 9 at Clarkston Golf Club. I ^ almost too Bald Mountain. GO TO REGIONAL Qualifiers at Pontiac Municipal will advance to the regional Moonlight Doubles Jackpot ot $400.00 ivory Sat. Night, 10:30 WUYSIDE Yachts Near Mid-Race easy. Not so easy, however, to get a hole-in-one, but a relatively easy green IFE441M 1M Oreham Laka ! PLYMOUTH. England (AP) I — The British ketch, Thomas Lipton was believed [leading the Transatlantic Solo Yacht Race Thursday night. I The race is nearing its half-way point, race officials said. SAVOY'S MOONLIGHT DOUBLES to hit whether you’re duffer or a pro. The rolling nine-hole layout ends with a downhill par-3, 140-yarder that looks much closer than it really is. Even a weil-dubbed shot could wind up on the green if properly aimed. Saturday Nights through some records, Mrs. Paul Frechette, I who operates the club along I with her husband, came up with some figures the hole-in-one seekers might find interesting. WOMEN SCORE, TOO During the seasons 1962-67, golfers aced the hole-times. On • sty-occasions; a wonran hit'tftc' perfect shot. Breaking it down by years, in National Event on Tap Here 19-24 in Tulsa, Okla. The tournament is open to golfers under 18 years of age (as of Sept. 1). FOUR ADVANCE In the open division of the Pontiac competition, the top four will advance to the regional event. The leading scorer in the Rochester-Lake Orion play will gain entry in the state event. Spring Lake Site of Junior Tourney Players from four states are stagger the first round over two days. Rain washed out the first day Wednesday. The downpour lifted Thursday morning, but the plush grass courts were ruled unplayable. BUY! SELL! TRADE! USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! Players who have not prevl-ously signed up for the touma-. ment may do so before play, starts at 9 a.m. at Pontiac Municipal. Tho.se in the Hochester-1 iLake Orion area who have not What do you say to a fine whiskey at a already in the field for the Na- f"‘ered may do so by caHing tional Junior Golf invitational .scheduled for Spring L a ke "f^s, 651-M63. Contestants will Country Club near Clarkston July.PW 18 holes ^ I The Waterford Jaycees will modest price ? ...Ill tr, hold their tournament, at Pon-CompeUtion will be in four Competition divisions with the top four in ... . . divisions - 13 each bracket receiving awar^. J Snder. 14-15 and 16-17. The three in each division will boys and girls under 18 years of , X j j iiJ ®ah Newman, chairman of -. -Conte^nts^L-and ^^ tourney: s^iTaU play 27 holes-9 each day; interested in the tour- thosein age groups 12-13, 14-15 gig^ „p before 9 a.m. and 16-17 will play 18 holes each - - • • • - Bowling - Prizes - Lunch For more information call Savoy 1962 there were five; four in ’63; five in ’64; six in ’65; seven in ’66; and five last year. ★ ir%' -★ And with this season still in the opening stage, golfers have already bagged four, so the club may be in for a banner year on old No. 9. GOOD OPPOR’TUNITY day. REGIS’TRA'nON DATE Registration is slated for Monday at the club. Monday, July 1, and depending on the number of entries, a qualifying round would also be played July 1. Day's Collects Eighth Victory SAVOY LANES Local players may obtain entry forms at Spring Lake on a pretty good opportunity to bag cosponsors of th^ event are Clarkston Appliance (5-4) Paul Atkins rapped out three “! hits last night in leading Day’s 130 S. Telegraph Rd. FE 3-7121 OPEN BOWLING DAY and NIGHT Still Some League Openings Due to the cemtruction on Elizabeth Lake Road, the entrance to Huron Bowl will ho Linn St. off of Huron St. HimOlfBOWL 2525 Elizabeth Lk. Rd. FE 5-2513 or FE 5-2525 an ace, says Mrs. Frechett. “If you hit a nice, straight ball and the grass is short in front. . . well, then the chances are pretty good,’’ she says. There was a flurry of activity at the hole this week. Aces were recorded Sunday, Monday and I Tuesday. LAST ONE Collecting t h e hole-in-one Tuesday was Mrs. J an Frederick.', of Oxford, who was playing in the Tuesday Morning Women’s League with Mrs. Freschette in her playing party. Mrs. Fredericks used a 9-iron and rolled the ball into the cup; and finished with a 54. Jack Haupt Pontiac Clarkston and the R. M. Wood Company of Waterford. Athletes Await Wheelchair Competition in Waterford Township Softball ‘ Action. i In a second game, Gary Achenbach flipped a two-hitter as Ward Body (5-4) downed Lighthouse Lanes (3-7), 3-1. Dick Hall gave up only three hits in taking the loss. In . Blooperball action. Lakeland Barbershop edged Richardson Dairy, 11-10. no Other tractor wwks lilffi TheHorse We have 8 Wheel Horse Tractors to choose ftora. 5 to 12 hp. Choose a 3-speed, 6-speed or automatie models. 42 attaching tools for every home chore. Largest selection in the industry. Wheel Horse is First in Features. Offers new enginee with solid state ignition. New automatic traction means less chance of wheel spinning in slippery •pots. New safety headlights and taillights let you lengthen your chore time. And WheSTHdrs^^rsL to offer you the 2-ycar warranty. . , Proof of Wheel Horse longer life. ^ Lot us give you our estimate on a Wheel Horse Homechore Tractor. Model CommandOi 6 H.P., Wide Tires $470®® SPECIAL BONUS Priced as Low as FREE Light Kit and Dump Trailer with Purchase KING BROS. PONTIAC RD. at OPDYKE PONTIAC, MICH. Telephone: FE 4-1662 and FE 4-0734 NEW YORK (AP) - About 300 athletes from 30 states will compete in the three-day National Wheelchair Games starting today. Gerry Philbin, defensive end of the American Football League New York Jets, and Ben Lipton, chairman of the execu-! One of the other of the female tjyg committee of the National Athletic Association, 600DERHAU a worn LTV. • ROMA. ni:. Frechette’s daughter, Feather, ^jj j^rmally open the Games. She has turned the trick three j jj, fjrst events will be table times, the first coming in 1962 when she was 11 years old. The others came in ’64 nd ’67. DEFENDING TITLE Detroit Lions Dick LeBeau and Jim Gibbons will be around next week to defend their Pine Lake Invitational Golf cham- tennis i weight lifting with bowling and swimming set for later today. Other sports on the program are track and field and archery. Following the games, the association will select the 6S-mem-ber U.S. team that will compete pionship. The tournament opens in the International Paralym-on Thursday. jpics in Israel Nov. 3-13. The The Western Country Club Invitational, originally slated for this week, was delayed until next week (June 20-22) to avoid conflict with the Red Run event which opened yesterday. United States will be one of countries in the Paralympics. All competitors in the games are men and women %ho* require wheelchairs. The main emphasis is on track and field. Call Your Favorite Lanes for Open Bowling Reservations AIRWAY UWES AUBURN LANES (MLUER lANES £0ULE1LLANE3 4IM W. OWM^ Mtaw MMJgl n $. Swim M. tetan HiUMi, FAIRGRIXINDS BUWLING HOWFS LANES HURON BOWL LAKEWOOD LANES MAVIS LANES n 0Ml«y Uto M, NiIm Ukw MHga MONTCALM B0WLIN6GENTRE NORIH HILL LANES nNE.N«rM,inM MtkitU-IMM lwy,CIiriaiN,MMIjM ORCHARD LANES SAVOY LANES SYLVAN LANES 300 BOWL WESTSIDE LANES ■•-saesaaa IN I. Tllwnfk M, rNHM, I^M ImSu. IN RuZ. ruHaw MTOraMlJli^lt^ WONDERUND LAKES The Bowling Proprietors of Qakland County ^^Heusejofthe^^ MAnHEWS-HARGREAVES UoedtuM. omA. JAMBOREE r Come In and Register For FREE PRIZES .. Family ais* teat, ttove and eleeping 1st Prtee bagt. 2nd Priee ... Redwood patio table and umbrella 3rd Priee .. -. Redwood pienie table and benehet Plot Many Other Prieeil Nafhing te buy, no obligation, |«W atop Into ourahowraom during aur Voeotian and Camping Jafliborao and logiatar. You may ba FREE BEFRESHMBITS SERVED AT OUR OUTDOOR TABLES AROUND OUR SHOWROOM SPECIAL OFFER Free Gift with the Purchase of Every New or Used Car or Truck During Our Va-catioA^AfL Cum pw^Jamhoree, Your •ummar onjoymant con ba mod# baHar for tha whola family whon youvi.it Motthawa-Hor-graovac during our Vocation ond Cornering Jc- boraa. Ba aura to aao. our diaploy of Compara, in Wogona injtho tin to fif 0 uMmoM inyomfort, toko c . _ -Al. rt, toko o damonatrotien cniiiiw Savings Servioa Sstisfaotion MATTHEWS HARGRtAVLsI 631 Oaklanil at Cast, fimtiae Miohigan’B Lartast VaiunB Ohavrolat Dialer FE 54161 V' VHP. PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAV. JUNE 14, 19fi8 C““5 The lady's hand rests on a problem of great concern to Mr. Spartan — a product is out of stock. Now, the lady attached to that hand has probably just wheeled her shopping cart past 5,000 or 7,000 items before she found the flaw, but there it is. Somewhere . . . Somehow . . . Mr. Spartan did not foresee the sudden demand for the missing product. Perhaps a women's magazine ran a recipe that caught the eye of a number of homemakers at the same time ... or maybe this particular item sounded like a nice change of pace on the menu at one of the local women's clubs. Women like variety... so demands change from one product to another, and it's sometimes difficult to predict the changes. Don't get the. wrong idea now, this doesn't happen very often.. . but, if it ever happens to you, mention it to your Mr. Spartan. If he can't find any in the back room,, he'll show you another brand, or at least suggest a substitute. It's true that nobody's perfect... but Mr. Spartan is trying awfully hard to keep you perfectly satisfied... and Satisfaction is why you shop a Spartan Store. .:shop the store with the SPARTAN on the door. SHORTENING 3-LB. TIN 55 BIRDS EYE 600L WHIP TOPPING Soft Margarine .... . . FLEISCHMANN'S, 1-LB. CTN. . . 2 89* Ot. 39^ Riceland Rice » * • • . . (WHITE), 1-POUND.. 19* SPECIAL LABEL, 1 Pt. 6 Ounce Bottle It AS SPECIAL LABEL Silver Dust 2-lb. 6-Oz. ADVANCED M9-Lb. 13-Oz. DISHWASHER All SPECIAL LABEL 1-Lb. 4-Oz. 68° 1.79 32' Hi Ho Crackers .... Gerber^s Cereal----- . . BY SUNSHINE, 1-POUND . . 43* Fig Newtons • • • • • . . FOR BABY, 8-OZ. WT... |9* Ammonia ......... . . FROM NABISCO, 1-POUND . . 39* • • BLUE RIBBON BRAND, QT. .. |9* French's Mustard . . Lux Bar Soap . . 9-OZ. WT. JAR . . 18* . . REGULAR SIZE, 3-PAK . . 33* Potato Chips................ Phase III Soap . . VITA BOY, 14-OZ. WT. BAG . . 69* Mozarella Cheese .T Vim Detergent .. KRAFT NATURAL, SLICED, 6-OZ. WT.PKG. . . 51* ..TABLE Caraway CheeseTTT Wisk Liquid .'. KRAFT NATURAL, SLICED, 6-OZ. WT. PKG. . . 47* . BATH SIZE BARS . . 3 ^or 49* argent..... . . TABLETS, 2-LB. 6-OZ. .. 57* . . DETERGENT, QUART . . 69* ndy................. . . LIQUID CLEANER, 1-PT. 12-OZ. . . 45* Muenster Cheese . . Handy Andy KRAFT NATURAL, SLICED, 8-OZ. WT. PKG. . . 55* • • LIQUID CLEANER, Bffck Cheese . ..... Banquet Dinners .. . KRAFT NATURAL, SLICED, 8-OZ. WT. PKG. . . 57* • • FROZEN; Chicken, Beef, Turkey, 11-OZ. WT. . . 39* Colby Cheese............. Tuna Pies . . KRAFT NATURAL, SLICED, 8-OZ. WT. PKG. . . 53* Frank'muth Cheese. . KflAFT NATURAL, SLICED, 8-OZ. WT. PKG. . . 53* STAR KIST, 8-OZ. WT. )C 2/39' Treasure Island Breaded Shrimp °£; 79‘ ”Sliop the store with the SPARTAN on the deer!" -V THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, JUNE 14, 19fi8 Rabbis Criticize forced Retirement DAIXAS, Tex. (AP) -You’re still healthy and your mind’s sharp. You’re experienced at yoi^ job and good at it. You’ve learnt its pitfalls, problems and possibilities and how to han-' form rabbis, which he heads, meets hext week, in Boston, They serve congregations with about one million members across the country. As Rabbi Olan sees it, Ameri- die them. But you’re 65, And thcican practice regarding oider cit-ruies say you’re finished. jizens disregards a basic reli- "This is one of the great im-lgious tenet, stemming from moralities of our time,” saysjGod’s sanctification of human Rabbi Levi A. Olan, a Texas re-beings to tend the earth and ligious leader who views the serve as co-partners in contin-moaem-acceni on youth, and uing creation, deference to it, as a distortion of with the number of persons over 65 now approaching nearly 10 per cent of the population, Rab-bf Ofan said many of them retain their vigor and have much-needed capabilities. the orderiy functioning of civiii- “A man is a workman here on tions they can make,” he said. | But for the most part, spread- zation. God's earth to do God’s work,” he said in an interview. ' Once ‘‘We take a whole segment ot^ou^make it impossible for him the population, and regardless to work, you rob him of what of their capacities and back-1God meant him to do. You’ve ground, deciare them useless,”!killed him as a functioning part-he said. “Society kiils them off ner of God. at 65. It’s destructive, wasteful “ifs a grave moral issue, in- ing the span of active life, and What older people “deserve is preference, yet we do not even give them equality,” Dr. Ho-schel adds, Some religious leaders advocate greater use of older people teachers in schools and universities, and as overseers in offices and industries, or the setting up of special universities “Our country Just hasn’t come to grips with the fact that these people have a great deal to con-tribute to life-not just for their ‘"ey can own sakes, but for the sake of|^^®*'' interests, real and badly needed contribu- As the Biblical book of Job ing institutional regulations says, “Wisdom is with the aged, force their retirement at 65, and a nd understand ing4n the fengthf^gme igbwlFadefS taWr of the civilized patterns of life,” he said. “Unions and industry have not faced up to it." He said, "Every great culture and philosophy has sought to define the ^stages of life, for children, for youth and for maturity. Under normal standards, youth must grow and develop before taking over loidership. “But the whole tendency to-day is to put the young in the center of things as if we’re al-1 most ready to turn the world! over to them. The general atti-1 tude is that the old generation •Mobil Oil Corporitlon The only game vve play crtli/lobll is virlth you. Notyourcar. The name of the game is Clean Up with Mobil. And you can clean up as much as $2,500. You might win a brand new Plymouth Barracuda, too. (We're giving one away every single day.) Just visit any particlpatmg..MQbil Statloii and starL wili handle it themselves. of days.” |jng it to younger levels. However* Ra'bbL .-idj «'ve made mbe and wrong.” ,he”n breSif Soutbe". Me.hodls. Univerel.|'SI „ evldenc. ib the land bolds Ibal the y»>"e P“P|b have such 1 Its a grave moral issue, m- in me lana nuuis mat me yuungi r\ n „ j: ms? jvussg n«»c ouvu volving the veflue of human life , are qualified to take over con- Dallas and televim^ stability or seasoning that we playing. There’s no need to buy anything. But if you do decide to buy something, you’ll find that although we're sensational at giving away money, we're even better at taking care of your car. Kaom Ulan, pasior OI L»aiias |/uia us noi Kumg lu uc au.»cu,ni,. I „r' iHpr npnnl» hrinos ^ . Temple Emanu-el and president by building more old folk’s rest The trend amounts to idola-™ ™ ® ° ^ They should be allowed of the Central Conference of homes or shuffleboard courts or try, says another religidusl®'^®^ to express theniselves, but that American Rabbis, is pressing insisting that older people use scholar. Rabbi Dr. Abraham idoesn’t mean they can run a for joint religious efforts tojtheir accumulated abilities play-j^pschel of .New York’s Jewish iPRESENT POUaES university.” j bring government and industry I ing cards or pitching hocse-Theological Seminary of Ameri-! Present policies, compelling At 65 himself. Rabbi 01an!_ behind new policies toward old-shoes.” - (.a. “Youth is our g^gd, and being healthy people to give up their adds: “I’m not ready to turn: er people. DESERVE PREFERENCE young is divine.” ^ lifetime work, are a “distortion our world over to the young.” [ NEXT WEEK ; With better health standards; \bu can also play "Claan Up with Mobil” by writing to Mobil Oil Corporation, PO. Box 53R Detroit, Michigan 48232 Only licensed drivers eligible. Void where prohibited. No purchase required. Car given somewhere In U.S.A, BUY! SELL! TRADE! ... USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! The conference of : I re-1 and medical advances increas-j What to Do on Rainy Day: List Those Things Undone iRAirrAHdATUiinc By HAL BOYLE NEW YORK (AP) - No one quite knows what to do on a rainy day. Life seems to have loose ends. Children feel wistful and un-purposeful. S o do grown-ups, if the truth be told. -* ★ ★ Impres? a teen-aggr by con-Lvincitig him Riere’s one person in the world over 30 he can! tru^. , Hold a convention in a phone booth. BOYLE One of the ways to fill time on a rainy day, besides watching the drops on a window coalesce into rivulet: and wander down to the sill, is to take pen and paper and make a list of things you might have done in life but haven’t. REVEALING? It can be a revealing catalogue. For example, your list might reveal that you have yet to— Beat a big bass drum in a parade. Cry “Thar she blows!” at the sight of a surfacing whale. Break up a solemn-faced Buckingham Palace guard with a funny story. CAN’T WAIT Yep, when on a rainy day you write down a list of all the things you haven’t done, you can hardly wait for the sunshine to break through—so you can get cracking! tws in I0HIH21! Exchange bows with an emperor penguin. Walk across America. Win a straw vote. Break the heart of a red-haired girl. Grow a third set of teeth. Understand a poem by Allen Ginsberg. Plant an oak tree. Fall into an olive pit. Discover a booby trap in time to save comrades from peril. Sup on a cup of ambrosia. Keep curious strangers in the hotel room below you awake all night by sternly refusing to drop the other shoe. Open a can of sardines and find a live one in the crowd. Box a compass. Paddle your own canoe In Venice. Be piped aboard a battleship. Paint the town a real bright Halt a lynch mob in Dodge City. I Salt a gold mine and sell it to| a greenhorn. ' Address a joint session of the Congress. Lift a midget to a mailbox to help him post a letter. j Become the secret pen pal ofj Gen, Charles de Gaulle. j Trade barbecue sauce reclpesJ with Lyndon Johnson. Carve your initials on the Taj Mahal. Build a castle in Spain. Swiss watches in favorite styles! 2BOB-LO MOONLIGHTS SAIL EVERY SATURDAY AT 9 AND 10 Every Saturday Bob-Lo offers you a choice of two Moonlights. Whether you sai' al 9 or 10, those Saturday Moonlights offer you the same bargain in pleasure. Cruising on the river, dancing under the stars, a visit to gay Bgb-Lo island — everything for a wonderful evening. And it’s all for $2.00. HEAVY DUTY TOOL BOX Youi choK* ot ouorted Swist-mode watcheil Sweep second hand, onti-mognetir lifetime mainspringl Expansion wolchband PORTABLE TOOL CADDY 6.99 3.99 1.69 Precision mode !4” and %" drive combination socket set! Lifetime guarantee! Roomy hip-roof deiigni Full length tote troy and piono hingel Boll boaring turn table' Carrying hondlel Holds tools, noils, screwsi Sturdy plastic. VISIT OUR NATIONAL BRAND DISCOUNT WiSTCLOX PLAIN DIAL POCKET WATCHES Speciol purchasel Shock resistant, onti-mogneticl Sweep second hand; nickel color cose Great for lather's Doyl 1.99 JEWEUY DEPT POR incredible SAVINOS! SHOP DAILY 9:30 A.M. TO 10 P.M. SUNDAYS... NOON TILL 6 P.M. USE YOUR MICHIGAN BANKARD CREDIT CARD! corner OF DIXIE HGWY. AT TELEGRAPH RD.-PONTIAC 8 GREAT STORES IN 1 MONEY REFUNDED IF YOU’RE NOT SATISFIED! THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, JUNE 14, 1968 C—T Red Cross Called GIs Hot Line to Home Folks "The Red Crosi is a hotline to the people back home, an oasis in the heat of battle, and a Comfort during hospltaliza* tton,” explained Gen. William C. Westmoreland, until recently commander of the U. S. Troops in Vietnam. , The organization’s many activities are well-shovm in a recently made film of Red Cross workers on the Job in Vietnam. The film is available* to groups upon request from -the Red Cross local office at 118 Franklin Blvd. In the last ycarlibmel78,000 servicemen in Vietnam alone have used at least one of the various services of the Red Cross. The case of a local man, Ronald Wims, whose wife Joyce lives at 366V9 iiaviiiK fivwu ouui .... , , • forming characteristics due to powdery mUdew its rhizomatous growth habit. Generally the Kentucky bluegrasses are not adapted to intense shade. There are a number of varieties of Kentucky bluegrass, some having distinctly different management requirements. It IS important to which can cause severe thinning under intense shade. Stem rusts are also a problem with Merion but can b e overcome by a balanced fertilizer program. Merion is highly susceptible to stripe smut, which is most prevalent carefully thatch conditions, i has shown some resistance to the current races of leaf and stem rust as well as to powdery mildew. It should not be used on droughty sites since it is very poor in drought tolerance ant drought recovery capability. * ★ ★ Newport seems to prefer medium high nitrogen fertility level. It has a medium rate establishment. Newport tends to become very stemmy seedhead setting in June. on any one disease on any one bluegfass variety oontalned In the blend. | cool season turfgrass of fine texture particularly adapted to light, sandy soils, shaded conditions and lower management WINDSOR - Is a dark green, moderately low growing Kentucky bluegrass. It has moderate susceptibility to leafspot, powdery mildew and rust. Windsor responds to high nitrogen fertilization similar to Merion. It has had only limited testing under Michigan conditions'. BLUEGRASS BLENDS - The blending of several bluegrass varieties which possess varying disease resistant characteristics is preferred. The blend is suited to a broader range of adptation disease tolerance than a RED FESCUE (FestUca rubra) Red Fescue I a perennial. Js superior to the bluegrasses i n establishment t-mixed—vHth-bluegrasses, often serves as a valuable companion grass. Excessive nitrogen or water will cause thinning of red fescue. Normally one-two pounds of actual nitrogen per 1,000 square feet per year is adequate. All conunercially available varieties of red fescue are susceptible to the leafspot disease which can cause extensive patchy, areas of dead turf in midsummer. ★ ★ Available varieties include Pennlawn; Rainier, Illabee, and Trinity red fescue which spread by underground creeping stems single variety. In g e n e r a 1, and Chewings red fescue which blending reduces the incidence mas a bunch type growth habit. You Can Find a Gift for Father at TOWN & COUNTRY MIKIS HY SPEtmiS BLUE SPRUCE up to 6-ft. tall Specimen Plants <22*® Potted Healthy Plants Ready to Bloom FATHER’S DAY DNLY 3 for «7 GIVE HIM A Gift Certificate Let Him Pick His Own Gift TOWN & COUNTRY CARDEN CENTER 5812 Highland Rd.,(M59) OR 3-7147 Just East of the Airport OPEN SUNDAY SURROUND YOUR HOME IN COLOR! Hybrid 7oas—Florabundas Climbers Famous Jackson and Perkins POHED ROSEBUSHES NOW IN BLOOM The finest quality potted Roses now in active growth and bud. New potent varieties as well as all-time favorites. from S1 98 10 Minutes North of Pontiac on Perry (M-24) As You Ei|ter Lake Orion JACOBSEN’S GARDEN TOWN NURSERY Hours: I i.m. to I p.m. - SunHuy: I to 2 p.m. 545 S. Broadway, Lake Orion MY 2-2681 I select the variety best suited to' . the .partkular---managemeBt-l^^^ level desired. Kentucky, Michigan, it has not bluegrasses should be mowed at 1 Mi to 2 inches. Cutting shorter than 1V4 inches will seriously weaken the turf, j Kentucky blue grasses are I widely used on lawns, athletic ifields, institutional grounds fairways, tees, roadsides cemeteries and airfields. ★ ★ ★ COUGAR — Is a moderately low growing variety of Ken- yet become as severe a problem as in states to the south. Merion also shows considerable susceptibility to a new disease which has been called Fusarium blight. With the advent of cool fall weather, Merion shows a reduced growth rate and turns a characteristic purpleish-green color. Merion has superior ability to tolerate and recover from tucky Blue grass with a similar f therefore would be leaf texture to Me r i o n adapted, than mos t Numerous leaves are oriented varieties, to hght .horizontally. It tends to have a blue-green color. paratively slow to establish. It is highly susceptible toi ® manage- leafspot and is moderately compared to most susceptible to stripe smut and bluegrass varieties and powdery mildew. Use of this variety in Michigan is suggested only for the northern half of the lower peninsula where leafspot is not a problem. The outstanding attribute of Cougar is the excellent drought tolerance and drought recovery on sandy soils. DELTA — This variety of Kentucky bluegrass is similar to Kenblu. It is as susceptible to leafspot as Kenblu Kentucky bluegrass but recovers from injury much more rapidly. It is fairly resistant to stem rust and powdery mildew. The variety is outstanding in establishment vigor. Delta can recover from drought fairly quickly. The growth habit of Delta is quite erect. FYLKING KENTUCKY BLUEGRASS — It has a dense, low growing habit of growth of relatively fine leaf texture. Its establishment rate is satisfactory. Fylking is reported to have good resistance to leafspot and stripe smut and a moderate resistance to stem rust. It is moderately susceptible to powdery mildew. Fylking has had only limited testing under Michigan conditions. KENBLU — It has superior early spring and late fall growth and color hut becomes dormant in midsummer. This twice the rate nitrogen fertilization (6-8 of actual nitrogen per 1,000 square feet per year). Merion tends to thatch more than other bluegrasses due to its vigorous, dense growth habit. NEWPORT - A Kentucky! bluegrass variety similar to | Merion in growth habit which i blends well with Merion. Its main virtue is excellent soil vigor which is desirable for] football fields. It is not as vigorous in rhizome production and sod formation. The leafspot resistance ofi Newport is not adequate with severe thinning frequently oc-| curing in the third and fourth years. Newport is moderately susceptible to stripe smut. It I Just Right For Father’s Day WHIKLWINDIwTORO Hw Worth Mnrer Tom’s Hardware will show you the complete line of TORO mowers From Large Selection of Used Power Mowers and Riding Mowers TOM’S HARDWARE 905 Orchard Lake Ave. Open Daily 9-6, Sunday 9-2 FE 5-2424 MASSEY-FERGUSON You won't want to *ettl« for less than the Massey-FergU-son 7 and its 7 H.P. engine . . . with electric starter, 3-speed gear shift, adjustable cushioned seat with comfortable back rest. ,00 ®525 Perry Lawn 8 Garden Center T615 Highland Rd. AA-59, Pontiac 67^6236 \Ritter^s Garden BIG SELECTION-ALL COLORS PETUNIAS, SNAPS, ZINNIAS MARIGOLDS, ASTERS [BARBERRY Home Grown STMWUIIIIES Extra Ltirge-Extra Nice For SALADS Dut of This Worid Crisp Radishes, LeHnoe, Grsan Green Peppers, Cnkas; FRESH EWRY RAY! RITTER'. ftvm Mwihdi 3225 W. HURON-FE 8-3911 6684 DIXIE HWY., CURKSTON SAVE WITH MEMBERS OF Hardware WNOLESALERSi Formirly Big ,4 HARDWARE STONES KEEQO PONTIAC Kaago Hardware No. 1 Tom’s Hardware 3041 Orchard Lake Road 905 Orthard Lake Ave. 682-2660 FE 5-2424 RENT ’EM! e Floor Sanders e Floor Edgera e Hand Sendora e Floor Peliahoro OPEN SUNDAY 9-2 FREE SDHERSMir SPECIAL ’9.95 Grass Bag Attachnient with Your Pwahase of Any YARD-MAN ROTARY MOWER “This Weekend Only" YARD-MAN ROTARY Model 2180 Supreme - Sofety Clutch/nroke. Sofety Twin/Deck. 20” cutting width. NEW HANDLE ...............2210- *109.95 _______ ______, . ..idle. Twin lined Deck, 22" Cutting Width, Dial-A-Speod Seleeter, SH H.P. Brigg. A Strotton «13ft95 Wa Takefrada-lns IDEAL FATHER’S DAY GIFT B & D ELECTRIC SHRUB and HEDGE TRIMMERS *19** BLACK A DECKERS Lawn Edger A Trimmer Neotly trims grots end weeds along fences, wells end under shrubbery. Unit converts to en edger with a quick twist. 6" blade. T Heavy Steel CLOTHES POSTS 9-ft. long— 4-ft. crossarms with 4 hooks Only Nils I i pair NO FINER SEED Perennial RYE GRASS 19* KENTUCKY CLUE GRASS ALta.srMsre CREEPINQ RED FISCUE 59! Scotts TURF BUILDER PLUS a Gives full Fertlllrlng of Turf Builder. Controls dandelion, plantain, buck-horn. Controls chickweed, ground ivy, clover, otc. MOO $095 10,000 $1995 Sq.Ft. 9ag P Sqe Ft. Bag I < scons TURF BUILDERS 5,0W sq. ft. bs, 405 jgJlL 10.000 tq. ft. bag 8s95 16.000 tq. ft. bag 13.95 THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIUAV, JUNE U. 1968 C—0 iTrrrrrrrmTrrr»rmTfTrmTriroTB"5Trnt Get rid of every single dandelion All you dcf is sjifcad turf builder plus 2 on your lawn. It knocks out dandelions and 24 other kinds of weeds as it full-fertilizes your grass. Results are amazing. As weeds curl up and gradually disappear, your lawn takes on new vigor and beauty. You’re bound to be pleased. If you’re not... your money back. It’s as simple as that. 5,000 sq ft bag 6.95 10,000 sq ft bag 12.95 We Deliver — Phone OR 3-2441 REGAL Feed and Lawn Supplx Co, 4266 Dixie Highway - Drayton Plaint, Michigan 3 MiUt North of Pontiac ^^neototet»iem^nt»tm>»s.»JtRJULlL«JL)L Bashful Perennial Folds Up if Touched Sensitive Plant Is a wonder of the botanicRl world. If you touch a single leaflet, It will immediately fold up. Successive leaflets along the stem will also fold and the entire branch will bend down toward the base of the plant. Left alone the plant will recover and become fully sensitive again. Repeated stimulation does not harm the plant. The plant will Egg Cartons Are Handy for Planls When transplanting plants to a cold frame, place an egg-case filler, or as many fillers as I needed, in the cold frame and I fill with dirt. Set one plant into each egg section. Then when ready to tPipsplant to the garden the egg case filler can be lifted out, and 'each plant has a nice square of j earth about the roots. This enables the plant to be .transplanted without checking jits growth. The bush morning glory {Iponmoea leptophylla) has a heavy perennial root. A summer bloomer, its flowers are three-inch purple-pink. recover from shock in a minute i or so, but will not become fully sensitive again for a few hours. * * ★ In direct sunlight, the leaves return to normal In a few minutes. Botanists call this reaction to touch thigmotropism. SEMITROPICAL The Swisitlve Plant (Mimosa pudica) Is of semi-tropical origin and likes warm bright cot^itlons. It will transplant very well out of doors in full sunlight where It displays even greater sensitivity. The plant, witn its beauUM, Jacy Jollage^ and dainty pink flowers will grow two or three feet tall in garden or flower bed. It is also suitable for indoor winter use as a house plant. A perennial in its native climate. Sensitive Plant is grown as an annual here. You can enjoy this unusual plant. Start a Punch ’n Gro planter kit already planted with Sensitive Plant. The kits contain seeds evenly spaced at the right depth for best germination and growth. The Sensitive Plant seeds have been specially treated to speed germination. Already fertilized and with a special soil mixture, the kits are found at most supermarkets and variety stores. Instructions for starting the kit and transplanting out of doors are included. Pinch Plants Spur Busbiness Keep pinching your plants for bushier growth. Both annual and perennials benefit from this occasional nip. Do not pinch chrysanthemums after July 4 or your plant may not set flowers early enough to mature this season. Gardening Tip Morning glory seeds arc venr hard. To facilitate germination, notch the seed with a shinrp knHbimr soak It several hours In lukewarm water. Vertical louvers as applied to fence construction allow .for privacy and shade In your garden. Sensitive Plant WE 66 UNVUlim M • Kitehen* • Carages . • Awnino* • R* • Storm Windows • Dormers • Sidine • Ponelino o Storm Doors • Roofing e Cement • Shutters CALL NOW FOR FREE ESTIMATES, DESIGN SERVICE OR 4-0169 HOME IMPROVEMEHT CO. 1656 Highland Bd., Pontiac, Mich. BORDINE’S HAS MORE OF EVERYTHING WEEKEND SAT SPECIAL! Inly "Bashful Girl" Garden Fountain 4ya-ft, High Pump Included Choice of gold, bronze, white, jade, aqua and gold. Free delivery 15 miles. Sole ehds Sunday night, June 16. 3V2-ft. diam. shapes Dramatic Outdoor Planters These handsome Alpha planters are very striking when filled with flowering plants. Made of weather resistant aggregate, they are not likely to break or crack. Can be spray painted any color. $8.00 to $45.00 Decorative GARDEN STONE Stone Chips coated with Valspar vinyl plastic. Choose from green, red, blu4, turquoise. 50-lb. bag....................$2.49 TERRAGREEN JUMBOS. Peach-colored cloy chops. Conserve moisture, decorate ground, keep weeds down. 50-lb. bag....................$3.25 WHITE MARBLE CHIPS 50-lb. bag................... $2.25 SALE OF TONKA FOLDING FIREBOWL Regularly $14.99 $12*« No. 6244 — 24" diam. grill with large hood and UL motor. 1" diam. aluminum legs fold easily for storage. 6" wheels. Chrome.plated grid with handles. Setew-type grid adjustment. Swing out spit. 4 spit heights TONKA SUPREME FIREBOWL $29” WEBER CHAR6ROIL COVERED KETTLE DELUXE GRILL No. BK-710. Th» T«xon (block). 22%" diam. grill, oluminum oih cotchor, legi, rubbor tired wh»*li. 29" high. No. CB-220-A. Cooking height 33". Cooking area, 19 x 33". Fire level, adjuiloble from 10" to 4?4". S yeor guarantee. $49*$ GARDEN ARBORS Decorative white painted woods. Adorn them with vines and climbing roses. _ $7.95 up Swinging Gate* $5.95 Arbor with benche* and gates .$42.50 RUSTIC PICNIC TABLES Sturdy redwood and fir tables with benches that will give you wonderful service Summer after summer. _ $24.50, $39.50 OPEN DAILY 10 TO 10 SUNDAY n to 6 FRIDAY - SATURDAY - SUNDAY lAWflBARBIH BISCBUNTS 50’ lb. Bag 10-6-4 lAWN FERTILIZER 1.67 Kmart Price — Charge It All purpose fertilizer enriches soil. Covers 5,000 sq. fu -NetWt. 50-Lb.- BAG OF MICHIGAN PEAT 63* Kmart Price — Charge It Weed free. Excellent soil conditioner. Use as top dressing. •Net Wt. “CAMPUS GREEN” GRASS SEED SALE 97* Our Reg. 1.11 — Chargelt S-I.b.* bag. Ideal grass starter Choice; VEGETABLE or FLOWBt FUTS Wide variety In flower annual* and vegetable flat*. $52.00 up I stand, .............S7.9S >1 Table,........... 24.95 Tables ..............20.95 BORDIIVE’S GARDEN TIP DF THE WEEK Bettar Kill Rose Chafers New Thase fawn-eolorad blender b*«tl*« *P-pear in mid-June and eat highly-colored flower* like_ro*e*, pepnie*, irit, hy-¥r^ahgea. Be*f way to treot them !* to de*troy thoir grub* now by *proying your lawn and *hrub bod* with Chlordono or Dioldrin. To kill tho adult bootlo*, u*o a coirtbinotion of DDT and Malothion emul-*ion. SALE OF SPREADING JUNIPERS Choice of PFITZER, HITZI, ARMSTRONG. $4199 12" te 15" *toek, reody to plont •r ^ » In greund right new. ■■ OPEN 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. EVERYDAY INCLUDING SUNDAY Our Reg. 1.97 BARK MULCH bat 1.61 BOW-TINE RAKE Our Reg. 1.77 1.47 Painted tines .. . A 14-inch spread. GARDEN SHOVEL Our4teg. 1.77 1.47 Painted . . . so it resists rust. SHEEP MANURE 50!.^;, 1.77 Deluxe “CAPE COD” WHITE WOOD PICKET FENCE 99 c much Deluxe fence lecdon ie 48 inchee long. Save I MID-SEASON ClEmilCE OF EVERGREENS, BUSHES... TREES BORDIIMEVS Better Biaamss Nursery • Greenhouse • Garden Store • Florist 1835 S. Rochester Road • 1 Mile North of Auburn Road • Phone 651-9000 REGULAR 3.37 2.87 3.52 3.17 11.47 7.83 7.83 3.27 2.07 8.37 4.97 5.87 2.87 2.87 1.87 4.67 SAVnr Va and MoM ASSORTED DWARF FRUIT TREES SPREADING YEWS UPRIGHT YEWS PFITZER JUNIPER AUSTRIAN PINE PATHFINDER JUNIPERS CANNAERTI JUNIPERS SPINY CREEK JUNIPERS IRISH JUNIPER CLUMP BIRCH MARSHALL’S SEEDLESS ASH MAGNOLIS SOULANGEANA FORSYTHIA, LINWOOD COLD HONEYSUCKLE FRENCH HYBRID LILACS WISTERIA TREE - PURPLE mEfRICE 5’to 6’ 1.68 18” to 24” 1.44 18” to 24” 1.76 12” to 18” 1.58 2’ to 3’ 5.74 4’ to 5’ 3.92 4’ to 5’ 3.92 18” to 24” 1.64 12” to 18” 1.04 6’ to V 4.17 5’ to 6' 2.43 2’ to 3’ 2.94 5' to 6' 1.44 3’ to 4' 1.44 2' to 3’ .94 2.34 GLENWOOD PLAZA. . North Perry at Glenwood \ 0—10 OMUND UNIVERSITY’S MEUOW BROOK FAIR PreaentB COUNT BASIE AND HIS ORCHESTRA Saturday, June 15 - 8:30 P.M. Meadow Brook Festival Grounds ' TICKETS: Pavilion $3.00 - Lawn $2.00 Available On Festival Grounds THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY. JUNE 14, 1968 New Show BTi Volumes Books Cover Ed Sullivqn, Waif Disney -ACADEMY AWARD WINNER- BEST AC1IIESS K?. BESTSGBEHIUYP Stanley Kramer Spencer i Sidney i Katharine TRACY ' POITIER' HEPBURN guess who's coming to dinner ® ■ ^ZZaKEEGO Hannan’s Narmits in MRS. BROWN YOU’VE GOT A LOVELY DAUGHTER WMUay* at TiN and tSdS SJI. tatarday at liN, 2M, 4iM, laaday at 2tOI, MS and Sill P.M. PLUS PETER SELLERS AS “THE BOBO” Waakdaya li4S Only SaturdaywIsM, liSS Sanday 2>4I, Ti2S A Doubla Agant in Doubla-Dangar ”A DANDY IN ASPIC” ‘Scop* and Color Starring Waakdaya at T:0S and 9:15 Saturday at 1:50, 5:00, 1:10, 15:20 Sunday 2:90,4:1S,S:2S,S:1S DRIVE-IN THEATER Union Lk. at Haggerty Rd. EM 3-0661 COMMERCE FIRST RUN Showtime Dusk One for eacli of the Deadly Sins, AMERICAN INTERNATIONAL COLOR nr PERFECT inllKERmBW-ADAMH^ out talent” to Harriet Van Home’s “lie got where he Is not by having a personality but by having no personality; he Is the commonest common denominator.” ★ * -y; Such coipmerits have gotten under Sullivan’s supposedly thick skin. But critics come and Sullivan remains. On June 20 he marks the 20th anniversary of his weekly television hour. “Always on Sunday” was written by the CBS publicist for the Ed Sullivan Show, Michael David Harris, and thus cannot be counted on for complete objectivity. Yet the biography is sometimes quite candid, when the author recounts the Sullivan bloopers over the years. Some of the best: “I’d like to prevent Robert Merrill”: “The fierce Maori tribe from New England”; (for a tuberculosis drive) “Good night and help By BOB THOMAS AP Movle-Television Writer HOLLYWOOD - Show biz books— The inexplicable Ed Sullivan gets the full-scale treatment in a new book titled “Always on Sunday”;'! Meredith Press, $4.95. The.vol-: u m e doesn’t! quite providej reason Stoneface’s suc-l cess, but it tells almost every-1 thing else the THOM.4S reader would need to know about this unique television phenomenon. The Sullivan mystique has been dealt with, usually in a snide way by his detractors. The comments range from Fred Allen’s “Ed Sullivan will be a success as long as other pepple have talent” to John Crosby’s ‘Mr. Sullivan, of course, is notoriously and admittedly with-stamp out TV”; (after a Sergio Franchi Christmas number) ‘Let’s hear it for the Lord’s Prayer” ... 'The Disney Version” by Richard Schickel (Simon and Schuster, $6.50) is the first full-scale biography to appear since the death of Walt Disney in December 1966. The Disney fijmily and studio declined to cooperate with the author, which proved to be both an asset and a liability. ★ ★ ★ Since he was not beholden to the Disneys, Schickel was able| to view Walt for what he was: a: brilliant but sometimes fallible human being. He could also assess the Disney product; which often leaned too far in the-direction of sentiment and commerce. The Schickel version of Walt and his works may seem overly harsh at times, but it is incisive. Lacking access to firsthand sources—or even illustrations for the book—Schickel Is fo to rely on hearsay and long-ago interviews. That is the basic weakness in “The Disney Version”: There is no original reporting. But it is a valuable contribution to what will doubtless be a growing collection of Dlsneyana. Broadcast Satellites' Role to Grow united nations, n.y. (AP) — Communications satellites can make government more democratic, says a new U.N. study titled “Space lienee and ’Techhoro^.” By about 1975, it declares, broadcasting satellites may be developed that can send directly to all home television sets in A million square miles—a 1' the area of the United States— and so “open a whole new dimension in information dissemination.” ★ * Meanwhile, it states, the existing point-to-point satellites that carry network TV and radio programs from continent to continent may become so numerous as to increase the number of telephone and telegraph channels enormously and reduce long-distance tolls to a single rate to any. place on earth. ■k -k it With a better informed public, and with the possibility of automatic and instaneous opinion sampling and voting,” the study continues, “much greater public participation at all levels of gov^ ernment would be possible.” “The meteorological satellite and the high-spe^ computer, combined with increasing knowledge in the physical proc-esses in the at^sptee produce weather and influence climate,” it says, “are rapidly leading to a point where it will be possible to make reliable long-range weather predictions The results, it says, could be ‘better access to information sources and possibly, less delegation of authority,” and also “better representation at all levels and more democratic procedures.” k k k At the same time, the study dds, direct - broadcasting TV satellites could carry educational programs to homes and schools in the remotest villages, for such varied purposes as spreading the news, eradicating illiteracy, building national unity and promoting the use of a single national language in place of many dialects. POWER NEEDED What is needed for such satellites, it says, is “a good deal of power to retransmit signals” that home TV sets can pick up, and “very large antennas which could be erected in space and then accurately point^ at the area to be covert.’; “If power-source and antenna development is vigorously pursued,” it contends, “direct broadcasting television satellite capability might be available by the mid4970s.” k k k „ The U.N. secretariat prepared the study for the U.N. Conference on the Peaceful Uses of Outer Space in^^Vienna July 14-27. It focuses on benefits to developing countries from such Last two days - Friday & Saturday June 14 and 15 “THE THREE SUNS” 4825 W. Huron (M-59) Cover charge this engagement only RESERVATIONS SUGGESTED Aiiau(u| Lcuiej Phone 674-0426 Coming Monday, June 17, **Beau Marc*” from Phijadelphia over a period of two weeks or more.” H0LLY-Tonight-1:30 IBCimiE) 12 NORTH SA6INAW IN DOWNTOWN PONTIAC MATINEES DAILY OPEN 11:45 A.M. Show Starts 12:00 Noon _______ Continuous—334-4436 YOU MUST BE 18 - PROOF REQUIRED i HOW PLAYING AT WATERFORD I IBCimiE) They’reryovng... they’re in love WALTDISNEV mww TCCNNfCOtOII’ emiwmim LAKE THEATRE WALLED UKE PY 2-22S4 Fri. 7 p.m. Continuous Sat. A Sun. 3:30 PJW. Continuous USTINOV PLESHETTE " THE FOX* IS HEREI AMO FALPATATIONLPEOPLE, WHAT A MOVIEr SANDYDENNIS -KEIR DULLEA ANNE HEYWOOD Afl ELLEN MARCH PC IX H. LAWRENCE'S THE GJC Exclusively at f these Theatres: [ lAPARISIEN j TOWNE BU'Y! SELL! TRADE! . USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! j Won* PloAfitu^ at PontuiC | first dbive-im run"! - ^ RODGERS .-HAMMERSTF.IN’S I UNDER 12 RODGERS-HAMMERSTEIN’S M 'trJ WINNIIOFSACAOEMUKK ( \ lieliiiliB8"ltet I •■Ms-' —1 ETbIrT VISI KltllAFD ROOCESS » SPECIAL FEATURETTE ‘The Mississippi Traveler’ GIANT FREE POWER RIDES Ptmtiac BOX OFFICE OPEN 7:00 P.M. BTRlSlHEAraTFEM^ ^ 2935 DIXIE HIGHWAY (U.S. 10) 1 BLOCK N. TELEGRAPH R i I OP iNuo / l ^ , I AWAVii I SUSAN STRASBFI)^ y^sracKi^; M /"WHECOLOll niSn^deTn ROARKEMm giant FREE POWERIDES BOX OFFICE OPEN 7:00 P.M. DRIVE IN THEATER------G74-T800 WMS. UKE RD. AT AIRPORT RD., MILE WEST OF DIXIE HGWY. (ILS. 10) • CHILDREN UNDER 12 FREE \No4ja PUuyitUf. at lSANWDENMS KEIRDULW^A ANNEHEYWOOD '^4IMBM another... “THE' 7vi,iiTM TioBERT AOUIDEFOR ii MAHHAU MORSE THE MARRIED MAN'S INBER STEVENS • color by deluxe BOX OFFICE OPEN 7:00 P.M. Jg DRIVE IN THEATER FE 21000 /^^SOUTH TELEGRAPH AT SO. LAKE RD.1 MILE df W. WOODWARD / I WouA Platfi4Ujj TAURUS message. Draw line t-*-—- ■ reality and wishful thinking. CANCER (June 21-July 22): lourney may be on agenda. Wonde vacation travel — but check dir: measages. Be positive of u purpose. Then you gain setisfaction LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Day features change, variety. Your Intellectual curiosity comes Into play. You find out thinm especially about m 0 - -I— c„,( oui ARIES per Jack E. Moore, 63 Whitfield Joseph B. Depman Jr., Birmii,, Charles J. Ohirich, 113 Hudson Christopher J. Cadwallader, 233 Edison Henry Barton, 6455 "------- Douglas T. Fortin, Ronald Gowdy, 236 . .. Weldon H. Lewis, Clat „ In P,ugh, 573 Californi Roper M, Soriano, " Clifford P. Ayotte, lorlano, 724 Cortwrlght . . Ayotte, 41 South Strath Paul 0. cook, 154 Hickory Lane George A. Crossley, Drayton Plaint Robert C. Dieball, 4458 Motorway Royce T. Griffith, 2200 Dr Willie J. Stewarl, 82 Palmer Francis D. LaBarge, 1547 ' David P, Little, 344 West Charley M. Reyes, 110 South Jamei C. Smith,.67 Henry Cla, Ronnie D. Warren, 121 Eest YpsllontI Richard 0. Welch, Highland Bryce AL Whitaker, 1069 Brown Henry A. COx, 45 Allen Willard J. Smi... ...... Gary J. Wells, 1324 Uni Bruce R. WIgent, 128 Tt Donald H. GreenIcSs, Clarkslon Raul G, Cruz, 778 Corwin Robert er Oevaney, I149Sfanl Carl F. Gllgallon, Clarston John W. Glenn, 73 Jackson Jasper Green, 319 South Edi Grant E. Lee, . 36 Whltfi-'- Bruce* E.' Kent,"Lake o”.„., Paul W. Lampkin, Waterford Lloyd A. Low, Drayton Plains "■ tat, 21 Putnam ----------.Jewl - “ ' ■ Richard G. Par ----- -nglefo Kenneth Luces, _ Gerald^ Newbarry, Rochester “ ~irr. Walled Lake -T, 365 South Marshall Daniel M. White, 2025 OkJ Lane Keith L. Wilson, 81 East Hopkins Gaorga C. Antonlou, 2472 Empire Clarence R. Campbell. Drayton James D, O'Dee, 217 Wes^ Brool Ferrell J, Wagner, Clerkston HeroW e. V^ck, 1251 Cherryt* KennMh J. Blue, Union Lake Andre R. Janiste,------- Lynn P. Beaulieu, VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Give ; tentlon to home, mete, partner. Be awe. _ „ of' public reaction, not wise to force 1 Issues. Diplomacy wins the day ~ perceptive. Learn why people act ai LIBRA (Sept.23-Oct. 22): Don't dt-. yourself regarding motives of oth< Individual who aided you In past n now be confined to home, hospital. V' Obtain hint from VIRGO message. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): emphz, goodwill, especially in relations with friends, children, one who attracts you romantically. Give of yourself. What you . give Is returned twofold. Act accordingly. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Upsurge Indicated where property affairs are concerned. You are able to obtain greeter value for efforts, money. " act is due to be culmintaed I favor. Relax tonight. CAPRICORN (bee. 22-Jan. 19)( You move about, but take care In trait' Stress originality, Numerdus ideas 6.-available; choose quality. Relative may make request. If it Is reasonab'-willing to co-operate. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.18): Check' possessions. You may exhibit tendency to be careless today. Could result In loss " alert, you could spot legitimate bargi Be a keen observer. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Good lu aspect today coincides with chance cement a close, personal relatlonsi The following is a list of recent Pontiac area births as recorded at the Oakland Counts Clerk’s Office (by name of father): GrImes/ 65 East CoiQata Clarksfon THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, JUNE 14, 196^ The following are top prices covering sales of locally grown produce by growers and sold by them in wholesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets as of Wednesday. Produce Apples, Red Delicio Stock Market Calms Down VEGETABLES Chives, dz. bch. (Radishes. Red. dz. t NEW YORK (AP) - 'fhe stock market calmed down considerably today after the record-breaking volume Thursday. Initial losses were trimmed early Friday afternoon. Ijosses outnumbered gains by ^^M’lrore than 500 issues on the New 6;»|York Stock Exchange, but most 275!declines were fractional. After ’“ the first wave of selling, scat-i.wjtered stocks firmed and began ’lev to post some pretty good it Houst, 8-lb. bskt. lettuce .SALAD GREENS The Dow Jones industrial average at noon was off 1.50 at Ituce, Bibb, pk. t lluce, Boslon, dz. Iluce, Leaf, bu. Poultry and Eggs DETROIT EGGS DETROIT (AP)-(USDA)- Egg prices ..... dozen by first rMelvers (Includ- 912.36, recovering from an early decline of 4.03. Brokers said many investors were following standard policy of “buying on dipls,” since they were convinced ttiat the trend of the market in the current phase still upward, barring some unsettling news. AVERAGE DOWN The Associated Press average of 60 stocks at noon was down 1.3 at 341.9, with industrials off 3.3, rails off 1.1, and utilities up 1.1. Utilities were among the first to pick themselves up, paced by American Telephone, which opened unchanged, then showed a 1-point gain. Southern California Edison, Consolidated Natural Gas, and Public Service Electric & Gas were among the fractional gainers. * ★ * Prices were mixed on the American „ Stock Exchange. Most changes were narrow, but California Computer dropped about 2, and Reliance Insurance 1, while Consolidated Oil & Gas advanced more than a point. Ihe New York Stock Exchange NEW YORK (AP) - New York S ixchongo selected noon prices: ---A----- (hds.) H ... 19 59 30 Z- t LOW I It Chg. 194 S5 ACF Ind 2,20 -. Ad Minis .20 30 27'/i 27 Address 1.40 Admiral AIrRedtn 1.50 AlcanAlum i lAllegCp ,l0e 60A — ' 95 22»A 22Vj 22'/z - ’ 64 18 174k 17% 9 22'A 21'4 22'A ......... 66 .34'4 36Vj 36'/j —Vj dium, 27-281 small, 1MB. DETROIT POULTRY ii» DETROIT (AP)-(USDA)- Prices paid.Sii^LlJd '2.Vo Fs MV. 624k M4k -14k per pounit lor No. 1 live poultry: beavy ai|--- — — — type hens, 19-21; broilers and fryer5,^|'lJ^t;;' ' Whitest l»-20'/z: Barred Itock^ mz^ LiUodSts_J.4(l-rfravy lyt»” rewsterkr TfuckttnoS | aiiis Char t J3-34. [Alcoa 1.80 CHICAGO EGGS AMBAC .60 CHICAGO (AP) — Chicago Mercantile [Amerada 3 Exchange—butter steady; wholesale, buy-!Am Alrlin .80 Ing prices unchanoed; 93 score AA 66; AmBdest 1.60 92 A M: 90 e 59 3F4 314k 314k -I- ’4 43 70 69I/I 69% + '4 GAP Corp .40 Gam Sko 1.30 GAccept 1.40 iDynam ) .. Elec 2.60 Gen Eds 2.40 Gen Mills .80 GenMot 1.95ei GenPrec .80 GPubUt 1.56 GTel El 1.40 Gen Tire .80 Genesco 1.60 Ga Pacific 1b GettyOII .72a Gillette ■ “ ,0 B64'A: 89 C 62. Eggs about steady; wholesale buying prices unchanged; 80 per cent or batter Grade A whites 35; mediums 27; standards 26; checks 18. CHICAGO POULTRY CHICAGO (AP) -(USDA1- Live poultry: Wholesale buying prices unchanged; roasters 24Vi-26yi; special fed White Rock fryers 20-21 Vs. Livestock DETROIT (AP) —(USDA)— Cattle 400; choice 950-1200 pound slaughter steers 26.75-27.75; mixed good and choice 26.0G 26.75; utility cows 20-21; heifers not Test-Hogs 250; U.s. 1-2 220-225 pound bar-!*hKen cnem rows aiid flilts 22.00-22.50; F3 f 21.50-22.00; C.S. 1-3 300-400 pound «ows(J^^“ 5 16 50-17 00 ' CrySuo 186 27’4 2714 27H - .60 20 6) 4k 59% 60'A - .20 36 5) SOW 51 — - ,40 3 324k 32'4 32Ve + V4 ,25 118 2644 26 26'A .... .52 30 - 364k 364k 36<4 ... .20 57 66% 65'4 yS'A — ' .66 9 111'A 11044 tllWk —11 wl 26 374 .. ., 37'4 384k — ■■ 9 2444 244k 244k ... 29 404k 404k 404k — 116 28'4 274k 274k — % 2 5444 54'4 54'4 90 214k 21% 214k ............... 7 8144 81 81 GreenOnt .88 13 42% 4144 42 -IVk Greyhound 1 68 224k 22Vk 224k -t- Vk I 79% 79% —3t/4 207 33 314k 32% —1% 76 494k 484k 49 + 9 124k 12Vi 12% — ' 5 59'/e 59% 594k -t- ' Gulf on 2.60 44 7544 75%k 754k . .. GulfStaUt .88 29 24% 24% 24% -f % GulfWIn .30b 159 51 50% 50% —H— ____________ 28 84% 84% 84% Harris Int 1 7 64% 634k 634k ---- 3,,^ 16.50-17.00. Vealers 75; high choice and prime 38-40: choice 34-38; good 29-34. Sheep 200; not enough any grade on otter to set up price quotation. Atf RIch 3.10 CHICAGO LIVESTOCK Atlas Ch .80 CHICAGO (AP)-(USDA)- Hogs 4,000; Atlas Corp 1-2 190-235 lb butchers 21.00-22.25 ; 8 9head Avco CP 1.20 sorted 210-220 lbs 22.25; 1-3 220-240 lbs Avne! Inc .50 20.25-21.25; 240-250 lbs 20.00-20.50; 1-3 300- Avon Pd 1.60 400 lb fows 17.00-18.00; 400-500 lbs 16.25-1/00 Cattle 3,500: prime 1,225-1,325 lb slaugh- eabcK W 1.36 yield grade 3 and 4 28.2^|BaltGE 1.60 43 44% 43% z ....Ck 1.40a 193 71% 71 Ashid Oil 1 " 25 434k 42% 43 AssdDG 1.60 7 77% 77% 77% — ' Atchison 1.60 86 36% 36% 36Vj . yield grada'2 to 4 26.50-27.50;'mlxed^od^lBaechAlrc'lb and choice 25.75-26.50; choice B50-1,IW0 lb|Bell How .60 slaughter heifers yield grade 2 to 4 Bendix 1.40 25.50-26.50; mixed good and choice 25.25-[ BenefFin 1.60 2^ 75 1 a------ 202 64k 6Vx --------- 76 49% 484k 48% - % 75 62 59V4 61 -1 23 146% 144% 144% —244 23 46% 45% 46% — % ___.... x11 294k 29% 294k -F % Fds 1.82 2 71% 71% 71'/J . . S3 56 55% Sm - % ' 624k 62% 62% — % 26 414k 4 1 87% 87% —IVs > 354k 'sheep 100; choice and prime lambs I Beth Stl 2.60 83 304k 30% 3 -1-14k 9d-105 lbs 29.50; flood and choice 27.00-' Boelnj 1.20 jjOO. BoiseCasc .25 _______I Borden 1,20 .BorgWar 1.25 American Stock Exch. Ifunste BucyEr 1.:^0 NEW YORK (AP) - American StockjBudd Co -80 Exchange selected_ noon prices: Net i Bunk^^Ramo I Lail Chg.' Burj Ind 1.20 31 35 34^4 34% s., 19 33% 33Va 33% 62 83 82% 63 — 128 17% 17Va 17% ... 23 30 29’/4 30 + lOA fv«a .iwy 5 44 43% ^ “1"1 ^ *?2e 60 23,^_ 22^ 22 22 313/4 31Vi 31% — V4 9 35% 35V4 35‘/ ' 371 18Va I8V4 18^1 24 46V2 46 46 24 46Va 46 46 16 213 210% 2103/4 -3% ArkLGas Asamera un AssdOil & G AtlasCor|0 wt BrazULtPw®! Brit Pet .44e Campbl Chib Cdn ^velln Creole 2.60a Data Cont Dixilyn Corp Dynalectrn EquityCp .33f Fed Resrees Felmont Oil Frontier Air Gen Plywood Giant Yel .40 Goldfield Gt Bas Pet Gulf Am Cp HoernerW ,82 Husky 0 .15e Hycon Mfg Hydrometl Isram Corp Kaiser Ind 29 37% 37Vj 37% •+ 12 344k 34'.-b 344k + ., 105 15% 15% 15% — 4k 12 8% 8% 8’/s 59 9 1-16 8% 9 -1-3-16 70 24 234k 23" 6i 33V. 31'/a 32! 184k .19 ... 7% et- ... 230 11% 11'/J 11'!z — % 578 8'/z 7'/i 230 11% 11'/J 1. - 16 24'/. 23Vz 23% - 19 17% 16% 17 — -V. 31 12'k 11% 12 — % 34 124k 12% 12'/. — '/. 114 12% 12'/z 12'/z — '/a 53 54k 5'/. 5',k — '/a 142 16'/. 15% 16 — '/> 10 18% 18% 18% 30 29% 28'k 29'/. -f % 8 16'/z 16'k 16'k — '/a 27 214k 21 21 — '/a Cal FinanI CampRL .45a Camp Soup 1 Canteen .80 CaroPLt 1.38 ,CaroT8.T .76 Carrier Cp 1 CarferW .40a Case Jl Castle Cook 1 CaterTr 1.20 CelaneseCp 2 Cenco Ins .30 Cent SW 1.70 23 6'/j „ ... 6'/.-% 8 37'% 37 37'/. " 15 33'/i 32% 33'/. . 24 30% 29% 29% —1% 8 364k 36'/. 36'/. — 'k 14 304k 29% 30'k + 'k 29 80 79'/. 79'/i —t’" 53 17'/k 164k 16% - 29 ir/a 16% 17% — .. 50 46'A 44% 46 -H'A 56 42 4I'A 414k — 4k (hds.) High Low Last Chg. —G— 175 26 25'/z 25% + V. 10 30'/s 29% 30 -F 'k 17 42 414k 414k — 4k 191 60 59'/> 59'/l — % 77 89'/. 88 But delegates are undecided as to what—if any—role Sen. Edward M. Kennedy should play at the August convention in Chicago. Several delegates expressed hope that Kennedy would be the vice presidential nominee. A total of 39 Michigan delegates said they would vote for Humphrey. Only three said they Supported Sen. Eugene ** McCarthy, D-Minn. However, 36 delegates said they were undecided as to which, candidate they would, support. S^e tha^.^ was^ possibie^ a ren ly vi^ed as a candidate L*; could capture the nomination. problems MOST CONTACTED of practical eco-| More than three-fourths of Michigan’s 102-member delegation was contactfed during the poll. The remainder could not be reached for comment. One delegate said he would vote for Edward M. Kennedy on the first ballot as the presidential nominee. Another said he would vote for former Gov. G. Mennen Williams. NEW TAKEOUT PLACE - Chicken in a Drum, a carry-out service, recently opened at 3128 Huron, Waterford Township. Chicken dinners for one to six people, drums of chicken, and barbecued spareribs are all Pontiac Pratt Photo available, according to manager Everett Stoner. Side salads are also sold by the pint. Hours are from 10 a.m. to 11 p.m. Friday and Saturday and from 11 a.m. to 10 p.m. Sunday through Thursday. Baffling Economic Problem Is It Inflation vs. Jobs? By JOHN CUNNIFF AP Business Analyst NEW YORK — During recent months the job situation has been at its best in nearly 15 I years and in-f 1 a t i 0 n at its| worst in about Shell Oil J.30 141 66Vi 65V, 65V4 — '/» j 10 55'/i S4'/«i 54'/i—U, 112 84'/i 84% 84'/k — 'h Sinclair 2.80 SingerCo 2.40 Smith K 1.80a SouCalE 1.40 South Co 1.08 SouNGas 1.40 Kennedy, brother of slain President John F. Kennedy, has not announced any plans since Sen. Robert F. Kenedy assassinated last week in Los 63 28V4 27% 28 34 44 43% 43% . . 63 34'A 33'/i 33% — '/k 63 25'/4 243/4 25 — ' StOMCal 2.70 StOIMnd 2.10 KanPwC"TI2 Katy ind KayserRo .60 2 36 35% 36 .. . 22 35 34% 34% — % —K— 52 44V1I 43% 43% — % 5 253/4 25V» 253/4 . 13 2IV4 20% 7VA 4 V4 58 26Va 253^ 26 — Vn 20 35% 34% 34% . ! Tenneco .28 Texaco 2.80 TexETm 1.20 Texas Inst .80 UnFruR __ UnitAAM 1.20 20 33 US Borax 1a ' USGypsm 3a 10 36 35% 36 15 1093/4 107 107 —3’/ 73 29% 29Vi 29% 4 US Steel 2.40 162 40% 40 Lear Sleg .80 63 16% 16% 16% . IlOFGIss 2.80 22 64Va 633/4 633/4 - %i LIgg AAyer 31 20 19% 193/4 15 67% 67»» 67% Hii ■% l%'1 — ’/• ! Ligo Myei ChlMH Step 14 56'/z 5S'/k 55% —1'/. LIvIngstn Oil 62 ll'A 10% 11 ChIPneu 1.80 16 40% 40'/. 40%-F .'A LockhdA 2.20 44 59'/k 58% 583A . . - • - 2 27’/z 27'/. 27'/. - %'LoewsTh .20h 126 96% 95'/i 95’/; — ' - — --- " LoneSCem 1 10 23% 23'A 23% — ' 13 — y.icievEIIII 1.92 80 22',. 21% 22'/b 3 13'/4 13 13 _ _ 9 10'4 10'k 10',4 — 'ijCocaCota 1.20 ^7 l4^ 1^ 10 38% 38'/. 38% IcoloIntG 1.60 53 39'/. 39 -.......... .- ---- ----- ---- 124 55% 54'/z 55% -F %[Lorniard 2.70 12 50'A 49% 50% Ormand Ind RIC Group Saxon indust Scurry Rain Sign/ Co la Statham Inst SyntexCp .40 27 56'k 54’,y 55 -1%ic 401,. vomauiv .juc “'ft 1 ComwEd 2.20 ' ’F'* JL? T'.i" Con Edi: 67'/; 48 — % I LoneSGa -,ng|-‘ „ - - -jrlTl 9 28'/i 28% 28%-'/;' 10 37z/i 37z/i 37% -F Vk| 29 78'/. 77% 77% -1%' 15 45 44'A 44% -.'/4j 23 68'/; 67% 68 —'/4 Macke Co 9 50% 50'/; 50%-F% MacyRH 50 59% , 59'/. 59', ■ 86 24’/; 26',- 159 53% 53 15 30% 30% 30% StI 1 . . 45'/. 45'/. — 0 35 36% 36'/4 34% -F V 29 27»i 26'/a 26V7 -1 11 38Vj 38'/a 38Va ~ % 45 30 29V4 293/4 — V ...... 809 56 54^ 55V4 —m SquareD .70a 93 20% 20Vi — % ------- ,4.0 ,, 43^ 3:^ 43:^ _ 62 26Va 26% 26V.t — '4 86 62% 61% 62 — % 136 53 52 52% - ' 224 673/4 67 67% 4 —T— 184 293/4 29% 29% - 38 77% 77Vs 77% *f 24 25V4 25 25Vb 109 43% 423/4 431/4 . 38 111% 109% —u— 153 41% 41% 41%- 81 68 663/4 67% - 12 11% HVa 11% 563/4 553/4 56 — 1 5 28% 28'/a 28Va } 31% 30% 31% ■ 59 66V« 65% 65% - •F % Ohn 1.60 37 49 48Va 48% — \ —V— ian Asso 254 30Va 29Va 293/4 —1 do Co .60 9 30'/4 30 30V4 — % El Pw 72 27% 27% 27% .... _w—X—Y—Z— 'nUamb 1 37 52% 5P/4 52 . . i Wat 1.20 2 21% 21% 21% itnAIrL 1 42 42% 41 Va 41Va —1 Banc 1.20 15 34% 33% 34% + % JTel 1.40 86 45% 44% 45% ' ^ itgEI 1,80 59 74'/4 73V4 733/4 ^rhr 1.0 19 48% 47% 47%—1% rICp 1.60 36 64% 62% 6% +1 te Mot 2b * 29 54 52% 52% —1% - V 32% 32% 32% 4 ' % Magni M ilitk 433/1 if; -'Ml'Mar Mjd ilso . 52'/. 53 98 71'.,i 70 70’/. 104 32 30'/. 31',’; Wn Nuclear 3 31.V* 31 "*^oiS(ConsP> Copyrighted by The Associated Press 1968] Lonsvv iconElecInd 1 xl6 43'/. 42H SiConNatG ■“ ”''■ Stocks of Local Interest Figures after decimal points are eighths OVER THE COUNTER STOCKS (Quotations from the NASD are representative Inter-dealer prices of approximately 11 a.m. Inter-daa'— change throughout the day. Contalnr 1,40 ContAIrL .50 Cent Can 2 . Cont Ins 3.20 Cont Mot .40 Cont Oil 2.8 Corn Pd 1.70 CorGW 2.50a Cowles .50 CoxBdeas .50 * useHInd 1 571k 553/. MS, _iSk MartlnMar 1 57 321k 32'/k 32'/. . JJ'VpStr 1.60 ...t ift I Maytag 1.80 McCall .40b McDonnD .40 MeadCp 1.90 Melv Shoe Merck 1.60a MGM 1.20b •i 20'A 20^ 20 :: , w,. .... 10,1 67 66'/. 66'/. - '/k " Control Data 229 165'/. 16W. IM'A - 2' J J iSi io'^^Z SlWohasco - I 37% 4 18 29% . 29 37Va 37% 37% - 25 32Vb 31% 32 - 53 20% 193/4 20% 4 33 56% 55% 55% - 21 95% 94V4 943/4 ., 200 49Va 5 48% 48% 4 . .....Sht 1.80 100 40V4 38% : ZenithR 1.20a 33 56% 55% Copyrighted by The Associated Press 19M Sales figures are on the last quarterly ;r seml-anrufhl declaration. Spec'-' “ ixtra dividends or payments not ------------ ■ted as regular are Identified In the taotnoteg 41'/i 42 69 91 Ik - Ik 43 401k ' 7 350 ' MontDUt 1.60 U6 231k 23'/. 231k - Ik! following ___________ i a—Also extra or extras, b—Annual rata ,, iplus stock dividend, c—Liquidating dlv' T '/• dend. d-Declared or paid in 1967 pli dock dividend, e—Declared or paid i ;ar this year, f—Payable In stock durlr 1967, estimated cash value on ex-dIvIder -------gJ/Pald last yea . —' alter stock dividend paid this year ... h dividends I ..•rears, n—New Issue, p—Paid this yeai. dividend omitted, deferred or no action taken at last dividend meeting, r—De- .------.. pio, jfock dividend. . ____ during 1968, estimated cash value on - —' -------- . I 42'/. 42 42’/. -F Ik 87 221k 221k 221k — Vk 45,116’/, 11514 116',^ — Ik 5 221k 22'/. 22H -F '/k 170 45 44 4414 — '/. 40 30’/, 301k aO'/k — '/• 158 42'/. 42 4214 — 'A 8 303/. 30'/, 3(P/. -F '/. or ex-distrib ■ is - , imontPw 1.56 42 281k 281k 28'/;-F “ “’^^ijMontWard 1 94 33’/. 331k 331k — '/; II markup, markdown orje^ow Coll . I Crown Cor. CrownZe 2.20 Cruc Sll 1.20 ia'i XUKlahy Co Curtiss Wr 1 25 73 72'A 72'/. - '/ 48 461k 46','. 46'/; — ' 27 38V. 38 38'/; 6 221k 221k 22'/; ' ’ Detrex Chemical Diamond Crystal Kelly Services Mohawk Rubber Co. North Central Airlines Unit Safran Printing Scrlpto.............. Wyandotte Chemical MUTUAL FUNDS AfflUated Fund .. Chemical Fund Dreyfus .......... Keystone Income k Keystone Growth K Wellington Fund Windsor Fund NatAIrlln .30 oaki; Nat BIsc 2.10 .. 291k 2»'14 - WiNatcan .60 ____n_____ [NatCash 1.20 ^ , N Dairy 1.60 6 251k 251k 251k- .41 Nat DIst 1.80 5 42’/. 41V. 41V.-1'/. Nat Fuel ' - 1 2914 2914 2914 '■•-- -- 192 531k 521k 53 25 34'A 34'/; 34V. -F '/< _______ . _ 140'/; 139 140'/. -F Ik MtStTT 1.24 x20 21'A 21'/. 21'/; + '‘ —N— X63 34% 33% 33% —1 25 49 48% 48% — 9 mk 48% 46% — 134 145V2 144 145 —1’ 31 44 43% 43% 21 39Va 39 39 ...... 28% 28% Treasury Position Del steel .60 OlaSham 1.40 Disney .30b DomeMln .80 DowChm 2.40 Dressind 1.40 DukaPw 1.20 guPont 2.50e uq Lt 1.66 Dyne Am .40 'lEast Air .50 E Kodak .88 I EatonYa 1.25 lElelISp l.Olt 55 32H 311k 32 23 20'A 19’/. 20 16 25'/. 24’/. 2S',4,4 19 2214 22'/, 22’k - 41 3114 311k 31,V. 4 Nat Steel 2.50 ■■ t Tea .80 20 35 341k 341k 15 36'A 36 36'/. 18 162'/; 161 161 16 29',4 28’/, 29'4 104 23!. 23',4 231. —E—. 57 36' ilAIrl 351k 36 64 861k 85V. 861k 14 32'/; 32'a 32'k - Nwst,.....— NwBan 2.10a Norton 1.50 Norwich .75 ................J 45'/. + '/; 12 58'/. 57’A 58 39 63’/; 6214 63 - ’ 25 4B'k AVh 471k — ’ 8 1514 151k 1514 . 4 41'A 4l'/k 4l'k - ' 52 38W 38'/. 38’A — ' 9 28’A 28’/k 28’/, — '- 61 191k 191k 19'/k - 1» 48 1041k 103 104 - '/ 60 3814 38V. 3814 4 14 54 53V. 53 V. - ' 7 S3’A 531k 53V. - 1 32 28 2714 28 47 43V. 43'/. 43'4 - or ax-dlstrlbu- Alex Ott of Flint said he had received a tremendous response from persons in his area wanting Kennedy to be named to the second spot on the Democratic ticket. STRONGEST ’OCKET Humphrey and Kennedy would make the strongest ticket, added Sen. Coleman Young, D-Detroit. Several delegates said they had heard reports that Kennedy would seek the presidential nomination or be pressured to accept the vice presidential post. ★ “Some people called and said Ted Kennedy is going to run,’’ explained Murray E. Jackson of Detroit. “I don’t believe it, but if he did it would be a different ball gjame altogether.’’ Many explained that it is speculation at this point to say what Kennedy will do. NOW UNCOMMITTED Nearly all delegates who said they supported Robert F. Kennedy for the nomination are now uncommitted. Joseph B. Sullivan of Detroit, a former Kennedy supporter, said he now leans to McCarthy. ★ However, Sullivan added, “I’m not sure he ijnderstands the foundations of the problem. A philosopher and poet he 4s, and grand things they are, but I’m not sure they make him qualified to be president. The problem i is this; can a CUNNIFF free economy obtain full employment wi^out inflation? Or, as seems , to have been demonstrated, is a point reached where a scarcity of labor inevitably means higher prices? * -A The reasons for this diabolical relationship are not obscure: a scarcity of labor means that wages are bid up, causing prices also to rise; a scarcity of labor means that low productivity workers must be hired. Despite this relationship, the Employment Act of 1946 committed the government to a search for economic growth with stable prices and full employment. Growth and stability have l»en achieved at one time or another since then. But full employment at the same time has been reached in definition only. INTERIM GOAL ll86rwh«ff-imenfipioynient was reduced to 4 per cent, the administration claimed its “interim goal” had been reached. At least for the time being, this was “full employment.” An unofficial goal of 3 per cient then ^e, the rate of joblessness has slowly been approaching that goal. But so has inflation been growing. * * ★ A situatiem seems to exist, therefore, that for the time being aborts the best intentions of economic planners. An obvious solution is controls on wages, prices and credit, but such controls mean the cessation of a free economy. In the absence of controls, it is not strange to find the extremely low unemployment rate of 3.5 per cent of the total labor force in May accompanied by inflation of about 4 per cent. SECRET TAX The low jobless rate meant that 75.9 milli(»i workers had jobs and only 2.8 million were without employment. The high rate of inflation meant that a man earning |10,000 a year was ^ of $400 a year. It isn’t a surprise either to find that some economists now feel that an economic impasse has been reached and that on* or the other—inflation or Jobs— must soon give way. And It looks as if jobs mif^t be tihe loo- GIs Find 32 VC Missiles SAIGON (AP) - U.S. soldiers scouring Saigon’s rocket belt Thursday found 32 enemy missiles and killed 26 guerrillas. But despite the 12,000 allied troops combing the area, the Vietcong fired^our-roekets into Tan Son Nhut airbase, killing one American and damaging a plane. Saigon itself escaped attack for the third straight day. ★ A A The biggest cache of rockets was found by men of the U.S. 1st Infantry Division six miles northea.st of the capital. They uncovered and destroyed 22 rounds of 107mm Chinese rockets, which made their first appearance in the Vietnanj war last February. Troops of the U.S. 25th Infantry Division accounted for 10 of the big 122mm Soviet rockets with which the Vietcong has been blasting at Saigon since 7—Sales In full. , old—Called, x—Ex dividend, y—Ex divi end and sales in full, x-dls—Ex distribu Ion. xr—Ex rigts. xw—Without war ... bankruptcy or receivership or being reorganized under the Bankruptcy *......... ..........”*^iu!sl*cr Act, or securities a Month Ago . Year Ago . 1968 High WASHINGTON (API-Thc cash position El dt the Treasury compared with cor-*-Sponding date a year — [EIPasoNG 1 s corp 1 „ 37 — 1, 73 34'A 33 3314 —IW -F- InrT'^John’son Juna 11, 1948 Juna 11, 1967 Ethyl Cp 60 Balance— .EvansP 60b $ 4.552,923,508.72 I 3.652,390,738.51 ] Eversharp Deposits Fiscal Yaer July 1— _ . | 149,799,523,895.80 146,069,312,514.06 Wllhdrawalt Fiscal Year- iFalrCam.SOg 11J JOV. 6J|4 JJ’A-I A r“: . !»j33,477,345:U^T5i;697,T67,m7^a2rm^^ .15e 67 2W JJvk + W ■- ?? "J* 2?''''* 35??"', Gold AsHts- ! FedDStr k10,366,914,085.97 13,108,585,416.5; Fed D Sir X-Includoa 8415,438,241. - ............... lect to statutory limit. 6 50’/. 5014 50". _0__ 29 60'A 591k 591k -11k|occldanl .40b 722 53'/; 51?. $21k --I'/k 57 65'A 64'A 6S'/4 - '/4 OhIoEdls....... 35 36'/4 35'/4 36 -lUoklaGE 35 19V; 19'/4 19'-4 —'/4 OklaNGs 85 46'/k 441k , 44’/; —2'A OlInMat 17 103'/; 103 1031k - Ik-■- Otnark 1.171 Ttls ElaV 2 jutbd Mar i Owtnslll 1.3S t lUb-IFIIti 31 781./; 2 401k 0 30 31 - 28 57’/. 138 2914 29'/k 29Vk — Vk 8 43tk 43H 56 701* 69 20 22Ik W* . 167 57,14 5614 5614 —1 •• If'* 14 V, .NEW YORK (API-Noon New York Fla Pow 1.44 - Exchanoe Index: FlaPwLt 1.76 " . +19 cental EMC 0> .85 57,53 +0.21 FoodPalr .90 61.15 +0.24 FordMot 2.40 _____________ .54,52 +0.12 ForMcK 75 UlilKv 42.33 +0.09,FreopSul 1.40 ’0.34'FruehCp 1,70 Slock e... Market Index IndusIrlBl . 65.33 -* •35.il',4 I 3B% > Pac Pet !lSg ll PanASul 1.50 Pan Am .40 Panh EP 1.60 »'':2oii Penney 1.60a PennCen 2.40 PaPwLi 1.56 pannzun 1,40 PepsiCo .90 Period Film PllierC 1,20b PhelpsD 3.40 PhllB El 1.64 28 261k 25’* 26'* 48 211k 211k 21'/ '; 14 191k 19'A 191k + '* 97 361k 36 36'/. — Ik 5 27'* 27'* 27'* .. 14 4S1k 5'/< 45'* .. 47 35'* 341k 35 + 66 57'* 56'* 56'* —1 —P— ^ 39 321k 32 321k + V4 11 27’* 2714 2714 ,147 19’* 19H 191k 44 22'/< 21’* 22 26 2IVI1 23% 23% 47 3S>* 34% 35 192 23% 23'* 23'-4 8 33’/. 33’* 33’* 76 30 29'* 29'* ,.3S 25 241*,,-24%- 190 81% ll 81% 61 82% 81% 81% 17 2714 27'* ,27'* - % 60 167',4 160'/4 t62 r-?, 64 50 48V4 4814.—1' 28 78 76 77',. --1 40 77 711* 72 -t ' 23 72 71'* 71','; - > 29 28 27% 27% - < DOW-JONES AVERAGES STOCKS 30 Indus! ............. IS Ind. Ralls U______________ .. -3.3 —1.1 +1.1 —1.3 . 483.8 209.1 143.7 341.9 87.1 210.2 142.6 343.2 .. 484.9 209.3 142.9 342.1 . 470.4 193.2 1«.1 328.1 463.3 194.8 1«.8 327.8 .. 487.4 210.2 154.1 343.5 435,6 165.6 135.1 299.1 493.2 209.6 159.1 342.6 413.4 159.4 136.5 292.8 Colorado Firm Bought by Chain With Locat Ties The half-century-old Charles E. Wells Music Co., Denver, Colo., has been purchased by American Music Stores, Inc., AMS president Jack J. Wainger announced recently. AMS is the parent of WKC Furniture Store and Grinnell Brothers music stores in the Pontiac area. A U.S. spokesman said the firing site had been used in the shelling of Tan Son Nhut Wednesday, when at least 10 rounds killed four Vietnamese and wounded 26 other civilians, including two Americans. The spokesman said there were 17 patches of ground charred by rockets blasting off from the site, plus 14 crude launching tripods and 12 aiming stakes. ★ ★ ★ The 26 guerrillas were killed in two clashes, and six U.S. soldiers were wounded. In addition to the thousands of allied troops searching in a radius of seven miles around the capital, the distance from which the big enemy rockets can hit the city, more radar equipment report^ly has been installed to pinpoint the enemy launching sites for counterfire. Lower-Court Bill Received by Romney LANSING (UPI) - long-sought and highly controversial bill to reorganize Michigan’s lower courts officially went to Gov. Gewge Romney Thursday. House Speaker Robert E. Waldron, R^rosse Pointe, said the bill came from tba i^ter and went to Romney’s desk at 4:30 p.m. Romn^ now has 14 days to the minute to sign or veto the measure. AAA If he does neither, it becomes law without his signature. He was expected to sign It so machinery for election of 102 to 182 new district Judges this year can get rollling. SEVEN DAY Eligible cities will'liave seven days after the bill becomes law to decide whether to exempt their municipal courts from the law’s provisions — a factor that Waldron said prompted him to announce when the -bill went to Romney so they can decide what to do. May 5. Nine were found in four, . . sampans submerged in a canal Whde aS military sampans nine miles northwest of Saigon, and the 10th was located at a firing site five miles northwest of the capital. News in Brief believe they can reduce the Dulcimer Tones LINCOLN, Neb. (AP)-God-fried Schumacher, 91, salvages parts from discarded pianos to create a new instrument — the rocket attacks on Saigon, they dulcimer, a type 6f zither that say there is no way to eliminate sounds similar to a harpsi-them. The Vietcong always will chord. Schumacher has built be able to sneak a few men and several from salvaged wood rockets through the allied pa- and metal fixtures of old trols, they say. pianos. Willie J. Hawkins, 40, of 73 Henry Clay yesterday reported to Pontiac police that his garage j had been broken into during the night and that an outboard mo-j Roderick V. Wiley, Pontiac tor and fishing equipment, val-jMotor Division’s national busi-ued at a total of about $460, ‘ were stolen. Business Notes in the GM Institute Dealership Management F 10 Higher grade rail. 10 Second grade rallt . 10 Public utllltle. 912.36^1.50 265.74—0.61 124.71+0.22 328.33-0.47 75.00 : 62.46+0.21 75.20-0.01 79.81-m.22 Fridav'k 1«» Dividends Rata riod Record abia STOCK The cash sum was un- Expansion planning begins immediately, according to Wain* ger. BOND AVERAGES compHtd b^ Tha^ AsfKlattd^ Rallt Ind. Util. F| ;l Chang# —.1 6-28.. 7-19,Week A( Torontp-Domid Bk ... REGULAR CTS Corp , .10 C Sterling Net BAT .40 IQ 628 7-1511967 Low . \ 87.1 78.9 88.0 67.0 7S'.4 8s!6 0 95.6 8.9 92.5 89 Rummage. St. Paul Church, 165 East Square Lake Road, Bloomfield Hills. Saturday, June 15, 7 a.m. to 1 p.m. Clothing, washer, dishes, furniture, stove, swing set. —Adv. Rummage Sale — Four-Towns Methodist Church, Saturday, June 15, 9-12, Cooley and Loc-haven Rd. —Adv. Rummage-Antique Sale: Pilot Club, 835 Menominee, Corner, Ontario, Sat., June 15, 8-3.—Adv. Saturday, June 15, 4 p.m. to 7 p.m., beef barbeque will be held at thfe United Oxford Methodist Church, 21 East Burdick. To benefit the Methodist Youth Summer Camp. Adults $1.50, children $1.00. Tickets obtainable from the youth. Come as blyou are. —Adv. Garage Sale; June 15,16, from 10-6, 435 University Dr. -Adv nesS management was honored recently with a certificate of appreciation from General Motors I n 81 i-tute. Wiley of 6425 Wing Lake, ^Bloomfield WILEY Township, was honored for his 20 years of participation as a guest lecturer PFEIFFER BAISCH Two men were promoted as of July 1 at Michigan Seamless Tube Co. Carl E. Pfeiffer of 2559 Bradway, Bloomfield Township, has been elected corporate executive vice president of Michigan Seamless Tuba Co. and subsidiaries. Walter fL Baisch of Brighton was elected president of the Standard Tube Co., division of Michigan Seam- Very Cold Cash NASHVILLE, Tenn. iJfi -Police are hot on the trail of a E thief who made off with $322 in P extremely cold cash. The stolen money, in a bank sack, wasp’’"' * * « taHen from its hiding place in| pfgjffer |s « member of the the freezer at a I o c al I board of directors of the parent re^aurant. 'and subsidiary companies. C—**lli THE PONTIAC FRIDAY, JUNE 14, 1968 Testimony in Kennedy Assassination Hearing Revealed LOS AN{IEU,ES (AP) Twelve hours before S Robert F. Kennedy’s assassination, witnesses say, the accused man was rapid-firing the death weapon on a target range. Other witnesses say three bullets hit Kennedy — not two, as previous^ reported —and^ that the killer stepped from I -beside a smiling, shapely mystery girl and fired his| revolver with “a very sick-! looking smile on his face.” ★ ★ ★ These were highlights of testimony made public Thursday by the county grand jury which last Friday indicted Sirhan Bishara Sirhan, a 24-1 year-old Jordanian immigrant, for the murder. The transcript — 258 doublespaced typewritten pages — became public when filed with the county clerk. * ★ ★ Testimony from 22 witnesses' — hotel employes, police and medical men — gave this pic-j ture; I ‘WATTING IN KITCHEN’ A half hour before the shooting, Sirhan had been! waiting in the hotel kitchen, asking a porter three or four times if the senator was expected to pass through. From the Embassy Room stage where he had proclaimed victory, Kennedy was led by the hand by a hotel employe to the place where Sirhan was stand- The employe, an assistant maltre d’, said the kitchen, passage was due to a last-minute change of mind, that earlier Kennedy had been expected to go downstairs to address a group unable to get into the main ballroom. The employe did not say why the plan was chang^. Henry Adrian Carreon, an elementary school playground director and police science major at East Los Angeles College, testified he and a friend, D»vid Montellano, were target-shooting about noon June 4 on the San Gabriel Valley Gun Qub’s pistol range. •SHOOTING RAPIDLY’ “To the left of us there was an individual around five feet away, shooting very r^idly on the range with a revolver,” said Carreon. Carreon Identified the individual from photos as Sirhan. ★ ★ ★ Shown a gun while before the grand jury, Carreon identified it as the one he saw on the practice range. Dr. Thomas T. Noguchi, chief medical examiner who performed a six-hour autopsy on Kennedy’s body, told newsmen just after the post mortem that he found two bullets and two wounds. FOUim 3 WOUNDS But the transcript quoted him as telling the grand jury he found three wounds and two bullets, indicating Kennedy was hit three times. i Noguchi said the fatal bullet entered the right mastoid,! behind the right ear, penetrating the brain, and two! others about two inches apart! entered the right armpit. ★ ★ ★ Testimony about the giirl at; the killer’s side was given by I Vincent Thomas Di Pierro, a | student and part-time! Ambassador Hotel waiter. His account: He noticed the girl and Sirhan ! standing on a tray stacker or bolder. ★ ★ ★ “The only reason I noticed him, there was a very good-looking girl next to him,” said Di Pierro. “That Was the only reason I looked over there. Di Pierro said the slayer moved around the hotel captain, and “he stuck the gun straight out, and nobody could move. It was—you were just frozen; you didn’t know what to do. COULD IDENTIFY GIRL “And thoi I saw the first powdering or plastering, when he pulled the trigger, the first shot, Mr. Kennedy fell down.” A grand juror asked Di Pierro If he could identify the girl if he saw her again. ALCOHOLISM Help for the alcoholic at well 'or lamilioi and (riondi oil ‘To some degree, yes, sir. II “Back of the tray stand?” I Answer: “Together, they could... I “Yes.’and what happened, he! were both smiling. As he got After the shooting . . . didilooked as though he eitherjdown, he was smiling. In fact, you happen to see this girl j talked to her or flirted with her I the minute the first two shots again?” because she smiled. This is justiwere fired, he still had a very No ... I only saw her I before he got down.” jsick-looking smile on his face, before.” ■ j Question: “So, at least, their iThat’s one thing — I can never Di Pierro: “ . . . Like I say, association, in proximity of the forget that.” they were . standing tray, they are smiling, perhaps ! Sirhan. short, slender and together” |—” swarthy, remains under con- stant surveillance in a heavily guarded cell at Central Jail. He' is scheduled to plead to the indictment June 28. REPORT ON INJURIES Dr. Henry M. Cueno, a neurosurgeon who operated on Kennedy, said the senator suffered heart and respiratory difficulty besides the brain injury. The neurosurgeon said he pronounced Kennedy dead at 44 a.m. June 6. ' ★ Police officer Arthur Placen-cia said he and his partner, Travis White, received a call-ambulance, shooting, man down 3400 Wilshire” — and reached the hotel about 12:30 a.m. June 5. Pro football star Roosevelt Grier and former Olympic champion Rafer Johnson, both Kennedy aides, were holding the suspect on the table. The officers handcuffed the man and hustled him to their policie car. GRANDFATHER CLOCK SPECIALISTS Stdea & Serviem • THE TIME SHOP ISIS. BalPi Biriningliam 646-7377 YANKEE'S DISCOUNT JlAJMtaaeayWmHtatureay • PJi.tuiieaxMiruSaiar«ay IpooM U ■otilop IlN M. folorOay, opN to oomiia aSorotloO. tpookora UiKSNl I OJI. ToooOOy onO OAKLAND COUNTY AUNO CENTER Ittt Mm, rMNaa. Ft t-lHi AT OUR NEW STORE LOCATED AT 1125 N. PERRY Are Your School's Activities Now Appearing In The Press? THE PONTIAC PRESS THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, .DINE U. 1'.)«8 Turn to This Page Tuesdays, Fridays for Senior High School News D—1 CLEAN-OUT DETAIL-Ruth Love (left) salutatorian of Stevenson-Utlca high schools, gets an assist from Mary Campbell as she cleans out her locker for the last time. Ruth has maintained a 3.914 grade point average through her high school years. No Majorettes to Aid Drum Major at PNH By BETTY ATWELL Junior Matt Smith has been chosen as the sole drum major for next year at Pontiac Northern High School. Debbie Tenjeras will assist the new drum major, a first at PNH. Next year, it has been decided, there will be no majorettes. Instead, Matt and Debbie will share the position. Skip Kelley, Judy Cameron and Sherry Tedder were this year’s major and majorettes, respectively. EDITOR CHOSEN Charlene Depner will serve as editor-in-chief of the yearbook staff next year. Denise Coin will handle photography and special events, Margaret Frank, advertising and seniors, Terry Kay, sophomores and juniors; Debbie Tenjeras, academics; Sandy V a n H o o k , At Stevenson, Utica Top Students Are Honored Students Feted at Novi High By PENNY McMiLLEN Ranking second in scholastic average for the class of ’68, Ruth Love has been selected salutatorian for Stevenson High SchoohK^ Ruth has maintained a 3.914 grade point average, as well as belonging to several clubs, including the National Honor Society, Latin Club, Ushers’ Club, and the Swimming Ciub. During her freshman year, Ruth was chosen student of the year. At the annual honor assembly she 57 at Holly Get Athletic Av^ards By MARCIA CLARK Fifty-seven boys were honored recently at the annual spring sports assembly at HoUy High School. Varsity letters in tennis were awarded to Lee Tyler, Gary Collins, Bruce Las-sila, Bruce Fox, John Leece, Don Fox and Jeff Leece by coach Nick Klak. * * * Awards in golf went to Gary Stack, Grafton Moore, Dave Walters, Tim Burns, Bruce Neubeuker and Dave Rich. Don Diegel is their coach. Baseball awards went to Dave Rhoades,' Phil Morse, Jeff Reagan, Chuck Swegles, Mike Tubbs, Tom Roeder, Jeff Caryl, Tom Hayes, Dave Darton, Chuck Keefer, Lewis Lawrence, Hank Norton, Roy Philips and Frank Leach. Ron Forbes is their coach. TRACK AWARDS Track awards went to Alvin Alexander, Doug Alexander, Dave Ck)leman, Jim Hall, Mike Lennox, Gary Plew, Dave ScMeber, Tirti" Stallcup, Dave Limbaugh, Bob Montgomery aijd Dave Barnes in the junior varsity division. ★ ★ ★ Kevin Chappell, Scott Harrower, Gordon Hopson, Allen Kirkon, Greg Kun-dinger and Wesley Tyler received track awards in the ninth grade division. ★ * ★ Larry Beers, Kirk Chappell, Jim Cook, Mike Lacey and Roger Downing received awards in the tenth grade division. Juniors receiving awards were Dan Hess, Wayne Samuel, Tim Striggow and Ted Witte. Senior track awards went to Mike Chittick and Steve Peavey. BACCALAUREATE HELD Baccalaureate was held at HHS Sunday. The Rev. Melvin Younger delivered the invocation. Other speakers were the Rev. Father C. Rancourt, the Rev. Louis Thompson, the Rev. Robert Hazen and the Rev. Henry Powell. ---Also participating in the ceremonies was the HHS A Cappella choir under the direction of Darrell Burget. * *,. - Commencement ceremonies for the 150 graduates of HHS were held Hiursday. Five students graduated with high honors. They were: Linda Jordan, Kathy Laughter,. Gloria Lawson, Linda Rose and Unda Wolverton. EIGHT WITH HONORS EUght students graduated with honors. They Included David Colebank, David Darton, Linda Dunning, Betsy Good, Becky Hogan, Kimberly Keener, Mary Mavis, Judy White and Celis Wycoff. ■k -k-k Speaking at the graduation ceremonies were Russell D. Haddon, superintendent of the Holly School district, and Norm D. Jones, principal of Holly High School. Wednesday, signaled the end of the dl-68 school year at HHS. Many students will return to the high school Monday to take part in the driver training classes. received separate awards for her outstanding achievement in math, English, physics, and chemistry. Ruth plans to major in biology at Central Michigan University in the fall and hopes to be a secondary teacher upon completion of college. VALEDICTORIAN Valedictorian for this year’s Stevenson-Utica graduating class is Marylin Monzo. She is a senior at Utica High and has kept a 3.973 average, the highest in a class of 634 students. Stevenson can boast still another exceptional student. Bev Misch, SHS junior, will participate in the National Science Foundation Summer Linguistic Institute. ★ ★ ★ Bev was the only high school student selected to attend the institute from Michigan. SHS juniors brought the school year to its close with a “farewell picnic” at Stone Creek Park, Tuesday. The three-hour picnic was followed by a splash part at Utica High. EMU PRESIDENT SPEAKS Yesterday, seniors brought the year to a close with the graduation ceremony in the William Davis Stadium. Dr. Harold E. Sponberg, president of Eastern Michigan University, was the guest speaker. His discussion centered on the theme, “The Shape of the Year to Come.” Each senior received his diploma, a large sheet of pictures of the class and a carnation, the ’68 class flower. Capping the night was the all-night party at Utica High. By THOM HOLME.S Before the last day of school, last Friday an honors convocation was held last Thursday in the Novi High School auditorium. Awards were given out for various sports activities, band participation and to all students who posted a perfect attendance record through the school year. ★ ★ ★ Oass and Student Council officers and council members were then honored. Honored with academic awards were Jack Morris, art; Deborah Kuick, band; Suzanne Gerou, commercial; Judith Durling, English; Judith Durling, foreign language; Marcia Thorpe, homemaking; Syd Chapman, industrial arts; and Rhonda Graham, journalism. OTHERS HONORED Others honored were Susanne Gerou, mathematics; Mark Earl, physical education-boys; D^se Tafralian, physical education-^rls F John Lyon, science; Carol Bruce, social studies; and Eunice Reuter, speech. Students who were able to remain on the honor roll throughout the year were also feted. ★ ★ ★ Citizenship awards were given to Candy Zarish, Tom Van Wagner, and Steve Pomeroy. The leadership award was granted Gary Boyer, president of the Student Council, The Novi High Concert Band provided the music. organizations; and Jenny Schnecken-burger, sports. More of the staff will be chosen with the arrival of the sophomores next year. » k k k Kenneth Ferguson is the adviser for the Avalanche staff. John Buchanan, school paper adviser has selected Jon Hurtado as the sports editor next year. Larry Heltsley will replace Betty Atwell as The Pontiac Press correspondent. POLARIS PHOTOGRAPHER Shelia Thamm will take over Mark Cook’s duties as the Polaris photographer. The Varsity Club is sponsoring a moonlight cruise to Bob-lo tonight. * k k Graduation exercises wer^ held at Wisner Stadium Wednesday hight. The 510 members of the graduating class of ’68 marched together for the last time. RETIREMENT PARTY Mr. and Mrs. George Gary were the hosts for a retirement party for Neil Gray last Sunday. ■ Theiflrnrcr'PNH- latigoageiiraelief'was honored by his friends and faculty members at the reception in Deer Lake. Spirit Risers Busy at Avondale High By JAN MALANE Even though school at Avondale High School officially ended after graduation June 5, many students are keeping active in school organizations. The Drama Club had a three-day camp-out at Highland Lakes. The drama awards banquet Was held during the Tuesday to Thursday excursion. ★ ★ ★ The Spirit Risers will hold meetings twice a month during the summer to discuss plans for next year’s activities. Since homecoming next year will be held soon after school opens, plans must be made now. To help with the planning, letters were sent out to many different colleges around the nation. The Spirit Risers asked what methods these college students used to promote spirit on campus. ★ ★ ★ The Spirit Risers received answers from Ohio University, Notre Dame, Western Michigan University and Eastern Michigan University. A representative of Olivet College came to AHS to talk personally with the Spirit Risers. 9 Students Feted at Pontiac Catholic By DEBBIE ROCHON At the Honors Convocation hald at , Pontiac Catholic recently, nine students received awards for their contributions to the school this year. Receiving the manhood and womanhood awards from the class of ’68 were Frank Olesky and Maria Bora. * ★ * Janie Heitjan and Paul Schmansky were given the Danforth Leadership awards, subtitled the “I dare you” award, as it represents students who accept challenges and lead others in facing problems. Recognition was also given to those students who excelled in certain subjects. Judy Rick was given the art award, while Atwood Lynn received the social sciences award. KENNEDY AWARD Don Taylor was given the John F. Kennedy world affairs awardTror having exceptional perception of wwld events. Other awards went to Denise McKenzie, business, and G r e t c h e n Gallagher, yearbook editor. ★ ★ ★ An alumni association was recently formed at Pontiac Catholic to help maintain contact between the graduating seniors after this summer. ''t ‘',.1:''’5'V' >'!'? .f-^1?"!I HIP HIP HOORAY - Oxford High School salutatorian Dale Clark (left) and valedictorian Alan Houck give three cheers that rush and bustle of the final weeks before graduation are over. Both are planning to attend Michigan State University. Top Oxford High Scholars Serve in Commencement Jills Sing at HemisFair The Jills from Bloomfield Hills Andover High School, after a taped audition and fecommendatlons from New York and Montreal, have been invited to perform June 21 and 22 at HemisFair ’68 in San Antonio, Tex. The following Jills will perform at HemisFair: Susan Smith, Susan Thomas, Melissa Thomas, Linda McVetty, Barbara Knowles, Nancy Quinn, Renee Tah-ran, Dayle Eby and Jane Malmberg. The director is Clarence Luchtman. By CLARA CALLAHAN At the recent commencement exercises at Oxford High School valedictorian Alan Houck and Salutatorian Dale Clack were presented to the audience. Alan has attended Oxford High School as a tuition student. He lives in Lake Orion. A member of National Honor Society, Alan has found time to be the sports writer for the various athletic teams at Oxford as well as serving as sports editor of the yearbook. Dale has had the distinction of attending a one room School house in North Oxford (before consolidation) for the first eight years of his educational, career. Since joining the forces at OHS, Dale has kept busy. AT YOUR SERVICE-Steve Gard, recent graduate of Groves High Sc hool, has his toe in the door as he sells his way to college this summer. .Steven plans to attend Michigan Slate University. At Wylie Groves High It's That Time of Year Again By KIM SEROTA This is the time of the year when seniors graduate, underclassmen take final exams, many make plans for the summer and all pause to reflect on the events of the previous school year. It is no different at Wylie E. Groves High School. First Year Over at New WBH Also a National Honor Society member Dale served as editor-in-chief of this year’s yearbook. GO TO MSU Both will enter Michigan State University this fall. Two members of next year’s yearbook staff, Clara Callahan, editor, and John Molosch, assistant editor, are leaving for a one-w6ek yearbook seminar a t Northwood Institute in Midland Sunday. ^ ★ ★ ★ » Later this month, the newly elected Student Council officers will also attend camp. They are Dennis Wait, president} Denise Wait, vice president; Nancy Hall, treasurer; and Linda Houser, secretary. By BOB BROWNE 'The first full school year was completed Tuesday in the new West Bloomfield High Schftol building as the re-ipaining three classes finished examinations and fled the school for summer vacation. Baccalaureate services were held last Sunday for the members of the graduating class. The invocation and the benediction were delivered by the Rev. Harry W. Clark and the scripture reading and the address by the Rev. Edward F. Konopka. ★ k k Bettie Venos sang the senior,class song, “The Impossible Dream.” The professional and recessional were played by Verland Anding, father of class president Larry Anding. After graduation Wednesday, seniors attended an all-night party at the high school, which ended with the traditional 4:30 a.m. breakfast. k k k Next year’s varsity and junior varsity cheerleading squads will be off to cheerleading camp tomorrow, to learn new techniques and skills. The incoming seniors held their elections for next year’s officers. Chosen were Mark Nusslock president, Steve Westjohn vice president, Dianne David secretary and Debbie Weiss treasurer. Emmanuel Closing Becomes Reality By JOHN SINER After nearly a year of continuous parent-administrative meetings, § grim “last resort” became a somber reality _ the end of the Emmanuel Christian High School. Due to a lack of funds for the operation and maintenance of school buses, a significant decrease in the .iirojected enrollment for the 1968-69 school year was tlte major factor which forced Emmanuel to suspend its operation as the only Baptist-affiliated school in the area. ★ ★ ★ Among the fruitless possibilities brought forth for the continuation of the school were car pools, a raise in the monthly tuition rates, pledges and a general recruiting of students for the fall term. * * ★ Classes, which were to formally end Wednesday, ended Tuesday at 2:30 p.m. when students ^nd teachers, many with tears In tbeir eyes, emptied the once active halls and classrooms fof the last time. .School opened late because of a teach, er dispute and is finishing with late finals this week. In between, students worked under irregular conditions with construction work in the halls, no extracurricular activities and a damaging fire. ★ ★ ★ Despite the difficulties, this was also the year of the Student Council adopting a Formosan orphan and gaining many priviliges for the student body, the Dramaticus presentation of “West Side Story” which ran with three encore performances and of the political campaigns and Groves primary which nominated Sen. Eugene McCarthy (or president. Many scholarships have been awarded to seniors of the class of ’68. Recipient of local and schbol awards included Kyle Andeer, Harry Barkdey, Jim MacDonald, Cindy Marshall, Joyce Valentine and Ron Vibbert. LOOKING FORWARD While there are numerous things to look back upon many students and teachers are looking forward to the future. Many students plan to travel this summer, with trips planned all over the world, from Europe to South America. ★ ★ ★ Several will study abroad including Sandy Kahn and Peggy Maass who are both going to Switzerland as part of the Youth for Understanding program and Sue Dickson who, as an American Field Service student, will go to Uraguay. ★ ★ ★ Teachers, too, will be active this sum. mer. George Landino, an art teacher, will write a book to be used in weaving courses; Marvin Parent, who is leaving Groves, will teach at Highland Park College; and Mrs. Mary Ellen Vaydik, journalism adviser, will teach yearbook production at the University of Detroit. Dominican Book Late By ANDI BARNES Better late than never. These words were typical comments about the distribution of Dominican Academy’s yearbook, The Woodlander. . Yearbooks were given out Sunday following commencement exercises. Cheerleader Team Selected at Mott By GEORGIA ROSEWALL Pep and enthusiasm for next years’ sports has already begun. Waterford Mott’s varsity cheerleaders were chosen last week. Mott’s varsity squad consists of Cindy Shanabrook. Dawn Saffron, Mari Lynn Hutson,, Kathy Moore, Dee Dee Smith and Diane Detmer. The captain of the cheerleaders will be chosen later by the squad. ^, * * * A group of students, under the direction of faculty members Harriet Davidson and Jane Hunt, presented a “Mott Laugh-in” last week at an a.ssembly. After the “Laugh-In,” awards were presented to various individuals from Drama Club. Debate Club and the Journalism department. MOST VALUABLE Two awards were given out by Drama Club. Michelle Kristen received “most valuable performance” award and Jim Durnbaugh was named “most valuable member of Drama Club.” Awards were presented to outstanding members of Debate club ... Ray Bellehumeur, Keith Sirlin, John Rennie, John Niles, Mike Walmsley, Deni Bradsher and Jerry Fettinger. ★ '* 'A \ The Journglism department pre.sented Georgia Rosewall with an award for her work on the newspaper. For their outstanding work on Mott’p first yearbook, “Polaris,” Dawn Saffron, editor, and Debe Brown, assistant editor* received recognition. D_Jr THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRH)AA , .TUNE It. 1068 Detroit Center to Aid Tourists Is Reopened ! Two-Car Crash! Kills Avon Girl A 16-year-old Avon Townslilp i girl was killed in a two-car coi-A summer information centeri ijsion at Squirrel and University r visitors and residents seek-T n P o n 11 a c g information on happenings T o w n ship at Southeast Michigan has been ® >ened in a '44-foot trailer In terday, accord-ont of the Ford Auditorium in 1 8 to the ntown Detroit. ,Oakland County The center, sponsored by the office. )uthea.st Michigan Tourist t^oad is Ann A.ssocialion. is staffed by tri-Tt e r k 1 e s s, iial Maria Lagos, a Mary- daughter of Mr. e College senior. and Mrs. David R. Herkless of * ★ ★ 6156 Blue Beach. I-ast year nearly 12,000 Critical With Breathing Ills NEW YORK (AP) - A day-old baby girl born with a bullet in her body was in critical condition today-^but not because of the bullet. The infant, born to Mrs. Lucy Ortiz, 20. in Kings County Hospital, Brooklyn, was suffering from a respiratory ailment that sometimes strikes premature babies. Dr. Gary Siegel said. Bad Eye Keeps Hope at Home LOS ANGELES (UPI) Comedian Bob Hope, suffering ‘a mild flare-up” of an old eye ailment, was confined to his home today and wearing patches over both eyes. Hope. 65, canceled a 11 engagements, and his physician, Dr. Tjhomas M. Hearn, said ”it's a day-to-day proposition we willjopk at him each day to see when he can return to his normal schedule. Hope suffered a blood clot in the left eye in Germany in 1958. There was a recurrence in 1963 and he was hospitalized for Doctors speculated that the She was a passenger in a j bullet lodged in Mrs. Ortiz’ ons Were received at the car driven by Douglas Defoe, I womb and was swallowed by er and directed to places to 17, of 572 Curzon, Avon Town- i the fetus. I and things to see in the ship, deputies said. He was in ! The ho.spital said Mrs. Ortiz several days in San Francisco, it-county Southeast Michigan fair condition today with a i entered the hospital Monday. ' , ... , CAESAREAN SURGERY The trailer will be open juries at Crittenton Hospital,: ^ , igh August. Information on Rochester. !, a t tractions, accommodations! Driver of the second car was Canos, came, in Mpn- and places to stay and visit also Robert L. Peaslee, 21, of Royal ^ may be obtained from the Oak. He was reported not seri- showed a bullet in her Tourist Association's office at ously injured. abdomen, and doctors performed Broderick, Detroit. Massacre Replay Plan Is Announced ______________ a Caesarean operation and _ _ _ _ / r livered the 5-pound, IV^-ounce FCC Offers I Further X rays of Mrs. Ortiz I I / • I I did not show the bullet, and the neip in ofL/Oy Ibaby was X rayed, nie slug was Mayors of Laredo Meet in Texas City of Violence •o«rd l5«Sw dticribtd stolen 1C SALE lutlon of the To IMt, take notic iclaimed vraph Road7 Pontiac n Saturday, the 15th day of June. POLICE MONITORS SONAR • REOENCY NALLICRAFTERS - *29.95 andu, TOWN t COUNTRY RADIO A TV BURNABY. B,C. (API - Thej w,s„,„™n (API 129 St, Valentine’s Day gang- , ,Notice further o.ven that the Can, ‘aid massacTe in Chicago won’t Communications Com-| f reenacted at a shopping cen- help Presi-^ here after all. Too mafiv . Johnson s violence com-. ^len <■> Palana County Tibjcctcd ________, ...—:jtmssieifc-jtelemine,»-lb^ 'f,“Sy,'"M'i5*hig^i,'.'' fhe^Ta'Id^^'eSr The STiow had been planned ‘‘""^hip between violence in '''''MTWniage7^?“finX esTabSdX'^rhe hy pronioier George Patev, who *he content of paid an undisclosed price for, | a?d some bricks from the Chicago! “We believe it rightly ap-j Garage wall where gangsters,! propriate to bring to your at-rder of the dressed in police uniforms, Mention, as has the President, r brain, imowed dowH scven rivals. ithis matter of thorough study >t said Dr'aina I ^^^^y Hiost ,of the calls of possible casual connections' ranage^Boord j^yg|.g persons who contend- between the mass media and' ------------ed the 5 show would glamorize-the ‘kinds of violent aberra- LAREDO, Tex. (AP) - The mayors of Laredo, Spain, and Laredo, Tex., met in this Texas-Mexico border city Thursday with the mayor of Nuevo Laredo, Mexico. found in her intestines. i Mayor Antonio Fernandez Ei Mrs. Ortiz remained In faiririquez of Laredo, Spain, is on tondition, while police invest!-three-day visit to the United gated the circumstances of the States as the guest of Laredo, I^ath Notices Huntoon Funeral Home with Rev. Alfred Lowe officiating. Interment in Perry Mount Park Cemetery. HURLBURT, M A R F 0 R I E (BILLIE); June 13, 1968; 602University Drive; age 71; beloved wife of George Hurlburt; dear mother of Jean Stoll, Mrs. Ida Duncan, Delbert and Emery Hurlburt; dear sister of Pearl Mason; also survived by eight grandchildren. Funeal service will be Monday, June 17 at 1:30 p.m. at Huntoon FYineral Home, interment in Lakeville, Michigan. Mrs. Hurlburt will lie in state at the funeral home. shooting. isessed, or any .... lenttried to be heard. I This notice is given by t Drainage Board for the duy 1 Dated; May 23, 1968 DANiEU •• rorporation to be county, tions’ to which the President ■ referred,” the FCC said Thursday in a letter to Dr. Milton S. '’■(Eisenhower, head of the Tex. Mayor Joe Martin Jr. of Lare-do, fex., and Mayor Roberto Villareal of Nuevo Laredo are to KEENEY, ORA B.; June 13, 1968 ; 3094 Edgefield, Waterford Township; age 84; dear mother of Mrs. LaVerne Selmes, F. Hal, George I., and Arthur F. Keeney. Also survived by ten grandchildren including Mrs. Janet Wheaton and 15 great-grandchildren. Funeral service will be Monday, June 17, at 10:30 a m. at Pollock-Jowlett Funeral Home, Port Huron. Interment in Washington Cemetery, Sanilac County, Michigan. Mrs. Keeney will lie in state at Dpnaldson-Johns Funeral Home after 3:00 p.m. Friday until Saturday morning at which time she will be taken to the Pollock-Jowlett Funeral Home. McConnell, vernon: Jun« hjinq,r ,guesks Saturday at lemisFair on the world fair’ Laredo Day.” Waterford Vote Certified POOLE sioner, 550 Sou... .... tiac, Michigan, 48053, f( BLACK A WHITE PICTURE TUBES I $100 PER INCH 1 1 ttuiXirX Slut COLOR TV REPAIRS jf||j|gV^ Imtntdialg Sarviea II ll|l ECTRONICS 673-9760 LIBERTY EL 1SSS Williami Likt Rd. cSfkland;;cS;n?v“*^^iL“hlgr, 'aTTh'; “offi'ci "" —K. violence panel. by making a deposit of Ten Dollars ★ ★ ★ hi Section “n”" winhUriH'($10.00) (CHECK ONLY) for each set land countyl^MichlSIin.^ ^ ^ °{ deSos1f^o'l■°^S *rSSnd! ^ohnson sct Up the 10-member «turned irt Natioual Commission on the ' E.D.S.T, Monday, July 1, good condition within (15) days after ^ , 1968, at which time all bids will be pub- the opening of construction bids. Cause and Prevention Of i j w. ---------- — .. "Mr rc,:erin con. amVnr:,‘'5V;.'?ht''^id' Violence after Sen. Robert F. presented previously been credited with. 3.5 L E rro.*;' doodlino h iloni Wool Ad ClOilng limo lor odvortitomooh intalnlng typo •lioi lorgor Ihoy gulof ogolo typo it 12 o'clock nooii o day prouioui lo publlcotloil. CASH WANT AD RATES Iwhon coih ■ccomponloi ordor) nol )-Ooy SOoyc A-Doyi 2 $2 00 S 2 57 I 3.«9 3 200 3 76 S.SI 4 2.51 4,90 7.52 5 2.12 5.70; .9.12 Tho Pontiac Pross CloMiflod Doportmoni Siom I A.M. TO 5 P M. "AVON CALLI CIRCUi T RIOiNO ifibliroPtn > dgyi, irtih hprMi And pony rldoi. 2250 Drihnof Nd., Oxford. PONY Riois, hofiitack rid¥o“T35d Scrippi R^, ofl Joilyn or M-24. HALL FOR RiNtr RECfPTIONS, l^oi, church. OR 2-5202. PE 2- With A Poydoy Poymont Lot Oobt-Ald. profoiclonol crodit counioloro provido you with con-ridontlal monoy monogomont lorvlce that hoi holpod thouoandi ulva their bill problomi. Ooltln^ a r^bllJoJir ' coTi't'teVrow vour'iolf o'ut”oi‘do'bt!i Toko Walton Oat the help you've been lookino* end. Follow i tor by taking all your I dlicusilng your problemi: DEBT-AiD, inc, ' .j 504 Community Nafl. Bnk., Bldg. , FE 2-0151 III ____ Llmiad St BoniM________ | HALL FOR RENT.' 37 W. Yalo. FE 2-0072. Attar > P.M., FE 5-0315. ANb^TCNIcTrea for 451-4144. SPRING OPENING UPLAND HILLS FARM New Iambi galora. Calvai, piglol baby chicki being hatched dalli Farm lour lor whole lemlly. Si-mllklng at the cow, aheap aliaering at 2:30 and have a chance fo pat baby animali. D a 11 g h t f u I horiadrawn hayrldei, pony ridei. Deiiriniii )6od from farm kitchen. nliiTon and tour 25 centi, kMd evtra. Open sundayi, .. .. - ^.. FAMILY VISITS SUNDAYS ONLY. { Hlp WawtEj Mato ______ CUSTODIAL WORKER II eallont fringe I__________ _______ full paid family Blue Croat, I Shield, Ufa Iniurance, paid v lion, rallremeni program Htljs WanUd ___BIHtlp WaiitEd Moh the « COUNSELOR FOR f A M P FOR Laundry, 540 S. Telegraph. 'jBRIDOEPORt dPERATOR, « LOSE WEIGHT SAFELY w A-Dlat Tablets. Only 94 Slmm» ft— OAKLAND COUNTY ^ Dtx- ITY Singles Club 35 ........... Pontlec Press Box C-50p Pontiac, Mkhlgan._____ WAitTED: HANDMADE ITEMS~on Anniversary sale. 35 Churchill Rd. w^o'*a SiSars;iiray'aeatnic!*C-*545...... no. TR ^R DU 4253$ on June 5 at uS nss"" ** ^*"**'‘ FOUND i\NCi COLLIES IN vicinity ot 24 Mile end Mount. 731-7157. FOUND: BEAGLE PUP, ScoH Lake In Memoriam 2 IN LOVING MEMORY of Evelyn G. Oldbaugh, who passed away Junr-I 14, 1947. Peaceful by thy rest, dear Mother, ........ to breatho thy name; BOX REPLIES At 10 a.m. today there were replies at The Press Ofiice in the following boxes: C-24, C-26, C-29, C-32, C-35, C-36, C 37, C-13, C-16, C-47, C-48, C-50, C-53, C-54, C-55, C-57, Funeral Directors wearing yellow flea collar. \ Melnes Ave. FE 4-4403.______________ LOST LARGE MA^LE G a r m a i Shephard, brown, answers to Czar. Belongs to little girl In hospilel. Vicinity ot Newton Rd., Union Lake. 343-9007. ___ _ _ LOST — BLACK STRAW purse' Cooley Lake Rd. vie. of Crescent and Elizabeth Lgkes. Finder keep, money, medicine and paperi' Bridgeport Operators Permanent positions with rsc.... expending company, fringe benefits, overtime, good working conditions, Clyde Corp, 1800 W. Maple, Troy. BROILER A5AN; EXPERIENCED, Insurance and unloi......... ply George Rieger, 130 W. Grand River benaWs. 4 Cenopf Hot BHgMon. LOST - V/i YEAR old light apricot or cream toy poodle, has some black on ears, female, ans. to name "Penny". Children's pet. LOST WHITE MALE sable marking, pleast mediately If found. I WILL THE PERSON WHO FOUND a b«ach bag at Dodge P ' Thursday, please return the glasi as they are badly needed. Inr life we loved you In death we do the same. Sadly missed by husband and COATS ! FUNERAL HOME j DRAYTON PLAINS LOOK HERE ... thousands do, every day! that's why it's such a good idea to place a WANT AD Whether it's a buyer or on item you seek . . . finding is easy when you use and read Press Want Ads. when you want to sell, buy, rent, trade, hire, Jind. YOU'LL B€ GLAD YOU DID! JUST CALL 332-8181 C. J. GODHARDT FUNERAL HOME ; Keeqo Harbor, Ph. 5a2»0200, bONELSON-JOHNS ______FUNERAL HOME____I Huntoon I Serving Pontiac for SO years ' 79 Oakland Ave. FE 20189 SPARKS-GRIFFIN FUNERAL HOME ^Thoughtful Service** FE S-9288 VoorheesSiplel GRAVE PLOTS Glen Ed Lutheran Cemetery, In the gard of Gethesmana locatad on I m road. EM 3-2470. ________ Six choice lots li White Chapel below market Bennett at Ml 4-3 THE PONTIAC PRESS does nol knowingly accept HELP-WANTED, ADS that Indicate a prefe , based, , ,titr^ aga , fcDm . .. arhRjpyt!Cf. covered by the AGE DISCRIMINATION' IN EMPLOYMENT ACT. More Information may be obtained from Von Reynolds, Investigator, 44 Federal Bldg. 35-37 E. HurOn St. Pontiac, Michigan 48055. BUSHELING TAILOR and PRESSER Full time 40 hours. Fine Earnings Hospitalization Purchasa Discount Lite Insurance Overtime beyond 40 hour* Liberal Vacation Policy Paid Holidays Many other benefits HUDSON'S PONTIAC MALL .. .......... must be a of Oakland County, hava your 35th bu‘ -hava ccmplali school grada, — -------- .... .. laast 4 months continuous full-tims paid custodial or ralalad work ~ parlanca wllhin tha past yaar. apply now TO: The Personnel Division Oakland County Courthouse 200 N. Talagraph Rd. Pontiac 41 n and board pi r. 334,5475 or 79 CRANE OPERATORS ™.j Torch men tor year around employmeht. Come to 135 Branch DELIVERY MAN OVER 15 wt own car, nights, part lima, inguli Lillie Caasar's, 41 Olanwood Plan DESIGNER, MINIMUM ol 3 y'r_. exparlanca on machine tools, 474- 0434._____________ ______ die" makers, tool makers, machinists, perl or full time, retirees hired. Steady work, days only. Apply at 217 Central ------ Segln^ St., Pontiac. DISHWASHER BUS BOYS . Full time on the night sTiltl. Must be 15 or over. Ectis'eRCIS. BIG BOY RESTAURANT __Telegraph end Huron__________ DRIVERS — EXPERIENCE driving semi tractor-trailers, in the moving Industry. Contact Northland Mov- HELPI Work coming out our ears. Need experienced mechanics. Hl^h pay, good working con- OAKLAND Chrysler - Plymouth 724 Oektend Ave. FE 59434 High School Graduotes with machine shop or trede school training. Apprenticeship program. Apply In person. Lynd Geer end Tool Company 341 South Street Rochaetar HURON VALLBY 'SCHOOtS ere In need of qualified drivers education Instructors tor summer work only, S5 per hr. Cell IS7-4I1S._________ TD." - 6.O. ORINDER, Parker Megestic mehlne, night ■■■'“ — cellent benefits. Bentr- ' Industrial Row- Troy. PART AND FULL TIME. CMjr Ice, 113 N. Cess. PRESSER FOR dry-cieenlng -------cleaners, 379 1^ PHAR^mf^*' Excellent hours end working conditions, flood prescription store, lop salary, tor right men, Mr. Dunsky, Thrifty Drugs, 140 N. Saginaw. n Corp., 2170 Precision Automatic Parts, : Blvd, E., Pontiac. Phototype sheet metal Layout men Machine hands — 4 year minimum experience, top leti. and overtime. WIttaulfar Division of Pioneer Engineering a i ' Manutacluring Company, 2540 E< 9 Mile Rd. Warren. 755-4400. E Display Experience In Retell Store -- Window ..... must have good b a c k g I MAN, PART TIME, Married, o: 1 MAN PART TIME Ve need a dependable married man, over 21, fo work mornings or--- Call 474-0520, 4 P.M.-B P.N. alue. Call Don ATTENDANT, Must have ...___________ well qualified, must have ref. Private home, $4 per hour, steady work, 4741 Country Club Reply Ponllar — Pontica, Mich. dent c College Studen%-“ SUMMER JOBS 00 MO. SALARY. Plus stu-_-..t can win up lo 13,000 IN CASH SCHOLARSHIPS. 51000 IN SCHOLARSHIP eWarded weakly plus win one of our 53,000 around the world vacation trips, all expenses paid . . . Visit London, Paris, Rome, Moscow, Hong Kong, Tokyo, Hawaii or win a new Ford station wagon. Plus. . . win a vacation travel award to Acapulco. Orb weak all expenses paid . . . plus merchandise awards, such as color TV, etc. An exciting - -'- I of your I Pontiac Press Box C-54, Personals AVOID GARNISHMENTS Get out of debt with our plen Debt Consultants 514 Pontiac State Bank Buliamg FE 8-0333 state LlcensOd—Bonded Open Saturday 9-12 a.m. AAA OPPORTUNITY dlate opening for Real Estate] ■nan. Fine opportunity and your investigation. All in-.. ..jws confidential. Ask for Warren Stout, Realtor, 1450 N. Opdyke Road, Pontiac, Michigan FE $-81^ appointment." PLANNED BUDGET PROGRAM YOU CAN AFFORD TAILORED TO YOUR INCOME SEE MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELORS 702 Pontiac State Bank Bf ‘ FE 8-0456 AMERICAN NATIONAL Insurance Co. has opening for 2 men in sales and service. Guaranteed salary plus commission. Full fringe benefits and promotions on merit. 674-2272.______________________ Arc Welders Truck Body Help WnnteTMaie BHelplviinfeirMale 6~ | Spray PaiuterS ON AND AFTER THIS date June 14, 1948, I will not be responsible for any debts contracted by any other thih myself. Milton N. Metcelf, 2484 LaFay Ave., Pontiac, Michigan. ATTENTION Distributor tor nationally know beverage, must be young, end ai gressive. Cootact collect KE 7-7101 AUTOMATIC SCREW MACHME^se - ---- - " operators for RZ ---nport. Must be d wages and ................ Mfg. Co., South Lyon. 438-4201. perlenced. Good etc. with distinaulshed in- ------ known firm rated I, Brr”-‘- fcdo Flat monthly salaries to those accepted, after free 4 day Indoctrination training period, prepare for your personal Interview now ... to Insure your self-employment this summer. For ypur Interview call: MR. G. W. GILBERT 962-4346 ___..ckground .. -.. ... Art, Color, Line end Design or Cratt Creation. FULL TIME 40 hours Fine earnings Hospitalization Purchase Discount Life Insurance Overtime beyond 40 hours Liberal Vacation policy Paid Vacations Many other benefits Apply in Persoi) (Bring brief portfolio If^^llable) Employment Office Basement Hudson's- PONTIAC MALL DIE REPAIR Press Maintenance EARN EXTRA $ $ $ managers, assistant manager. . station attendants. Rapid ad-l vancement. Apply at 425 Orchard Lake Road or-5484 Highland Food between 7 a.m. or 4 p.m. Ask lor supervisor Gory Coury or manager Milton Lynn, or call Highland^ Road. 473-V355 or Orchard I aka Road, 335-1713. ____ _ LARG'E VOLUME. Standard Oil Sarvice Station has openings tor gasoline attendants. Part-time 5 lo To p.m., Sundays 9 to 7 p.m. Cell Ml 7-0700. ______________ MAN FOR LANDSCAPING and gardening. Hours to suit you. Call MARRIED MAN DES1RIN(3 a only. Bloomtiald Open Hunt, 405 E. Long Lake Rd., Bloomtield Hills. PART TIME p'lUMB'ER, Insleilatlor of water softeners, must have owr “ PART TIME River, New Hudson, 48145. Professional Employment Counselor A heavy business background or direct sales experience along with an outgoing personality will quality you tor this excellent position in the personnel Held. Call: NITA STUART 334-2477 ROUTE MAN QUIZ Yes Nq Do you wont steady work, with no layoffs? □ □ Do you want to earn $150 per week? □ □ Do you want Life and Accident Insurance? □ □ Do you have a chauffeur's license? □ □ Are you married and bondable? □ . □ Do you like outside work? □ □ Do you want paicL vacations ond holidays? □ □ If you con answer 5 of these 7 questions then call Culligan Water Conciitioning 925 ORCHARD LAKE AVE. PONTIAC, MICHIGAN 334-9944 i and retirement plan MECHANICS Also helpers »nd Berts clerks. Hourly rale. Must be able to work any shill. Apply st KEEGO SALES 5. SERVICE, J-"----- -" steady employment. Top position for j-goodTiWax “*- Co, 1593 S, ROCHESTER COMMUNITY SCHOOLS School bus mechanic, full time — day shift, excellent fringe benefits. Apply—Board of Education Office 4th & Wilcox or Phone 651-6210 Moodoy-4hru -F-ridaf 8:00-4^30 p.m. ___ 447-7700. Ask __________________ ___________ .. .. . ___________ RECENT BUSINESS SCHOOL NEEDED FOR SPECIAL graduate or rwix ■■---- -- r-lT-- STOCK DEPARTMENT. THIS IS A „'IS*’’*' NEW ONE ------------------ ----- —“ " V dept! OFFERING g*"®*,"*' .. POSSIBILITY TO GROW WITH a! Bushing, FAST GROWING COMPANY, emplovei PREFER A HIGH SCHOOL GRADUATE, DRAFT FREE AND DEPENDABLE. EXCELLENT FRINGE BENEFITS, OVERTIME, GOOD JOB SECURITY. APPLY AT EXPERIENCED SEMI Drivers for local delivery, apply at 2571 Hamlin Rd., Rochester. See Ctrl Woody. ___________ MACHINIST, FIRST CLASS, ca of (Mrating all medium machine shop equipment. Benefits - Blue Cross and Blue Shield, Royal Design, 32401 Stevenson Highway. Madison H e 1 g t ‘ -between 13 and 14 Mile Road. REFRIGERATION OPERATOR Having City of Detroit, first class refrigeration and high . pressure boilers operations. Permanent positions In toad processing plant. Paying cate — yearly straight time wages In excess of $9,500. Exceptional fringe benefits and pension plan. Cali Sealtest Food Div., Frederick Norton - Detroit 831-4010. An Equal Opportunity Employer 424-8430. MAN OVER to for tree work. FE 5-3005. ____ly employe benefits. Apply person at Robert Hell Clothes, 4440 Dixie Hwy., Clerkston. ________________ CITY OF PONTIAC CHEMIST Supervise sewage treatment, plant labratory and conduct water pollution control studies. Strong background 1 analytics. ......... nd recent laboratory —Salary 4.2 Designer We are lookikng far body designers with 5 or more years experience and also for a cabinet designer. Preferably with mobile home background. This is an opportunity for you to get away from the crowded city and enjoy the Michigan outdoors. We can offer you a long range career opportunity, overtime and fringe benefits. Write, phone or come in and see us for more information. TRAVCO CORP. BROWN aiY MICHIGAN 313-346-2725 n Equal Opportunity Employer MICHIGAiSl .. BELL Has immediate full time openings in Pontiac, Detroit and throughout the Metropoliton area for: • LINEMEN ' • INSTALLERS • ELECTRICAL TECHNICIANS • FULL PAY DURING TRAINING • HIGHER STARTING WAGES • EXCELLENT BENEFITS \^APPLY NOW! Room A-172 — 1365 Cass Ave., Detroit Room S-175 — 23500 Northwestern Hwy., Southfield 19992 Kelly Rd„ Detroit (near Eastland) MICHIGAN BELL Pai^t of the Nationwide Bell System ' An equal Opportunity Employer I Apply In person REMKE, INC. 28100 Grosbeck Hwy. (Detroit, I ATTENTION Distributor for nationally known *“ •!!,•!. *0" CITY OF OAK PARK MALE HELP WANTED OAK PARK Experienced Production Mochine Operators ____________________ ____________________ ___________________________ Night shift, 58 hour week, steady MAN, 15 OR OVER, MUST tieve Well "known, highly successful year round employment. No ley drivers license. Call after 4, FE 5- ---------- ---" ---------‘* 5ffs. Apply In person. i y78l, Lynd Gear and Tool Company 1 ------ 341 South Sir—‘ Experienced Automatic Lathe Operators will train seml-experlenced men, 58 hour week, top wages, benefits. No layoffs. ,-Equal opportunity employer. Apply In person. Lynd Gear and Tool Company 341 South Street ixperlenced s e I a s . ,_____ Its Detroit office. Technical background and experience In selling production parts 4440, 587-5875. Id nights. Pinkerton, 544-4794. EXCELLENT OPPORTUNITY Firm engaged In contracting of custom wood store fixtures architectural interiors has opening for an ambitious man fo __^ — __ NEW CAR ——j_i Mointenonce Electrician Maintenance Plumber Grounds Keeper Full^^ lime posIHons,^ available li men ..jslne'ss.’“AppVlc7nt shouW h«e'2 background In maintenance and to 5 years multiple line or Illy In-constructlon. Salary commensurate surance, selling experience. Must with background and qualifications, be Interested In personal pro- Reply Box C-2, Pontiac Press. duction and inanageme n i --------------------------------* responsibilities. All Inquiries shall MULTIPLE SPINDLE ' ------------------------- -------------- Screw machine SALESPEOPLE. ASSOCIATE MANAGER, Multiple Line Insurance Agency. Weekly -- SECOND AND THIRD COOKS. Night shift. Some experience neces—-but willing to train. THE CITY _. ___ PRESENTLY TAK PLICATIONS I FOLLOWING: Code Enforcement Officer 88149- 9904; Pit - ------- ----- time) tL ________ ___________ Technician II $8149-9904; Building forward to advancement progressive young ci----- to Pontiac Press Box ELECTRICAL ENGINEER I IMMEDIATE^ OPENINGS^ - for^ a^ electrical anginwring 'and'at least i " yrs., experience................. :nitler '- —-*• — ?cemeSt with®S' 1 OQTT1 I roiflp^any. Reply, OClitJoii iCli i J i Plymouth. 442-7W $3.29 hourly; Park Maintenance Man S3.03-S3.40 hourly. LIBERAL FRINGE BENEFITS irorwi APPLY IN PERSON TC personnel OFFICE, CITY OF OAK PARK, 13400 OAK PARK BLVD. BETWEEN THE HOURS OF 8:30 A.M. and 5 P.M. ACCOUNTANT Expanding medium sized CPA with diversified Industrial diet_ The partners invite applicants presently in Industrial accounting to discuss with us, or any membe our staff, the /opportunities ... public accounting and specifically bur firm. Send resume to: JAN2 8, KNIGHT, CPA's 1100 N. WOODWARD, BIRMINGHAM, MICH. 48011. Replies will be held CIVIL ENGINEER, sewer design red but not n^_ Chief experience surveys and ,-,»»■ n u ■ „. Permanent positions. CONSOER. TOWNSEND & ASSOCIATES, G5340 Corunna Rd. (t bik. west of Dye Rd.) Flint, Michigan. Ph. 732-0740. *“ -------------------■--- AUTO MECHANIC, EXPERIENCED, with tools, growing dealership provides excellent opportunity for ambitious man. Above average earnings, fringe benefits, weekly guarantee. Contact Mr. Norton at Hahn Chrysler-Plymouth, Clarks-ton. 425-243S. automatic SCREW MACHINE OPERATOR Good wages, benefits, dvertlma plus bonuses. Precision Autf- Screw Machine Co., 344 S. 333-7983. AUTO MECHANIC Experienced. Heavy. Wilson Crissman Cadillac. Ml /------- Days. Callege Graduates In Psycho logy-Soclology-Scclal Work-PolTce Administration $7,200-$10,000 The County ot Oakland Is seeking quBlIfiad man to work with the Juvenile Division of the Probate Court as Child Welfare Workers. Excellent opportunity for a person who wants to work with the most outstanding ben^ts In ad-EduCatlon op-- JultioP relm- _________orm^ll.. .. .. ....... application, contact; PERSONNEL DIVISION Oakland County Court House 200 N. Telegraph Rd. Pontiac, Mich Phone 338-4751 Ext. 495 Help Wanted Mala 6 Help Wanted Mala facilities In such distribution, tra --------electrical industr'ali 1 as power, . a r d ily In person only — SPARTAN DODGE 855 OAKLAND AV£. ! SERVICE STATION attendant part time, evenings and weekends, exp. preferred. Walled Lake area, 424- Also Immediate openings for; PROCESS ENGINEERS NEW CAR SALESMEN Excellent pay and demo plan. WHEATON CHRYSLER PLYMOUTH 424-3192 SERVICE STATION attendant for Lake Orton area. Full or pert time men needed at once. Apply to Russ John ..... 89 M-24 In Lake Orion. manufa'cturing "p'r o'c e s s e s nut FORMER OP^ATOR, top - ,—..-------..ages and fringes; 9950 Freeland, * itrolt.____________________________I Service Monager Lloyd Bridges Dodge Walled Lake, 424-1572 (preferable soft trim) and be wl Ing to work In close assoclatic.. with production Dept., experience In cut and sew operations —' --------- p ■ elude mechanical r a b 1 a Education background should INDUSTRIAL ENGINEERING Minimum requirements ot 2 yrs direct or Indirect labor, tlm_ studio experience. Need ability to developed and In-*-" —*'—' cooperate with other staff production activities. Degree - - working on degree prefe Salary commensurate qualification. Excellent f r I .. . . benefits. Please forward personal resume to PONTIAC PRESS BOX EXPERIENCED FOREMAN Installation of oppoiiunlty ment. Call 541 EXPERIENCED DRAFTSMAN needed for detail and light lay-out. Jaybird Automation Inc., 45380 West Road, Walled, ‘ —- FACTORY WORKER Reliable man over 30 for small manufacturing plant In Troy. Steady employment. Starting wage $2.25 an hour. Call Mr. Lemanski 48^2444. 9 a.m. to 11 a.m.__ WARRANTY DATA ANALYST ’ Oppartunity to organize and administer a warranty information system for world's leading Manufacturer of truck-trailers, os a membW of tho Corporate Manufacturing Staff. This position involves setting up procedures, codes and forms of reporting and recording warranty claims on Company products, analysis of statistical data and preparation of reports to Management. Some involvement with data processing systems would be helpful. Positions reports to Manager-Quality Control and will be exceptionally attractive to a person with good potential who has some warranty analysis experience. Excell«nt ttarllno lalary plus full program erf amptoyee benefiti and opportunity lor partonel growth and^ advancement. Pleeit Sind Raiume Including Hilary Requlrementi Director-Personnel P.O. Box 238 Detroit, Michigan 48232 FRUEHAUF CORP. Factory Workers __________ machine materlal handlers; com labprers; etc. Dally pay. I any time after 4 am. Employers Temporary Service Clawson 45 S. Main Radford 24117 Grand River ---Hllten Rd. GAS STATION MECHANICS, local references, should be high ach"' graduate, able to manage day afternoon sWft. Shell Station, Lc Lake —- '-----' ----" Hills. OUTBOARD MECHANIC, full time' yyalton. • SERVICE STATION ATTENDANT. I —. —..... ,|„,g ,430 joslyn at PRESS OPERATORS TRAINEE MACHINE OPERATORS TRAINEE Excellent opportunity for men who are dependable. Approx. S3 hrs. week. Exc. fringe benefits Including a profit sharing program. Apply at 4 Bhrber St., Pleasant Ridge (oft 10 Mile Rd.) Plumbing an(d Heating Salesman SHIPPING AND RECEIVING Department assistant, must have chauffeur's license, ■- —■-with fringe *■— SHIPPING ROOM WRAPPER. 40 hour week. Steady work Hospitalization. Macaulay's Inc. 15188 West 8 Mile, Green-8 Shop ping Center. 547-3000. An equal opportunity employer SHOE SALESMAN Better family store, full time, Blu< Cross paid, full day off, good salary and c-------r.-. portunlty for ----- expanding company. BECKER'S SHOES Pontiac Mall 482-0511 We have a fine ca _ _______ for a man who hat had soma plumbing or heating background, to work Into a tales position with high earnings potential. Many company benefits Including profit sharing and Immediate dltcour* APPrf PERSONNEL DEPT. SECOND FLOOR Montgomery Ward STABLE HANDS WANTED. Apply person JM Stables, 4982 Meisr Rd. at King, Marine City, Mich. STORE SALES PERSONNEL, perlenced In sales on tires f. _ auto accessories. Steady employment. $400 mo. to start. Paid hospitalization, vacation, plan. Fir—-- " ' Southfield. 11 Mile end TAPPER OPERATOR, TOP wage: and fringes; 9950 Freeland Detroit.______________________ TECHNICIAN SERVICE TRAINEE 21 to 24. Basic knowledge, mechanical and electric. Job opportunity. Phone Mr. Szf"— — 7048, 9 to 4 p.m. TREE TIMME'R Climber for Parks and Recreation Department. Steady work, benefits Inclu ding hospitalization and life Insu- retirement, paid holidays, vacation end sick time. Salary range $2.81-53.37, will adlust for experience. ----1 opportunTty employer. --------. —rtment, Martin ei, Birmmgnam. CITY OF BIRMINGHAM GROOM TO TAKE cere of aaddle horses, Outlands Riding Stable, 23175 W. 14 Mile Rd., Birmingham, Mich. GUARD For Utica, Ml. Clemens end Detroit area. Top Union scale Paid Blue Cross, vacation and holiday benefits. Call us collect, Bondpd Guard Services, 441 E. Grand! Blvd., Detroit. LO 8-4150.____ GUARDS Hospital end tndustrl pert time poll"— and bantflfi. Rm. 402, Detipit. 941-4577 Call col- I Park Avenue! GRILL MAN FOR NIGHT Shill Must hava experience for pait fooo -peratlon. Good wages, Brothers Restaurant, doUiucts, ____________ end most of heating end air con-llonlng, top wage to right man, . . floaferi, call ln_person, Westeo Heating Service, gS)' W. Ctarkiton, Rd., I HIGHLANDER MOTEL moial desk clerk. Over 23, i sponsible person. 338-4041. GENERAL ACCOUNTANT Minimum 5 years axperlancs In all phases of genersi accounting with Industrial manufacturing background. General ledger through financial statements. A good working knowledge of cost accounting htiplul. Degree preferred but not necessary. Company otters excel-Itnt bentllta and promotions opportunities. Wilt discuss salary. Reply by telephone, resume or in person to SHATTERPROOF GLASS CORPORATION jPecrultIng Department 4815 Cabot Detroit, MichigaV.4f(210 CALL- 682-6200 Ext. 414 or 410 for Interview appointment LATHE OPERATOR Turret & Set Up EXPERIENCE PREFERRED Contact Mr. H. Kramer FORD TRACTOR DIVISION Royal Oak Equipment Plant 3200 W. 14 Mile Road 549-3400 An Equal Opportunity Employer SALESMAN INDUSTRIAL PRODUiSTS The Thomas & Betts Co., nationally known as a leader in the field of electrical and electronic fittings has an immediate opening for a salesman to cover the Flint, Joginaw, Bay City, Port Huron, Pontiac and Ann Arbor areas. Position requires: a mechanically inclined individual with some sales experience and college background or equivalent. You will sell our complete product li eluding: Terminals, connectors, han fittings ond relatejjl accessaries through authorized distributors. Unlimited opportunity for recognition ond growth. Liberal base salary and bonus. Company car and expense occount. Send resume including salary requirements tOi The THOMAS (Sc BETTS Co. 8414 West McNichols Rd. Detroit, Michigan 48221 An Equal Opportunity empleyar ASSISTANT PROJECT ENGINEER LATHE OPERATOR (A) PROGRAMMER SHEET METAL FABRICATOR MANUFACTURING ENGINEER GENERAL MACHINIST SYSTEMS & PROCEDURE ANALYST HELI-ARC WaDER Build your future with the WILLIAMS RESEARCH CORPORATION Team Call or come in for a confidential interview. See Mr. Charles E. Bailey, Personnel Manager. WILLIAMS RESEARCH CORPORATION 2280 West Maple Road P.O. Box 95, Walled Lake, Michigan 624-4591 r ' AYi tqual opportunity tmployor. MAINTENANCE PORTER For Maintenance Department in Retail Department Store Hours 5 A.M to 10 A.M. Immediate discount privileges ond many Company benefits APPLY IN PERSON TO THE PERSONNEL OFFICE MONTGOMERY WARD 29501 PLYMOUTH RD. LIVONIA, MICHIGAN:! WONDIRUND SHOPPING CtNTSR THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY. JUNE 14, 1908 TOOL DESIGNER Manulacturara of p r a c I s I o tnachlna tool* (non-automotive) I looking lor young man with 2 to vaar* axparlanca In cutting toe. da*lgn and detailing. Excellent DE VLIEG MACHINE COMPANY 14 Mile and Collage Royal Oak, Michigan An equal opportunity employer appoir reen I er dment call 373-UU UNIFORM GUARDS - FULL or part time. Experienced or ■■■"' train. Marla Detective Agency WANTED Experienced dders, top wages. Blue Crosi hospitaliratlon. retirement plan, year around work. Call bet. 7:30 and 9 In the morning, 332-5231. WANTED MAN WITH ability service all makes of oil burne full time employment, apply person only, 351 S. Paddock.____ BARMAID AND wallraae. Ex-parlancod. Apply _ln p e r * o r Catalina Loungb, after 5 p.m. BAKERY CLERK — no Sundi work. Apply In person Aubu Bakery, fl7S Baldwin, Pontiac. BEAUTICIAN, NO EXPERIENCE _________ 334-e29l___________ BEAUTY 6PERATOR, full or pai R MAID. PART TIME BE A FULLERETTE G SERVICE SUPPLIES 13 BOOKKEEPING MACHINE OPERATOR ro work In the City of Blrm- equal opportunity employer. Apply 9:00 a.m. and 12:00 noon at the Personnel Office, M u n I c I p " ‘ Building, ISl Martin Street, BIr ir experience, aoie to type m. Hours 8:00-5:00, Monday through Friday. Salary range S49B9-S5987. Full benellt program. An equal opportunity employer. Apply 9:00 a.m. to 12 noon. Personnel Oftlce, Municipal Building, 151 Martin Street, Blrm- >k>yer. Applications 4 p.m. Firestone Golf Dr., Pontiac. YOUNG MAN WANTED to designing, must have draftli., perlence In high school. 1727 East Auburn Ave., Roc"--------- training and sch and die making trade. 1727 East nign i senool grao. w n i Chrysfer-Plymouth. <24-3192. grad. W h e a t o I WoHtBii FsinoIb THE PONTIAC PRESS does knowingly accept HELP-WANTED ADS that Indicati covarad by the AGE DISCRIMINATION IN EMPLOYMENT ACT. ASore Information may bo obtain^ from Von Raynolds, Investigator, <4 Federal Bldg., 35-37 Huron St., Pontiac 2 WOMEN Needed for telephone work for local Dry Cleaners. Day and Eve. work, guaranettd salary, 338-2801. i ASSISTANT SHAMPOO GIRLS. Licensed. Top pay. Torriglano's Salon, 644-2242.__________ necessary. Apply 540 South Talagra Pontiac Laundry, ACCOUNTING CLERK fringe benefits. Call 887-4118. Alberfs Coiffures __juty operator wai Highland Rd. 481-(I(I60. ALERT WOMAN FOR real estate office. Over 25 preferred. General • ability. Good typist. Should glesant telaphona personality. W. Maple, Walled Lake. Buffeteria Help DO YOU WANT A STEADY PART-TIME JOB? Interesting survey type assignment working from own home represen* fi Ing I Bo Jtolp ____ LOUNGE WAITRESS AND L.P.Il. i^OR MAALrWJRlWd"^^ ■ ---- Oek. Woodwerd-IO Mile Guaranteed -------- ------- ------ t elephone personality required. Write Immediately stating phone number to Pontiac P DRUG CLERK, GENERAL store. __________ _____ 4 p.m. to 10 p.m. Also, part time gala. Union Lake Drug, 8050 Cooley Lake Rd. ---------- Lake. 343-4134, Mrs. DENTAL HYGIENIST Immedlalt full time or pert tir position for dopendabit a r qualified person. Call 343-4410 f Interview appointment. Elias Big Boy Family Restaurant .—.10 ladles tor WAITRESSES, TEL-TRAY OPERATORS AND CAR HOPS. Must bo neat ep-pearlng *nd ot good character. No experience neceiiery. We train you. Company paid vacation, health Insurance, life Insurance, lunch hour, meals. S-4 days week. Day shift and night shift. Ages 19-35 preferred. Intarvl— • n a.m. 2-4 and 8-9 p.m. L.P.N. l3.iS P^R HOUR Union Like oroo, EM 3-4121___ 3 FOR MOTEL, S days, $1.35, ........ ’*■ 789 S. Woodward, & MAIDS Full lima — days and afternoons. Critlenton Hospital, see Mr. Bowen, Housekeeping Dept. MAID FOR STEAMING, stock and light cleaning. Ladles specially shop, above avaraga wages. Vacation with iwy and other banatits. Call MISS Dunn, EL 7-0545._______ MAIDS yVANTED. PAID vacation, hos^talliatlon. Apjaly^ In Inn, lU: MATURE WOMAN TO HOST and supervise dining room, f have restaurant experience, i be nan and have good charai Good trlnga benefits. Aga 25 t preferred. Elias Big Boy Family Restaurant Telegraph A Huron Sis. » *® " middle-aged WO^N t< ih and H in Sts. d Silver Lake Rd. experienced tru^ driver wanted lor lumber yard. Apply In person at John R. Lumber Co. 7940 Cooley Lake Rd., Ur— ■ - I, apply In parson Mitch's Bar ___* r... cil. X P E RIENCED SALESLADIES, - and capable of working ----‘ ‘■-nds; also girls .... . _______of display. Openings In Troy, Rochester end Pontiac. Apply Alvin's, 892 W. mature v.... 47>4050 for af ____________ experienced waitress kitchen help wanted for wee related work. Must nave neat ap- sa.nrk ni i.ie386 KITCHEN HELP, DAY end _________ shift, hospitalizattonp paid vacation, meals. Apply at; ELIAS BROS. BIG BOY RESTAURANT Dixie Hwy. & Silver Lake Rd. LADY FOR PART TIME cleaners. Call pressing I III 482-»1l LOCKER ROOM MAID, FRANKLIN Hills Country Club,'ev^-'— ---* have transportation. < MIODLE-AGED lady to care tor Invalid woman. 887«5025, coliect. middle-aged lady WANTED tor part-time oftlce work, Poiltlor could result In full-time employ' ment. Some bookeeping experlencs necessary with typing required. Excellent working condition with Page, Christian Memorial E Cemetery, 521 E. Hamlin Rochester, Mich., MAID FOR MOTEL, t time, 81.33, 1120. N. Royal Oak._______ '."XI MEDICAL OFFICE ASSISTANT, lirmingham, Bloomfield area, call nter 9 p.m. 851-1030. retarded chIMrsn, 10 weeks, I ^tag^room and board. 334-0 RiSisfiiBBtt NuWtii. AreHr iphic as-|f^r|ln|[) "lil hospllaT hair'"0B'-GYN Rasldenl Training Program. Othar opan'—-avallabra on Mtdical and Sure Units. ExctllanI starting sal . Oanarous fringe benefits Including Retirement Program. Contact Paraonnel Director, Saginaw General Hoioltal, Saginaw Michigan. 40102. Phone 7S3-34I REGISTERED V NURSES ALL SHIFTS All Departments STAFF NURSES $450 to 1770 per mo. HEAD NURSES SECRETARIES least one year stanogi perltnca In satae or an ?#qulra(P'"* CLERK TYPISTS starting laval positions In selesi good typing end clerical aptitude required. —Modern Facilities— -Congenial Co-Workers- — Attractive Salerlei and Benefits- VICKERS Division of Sperry Rand Corp. Crooks Rd. near 15 Mile Rd Troy, Michigan 48084 P.O. Box 302 576-3415 wanted' - LADY for housework, " - 'n. Phone 3M-2004,_ 11 p.m. to 7:30 a.m. $4.50 per day Weekends are required waitresses WANTED, furnished uniforms, meals, Insurance hospitalization vacation pay. Christmas bonus, and store discounts. Apply downtown Kresges, "NOW" OPENINGS Senior Key Punch Operators for the afternoon shift, 3:30 .. midnight, for Indefinite period, staTtIng immediately. Senior Key Punch Operators (4) 12:45 a.m., beginning 4-17-41 2tr?n Pontiac area. , All are outside assignments. High KELLY GIRL 338-0338 642-9650 An Equal Opportunity Employar itriclan's oHIct. Birmingham. Aoia to giva In-lectlons. Writ# Pontiac Press Box NURSES AIDES, axparleneed or will ----- shifts, must have cwn ■ Area, EM 3-4121. OFFICE ASSISTANT FOR .. • . Typewritten reply to Include onal data, references end ex-snee. Write Pontiac Press Box FOR SALESWOAAAN trainee, peter age 25 to " knowledge ot home sewing ... portant, some experience working with public helpful. Saif— ----- mission, Sday week, . . - . employee benefit. Sinpr Sewing Center 323 E. Maple, E PART TIME HELP nc------------------ and short order cook. Over 21. Living near Fisher B ' Bar 913 Baldwin Ave. ____________ PART TIME PRESSER FOR quality dry cleaning plant. Paid vacation, paid holidays, and other fringe -------- — Atoore 332-1822. PIZZA COOK, experienced ^--------- but will train, paid vacations ai holidays. Apply Pied Pip« Restaurant, 4370 Highland Rd. PRESSER FOR d I^rein'e! Punch Press OPERATORS refer a familiarization with pr< gressivs punch press operalon. Da and night shifts. Apply between a.m.-4 p.m, Employers Temp. Service i S. Main Clawson .J20 Hilton Rd. Ferndale 24117 Grand River____RedtOrd REAL SHARP GIRL wanted to tend bar and ao walTreis work; Reliable iob, good pay. Apply In------ manager. Chalet Inn, RETAIL SALES CAREER ALSO CASHIER POSITION Michigan's leading lewelry sto Retail experience desirable, cellent salary plus medic benefits, etc. Location — Poni Mall. Call collect or write — ..... Rogers, Rose Jewelry, 4440 Cass, Help Wonted M. or F. p Wonted M. or F. DRY CLEANING plant needs woman for shipping, mlddleaged preferred. Wesch Cleaners, 1454 S. Woodward, Birmingham. Ml 4-7044. Halp Wonted Femole 7 Help Wanted Female DIETITIAN Oakland County has an immediate opening for on experienced dietitian to plan and direct the acTiyities of the dietary department of the County hospital. REQUIREMENTS: Bachelor's degree with major in foods and nutrition or institutional management and membership in American Dietitic Association. SALARY: $7,000-$8,200, based on experience and training. Excellent fringe benefits include full paid Blue Cross-Blue Shield, 10-20 annual leave days, 10 paid holidays, 13 paid sick leave days per year, life insurance plan, liberal retirement program and tuition reimbursement for related study. For further information or to opply, contact: PERSONNEL DIVISION OAKLAND COUNTY COURT HOUSE 1200 N. Telegraph Rd„ 3384751, Pontiac, Mich. Ext. 495 j Body Reparlman . _______....e Body Rapalimrisn II . Automobile Body V"‘—* THE OAKLAND COUNTY MERIT SYSTEM le following OPEN COMPETITIVE EXAMINATIONS to estsbilsh lists ._ I* classifications. CONTINUOUS EXAMINATIONS Applications otr these examinations may be filed until further 7,000- 7,400 . 4,100- 4,700 , 4,100- 4,700 . 01.50 per hr. 5,900- 6,800 7,200- 7,400 , 7,800- 9,000 , 0,500- 9,000 W50O- 11,000 7,100- 0,000 5.200- 4,400 4.300- 4,400 4.300- 4,400 4,900- 5,700 5.300- 5,700 5.300- 5,900 5.200- 4,400 , 4,600- 5,300 Appraiser Aide Car Washer .......................... Children's Supervisor I (Mala) ...... Child Weltara Worker I .............. Child Welfare Worker II ............. Civil Engineer I .................... Civil Engineer II ................... Clerk I ............................. Civil Engineer III .................. Clerk II ............................ Construction Inspector I ............ Construction Inspector II ........... Court Clerk ......................... Court Reporter I .................... Court Reporter II ................... Custodian Worker II ................. Dental Clinic Assistant I ........... Engineering Aide I .................. Federal and State Aid Coordinator Staff Keet Key Punch Operator Key Punch Operator II Laundry Washerman (.IcsnseO Practical Nur Maintenance Laborer . Nursing Aide ......... Patrolman Personal P.—... Personal Property Programmer I ..................... Programmer II .................... Public Health Clinical Dentist ... Public Health Nurse I ............ Public Health Nurse II . ......... Public Health Nurse III .......... Public Health Sanitarian I ....... Public Health Sanitarian II ...... Real Property Appraiser I ........ Secretary ^....................... Social Worker I .................. Social Worker II ................ Stenographer I ................... Stenographer 11 .................. Wuetodla. worker Typist I ......................... 7,40( - 0,200 . 8,400- 9,500 . 8,400- 9,500 9,700- 11,200 . 12,000- 14,000 . 7,100- 8,000 . 0,000- 0/400 . 0,500- 9,100 . 1,000- 9,000 . 9,500- 10,000 . 0,400- 9,500 . 5,700- 4,900 . 10,000-1 11,000 . 11,500- 12,500 . 4,400- 4,900 . 5,400- 4,200 . 4,900- 5,700 S'1 5,700 i,juu- 4,6C-1,900- 5,7C AppllceHohi Mutt Be Obtained From: THE PERSONNEL DIVISION ’ OAKLAND COUNTY COURTHOUSE 1200 N. Talsgraph Rd. WAITRESSES, AND kitchen help, experienced, apply in person. Sonny's Lounge. 700 N. Milford Rd., Milford. 484-7915._________ WAITRESS, EXPERIENCE D . Afternoon shill. 451-7800 aft. 10 paid vacation after 5 years. 4. Paid Ufa Insurance Ponticic Osteopathic Hospital 1 50 North Perry St. Pontiac, Michigan 48058 WAITRESS. _____ RESTAURANT, Keego Apply In parson after 4 p. WAITRESS to work days, with food and liquor, hourly R.N.'s Temporary 1111 -1 n assignments available In Pontiac plant areas. Medical Depts. Doctor on duty — SALESLADIFS, READY TO wear experience, enloy many employe benefits. Apply In person at Roher* Hall Clothes, 4440 Dixie Hwy. Clarkston.__________________ SALAD GIRL, 4 nights a cocktail lounge In SEAMSTRESS SECOND AND THIRD COOKS. Night shift. Some experir— -------- but willing to train. Aunt Jemima's Kitchen, WIxom Rd., Wixom, Mich. 349 Good location, work atmosphere and starting salary. Apply In person Jim Robbins Co. 14 Mile 8> Stephenson Hwy., Troy or call 588- SECRETARY Excellent opportunity for experienced secretary. Pleasant working conditions. Good salary and fringe be -"*- ' "— -----■■ 8:30 to 5 p.m mature person with a neat appearance who Is good with figures. Contact Mr. Ha yd an at Aerodynamics Inc.. Pontiac Airport. 474-0441. S E CRETARY-RECEPTIONIST, GOOD shorthand and typing skills with previous office ------- $450 a mo. starting. ( Stephenson Hwy., Troy I Wanltd FMiral* 7 Htlp WontBii M. w F. SHIRT GIRL FOR QUALITY laundry. Paid holldaye, vacation, -thar *-'— ■ r. Moore 33M012. pal STENOGRAPHS For salat ottlca. Work consists ot dictation, typing and usual office routine. S days week. Permanent position. Dictation and good tyr' a must. Located on Telegraph n Long Lake Rd. Phone 447-3200 ... appt. Automation 0, Measurement - LADY tor part time 3 young ladles 20 to 30 years ot excellent OPPORTUNITY" -Retired or taml-rellred couple to manege new 22 unit motel In northern Mich. Salary and living quarters furnlihad. Writs tor appointment stating qualifications -Four Saasons MIqtor Lodge. R. I Boyne Falls, MIcti. 49713. FlTpliRilNClD BOOKKEiPiNO Ottlca Managtr naadad. Top wages.. Fringe banatits snd refersness needed. See M r Bridget, Lloyd Bridget Dodge, cell 424 1572. ______ ____ Hel£ Weirted M. or F._______ I CARETAKER WANTED For 17 unit epertmenf In beeutltul Fontlic rairdeirtlal »ree. Bspiv Pontiac Ptaie Box 07.__ „ , HousiKiB^IHei help Htlp Wind M. tr F. i TAILOR OR . IBAMtTRBSO tor men't alltrallont, part or full time. Rallrad partoo coneldar^. Ar^yla Shop, Birmingham, 424- IS YOUR INCOME Adequate? Ca^^l Mr. Foley, York REAL ESTATE. OR 4-0343. BLUE-SKY. DRIVE-IN 2IS0 (kiidyke Pontiac. Michipi FEEL LIKE LIFE le peeelng you by? Cell Mr. Foley, YORK REAL ESTATE, OR 4-0343. KEY PUNCH OPERATORS, we ne^ too experienced. Apply Dempsey t Key Punch ' Service, (Srend Blanc. 4 mllet S. ot Flint. l»-4^ 313^404-7101 or 313-494-5131. PART TIME WORK, mala and temala. age 1340. Earn extra money at lilght, 3-4-5 or 4 n ghit a weak. Saa your fsvorllt movla with your family every weak, FREE on .{qur night off. Apply Miracle Mile brive-ln Theater, 210 3 * Telegraph, after 3 p.m. Want Unlimited Income? Take full idvantagO, ot your ambition In fht field of Real Etlaia "World's Largast • u s I n a e •'' Holloway Raally Co., Inc., with a s'* '^wiekt of school and training. 2-14 wtakt ot odvanco school 3l3)nt*''ijeer ot "In the Field WHY'no?' work with -- O^na of Michloan't numbtr on Roil liloto Co. H*oiloway Realty Co., Inc. 635-7285 ALUMINUM SIDING, WINDOWS, —ling Installed by "Superior. I FE 4-3177 anyllmf F IT'S AT ALL Antenna Service Aiphnlt PaviiiB________ ASPHALT PAVING Residential and commercial. No lob too small. Work guaranteed. Free estlmales PfiNTIAC ASPHALT CO. FE 4-0224 DivssmaMng^jrdlering ALTERATIONS, ALL TYPES, KNIT “ drettei, leather coats. 402-9533. DRESSMAKING A N D ALTERA ~ TIONS for men and women. FE 4 A-l PAINTING AND PAPER HANGING THOMPSON____________FE 4-0344 -1 PAINTING WORK GUARAN-teed. Free eillmele*. 412-0420. AAA PAINTING AND 0EC0RATIN9, 25 yrs. exp. Free est. UL 2-1390. OUSE PAINTING. Guaranteed Drivers Training Al-SELHOST ASPHALT 8. Seal coating. Free estlmales. 343-,'' 7989, It no answer, 474-2920.__| Tennis courts. 'iveways. < R 3-0326. ■FiTBNrjrR rN”l‘ASPHALT AND SEAL coating. Free .,i|mates. FE 2-4431. estimates. FE 5-4759. FULL TIME, nights. I asphalt, SEAL coating Keego Harbor. 482- Ins. Free ast, OR 307M, 482-8377. ASPHALT PARKING LOTS AND roadwat ......... ........ AAA ASPHALT paving ai FE 35320, F«r Free , 40 years txparlenca, FI CEMENT WORK, PORCHES AND "'-itneys. FE 30903. CEMENT WORK, OARAGE floars. Carpet Cleaning Cement Work CONCRETE COMPANY. 4 COMMERCIAL/ IN ! residmtiil. Block INDUSTRIAL GUINN's'cONST. CO. 3337477 or 391-2471 Fencing n Pontiac araa. Our prices BLACK DIRT, VIBRATED process Homeowners Insurance Anderson 8i Associates FE 33535 TOPSOIL, THE BEST, driveway gravel, till sand, stone, reas-prlcas, fait dallvary, 4730049, Stop disease Insects We stop mosquitos, other Insects. J. 8. E. SPRAY SERVICE 3437295 Landscaping retaining walls. Free estimates. J. H. Waltman. FE 8-8314. ________ ,-1 MERION BLUE PEAT SOD, 43 cents per yd. Delivered. 482-1904. BEAUTIFUL SOD AT reasonable price, delivery and avail., 330-3018, 4733401. mowing and garden care. 482-: ( PERT SODDING, SEEDING AND shrubs — 482-1224. Lawn ServicB clean up. 4733992. HAVE LAWN MOWER, Will travel LAWN SPRAYING, FERTILIZER, crab grass kllltr and weed killers. Call for tree estimate. 4740945. 4231552. C. 8. H. Spraying.___ tlque birch. $5.49, 14.35. Oak, Hickory; Walnut, S5.77. 852-2709. VILLAGE PANEL 0, TRIM 3342 Auburn Rd. RAILROAD TIES Hardwood lumber, all sizes tor -------- 4237453. TALBOTT LUMBER Glass service, wood or alumln Building and Hardwart euppllei *15 Oakfand___________ FE 3 Mailbox Posts MAILBOX POSTS INSTALLED WOOD OR STEEL. 402-0354. SNYDER BROS. MOVING CO. WB move anything, anywhara — PIANO MOVINO EXPERTS. IS3 SMITTY'S LAWN MOWER repair service. N|W^ ----- --- ------- for sale. 3041 Elizabeth Lk. Rd. 402-9755. Pldstoring SarvIcB PLASTERING. D. MEYERS. INTERIOR AND EXTERIOR palnt-'— reasonable, free estimates. Id work, R. W. Lister, PAINTING, PAPERING Wk L L cleaning, papar removal. B. T. Sanducky, FE 34548. UL 2-3190. OSGAR SCHMIDT ROOFING, NEW AND OLD. fret CLARKSTON ROOFING CO. 473-9297. Insuranca Rtpalri. NEW ROOFS FOR OLD HOT ROOK. Shlnglas, 24 hr*., traa repair roots. FE 31725, ROOFING, NEW AND n Sand-Cravel-DIrt BLACK DIRT, FILU TOP Aulldozlng — BacKhoe easonafala - 4031471 Opdyke near Auburn. FB "L 35442. *3^731 Saptic Tank Sorvic# Sign PylitflHB M 3 M SIGN SERVICE, sign painting and neon repair, r— — FE 37148, FE 33210. Tree Spraying ANY SIZE, ANY TYPE Tree Trimming Servic# AL'S TREE SERVICB tree estlmaatai. 402-1397, 4737140, 428-3521 i-l TREE SERVICE BY B & L Free estimate. FE 34449, 4733SI0. B3B TREE SERVICE. Fully In- -----■ —Ing, removal. Fred 1201. 7230411, REE CUTTING ----------- . . - . estimates. Call btlwtan 9 and 4. 3333741. TREE TRIMMING, REA40VAL, light HAULING AND rJBBISH. NAMB your price. Anytime. FE 8-0095. LIGHT HAULING AND trash. 333 4941._______________________ LIGHT HAULING AND moving. LIGHT HAULING, REASONABLB ratee. 3331244._____________ LIGHT HAULINO OF ANY kind and LIGHT HAULING OF ANY KIND. _______Odd lobs. FE 32347. TRUCKING, FRONT-END LOAblNG AND BACKHOE. FE 30180. Truck lUiitel Trucks to Rent ’^■"“’?if5“c"K‘s-TRA».®‘"'“ AND EQUIPMENT Semi Trailers Pontiac Farm and Indusrtial Tractor Co. 125 S. WOODWARD FE 30441 FE 31441 Open Dally Including Sunday Water Softanan A-1 WALL WASHING, FE 2-9015. ---- ^ • BLOOMF I ELD WALL CLEANERJ. Walls eltancd. Reas. Satisfaction ---------iniurgg; pr *'*'•' J»!Sa_ CHET'S PORTABLE WELDING, wrought Iron, boom truck oarvict, damdiltion work. 4934180. H»l|i WAITBR^ WAITRBMBS. (nd but boyi, bowllna tlliy iftindant. Ti dr ovtr. AMly 1 to 4 p m., Tuoi., VZX;. £■**>■ »Afltv fNifRUCtOR, ir llio noidtd, 354-3i57. Sain H«lp Mala-fiiiiiilB l>A Public Relations Trainee TO $725 FEE PAID Company car and oxponioi, ox- Wanted te Real UNPURNIIHeD 3 TO 4 bodroom hooM In Walarlord or Clorkotr-immodlola poHooolon or July Coll VA »-5;i4, aroNo Pointo. ?.‘!iJcV th?“o*„orr“y;« PUIIIno tprth? Why not look Into the oxcitino loKo dovolopmoni Phaio ol rooT oalolt with Amoricon Land Corporation hara in Dalrolt. yvo haya lavoral good tailing pro-locli In Michigan. Now. all wa Mri. Balchaldar. INTBRNATIONAL PeRSONNBL ______ _e5i-ioso • skreTarV TO $550 FEE PAID w>miD^o~iiiri —----------- »imii“y''’L!‘'’^r'33r2ia’4 THE PONTIAC JUiKSS. FItUMV. J I N K U. I!M58 Rent Heviei, Unfurnished dOiSale Houses t o—a Ajtartments, Furnished 37 SYLVAN LAKE AREA, Itraal loval apartmanfr fiirnithad, ullllilat In-cludad, tuitabla for t famala adult, no chlldran, poll or tmokari. MS-JI4J att. 4. ________,____ watkTns lake front, s nicaly Ivrnithad, llraptaca, ----- - quiat iln^ parton, utllltlai dapoill y 40M atta derby, axe. working Cl lutura, your choice ol 1, call Mri. Batchaldar. INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL |3MP50 ENOINEER AND I ____..'llh pal wlih to rani or 3 bedroom homo, wit and rafrlgarBlor, within dlilanca to Clarkiton .naadad by Augutl, call av 4. 473-3«». Ajpertments, __________ ^ down. Wa buy _________ ____________ homat. ART DANIELS REALTY, badroomi, baamad calllngi. Oraat 1230 N. Milford Rd., MSI347 — for country living. ---- ----------- “ ‘ *■ - ....- Write It utllllla IX C-37. Itont lake Cettafes . .... ..f mo.I jm Daxtar-PIncknay Rd. 424^4. • Pontiac Pratt 3 “bIDROOM HOME “ “ acret, alum t, ralaranoat. Box C- houiatrallar 0 2 BEDROOMS WINTERIZED, mar home, unfurnithad on lot, 2 blocki from private ___ Middle Stralft Lake. MA 4-7M4 BEDROOM COTTAGES , partial b IE by~ bwr tIdW Sale Houses 491 Sale Houses BRICK RANCH IN OXFORD. 3 FULL badroomi, lamlly roo~ - - — _J33.i^j_qwnar. 4»»7L ICK 3 BEDROOM, noma tall on 2 attractive loti ___ _________ Tel-Huron. On paved road In BUENA VlSTA HEIGHTS ^ I ;n<,'''’*g.rS3i”' shoS“n* "ra*;! btdroom brick «nd Atbestot $21r500. Call now. P;*nV waterford realty nlJacN'larm.'^ C.l“ DI«la„H^«y,^ ... . . 473-1273| 2 BfbROOM LAKE privilege he wait of Clarkiton, all large roc gai heat, Clarkiton ichooli < phone — tIO.SOO - Tarmi. MENZIES REAL ESTATE we buy LMy LaejMBu'iw JOHNSON M FT, ON CANAL AT porlonct nood apply. Call Mi Daavar lor porionol Interview at: ROYER REALTY, INC. 628-2548 Some-Experience Bookkeeper found conditlondd, hoatad. Roc. 2 BEDROOMS ON SYLVAN LAKE. dJ room. Adulli, no poll. From $140. Furnlihod. Largo yard. FIraplace. - - I _PE 5-1305._________________I Swimming. MOO par loaion. 403- IWOMAN WITH 1 OR 2 chlldron to j BEDROOM APARTMENT neor .J*IL________________________________________1 ‘ .. --------- ---- ------- . ^ J BEDROOM, BOAT, Largo lol,| ___ ..... child wolcomo. 42S-2415i lurnlihad, on Union Loko. 443 or 623-3133. waakly. Juno 30 to Auguit 20. 305 ------------------------------- ^ month oflor Stplember 3 . 343- I. 4073 Kompt. 75. 3l4,m*F*t?A. rd. Flroploce.,2 Bodroom. 2 llraplacas^ Full_ 425-2775 170^5. Telegraph ^V OWN'-garai|a. WE trade lake front HOME. 3 1 FE__ 3-7174 I'/I baths, ^gai -.... all MY 2-2321 or FE 3-9443' , 42'xlOO' I Full prict only ltt,3( ... Ihli one. WATERFORD TWF, Iqi, pit school i r«nch homt on nkt WaotBd Rael Estate 1 MILLION Dbilxri hava bean made aval to ui to purchaao and aiiuma school I ’ n.^'?"°Wrtlttr'’'’fclKtoT I 3-XeDROOM,“FIREPLACE, adults, no imokori, '3120 plus'COTTAGE ON LAKE Onon, Ac- iJ'A'rbl*’' oi utlllllos. FE 2-7271 or M2-4340. I commodatn 4. Modern con-2 BEDROOM APARTMENT. Newly 3lo!500') Paymanli 345 mo. daeorolid. Eloc. range, _MYj-iq«.____--------------------------| including taxes and Insurance, In- ralrlgarator. Fine neighborhood.'COTTAGE, 7 BEDROOMS, idtal for' tarast rale 5W per cant. FE 4-3374. ------ ---------- .,..h ---- I..™ ‘ *"n- fBEbROOM RANCH ON vricre lot near Walled Lake. Gai heal. 1W Ponllac: room Cope Cod, ,L®V SIX ACRES WITH POSSIBILITY »ir,3w. .u 3, properly, 4 room hon .. . - - .............. ..-*r-_......... brick, baiamant, cdmplataly ftnlih- Recroalion room, 2 cor by OWNER, 3 bedroom br'^v - -------------- ---------------- ----- ... ... ....-------- recreation roon --------- and piano, located In . ____________________________________ „ Nina Martin, Realtor . ................. ^ 7,7, BY OWNER. MR. Proleiilonal man. WANT TO BUILD? We ----- ----- '"cation Bloomllald Hill* A, modeli lo show you ono uns ,u Item built home with cuiloml buy. CilJ or slop Bt_^U)a_otNca lo-iterlali throughout. 3 yer Y-VsTs, ground!. Call MY 2-2121 or FE payment. Attar 4 coll Jock Jolt „ 432-0212. £ JOHNSON icraeni. Owner muit rolocati within 40 days. Will lacrlflca toi >lno? Eari 0 OP»» * 5 HOMES, LOTS, 023 S. Lapaar Oxiord Holly Plaza Holly, Mich. _____MIS Goodrich, Mich. MOBILE HOME SALES coi needs part lima sales help, and outside. Call noon to i A SHARP FILE CLERK. W a groomed lor ■ plush firm. S30C Call Sue Lee, 333-41S7, Associate Able to do SOI 54,000 with no o nocassory. Young Secretary Accrete typing, speed not needed 'X'arCELS'f-'a'r M's,'BullNESS S5500 up. Plush surroundings, good PROPERTIES, AND LAND CON-promollons. i TRACT, WARREN STOUT, Realtor ISO N. Opdyka FE 5-0145 Jrgantly need for Immodlola salel Pontiac Dally 'III 3 MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE ALL CASH For hornet QnypIlCt In Oakland ' In 24 hours. . ciac. ranvVfi ____________________________ ____ Fine neighborhood.'cOTTAGEy 7 BEDROOMSy ideal for MSdiMway .Via VI Vereago outrlghf.l tiSO mo. See Menager, 2403 James club, across from Decker's Lend- We will give you cesn for your K. Blvd, 682-0SS7. ___ _ ; Ing, N. Chennel, Anchor Bay. equity Our approlsar Is owolling 3 rooms, MODERN oportment '* your call building, no children. $85 0 month. ....... ............ 674-2236 see monagor 110 Eon Huron. ELIZABETH LAKE lurnlihad col- ............. „ ..... — AftrfllllOllfiH RFAITY 4 ROOM XPARTMENTrr so iT3.'“or°TU*’5 2352 ° - mCtULLOUuH KtALIY bedroom. No children. Slaters ------ ------ 3 BEDROOM YEAR AROUND hpuie Highland Rd. (M-54) MLS Apartments, 42 East Huron. FE 2- FURNISHED COTTAGE on beautiful on Sylvan Lake. 1523 Lokovlew.! tj|;4 _______ ______________________________________________I Wlllloms Lake, fishing boat and _Sylvan_yillage, 1 to ' BlMMFIELb ORCHARDS' 473^27^tL’'5p°nJ"'°’™*''°"^'*'\^ BEDROOM BRICK ranch, attached; J. lU vJU APARTMFNTt; gayloRD-HIDDEN valley area — Kassuba Lake chalet. 4 bedroom, 2'/i baths. Complately equipped. $1,000 mo. References 2 extra large bedrooms. Mammoth kitchen end dining area, 2 fireplaces, 1 Georgia marble, 1 brick. Deluxe femlly room, baths. 1400 sq. ft. flagstone In foyer. 1.000 sq. ft. recreation room MY 2 2891 r FE 8-9493. 2 W. Flint SI. GAYLOROS, tNC. eated ( of A SHARP GAL f variety of benefifsy $: 332-9157y *- . Cell Kathy King/ All Fee Paid 11 II EL BOSSO It Tokes Two to Tango You and a top notch boss, good and typing skills will ') this tnviable posl- from $160- 1 Ml 4 6111 a appliances, — Alt Located coTpaimi:, LAI< 2 B I _______ling and tamllv kitchens,! 6 ROOMS, I !-car garage, baths, carpeting, | Irapas, bullt-ins-, finished basamant, alto, large lenced-in lot, reels In Commerce T( !6,400. 424-1482. out enlira house. Thermopane w i n dryer and built radio. Exlerfor is ,1th 75 ft ..... .,..000 c :hasad f MY 2-2841 or FE 8-4443 HALL face brick is on 75 ft. lot lolning. $47,000 $20,300. ________ .«. .without ext lot.JFE 4-83M. 2092 Devonshire ip. BY OWNER, i-bedroom rench on acres, Family room wl“-Carpeting ^end drapes. ft oasemenT ana l'« ioto^**'^*^**® other buildings. J25-1879........ ■ CLARKSTON AREA h bedroom, full baseme nl attached 2Vj car gs n room on main flot « lawn and shrubs. Her t- schools and shoppin« do here but move In H at $26,900, easy t«^rm 6 Gl OR FHA TERMS n 2 acres baths.: s stay. larpeted I Instructions-Schools ATTENTION Gi'S AND NON GrS Enroll now start training AUTO MECHANICS AUTO BODY REPAIR ACTY-ARC WELDING HELI-ARC WELDING i Approved under Gl Bill I WOLVERINE SCHOOL MICHIGAN'S OLDEST TRADE SCHOOL I West Fort, Pet._wq_yi642 FRENCH, NEW METHOD, we state, you toko homo. Chlldran or adults. Ml 2-3444, 5 p.m.-4 p.m,____J Work WontBd Mala_________ U D HOUSES.! Interior and o ----- --—- ..Id wall •"••hln IIght hauling. EM 3-5847. YORK 33V5470, FE 8-0770. One, All utllltlet ' Antonelli Realty Co. "'modern'Tlrepiaca'wS wk.'34'l'-3027.' 5524 MAIN DRYDEN, MICH. I NEW 2 BEDROOM, year around "t"" hdme on Cass Lake, weekly SI50.-' - - mthly at 1400. 482- only 315,50 B HALL REALTY, REALTOR LET'S TRADE large tamiiy Kircneni,| ,?LL , pool and largo sun dock f^?:^577.-------------------- ulllltles oxcept electric. MULLET LAKE. Large collages, rniiinn on South Blvd. (20 Mllei modern, hoalod. 645-2247. _ | "® ’ «oino lot' with shade no.,, uatwaen Opdyka and 1-75, ^eaR PO'NTIAC. NICE lakalront “apEER oJuNTY - 144 acres an^truit tJees 2-carHorage with ^ sSSd?v*?2'?o‘**4 Sm Cloffd 4*25*1 with running stream, free road tool r«xn. Beach priv.; near golf HAROLD R. FRANKS, Realty 4.P,.,.,Clos,d| ^.,7,. boot. AV.IL Aug. ,0th. 425-^ tront.g. (^i'p.rn^J'M^^^ LAKE PLEASURES N^LcA^.LLE,„ 3,^.»d^^^^^ '^Sf«°mich." CoslTFor Your Equity 796-3615 --------------------- garage. Full price $16,900 with $1700 down or trade in SMALL FARM 4 room all aluminum term home. Located lust oft Dixie Hwy., In Springllald Township. Has 14' kitchen, 24' dining room, Sun porch, fenced back yard and 2 car oarage. 35500 down or trade. GROSS REALTY AND investment CO. OR 4-3105 MLS We oey ca^h for used homes LARGE'BUNGALOW Near everything. 3 apaciout bedrooms, natural fireplace, dining room, full basement, gas heat and garage. Needs some tixln'. Owners Agent 674-1698.__________ “large lot Surrounds this asbestos ranch Avon TownshJ "------“ ' 2024. I BUYER WITH CASH to rr 'SECLUDED LAKEFRONT LOGfon 2 : cabin, 30 ml. Detroit. $475 mo. (io,400 ” I Detroit, 243-5"* 5 ____________744-34I5 y T 7t trees! shrubs, on west shore ol Ox-, one’'o’The "" 4-H REAL estate I J-J T ^7h Jl^^^iac’^; r"vi,s"''c*he^*k4j;'^rnor"■ ndence Twp., Lake across the ->- J--A J X X n.^iy remodeled! "> vets. Check this one now. -----Jr......... 4..-„i.s.„4 . e. ------ enclosed reari A \ 7^ n A1 CASH I Woodrow Wilson pi I 'fenced lots. Price 363-5703 Itroct terms. , country LIVING on 8 acres with 1 UNToiTTAi^WoNT^ 5844 O'X1E HWY 423-1400 ^*'7?!i:hen!'“'repla‘l?e,'“ifh' m.n"y ®^ no n.nx55 - OR 3-2321; d*,’', J*u*„te*r’sity‘’«1-742" "**' FURNISHED COTTAGE ^ •' ■ fenced lots. I ..- 75/ sandy i>each on Subgum Laki coSes 49 BY OWNER 2 BEDROOM, garage, 5 room^g, $11,200, $3,700 dowr , 222-2390 from Detroit. Mod. convenlMces.| independence Twp., Lake across | newly remodeled near Lotus Lake balance $65 month, 6 per cent ke'^^John^KInSer* apartments available.] August $W pe^ k- bum-ln’H«%oi!rf Wllanl” “1'JP„n'laKE FRON^ Ton™??!!!™*,*I KS* 'ill®. ® R* Buyers waltino — ol* cash sales.' Call VAL-U-WAY REALTY tor -immadlata- tree appraisal of youri CLEAN UPPER 1 bedroom apart-1 meni near Clarkiton and 1-75, heat .n" .nft water unit furnished, i edecoraled, $20 sandy beach. June 4-14, Aug. 12 - furnished. Sept. 3, $150 weekly. Also Sept, 3 lo,, f ■ to June 1, only S150 monthly. UN terms, 42 5844 ...., .emodeled near Lotus Lake balance $65 school, Waterford Township • |,nd conirac,. ?mmeSiat^'5l)ss«*bn',*0R MOM,^ Everette Cummings,_ReaItor 25»3 UNION LAKE Rd. Lauinger ^ FOR GRACIOUS LIVING — onlor AUDITOR, OFFICE MANAGER ervlsor, special assig---" axparlence, 752-4414. 1 INTERESTED I ' acreage: — i Building C newly redecorated, .S20 per wk.. ----- I inW **'** ---------'AFTER 8 P..... ■ ^ OR 3-0455 628-2678 OR 3-2321 I GRAND PRIX APARTMENTS IATTNACTIVE ROOM^ Gentleman. ' I bedroom, from $135 carpeted Use ot kitchen. FE 4-4024, 12:X ^ ^00,^1 RANCHER, attached i 2 bedrooms, from $140 carpeted IcLEAN SLEEPING ROOM_ FOR garage, utility-------------------— " ........ Sli’«r°N‘-.°fh‘’nl 315 S. Telegraph, Pontiac 1 ^*„tr-" 3-8141. Nelson . ^ , 334.7,7, _ _ EXPERIENCED PAINTER DE- HOME lUNTY. -■ 474-1648_ LAWNS, LOTS, and fields mowed, 482-0442.______________________ I LIGHT HAULING AND odd lobs, reas. rotas. 335-11S2.________ LIGHT HAULING, hand digging. ODD JOBSI CALL BOB 341-1414, 335- ______ ... plush surroundings,'! light typing and pleasant phone voice, full or part time. ; : KInW^F night work, age prefer club work, no pots and 5 or Insurance. Reply Pontiac ~ X C-3. ...... rralnetT,' top starting j Work Wanted Female salary, the best ol training pro-1 —-------------------- --- I IRONINGS^ VENTED. Missus and Hubby still In school? Looking bright future, management 332-1572. s trainee to $1 mature lady WOULD Ilka ---------- of elderly or saml-tnvalld, days, refs. Would taka relief work. Prefer near bus line. 332-4744. AIRLINES TRAINEE TO $600 Excellent career with Inlarni ilrllne, free travel, top -fxparlenca necessary, Batchelder. INTERNATIONAL P' Buiinest Sereic^ NEW ROOFING, RE-ROOFING, | REPAIRS. 15 YEARS GUARANTEE. Ellis Rooting. 335-2038; Free|l LOTS—WANTED IN PONTIAC Immediate closing. REAL REALTY. 442-4220 Listings Wanted -HOMES- -LOTS- -ACREA6E- Call: Preston Bilt Homes and Realty 673-8811 IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY Coral Ridge Apts. SECOND-WILCOX ROCHESTER 1 BEDROOM APTS. $145 Mo. , Elizabeth Lk. Rd. 335- Pontiac Also 3 bedroom brick rancher, brartd new, full basamant, lake 0 M E , privileges. $26,500, dNnkerSy or HOLLOWAY REALTY CO. 112 MILFORD RD. HIGHLAND ______________W4-2«1 _ 17 ACRESy CASS river fronVeqe. ---- . ---------house, bath, igs. $15,000. CITY OF PONTIAC HAYDEN 5-AND-5 INCOME T“r'"ga'’rTg*e‘' fai;;&r. '“3''-b,.hs‘’Tull Sa«- «' T'*m '“all **'^*’' ^ garage. ^-lar^stON, 3 bedroom older t LARGE ROOM, 2 beds, air con-1 ditionad. pvt. entrance, parking.! 140 State.______________________'CASEVILLE: I LIVE IN DOWNTOWN Pontiac's on M-25, 3 neor town. 2 bedroom house, t YORK INDEPENDENCE GREEN APARTMENTS lovely room for a goriliemis; Beside an 18 hole golf coufsa — 445 W. Hur— WaldtoiL HoteL completely furnished rooms, rates begin at S21! weekly. Contact Mr. Shields, 34 E. Pike St. or call 332-6541, bet. 4' .—3 p.m. uVS MIDDLE-AGED LADY Wishes ;■—........ -r— ' share nice home with seme. 43 __ .. ...I course, washer and, dryer In every a------- - “ barn, $14,500. HALL: LARGE 2 floors, ideal I restaurant, dancing, wedding shaded lot, on M-25, 312,600. WE TRADE, cent beach, !FE 6-7176 FE 8-7176 ear around (1702 Telegraph _ Pqmiac| lot, 314,000. CHEROKEE ROAD: Spacious rooms are the keynote ol this ________ . ------ located on one of Pontiac's ------- . desirable streets. 2 baths add to recreation room. 334,000. J. C. HAYDEN, Realtor 343-4604 10745 Highland Rd. (M-S4) 'nci'Kied . ... .......... .................. ..... ....... 40 ACRES: .......------ ------- .V, house, bath, furnace, large barn, home tode good soli, black top road, 2 miles MR. G.I.: ; apartments, 3 bedroiDm^ownhouVes,'nice ROOM FOR gentleman. "a'raa? M,000.'“""'“ ...... ’''"*®'®" tedrooms. 1 some furnished apartments g77S. __________________i Large kite..-.., - -- rn'',rn“(%r7ndn7v.*r’*.U;.S;,SAG^^^^^^^ tJJS'-"M°.Jd-i’Ve*,'F":^lr;.727oO.“' ' ' ^tnaii 'Xs* 4*7%Si%e^ji s£lc.^JV, tetaphone. 784 S.l HAHN^B^OK^ X7X.X,,, -------------------a/IN bWsT PH 872-2155 or 872-3514._________ JOHN K. IRWIN & SONS Middle-aged is'. SEWARD ST., - Large living 313 West Huron — Since 1425 room, bedrmm kitchen jwith dmif^ pg 5.9444 gffer 5 p.m. FE 5-4844 HIGHLAND ESTATES 3 bedroom brldk ranch, breezeway, garage, finished rec room, built-Ins, fenced yard, patio. 47X1153. NEW DOLLY MADISON APARTMENTS FROM $140 - SLEEPING ROOM, TWIN BEDS, CLOSE TO Mall. Mid-*'------------- ladles preferred. 4B2-41SS. 43 ’'jTREE TRIMMING AND removal. krea. Reply Pontiac Press, Box - JOHN OWEN'S landscaping. Kentucky and Marian Blue Sod, laid or dellvarad, also grading, 424-3304. LAWN MOWIN(3 and roto tilling, I 343-5138._____________________________I [odd JQBSI calx bob 341-1414, 335-' 18-A QUICK CASH FOR YOUR home. Equity or land contract. Call Clark Real Ei ------------ Real Estate. FE 3-788S. Near: J. L. Hudson's and Sears OAKLAND MALL Includes: AIR CONDITIONING POOL ALL UTILITIES EXCEPT ELECTRICITY Model Open 11 g.m.-8 p.m. 585-1125 Rooms jwlfh Board 1 OR 2 GENTLEMEN. Home < mosphera. Fine food. FE 8-3255. PRIVATE, GOOD HOME and too elderly considered. 482-8152._ RETIRED ELDERLY MAN In qul country home. 425-5150._______ HIITER privileges wl .. —__n brick ranch! 2 full ceramic tile baths, 1 i I master bedroom, f 1 r e p I a c i carpeting, built-ins, full basemai.., I attached 2V> car garage. See this EAST SIDE - This uo7,g,, this large foyer entrance. Spacious JfcSiL“±| Tiving room.-'•vHtt* ttrepUica.'-^Ftill'■ 1 formal dining room. Large built-in GE kitchen, 3 li-'---------- " full baths, 2'A cor Carpeted throughout. J I. trees and lakes, I «f! available. DUCK LAKEFRONT — 2-badroomi. Large living room. New f------------- s ‘•Fully furnished. Just 115,400 •TIVILEGED - S plus gara®a. --------- Fully furnished. Just ____________you In. OXFORD AREA Lake privileged 3-badrooms. Full paneled bas^ mant. Fireplace. Carpet and drapes. Nice patio. Brtozoway and attached 2 car iiioraga. Baautitulty landscaped. 523,0(10. ___ 13 ACRES - Timber and Ifjta- W® ft. road frontage. Just off M-24, north ol Oakland Co. lino. HIGHLAND - 4 bedroom. Full basement, wooded lot. Ponolod teoturar. Carpeting. $3,000 down. Land contract. . „ WATER FRONT - 7 ft. m .water. Cedar Island Lake. Brick I bedroom. Walkout bosemaot. Ladoailono firoploco. ,_L a r g a covered porch. Exe. ntlghborho^. Deep lake. Trout fishtng, 10-mlnutes to Pontloe. Full price $27,300. )m, a?lractl' full hxsomnnt now nos at rs Desi. inis J oauruoiii laisoa hot wat" healer, Fwnd?5, ranch wUh large lamily_rppm.^T2-ir garage, 38,000 with $250 hiH‘".7!t 5lnino 2?ea s cTosIng cost, FHA or VA f *r<.ctive kitchen and dinlpg area. besc'^Ts^s'^bedroom Raised garage. $10,250, Gl or 'fHA terms, LAW ANDT LOT — covered with fruil FE 8284 i retired elderly m . country home, 625-5150. 3193. ELECTRONICS TECHNICIAN TO $8400 use your service experience and SODDING OR SEEDINGT^refejnlng training "r electronics schocllng| walls, railroad ties, dellvareil or for top pay and long range fringe M'?®',!'*® .*:“i,®J*"y7^ 1510050 MM543, i ELECTRONICS TECH TO $7,200 FEE PAID Moving andjrwklng _ 22 LIGHT HAULING, rr. c Reasonable. 682-7516.___^ Painting end DacmHng 231 ____ -. Force experience preferred. Trainees and experienced. Some positions to $4,200 with relocation. Call Mr. Frye. ; INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL _____________•51:]«50___________' Real Estate trainees We have openings tor 2 sales people, experienced or will train, to —...........; •■■■ replace 2 who were promoted fo| and Interior, tree our Commercial Deportment. Our guoranteed workmanship. FE 0- lop salesman made over $13,00o! 4110 or FE S-1034.______________i the first 5 months this year. It you EXPERIENCED PAINTING, IN-are Interested In a highly, terlor and exterior. Low rales. rewarding career, call Mr. 'Cross 682-4570 or 382-4313. _________ ilni* “®f®*"*‘** Interview at yviFE painters and ----------------I wall washers, 15 years exp. reas., after 4. 425-3514._____^______ L A D I ES DESIRE INTERIOR painting In Waterford area. Free SELLING TRADING jgYJNG________ Your real estate today, cell; RAY REAL ESTATE 689-0760 RAY REAL ESTATE 731-0500______ SPOT CASH - NEWLY FURNISHED, NIC rooms and bath on Walton nice large yard, bungalov t‘ home, private entrances. I s _ at 400 Oakland Avenue. NEW LUXURIOUS APARTMENT 1-bedroom apt. $140 up. No chlldi or pets allowed. Carpeting, stove and retrigij artr -eond. ad, plus all utilities except el ;Rent^ Stores____________ 3,000 OR 6,000 SQ. FT. STORE inj new shopping area 34210 Van! Dyke, Sterling, Suitable for drug, party, hardware, etc. 731-8228 or _ 731-1410.__________________________ ALL PANELED, CARPETED store located near Sears. For rem or lease. FE 3-7853. Eves. FE 5-7303. and enclosed porch with hoot sullabl* tor 2nd bedroom, full basement, furnace, hot __ ____ _ ........ ................... " "...J""!"*'".. xM onv 12x25. 16x25 carrpeted living roorn- $4,400. iJled *ba'lh*w?th*'extra*^ bath*'otf 4 ACRES — near Orion. 34,' family room, American Standard .,dcc uxiih modern huildlnos 185 ELIZABETH LAKE RD. ' hot water heat, finished 2 car »0 ACRES - with modern buildings ■”3or;!,®R®o*se'viM: rppF«l.le-d. $34:500. - Carpeting and drapes, f^^fr'mon"th. '*"**’'' REAGAN REAL ESTATE OPdyke____________ 3 bedroom bungalow on R finished 2 car I-- —-garage on 2-100x170 ft. lots on "'ar Romeo. .....H he ...n tn be lake front lot RAY 332-^156 L ------1 BUILDING 20x50 FOR r drapes, 340 E. Pike. 332-1444. Manager-Apt. 4. 14 Salmer 2300^UARE^FEEL Living area with 4 nice b ‘ ' n with fireplace! Crestbrook . MODEL OPEN Many more to choose from. Just call HIITER REALTY, 3742 Ell-Lake Rd. 482-8080, aft. 8 p.m. 48 DAILY 2-6 PRESIDENT MADISON apartments FROM $140 Between: 13 and 14 Mile Rd., on John R. Includes: Air Conditioning Corner Huron ond Proll Brick building, new paint and. children, living room with fireplace; ;,7goi~DViced'at bnlv tidor, steam heat furnished, was a and new carpeting, ultra-modern grocery, some fixtures and SDM kitchen with table space, gaiiie ' h, gutter, sidewalks and license transfer available. $125 mo. room, a tamiiy room 24x24 with ’tV":!' m Call Dick Valuet, FE X3531. '______built-in bar, refrigeration, TV,| LARGE ARJA,_ PLENTY of parking, I »'er~. ^^Hrect ' paved streets, large corner lot, 427-2825 Gommer^ Township. 427-3840 ...IS by the wsl. . MICHEALS REALTY Rent Office Space 2 OFFICE SPACES — ! CUSTOM PAINTING AND exterlor|T^jNSFERRED .COUPLE WITH 4-°XlV ho'me In**Watertord'area. Agent°ORi Model Open 11 a.m.-8 p.m. | — I 588-6300 ENGINEERS TO $18,000 exterior painting. 353-2342. experience, need Is urgent, call ' next. Orvai GIdcumb, 473-_ m'YpS’ffATir.Mai pfpsonnfl i HOUSE PAINTING GUARANTEEI3. INTERNATK3NAL PERSONNEL | outside. Call Joe. FE ____________________________' 8-4748. __________________ DRAFTSAAAN, WORK with growing WALLPAPCT REMOVAL by tteam, firm. Experience counts. Start at - — '- S7500. Jack Parks, 334-2471, Snell-Ing and Snelling Personnel._ GENERAL OFFICE FEE PAID , Some office experience, light fyp-| - - ----G— —^gitions, ad-' ........ ...... call Mr. InVeRNATIONAL PERSONNEL, -MAtniGMiltW $650 UP Degree required. Econ., linant., accounting malors. Fee paid. Call RD 9-5777 Mrs. Plland. INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL ------------_---------------i.. 1880 s. Woodward, B'ham. 442 82« Wanted Houithold Good* 29 -----PAtRT EXPERIENCE --------------- PLANT SUPERINTENDENT, GEN-eral foreman, color matcher, lab. tech., quality control ' We Need Listings Buyers Galore J. A. Taylor Agency, Inc. Real Estate — Insurance — Apartments, Furnished 37 20 TO so PCT. OFF On a Selected group ot fabrics. Let ........... prIceJ Call . ... ...........stf In your Com'l. upholstory.__________ Scenic View Townhouse 2 bedroom with lovely country view, private entrance, tlroplace, patio, balcony, oir-eonditioning, wosher-dryer, Hlllvlew V 111 o g o Williams and Elizabeth Lk. Rds. $185 Mo. EM ^^l)61, or 335-3120. years old, nestled in a peaceful ------ commuting distance - a r p e 11 n g , ceramic tile village t...... —.......- of Pontiac. With cs ,u______ _ conditioning, large, ...... ....... ......... .'or onl' a month. Call Ortonville 327- Of beautifully paneled otfic ----- ---------- --------p,lu6, laldwi reason- ABLE SECRETARIES have 10x14 offices ready with comi 'Ice; Xerox, conference /' —only $33,400. COSWAY REAL ESTATE nWh. 681-0760 3379 Orchard Lk. (at Commerce Rd.) 45JI/ ANTIQUE REMODELED IN 1958 Large 8 room home with 2 baths, basement, 3 beautiful natural fireplaces. Enjoy the animals and. birds'and scenic views, on this in-| comparable 2 acres. Just outside of i Orchard Lake on Pontiac Trail. Also small barn tor horses. UNDERPRICES AT $5 7,000. TERMS OR TRADE YOUR; ... ..... HOME. ! baths, 2 fireplaces C. Schuett EM 3-7188; ^... level, a lOO'xTOO* partly wooded Crescent Lake Road, turn right tc Crestbrook Street and model. DON GIROUX REAL ESTATE -lighland Road (M-54) DAILY WHITE LAKE PRIVILEGES - 4044 ASHFORD See this exceptionally clean, brick and alum., sided home. For $24,400 - 3 bedrooms, 2 hill ^ IRWIN WEST SUBURBAN Sharp 3 bedroom ranch type home with aluminum siding, carpeting throughout, recreation room, fuU basement, family room, 2 car gar and all on well landscaped lot. Di overlook this white beauty. KEEGO HARBOR DOWN TO VETS — Large 4 -^room. Full (iisement, [replace. 2 ear garage. Near .nttacMell.^^ SCHOOLS - ’buII^ 674-0319 VE-FHA 673-2168 1531 Williams Lake Rd. at 3A-S4 LAZENBY TAKE OVER PAYMENTS walkout b large llvinu iwwim oak floors, sepere excellent starts h LIST WITH HACKBTT -sales people, to give ydu coureteous service. Cell now 4703. List With Heekett - si home with lake GEORGE IRWIN, REALTOR _MUl-TIPLE LISTING '^peti'every day till dark ATTENTION VETERANS central TV deposit, FE 4-7914 after 4 p.m. 2 ROOMS AND BATH. Pontiac. a week. Deposit. 473-7484. 2 ROOMS, CARPETED. Now ep-pllances. 775 ■ - “■* WEST SIDE 4 large rooms end tx flee and commercial center. Medical suites, general olllce J suites end commercial spaces. lot. Owners moving c J. L DAILY CO. 1448 UNION LAKE RD. UNION LAKE_________EM 3-/1J4 DEERFIELD VILLAGE By owner 4 SCHRAJyJ LOT OWNERS House for Sale will put this 24'x42' brick rwch on your property for only $12,900, £8lf "‘357-5892 or 647-1991 OFFIC'E SPACE AVAIL^^^^^ 4-0306. 2 ROOMS AND BATH, ADULTS, utilities. Clean *“'* -------- 2-4991. R«nt Houses, Furnished 39; ) BATH, SIS weakly. AAA Allowance Seattle "ooms and further Intermetlan call 354-3237. ?-| Photographer's ! Studio or Small Shop :. dep.'■335-1744, bef. 2 jssession: To $16,000 Fee Pai(d 1 PIECE OR HOUSEFUL. _M._C. LIpperd -_FEJ-7432_ CASH FOR FURNirURE AND a Pearsen'8. FE 4-7SI1_ er heuseful. 3 ROOMS, NICi distance ta f Fisher Body. C„,..............- , ar na drinkers. Cantset awner. 344 er 335-4408.___________________ ELIZABETH LAKE, sandy beach, pets, dep. 482-0531.______ FREE RENT PLUS wages. All HIGHEST PRICES PAID FOR g^| Orion, come, fi utilities. Child K---------- I dep. required. 443-4413. LARGE have you? , ___|3 ROOMS AND BATH, 8 & B AUCTION ! ** ®*® ' 084 Dixie Hwy. OR 3-2717 Tyler's Auction, 7403 Highland I Road. 473-4534. .3 ROOMS, '' COPPER, BRASS, ' Starters end ganere*-NEWSPAPER 8Sc . dellvarad. Royal Oak Wastcj P - ---------1 Co., *■•' ' -----IS, .125 WEEK. S25 DE- I. 187-4101.___________________ , —OMS WALKING distance tram _g|»her Jody,^ FE_Sri433...------ ■WLY decora fad. .....ence. From $40 dee. Pontiac tram S30 wk. FE 5-2134. ROOMS, S50 DEPOSIT, $27 weekly, FE 5-7432. . _______________ 3 ROOMS AND B*TH. Adults V, m^FErPAID^""^' Mi...il.n..u. 30 MALES Bold Future Gat on a menepement training program that leads lo quick - Mission Impossible No apkgrlaneeT Your high school diploma II the key to........... future. SaFery 14,000 up. Where'd He Go? _ _____ ________________________ADULTS ONLY, eoirege’graduato'i. ciiri’er poillioni,' siuvlRn5iriiifi«Tei,Tuif i rnuLTi'ONV?^?™!^ salary open. i a tew days lift to f*®*®,"’ . . t7aM ua> Abijolufe top! Electronics »''®W “®i cash price. -x’ ’•<« » Calleiqt Gredi Norfhwood Cu... ----------------- -------... OuaTy'cSotJlJl' ® Dr-. Royal Oak,....... _..... t'tojJ.- (, middle-aged, couple I Kemehm. Woman to do light—-- Shopbing centet ------------ — -- 1175 per month. Call 332-4203, Miss e'^’"^"^hor'se's" H* H*"Hotfme'n**?L""ctodet ha'll,'Stoht,**Dlx% "hw I '’?r. Welton. Phene Mr. Bruton 2 BEDROOM HOUSE near WIsner Stadium, S140 month with S140 deposit. 478-5414. .____________ i •-BEDROOM TERRACE, 4 rooms ahd full basement. $15 per month. Slaters Apartments, 42 East Huron. YORKSHIRE OfFICf CENTER us, 'iAXii. Ki.'-is: i ping. Custom designid —’ RentHouiee,UnfurnliliiedJOj 30 X SO' BUILDINJJ W barKlnB.~W. Huron, F 25,200 SQ. FT. 2 adjacent bldgs, across •tram Osteopathic HosHlel. WJIl remodel to suit tenant or will provide new bldg, with parking on site 120x140. Contact Bruce Annelt personally. Annett, Inc., Realtors / H E. Huron SI. . , .'S3SI-0444 Ottica Open Evenings 3. Sundays 1-4 AVaTlABLE tacmtles*'^ J. A. Taylor Agency, Inc. 7732 Highland Rd. (MS41 OR 4-0304 _______Open Dally 4-4 Sun. 1-5___ AUBURN GARDENS 5 room ranch, full basement with gas heat. New caprellng, large dining room, new furnace, connecting bath. FHA approved. Zero down. About $470 closing costs. Owners agent. 338-4452._______ down land contract. Nix Realty 451-0221, 052-5375.________ BEAT THE SUMMER HEAT, buy lovely ranch type lag ham# on private lake, private beach, i bedrooms, K^e r den, 2'/i baths, paneled family room with fireplace. Large kitchen with Island range, storms and screens, socmpletely sided, one block tram elemen ary schoo^, less than t year old. $54,500. 851-1405. ____________________ EASTSTDE, 3 BEDROOM, newly decorated, nicely landr----- garage, $13,400. C ____Tj^OO._____________ EXECUTIVE RANCH In Clarkston within w a I distance to schools and the v MLS $550 DOWN Modern 2 bedroom, full basement, gas furnace, garage. Well located. Ideal lor VO>»’^| lamlly. FHA List With SCHRAM and Coll the Von OPEN EVES. AND SUN. 1111 JOSLYN AVE. FEi5-4471 REALTOR Serving Pontiac area loi xo y^' LAKE FRONT Vacant — 3 bedrooms, furnisi large kitchen, large glassed porch, carport. $18,400. WATERFRONT Exclusive Cedar Island — 2 bedroom ranch, large glassed In porch, fireplace and garage. - - $26,800.® i FLATTLEY REALTY Ing 620 COMMERCE RD. 363-4981 LOVELAND KEEGO HARBOR Large older home. 3^bedro8ms. Double lot. Beoutllul sheda treat. $12,400. Terms. . „ Leona Loveland, Realtor 402-1235 ___ __ LOVELY CONTEMPORARY Beach privileges, near Telwr*^ and 15 Mile Rd. 2400 sq. tf., ranch, 3-4 badrooms, 2Vs baths, ba«tmenl. EleQsnt VYhItQ brick/ 2 way fireplace separating living room and walnut paneled activity room Large kitchen with table epeee. Separate dining and dr“ studio city V.- -. Many other letotures. the 850s. It desired — walnut paneling an ' celling. Gas an xpertly lendscepef itatures. Asking I lortgage. ( 3 BEDROOMS, SUBURBAN living,' ’miciheaLs Realty 427-3040______________ 427-2025 4 ROOM HOUSE WITH SOME lurniture, on N. Sejolnew. $140 per month. lurniture, on N. Seglnew. $1 ——mull have depotlt. '^‘^iL“E?r''A'Y'^EY:....... _____Bldg. FE 4-5181 Eves, and Sundays jM2-2073. 5 ROOM HOUSE, S38.S0 a week. I nriA" »r»M ‘ni-ieex. ' ) recreation _ ____ ____ ______nent, lovelv larg. t'/T acre lot, shown by ap fiointmertt. 673-B847._______ BREATHE DEEP AND ENJOY THE SWEET FRESH AIR of the country. WE WICL BUILD YOU A BASIC- I land RETIREE'S DELIGHT HERE IS THE ANSWER - if there Is lust the two of you — this 3 room masonry home Is lust your size, all n e w IV decorated, gas heat, lots ol fruit trees, 104x140' silt near Cass Lake, completely anchor fenced. $10,250 — $1500 down on land contract. HAGSTROM, Realtor 4400 W,.Huran ^MLS patio. Corpetlnfl, draperies, ii fireplaces, 2 lots, 2 car garage, too many other features to mentton. Call for an appointment lo show your family their new home. 2-FAMILY Near Utica with 240- frontage on Auburn Rd. Let the rental make the payments until you develop it tor commercial use. with substantial down payment.^ The Rolfe H. Smith Co. Sheldon B. Smith, Realtor 244 S. TELEGRAPH RD. 338-7848 FIRST IN VALUES Cease RENTING $78 Mo. Sole Houses igs and i weciv days. 49Sole Houses on lend contract, - J57T4 rs*: ^ yrTpertro" haulUIr-''-’-- )/ 222 Shtffnan f^urnUhadj baby wticomt. 3350 793 S88*4700^M8dls5n_H#l liw Rwr'":........ ............ rt. I sq. tt„ truck well with ties tor loading end unloading, ___ rates, city of Rochastar, 451- 5570. ____________ BEAUTIFUL RESTAURANT. GS^ wT?i;im®for'D.‘ITQ«®®"**»n3!lrRTGWN-l^^^^^ 042Y.*to'ro'"p‘'mY'^'"’ *“’■ "’'i LVMto'Su"v""^ "wrifliV'&t's' „»M^.r’^;.oh., Road. $10 Deposit WITH application vbcdroom HOME ,S HEAT BUILD ON YOUR LOT ;LY 1 BB6R00M, 4i Augosie. ES;,SO “I m.-- moteT. (too secui welcome, couple, m— yrs. ot age. 4a$-141$ end iBEDROOM frame: Orion. Iis'ooo. 443-4543. Pontiac, or phono; 452-3850 LARGE DINING AREA____, WILL accept ALL APP^^ PEOPLE WITH CREDIT P^ BLEMS AND RETIREES ARE (OKAY V|ITH US. PEN DAILY AND SAT. AND SUN. 24o'^yy.'’Kennett Near Baldwin REAL VALUE REALTY For Immediate Action Coll FE S-3676 642-4220 Kumn "ESTABLISHED 1930" Tea! estale-ammmts "to red carpet service Is I Sales Plan, A HORSE COUNTRY. iremely eye-appealing aluminui 0 help you sell or trade your homo, sailing 2-^rvtce and we and our cllerfts tael our he finest. Ask about our GUARANTEED 4Vt acres of fenced green 0'»»» an®. lul trees is the beautiful setting for this ax------- sided bungalow. J'AodarnIzad ktle^n ixcellent chain link dog ki •r III Oxford and sxe soma large to^ly vanr with Ilka new carpeting, to living’ r»m' .'n'd"''dintoo-V^mr basemen’'wlto'nelM^^ fSrnace and 5^®5jy,"®*®''*"*'’* and Anchor fenced back yard. 117,4^50 full .price. ____ ?.",Ii"o","?h,°rl}iIfn^"ixe?i!r.’' ’Th'ls^Sime* ir*S’tu.IJ5 ta oacK yarq. leat, 12x19 livir Ih* flraplact/ bxtra I r e Kiicnen j wen uit»iwmw« ____ :tmtnt driva and 8*S*24''o"Joi. ‘'$18,450.“'"'’' ' ' fide-'d^faU^^o'm. a^n“?«. V.ll'’S'xnV'r« !?ooriTT*^'?<«jmI.”'t"I<^ bath"’wlth®'"'nlly? s"p*a*clous kitchen wltti eating space and oas heat, TRADE. i 2536 Dixie Hwy.^ Multiple Listing Service 674-0324 D—6 THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, JUNE 14, 1068 »full taMnwnt, a-c»r f* QaraMrRMW to movo I p;.WI. MMioO or Ml *^>70t. MODEL HOME OPUEN SAT., SUN. 1-5 ANYTIME BY APPT. 1 bedroom brick trl-level with » ca attached garage. )Vi b ROLLING HILLS Mter, houiea thla all brick ■ lew trl-level, 3 to < , huge family room with _____3V1 car att chad garage ind hall acre of beautllully land-caped property. Multitudes of xtras. Asking t37,100. RAY Also We Build I bedroom ^trMevel with m car 3 K&'ViSSt^vSRh'I car garag and fun basement, $15,700 plus lot. 4 bedroom colonial with 9V1 baths, family room, formal and Informal J, G. HAYDEN, Realtor IS3-M04 10735 Highland Rd. (M-SO) Vi mile west of Oxbow Lat- MODEL OPEN DAILY 9-9 SUNDAY 2-8 P.M. Tasteful luxury and carefully planned conveniences that —— - to "elegance w 11 h o u travagance" mean more "Frushour-Angell" built t . That's why you can still have that new home of your dreams, built on your jot for only $10,400. Why don't you bring your family over to Inspect our model at 1052 N. Cass Lake Road today. Salas exclusively MORE HOUSE? lere It Is In this very lovely 3 bedroom ranch, family styled kitchen, carpeted living room, and a fenced lot. Taka advantage of this prl—" -’■■■“ “■------ • -^AY t call RAY today. I RAY 689-0760 Ti¥w 3 BEDROOM RANCH, bath NEW 3 BEDROOM, colonia, ranch perfect location, m bat hi fireplace In tiled and panel* basement, screened porch, parafl .. ... A-----------preclate. 628-3566. OPEN SUNDAY 2-5 SEMINOLE HILLS Located at 230 Chippewa off West Huron, spotless, excellent condition, 3 nice bedrooms, m baths. 2 fireplaces, full basement, gas heat, 2 car garage, 3 beautifully landscaped lots, ....... small down pawn on 6 per cent la ROYER Oakland County. Free Home You betl Live 'in this 3-come home and-let the — .. located In the quiet village of Holly on nice shaded street. Close to schools and si Country Estate Be the envy of the city dweller ... this private estate. Located lust north of Pontiac In 0 r' - -Township. Give your children to roam, raise a garden or even a couple of horses. This estate boasts of a gracious 2 year old, 2 story colonial home with 4 bedrooms. Vh baths. Huge brick fireplace —' family room plus many other tras. Call today tor------ Beautiful Country Home 3 bedrooms. Largo s u n k e r carpeted living room. Beautif large bathrooms. Large roomy closets. Hot water heat. 3 car -tached garage. All this plus acres on blacktop road In Oxford area. Owner wants to leave state, 40 days possession. Ask for No. 254F when you call. WE BUILD - TRADE ROYER REALTY, INC. PHONE: 628-2548 MAIN OPFtCB,*»23 SrLapieer' Oxford PHONE: 634-8204 OXBOW LAKE FRONT home. 80x144 ft. lot. gaod beach, 1 bar---------- possible 2. Fully furnished......... toon and boat, exc. condition. 343- Spaclous New Homes by ROSS PRESTON BILT-HOMES AND REALTY 473-8811 QUALITY BUILT 3 bedroom brick ranch on acres, r/i car attached gan Elus extra aluminum s i d uilding, 24 ft. X 32 ft. for yc.. tractor. Close to $tonay Creek Park. $371900. Shepard Real Estate, Inc. ____________651-7175________ 259 $. Woodward carpeting, 2-cer geraiw 15x32......... room 0 down, ebout $70 per month. Owner's agent. 474-1498. Rochester ajiea, sstory trai In city, 3-badroom, living roo dining room, family room w fireplace, small den, carpeh $19,900. Call 451-8210 after 4. SMALL FARMS — Room tor horses and children. Biiy, sell or trade with ART DANIELS REALTY, 1230 N. Milford Rd. 485-1547 or----- Daxter-PInckney Rd. 424-4494. RHODES EXTRA NICE — 3 bedroom aluminum home, m stories. Wail to wall cari^. Full baiemant, tiled. Gas heat. V/i car garage. See “-‘s excellent home today. Only , Jr900. A HIDE OUT - beach. A real buy at KOOO. 100' LAKEFRONT LOT — In-dlanwood Shores. Only $9r000. HOME SITES — In an excellent neighborhood. Only ISrOOO. Terms. A. J. RHODES, REALTOR FE $-2304__________________ ROCHESTER AREA Christian .... 98' ranch on approximato acre wooded lot. 3 largo bedrooms, I'/s baths, 2 fireplaces, kitchen built-in paneled family room, full dining room, 2Vii car garage. $44,900. Assumable 5 bath, natural fireplace, 2 car garage, Sylvan Realty, 473G4I0 or 482-2300. WYAAAN LEWIS REALTY 389 WhIttomore________338-0325 YOUNG-BILT HOMES REALLY MEANS BETTER BILT Russell Young, 3J4-3830 ______53V5 W. Huron St.___ STRUBLE WE TRADE a home ol >_ own. This 3-bedroom home Is located on the N. side of r " It has a full baseman furnace. Priced at $14,50O„. INCOME Put that money to work ........ nice 2-lamlly apartment. Each apartment has living ro -room, kitchen, 2 bedi^.... bath with private entrances. Full ------ ------------- . . MILLER AARON BAU6HEY REALTOR Ledgerock tirpitce l room. Lovely cerpelo Bright kitchen with ......... besemont, 2 car garage. The le FE 5-8183 FOUR BEDROOMS Brick two story h( living and dining n Sun room. Full b recreation room. ........— Three car garage. Big lot. Cell I. Carpeted ld home, at a price •nd terms to fit your budget. CALL NOWI >t for the price ol $27,950 w TRADING THE BATEMAN WAY gives you a positive sale end allows you to l"*® v®ur new home. .,1 p*<*7ooms. It's baths, beautiful custom-built kHetien, full basement, wood saaled^lass windows with *!*** (Ileaming-whife carefree eluml-"S"’ decorating and building site. OPEN SAT. 8, SUN. 1-5 p.m. Also shown by appointment on week days. Comar of Scott Lake and Watkins Laka Rds. S~OI-D| jBATEMANlj SNYDER KINNEY (Sc BENNETT FRANKLIN VILLAGE MA 4-94(K WE WILL SELL your homa — and build you a ntw homa. Call for Mr. Fessalar, 343-4703 . Hackatt Raalty. 18(7x130' lot, $14,900, Gl 0 WILL BUILD 3 BEDROOM brick and alum, sidad homa on your lot. Basic prica $13,900 — $50 down. 343-4703. $1500 DOWN, 2 possibly 3 bedrooms. Union Laka area, \ttrw lot. Full price $7500. 343- $1500 DOWN, 2 possibly 3 full price. 343-5477. contract, terms. EM 37700. HIGHLAND AREA, 2 bedrooms, large living room, fireplace, partly furnished, large lot. $14,400 - $3000 down on land contract. EM 35477. UNION LAKE, 3 possibly 4 bedroom ranch, large living room and dining room, lots of 'rTr'S.s.M. nice lot. $17,500. Ttrms. 3435477. OUTSKIRTS OF PONTIAC, 4 bedrooms, V/i story frame, iVi bath, basement and 2'/k car garage. East side, priced right, $18,500. Terms. EM 34703. 3 BEDROOM, full basement, 2 baths, large lot, double Insulation, near M-59 Plau, lots of storage, extra well for watering lawn, only 5 years okt, 819,400. Terms EM 37700. . 3 BEDROOMS, IndependanCa Twp., Ilka new, gas heat, large garaga, tool shad, lot 108x352'. $20,9(K). Terms arranged. EM 3 5477. LAKE ORION, 2 aerts and log homa on Square Lakt, furnished, firaplaca paneling, etc. $22,500, Terms. 3434730. DUCK LAKE FRONT, ranch, 3 car garage, sandy beach, firaplaca. 3637700. beach, garaga, 828,90 Il sandy beach. 832,900. EM 4Vi ACRES — Highland Twp. 3 bedrooms and dan, ledgerock firaplaca, 2 car garaga, 1'/i baths, a truly lovely homa, also has small building for couple horses. 144,900. Tarltis arranged. EM 37700. 20 ACRES, Commerce Twp., 4 VACANT LAND APPROXIMATELY 1 acra lot. Union Lako area, S2000 terms. 3434703. INDEPENDENCE TWP. near Pina Knob Ski Lodge, 1l8'x3(K7. $2250 with low down payment. ITBO-ksfr E 2 LOTS, canal front, ( Hackatt Really 7750 Cooley Lake Rd., Unloip'Leke LIST WITH HACKETT - START TO PACK- VON LAND CONTRACT Is It necessary that you buy on a land contract? Let us show you this small but nice comfortable 2 bedroom home, lust right lor a retired couple or newlyweds |usf starting out. It can be yours for lust $1,500 down^ust call today and we'll be glad to show It tp you. Full price $8,900. PAINT NO MORE This cozy 2 bedroom what nawlyuvKls oy a retired ci I, also 1 s a 2 b 'hat r lonth. You can buy the apt. will make y Priced at 819,500, I ON HALL, and op land contract. Les Brown, Realtor 509 Elizabeth Laka Rd. (Across from tho Mall) VON REALTY REALTOR 1 th« Mall MLS Room 110 6e2-5802r if no answer '— Mattingly NEW LISTING IN WATERFORD 7 room ranch with 3 bedrooms, full dining room, largo yard with ro are anxious to show 111 Commercial Package With over 300' of frontaoe c paved, suburban street. This eludes a commercial building w 2 second floor a—------** — year around cotta isently rt tr $500 P' ed at $17.9(X pric- 2 BEDROOM RANCH styled homa with 1V5 car garage on pavod street, in good neighborhood, gas heat, storms and screens and carpeted living room, make this one ot your bast buys for just $13,500. DAN MATTINGLY AGENCY Office Model 682-9000 OR 4-3568 BRIAN'S BUYS NEAR OPDYKE BRICK RANCH Neat and clean 3 bedroom rancher featuring full finished basement with gas haat. wall to wail carpet. 'Iced at $16,300 with 10 per cent ROOM TO ROMP HOUSE ON Vi ACRE Off M-59 and close to shopping In ■ ■n homa with full base-_ — garage, paneled living oil heat, Gl nothing down or 10 cent down on new mortgage. Call Brian . It Sailin' or Buyin' Brian Realty Inc. 623-0702 Dixie Hwy., Waterford Wi(deman WATER FRONT Largo brick colonial home featuring bedrooms, living room, large mat dining roofn and den — carpeted. Spacious kitchen, breakfast nook, basement, large rec— --- Large lot with Plenty ---- ----- go(>d beach, iee it today. IMMEDIATE POSSESSION. WEST SIDE bedroom Home, large LOKE COUNTRY LIVING? See this 4 bedroom homo situated or m acre parcel, family room, base ment and attached garage. Some shade and fruit trees. CALL TODAY. I. 0. WIDEMAN, REALTOR 412 W. HURON ST. 334-4521 EVE. CALL __333|4« CLARK INDIAN VILLAGE: -....... paneisd reeriation garage. Can assume a Gl 4 nt n ----- UPPER STRAITS LAKE PRIVILEGES: 7-room modern ranch homa. Brick and stone firaplaca, separate dkilng ------ ----------- walls, ivy baths, garaga, 150x200 I contract terms. CITY EAST SIDE: FHA "0" DOWN: Only closing costs, 4-room, with basement, carpeting and drapes in- TIMES Assume 5)4 per cent mortgage and you can be the proud owner of this sharp aluminum sided bungal lovely corner lot In Plains. This home has 2 formal dining, paneleu ....., room, aHached garage, fenced large kl.......... boards, beautifully _____ el, large utility room, _________ storms and screens. Price Is only $14,500, only S40O pays all costs to move you in. PIONEER HI6HUNDS Extra sharp brick and cedar shake 2-story homo with 5 largo bedrooms. Wall to wall carpeting In the family alza living room ang formal dining room, roomy kitchen with ample cupboard ------------ ceramic tile bath, full gas heat, alum, stc— screens. IVk car garaga. Extras also Include washer and dryer, elec, range, retrigaritor, 5 pc dinette set and lake privileges on Sylvan Lake. Priced at $20,000, $1,000 down plus closing costs will HOME WE HAVE FOR SALE R. J. (Dick) VALUET REALTOR FE 4-3531 345 Oakland Ave. Open 9 to 9' Closing Costs Only To a qualified Gl or about ------ down on FHA. Wa have a 5 room ranch In the Northern High School area. You will be as enthused as "JOIN THE AKARCH TO TIMES" Times Realty ANNETT Webster School Area 3 bedroom brick homa li cel lent condition, extra lot for parking, zoned for Per---------' Service. 100 ft. frontaga su tor doctors office, Insurani any professional b u s I n $28,900, terms. living area In excellent cone_______ LR 14x24, open firaplaca, formal DR 15x17, sunroom, ultra modern kitchen, 2 baths, full basement has rec. room, 2 car garaga. Several fruit trees. $45,000, terms. in excellent condition. Georgiai. room 20x28, living room 13x24, formal dining room 14x18, 3 fireplaces, ultra modern kitchen, 3 Tull baths. Also Includes 3 bedroom guest house, bunk house and 2 barns for horses. " beach on deep lake. $8 terms. E WILL TRADE REALTORS 28 E. Huran St. Office Open Evenings 8. Sunday 1-4 ten Evenings 8> S 338-0466 STOUTS BEST BUYS TODAY everything for . plus over vy acre In 1958 with ■ ceramic bath. “ itortabla living of land. Bull! ••"nms and with Gas not water noai. Miacnad giant 24x24 garaga. Extra 1 car garage for storage. 2 tl-------------- Outstanding yard _____ area. Hard to btlleva at only $21,900. 1961 TRI-LEVEL- Beautlful I and $4 tachad g It afar ----------- age. 12x14 tool shed. 1 Lepeer erea with _________js to Pontls* QUIET LOCATIONl- Do you naad a nica family homa on a nica lot 134x100 with laka privllagat waat at FontlaeT call us on tMt 3 be aluminum iMad ranch, ceramic tile baths, basr gas heat, 2 car garaga. mora features In this homa for only 822,500 and a pleasure to show. DOLLAR DIZZY?- Wsltlng for a bargain? Wa have an axcallent 1 story 0 room duplex for only $12,500 with $2500 down producing a waef' Income pf $53. Located ... - — rental area in Orloh Township and close to 1-75. Really -bargain I Warren Stout, Realtor 1450 N. Opdyke Rd. FI 38145 'BUD' HOLLY, MICHIGAN BEAUTIFUL BUSH LAKE Lekt front lots, off tho Lake 35 In all to choost from, oi. .... wostorly shore ot highly dosirablo BUSH LAKE In the Village of Holly tocettd ap-proximataly 5 miles west of I-7S midway batwaan Flint and Pontiac. Sawar, Water, Curb and Black-top straels, Im-tls all complatad - .oady to ft........ ...... .... 500.00 to $4,500.00 lor oM^ lake lots - $4,m00 to IIOMW tbr lakolront loti. Taka your pick, call nowl NICHOLIE-HUDSON Associates, Inc. 49 Univarsllty Or. FE 5-1201 After 6 P.M. FE 2-3370 $a|g Hbwi KAMPSEN "IT'S TRADING TIME" RENT BEATER Tht payments are < monthly r- '— aluminum tiac's na Ph"*ls'V_________ Is only 09,000. Approx. down should assume the -- contract. Nica for newlyweds or tatiraes. SAVE MORTGAGE COSTS On this noar t ... ARRO Now Is the time to sell Put your trust In ARRO With thoir hustling porsonnall PLANNING TO BUILD? Hero Is an Ideal spot, 5 acres. Land In good west suburban location. Approximately 15 mllos from Pontiac. Call tor details. ZONED LIGHT COAAMERCIAL . garage, priced at $$500. PHONEt 682-2211 5132 Cass-Ellzabeth Road REALTOR Open Dalli tr goroge, ,— ... — wlnno, oi._ .... cerpeting la Included. Full price Is only 111,*** —* *•■“ QUADRUPLETS NOT REQUIRED but If you love your „ them tMa^ Jumbo size ton room homa locatad on a large beautifully landscaped lot IVk mllas from 1-75 In Avon Twp. It Includes a 30x30* hoatad garaga . ... - -b|M facilities. The plumWn^ fl taaturas such at wash basins In two ot the live bedrooms, loads ot bullt-Int, two full baths, ---------------- Immedlata, .Prici $37,950. NO YARD WORK I Who needs a larg maintain? This hom Val-U-Way CALIFORNIA ST. Clean modern 3 bedroom brick front rancher. Paaturos file bath, alum, stc screens. Large kitchen... erea. It's vacant, Immedlata possession. Priced at $I2,f"" -— for the smell family. Two bodrooms, besemant. h e a ' garage, ancloted front p< Immaculately clean and at Owner moving out of town anxious- East Slda loca $1r000 (save.....,. only $10,950. *.» LADY BE GOOD TO YOURSELF AND YOUR FAMILY Insisting home inside to cleanliness. Can little S! itraci ■anged. OUR GUARANTEED Ideally I Schools, all within Even h homa that's for everyone. ■ and shoppinr la block radius KINZLER Newer Home-10 Acres (tras. Ntw 2M5 building sulta^ r horses. 10 lovo oerts and o«^ III. Variety of fruit treat, in lowe-IX area. An axcOMant value. BIG FAMILY HQME In Pontlae-Walklilt Etialat. A brick ranch with attached 2-cs iraga. Custom built by an axactin mar. Hat ledgerock llroplaca I ling room, farm size kitchen an ilthtd racraatlon room. Tc I c I u d a plush carpeting and ..aparlat In all rooms. Landscaped lot 100x150. Hgne tgo lorg- *" ^r^^t owner ^nd itiay co ACREAGE PARCELS Wa now have stvaral new acraaga arcel davalopmants In Clarkston, lolly and Orion school districts. holes 1-3-5 and 10 acrea i- ixcallant rolling laml somi nd soma with live atraam. par cant down. Sao this ni tho aelectlon Is good. JOHN KINZLER, Realtor 119 Dixie Hwy. ACROSS FROM PACKERS STORE Multiple Listing Sarvica Open 9-8 izabetH UKeNont LOf“ ra. I1?600*armi. AlS farga'tot j» tht read from itia lake. ELwi^'P REALTY_________$12 3410 HIOHLAND-MILFOtIO AREA iO'xISO' lokt front, $100 down. Blacktop Rd. Near axpraiswayi. Open ' . Bloch Bro$. 433-im FE 4-I, 5440 Dlxlr “... 1. Only 15 GILES LAKE ANGELUS be the first to te< irick homo, braei garage, 40'xlM' c ' leaving state, ar land contract. SMALL BUT NICE ARE YOU A Gl? It you art, you can buy this 2 family Income with nolhing and let It pay for It salt. . - . price only $11,900. You can't beat a deal Ilka that. Claude McGruder Reoltor 231 Baldwin FE 5-7145 Multiple Listing Sarvica 7 ACRII, 800> UKj larM trooi $l'^?^an '•'OnUX!"'* INDIANWOOD LAKE FRONT -Magnificent stalo style ground, palatial 0 room ^colonial with canter hall, 5 Mrooms, 2 lull baths up, v4 bath doum, stpara a dining room, hyga outdoor Jatnlly room on main floor, llnlihad a. '•vvmr':2;u '" KENT MULTIPLE HOUSES — 4 houses and plenty of room to build. S acres with frontage on paved road. $42,500, ttrmi. Floyd Kent, Inc., Realtor 2200 DIxlo Hwy. at Talagraph FE 24)123 or FE MW BEAT THE HEAT WITH THIS UKE FRONT COMPLETELY FURNISHED COTTAGE. Has paneled living room, glassed end screened porch. Wide private beach with dock end boat. Easy walk to Union Lake shopping. Only $12,900. C. SCHUETT EM 3-7188 8800 Commerce Rd. Union Lake Open every day til* INCOME — 4 BEDROOM home on large lot, WALLED LAKE PRIVILEGES. 2nd floor presontly rented as „ AP*-.„I m mediate possession. Only 127,000. COMMERCE LAKE FRONT - with BUY — OR BUY BEFORE YOU SELL — CALL RIGHT NOW TO TRADE THE HOME YOU OWN FOR THE HOME YOU WANTI Ask Harrell, Dave Bradley, man, Dick Bryan, Ken _ . _ Mountain, Leo Kampsen, Thurm Witt, Lee Kerr, Oleta Howard, Elaine Smith, Leo Bogert or Emery butler. ---Huron St. MLS FE 44)921 p.m. Call_____________474-3950 EASTHAM •aise your family or lust relax. Priced at oi 7 S1S,5(I0. YOU HAVE FOUND IT! This ranch home offers 3 rooms# large kitchen end nice ...ig room with no stairs to climb. This is a reals Value with carpeting —"““IS Included In the low price RETIREMENT SPECIAL This ranch home is perfect tor retirement or small family, with nice living room, dining room, largo kitchen, tiled bath, 2 bedrooms, full basement with space tor recreation om. There Is carpeting In the living om and dining room and the prica $14,900. Wa'II be glad to show you. RESORT AREA Just a 2 hour drlvt will take you this lovely large waterfront on CO Huron. So why not swim in beautiful sandy beach, excellent ..aiming and fishing. This lovely property Is In an area ot luxury lomes, and Is only 3 miles from Port Austin. There Is tun to be had right here, so why welt? It can be yours for only $5,000 down. Call us (or more details. TED'S Trading CASS LAKE CANAL Land contract terms, 4 room bungalow in W. Bioomllold, payments only $94 par month, carpeting, yard lamps, locatad on O'NEIL WHY NOT TRADE? THE PARK-LIKE GROUNDS Of this lovely 3 bedroom ranch style i "— consists of 4 , acres of land,! rlvacy? Wall here It Is. For family and your guest: pleasure, there's a 20x40' Belelri swimming pool Including all ac cessorles. It you're looking foi something "special" be sure to s« this one. Priced at $37,900. NO. 15-19 DREAMS DO COME TRUEI folks have dreamed of a honx Ibis, ntarly new, cust^ bull --------family i kitchen, large dir 2Vi car garaga, i------ the street from Van stucco siding, alumlnuin s hardwood floors, and pane walls, full price $10,750. 3 BEDROOM RANCH ,-jved straat and drive. Aluminum storms and scroons. Excallent FHA terms. Priced to soil quick at $15,950. Or lat'i trade. $100 Moves you Info this 3 bedroom home on Gl terms. Exeallant Value at $11,550. 2 car garage, aluminum storms and screens, A very neat and clean hdme. MONEY MAKER Lovely 2 femlly Income home, full basement, garage, completely carpeted. Immaculate condHioni pood location. Lend contract teiThs or you can trade. WANT TO RETIRE Excellent Investment for eddod inrnme. 9 family with Sleeping basement, 3 - c a r garage, some (i inting at ventTonil NOT COMMONLY FOUND Rochester area, 3-bedroom brick ranch home, excellent location, full besemont, 1',^ baths, carpeting, bullt-lns, paved straat and drivei Full price $22,500. Ttrmt or Itt'i JAYNO HEIGHTS wa have stvaral choice^ bul...... altas available fa) lovely Jevno Heights. 5 lovely lekes. excellant beech fecllltles, peved etreets, community water tystem, cloee to excellent school, tnmino er* ways. Cell our otilce now dotells. TED'S CORNER .....ilnate us, by ellmlnetlng us, you become men you middlemen, the . to elimlnete in . . ___ place. Why not cell your friendly middleman al: JACK FRUSHOUR REALTOR WE TRADE TO SEE IS TO DESIRE this Im- wall carpeting In living room, fireplace, large dining area, family sized kitchen — all formica, 2 baths, 3 bedrooms, utility room on main floor, full basement, and 2W-car garage. All this on a large lot with many mora extras that go with these — so give us a call. The full price on this —•— — taka your prtsti I In on ALUMINUM RANCHER for yourself. It ■----living dining as dormstory's will —......7, price -* I $29,500. Details want to establish your own ness In the g r o w I ng an _ Clarkston? Almost an acra ot ground, with 3 family zoned manufacturing. 425-J ORCHARD LAKE PRIVILEGES - beautifully I—'------ '— kitchen, larft. fireplace, 3 t ment. Land ..... available. $37,?00. CASS LAKE FRONT — 240 ft. tron; Multiple Listing Sarvica located (— -------------- $12,000 down on land j^ract. INDUSTRIAL BUILDING 5400 sq. It. masonry building li eludes 700 sq. ft. of offices, 31 ft. of frontage on busy stree has loading dock, ten ton hols four 12x12 doors, also frontage on canal to lake. Rontod at $700 ot comm, and I , part rented, call ""bateman COMMERICAL-INVESTMENT 1-40 2 family, Waterford area, currently renting at $255 per month. Excellent Investment. Full price LOWER STRAITS LAKE FRONT -■—a petlo. 3 separate tamlly n areas. 3 large t— tual amount of sioragi imtr kitchen. $4?,900. BROOCK Lake Front Out On the Peninsula with nice landy btach. Enloy the boating# ftablno. water akllna. Thla r'.'i^'Ilr select list ol tenants Ing for rental units ot all types. We can assist yt........... finding of tenants, sell or service your rental units. You can TRADE — EXCHANGE — vantages. Call i ¥ tor further In- McCULLOUGH REALTY Highland Rd. (M S?) MLS Open ?-9______________47 ' pretty bu res, m b ENCHANTING WHITE BRICK RANCH Attached over sized 3 car garage. This home to In the "pink" of condition with lush moss green wall to carpeting, lemon yallo' Itching wall lat, Commt enmsrce Lake .... ____n as spring I waiting for you. Im- KNOW THE REAL JOY OF GOOD LIVING Cabin or Mobile Homes Large wooded I C. PANGUS, INC., Realtors OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 430 M-15 >• Ortonvilll CALL COLLECT 427-2815 BY OWNER LAKE ANGELUS S-bedroom, stumnlum sided ranch. Largs dining room and llvina room — 2 story furnished ocean type leaw-" ■" extras. Beautiful _____ ______ _____ tri-laval In the Northern HI area. 3 btdroom brick and frama with IVk baths, ........... In kitchtn, paneled family " —ly brand, — — _._jtlfully lam be e pleasure ,v Priced et $23,950. No. 11-17 carpeting, yard. It v family 1 bedroom end __________ _______ ____ make this home suitable to the largo or smell family. Full baiamr-' nicely done as a recreation re with extra lavatory. Economical heat, low taxei mekee this hotm Investment at 810,950. Trade jrour WEST SIDE G.l. TERMS om bungalow, good w Largo livlno room, d ull besemont with n furnace. ‘ " price $9,9t No. 4-12 Nice 2______ side loatlon. Ino room, ..... ..................... ges furnace, one car garage. Full —-9,900. Zero down to voteran. PRICED FROM 825,950. INCL LOT. North on DIxlo (U.S 10) to Our Lady ----------Church, ler “ ' ——'— FOX BAI^ PRICED FROM 838,090. INCL. LOT. weet on Elluboth Uke Rood. RANCH MODEL AT 1053 N. CAtt lake road, open DAILY 9-9. WILL DUSyCATI ON YOUR LOT AT 818,400. ALL MODELS SHOWN AT YOUR CONVENIENCE. CALL TODAY FOR YOUR APPOINTMENT. LIST WITH O'NEIL REALTY For 3 Good Reasons Wt think 0 Our lilt of_________ And our tireless efforts Will meko you glad you celled RAY CPNEIL REALTY INVESTORS Brick apartment b u 11 d I n with over 25 modern unit! First time offered. Ampi CROSS REALTY AND INVESTMENT CO. OR 4-3108 5 COTTAGES WITH prlvIlegM on Perry Lake, priced from $4,000 to $7900 W. of Sashabaw Rd., Brandon Twp. Indian Lake Lot — 112' on water, E of Orion, $4900. GREEN ACRES 1449 S. Lapeer Rd.______MY 3-4242 Take living In Michigan. 334-4280.______________ Cope Cod Lake Front Lots of gracious living In this quiet community. 3-bedrooms, 1 down, 2 up. Picture windows at each end of charming living room overlooks huge deck. Kitchen bullMnr basement, carpeting, etc. To is to want ». mSOO. for the kiddles, boat space tor dad's boat. Possible 3 bedrooms, V/t baths, full finished beseme ' with fireplace end bar. 2 car i tachad garage. A privilege show, 821,900. Middle Straits Privileges with this lovely Roman Brick Ranch, partial basement, 2 car —-------^e, lOO* lot, spacious IS firoplace, 3 large room, dining *“ table spec Also Lake privileged tote et Sugdsh, Middle itralle and Sylvan. HEARTHSIDE REALTY 3147 Orchard Uke Road (Just west ot Clayton Furniture) Cottoges-A-Frames And conventional styles, write to NUTREND HOMES. INC., BOX 295, Rochester, Michigan or cell CLARKSTON - ru«ssi,......... churches, shopping at ex^rati' 50 tt. with IREEN LAKE FRONT - 4 bedrooms, fireplace In large living room, farm styled kitchen, large glassed-in porch, braezeway and LIVING. Hlghland-Mllford your door. Year around living. Bloch Bros. LI 8-7711. Open 7 days. 5440 Dixie, Waterford. Ph. Pontiac, 423-1333.________________________ close to Clarkston and 1-75. 120,000 - $4000 down. Underwood Reel Estate 445 Dixie Hwy._____________425-2415 LARGE WOODED LAKE LOTS Private laka with no public access. Miles of beautiful shoreline. Thie property has never been offered for sale before. -- Ogemaw State sites nt t by fire trail. I mation write Columpie kcii ) W. Maple Rd., Troy, Ml 14. Or call Jack Stanton, 4 LAKE FRONT HOMES, new ar used. J. L, Dally Co. EM 3-7114. NEW 3-BEDROOM, 2 complel baths, on Cats Uke, 482-5328. Pontiac Lake Frontage 2770 Webum Road Cornar ol Gale Road at Northwest tide of lake. All aluminum ranch, attachad aluminum garaga, gas heat, new kitchen with stove and refrigerator, cyclona fanca. Can be permanent homa. Priced to sail quick. Open Sun. 1 to 5. Dapondablo Raalty 502-4312 RANCHOUSE 4 or 5 bedrooms, 3Vs baths, 125 ft. on Sylvan Laka In city of Pontiac, (toad beach. $5fOOO. 335-2727-___________ SUMMER COTTAGE, oomplataly furnlthad, including boat. .Out. of town owner must tall. Atkira lest than 894100 will trade for llatrolt property. 342-0400. ARTHUR M. KING NEW 'LAKE LAPEER NOW UNDER CONSTRUCTION, ONE OF MICHIGAN'S FINEST LAKES, OVER m ACRES OP LAKE SURROUNDED BY ROLLING HILLS, TREES AND NATURAL SAND BEACH. SOUTH OF LAPEER. PICK OUT A LOT NOW FOR CHOICE LOCATION AND PRICE. V>-ACRB OR LARGER. $75 PER LAKE FRONT FT. OR LESS. C. PANGUS, INC, Realtors OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK $30 M-15 Ortanv ____CALL COLLECT 427-2115 TOWNSEND LAlE ft. lake fronttoa. 300 ft. deep, it down. $4500. 10 per cant down. SISLOCK & KENT, INC. " *3!li-9294 1309 Pontiac State Bi VERY ATTRACTIVE LAK^^fryJ^^S ^on s'^ildat'^. YEAR AROUtiD HOME on Cald Eagla Lako, off M-15 bat. Clarkston and .Ortonvllla, axe. fishing and swimming, I7*' ** watar, 2 bedroom alunilnum homa, large living room fireplace, bullt-ln stove and redwood patio, home partially furnlthad. Owner will hold land controef. Priced at 117,500, l- " D-8 TUE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY. JUNE 14j, I9U8 1-AAA sand and grivtl, all artas dallvarad. 67J-S5U, Walartord. 1-A BLACK DIRT Slata taiMi also topsoil, si------ Kival fill. BulMars supplies. Bud Hard, SJ3-1410; Lao Beardslea aas-iMS. ..jmber. Ed Kasler, 74«4 Gerald, Warren, Mich. 5L ____________ GERMAN SHEPHERD PUPS. AKC Call 363-W18. GREAT DANE P CLOCKS GALORE Fine art «last, torniture, lamps, etc. Saturday. June 15, 4:30 p.m. BLUE BIRD AUCTION l«S3 DIXIE HIGHWAY _______HOLLY. MICHIGAN__________ HOUSEHOLD ESTATE AUCTION. Consisting of 6 rooms of antique and modern furnishings. Sat. June IS at 10;30 a.m. Located W mile north of Ortonvllle on M-15 to Groveland Rd. Then 4 miles ----- on Groveland Rd. to the come Groveland and Van Rds. I3J0 oM „ u,ry nice modern bedr...... very nice i piece walnut cellent condition, call_ 4' TRAILtR SLEEPS - -Crooks Rd. _N. of Auburn, UL 9- . LAYTON COSiFLEflLY self contained, sleeps........ "" dltlon, 3et-lt44. 90" TRAVEL TRAILER, self con dining r marble to garden equ&ment plus all, household effects. Mrs. Blanche DeVere Estate. Duane Sr*-'-Admlnlslrator. Bud H I c k nr auctioneer, Oxford. GORDON SETTER PUP S, AKC 9t5».____________________ -----on sired. ^1“ ’ FARM, FURNITURE ana somi d male, reedy to hunt. MA Auction Sat. June 15, Starting 19:30 p.~ ’ —*“■ ’ reg., shot! 64S-5999. GERMAN SHEPHERD PUPS, AKC, silver female, bik. and tan male, 4 wks. 1195. 444-8314.________ german shepherd puppies, AKC. 498-4403 after 4:30.__ South of Holly at 4551 Milford Rd. Mr. and Mrs. William Boynton Props. Bob Wiles Auctioneer Phone Byron. 944-4798. FILL DIRT, SAND, gravel of kfas - delivered. F^ 9-1485. fill DIRT, TOPSOIL, Gravel, 1C Stone, black dirt, loader a bulldozer work, OR 3-5050.________ FILL SAND, ROAD Gravel, fill dii Free rotten horse manure, 444- grading AJHD^BACKFILLfNG DTST' FALL, IN 'THE^T^, Prsyton-Waterford area, we dug a series of basements, which netted us several hundred yds. ot fill dirt. An early winter plus a ' Inclement spring prevented previous removal o f this oin. Beginning June 12, we shall Fesume operations. If you are In need of till, priced right, call OR 3-8935, 4 a.m. — 11 p.m. MINIATURE SCHNAUZER Puppies, AKC registered. LI 8-9450._ MINIATURE SCHNAUZER puppies. - ------ ~------stock. Males. OLD ENGLISH SHEEP Dog puppies. Champion Sired, Out Show quality Bitch, beautiful markings and -■477-7454. LIMESTONE, CRUSHED stone, fill sand, top soil, fill dirt, loadlng^nd delivery. 7 ----- MA 5-2141. American Stone Products. MERION BLUE PEAT sod delivered 42 cents a yard, a so Week dirt, ' sand and gravel delivered. 333-7438 PROCESSED BLACK DIRT and p SONTIAC LAKE BUILDERS SUP-p^ Sand, gravel, fill dirte. OR 3- , SAND AND GRAVEL aH pu| -----, i^tiet»- 1944 DODGE FAMILY custom, V-8, radio, s'-— 75f- ■ ---- • '^4 ton'truck. LTke "new.'maire fer. 444-2904. ___________ 1947 lOVb' CAMPER, with extr - - without truck. 849-1193. furnishings never used. M75. 451-4954.____________ BoatirAccMWIu 1959 CHRIS-Craft, 18' Inboard 4. ex-—'int condition throughout, 81350. Bordine's. 1835 Rochester Wrambl1¥; 948 BSA THUNDERBOLT, .3M ml. $1)50. 113 w. Rutgers. FE 5-7191. 9M ^ KAWASAKI 950 s f r e a scrambler, leu than 500 ml., nev Wanted CarS'Trackt 101 A LATE MODEL CAR damagad " — ' probrwns. rJpRJSlt ----i TOP S PAID 147 MPG "beachcoWer 14'. 45 fQ|- g|| jhorp Pontiocs cM'IyIanD CADILLACS. We ore T'g’ffdn.'^y;,;tl'r>T*494T83.*"^ i prepofed to make you e ror-M-ijoi:--------A vnk»i?i» Ask for Bob TRIUMPH BONNEVILLE 300 iu7 40 HORSEPOWiR Firestone,'BumS. 5-4341 If no answi All 1968 Models Mile. JO 4-4880, Mr. Metzger. 1947 MiCROMITE SPORT BOAT, Johnson Sea Horse 4 HP. 494-4435. ~1t- silver LINE’^WITH 150 WILSON CRISSMAN PART SHEPHERD, part border collie. 7 yrs. old. Female, spayed. Poo house Inc. 434-4384, after 4:30. POODLE FUPS. AKC. POODLE STUD SERVICE AKC, 3W pound. White, silver and black. 7 P.M. Office ( < tools, 3 0 ■Han's ''Auctions, ■''ibs"''^; iton Rd., Lake Orion, 493- dryer, stove, used ft 5810 Tipsico Lake Rd., H..., Details here on Thursday Perkins Sale Service Auctioneers PH Swartz Creek 435-9400 [PUREBRED MINIATURE DACH-I;^- . . , d puppies, 7 weeks old,-redHTemS«TTees»nreilS-black, $50. 489-5107. ---- Iris lot EVERYTHING IN PERRENIALS 1000 varieties —- -' ■' 1968 Starcraft Campers Inside display CRUISE OUT, INC. E. WRlton Dally 9-4 FE 8-4409 APACHE FOLD OUT, sleeps 4, exc. condition. 474-9378. WESTERN FIELD TENT TRAILER, AIRSTREAM LIGHTWEIGHT TRAVEL TRAILERS Since 1932. Guaranteed for life. S< them and get a demonstration at Warner Trailer Sales, 309« Huron (plan to |oln one of Byam's exciting caravans). APACHE CAMP TRAILERS PICKUP TRUCK CAMPERS Save $330 and . ... brand new 1947 . Camp Trailers. Used Apache Camp Trailers $995 up. All 10 new 1948 model. . - traltBrs on Tllspl8yt':Savo-op -to ddOdt-on new 1947 Pickup T - "*^oom‘" * ---- Home Town 10,000 St SCOTTISH TERRIER pupp brindle, AKC, temporery snuis,; woriped, now ready, 434-8937. j ly), igt SCOTTISH TERRIER, 3 AKC, tern- Values to $5 porary shots, 10 weeks old. j 30c i HUGH'S GARDENS SHELTIES (TOY COLLIES), AKC, t,24333 Lahsy-------------Ikid’?? — sable and white, $40. 353-1 yyeitock 83 ' SONTEST_HORSE,_7_ye»rs_ Palarr IQ mare, 14 mos. 394-0284. 1 FOUR YEAR OLD gelding, gentle, saddle. 428-3387. •,'2 GELDINGS — Both English, W Arabian colt. 495^4559.____ THOROUGHBRED GELDINGS, Son. 10 A.M. to 5 P.M. BILL COLLER VS mile E. ot Lapeer City limits on M-21 AIRSTRAM TRAVEL TRAILER IRADLEY CAMPER, PICK-UP sleepers and covers, spare tire carriers, 3259 Seebaldt, Drayton Plains, 473-9598. Reasonably priced. 427- CAMP TRAILER sleeps 9. FE 2- BSA, IKIUMl-n, ncMvun NORTON, DUCAT) AND MONTESA ANDERSON SALES A SERVICE 445 S. Telegraph_____£E 3-7J09 ANNOUNCING THE NEW 1968 Hodaka 100 cc. 5-SPEED TRAIL BIKE. The Bronco 50 cc. i 4-speed bike. I MG SALES 4‘_‘‘LPi*l* Hwy„ Drayton 473-4458 1947 BULTACO MATADORE, 250 A Motors. 493-1400. CADILLAC ... tilt and 1350 N. Woodward Ml 41930 Kars Boat. BOAT, MOTOR and tl _____________....'trailer. 14' Olastron. 75 HP Ev|nrud*^ a^c. shift. $1,050. 4174 CnnlonvIMe Rd. OR 3-7458 after 4 P.M. _________ BOAT CRADLE FOR 17' CENTURY. GLENN'S Real. 6635. , $550. Ml *Tm perfectly willing to start at the bottom, Mr. Dillard, provided the salary is right!’* ....... 50 cc, 5 a P • a c transmlulon. Rupp Mini bikes from $144.50. Take M-59 to W Highland. Right to Hickory RIdgf Rd. to Demode Rd. left and follov signs to DAWSON'S SALES A1 TIPSICO LAKE. Phone 499-9179. HARLEY CHOPPER, $450. 343-«48 bet. 5 and 7 Boats at~----- OPEN DAILY 9 TO 4 MON. TILL 9 SUNDAYS 10-4 PAUL A. YOUNG, INC. 4030 Dixie Hwy. Marina on Loon Lake OR 4-0411________ WIDOW MUST SELL 1947 Mai 50' X 12' with tliKiul. Lived . months. Deluxe furnishings, central air conditioning. Best offer. 33A 1435 alter 4 p.m. ' HONDA S90 WITH BIG bore kit - makes It 97CC, completely set for scrambling, frails, or hi... Completely rebuilt. Everything new. A lot extra parts. Plus a single bike trailer. 489-1954. Do-It-Yourself DOCKS Aluminum or Wood Larsen Boats Grumman Canoes harringIon boat works "Your Evinrude Dealer" 1899 S. Telegraph_____33M??3 1-A ACTION will take exchange for 3 b ...use In Brighton Madison Heights. 1-A Beauties to Choose From WE finance - TERMS RICHARDSON monarch . ..OUKE HOMETTE LIBERTY colonial mobile homes FE-^-T45r=~ 423-131(7 95 OPDYKE 5430 DIXIE Auburn Heights 5. of L, X SO-, 2-BEDROOMS. Furnished. Call after 4:30 p.m. 859-3385. r X 50' HOUSETRAILER. $1,050. 9595 N. Adams. Off Auburn._ lixSir GENERAL. ’ihXJ 10x55 EXPANDO. 2 bedroom, good condition, extra storage, storms and screens, washer and dryer, new furnace, on lot, Immediate possession. 489-4132. I**"'.. FURNISHED. SEE on lot M, 50x12' PONTIAC CHIEF, carpeted, furnished, Lk. front lot, 473-4474. 12x52 PARKWOOD, CARPETED, living room, 2-bedroom, 493-0140, after ' SIAMESE KITTENS AND GUAR- 3 poNIES, 1 WELCH in foal $125. 2 ...—I J,ud service. Eves. 493- Shetland ponies, 1 year old $50 ■ ' ■ - ddle. 759-9045. __________1 TOY FOX TERRIER PUPPIES WALKER COON HOUND, 1 1 old. OL 1-1940 sharp under tack, $250, after 4:30.j YEAR CHESTNUT GELDING, contesting. Best otter. After 4 489-4019. CENTURY YELLOWSTONE TRAVEL TRAILERS Quality at any budget stachler trailer sales, INC. Highland (M-59) * 12x57 RITZCRAFT., 2 bedrooms, w: to wall carpeting, exc. conditio immediate possession. 447-4944. „„.-rnlshed. 119 Greanhill I Cranberry Lake Mobile I ........... -1 473-9070. 1955 CHEVY MOBILE t condition. In trailer_______pari Reasonably priced. 401-0904. AIREDALE TERRIER puppie ALASKAN ^ MALAMUTE Stud service. 497-3475.______ AKC FEMALE BRITTANY, years old, 473-0197. 1 PUBLIC AUCTION SALE HORSES AND ponies for sale. 425- Check our deal on SWISS COLONY LUXURY TRAILERS FROLIC, TRAILERS AND TRUCK CAMPERS work, $1,750. 3144 Aupurn no SKAMPER ■ 1944 liberty. Soxio. ski^ FOLD-DOWN CAMPERS 13 to 28 ft. on display at — Jacobson Trailer Sales 5490 Williams Lake Rd. OR 3-5981 WE NEED TRADE INS FOR OUR CUSTOMERS TO TAKE NORTH NOW LET'S TRADE . . NOW.. SEE THE ALL NEW 40x19 DETROIT WITH SUDE-A-ROOM PLUS MANY OTHERS Free Delivery up to 300 ml. See the New Detroiters Bob Hutchinsons MOBILE HOMES 4301 Dixie Hwy. (US-10) OR 3-1202 DRAYTON PLAINS Open Daily 'til 8 p.m. Saturday and Sunday *tli 5 Motorcycle Insurance Anderson & Associates 1044 Joslyn___________FE 4-3S35 r further Informellon cell, 287- MOTORCYCLE INSURANCE - C. JOHNSON AGENCY _______rt 4-2533 arts for this bike, 493-0939. HARRISON COOL PAK auto, air conditioner, S100. 474-0930. HYDROMITE FIBERGLAS boat, less motor, $123. 94740 Lahser Rd. FOR "CLEAN" USED CARS 959 W. Huron .11. ^371____ F| 4-1 wanted': 1941 lo 1944 1 ton pickup. In good condition, lor C4sh. 434-W70. WANTED Late Model GM Cars TOP $ PAID FOR EXTRA CLEAN CARS Suburban Olds ____BIRMINGHAM_ We would like to buy iaie model GM Cars or will accept trade-downs. Stop by today. FISCHER BUICK 544 S. WOODWARD 647-5600 Junk Can-Trucks 101-A JOHNSON 95 horsepower motor wll ------ils and tank, $150. 489-9730. YAMAHA 1947, 350 CC With ---- JOHNSON INBOARD outboard, 2 without side car. 473-4044. YAMAHA too. _____.... ....Jllent condition $2,( without trailer, $22S0 with train _____ 333-5IKL___________________________ t. 1300. H-, must be perfect. Ml 4-3153._____ NEW 12' BOAT TRAILER. Used Sieves 1947 RUPP MINI-bIke, good con-ditlon. 339-1544.____________ once, $100. EM 3-3448. USED BIKES. Spaed Seville »93 Boots-Accessories NEW .. . TROJAN CRUISERS ON DISPLAY SLICKCRAFTS Immediate Delivery USED BOATS ^ 45-24 Owens 995 h.p. Exp. hard! 44- 95 Owens 185 h.p. Exp. hardtoi 45- 25 Owens 18S h.P. Exp. loaded 40-25 Owens 105 h.p. Exp. Loaded 40-95 Cavalier 105 h.p. Exp. Loaded 45-20 Badgers I/O 140 h.p. ALSO OUTBOARDS LAKE & SEA MARINA laginaw at S. Blvd. FE 4-95B7 j^ii^*'........ By Sun. 12-8 ‘REMEMBER IT'S PINTERS Rent Trailer Space 7Vj horse evinrude, . . - dltlon $100. OR 3-8871. ____ 8 FT. hydroplane, 14 hor«p„ Pontoons, waterbikes. Rafts, Mercury and trailer. Call lor ap-, water Skis. Marine Accessories. pointment. 489-5019.___________(YOUR JOHNSON DEALER) 9' TAG-A-LONG FIBERGLASS Dingy 1370 opdyke 9-8 and Captain John davits. 402-31421 from 9:30 a.m. lo 2 p.m. and 41 p.m. til 9:30 p.m.________________I It University E Sat. 8-4 TRAILER SPACE. IN Imli area. $20 per -------■- Madison Heights. Imlay Cl 1. S80-47( CLASS B. BOAT with 1945 Mercury 35 h.p. motor, elec, start lAute Accesseries ---- 12' ALUMINUM BOATS .... Trailers $120. IS' canoes $194. "I Big Coho boats, 14', $289; 15' $3 AKC POODLE PUPS, $45 and up. AKC POODLE PUPS, toys, while, silver. 343-8073, 343-9531 AKC 1 YEAR OLD Silver-gray mat German Shepherd, good watchdog to good home. 33S-4481, bet. 3:3 p.m. or aft. 4:30 p.m._______________ ANTIQUE AUCTION SUNDAY June 14 12:30 p.m. 9010 Pontiac Trail i'h miles south of Soufh Lyon, Picture frames, clocks, gone with the wind lamps, stereo cabinet. male year Va $95, lovely pets, 4 AKC BEAUTIFUL COLLIE PUP, tris and sable, $7S. 451-8740, AKC DOBERMAN PINSCHER, mo. old male, black and t< housebrokan, $150. 4------- home preferred. 549-9087. AFGHAN PUPPIES, AKC. Champion BASSETT HOUND, AKC registered, housebrokan, I yr. old. 339-7059, ^AUTIFUL FARM COLLIE PUP- CAT BEAR AND COON Hounds, World's bast bloodlines, pure reg. walkers, and Bluatics, started and pup, Lee Groesser, Junction 131 and 104, Fife Lake, Michigan 49433. COLLIES, AKC, line breeC quality. Puppies. 335-0415. COLLIE PUPS AKC, Also service. 394-0140.______________________ CHIHUAHUA PUPPIES ____________887-9935_____________ DALMATIAN PUPPIES 3 months, AKC rtgistared. 474-4079. boBER/^N PINSCHER, AKC, male 4 . years, has had obedlanoa , training. 45I-4009.________ BNGLISH POINTER 3 YEA‘RS“oi3, well trained, 47M907,___________ FREE, 3 LITTLE kittens need ie desperately. 489-4344. OF COACH HOUSE COLONIAL FURNITURE 4405 Highland Rd. (M-59) (cor. Pontiac Lk. Rd.) Sat., June 15,1 p.m. Sun., June 16,1 p.m. LIQUIDATING ALL FURNITURE AND ACCESSORIES. COMPLETE PAI^M'NO HORSES BOARDED, Clarkston ar $35 and up. 495-9444 or 447-4979. horses for rent or sale. 3085 - ■ Pontiac. ipeer Rd., sin Riding 51 Camping Private Lake --------------------------- „ i;,,, . sate bbach: flush toilets end 1945 NEW MOON, 12x40, _M2 i shwers, 1140 M15, Ortonvllle. pando, 3 bedrooms, like McFeely Resort. 427-3820 weekends _oy.1,^---------------- or 945-5958 weekdays 9 to 3. 412 1915 PONTIAC CHIEF, 12x50, 1 Empire Bldg., Detroit, 48224._ i $3500. UL 9-9509. park, 859-9442.______________________________ 1945 PARK ESTATES, 12'x60', fully carpeted and skirted, 859-3719. H. OR 3-9504. Ford - INVENTORY MUST GO. OVER $50,000 WORTH OF STOCK Toni Tyler, 473-9534 every Saturday night. ______________________FOR RENT CAMPING trailers. PIGS FOR SALE after 5 p.m. and all day Satu 42S-4S98. I 391-9810. 3491 North Joslyn. M Campers. 1965 VW CAMPER Clarkston Auto Parts lorth Main 425-5171 OPEN $ TO 9 ■ rebuilt auto parts RENT-A-H0U5EB0AT !' Seagoing houseboat, f lulpped. Including central I nd air-condllloning. HIDE-AWAY HARBOR 15044 JEFFE'RSON Ml. Clemens, Mi^ SAILBOAT 14'' FIBERGLAS Snipe. $450. OR 4-I04S. DUAL QUAD SET5 Complete with linkage and al $125 Goodyear 5erviqe 5tore 1370 Wide Track Dr., West Pontiac Friday 'til 9 p.m. 2' PLYWOOD RUNABOUT, Her-rlngton-RIchardson convert-a-trailer, 400 lb. capacity, 22 h.p. Mercury 1958. Together $195 . 335-7783 aft. 3. 859 Stirling Rd.______ SAILBOAT, ASHFORD 20 — t main |lb Genoa, family sized cabin, sleeps 9, fully equip, head and trailer, exc. com JU 8-4449.______________________ 'SAILBOAT FUN FISH, Ilka Sallfleh, ' -----s. 494-I4S0._________ perlenced rider. $400. 434-8940 after PONY RIDES, _________ NEW 18' WITH TOILET, shower.j h equipment. Side lent,, ox, all extras included: r cent warranty. Only REGISTERED QUARTER foal. Daughter of Senior George. ......98-9300. REGISTERED 2 YEAR OLD quarter horse gelding. John Leo Breeding. Reg. 3 year old quarter horse mare. Pleasure broke. AAA SPIRITED OR GENTLE horses SADDLE, ROUGHOUT, LIKE NEW. blocks South of Utica High School at 7542 Daisy Street. 1 round kitchen table with 4 swivel chairs; --------------coppertone r; 3 piece ■ ‘ables, piece electric stov room suite; end tables, IS, trundle beds; ' 9om suite; 9 piece ; apartment si; desk end chair pool table; Kennr dryer; dishes en< Duane ilpton auctioneer, terms. 1199. TENNESSEE WALKER BROOD Mare, reg. Merry Boy breedlP" * year old. After 3 p.m. 474-1740 WANTED; 2 horse capacity horse trailer. In good condition, 343-4590. WELSH-HACKNEY AAARE^wlJh hjly NOW ON DI5PLAY Travelmate 10 ft. Double Bed, Dinette $1395 12 ft. Double bed. Dinette $1,495 '• Pleasure Mate America's Custom Hardtop Only $1385 Holly Travel Coach, Inc. 15210 Holly Rd., Holly ME 4-4771 ____Open Dally and Sundays_ OAKLAND CAMPER BEELINE TOUR-A-HOME COVERS Parts and accessories B & B AUCTION JACK MEYER5, 5PECIAL 5ATURDAY NIGHT AUCTION JUNE 15, 7 P.M. 5HARP TftUCKL0AD5 OF FRE5H PRODUCE, GR0CERIE5 (SOLD IN CASE LOTS), RAILROAD SALVAGE, FURNITURE AND APPLIANCES, FIRE DAMAGED FURNITURE, YARDGOODS, CARPETING, MATTRESSES (All Sizes) dreds of other articles too lerous to mention. 5809 Dixie Highway OR : Drayton Plains, Michigan 'Exc. conformatlor colleen pianery Fillmore, M>ats WE CURE AND SMOKE MEATS. $1695 Autobahn ^ HursTTloor Shifters $69 FOR 4 SPEED $60 FOR 3 SPEED Goodyear Service Store 1370 Wide Track Dr., West I boats a 12' WOLVERINE RUNABOUT. 10 world's ----------- h.p. Mercury, $175. 334-3137. Choose from ........... 11' BOAT, TRAILER, 5 h.p. rhotor, motors. $900, 0540 Pontiac Lk. Rd.__ olastron and Ch 14' WOLVERINE, 35 Evinrude, gator Chrysler outboard! trailer, sklls, $800. 474-0930. . ,-»k 14' SEA MAID, ALUMINU^' 10, 100 JUNK CARS - TRUCKS, ‘ree tow anytime, FE 9-2444. I'JUNK CARS, K.*.Y for SOM6 son, OR 3-5849. FREE TOWING, 34 hour road lea, 473-0493. Dave's Towing. trucks. 343-7581 or 34 WANTED: JUNK AND ----- Top pricee. Fro# la. FE 5-9044. Used Auto-Tnick Ports 102 ____... Ct. off S _____ att. 5 p.m.__________ 1943, 1944 CHEVY parti. CorveMe 1947 CHEVY 394 CU. m., 395 F after 5 p.m. (-1 TRUCK-AUTO engines. Fectory > tor MG. $50. FH MISCELLANEOUS TRUCK parts, I* 4-lug wheeli. bucket teats, cup side boxes. Cutting torch. trailer, 3 year INuV So*'' •s id, 28-lectrlS- start. FIBERGLAS-CANOES as l( COHO F I S H I I need _____ Tires-Auto-Truck 92 •n mne north ot Miracle Mile | ----------------------- 1765 S. Telegraph FE 8-4531 ATTENTION CORVETTE owners: Authorized VW .. , ______ ,rlth electr best offer. 495-3513. 14‘ aluminum canoe, Aerocraft. Good condition. 852-3332^_______ 15' BORUM BOAT, Ireller, 50 h P , O A K L A N D COUNTY'S °>-D^T Evinrude electric motor, cover and .fori? * New and Used Tnickt 103 0941, bet, 9-3:30. 1940 WILLYS JEEP, 4 wheal drlvt. skis. OR M924. ___. ltlce, 473^147. 1954 CHEVY I TON STAKE, like new, 54,000 miles, $300. MY 3-2779, after 4. 15' FIBERGj^S, 4(j NORSE Johnan goRRECT CRAFT, 9 Modbis made Motor, $200 down, take over, jg, skiing, 14' to 24' models on payments. 343-7440._______j display nowl 43 years 1955 DODGE PICKUP truck 84-ton, IS' TROJAN BOAT $120 craftsmanship ii 15' TROJAN, 35 ELECTRIC Start dayS°A WEEK^^^" f ''' "buyers^ome^to dreyers" SUNDAYS 12 to 6:30 valuer now $160. Call 624-4229 o ALL $300 OFF! ___________ _________ refinished. 424-5141 after 4 p. pIFeile ' CN72's irn ; i5< aERO - CRAFT, FIBERGL/Is, I52IO''n."hOLLY'Rf5.,'H6LLY loaded. 35 Johnson, trailer, $425 . 434-8300 OR 434-4771 Can be seen at Maceday Lake. 473- TRADE 1959 Owens 24' sleeps 4, for pickup of e or $2600, best offer 879-4440. Mag _)____________________________ ----------—IS' AEROCRAFT FIBERGLASS ski used wheels. MARKET TIRE, boat, *no. 7S 2435 Orchard Lake Rd., Keego. 1954 FORD EXPRESS pickup, xi *-h, with new 16" tires and tubes. 1957 FO^D SA TON wrecker, perfect motor and boom, 8400 or best ot-fer. 493-1150. ______________________ at Colgate 335-0634______ Ho^H^imlFi^^ B & B AUCTION FRIDAY NIGHT, JUNE 14 7 P.M. SHARP MIDDLE OF THE MONTH CLEAN-UP AUCTON suites, lamps, plctrei machines, sterec ______________ ____ combinations vacuum cleaners, tans, bicycles, odd • • lawn furniture, toys, tractors, mowers, tools. FREE. 7 WEEK OLD longhaired FEMAie, RED-BONE COON 7 mot. old# oxcollont heahn# an ahots. Por further Information call. _______ _______ _________ rocker cuckoo clocks, old pictures, di8he», silverware, fireplace fixtures, milk cans and ox-yoke. Hundreds of other articles too numerous to mention. 2 Auctioneers to Help You 447-3043. __________ $ER:MAN SHEPHERD AKC, 175 —' - ■ — diRMAN 5HEPHElfb“'P“ I B & B AUCTION [EVERY FRIDAY ........7:00 P.M. reke'Orlon'391- every SATURDAY .....7:00 P.M. Lexe orion. «i SUNDAY .......2:00 P “ WE BUY - SELL - TRADE CONSIGNMENTS W PERKINS SALE Call FE 2-4155. PICK-UP CAMPER, 4 slea^r, $650. 451-3009.________________________ PIONEER CAMPER SALES Trailers: Jubilee, Globe Star Barth Campers: Swinger, Mackinaw, :— Travel Queen, Caribou, Barth Oil' Covers:Stutz Bearcar, Merit 3091 W. Huron 481-0, Travel Mates Best Mobile Home Sales Open Doily 9'a.m.-8 p.m. Maricite Champion Royal Embassy American Pleasure Males Only $45 per week Holly Travel Coach, Inc. 15210 Holly Rd., Holly ME 4-4771 Open Dally and Sundays -u.. » ...... Wheel Horse, $449.95. Tom's Hardware, 905 Orchard Lk. Dally 9,6, Sun. 9-2. FE S-2424 N TRACTOR, FRONT Li Back blade. Not over 4 hou complete overhaul by auth------ dealer. 299S Lapeer Rd. 2nd house 948 FORD TRACTOR, good condition, 3181 Hessel off Auburn at Dequindr HOMELITE CHAIN SAWS, JOHN ROUGH-IT ON YOUR VACATION Unthinkable Relax and enloy your vacation, you earned " EVAN'S EQUIPMENT 4507 Dixie Hwy., Clarkston, Mich. (Just north o( Waterford) 425-2514 625-1711 ' I. through FrI., 8 e.m, lo 9 ., Sat. 8 a.m. lo 5 p.m. Closed , Victor MARLETTEJXPANDOS ON free DELIVERY AND SET UP ■’'ir.^brr^^.kfMobii. 343-5294 ______________ CASH FOR LATE TRAVELO, Hoj^ Perk or equivalent with tipout. 354- LANDSCAPING EQUIPMENT, Super C with grader blade, "II Fast Hitch equipment, also bulldozer. After 4 p.m. MA 4-3252. _ IPlOAL 10 day only with the purchase ol Mossey-Ferguson No. 9 or No. 1 Deal or you can buy a No. 22 Ba Thrower for a $100. USED EQUIPMENT John Bean 500 lb. sprayer with motor, TD 9 Internafional Crawler with loader, gdrden traefore and riding mowers from 4 to 12 horses. PONTIAC FARM AND INDUSTRIAL TRACTOR CO. 125 S. woodward ^ SPORTCRAFT MANUFACTURING '•eel frame pi->—»'*• *""« 4140 Foley Trot^oo(d BIG IN SAFETY, COMFORT-ECONOMY. INDUVIDUAL WHEEL SUSPENSION 517 E. Walton Blvd. AT JOHNSON'S 517 E. Walton Blvd. FE 4-5853 I. Trailers. r rertf. USED FARMALL CUBS ONLY $795 EACH KING BROS. TRAVEL TRAILERS Your dealer for — CORSAIR, GEM ROAMER AND TALLY-HO ALSO Corsair and Gem pickup cempci and Mackniaw pickup covert. Ellsworth Trailer Sales 4577 Dixie __________ n I e r c 0 yi/OLVERINE TRUCK CAMPERS AND SLEEPERS. Factory outlet, repair and parts, new and used, rentals. Jacks, • - - • telescoping bunivvrs, tanks. Lowry Camper ------- ---- S. Hospital Rd., Union Lake EM 3-3481. I Barnon Custom Auto Sanrice - Repair 93 1-A BUMPING, PAINTING Free Estimates Satisfaction guaranteed ECONOMY CARS $5695!2335 DIXIE____________FE 4-2131 WEEKEND oTiLY?*^^” NEW l’968° 60x12'S: Early American *4895 3 bedrooms Baroness >^|! ?,*™ba"th^“F*'*and R i FAC^fORY REBUILT MOTORS Lor »^e"r1dandsetu£;;I .... *“ - ALL ARE MHMA HIgl horsepower Mercury, with trailer $325. Without trailer, $250. Ready to go I 425-2048. SPECIAL 17' Glastron, 120 h.p. Mer Cruiser, Inboard-outdrive. Alloy Tandem trailer. $3295 16' Carver, 75 h,- 1959 CHEVROLET Vj Ton pickup truck. 4 speed transmission. Good 4 ply tires. Extra good condition. Cell bet. 3 P.M. and 10 P.M. FE 5- MODERN ENGINES Motor Scooters Motorcycles 154 AJS 500 CC, TWIN, lust rebuilt $500. 493-1150. 1945 HONDA 150, electric starter, exc. condition, low mileage. UL 2- Oxford Trailer Sales 5 NEW MODELS JUST I^N Priced righi, built right. 52-40 ft. long. 12 wide, 2 or 3 bedrooms. CLkatts# Amariesn or modem. Phone mi. S. of Lake Orion 1965 HONDA 305# MY 2-0721) on M-24. SPRING SPECIALS FOR EXAMPLE THESE 194l's I2'x40' 3 bedroom, $4795 12'xSO' at $3150 at $3550 Also the Danish KiSo, luxury for less, featuring exterior storage. Large sevlnga on everything slock. Free delivery and i within 300 miles. Wa will n: knowingly be undersold. MIDLAND TRAILER SALES Open 9 to 8 ' - ’ - 2257 Dixie H “TOWN & COUNTRY MOBILE HOMES T2xM HOMECRAFT, 14,295 “If.?. "osM-te IS MOBILE HOMES ______llxit Hwy., Holly * Mllet S. ot Grand Blanc 537-1117,' ____________________________ CRUISE OUT INC. THOMPSON LAPSTRAKE, 50 63 E. Walton FE 0-4402 ------ ------------- Hours: dally 9-0, Sat.-' I960 CHEVY 1W ton wrecker, 1960 A. and W. Winch. Make offer. 26760 Lahser Rd.______________357-9864 196b GMC V-4 DIESEL tractor. 94 d condition. $750. 14' RANKER RUN-about, convertible top, ’cover end all accessories. Complete wllh 35 horse Evinrude, electric starter, like new, OR 3- 1964 40 CYLE, SCRAMBLER. DA 8- 1944 HONDA 160 SCRAMBLER, exc. ■unning conditon, helmet, extre lire, $330 or best offer. $52-3300. BULTACO. - -- horsepower. Scremble handle bars Small tprocket. $300. Ml 4-2052 *• 1944 BSA Victor Enduro Special, 3S00 miles. Extremely fine shape. $750. Cell 423-0417. 1944 BSA ROYAL S 442-5234. r. $750. Phone iTss HONDA 305, GOOD condition, $325, FE 4-3MI, 12-9 p.m.________ 1944 TRIUMPH BONNEVILLE, many extras, exc. Condition. OR 3- 441$ attar 4i30 p.m.__________ 1944 TRIUiyiPH BONNEVILLE,, —«‘8Q, 759-5491. 1944 HONDA CB 180. Extras. Cintom 1947 TRIUMPH CUB, COtl $235, 1947 HARLEY SPRINT, 250 CC, ex-cellent condition. 335-W45. Tony's Marine Service JOHNSON MOTORS . Geneve GW Invader, Shell Lake, Aerocraft alum, boats ant canoes. Also pontoons. Terrific discounts on all 1947 motors a--' _____________________King Bros., FE 4-0734 or FE 4-1442._________________ 5' INBOARD, 210 HDRSEN V-8, beautiful tor skiing best offer. 682- ’ FT. PENNY'AN W( LAPSTRAKE BOAT, 40 Evinrude, I3S0 lb. trailer, acces. Clean and sound. $1,22! 1946 CESSNA SKY-HAWK, 197 total hours, ARC 300 R 1W nav., com. radio. Full Hawk extras, red, white and black, excellent condlMon. Baaed el Pontiac airport. 31M26- h.p, Chr '8 5:30. “"’CHRIS-CRAFT BOAT with " -'-It bottom. Call 428-1743. I' CABIN CRUISER. -power Volvo lO. Full mooring canvas, trailer. 343-9373. eluding h r. $3500. 4 22' CHRIS-CRAFT CRUISER, horse, tandem trailer, ------- 602-8069. WontBd Cart-Trucks 101 EXTKA dollars Paid FOR THAT EXTRA Sharp Car Especially 4 speeds and corvette "Check the ri Ihen gel the best" at Averill's FE 2-987S 2020 Dixie FE 4-4098 1942 FORD 3/4 ton Stake, no rusf, new 4 ply tires, $550. 447-4S48. l'942 OIVCQ WALK-IN VAN. Has 1V6 4 cTiavy angina and transmission, 7,000 ml. Ideal for camper. FE 5-0215. $495 1964 GMC WALK-IN PANEL VAN, $245. Mike Savoie Chevy, 1900 W. Maple Rd., Troy. Ml 4-2735. 1944 CHEVY PICK-UP WITH Plow, $1095. Mike Savoie Chevy, 1900 W. Maple Rd., Troy, Ml 4-2735.__ . 1965 CHEVY V2 ton pickup, one owner. Ilka new. Only- $1095 24' HOUSEBOAT. STEEL HULL. 2 motors. Retraclebls wheels. Make offer. Detroit, TO 4-3579. After S or Sat, or *- - 32' 1961/CHR 1C - cSaFTT Saa Skiff, twin 185 h.p. ( deck and cabin tops, fully dingy on davits, ship to shore^ ax- fully aqdIpMd 4' CHRIS-CRAFT, hardtop 1 cabin crulsar, 1943. S aaps six, lU't low hours, aquippad to Reasonably priced. 4244)457 tor ti l»47 HONDA, 140 Scrambler, mllaaoe, uis. FE 2-1994.________ 1947 YAMAHA 305 Scrambler, good shape. 4000 miles $430. Call 474- ir 1947 305 HOI ONDA SCRAMBLER, I 343-4047, Slava._ "1947 OSSA 175 CC. __________ '425-4792, 474-2901 40 HORSE mercury, alKirTc start 247*M®Lahsar Rd,___?«-*•** sFIjALVANpO STEEL DOCK.; Complete wRh' 2 seats, and ladder, iSSr Seik, SI30. 4734I349._ roTs'CHRIS-CBAF'T 24[ rough w«er wi hull, aairil . anehwd, *'1' *' room, mint condition, 542-4215 or| 272-W2. Mansfield AUTO SALEg 300 Sharp Cedlllecs, Pontiac, Olds and Buicks for out-of-stata market. Top dollar paid. MANSFIELD ^UTO SALES 1104 Baldwin Ava, FE S-5900_~ FE S-M STOP HERE 'LAST M&M MOTOR SALES Now at our new location . pay more for sharp, lata m cars. Corvettes naadad. 1945 DODOE SPORTSMAN van 225, 4 cyl. automatic. SI19S. Lloyd Bridges Dodge 1010 W. Maple. Walled Lk. 424-1572 T966 CHEVY / Va Ion pickup with ne«v4 Ply. tires, VI slick shill, radio, equipped to handle cempers, 1965 FORD '/2 Ton PICKUP low mileage, 4 cyl. aulomellc, premium whitewalls. Radio, aava $1395 Autobahn Motors IM. Authorized VW^Deaiar W mile north ol Miracle Mllst'-^ 1745 S. Talagrapli PE $-4531 196'4 CHEVY 4 Plfkup, W Ion, good condition $1150. 42S-23II._ 1947 FORD W TON vS, itfck wllh , 412-3)42, from 9:30 s. to 2 p.m, and 4 p.m. Ntw md Un4 Tnicin 103 IW^IjPff^TOW utru, m iMw, FTtljii Cot THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, JUNE 14, 1968 GMC ictory Branch SALE BUY NEW 1968 /. 4 Whael Drive FORD TRUCKS AT WHOteSALE PRICES Only 4 to Choose From JOHN McAULIFFE FORD 277 West Montcalm PE S-41W________LI 3-M30 10S THE 1969 JEEP CONVERTIBLES Have Arrived! GET YOUR SUMMER PRICE AND DEAL NOWI J*»p WaBonnr-UnIvcruls Oladlalor and Commando Pickup Commando Station Wagon available for IMMEDIATE DELIVERY *grimald1 "car Vo""” 900 Oaklond Avenue Foreign Core 10; Eaatway Dr. 33M77T. ’ 1950 VW SEP/ ditlon, MOO, t__________ 1040 VW PANEL TRUCK, battary and minor repom 6129 tfighland Road, (M-S9)________ 1941 VW GOOD CONDITION, 1325. 482-3929. K) SQUARE BACK, S550. HUNTER DODGE 19 S. Huntar B'ham. Ml 7-0955 1943 VW $497 ft .LUCKYAUTO Exc. condition. t064 TR-4, MUST SELL, $1195 or maka ottar 4S24R49.____________ t944 FIAT, 2 DOOR, $300. Daaltr 1965 ENGLISH FORD Consul# 2 door, good aconoi transporatlon. Only— $495 1945 VW SQUARE BACK, ditlon, extrai. 451-9739._____ I945 VW SQUARE back sedan. 1946 VW, 11295. ..... r-. $10.92 weak. Call Mr. Parks, 7500 Harold Turner Ford, mingham. 1967 OPAL KADET rally sport with tape datk $5^2932■_____________________ Bill Golling Volkswagen ANNOUNCES the» annual SUMMER SALE Large Savings in a Small v^y SELECTl3a'or,Tp"ERCENT USED CARS TO BE FOUND ANYWHERE Bellava us we don't _ meait to BUG you; But you have to see them All Colors and All Models to Choose from AT "Michigan's Fastest Growing VW Dealer" Bill Golling VW Inc. 1821 Maplelawn Blvd. Off Maple Road (15 Mile Rd.) ACROSS FROM BERZ AIRPORT Just South of Pontiac Troy Ml 2-M0( 1957 CAOILUC GOOD running eon ditlon. $100 call attar 4.'30 424^2011. LATB MODEL CADILLACS ON HAND AT ALL TIMES ■JEROME CADILLAC CO. I9ie wide Track Dr. PE 7-7021 940 CADILLAC COUPE dt VILLE, reasonable. 332-1207. and Used Cars 106 1950 BUICK, $100. Transportation, 1 owner. 343-3105 aft. 7. _____ 1940 BUICK LeSABRE, double ^wer, 2 door hardtop. Call 424- 1941 BUICK CONVERTIBLE", BUICK 1942 9 passenger wagon, ■■■ ~ ............................ 1943 BUICK ELECTRA 225, "““or, air, like new Inside $1000. FE 5-407$, FE $-0440, Nw end Uied Cnre 1H7 BUICK SKYURK TIZZY - Full tour door DaVllla. Vary sharp. Excallant condition. Owner, $1995. LI 2-5911. I960 CADILLAC 2-DOOR Hardtop, air conditional exc. condition. $700 best otter. FE 2-7019. ________ ,.<>,R!,LLAC convertible: 1943 CADILLAC CINVERTlBLE, ft power, new transmission, angli paint lob. Call 6T....... 1945 CADILLAC, repair. $1900. 24740 Lohser Rd. NEEDS motor 1937 CHEVROLET, GOOD CONDI-tlon. each. 473-3130. tree CHEVY; Wnei. you boy It MARKET TIRE give It a safet^^heck. 2435 Orchard 4 CORVAIRS TO CHOOSE FROM. '"‘-,'^s, ------ • Sav;______ Troy. Ml 4-27 a them at 1963 CHEVY SS, 2 door hardtop, VS auto., good condition, 473-3442._ 1954 CHEVROLET, GOOD MOTOR. Bv Kate Onann New nnd Uwd Cnra 106 '’«"aJ;^mot5crK£.^ .» 1947 CAAOARO SUPER sport, call 1947 CHEVROLEfTTdoor, 4 cylinder automatic, radio, excellont con-— $1«5. 473-1391. Stranahan. 1947 CHEVY IMPALA convortibla SS, bucket seats, stick, V-0, radio, rear speaker, good tires, 11,M0 Xls'lJss"* IMTThEvTIiIscAYNE, 4 cylinder; 2 door, 01,550. FE 0-249$. “I have a special Father’s Day gift for you. I’m not going to use the phone all day Sunday!” 1967 CHEVY SPORT HARDTOP, air conditioned, 01995. $39 do •- payments $15.92 week, call ...... Parks, Ml 4-7500. Harold Turner Ford, Birmingham. New and Used Cars 1943 CHEVY 4 . $400. 473-4142. 1943 CHEVY C 1963 BUICK Electro 225 4-door hardtop. You don't have h spend- -* lot -ofmoney. to--gCHEVY Bal-AIr . $1'" 1964 CHEVY Impels hardtop ...$1 1947 BISCAYNE 4 door .... ....$1595 1963 MERCURY Only ....$ »S 1945 CORVAIR Monza ....$495 1963 CHEVY Monza ..... $395 1943 BUICK Special 2 door .$295 1942 PONTIAC Catalina .$295 1941 FORD Wagon ..... .$495 10 used Pickups all mokes to choose from Starting at $795 ' Van Camp Chevrolet - 484-1025 1967 CAMERO Hare Is a real tint car and will really have many miles of trouble-free driving. Only $1795. GRIMALDI CAR CO. 900 Oakland Avenue 1947 IMPALA CONVlRflbLe, must be eeen, obtainfng company car, toll low M., ettor 4 p.m. TOM RADEMACHER CHEVY-OLDS 1947 CHEVY Bltceyna 4 door, . V-$, eutometic, told and lervlcad by us since new. One owner. $1795. On US to et MIS, Clarkston, AAA 5- 1948 CAMERO, BUCKET leats, shift, radio, heater must sell. BR 2-2784. ADKINS AUTO SALES 738 OAKLAND AVE. FE 2-4230 1942 Chrysler Coupe, very clean $395 1943 Pontiac Wagon. Only . loxn QIC, Coupe, very clean 41 Chevy 4 auto iO Ramblor 4 ai ) CHRYSLER 4-DOOR I .. $100 hardtop, ., .-......-.Jta 116.92 weoK. tail wir. Parka, Ml 4-7500. Harold Turner Ford, Birmingham. $1995. $39 c 1966 CHRYSLER Newport Convertible V-8 automatic, power steering, power brakei, black with black top and matching Interior, radio, hoator. $1995 Sea this auto at our new location on Maple Rd. (IS .... IVa miles East of BIRMINGHAM Chrysler-Plymouth 1945 CHRYSLER Newport, power Oakianid DODGE POLARA V - 8 1942 DODGE, 8395. "0" ( payments 83.88 week. Call ... Parks, Ml 4-7500. Harold Turner Ford. Birmingham. New iiii|l Um4 fall ' 8. Hunter B'ham. Ml New and Uted fan 1M •eden, good tires, body In exc. ehepo, 4W-il44.__________' KESSLER'S DODGE CARS AND TRUCKS Salea end Service Ktord __________OA $-1400 '44 bOboe POLARA, sedan/a V-$, radio, hoator, powor ifati new tiroa, eytrai. $1W5. HUNTER OOOOe BIRMINGHAM' Chrysler-Plymouth Oakland 6 PODGE CHARGER, automatic, edlo, heater, n>war stoarlng, air onditlon, toned almost new. $2095. HUNTER DODGE 1947 DODGE CORONET, hardtop, automatic; V-o, radio, heotar, power tisaring, whits walls, ready tor aummor, $1795. HUNTER DODGE , u...... B'ham. Ml 7-0955 Stanedard Auto Sales NEW FINANCE PLAN $5 Down 1964 PONTIAC Now and lleed fan TOM RADEMACHER ,947 oogSI''"ttt A paaaangtr wagon, V-l, 1 power ataarlng, radio, ____ whltewdlti, the mal family wagon tor the whole family. KWS. OnUI 10 at MI5, Clarkston. MA $-5071, 1967 DODGE Vocation Special $650Cl Mila) m miles East of ;.7;? FORD: Whon you buy If MARKET TIRE fivo It a .... talaty chock. 3435 Orchard Lake Rd. Kaago._____________ 1942 OALAXIB HARDTOP, excallant FORD, RUNS GOOD. Good ___y, tires, 4 msg. whoa'- Chevy or Tempest (never MA 4-5421.________________ DEPENDABLE TRANSPORTATION tor $150. 1940 Falcon, very good body, call AI Taylor, 474-2230. 1962 FORD ^DOOR, $544. "0" down, payments $445 weak. Call Mr. Parka, Ml 4-7500. Harold Tumor Ford, Birmingham. 1942 FALCON 2-DOOR, (395. ^—n, payments $4.42 week. — Parks, Ml 4-7500. Harold nor Ford, Birmingham. _ FALCON 2-D66R, AUTO., lY NICE THROUGHOUT 1964 FORD Galaxie 500 Convertible with V8, automatle, radio, hesttr, dork grsan, black root, only — $1095 Beattie Forci 1944 FALCON BUS, 0895. "0" down, payments 87.88 weak. Call Mr. Parks, Ml 4-7500. Harold Turhir Ford, Birmingham. X, toll pt ... $495 $7 WEEKLY 1964 PONTIAC Catalina 4 door, full power. 8495 $7 WEEKLY 1963 OLDS door hardtop. Midnight blue. 8495 15 WEEKLY 1961 TEMPEST cylinder automatic. 87 WEEKLY CREDIT MANAGER ON DUTY AT ALL TIMES Immediate Delivery We can finance you — even If You havt been bankrupt Standard AUTO SALES 109 East Blvd. S. 338-4033 Ask for Mr. White 'n^LSL (Formerly Kessler Hahn) Chrysler-Plymouth Rambler-Jeep SPRING SPECIAL SALE! 1962 PLYMOUTH 2-Door ledan. This car la In top condition. Ono owner. Only $495 1967 RAMBLER Classic 770 4-door, automatic, V-8, full power, factory official car. $1795 . 1965 DODGE Polara 2-door hardtop, automatlc,u full powor, dark green with Mack vinyl top. 25,000 miles, new car warranty. $1495 1962 CHEVY Convertible radio, hoator, automatic, V-f, Ilka new throughout! Only— $695 1966 PONTIAC Catolina 2-door hardtop, Vt, automstte, power ataarlng. Only $1895 1965 CHEVELLE Malibu 4door oadan, V-t, gutomatlc, Only— $1295 1964 FORD 1 Ton Wrsekar, fully agulppgd, gnly>i $2250 ON DIXIE HWY.-NEAR Ml5 CLARKSTON MAS-2635 1967 CAMERO igino and * u t o in a i -----Isslon, really sharp and i tra clean. $2195. GRIMALDI CAR CO. 900 Oakland Avenue 1947 CHEVELLE CONVERTIBLE. 81795. 493-2954.___________ BUY HERE PAY HERE Creciit No Problem 1961 Ford Country Squire wagon 898 full price 1943 Pontiac Convertible bucket seats $795 1959 T-BIrd convartibla full power $395 1964 Chevy 4 door, hard top. III brand new $895 Mds wagon double power $295 19U Pontiac Catalina 4 door hai $395 $395 I960 Chevy. Solid transportation. $95 1941 Chsvy Impala hard top Sky bh finish $298 Standard Auto 1304 Baldwin Ava. FE 8-4521 and top. 8295. MA 5-3293 «l NSU^PR^INZ 4 •( PANHARD ALUMINUM BODY, 4 door, front wheal drive, Michelln tires, epprox. 3«( ml. per gal., txc. RACE CAR, FORMULA Vas. YOUR VW CENTER 85 To Choose From -All Models--All Colors-—Reconditioned— Autobahn ATTENTION, ALL FORD, GM and CHRYSLER OWNERS SAVE NOW ON DODGE WHITE SALE SPECIALS New '68 Dart..........................$1995.00 New '68 Coronet .................$2035.00 New '68 Charger ........... $2599.00 New '68 Polara Hardtop.......................$2769.00* ‘INCLUDES: 318 V-8 ENGINE, TORQUE-FLITE TRANSMISSION, WHEEL COVERS, POWER STEERING, WHITEWALLS . (ATTENTION CHRYSLER CORP. EMPLOYEES) ^ SPECIAL HIGH TRADE-IN ALLOWANCES TO BUYERS WHO QUALIFY UNDER THE EMPLOYEE PURCHASE PLAN NEW FACTORY TESTED RUST-PROOFING PROCESS FREE WITH YOUR PURCHASE v-\ NEW or USED-BETTER CARS-BEST BUYS SPARTAN DODGE 855 OAKLAND (Just North of Coss Ave.) USED CAR SALES FE 8-4528 NEW CAD SALES FE 8-9222 — V\7e Meet or Beat Any Deal —Brand New— 1968 FIREBIRD — 2-Door Hardtop — With the 350 H.P. Heavy Duty 3-speed, push button radio. Rally 2 wheels, custom trim, and whitewalls. All this— Now Only ^2741 (3O0DWILL USED CARS whael, AM-FM Radio, Storoo 1967 BONNEVILLE Vista $2795 $1095 1965 BONNEVILLE Wag(Ui Outstanding beauty, az aya glass, a tamp, control, air conditioning. $2195 1965 PONTIAC Catalina Hardtop Coupe, powtr atoorlng, bn vinyl top. Sharp. $1595 1965 VW Sedan Gas saving beauty—priced to go at Only— $995 1964 CHEVELLE Malibu 4-Door Sedan, ready to go at Only $1195 1966 PONTIAC Catalina 3-Door Hardtop » $2195 1965 TEMPEST Wagon ...................$1095 1964 FORD Sedan ................... ....$495 1964 RAMBLER Wagon.................... .$695 1964 TEMPEST, gold, 2-door ..............$595 1966 RAMBLER 4-Door Sedan................';.$995 1959 PLYMOUTH Sedan ...........................$145 1964 PONTIAC Bonneville Hardtop ............$995 1964 PONTIAC Bonneville Coupe ..............$995 WE WILL MEET OR BEAT ANY DEAL, WE WILL NOT BE UNDERSOLD PONTIAC-TEMPEST Ask for Ken Johnson, Stub Graves, Jim Barnowsky, Rock Lund, Joe Flumerfelt Cn M-24-Lake Crion MY 3-6266 D^IO THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY. JUNE U, 1968 N«w aiMlUMd Cm 106 1964 T-BIRD R«d flnWi witti whit* Inttrlor. I iMlI powtr and It • I owhar tri GRIMALDI CAR CQ. 900 Oakland Avenue 1M4 FAIRLANE 2 door, 6 .... --- ntw lire*, «5S0 or bait oltar. Call Wl 7-ms.__________________ 1t«4 FORD HARDTOP, *795. down, paymanti M.“ —*-Mr. Parki, Ml ' Turnar Ford, 4-7500. Harold _____ CUSTOM - —, traniportallon ipeclal Only *31 full priea, No Money Down, Sa«— JOHN McAULIFFE FORD 430 Oakland Ava._______FE 5-4101 ’ down, payment! I m4 FORD FAIRLANE, auto., V radio, heater, runs great. $405. HUNTER DODGE B'Ham. Ml 7-0955 1944 THUNDERBIRD Hardtop, a V-8, radio, heater, full power, '■ and runs like new, *13W. HUNTER DODGE Ntw and Und Cm 106 TOM RADEMACHER CHEVY-OLDS 1«M FORD OalaKle 500 2 door hardtop, with V-t, automaNc, power atearlng, brakes, radio, Fnater, whitewalls, bronie with matching Interior. A real beauty with very low miles. *1*95. On US 10 at M15, Clarkston. MA 5-5071. 19*4 MUSTANG HAtOtOP, baautllui Arctic white with black bucket seats. Spring special only I14M full price. Just H8 down and M.St per month. This car carries a 5-year or 50,000 mile new ear warranty. JOHN McAULIFFE FORD | New ond Uttd Cart 106 IMS -kkERCURV WACOM, «3M. "T; r%5r*"»t*^ii5,s'.-'‘Ha^*i!i Turner Ford, Birmingham,___ 1*42 MERCURY Mon-terey Convertible, Mack with black an white vinyl Interior, white top, V t automatic, power steering, power brakes, radio, healer, whitewalls. Balanc* due *374.»1. Just assume payments ot *2.37 per week. t**3 MERCURY COMMUTER WAGON, auto., V-4, radio, hr-*— powar steering, new tires. *54i HUNTER DODGE >9 S. Hunter B'Ham Ml 7-0955 1944 FORD CONVERTIBLE, *1495. *39 down, Payments *13.92 wr-"-Call Mr. Parks, Ml 4-7500. Har Turner Ford, Birmingham. 1944 FORD COUNTRY Squire, 10 passenger wagor “—' — —I. ..., ,1 II vinyl Interior. V-.radio and and brakes. 10 special only *22(0 full price. B auto, transmission, radio and heater, power 1945 MUSTANG Convertible with automatic transmission, power steering, radio and heater, green finish with black top and Interior, set of snow tires and rims. Low mileage. Call after 1. 474-0054. 1945 FORD CUSTOM 4 automatic, doubi* " Dealer. 330-9238. 1945 FORD GALAXIE, eutomatic, doubla power, *750. Dealer. 33»9230. f*45 FORD LTD, all power, power steering and brakes, new tires. V-8, automatic, balance *1388. 493- ^965 ford, GALAXIE 500 Con-' vertible, standard shift, radio and heater, clean and low mileage. 482- 1945 COMET 2-DOOR, blue with matching Interior, ' imatlc, radio. steering, power brakes. Ilka new. Balanc* due *484.17, lust assume payments, of *5.04 per week. King Auto, 481-0802. 1965 FORD ECONO-VAN 4 cylinder, beige, good runni condition. _ . Speciallyi-Ericea — $595 JOHN McAULIFFE FORD 277 West Montcalm E 5^101____________LI 3-2030 SAVE MONEY AT MIKE SAVOIE CHEVY, 1900 W. Maple. M‘ ' 1947 GALAXIE GOLD HARDTOP. Power brakes. Power steering. Private. EM 3-4249. __________ 1945 FORD MUSTANG convertible with automatic *------------- power steering, ra----------------- green with black top and black Interior, set of snow tires ai rim. Low mileage. Call after p.m., 474-0854. 1947 T-BIRD, *129 .. ------ down. Call Mr. Parks, Ml 4-7500. Harold Turnar Ford, Birmingham. 1945 FALCON 2-DOOR, *795. - down, payments Si.92 week. Call Mr. Parks, Ml 4-7500. Harold Turner Fora, ~~ ' " Pretty Ponies 1965 ond 1966 MUSTANGS MANY TO CHOOSE FROM Priced from $1295 As Low as $39 Down HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. 444 S. WOODWARD AVE. automatic, nearer,' power steering, very a mileage, a new on* Is no nici spring special only — *2298 t price, lust *188 down, and *70 per month. Still under new c warranty of 5 year or 50,000 mile JOHN McAULIFFE FORD 430 Oakland Ave.________FE 5-4101 1947 MUSTANG HARDTOP,---------- twilight turquolsa with matching Interior, V8, automatic, radio, heater, power steering, summer special Only *2088 full price, *188 down, *43.64 per month. 1947 COMET CALIENTE with ... automatic, power steering. Only 82195. LLOYD BRIDGES DODGE W. Maple Rd., Walled Lk. 424-3192 1945 FORD GALAXIE 500, 4 door, V8 auto., power steering, exc. condition, private, <1100. 42iFl*12. 1*45 RED FORD V-8 convartlble, — tires, wire wheels, *1295 or best offer. 482- spotllght condition Convertible i9*5 thun- DERBIRD, air conditioned, double power. On* owner, priced condition. 3: excellent 1945 FORD Galaxle ______________ V8, automatic, radio, heater, power steering,' black black black and black, car. Black top, black Interior, whitewalls, be ready for spring — Only *1488 full price. Just *188 and *57.49 per month. 50,000 mile or 5 year warranty available. JOHN McAULIFFE FORD 430 Oakland Ave.________FE 5-4101 1965 FORD Country Squire ir steering, lugi — ''"■'•$1195 Bob Borst lincoln-Mercury Sales 1950 W. Maple Ml 4-2200 1945 FORD 10 PASSENGER wagon, *1395. *39 down, payments r2.44 week. Call Mr. Parks, Ml 4-7500. Harold Turner Ford, Birmingham. 1965 MUSTANG CONVERTIBLE, V-8, grey with black Interior. *1050. 1966 MUSTANG owner new car trade, 289 engine, tinted glass and has low mileage. Reasonable. GRIMALDI CAR CO. 900 Oakland Avenue equipped, way below market price $1695 Village Rambler 666 S. Woodward Birmingham 646-3900 1964 FORD CONVERTIBLE, automatic/ air conditioning/ clean, $1395. Mike Savoie Chevy, 1900 W. Mapie Rd., Troy. Ml 4-2735. 1966 FORD Galaxie 500 4-Door with V8, automatic, power ateer-Ing, factory air conditioning, oark moss finish. Only — $1745’ Beattie Ford ■ "Your FORD DEALER Since 1930" ON DIXIE HWY. IN WATERFORD 623-0900 1966 Ford Galaxie 500 Hardtop with 352 V-8, automatic, power steering, brakes, factory air conditioning. Red with matching trim. ^ $1895 Beattie Ford "Your FORD DEALER Since 1930" ON DIXIE HWY. IN WATERFORD 623-0900 1964 Catalina 4 door sedan 1944 Falcon Station Wagon . 1964 Mustang Convertibla 1964 Catalina 4 dr. sedan — Impale Hardtop .......... ___GMC Value Van 1944 GMC Value Van ........ 1943 Ford Wagon ........... 1962 Buick Spec. 9 pass .... 1943 Belaire 2 door........ 1942 Ford Galaxie 2 door .. 1958 Pontiac ............. *1495 .. *1295 ,. *1195 ...* 695 . * 495 1966 T-BlRD $2450 Beattie Ford "YotE FORD DEALER Since 1930" automatic, radio, heater, power steering, brakes, beautiful lime gold with black Interior, 13,000 actual miles, new car warranty still In effect. Summer special only — *2288 Full Price, lust *188 down, ---------- — month. Big Trade 1963 METEOR 9-Passenger Wogon V-8 automatic, radio, heater, beige with vinyl interior. $695 See . this auto at our new location on Maple Rd. (15 BIRMINGHAM Chrysler-Plymouth 1965 MERCURY WAOON, $1195. $39 |,g.24 week. Call bItI new tires, radio, vary owner, *1250. 343-2700. 1947 COUGAR XR-7, e full power In-43,500 actual. 1943 OLDS CONVERTIBLE, *495. "0" down, payments *5.44 week. Call Mr. Parks, Ml 4-7500. Harold Turner Ford, Birmingham. 4 DOOR Holiday hardtop. 1943 OLDSMOBILE, SUPER I door hardtop, car brakes, ste< air conditioned, 4-way seats. condition. *595. 482-4476. 1965 OLDS 98 3-Door hardtop, full pow $1795 Suburban Olds BIRMINGHAM Ml 7-5111 e. *1.4110. 482-4175. MARMADUKE By Anderson and Leeminir c t4mp( BIRMINGHAM Chrysler-Plymouth “There’s never any trouble in THIS neighborhood! We call it ‘Precinct M’i” New end Used Call 1962 PLYMOUTH Station Wagon V-8 avtomatlc, radio, heater luggage rack, balga will matching vinyl Interior. $395 NtW and Used Cars BIRMINGHAM Chrysler-Plymouth 1985 PLYMOUTH FURY III 4 sedan, power staaring, brakes, radio, heater, *155 lith *1,045 your balance to fir NEW FINANCE PLAN. IF PROBLEMS. BANKRUPT, OR GARNISHEED WAGES, WE CAN GET YOUR CREDIT RE-ESTABLISHED AGAIN. WE HAVE OVER 80 CARS THAT CAN BE PURCHASED. WITH NO DOWN PAYMENT. COME IN AND SEE C R E D I T MGR. MR. IRV. LUCKY AUTO Oaklanid 1945 PLYMOUTH station wagon, w11A V* -aprlnB special 4>nly *988 TuTt price, lust W down and *39.y per month, BIG TRADE ALLOWANCE 1 JOHN McAULIFFE FORD 4-7500. Harold 430 Oakland Ave.__FE 5-4101 whitewalls, see this one tor your vacation trip, *1395. On US 10 at M15, Clarkston, MA 5-5071. 1945 OLDS DYNAMIC 81, sharp, door, doubla power, *1400. FE 4*78, FE 8-8440, dealer. 1966 OLDSMOBILE Luxury Sedan end It Is fully load ed, here Is an ideal 2nd car foi summer tun. Full price only *2495. DOWNEY Oldsmobile, Inc. 550 Oakland Avenue FE 2-8101 1965 PLYMOUTH Sport Fury 2-door hardtop, fire engine red with blaS Interior, V-* aiitamatic, radio, heater, eeHiv^^ckct seats. auto at 01 on Maple R bRD, Air conditioning, 15. m down, payments‘*11.93 Ik. «N Mr. Park*, Ml 4-7500. oM Turnar Ford, Birmingham. % AS LOW 0/P Down AS ^ Payment EVEN IF YOU HAVE: Been Bankrupt!-Been in Receivership Had a Repossession-Just Turned 21 100 CARS TO CHOOSE FROM 1962 Ford wagon, $295 ....$3 Weekly 1962 Pontiac Hardtop, $595 ... .$ 6 Weekly 1962 Falcon, $295 ... .$ 3 Weekly 1964 Corvair Monza, $495 . .. .$ 5 Weekly 1965 Pontiac Catalina, $1195 .. ....$12 Weekly 1961 Ford wogon, $195 ... .$ 2 Weekly 1961 Chevy Impala Convertible, $195 $ 2 Weekly 1964 Pontiac Catalina, $995 ............$10 Weekly 1961 Corvair automatic, $195 .........$2 Weekly 1963 Pontiac Catalina, $695 ..........$ 7 Weekly 1963 Chevy 2-door, $495 ...............i 5 Weekly 1964 Chevy 2-door, $795 .............. $ 8 Weekly SSWUBME) MK® sms OPEN MON., THURS., FRI. TILL 9 P.M. 3400 ELIZABETH LAKE RD. ’/2 BIk. W.'of W. Huron (M-59) 681-0004 ALL CREDIT Al>PLICATIONS ACCEPTED VACATION - CAMPING - JAMBOREE - FREE tttqt I. 10x12 Wall Tent J U O i Plus 2 Sleeping Bags - Coleman Camp Stove REGISTER 2. 6 pc. Patio Table - NO OBLIGATION - 3. Redwood Picnic Table 1965 CHEVY Vz Ton Fleetside with stick shift, turquoise finish, heavy duty rubber. Only — $895 1965 GMC Vz Ton Pickup This unit has a extra low reduced price for quick sale at Only $1095 1968 CHEVY Bel-Air Wagon OUr company demo, with 327 V-8, eutomatic, power steering, radio, heater, premium whitewalls, teal blue tinfth. Save over — $700 1964 CHEVY Carry-All with V-8, radio, heater, fawn beige finish. Only $1195 1968 PONTIAC Catalina Sport Coupe with V-», automatic, power steering, brakes, tsh gold finish, black vinyl top. $2895 1966 CHEVY Bel Air 2-Door Sedan, with radio, heater, white-walls and a Daytona blue finish. Dniy — $1395 1967 CHEVY Caprice Sport Coupe with V-8, eutomatic, power steering, vinyl top, with nocturne blue finish. $2495 1964- GMC 3-5 Yds. Dump with 5-speed and 2-speed rear axle, ready to go down that highway. Only $2695 1967 VALIANT 4-Door—6-Cyl. with stick shift and a palamino 1967 CHEVY Vz Ton Pickup Fleetside pickup with V-8, custom 1966 CHEVY Impala 55 Convertible with V-8, eutomatic, power steering, radio, heater, whitewalls. 1965 CHEVY Impala ,4-Door with V-8, autometic, power steering, radio, heater, whitewalls. Ivory finish. Now only — $1695 appearance, Aztec bronze finish. $1995 black top, marina blue. . $1995 Daytona blue finish. $1545 InJF\/t Oakland County's Largest Volume Chevrolet Dealer FE 4-4547 631 OAKLAND Widest Selection of 'OK' Used Cars in Oakland County ' ■ ■ ■ 'V - - THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, JUNE U, 1968 D—n Sign-Up Set for Noncredit Oil Courses Registration for 14 noncredit courses offered by Oakland University Division of Continuing Education will be held from 8 a.m. to 7 p.m. Monday through Friday and 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. next Saturday in the division’s offices, 263 South Foundation Hall. The classes, which last from six to 10 weeks, start the week of June 24. -—Television Programs- Programs fumlshod by stations listed In this column am subioet to change without notice Chonnslt! 2-WJBK-TV, 4-WWJ-TV, 7~WXYZ-TV, 9-CKlW-TV, aO-WKIP-TV, 50-WTV5 Courses offered are: e Creative Writing, f o r published and nonpublished authors. e Basic painting and training In making leaded stained glass. e Study of the music to be performed during the fifth annual season of the Meadow Brook Festival. e Group dynamics, for those who want to clarify their feelings and ideas and improve their personal and professional relationships. o Basic ballet, for women who want to tone up their muscles while they learn about classical ballet. • Efficient reading, designed to Increase reading speed and comprehension. • For managers, an introduction to management and management philosophy. OUALITY REPAIRS ON ALL MAKE HEARING AIDS Loaners Availablo PONTIAC MALL OPTICAL & HEARINQ AlO CENTER Phone 682-1113 HEARING AID DEALER^ AVOID GARNISHMENT Let ut help you . . . We can get you a fresh start by consolidating your debts into one payment you can afford. No limit to the amount owed or number of croditors. Not a lean. Call or stop In. Debt Consultants of Pontiac, Inc. Telophono 331-0333 ltd Pontiac State Bank Bldg. Stota Llc*n»d ond Bond.d Open Sat. 9 to 12 REPLACE INSUUTED VINYL WINDOWS WEEDON'S 334-2591 Laundry Village S4lf-ServicB Coin Operated , 747 N. Perry St. Across From Kroger Super Market SUMMER SHRED SALE SAMPLE OF THE BANOAINI iHER TOOT l-^TEREO CEIVER... $349.60 SHER XP6B EAKERS .. $13T.T7 SHER FM^STEREO IMPACT WITH 2 •-55 SPKRS. $299.97 Up to $150.00 Saving* on Fi»her Console* own 6” Reel Tape leorder.... $67.77 jstomade Products 4MB W. Huron It. BTI4TBB FRIDAY NIGHT 6:00 (2) (4) (7) C - News, Weather, Sports (9) R — Dennis the Menace (50) R C - Flintstones (56) Friendly Giant 6:15 (56) Davey and Goliath 6:30 (2) C - News -Cronkite (4) C — News — Huntley, Brinkley (9) R — Gilligan’s Island (50) R — McHale’s Navy (56) What’s New 7:00 (2) R C - Truth or Conseqeunces (4) C —. News Weather, Sports (7) C ~ News — Reynolds (9) R — Movie: “I Confess” (1963) Montgomery, Anne Baxter, Karl Malden (50) R — My Favorite Martian (56) Elxperiment in Progress 7:30 (2) R C - Wild Wild West (4) R C — Tarzan — Scheming drifter tries to capitalize on J a i ’ s amnesia to steal sacred ruby. (7) (Special) C — Dick Cavett^— Dick presents __^highlights from his daytime series. (50) R —-1 Love Lucy (56) Consultation 8:00 (7) (Special) C - Golf Tournament — Highlights of U.S. Open’s first two rounds. (50) C - Hazel (56) On Hearing Music 8:30 (2) R C - Gomer Pyle, USMC (4) (Special) C — “The Art Game” — Edwin Newman and Aline Saarinen report on high-stakes arena of art collecting. (7) C — Man in a Suitcase — McGill becomes involved in plot to sabotage independence movement in African nation. (50) R — Honeymooners (56) R C —- Black Journal 8:55 (9) C - News 9:00 (2) C — Baseball -Tigers meet White Sox at Chicago. (9) R — Twilight Zone (50) R — Perry Mason 9:30 (4) C - Hollywood Squares (7) R C - Guns of Will Sonnett (9) C — Tommy Hunter (56) NET Playhouse -“Everyman,” one of the best-known medieval morality plays, is performed in modern dress. Alan Dobie, Robin Chapman. 10:00 (4) (Special) C -American Profile — Eddy Arnold narrates this study of country and western music. (7) R C - Judd for the Defense — Deposed syndicate boss is key to case against new Mr. Big — his son. Albert Dekker, Chris Connelly. (9) C-rShow of the Week: Wayne and Shuster (50) C — Les Crane 10:30 (9) 20 Million Questions — Fourth in series of six programs examining important issues 1 n upcoming general election. 11:00 (4) (7) (9) C - News, Weather, Sports (50) C — Joe Pyne 11:30(2) C - News, Weather, Sports (4) C — Johnny Carson (7) C — Joey Bishop (9) R — Arrest and Trial 12:00 (2) R — Movies: 1. “Tip on a Dead Jockey” (1957) Robert Taylor, Dorothy Malone; 2. “The Rest Is Silence” (German, 1960) Hardy Kruger, Peter Van Eyck 1:00 (4) Beat the Champ (7) News 1:30 (4)C :^PDQ AMERICAN PROFILE, 10 p.m. (4) 7V Features DICK CAVETT, 7:30 p.ih. (7) GOLF TOURNAMENT, 8 p.m. (7) ‘THE ART GAME,’ 8:30 p.m. (4) MAN IN A SUITCASE, 8:30 p.m. (7) BASEBALL, 9 p.m. (2) NET PLAYHOUSE, j p.m. (56) SHOW OF THE WEEK, 10 p.m. (9) BASEBALL, 2 p.m. (4), 2:15 p.m. (2) I GOLF TOURNAMENT, % 4 p.m. (7). News, 4:00 (2) Weather SA’TURDAY MORNING 6:05 (2) TV Chapel 6:10 (2) C-News 6:15 (2) Farm Scene 6:30 (2) Understanding Our World 6:55 (4) C —News 7:00 (2) C — Captain Kangaroo (4) C — Country Living 7:30 (4) C — Oopsy the Clown 7:45 (7) C — Rural Report 8:00 (2) C — Woodrow the Woodsman (7) C — TV College 8:30 ( 50) Rocky Jones 9:00 (2) C — Frankstein Jr. (4) C — Super 6 (7) C —Casper (50) C — Roller Derby — San Francisco Bay Bombers vs. Canadians 9:25 (9) Warmup 9:30 (2) C — Herculoids (4) C — Super President (7) C — Fantastic Four (9) Window on the Wbrld 10:00 (2) C —Shazzan (4) R C — Flintstones (7) C —Spiderman (9) William Tell (50) C — Home Shopper 10:30 (2) C — Space Ghost (4) Young Samson (7) C — Journey to the Center of the Earth (9) R —Hawkeye 11:00 (2) C - Moby Dick (4) C — Birdman (7) C — King Kong (9) Window on the World (50) C - Upbeat 11:30 (2) C — Superman-Aquaman (4) C — Ant-Squirrel A Look at TV A Man for All Sports ACmOBB 43 0bMnr« —— 44 Joan of—~ Amendment 47 Rude .----to non* 40 ——-#itatf 12 Worahip^ B2 Harveater 14 Office gadget SO French 15 BuUflghter phyilctit (7) C — George of the Jungle 11:45 (9) C - Gardening SATURDAY AFTERNOON 12:00 (4) C-CoolMcCool (7) C — Beatles (9) C — Audubon Theatre (50) R — Movie: “The Mask of Dimitrios” (1944) Oriental Express takes two separate individuals on the same sinister mission. Zachary Scott, Sidney Greenstreet, Peter Lorre, Faye Emerson 12:30 (2) R C - Jonny Quest (4) Beat the Champ — Bowling (7) C — American Bandstand (9) Country Calendar 1:00 (2) C - Lone Ranger (9) C-CBC Sports 1:30 (2) C-NFLAdtlon (4) C —Red Jones (7) Happening ’6ft—Guests are Carol Burnett and the Raiders. 2:00 ( — Tiger Warm-Up (4) C - BasebaU -Baltimore at Minnesota (7) R — Movie: “Morgan the Pirate” (1961) Steve Reeves, Valeria Lagrange (9) R —• Movie: “Battle Zone” (1952) Two combat Marine photographers fall out over a girl.--:^„ but team up for behind lines mission in Korea. John Hodiak, Linda Christian (50) R - Movie: “Knockout” (1941) 2:15 (2)C-Baseball: Detroit at Chicago 3:25 (7) C - Wonderful World of Sports 3:30 (7) C - Celebrity Billiards - Milton Berio guests. (50) R — Movie: “Captive Wild Woman” (1943) 4:00 (7) C - Golf Tournament — ’Third-round action in U.S. Open telecast from Rochester, N.Y. (9) Wrestling (56) Sing Hi-Sing Lo 4:15 (56) Merlin the Magician 4:30 (56) Music for Young People 4:50 (2) C - Baseball Scoreboard — Time approximate. 5:00 (2) R-Dobie Gillis (4) C — Car and Track (9) R — Twilight Zone A pool player of legendary fame returns to Earth as a merciless tester of would-be champions. (50) C-HyLit (56) What’s New 5:25 (2) C-Turf Talk 5:30 (2) R C - Gentle Ben (4) C — George Pierrot — “North Cape Cruise” Sports — Highlights of Indy 500 are presented. (56) R — The Constitution in Action 5:45 (2) C — Moments in Music WDe ______ (Irish appearan statesman) 58 Reposed 17 Taut 10 Cry loudly 20 Alcohol radicals 23 Nete 26 Like a green branch 38SMnbruiae SlVedlcgod of Are 32 Groups of six 84 Petty prince 6----heaven 37 Group of 7 Lifetime Number Phrails Aeiwsf Is Fiirl—s Fanlt degree DOWN 1 Obese '2 International 11 Monotonous 13 Finished 18 Family 3 Because 4 Allowance for waste 5 Unorthodox teaching (coll.) 20 Word of woe 21 lawful 22 Seasonal viaitor 24 Before 25 ----sense 27-----of all 29 European capital 30 Roman official 33 Only SORooated 30 Indian weight 40 Rhythmical 42 Certain 44 At a distanoa 45 Capital of vr- 4ft U S8 BY CYNTHIA LOWRY AP Television-Radio Writer NEW YORK - Reporting the finals of the U.S. Open golf tournament this weekend at the Oak Hill Country Club in Rochester, N. Y., is almost like covering an event i in his own back yard for ABC^ sportscaster Jim McKay. It is only about 150 miles from his home, a New York City suburb. McKay, as host of ABC’s “Wide World of Sports” for the past seven years and reporter of most of the network's special sports events, has logged close to two million miles following 96 sports in the course, is how one man can know enough about assorted, competitions ranging from auto racing to skiing to qualify as a commentator. Obviously McKay does, since he recently won an Emmy for his “Wide World of Sports” work. The secret, Jim said, is that he really loves sports — golf Soviet Union, Hawaii and most places in between. The question that occurs, of and tennis as a participant, -eryf ‘ ' eve^thing else as a spectator. Secondly, McKay, who started as a newspaper reporter in the late 1940s, said “I’m still a reporter.” “I’m not a real expert on everything, of course, but real experts, like Dick Button on skating, work with us,” he said. “And I do homework — I’ve got a filing cabinet and a library. I read books and talk to people.” Raidio Programs- WJR(7dO) WXYZd 270) CKLWfSOO) WWJ(950) WCANO130) WI>ON(1460) WJBKd 5001 WHf l-FM(94.7) «i04-WJR, N(Wi, Sporti WWJ, Newt, Sport« CKLW, Tom Shannon WJBK, Nawi, Hank O'Nell WCAR, Nawi, Ron Rosa WXYZ, Newscope WPON, News, P WHPI Don Bosco _ , liJ#-WWJ, Today lii Ravlav WJR. Business Baromatar .•s$ WWJ. emphasis WJR, Lowell Thomas, Auto. ii00_w°^AR, News, Rick Stewart WJR, News, Spoi WWJ, News, i11.r.WWJ. Ra-SpoiiiLlna 'ilB-WXYZ, Dave Lockhart WJR, Raaienar Report, S. Open Qoll tit MIdntta I Cavalcade Dlmanalon (:1I—WJR, Panorama, Cam-palon 'U l:l»-WJR, I tsOO-WHFI. Tom Coleman tliJO-WWJ, Death Notices, Overnight WJR, Scores , H,ai_WJR, Music TUI Dawn tlioo-WJBk, Nighttime _ , WXYZ, News, Jim Davis CKLW, Mllllon-Oollar Wetk- WCAR, News. Wayne Phllllf IATURDAV MuhNIN* stgg-WJR, waka-Up CKLW, Mllllon-Dollar Waak-and WXYZ, Nawa, Martin !■ Howard WJBK, Nawa, Marc Avery 7iOO-WJR, News, Cavalcade WHFI, Gary Puraca WPON, News, Chuck War- wnri. Jim amavr lltl»-WPON, News, Jtrry Whitman WCAR, Nawa, Rod MU SATURDAY AFTNRNOON UiOa-WWJ. News „WJR, Nawa, Farm wxy'z,"_____ nni-WWJ, Marly McNaalay IIiM-WJR, Cavalcade nag-WJR, Nawa. Showcast 1t«-WJR, Report on U.S. Dm Golf liig-WPON, News, Gary WKYZ.**Naws, Dick Purlan ••tfil...... rewi, Ron WJB"K,’'Naws, Hank O'Nall WHFI, Larry Baker WWJ. Nawa, Mo-“-4i4S-WJR, Scores ji'ltwjSl ISSrday ItiwM FACTS ABOUT COLOR TV ANTENNAS Experisnce has proven that the following facts apply to most locations in this aroa regarding Color TV Antenna installation. O Modern, broad-band antennas are definitely superior for color reception. • Lead-in wire should be high quality, low-loss type e One continuous lead-in td set is best without couplers or series outlets. 1 e Good antennas ore more directional — they tend to reject stations from other directions. • Effects of weather on antennas and lead-in wire con couse severe loss of performance. For specifie information contact your TESA of OAKLAND COUNTY corvloo doolor. Ho will bo glad to assist you. Biakt Radio A TV DMier Listing: FE4-STtt I lallts FU-ITII inllis FEi-mi Sroian’a Sadio-TV M4-I0SS Latimar Ra4ia-TV FE 3-28S2 msici .48IIL$sihMS Only 1 and 2 of a kind UP TO 50% OFF Sofas • Chairs • Divan Beds Recliners • Chests ♦ Dressers Odd Beds • Box Springs Mattresses • Dinette Sets IMPROVE YOUR HOME $ DEAL DIRECT BUILDUt FBEE PLANS and ESTIMATES- NO CHMU.E KITCHEN CABINETS mi-9880 Optn DsHy mi IhNs 5-Ft. Kitchen $d)Ur COMPLETE ilUS ]-Ft. Kitchen $d|nr COMPLETE iCUsJ COMPLETE CUsi iNClUDES Upper c Lowor Cabinoli, Cour Fops, Sink with Fauo * ADDITIONS* EJUrnTBOUB AunmnniSDmw COLOR ALUMINUMS SOOnHC—SDIM WOODFIELD CONSTRUCTION I WILL COME TO YOU FREE ESTIMATE I AND PLANS - NO CHAROE 12 .5. MILL LOCAL and WORLD NEWS ■ 1 Every Hour on the Hour 1 All Day Long! ■ POM OPEN MONDAY A FRIDAY I EVENINOSHILSPaM. .EffUUmt COLOR • BLACK & WHITE ANTENNA INSTALUTIONS UHF • VHF COMBINATION e ROTORS CUfCET’C radio & APPLIANdE , Off EC I O 422 Wost Huron FE4481T I LEASE YOUR CARPETMO For $1.00 0 Week Up To 180 Sq. Ft. COUNTRY SIDE CARPETS 673-7621 Sensationally priced deluxe full featured Zenith Console Z^tOUIRTV •Fine-Furniture styling! • Handcrafted quality! • Specially developed!^ The BARLOW • GASO-34 ^ Beautiful Contemporary styled Vi compact console in grained Walnut ■ color (GA50-34W) or in grained • Mahogany color (GA50-34R). 6" Oval twin-cone speaker. O I.^V4ll LWm-CWiic Jfrcafkx.* . ^ ■ ZENITH 23” COLOR TV 459’* Priced From E-ZTerms-24 Mos.toPay Open Friday Night ’til 9 TV-RADIO SERVICE 770 Orchardl.ak« Ave. FE 5-6112 THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, JUNE 14^ 1968 States Move to Enact Laws Controlling Highway Billboards CHICAGO (AP) — Motorists traveling the nation’s main highways will see more natural beauty and fewer billboards in the years ahead. The Federal Highway Admin-stration has approved outdoor advertising control legislation adopted in 10 states, the District of Columbia and Puerto Rico. * * ★ It has signed interim agreements with five other states that the federal fequlre- siUon, size, spacing, zoning and lightir most of ments. Several other states are considering legislation to clear their highway areas of unsightly or view-obstructing billboards. The agreements set up pre- have passed laws which meeticise standards governing the po- iting of billboards along interstate and primary road systems. BEAtPOFlCATION ACT A major impetus for highway view preservation is the 19®5 federal Highway Beautification Act providing for billboard controls, screening of roadside junk yards and landscaping. Under this legislation, lion-complying states are threatened with a loss of 10 per cent of federal highway funds contributed A provision was added, however, that the bill would not become effective until federal beautification funds were provided. North Carolina authorities said these funds have not yet been made available. The Oklahoma Legislature with signs permitted, all off-{M-emise private sips would be odered down by January 1970, or five years after the original license was issued. ★ ★ ★ Texas has taken no action to ban billboards, but the state leg- two bills this year de-siped to comply with the federal act. One bans billboards within 660 feet of the edge of federal or interstate rights-of-way and the other requires screening of junk yards. toward both interstate and pri-, Vermont passed one of the mary highway systems. j stiffest laws this year. It was vi- jgorously opposed by the Ver-Itie deadline for compliance mont Advertising Co. and by PATIENT CARE—A patient in the rehabilitation ward at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital receives care from volunteers. From left are Red Cross volunteer Dallas Austin of 1940 Yosemite, Birmingham: Hugh J. Nessel of 6960 Telepaph, Bloomfield Township; An- drew J. Wilson of 169 Ogemaw, observing as UAW represehtative on the Pontiac Area United Fund (PAUF) Budget Committee; and Red Cross volunteer Kevin Klein of 6454 Simmons, Waterford Township. St. Joseph is a member agency of PAUF. was Jan. 1, but Alan S. Boyd, secretary of the Department of Transportation, said no penalties will be applied this year. Jurisdictions which have complied with federal requirements are Maryland. Alaska. Califor-Connecticut, Vermont, Puerto Rico, the District of Columbia, Kentucky, Rhode Island, Utah, Virginia and Hawaii. INTERIMPACTS New York, Maine, Minnesota, Delaware and Pennsylvania have singed interim agreements with the Federal Highway Administration. I Opposition to billboard control jhas come principally from tourist-oriented towns, such roadside business interests as hotel, j motel - and restaur ant - o wnersy [and, in some states, outdoor ad-Ivertising companies. I * * * Garden clubs and conservationists have been avid supporters. Some legislators in Oklahoma and North Carolina denounced the provision for withholding federal funds from noncomplying states as blackmail. EFFECT DELAYED The North Carolina Legislature passed a bill last year banning billboards from an area within 600 feet of all interstate and federally aided primary highways, except in conunercial and industrial areas. lobbyists who repeatedly made unsuccessful efforts to water it down. Billboard interests asserted that under the law. free enterprise would be sold down the river. STATE SIGNS The Vermont law would, ban all off-premise private advertising and substitute state-owned! directional signs with state-j owned plazas in larger areas. Businesses would apply to the highway district for signs. Each would pay a $50 fee and be entitled to four directional signs. After the state covers an area islature adopted a re,solution last year authorizing the State Highway Commission to discuss highway beautification with federal representatives. Hearings are under way in Minnesota to remove about 9,000 signs for wlfich owners sought i no permits. Some owners are tearing down old signs rather than buy permits. ★ * * Wisconsin has a billboard law applying to the interstate system but not for most-other highways. Father and Son Ti/rndftWmrpmf^ RICHLAND, Wash. (AP) Duane Einan said his son Donnie was so shocked by the assassination of Sen. Robert F. Kennedy that he said people shouldn’t have guns if they intend to hurt someone. “If you feel that way, why don’t you go down and turn in your guns?” Einan asked his 7-year-old son. ★ * ★ “I will, if you will, dad,” Donnie replied. Thursday, Duane Einan handed police his .32-caliber revolver. Donnie turned over his air gun and four toy ^ns.____ FATHER’S DAY SPECIAL! COMPLETE WITH STURDY HAMMOCK STAND WiwerrWeatlterizeifHamimick^ Woven weatherized plaid cotton hammock. 30"x80" size with valance and loomed fringe. Complete with moisture proof tie-on pillow and sturdy steel hammock stand. THOMAS V A COHTEMPORARY ROOMFUL AT A PRICE YOU’D EXPECT TO PAY FOR THE SOFA ALONE! 3 piece correlated group-reg. Includes: 86'^ SOFA PLUS MR. and MRS. CHAIRS CONVENIENT TERMS Thcjt's rightl You pay just $399 for this complete 3 piece contemporary room setting I The beautiful 86" sofa and correlated Mr. and Mrs. chairs are covered in durable Scotchgarded nylon. Exposed wood surfaces are selected hardwoods with a warm walnut finish. Every piece is quality crafted with such costly features as solid white ash frames, self-decking, zippered foam rubber cushions and super arch spring construction. We'll even include arm covers at no extra costl PONTIAC 36/ S. SAGINAW•FE3-7901 OPEN MONDAY, THURSDAY, FRIDAY 'TiL 9 I DRAYTON 4945 DIXIE HWY* OR 4-0321 OPEN MONDAY, THURSDAY, FRIDAY/TIL 9 The Weather U. 1. Wtalhtr Burnu BartcaM I' Shower*, Warmer VOL. — NO, 111 THE PONTIAC ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ THE PONTIAC PRESS, I'llIDAV, JUNK 14. llUi8 52 PAGES UN.TeS‘®TN"T«TO,ONAU lOc Sewer Cost to Soar Above Estimate Downtown Developer Plan Hailed Pontiac Prass Photo BEHIND THE PLAN—Four men who worked together Leon, dean of the University of Detroit School of Architecture; to formulate the Davidson-Skelton plan tor redevelopment of C. Don Davidson, a Pontiac resident and designer and archi-Pontiac’s downtown urban renewal land are (from left) tect of a number of substantial community developments in developer Herbert Chernick, who with his father has been the South; and Marvin D. Skelton, a Waterford Township resi-involved in a number of multimillion dollar projects; Bruno dent who is acting as financial consultant. Housing in City Hit at Hearing By ED BLUNDEN The housing situation in Pontiac came under attack yesterday from two of the principal witnesses before the Michigan Civil Rights Commission which is* holding hearings in Pontiac. The hearings began yesterday, are continuing today and will be held Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday next week. Yesterday’s testimony was heard in the commission chambers at city hall. ★ ★ ★ The session was devoted mainly to problems of employment in the area. However, problems of housing and employment were linked by witnesses who claimed lack of suitable homes was hurting the workers. Ken Morris, regional director for the United Auto Workers, said that workers can’t afford to come to Pontiac and “give most of their pay to the landlord.’’ HIGH RENtS CITED He said high rents, due to the housing shortage, are restricting the number of people that can work here. He revealed that a General Motors executive had told him the company could readily expand to provide for 500 more jobs in this area, but it was feared there would be no place for them to stay. Morris said in past recruitment programs in the South, workers brought up here went back after a short time because they couldn’t find suitable housings He also testified that the UAW is fully $570,000 Grant Gives Oil Start on Doctoral Program Oakland University today accepted its largest academic grant of $570,000 to . help establish the university’s first doc-'“Toral degree program by 1970. The grant will enable OU’s relatively new .school of engineering to offer a In Today's - Press I Lapeer Area I Court bill mixed bles^ng for governmental units^PAuE A4. Kennedy Slaying Testirhony to grand jury is revealed - PAGE C-14. Sign of Hope New projects forecast for city’s southwest section—PAGE B-8. Area News ......... .A-4 Astrology ...../....,..C*12 Bridge .............. .i . .C-12 Crossword Puzzle ......D-11 Comics ............... C-12 ;1 Editorials ............— A-6 i Farm and Garden .. .G-8, C-9 High School ........ D*I Markets .......„.. .f.-... .C-18 Obituaries .........1.. B-7 Sports C4-C-4 Theaters ...........C-IO; C-11 I TV and Radio Programs . D-11 i Vietnam War News ..........C-13 Women’s Pages . . B-1—B-8 doctoral degree in systems engineering, to expand its faculty, research and graduate assistantships and to install a hybrid computer, says the National Science Foundation (NSF) which presented the grant. The Michigan State University Board of Trustees, which governs OU, accepted the grant in East Lansing. Oakland thus becomes ther first university or college in Michigan to receive a NSF grant under that agency’s departmental science development program. NEW QUARTERS IN FALL OU’s three - year - old School of Engineering will move into the new $5-million Dodge Hall of Engineering this fall. It Is said to be one of the finest facilities for engineering education in the state. A staff of six professors currently active in systems engineering will be increased to 10, said John E. Gibson, dean of the school. NSF and the university will share the additional cost. ' ★ * * l' , Systems engineering deals with the i, j design of devices interracting with all' r other coinponents in a large system, '■ such as “the national transportation I system’’ hnd “the city as a system,” to I meet needs of society: { Twenty-five students were enrolled in the engineering school when it was started three years and now 250 students attend the school. Enguieering education has been offered at Oakland since 1959. * ★ * Two years ago the school offered its first ^aduate program in systems engineering and now has nlore than 45 I graduate students, many of whom are engineers employedin industry. b integrated racially and that the union was carrying out programs to upgrade the skill of disadvantaged persons. Pontiac’s Housing Commission director, Roy MacAfee told the rights commission that studies had proven the city’s housing problems were acute, but that as far as he knew little would be done in the immediate future to resolve the problem. PROGRAM’S HISTORY TRACED Speaking of possible low-income federally sponsored housing projects, he traced the history of the program in the city. He pointed out the 400-unit Lakeside project on the south side built in 1950 had drawn an unfavorable reaction from the community. The units are occupied almost entirely by Negroes. MacAfee said the city comlnission passed an ordinance in 1956 blocking any more public housing in the city. This stayed on the books until two years ago. ★ ★ * The city is now planning to build a 400-unit housing project for the elderly to be located on the east side of the city. Construction is scheduled to start in August, MacAfee said. Asked about a project for low-income families, he said the city was apparently adopting a “wait-and-see attitude” in regard to the project for the elderly. (Continued on Page A-8, Col. 4) Buildings Worth $80 Million Are Envisioned , V By BOB WISLER A proposed plan for redevelopment of 27 acres of downtown urban renewal land — involving construction of up to $100 million worth of buildings — was unveiled last night to the Pontiac Area Planning Council. The reception afforded the plan by the governors’ city officials, and some 75 persons in the audience was unabashedly enthusiastic and optimistic. * ★ The design plan, prepared b y archetects C. Don Davidson and Bruno Related Stories, Pages A-11, C-I Leon, and financial consultant Marvin D. Skelton for developers Michael Chernick and his son, Herbert of Detroit, features 11 major buildings encompassing a vareity of uses. ' * ★ * The scope of the proposed project was not lost on those examining the points of the plan. It won approval from a variety of persons for its aesthetic and functional qualities, for the possible tax base it will bring the city and for its potential as a generator of new development in the dovmtown area and throughout the city. GROWING FEELING City Manager Joseph A. Warren said there has beep a growing feeling among those who were aware of the planning that something “really big was coming.” “It certainly looks like it’s here,” he said. * * * Warren — who said first'reaction to the plan might be: "It’s too good to be true — said city officials who have been working with Herbert Chernick and the-planners are convinced that the plan is feasible and realistic. An indication of how feasible and realistic it is was provideed by John H.-Mortgage & investment Co. of Birmingham. ‘VERY FEASIBLE’ .............. Fleming, a mortgage loan correspondent for Metropolitan Life In-suraance Co. of New York — with asset-s pegged at $2224 dbillion — said the life insurance companny reviews many-plans, most aesthetically endearing but unfeasible. , “Thiis one appears very feasible,” h-e said, stating that the iinsurance company is definitely interested i n mortgarginrg the properties. -* * ★ “We will do everything in ouur power assure success,” he said. The plan entails a design calling for use of a central plaza deck three stories-above the ground running over Orchard- (Continued on Page A-2, Col. 4) By JEAN SAILE lt’.s going to cost considerably more than originally figured to construct the six-township C’linton-Oakland Sewer Interceptor. The county had estimated the sewer cost at $16.9 million. The lowest combined total bids opened this week put the actual figure at $28.2 million. ★ ★ * Oakland County Department of Public works Director R, J, Alexander said: “We estimated low. 'Die general trend (in costs) is up. The unions are making tremendous demands. It’s a rough job and the only true estimator is the contractor who gets out there and digs it, bores it and bids it.” Alexander said 18 bids were received on the five-part job. HOLDS OUT HOPE While aghast at the $28.2-million total cost of the bids, the director held out hope that up to $20.8 million of the total might be funded by state and federal grants. fie pointed to recent state legislation which provides for a referendum in November •on' a $335-million bond issue. Under its provisions — in connection with the water pollution control act — the issue could help, in conjunction with the federal government, to fund up to 80 per cent of almost $26 million of the Clinton-pakland cost. If the referendum is Successful and the county is successful in its application for funds, the local share of the gigantic interceptor might amount to only $8 million, Alexander said. Meanwhile the director said — if all the bids are formally accepted next week — it VKill become necessary to go back to the townships to obtain the authority to sell an additional $2.75 million in bonds over the $16.9 million already sold. FEDERAL GRANT Helping to bear the cost is an $8,564,622 federal grant already received by the county. Alexander said that If the Department of Public Works accepts the bids, construction will probably start in 30 days. He said if a decision was made to re-adyertise all or parts of the bids it would probably be Sept. 1 before construction starts. ★ * ★ The low bids as received were as follows: Section 1 — the general area of Avon Township — Roger J. Au Construction Co. of Manchester, Ohio — $5,198,302. Section 2 — the general area across the northern part of Pontiac Township — Weissman Excavation Co. of Bedford — $3,095,776. Section 3 — the general area of northern Waterford Township towards Independence and Orion townships — Holloway and Toebe Co. of Wixom — $6,941,154. Section 4 — generally the southeast portion of Waterford Township and the northern part of West Bloomfield Township —S. J. Healy Co. of Chicago - $7,147,056. Section 5 — a pumping station In Waterford Township — O’Laughlin Co. of Detroit - $716,000. The remainder of the $28.2 million — some $5 million — is set aside for capitalized interest, engineering, inspection, easement acquisition and soil test borings, Alexander said. Tornado Kills Seven in Minnesota Town TRACY-, Minn. (iW—A tornado snapped through town with the sting of a big whip yesterday evening, killing seven persons and destroying and damaging more than 100 homes. Authorities feared the death toll would climb today as rescue workers pulled apart the rubble of houses. Spokesmen at the Tracy Hospital said seven bodies had been recovered. Vic- Area Temperature Faces Rain Drop Showers .and thundershowers forecast for tonight and early tomorrow in the Pontiac area will leave skies partly sunny and temperatures a little lower. Here is the day-by-day official U.S. Weather Bureau prediction: * , * * TONIGHT — Considerable cloudiness with showers and thundershowers likely tonight. Warmer tonight. Low 58 to 64. TOMORROW — Partly sunny and cooler. Precipitation probabilities in per cent are: Today 50, tonight 70, tomorrow 30. Fifty-six was the low recording prior to 8 a m. in downtown Pontiac. The mercury had warmed up to 72 by 12:30 p.m. tims included five women, a man and a girl aged 2. Seventy-two patients were admitted and 22 remained overnight. Eleven were listed in critical condition. ★ ★ ♦ The twister, powered two miles through this town of 2,800 in Minnesota’s southwestern farmland. It ravaged a block-and-a-half wide path, then skirted into the countryside, clawing an occasional farm building before it dissipated five miles out of town. Tracy was without electric power, water and phone service for several hours. The hospital was operating on emergency generators. ★ ★ ★ Water was brought by tank trucks from nearby Marshall and Slayton. v.V. S'\ > ■■ PCH GRADUATES 532—Blue kkies, sunshine, and about 5,000 persons were on hapd yesterday for Pontiac Central’s seated at right, graduation exercises atlWisner Stadium. The school’s faculty, page A-2.) Pontiic PrtM Pholp ) wore robes for the ceremonies. (Story, Oregon Girl, 7, Waits for Heart HERMISTON, Ore. DP) - The life of* 7-year-old Rebecca “Becky” Howland is in some other child’s chest. Becky needs a heart transplant to stay alive. She returned to I this northeastern -Oregon community t 'Tuesday from an ex- | amination by Dr. I Norman Shumway I at Stanford Univer- jjjjr' sity in Palo Alto, Calif BECKY HOWLAND Shumway said after the examination if a suitable donor is found Becky will be considered for a heart transplant. Shumway has performed two transplants. The patients died from other complications. DIFFICULT SEARCH He said the search for a suitable heart for Becky would be difficult because she is a young child requiring a smaller heart than adults. Dr. John Bussman, a Portland, Ore., heart specialist, says (he girl has a left heart ventricle which doesn't function prbperly. * ★ * Bussman, a classmate of Shumway at the University of Minnesota Medical School, said Becky might have a growth in that part of the heart chamber or might have a large blood clot. When Shumway gets a suitable heart, he will notify the Howlands. •READY TO GO’ “We’re all packed and ready to go,” Becky’s father, Elton Howland, laid 'Thursday. ' “Becky’s in good spirila,” Howland said. ■V A—2 MAKE OIR THE PONTIAC PRESS. FHIDAV. Jl NE 14. li)H8 Susfained Rocket Drive by VC Might Peril Talks PARIS (if) — A sustained Vietcong rocket offensive against the heart of Saigon couW wreck the Paris peace talks in short order, Western diplomats believe. For that reason they think the Communists may not bombard the city as they have threatened to do. ★ ★ ★ U.S. officials said they hoped the North Vietnamese would give careful consideration to the warning issued by U.S. Ambassador W. Averell Harriman to Ambassador Xuan Tliuy of North Vietnam. Harriman declared at the Wednesday session of the Paris talks with Thuy that terror attacks on Saigon “could have the most serious consequences for these talks.” NOT SPELLED OUT U.S. officials declined to spell out exactly what Harriman meant because only President Johnson could decide to Modernization Loan Approved TTie modernization of the 400 homes in Pontiac’s Lakeside Housing Project is assured today with the approval of a major loan from the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD). HUD announced today that the Pontiac Housing Commission has been awarded $023,310 to carry out the renovation of the 17-year-old units. The loan represents $485,000 in new funds and $137,500 the OHnmission has in reserves and residuals. * ★ ★ R. Clayton Jones, assistant director for the conunission, in outlining the use of the bulk of the funds, said $215,000 will be for modernizing all kitchens; $107,000 for replacing asphalt flooring with vinyl; $125,000 for the construtcion of a day nursery designed to house 100 children.” children.” ★ ★ ★ The nursery will be built near the Lakeside Community Center, and according to Jones, is one of the most important aspects of the program since it-will allow mothers to leave their children while they seek training or retraining for jobs. WATER HEATERS Also included in the remodemization plan is the rmoval of individual water heaters from the lM>mes and replacing them with only 170 heaters to serve a group of houses. These and heating boilers will be enclosed. Already under way, though n o t financed under today’s announced loan, is the replacement of cooking ranges in each of the homes. * ★ ★ Jones said that the loan is only about half of what requested by the commission and that the remainder to be used for the revamping of the homes’ exteriors is expected to be approved within a year. make a major change in U.S. military-diplomatic strategy. But knowledgeable diplomats familiar with the U.S. view of the situation said many more rocket assaults like those earlier this week, when explosives ^ rained on the center of the city, would '' force Johnson to consider retaliatory action againstJhe North and suspension of the talks. ★ ★ ★ Expanded bombing of the North by itself could provoke a North Vietnamese decision to suspend the talks. American officials were reported uncertain about what action to expect from the North Vietnamese and Vietcong forces in South Vietnam. Their heavy bombardment of the city early this week was not immediately followed by more massive blows, but the clandestine Communist radio in South Vietnam threatened that a lOlklay bombardment would be started Monday. U.S. OFFICIALS SKEPTICAL U.S. officials in Saigon doubted that the Communists could maintain a heavy bombardment of the city over many days. In Washington, South Vietnamese Ambassador Bui Diem said the Communists have been trying to shake the confidence of the Saigonese in their government. ★ ★ ★ To well informed diplomats here it appeared they have been trying to win some spectacular victwy, military or political, which \yould reinforce their bargaining position with the United States in Paris. U.S. officials assume that the North Vietnamese are no more eager than they are to risk responsibility for breaking off the talks. At yesterday’s meeting, in City Police Pull Out of Area Unit Pontiac Police Chief William K. Hanger today announced £he official withdrawal of Pontiac personnel from the North Oakland County Police Tactical Unit. His action came in a wake of two incidents involving Pontiac Press photographer and several members and supervisors of the tactical unit who refused to allow pictures of the unit’s training. * ★ ★ ’The incidents, 'Tuesday night and yesterday, entailed what Hanger de- scribed as “not the type of behavior a police officer should show toward a citizen.” Hanger met this morning with other Oakland County police chiefs at the Blloomfield Township Hall to advise them of the reasons for his decision. ★ * * Two supervisors and 11 patrolman from the Pontiac department had been enrolled in the unit, which until today consisted of 63 officers. It was meant to provide the area with a combined force in the event of emergencies. The Weather T(d«y In Pontiac Lownt temporature preceding a a At t a.m.: Wind Velocity 5 m.p.h Direction; Northeast Sun sets Friday at 9:11 p.m. Sun rites Saturday at 5:36 a.m. Moon sett Saturday at 11:07 p.m. Moon risat Saturday at 12:54 a.m. Downtaam Tamporaturas Thursday In Pontiac (as raeordad downtown I Highest temperature ............. Lowest temperature .......... Mean temperature................. Weather: Sunny, beautiful Thursday's Tamparaturas 69 51 Fort Worth 96 70 72 53 Jacksonville ' 71 56 Kansas City Lk. 71 55 Los Angelas ............... • loach 71 54 Miami laach M fact, they showed a hint of Interest in getting into private, informal discussions, which Harriman found encouraging. Dem Candidate Sues D.C. Paper NATIONAL WEA’IHER — Showers and thundershowers are forecast tonight from the aoudi and central Plains through the central Mississippi, Ohio and Ten-nenec valleys to the Great Lakes. Rain is also likely to develop east of the central Roddes. Gary R. Frink, a Democratic candidate fo Congress from hhe 19th District in Oakland and Wayne counties, has filed a $1,021,000 suit against the Washington Daily News, a Scripps-Howard publication. Frink alleges in suit filed in Federal District Court in Washington that he was libeled and his civil rights violated by a story that ran in the newspaper March 28 while he was counsel for a U.S. House of Representatives Post Office and civil service subcommittee. ★ * A The article, under the byline of Scripps-Howard staff writer Dan Thomasson, concerned a fund-raising event for Frink. According to the suit, the article implied that Frink was in violation of a federal statute that restricts federal employes from political activities. The law, the Hatch Act, which was referred to in the story, however, exempts congressional staff members, according to Frink. At a news conference in Detroit this morning, Frink, 115 LeGrande, said, “But what is even more serious than libel, is the fact that my Republican opponent conspired with his out-of-state congressional cronies to force me out of the 19th District congressional race before I had made my decision to run. “Congressman (Delbert) Latta of Ohio slandered me on the floor of the House minutes after the newspaper story became available on Capitol Hill newsstands,” said Frink, "He had to have advance notice of that story and have been prepared beforehand.” ★ ★ ★ Frink, who resigned his $21,000-a-year post shortly after the verbal attack, is asking $21,000 in compensatory and $1 million in punitive damages. Frink’s Republican opponent. Congressman Jack McDonald, on hearing of the conspiracy allegation, said “Mr. Frink’s charge is ridiculous.” “I had no idea that Congressman Latta was going to make the statement, and in fact, during my 1% years in Congress, I never had the occasion to discuss anything with Latta. It was only after his statement that I went up to him and introduced myself.” Record Crowd for PCH Grads Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY—Mostly cloudy With (occasional showers and little temperature change today. High 78 to 80. Partly cloudy and turning colder with a chance of showers tonight. Low 58 to 64. Saturday mostly sunny and cooler. Southwesterly winds 5 to 12 miles shifting to northeast to north 12 to 20 miles late this afternoon and continuing tonight. Sunday outiook: sunny and pleasant. Precipitation probabilities in per cent: today 50, tonight 70, Saturday 30. A record crowd of almost 5,000 persons watched last night as Pontiac Central’s 532 graduating seniors received diplomas in commencement exercises at Wisner Stadium. For the first time the school’s faculty also donned caps and gowns and led the List of Graduates, Page A-8 Class of 1968 in the processional as the PCH band played the traditional “Pomp and Circumstance. 'The class was presented to School Supt. Dr. Dana P. Whitmer who issued diplomas. Dr. Bufford Steffire, professor of Guidance and Personnel Services, Michigan State University, gave the commencement address, entitled “Growing Up in Michigan.” In his talk Dr. Steffire related particularly to what tools education must give to the new generation. He noted that four; items were especially important: tool$ to think; the ability to live together in society; a saleable skill and a respect for the rights of others. Area Citizens Mark Flag Day Area citizens are marking the 181st anniversary of the official adoption of the U S. flag today. Flag Day ceremonies are being conducted throughout the nation while homes, shops and other buildings are decorated with the Stars and Stripes. •k h * The David Belisle Post 1008 of the Veterans of Foreign Wars is planning a ceremony at the Pontiac Maill. Many organizations will put flags on display during a massing of flags at 7 p.m. Short speeches on the origin of the American flag are being given today. Chief Pontiac Post 337 is raising a flag at their post at 4918 Edgewood which will stay up until the Vietnam war is over. Flag Day was first observed oni June 14, 1877, to mark the 100th anniversary of the national banner. It was not uiitU 1916, however, that the o|i^rvance became an annual celebration. (Continued From Page One) lake-auburn and Saginaww and parking-under the main pedestrian levels. 3 OFFICE BUILDINGS Main buildings planned aree thhree of buildings, a 14-stoory executive facciliti s center (motel, convention, meeting rooms, etc.), two high-rise apartment towers, a 1,200 seat theater, an art museum-theater, a sports arena, a s een citizens housing building, a convalescent hospital and specialty stoores and small-shopping stores throughout the complex. James L. Bates, the city’s direettor of-planning and urban renewal, said the plan follows closely the original plan approvved by the federal Department of-housing and Urban Development, which provides the federal funds for the project. Davidson said it would take five years to complete the plan. ★ ★ * He allowed two years for completion of design and specifications and three years, hopefully, for all construction. Skelton, in ticking off strong points of the design, said buildings can be completed one at a time. Completion of a corner, for instance, would give the appearance of a completed project. 3 ECONOMIC GENERATORS He said there are three main economic generators — places which attract persons to the complex and which generate people back and forth across Mind Warfare Claimed SAIGON ((PI — South Korean military headquarters announced today that North Korean psychological warfare troops have been operating for more than two years in South Vietnam. Youth Unit's 1st Officers Are Selected BLOOMFIELD HILLS -r The Bloomfield Hills School District Youth Guidtuice Committee has elected officers for Us first year. Judge Alice L. GUbert, 4714 Pickering, Bloomfield Township, will serve as chairman. Other officers are Edward F. Allwein, 594 Roanoke, Bloomfield Township, vice chairman; Pat Pavkovitch, 5187 Dianna, Bloomfield Township, secretary; and Joseph Genovesi, 4944 Malibu, Bloomfield Township, treasurer. ’Hie organization, designed to prevent ..delinquency and neglect of youth through cooperative community efforts, i s sponsored by the board of education and the Township Board, It wiU also work in cooperation with Oakland County Youth Protective Services. DOWNTOWN PLAN—A design-plan model (below) and an artist’s rendering show what 27 acres of downtown urban renewal land south of Pike between Wide ’lYack might look like on complete development. Buildings are (from front, clockwise around the perimeter) a 14-story “supermotel,” a string of specialty shops, a 200-bed convalescent hospital, a 300-unit housing building (probably for senior citizens), the existing First United Church of Pontiac, a six-story office budding, a 14-story office building, h 10-story office building, a 5,200-seat sports arena, apartment towera 14 and 16 stories high for luxury apartments with commercial facilities on the first three floors. In center area is a deck plaza to contain a 400-seat art museum-theater, a 1,200-seat auditorium and recreation area. $80-Million Development of Downtown Is Envisioneid the complex. He said these are the ex*-ecutive facilities center the sports arena and a planned railway depot for Grand Trunk and Western Railroad. ★ ★ ★ Preliminary negotiations with the railroad have begun to relocate the depot west - of West Wide Track, south of Auburn, he said. ALMOST ADULA’TTORY The reaction to the plans and ideas expressed by Davidson, Chernick and Skelton was almost adulatory. The audience rose once to give the planners, especially Davidson, a standing ovation and clapped frequently. * * * Warren said the City Commission has reviewed the plans. There are important details to work out but the commission is enthusiastic and hopeful that the plan can be brought to frution, he sajd. * -A ■* I Other comments: Joseph E. Neipling director of public works and service, said: “Here is a real attempt to make the auto subservient to the human.” Dr. John Ylvisaker, a surgeon and developer of apartment complexes: “We have to applaud Don and the developer . . . and give it (the plan) the proper support that it deserves.” WOULD BE BEAU’TIFUL E. Eugene Russell, president of the-Pontiac Area Chamber of Commerce and district manager of Michigan Bell Co., said, “I think we could have one oef the-Ken Morris, reegional director of 4-he UAW: “Obviously an extremely wonderful project, beautiful . . . nobody can deny that.” “I for one certainly . thank the developer for t^fis kind of project.” Kenneth Cornwall, Grand Trunk Western Railroad official: I am very much impressed.” ASSET TO BUSINESS Meyer Simon, a downtown businessman: “This will certinly be an asset to 'all businesses up and down Saginaw.” Chernick was publicly named as thk developer Hast night. TTie city manager-* said the staff has the highest respect for him. k * * “We’re quite sure when he says the plan is realistic he ralfy means it and can carry it forth.” k k k He said Chemick’s father was founder of a firm which has broad experience in construction, one involved in large, more diversified and more sophisticated projects.” ★ ★ ★ The plan for the downtown area was engendered and fostered by Davison, he said. , “We gave them (Davidson and Leon) free rein . . . didn’t give them any outlines or stop them at any coundaries . . . We feel it is a good, logical economic scheme.” Fonllac Prnf Photo FLAG>RA1SING CEREMONY ~ Commander of Chief Pontiac Post 3$7 Garland Baldwin (left) and George Wade, post sergeant at Irms, raise a flag on post grounds which they say will remain up until the Vietnam war is ended. Jury Gets Spock Case BOSTON (AP) — The anti-draft conspiracy case of Dr. Benjamin l^)Ock and four other men goes to a Jury today after dosing statements by fte government that, should the defendants be convicted, ”Dr. Spock will go doWn like a man ■— with dignity.” PRESS WANT ADS put your offerings or wants in the “marketiHace” fast for quick action. Md, at so little cost. Dial 332-8181 or 33^981 BLOOMFIELD HILLS - Thomas 0. Mayberry, 781 Lone Pine, has been appointed head of the Detroit office of Marsh and McLen-nan Inc., interna- . ” tional insurance brokers and em- “ ploye benefits con-1 Mayberry, 43,1 joined the company I in 1949, working in I the account service | division. He succeeds R. T. MAYBERRY Johnstone, who retired after 38 years with the firm, the last 15 in the Detroit office. A native of Detroit, Mayberry graduated from Detroit Country Day School, Beverly Hills, and attended Washington and Lee University and the University of He is,a nfember of the Ec(«omic Club, the Detroit Club, the One Hundred Club and Bloomfield Hills Country Club. BIRMINGHAM — The summer vacation reading program at Baldwin Public Library will feature the HemisFair Exposition, being held this summer in San Antonio, Tex. All youngsters who have finished at least the second grade are eligible to participate, provided they have library cards for either Baldwin or Bloomfield Township Public Library. ★ -k k The reading program, scheduled to last six weeks, will begin June 24 and end Aug. 2. Reading mateiial and information on reading club rules will be available prior to the beginning of the program. The board of directors of MacManus, John and Adams, Inc., has appointed former area resident Donald M. Mahl-meister as a senior vice president. In announcing the appointment Ernest A. Jones, bo " chairman, said I Mahlmeister, man-1 ager of the com-1 pany’s Chicago of- [ fice for the past 18 I months, would con- ' tinue to serve in that capacity. Mahlmeister pre- I viously worked over I 18 years at the com- I pany’s Bloomfield * Hills headquarters. MAHLMEISTER He joined the firm in 1948 as a copywriter, following graduation from the University of Detroit and two years of prior service as a bomber pilot in World War II. ★ ★ ★ He was active in a number of community organizations, including Catholic Social Services of Oakland County, the United Foundation, and Meadow Brook Theater. School Vote Certified The Pontiac Schools Board of Canvassers has certified as correct Monday’s election results in which Christopher C. Brown was elected to the board of education. No changes were made in the individual vote totals. Autobahn Tie-Up Seen BERLIN (Jl — ’Traffic on the autobahn to West Berlhi returned to normal during the night, but pblice predicted more tie-ups today because of East Germany’s new restrictions. Want Ad Makes $160 Sale Fast . . . “Dozens of calls frpm our Press Want Ad. Made a very quick sale of both items.”—Mrs/. R. M. Kr ova FAliK 1 Court Bill Seems Mixed Blessing to Lapeer Area Governmental Units Ex-Teacher Asks Lake Orion School By TOM GRAY LAPEERr-The state lower court reorganization bili, needing only Gov. Romney’s signature to become law, appears to be a mixed biessing for governmentai units in this area. While city officiais worry about the loss of revenue the bill, passed by both houses of the legislature, could cause, Lapeer County’s presiding justice, Circuit Court Judge James P. Churchill, la pleased by its provision for an additional judgp in the circuit. Churchill said he had detelled the need for a second judge In the overloaded circuit to Rep. Roy J. Spencer, R-Attica, who promised to seek authorization for the-provision. At the city level, however, the proposed bill has thrown a roadblock in the path of an effort to create a municipal court here. City Manager AmoM Whitney had urged that Lapeer set up its own <»urt, so that money received from traffic and parking cases by justlcea of the peace would not be lost when the justices are abolished by the district court system. But under the bill, the city would be part of a "first-class district,’’ and thus barred from having a municipal court. Assistant Manager Harold Rose said Lapeer should continue to get some revenue from court cases, but "we don't know yet just how it’s going to be allocated. % * * * ‘"nie big problem,’’ Rose added, "is what will happen on parking meter fines." The city depends on those fines, he explained, for payments on a gl 15,000 bond issue used to finance the development and paving of municipal parking lots. The two judges in the 40th Circuit which includes Lapeer and Tuscola counties, will be paid $18,000 apiece a year by the state. The new judge will be elected for a six-year term in November, with a primary in August if three or more candidates file for election. Curricula Report Court facilities and pay for magistrates named by the judges whl be provided by the cdunties. Four Road Projects to Begin in County Nearly $1 million in road improvements Will begin next week in four separate Oakland County projects. Slated to begin Monday, the County Hoad Commission announced that a total of 4.1 miles of pavement will be installed on roads in Bloomfield Township, Birmingham, Southfield, Lathrup Village, Novi Village and Farmington Township. Over a mile of Novi Road in the village of Novi is slated for two lanes of concrete pavement which is supposed to be completed by November. In Bloomfield Township and Birmingham, a half-mile stretch of Cranbrook between 14 Mile and Lincoln wil receive two lanes of concrete pavement. Sterling Garrett Contracting Co. will handle the $157,000 job which is scheduled for completion in October. The strip, between 1-96 and 12Vi Mile will also be widened to five lanes at the 12 Mile Road intersection. To be constructed by Sterling Garrett, it will cost almost $175,000. FARMINGTON TOWNSHIP RESURFACING, WIDENING In. Southfield and Lathrup Villa^, 12 Mile between Southfield Road and Greenfield will be resurfa9ed widened with four-lane pavement, curbs and gutters. John Carlo, Inc., is expected to complete the $378,000 project in November. In Farmington, Powers, between 10 Mile Road and 11 Mile and 11 Mile between Powers and Orchard Lake Road will receive two lanes of asphalt surfacing. D. J. McQuestion & Son will handle the $192,000 job which also includes widening of major intersections. ^ No detours have been established for any of the affected roads, according to the Road Commission. However, access for local traffic wjll be inaintained, he said. THE PONTIAC PRESS AmNews FRIDAY, JUNE 14, 1968 A—4 OAKLAND TOWNSHIP - Die question if vdwther sand and gravel mining will be allowed in the Deqdindre-Inwood-Hixon roads area is again under consideration. A public bearing under the township’s year-old conservation prdiaance is due in the near Mure, according to Supervisor George Lyon. A court case questioning the township’s refusal two years ago to rezone to allow mining is still pending in the courts. The former owner asked the court to overrule the township board in its decision to retain residential zoning and thereby prohibit mining. LIMITED ACTIVITY The apfgicant this time is Lyon Sand and Gravel (no relation to the supervisor) of Detroit, which has repmledly purchased the 200 acres involved from Cooper Supply Co., a division of Texas I ndustries. The conervation ordinance provides for limited activity in the reclamation of land. Under it the decision on whether to issue a permit is based on the findings of a public hearing. Gives $10,000 for Accreditation Study Installation Near for Lions Officers Also being considered is a fire ordinance which would prohibit open burning without a permit. It provides for penalties of up to $500. The gift will help pay personnel to make a study of the school’s program for application for accreditation. HISTORY GA’THERERS - Mrs. Cecil Liestman (left) and Mrs. Hiram Terry compare notes on the information they are compiling for a Leonard information sheet. Designed for presentation to newcomers, it tells the hist(»y and services of the village. Mrs. EdWard Porter Jr. is serving with the two on the council-appointed committee. New officers of the Wixom-Walled Lake Lions Oub will be installed tomorrow evening at Thompson’s County Inn, 2635 E. FD^and, IR^Iand Township. Deputy District Gov. Ralph Alexander of the Birmingham Lions Club will install the following officers: Herbert Abrams, president; David Goodwin, first vice presidmt; Dr. I. W. Scheel^ second vice president; Laula Loveless, third vice president; Robert Wicht, secretary; Robert Smith, treasurer; and Louis James and Benjamin Schneider, directors. . Cocktails are at 6:30 p.m. with dinner at 7 p.m. Four Atdministrators Hired LAKE ORION — Questiming of Lake Orion schools policy moved into theParea of curricula this week as Mrs. Constance Krajicek, a former teacher, appeared before die board of education. She was promised an evaluation of the whole program as it pertains to college entrance requirements. •k * -k Supt. of Schools Lewis Mundy told Mrs, Krajicek, the lone visitor at the recent board meeting, that the schools have been accredited by the Nqrth C«»-tral Association of Secondary Schools since 1930. Mundy said that Lake Orion students have had no trouble gaining admittance to college. PROGRAMS FOR ALL He said the curricula neces4arily attempt to provide programs for all students whether they pursue college or go to work, and that the district is bound by the funds available as to the depth and variety of programs offered. Wolverine Lake Adopts Budget WOLVERINE LAKE - The Village Council has adopted the 1968-69 budget proposed by Village Manager Cliffwd Cottrell. Although there is no hike planned in the currently levied 8.5 mills, expenditures and revenues are anticipated to be $41,032 mori than last year. The budget goes into effect July 1. It includes the following salary increases: village manager, $500 more for a total of $10,500; clerk, $600 more for $5,850; treasurer, $640 more for $5,040; and police chief, $1,200 more for $6,500 including benefits. MAUj NEWCOMER — While a construction strike ha.«s stalled progress on Bonwit Teller’s new store in Troy, the completion this fall. It will include 82,000 square feet of mer- frame is in place. The two-story structure, a part of the chandislng and inventory space. Also planned for the center Somerset Mall Shopping Center, was scheduled originally for is an interior section, to contain some 35 additional stores. An expenditure of $115 per month is earmarked for a life insurance and weekly indemnity program for village employes. FIFTH POUCEMAN Hearing Planned on Grovel-Mining Plea other increased expenditures are for roads and a fifth full-time policeman. The major revenue increase is $6,000 from the state income tax. rebate. In other recent action, the council approved a change in the water fees. Richard J. Cole, 3785 Locust, has been appointed new Civil Defense director, replacing the late Clarence Williams. QUARTERLY CHARGE The ordinance amendment calls for a quarterly flat charge of $5 with an indoor meter and 16 cents for each 1,000 gallons of water used. The previous fee was $6 minimum for 16,000 gallons. ORCHARD LAKE - A $10,000 gift has been donated by an alumnus to help St. Mary’s College obtain accreditation from the North Central Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools. The new method of charging will benefit the resident who is away from his home for a long period, explained Cottrell. Djose residents can now save $1, or not pay any charges if they have their meter taken out of their house while they are away, Cottrell said. LAND REZONED The council also rezoned 3.5 acres for multiples on the west side of South Commerce south of Glengary for developer Edward Muzyczuk. for Huron Valley Schools Nine County 4-H'ers Attending Youth Week at Michigan State U. Use Will Cost Highland $3,200 Computer to Figure Tax Bills Four administrators have been hired for Huron Valley schools. . .Milfwd High School will have two new assistant principals, one a new position on the>-staff. They are William Hunter, who had been principal at Durand High School in-Durand, and, Charles Blosser, an industrial arts teacher at Crary Junior High School in Waterford Township and former principal of a private American school in Frankfort, Germany. Philip Conklin, an administrative intern in Huron Valley Schools this last year, was hired as Baker Elementary School principal. He has previously been a junior high and elementary principal. principal at Highland Junior High School. One-year contracts list salaries at $14,178 for Hunter; $12,844 for Blosser; $15,351 for Conklin; and $12,844 for Domalske. In other recent action, the Huron Valley school board adopted policies administrators. Nine Oakland County 4-H Club members are attending the 1968 State 4-H Youth Week at Michigan State University through tomorrow. They are Sue Butler and Brenda White of Oxford, Sue Becker, Connie McKay, Kitheryn Smith and Randy lid of Ortonville, Cheryl Scott of Lake Orion, Bonnie Peace of Holly and Biran Hoxie of Bloomfield Township. HEARING PROVIDED Adopted was a dismissal procedure HIGHLAND TOWNSHIP - This com-munity’s tax bills for December will be figured by computers. This first for Highland Township costs $3,200, the fee for use of the Oakland County computers, the Township Board has learned. The Township Board also has raised Assessor Clarence Forgette’s salary from $8,400 to $9,800 including car expenses and renewed his contract for one year., The board offered $6,000 for purchase of property on Livingston south of the post office for the new fire station. The parcel Is vacant and owned by Roscoe The board judged that the township treasury lacks the funds and residents may have to pay through specfkl assessments. • the operator or rider to wear a crash helmet, • not more than two cycles riding abreast in one lane. CHANGE IN SCHOOLS Sanford Burton, currently Baker prin- The board designated Itself to appoint the study committee. No dates were set for completion of the study or for when a final decision will be made. cipal, will head Milford Elementary School next year, with the resignation of Douglas Nichols. . Walter Domalske, another administrative intern, is to be assistant entitling administrators to an open or closed hearing not less than 15 days or more than 30 days after he gets formal written notification, including reasons for the dismissal. The administrators’ requests for two-year contracts (currently contracts are one-year) were tabled until the new superintenent takes over from Truman Owens, in the next month. The delegates, totaling 1,000 state youths, are discussing their goals and dreams, investigating the use and abuse of drugs, and seeking ways of imfU'oving themselves.' ★ Area leaders assisting in the program are Robert Huntoon of Rochester, Marlane Miller of Holly aM Judy Mirakian of Lake Orion. Mrs. Harold White of Oxford accompanied the county group. REPORT ANnCVATED NO ESTIMATES No cost estimates or constructibn-dpte estimates for the station have been made, said Township Clerk Mrs. Norma-gean Waters. Two Uds for garbage disposal service were tabled for a committee study of flnancini^rf The hoird agreed to let the Highland chapter of WEAR (Why Have Awful Roads) know when the toeMdtip road cjimmittee Itas a report ready on the use of the 2 mills levied Tor roads in the township. The WHAR chapter had requested a public meeting on the use ofthe2mUIs. . Passed was a moton^le c Including provisions reqtdring: • dealers not to rent, lease or furnish motorcycles to a nonlicensed operator, • not more than one person on a cycle at I'j^tlme, Violation penalties are $100 fine and/ or 90 days in jail. If and vdien some of the ordinance provisions may be declared unconstitutional by the State Supreme Court, the township will delete them from the oidl-nance, said a township spokesman. Ortonville Holding Its Carnival Days LAWMAN HIRED Hired to enforce this ordinance and all other township ordinances was Ora Jones, 3245 Central. The wages are $100 and $M for car expenses per month. He begins a three-morith trial period. Also amvoved was the Michigan Township Association Retirement plan for ) employes. Cost to em-I and the towhdiip will he about ORTONVILLE — The Ortonville carnival days, sponsored by the local Jay-cees, are under way in this village and will last through tomorrow. The traditional celebration includes kiddy rides, sidewalk sales, and helicopter rides. The copter rides are at the Ford Ag^cy, 968 M15, outside the village. ★ ★ ★ The affair also features the crowning of the Ortonvillq Queen, chosen from area teen-age gii;ls, tonight at 8. ■i ( Model-Plane Contest Is Set UTICA - The Exchange Clubs of Michigan will hold their annual Outdoor Model Aviation Contest Sunday at the Ford Utica Test Track, located on Van Dyke between 22 and 23 Mile. Fliers from Michigan, Ohio, Illinois and Canada will compete for trophies in the meet, the second largest in the United States. As in the past, the meet will be cosponsored by the Exchange Clubs Council of Metropolitan Detroit, Michigan District Exchange Clubs, Ford Motor Co. and the Civil Air Patrol. Awards and trophies will be presented to each age group in the 25 events, ranging from the simple hand-launched glider to the advanced radio-cdntrolled models. DEMONSTRATION SET The meet will start at 9 a.m. and end with a demonstration of model flying by the Livonia parks and Recreation Rib Crackers Club, scheduled from 4-5 p.m, The meet will be open to the ]H>b-lic. Refreshments will he available and there is no admissiitm charge. ----------------------------------- mi milts THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY. JUNE 14. 1008 Romney Signs Riot Bill on Traffic Obstruction LANSING (AP)-A bill aimed at giving police agencies addi-tiwial powers to deal with civil disturbances and riots was sipied into law Thursday by Gov. George Romney. Tbe measure is aimed at preventing wilful blocking of streets and highways. The specific language states: “No person, without authority, shall block, obstruct, impede or otherwise interfere with the normal flow of vehicular or pedestrian traffic upon a public street or highway in this state, by means of a barricade, object device, or with his person.” Romney signed a bill that would allow a member of the House to run for the Senate while still in the Legislature, but said he will ask the State Supreme Court to rule on the constitutionality of the bill. Also signed by the governor was the repeal of a section of 1075 W. Huron St. Phone 334-9957 If You Don't Buy From Us, Wo Both Lose Money! TRUCKLOAD PRICES FOR ALL! ASK US ABOUT KITCHEN CARPET WE CARRY A LARGE SELECTION OF CARPETS FOR ALL YOUR NEEDS OPEN MON. md FRI. 'TIL 9 P.M. FREE ESTIMATES AND IMMEDIATE INSTALLATION 100% CONTINUOUS FILAMENT NYLON CARPET SK95 Completely Installed, including carpet, pad, labor and sq. yd. tackless installation, the criminal sexual psycho-row, rabbits, woodchucks andi —Giving probate courts au-" ruffed grouse. | thority to provide the State —Including veterans of the | Health Department with infor-Vletnam conflict in the Michi-imatlon needed to create a new gan Uniform Service Act. | birth certificate. pathic act which sponsors said served as an “escape hatch” for some persons charged with murder. ★ 1 In previous years, some sexual offenders have been committed to mental institutions instead of being imprisoned although they were not declai-ed legally insane. This allowed them to escape criminal prosecution. Under the amended law, the offender must be dealt with either as a criminal or as a mental patient committed through normal mental health FLAGS OUTDOOR • INDOOR ALL TYPES OHRISTIAN LITERATURE SALES 88 Oakland Av«. FE 4-9881 Solid Vinyl Tile 9x9 . . 13* ea. Plastic Wall Tile 1* ea. and up Vinyl Asbestos Tile 12x12 .. 13* ea. ALL FORMICA VANITIES 24" w/sink $3095 Ceiling Tile 12x12 PLAIN 10* ea. Suspended SLASS TUB Enclosures Ceiling Tile SO A As ^ A Includes Rf 4Qr ■ As Low As 95 & UP Sq. Ft. , CERAMIC TILE 1x1 .... 39* «t- 4'/4X41/2.»39*«-ALL FIRST QUALITY Pontac'» Largest Selection MAC-O-LAC FORMULA 99 ROYAL BONO $R99 U Gal. Latex semigloss glosis enamel PAROLE REQUIREMENTS The act also contains more stringent parole requirements for those already committed under the repealed act. The governor also signed into I law bills: * ★ ★ —Allowing the issuance of a i summons or an “appearance j ticket” similar to those used in I traffic cases against defendants I in minor criminal cases. This j would be an option to the arrest warrant now mandatory in such cases. w * ! — Deleting the requirement that motorcycle "operators wear I crash helmets but providing that motorized fwo-wheeled vehicles must be equipped with crash helmets for the driver and any passengers. —Requiring motorcyclists to wear goggles or a face shield when operating the cycle on a public highway in excess of 35' miles per hour. HUNTING SEASON — Lengthening the hunting season for certain game ani-' mals — deer with bow and ar- Fox Is Outfoxed i CHICAGO (AP) - A fox ledj two policemen and 40 neighbor-! hood residents on a 30-minute j chase Thursday night. The elusive animal was finally outfoxed when someone drew a shirt over it. No one immediately claimed I the gray fox, estimated to be I two months old. It was taken to I the Lincoln Park Zoo. At WKC ... Naturally! 2 tori GIFT OFFER FOR FATHER'S DAY JUNE 16! PORTABLE TV AND RADIO, BOTH FOR 13995 AT TMI oEACH 108 North Saginaw FE 3-7114 PORTABLE 7" TV WITH 49.95 POCKET FM RADIO INCLUDED! SAVE *251 Don't miss this 2-for-l Father's Day gift offer! Both the Sony Portable TV and Pocket FM Radio are sure ''Dad-pleasers!'' Weighing only B’/a lbs., this portable TV ploys anywhere —indoors or out —with AC or battery! Features o!! so!id state circuitry, 19 transistors, powerful front speaker, 7" diagonal picture with block screen to cut sun glare! The Sony pocket radio has 7 light ounces of dynamic FM reception. Includes automatic FM tuning button, 11 transistors and telescopic antenna. esaiac NO MONEY DOWN-90 Days Same as Cash PARK FREE in LoL>at Rear of WKC OPEN TONITE 'til 9 pm — Sat. 9:30 to 5:30 pm PUBLIC AUCTION OF COACH HOUSE COLOHIAL FURNITURE EVERYTHING MUST BE SOLD! SatuiHay, June ISth and Sunday, June 16th SALE STARTS AT 1 P.M. SHARP BRAND NEW-FAMOUS BRANDS * SOFAS* CHAIRS •RECLINERS * DINING ROOM * END TABLES * LAMPS • BEDROOMS • PICTURES * MATTRESSES • DECORATOR WALL PLAQUES • PLUS MANY MORE ITEMS AUCTIONEER ... Mr. Tom Tyler CREDIT ARRANGED ON THE SPOT • Terms —Up to 36 Months to Pay • No Lay-awqys • No^etynds • All Soles Final • No Phone Orders Pontiac, Mich. Phone 614-2251 4405 HIGHLAND RD. Corner of Pontiac 1 ake Rd. Maybe you had a hole in your head when you bought that power saw! Do yourself a favor . . . give up after your fifty-sixth attempt to make something . • • and sell that saw with a Pontiac Press Want Ad. You’ll get fast results just by dialing 332-8181 or 334-4981 today! Be Sure to Order The Thrifty Six Time Rate PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY. JUNK 14. 1968 B^7 Deaths in Pontiac and Neighboring (Communities Personalized -- — — — ——---------------------------- Greeting Card Baby Girl Hager Prayers will be offered for Baby Girl Hager, Infant daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Hager Jr. of 96 Franklin Blvd., at 10:30 a.m. tomorrow at the Huntoon Funeral Home with burial in Perry Mount Park Cemetery. The baby died two hours after birth yesterday. Surviving, besides the parents, are grandparents Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Hager Sr. and Mr. and Mrs. George McClain. Mrs. George Hurlburt Service for Mrs. George (Marjorie) Hurlburt, 71, of 602Mi University will be 1:30 p.m. Monday at the Huntoon Funeral Home, with burial in the cemetery at Uakeville. Mrs. Hurlburt died yesterday. Surviving are her husband; • four children, Jean Stoll, Mrs. Ida Duncan of Orion Township) Delbert of Waterford Township and Emery of Detroit; a sister. Pearl Mason of Pontiac; and eight grandchildren. Mrs. Fred C. Keeney Service for Mrs. Fred C ;.(Ora B.) Keeney, 84, of 3094 Edgetield, Waterford Township, will be 10:30 a.m Monday at the Pollock-Jowlett Funeral Home in Port Huron, with burial in Washington Cemetery, Sanilac County.. Her body will be taken there tomorrow morning by the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home, Pontiac. Mrs. Keeney, a member of Jehovah’s Witnesses, died yesterday. Surviving are a daughter, Mrs. La Verne Selmes o f Waterford Township; three sons, F. Hal, George I. and Arthur F. Keeney, all of Port Huron; 10 grandchildren; and 15 great-grandchildren. Ray E. Erickson AVON TOWNSHIP - Ray E. Erickson, 53, of 3177 S. Adapis died today. His body is at Harold R. Davis Funeral Home, Auburn Heights. Mr. Erickson, an employe of Pontiac Motors Division, was a member of the Pontiac Elks Lodge No. 810. Surviving besides his wife, Ruth, are two sons, Raymond and Edwin, both in the U.S. Navy; four grandchildren; his mother, Mrs. Mable Erickson of Pontiac Township ; five brothers, including Delmond of Avon Township, Donald o f Pontiac Township and, Leroy and Gordon, both of Waterford Township; and a sister, Mrs. Betty Poprofsky of Waterford Township. Ann Herkless AVON TOWNSHIP - Ann Herkless, 16-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. David R. Herkless of 6156 Blue Beach, died last night. Her body is at the WUliam R. Potere Funeral Homei Rochester. She died from injuries recieved in an automobile accident last night. terday. Surviving are his wife, Grace; two daughters, Mrs. Ronald Ruffatto and Mrs. Marvin Lein-enger, both of Waterford Township; three sons, Melvyn of Union Lake, Donald of Water> ford TownsMp and Kenneth of White Lake Township; thnee sisters, Mrs. Arvin Waters of Pontiac, Mrs. Arnold Smithling Sheriff Willing > to Bow to Mate LORDSBURG, N.M. (AP) Sheriff Doris McCarty says she’s ready to retunr her badge to her husband this fall, if he’s elected. Mrs. McCarty ran for sheriff in 1966 because her husband, Leroy, had served two consecutive terms and was ineligible for re-election. Her husband served as her deputy. “I keep away from violence quicker than anything,” she said Thursday. “I’ve never had to make an arrest. But I have put people in jail—mostly drunks.” She said her husband does most of the heavy work and she assists him. “My husband says I take fin-gerpririts almost as well as he does.” More than half of all adults over 35 suffer from various forms of arthritis. The fabulous New residential air conditioner with exclusive round design ■Upflow air...tosses heat and sound skyward ■Circular coil...provides larger cooling area ■ Built to last.jugged, heavy-du^ compressoi This is the first architecturally styled air conditioner to replace the traditional old square box. Look at its fine design - created by Vi/alter W. Hoyle, I.D.S.A. Compare the quality features. And it's built tough and corrosion-free to shrug off weather for years and years. Call us today... we'll be glad to survey your air conditioning needs free of charge. Call for Free, No Obligation Survey Today! Operator on Duty. "Over 23 Years in Oakland County" Matheson Heating & Air Conditioning Union Loke 363‘4B68 Residential and Commercial, Authorized Carrier* Dealer of Oxford and Mrs. Glenn Griswold of North Branch; and 13 grandchildren. Mrs. George Singleton KEEGO HARBOR Service for Mrs. George (Myrtle A.) iSingleton, 71, of 2412 Pine Lake Henry A. Nichols WHITE LAKE TOWNSHIP -Service for Henry A. Nichols, 63, of 265 Tower will be 11 a.m. Monday at Elton Black Funeral Home, Union Lake, with burial in Stiles Cemetery, Lapeer. Mr. Nichols, a store installer j will be 1 p.m. Monday at C. J. for Western Auto Co., died yes-Godhardt Funeral Home With tprrimv ' 'burial in Oakland Hills Memorial Gardens, Novi. Rebecca Lodge No. 4 50 I.O.O.F. of Pontiac will hold a service Sunday at 8 p.m. at the funeral home. Mrs. Singleton, a member of the Trinity Methodist Church, died yesterday. She also was a member of the Rebecca Lodge 450 and the ladies Encampment Auxiliary I.O.O.F. lOuisviLLE, Ky. (JB -A of Berkley. |most unusual greeting appeared Survlvtojbaltehrhurtaaii^, ^ are a son, George E. of|Lou|gvUie Times recently. Hawthorne, Calif.; a daughter, Howard Holland of Lock port. N. Y.; seven grandchildren; nine great-grandchildren; a sister; and two brothers. Mrs. William Wilson MILFORD — Service for Mrs. William (Nina S.) Wilson, 88, of 425 Liberty will be 3 p.m. tomorrow at Rlchardson-Bird Funeral Home, with burial in Oak Grove Cemetery. Mrs. Wilson died yesterday. She was a member of Milford jPresbyterlan Church. Addressed to Mrs. Lula Crain, it read: “Happy Easter, Mother Dear — Love, Your Son." The ad was placed by Marine |t. J. R. Cowan, who had written the newspaper and explained that he couldn’t find a conventional Easter greeting card where he was. At the time, Cowan was participatlg in the fighting around Khe Sanh in South Vietnam. a cuttlefish believed to be 100 million years old were found in eastern Bohemia recently. Boy Hit by Car at White Lake A White Lake Township boy is in satisfactory condition to Pontiac General Hospital today with head and arm injuries suffered yesterday in a traffic accident. Injured is Scott R. Wilson, 7, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ronald L. Wilson, 8685 Highland. Pontiac State Pqlice said the boy ran into the {isth of a car driven by Henriette Qark, 48, of 7764 Pontiac Lake, Waterford Township. The accident occurred at about 12:15 p.m. on Highland, just west of Pontiac Lake Road, in White Lake Township. According to police, the Clark car was heading west on Highland and the boy was running north across the road. Roal Lom Yew OmI Enjoy LKo With 8IBS0N CONSUMERS POWER CO. 28 West Lawrence 333-7812 EXPLIUIIMSII HE nUTIH UTS I tOHMIlllT SEIVICE OF OUlUl CIMKIMIIT CIUEIE EXPLORATION IN OREATIVE ARTS A Community Service of Oakland Community College In Cooperation with: Forndale Board of Education Farmington Board of Education Pra-r*giil«r now .. . Rogittrotion limitad in oH workthopt Profotiional Staff . .. Spacializad inttniction in all tha arti For Further Information Call: 642-6211 A summer program of workshops in the creative arts for children and youth 2 LOCATIONS: FERNDALE HIGH SCHOOL, 881 PiNECRESt, FERNDALE, MICH.; NORTH FARMINQTON HIGH SCHOOL, 32900 W. 13 MILE RD., FARMINGTON, MICH, MODERN DANCE Six-wa«k saition for tfudantt in gradat 7 thru 9. Designed for oil students interested in creative and interpretive dance. Students will explore and create dances using modern, jazz, and Spanish lines ond rhythms. Students will be able to develop and solve simple and SCULPTURE# Six-waak laitian fi in grader 9 thru 12. Limit: 15 students DRAMATIC ARTS WORKSHOP Six-waak taition for (tudanti in gradat 9 thru 12. July 1 thru August 13,1968 9 o.m. to 12 noon A drama workshop tor beginning and advanced students integrating instruction and reheorsdl in octing, voice, ond mime: Rehearsal of ihort scenes tor doss presentation and critique, as well os production work on longer plays. Limit: 45 students TUITION $80 MUSIC COMPOSITION WORKSHOP Four-waak session for students in gotdes 5 thru 7. July 1 thru July 30, 1968 Students will hove o choice of o wide range ol explorotory experiences including, casting in fibre gloss, hydroslone and metol; corving in wood and stone; building with plaster, wood and plexigloss; and welding. Limit: 18 studsnts TUITION $50 let be offered at N. Farmington High School. Clotsot d at Forndolo High School and Oakland Community Collogo, 27055 Orchard Loko Rood, Foimington, Michigan. The first series will include tour American Classics revealing tho devolepment of cinematography os on art form both in octing jsnd directing. The second series will highlight tour importont, historically significant foreign films. Brief lecture and discussion will precede and follow the film. FEE: $4 aaeh strits, $1.58 aiagia admiaaiaa JAZZ WORKSHOP* Four -week session for students in grades 9 thru 12. Students will explore, write, and create Jozz with porticulor emphasis eti improvisation and experimentation. Guest ortists in jazz os well as specialists in related fields will be available for seminars on jazz In the contemporary world. Limit: 40 studants I only. 9 o.m. to 12 noon Music composition is a highly specialized workshop tor selected music students in the middle elementary grades. Students in this workshop will be expected to be proficient on on instrument and able to write simple melodies. Original compositions will be heord in finol performonce. TUITION $40 CREATIVE DRAMA FOR CHILDREN 3 two-week sessions tOr students in grodoi 1 thru 6. 1st Session; July 1 thru July 16, 1968 2nd Sossion: July 18 thru July 31, 1968 3rd SoSsion; August 5 thru August 16, 1968 1st and 2nd gradat—9 o.m. to 10:30 o.m. 3rd end 4th grades—10:30 o.m. to 12 neon Sth ond 6th grades-10:30 o.m. to 12 noon Creollvo drama or playmaking utilizes the nolural potential of eoch child tor creative self expression. In creative drama, children in small groups will explore ond create oil forms of improvised drama, dramatic ploy, dramatizing stories and plays, ond spontaneous pontomine. Limit! 15 studants aaeh group tach totsion TUITION $25 PUPPETRY WORKSHOP FEE $41 VOCAL MUSIC Four-weak tatsion for tfudenft in grades 9 thru 12. July 1 thru July 30, 1968 9 a.m. to 12 noon A workshop devoted to instruction, rehearsal ond performance In vocol music, including sight reading, sectional and ensemble singing. A wide ronge , of music literature will be the basis tor the repertoire of this workshop. Including classic, popular, ond folk songs. Limit: tO studants TUITION $45 CREATIVE PHOTOGRAPHY Four-week session for studants in grades 9 thru 12. July 1 thru July 30, 1968 9 o.m. to 12 noon for beginning and advanced students interested in photography os a creative oft. Students will receive basic instruction in camera technique, composition, developing, and printing, poying special ottention to individuof‘needs. Students should hove adjustable camera, tripod, and exposure meter. Limit: 20 studants , TUITION $41 PAINTING AND DRAWING / 2 three-week sessions for students in grades 5 thru 0, 1 St Settiont July 1 thru July 23, 1968 2nd Session: July 29 thru August 16, 1968 9 o.m. to 12:00 noon Beginning and advanced students will have opportunities to sketch and draw, point In water color, tempera, acrylics and oils. A Vride variety ot experl- ' encci will develop self-expression ihrobgh an understanding of principles ot composition,' design and the use 6f voried media. Limit: 15 studants aaeh sassion TUITION $10 1 St Session: July 1 thru July 23,19(68 2nd Session: July 29 thni August 16, 1968 1st thni 3rd grades—9 o.m. to 10:30 o.m. 4th thru 6th grades—11 o.m. to 12:30 p.m. Students will invent ond construct all types of puppets—from bot;d puppets to simple siring puppets. Originol stories and ploys will be created by the students for presentation and production. Limit: II studants aaeh group aaeh sassion TUITION $10 FILM CLASSICS* 2 Series: July 2, 9, 16, 23 August 7, 14, 21, 28 '8-11 p.m. July Series — Four American Film Classics 1. INTOLERANCE - o D. W. Griffith epic (1916) 2. MODERN TIMES - o Charlie Chaplin great (1936) g 3. THE INFORMER - John Ford's masterpiece (1935) 4. CITIZEN KANE - Orson Welles' greatest (1941) August Series — Four Foreign Film Classics 1. THE PASSION OF JOAN OF ARC and BLOOD OF THE POET -Fronce( 1928,1932) 2. IVAN THE TERRIBLE, Port)-Russia (1944) 3. THE ajCYCLETHIEF -.Italy(1949) 4. RICHARD III-England (1955) COMMUNITY BAND* For young people and adults, Tuesday evenings. July 2, 9, 16, 23, 30 - Aug. 6, 13 7-10 p.m. Reheorsol and performance of oil types of bond lileroture including marches, show tunes, clossic and conlemporory works. Public performance is plonned. Large Instruments will be loaned to porticiponls. Limit: 50 studsnts FEE: $1.50 Adults - $1.10 Studants ■To be offered ot Ferndolt Hish School enly. REGISTRATION FORM ..Phone- . Grade_ (as of Sept. I960) Make checks payoble to Oakland Community Callage THE PONTIAC PRESS. ERIDAV. JUNE U, 1968 Copfers Hunt in Vain for Cong SAIGON (AP) -• At sunset, two helicopter gunships skimmed over the rooftdps of Saigon and headed out to locate the launching sites for the 122mm Russian-made rockets that were slamming into the city for more than a month. In the lead ship, Capt. Reid McBride of Logan, Utah, guided the flight along a general north-eastSerly direction, to avoid staring into the declining sun, and seldom climbed higher than 5 to 10 feet above the treetops. enough to cart on a wagon or even a bicyci© to their launching sites, which must be within five miles of the capital city. VR IS THE GAME “Hey, what about those haystacks?” suggested door gunner Spain, ihumping the pilot on the shoulder and bellowing into his helmet. VR—visual reconnaissance—is the name of the game, so the two helicopters danced in and out among the haystacks like hobgoblins on Halloween. McBride wore “chicken plate,” a steel bullet-proof vest. So did his copilot, ‘WO John McQueen of Torrance, Calif., and the two machine gunners leaning out the open doors. Spec. 4 Kirby Spain of Darde-nelie. Ark., and Spec. 5 Thompson Lee of San Antonio, Tex. So did the reporter sitting on the ammo cannister. In less than two minutes of flight time, Saigon’s shanty town suburbs fell away into a watery green world of rice paddies, swamps, endlessly snakirig rivers and canals, punctuated here and there by stands of coconut trees, tiny farms of manioc, sudden clumps of dense woods. 3 TIMES A DAY Three times a day at dusk, dawn and midday, sometimes more often when they were scrambled during an actual rocket launch, McBride and the other members of the Razor-back gun platoon of the 120th Aviation Company had flown the same 25-mile patch of paddy and pineapple plantation. The conversation between pilot and copilot of the intercom told how well they knew the terrain, even down to the newest wagon track. The rockets come equipped with a launching base, biit they can and have been fired from inside haystacks resting on a bipod of bamboo poies, with the rocketeer in a nearby haystack or behind a fence triggering a mechanism no more complicated than the cord on an electrical shaver. When fired this way the rockets are wildly inaccurate, which may explain the relatively little tactical damage but the high civilian casualties inflicted on the city in the past month. I It was fully dark now, save for a glow from burning build- that the Saigon River makes near the old Bien Hoa highway ings that told of street fighting just beyond the city limits in in Cholon and Gia Dinh. Rain began to fall, and their only hope of locating a rocket site was to catch the bright white liqk of the muzzle blast and tlw orange fire ball arching toward the city. McBride returned to Tan Son Nhut and was barely settled down to watch Perry Mason on the television set in their “scramble shack” when the artillery began thumping away. 24-HOUR ALERT I'Yom here on out, they were „.i a 24-hour alert, ready to run for the ships at word of a scramble. The crew had just settled down, boots still on, when the FM tactical radio cut in on Perry Mason’s summing-up scene. Razorbacks scramble to the west, Vietcong moving near the Ikeyhole.” I The keyhole is the big loop Gia Dinh Province. RAIN POURS The rain was a torrent, whipped by skitting winds, as the Razorbacks raced to their gunships. Switch on ... switch off ... tail clear.” The blades whirled noisily, then began knocking in a pop-pop rhythm as McBride altered pitch and lifted off over the empty race track, where nothing has run except blood in nearly four months. ti hope it’s not street fighting again,” said McQueen. “I hate operating in that tight. Besides I don’t like knocking down buildings. You hate to see the women streaming out, lugging the kids and everything they can carry. You know damn well no matter how careful you are, the innocent get it.” “Something’s been moving through here, those ruts weren’t here yesterday,” said McBride, flying so low that five water buffalo went stampeding across the paddy dikes. Intelligence officers believe that the rocket tubes and their firing devices are unloaded by freighter at Sihanoukville in Cambodia, then taken by sampan down the countless fingers of waterway that claw at Saigon. The 3-foot tubes are light “No,” answered McBride through his head set. “It’s VC troops moving near a bridge P yjty ' °ver the keyhole.” ROCKET PLATOON? South Vietnamese marines, who had reported the enemy movement, thought it might be a rocket platoon moving to a new location. At first most of the rounds aimed at Saigon came from the west, in the vicinity of a village called Hoc Mon. Lately, they had come from the south, especially the rockets aimed at the docks. Now, more and more, the razor-backs were scrambled in every direction. “We’ll have to orbit until the artillery subsides,” said McBride, but he had no sooner climbed to 2,000 feet than the radio issued new orders: Saigon Building Burns After Rocket Hit “We have a negative target for you—repeat—negative. Return to base.” The rain cascaded across the windshield in a constant deluge. A hard night for the razorbacks. In that inky darkness, they could never locate the white lick of flame from the tube. CHARLIE KNOWS’ “You gotta hand it to old Charlie,” said McQueen, finally | pulling off his boots. “He knows! when he’s got everything going | for him.” Advertisement WorWs Finest Bourbon a 173-Year-Old Secret CHICAGO, ILL.-Before you can call yourself the world’s finest anything— you’d better have a case in your favor. Jim Beam Bourbon has that ‘case. The whole matter started with Jacob Beam—who would be ‘200 years old this year— and a secret he discovered. The secret, in the case of Jim Beam Bourbon, goes back to 1795, and it is still hush-hush today. The secret lay in the heart of Kentucky where there was, and is today, the right combination for pleasure. The right land. The right climate: the perfect Bourbon formula. In north central Kentucky, Jacob Beam found clean iron-free water—water that came from limestone springs considered thd very finest. Beam set out to make Bourbon in this rolling country; and he added his own special ingredient: pride. distiller has been carried through six generations, now. Every glass of today’s Beam Bourbon holds the best from nature and the pride that was passed on from Jacob to David to David M. to Colonel James to T. Jeremiah to Baker and Booker Noe—over a span of 173 years. All those Beams have rested their case on Bourbon that’s worthy of your trust. And it's still a big secret. Beam. Not so say the Russians. They insist that Bourbon was actually discovered 10 years earlier by Ivan Chekkakoff in a little town called Vladivostok. They further state that the famous Beam formula is nothing more than a copy of the Chekkakoff stuff. However, they did admii they have been importing subj stantial amountsof clear, ironl Jim Beam Bourbon Is Michigan's Largest Seller Russians claim credit for Beam formula free water from limestont|. springs in north central Ken |^^|jy[ tucky. Idle Boast? American sources declinei to comment exceptto say tha^ Officials of the James-B. Beam Distilling Company have reported that again in 1967 Jim Beam Bourbon out- i sold all other bourbons in the ; State of Michigan. ; Distilled in the famous north-central hills of Northern Kentucky from a formula developed in 1795, Jim Beam is i-seller throughout the popularity is precise selection >nta, infinitely care- i jand the continuity | roken generations of : management. I Bourbon will probably be Six Generation Formula The pride of this first Beam WASH,INGTON —Word from the Kremlin today has startled the Bourbon-making world. Unreliable sources from Moscow state that Bourbon is-not an American spirit but, in fact, a Russian one. Bourbon, of course, is considered the only true American spirit. And the world’sfi nest Bourbon was first distilled back in 1795 by a guy named Jacob the moon 10 years befo: vodka will. JIM BEAM BOURBONMAKING NEWS SINCE 179S CLERMONT. KY.-173 years ago Jacob Beam started making Beam Bourbon here in Kentucky. It is still being made here today. And still by the Beams. Along with inspired skills, the making of a Bourbon like Beam requires an upusual coinbination of land, climate and natural materials. And it’s all here, in north central Kentucky. There’s the ancient, underlying limestone springs that supply sweet, clear water-^ vital ingredient in the making of fine Bourbon. The rich, fertile, surrounding valleys and plains provide tion and I inal formula. Bui more to the fact that toda;^ as for over 173 years, it’s the Beams who make Jim Beam. Ken-m Whis-ledbythe (utilling Co., ......... [m, Kentucky. Jim Beam ?§ EWf Kentucky Straight Bourbon Whiskey distilled and bbttled by the James B. Beam Distilling Co., Clermont, Beam, Kentucky. If you hove limited space, water and sewage problems and want to save money on water, detergent and repairs ... BUY this outstanding combination by HOOVER for the fastest washing, most compact Wosher-Dryer ever made. our appliance prices were never iower! 49*® Your Choice upright or Crown Princess Yac-Ciearter saie UPRIGHT: Power-driven cleaning action with ad-justoble 3-po'sition handle. It Beatsl Shakes! SweepsI 'CORDAWAY'VAC; Stows its own hose, cord ond accessories . . . stands on end for compact storogel Complete with 8-piece accessory other stores in DETROIT PORT HURON • PONTIAC • FLINT e ANN ARBOR • TOLEDO,OHIO PEOPLES OUTFITTING C O TELEGRAPH at SQUARE LAKE RDS. In Mirada Mila Shopping Center 'I. $6'/i Million Center MAKE OVER PAGES Arena Plans Unveiled i NEARS REALITY — This is an artist’s sketch of the pro-I posed sports arena which has been included in the multi-million downtown Pontiac building program unveiled last t night before city civic leaders. The arena which will seat between 5,500 and 6,500 for various events has been pinpoint, ed for the area at Wide Track and Orchard Lake, west of Saginaw. By BRUNO L. KEARNS Sports Editor, Pontiac Press X. A dream is touching the realm of reality for Pontiac. Part of the $80-thillion downtown building program unveiled last night, was a sports arena-convention center which awed Pontiac’s civic leaders who attended the overall unveiling a I Washington Junior HighSchooI. The erana-convention center, pinpointed for the area on the southeast corner of Wide Track and Orchard Lake Ave., would take up $6'/2 million of the overall total. The plan initiated bu U. if D. professor Don Davidson, former Pontiac Central star athlete, cplls for the arena to seat between 5,500 and 7,000 people, depending on the scheduled events. Marvin Skelton, financial consultant for the overall program, said the arena “would be the economic generator which would assuredly create the demand for goods and services in this area.” Davidson, the author of the University of Detroit study covering the overall redevelopment of the city, said, “the arena is one of the first and more important structures to be considered in the total plan.!’ Ralph Norvell, Pontiac businessman who was a member of the Pontiac Civic Center committee inl959 when plan^ were discussed for such a facility, said, “I have never been so motivated of feel so fdll of enthusiasm about anything I have ever witnessed.,, Don Prayer, member of the Pontiac Citizen's Committee, spearheading the presentation and adoption of the huge program, said, “There is certainly a definite,need for such a facility in this area. All surveys of population and growth substantiate this.” At least six times in the past 35 years, groups have formed.-to attempt to generate the interest for building a sports-recreation and community center. The ,atest attempt was in 1959 when Bill Donaldson, who was then mayor, got as far as having plans on the drawing board. “This arena and the overall plan Of the proposed structures will be something of which the people of Pontiac can be ex-tremely proud,” added Davidson. THE PONTIAC PRESS f/m/'f l lUDAV, Jl \K 14, IIMIK McLain Turns On Charm After 10th Win Denny Checks Fading Twins With 6-Hitter By BILL HALLS ■DETROIT ,(AP) — The Detroit Tigers’ latest winning streak has even softened the mercurial personality of Denny McLain. " The fiery right-hander, who has feuded I with Manager Mayo Smith, the fans and f sports writers within the past year, • became the first American League pitcher to win 10 games Thursday when , he set down the slumping Minnesota Twins 3-1 on a six-hitter. * ★ ★ Sporting newly cropped hair and a gracious smile, he quietly answered questions about himself and Detroit’s 5>/2-game lead in the pennant race. “If we keep winning three out of four there’s no way we can lose it,” he said. j COULD BE 30 Told his 10 victories one-third of the way through the season works out to a 30-victory year, he replied: “It works out to 31. I’ve tried that game once. I had 13 victories at the All-Star break in 1966 and just got in the door with 20.” ★ ★ ★ Last year McLain won 17 games but missed the last month of the season with two dislocated toes, acquired, he said, when he stood up after his foot fell asleep while watching television. This put him in Smith’s doghouse pnji >IcLain’s name came up frequently in winter trade rumors. Earlier this year, he accused Detroit fans of jeering the team into losing the pennant and charged , sports writers with misquoting him. , Manager Smith was enthusiastic about his pitching staff as the Tigers swept the four-game series with the Twins and turned in their ninth victory in the past 10 games. LAUDS DENNIS “Anytime you get 11 runs and win four games it’s a tribute to your pitching,” he said. “McLain’s concentrating better now . . . thinking about what he’s doing out there.” McLain gave up a run in the second inning on a single by Rich Reese, a sacrifice and Jim Holt’s single. But he settled down and allowed only one hit after the HRh inning. Detroit scored two unearned runs off loser Jim Merritt, 4-6, in the third. Dick McAuliffe led off with a single. Merritt got Jhe next two men before Bill Freehan singled. Then shortstop Jackie Hernandez booted Willie Horton’s grounder, letting in one run and Don Wert singled home . another. Detroit added another run in the fifth on Mickey Stanley’s single, a sacrifice and Freehan’s second hit, 'In-Betweener Yancey Has 2-Stroke Lead in U.S. Open ROCHESTER, N; Y. (UPI) - It wasn’t a young lion or an old walrus they were all chasing today in the second round of- the U.S. Open, but rather 29-year-old Albert “Bert” Yancey, who falls somewhere in between. * ★ * He said “everything went right” for him during Thursday’s opening round, a statement which comes as no particular news to any of the 149 other.^competitors who saw him take a two-stroke lead with his three-under-par 35-32—67. Yancey, a product of Chipley, Fla., now playingN)ut of Radnor, Pa., handled the rain-dampened, 6,962-yard Oak Hill Country Club course as if he was bom, raised and edudated on it for his two-stroke margin over a pair of Texans, Lee Trevino of El Paso, and Charles Coody of Fort Worth, each of whom had 69’s. 2 Veterans Moving in Pro Ice Maneuver GOOD AND bad — The slight smile on the face of Roberto De Vicenzo (left) and the scowl by Arnold Palmer reflect the outcome of their putts on the 11^ green yesterday during the opening round of the U.S.G.A. Open at Oak Hill Country Club in Rochester, N.Y. De Vincenzo rolled his in for a birdie, while Arnie missed but mad a par. De Vicenzo carded a 72, Palmer a 73. Lindgren Protests AAU Ruling OIT ab r h bl I » 4 0 2 0 Ct 4 2 10 a rf 3 0 0 0 MINNISOTA ab r h bl Tovar 2b 4 0 0 0 Uhlaandr cf 4 0 1 0 ____. . Oliva rf 3 0 10 Northrup Raasa 1b ..4110 Praahan Rollins 3b 2 0 0 0 WHortoti Klllabraw 3b I 0 0 0 Comar I Hardandi as 2 0 0 0 byler as Look ^ 1 0 0 0 McLain Qulllei 2b 0 0 OA RClark pb 1 0 o o Merritt p 2 0 1 0 Koatro ph 1 0 0 0 " ParrnoakI p 0 0 0 0 Total 32 1 « 1 Total 2? 3 0 3 .... 'Sof !r! oJIS^S !—Harnandaz. PP—MInnaaota 2. LOB— inaaota 7. Datrolt 6. 2B—OHva, werritt. 3B-McAullffa. S-Rollint, Northrup. IP H RERBBSO' ^ranoaltV'*’*’ 2 10 0 11 “thepC-^rmuby^ McLain ’(Oii'vaL T-J:10. A-13,lW. ^ Datrolt E-Ha 5? . u 0 0 0 0 0 0 4 0 3 1 3 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 BERKELEY, Calif. (AP) - Gerry Lindgren, an easy winner of the 10,000-meter run at the Track and, Field ' Championships Thursday, said he will not run in the AAU m°eet next week to protest the non-recognltlon of Jim Ryun’s world half-mile record. Speaking shwtly after he won the 10,000 in 29:41.0, Lindgren said, “I won’t go to the AAU meet because I don’t need to.” “I’ve qualified for the Olympic trials here,*’ he said. NOT RECOGNIZED Ryun ran the 880 in 1:44.9 two years ago, but the AAU did not recommepd that it be recognized as a world record becau^ the mark was set at a meet it did not sanction. Although it- is an American record, it is not officially con-j^dered a world/^ark. “Even for Ryun, world records aren’t that easy to come by,” saijd the diminuitive Washington State distance champion. “We want to see a little less politicking going on. Maybe next year I’ll run in the AAU meet because I’ll have to qualify for some of the trips.' I hope some of the other guys who don’t have to go, won’t go,’’ he said} Lindgren said he had not told Ryun about his decision. The AAU meet will be run next Thrusday and Friday at Sacramento, Calif. But Yancey didn’t do it alone. He had help. OUTSIDE HELP Outside help from Byron Nelson, the 56-year-old former golfing great who now does the commentating for ABC which begins televising this event today. Nelson told Yancey the best way to get out of the rough and Albert—“that’s my real name but I go by Bert”—listened. others NEED HELP Some of the old guard could have used Nelson’s help also. rearthe”^eCTs'wr‘X?nd ™ ^3 TIGER AT WORK - Detroit Tigers' Jim Northrup, unable to catch up with a long blast off the bat of Minnesota s Tony Oliva, puts on the brakes and waits to ~ play the ball off the right field fence during the second inning of their game in Related Details: See Page C-3 Detroit yesterday. Northrup’s play on the ball held Oliva to a double. Tigers , ^ . won the game, 3-1. 72: Arnold Palmer didn’t cotton to the-------------------------------------—_____------------------------------. silicone-type sand which fills all of Oak Hill’s 66 bunkers and tqok a 73; Billy Casper, the favorite, hurt his back-blasting out of a bunker on the 10th but wasn’t exciting anybody before that en route to his 75; Gary Player never really got started with his 76; and Bob Goalby, the Masters titlist, also came in with a 76. ■R •R ★ The smallest pro in the field, 5-foot-3 John Felus from Gallitzin, Pa., occasioned the biggest buzz when he led the pack temporarily and then checked in with a mighty respectable even par 70. _ * * ■* ' ^ That not only made the little 140-pounder happy, it also made him one of only nine golfers to equal or better par during a day when there were dark clouds continually overhead and it rained off and on. ' * * * Al. Balding, the 44-year-old Canadian canipaigner, also had a 70 along with former PGA champ Dave Marr, Billy •Tflarrell, Don Bies and Labron"Harris. NICKLAUS TWO OVER Don January, the present PGA kingpin, was one stroke back at 71 in a group which included Gardner Dickinson, Dan Sikes, Bill Collins, Gay Brewer, Julius Boros and Australia’s Bruce Devlin. Along with Nicklaus in the 72 bracket were Robert de Vicenzo, Al Geiberger and Aussie Kel Nagle while 56-year-old Sammy Snead (still seeking his first U.S. Open title in 26 tries) Doug Sanders, Ted Makelena and Bob Charles had 73’s. *■ * R There was nothing realty spectacular about Yancey’s fine round, only consistency. . “I made only one or two good putts,” he admitted, “but I was rolling the ball up close to the hole all day long. Everything went right. I played as good as I knew how and three-under was about as good as I could expect. ■R ★ R ' Yancey, competing in third U.S. Open, had four birdies against a single bogey which he took on the par four 4^2-yard eighth when he drove into a bunker. * * . * Yancey wasn’t in the deep rough often but but he was in the shorter rough nearer to the fairway several times and' that’s where Nelson’s advice helped. ■ -R R , ■ R "I talked to him Wednesday and he said to accelerate the clubhead when hitting from the rough here,” said the 6-foot-1, 190-pound Floridian. “That helped MONTREAL (AP) - Two veteran National Hockey League players moved to new teams as the NHL completed its annual summer meetings here 'Ibursday. The New York Rangers sent left wing Camille Henry to St. Louis in a five-player trade. Henry, 35, had a career total of 261 goals with New York and scored eight times in 32 games last season. Moving to the Blues with Henry are goalie Robbie Irons and defenseman Bill Plager, who joins two other defenseman brothers. Bob and Barclay, already with St. Louis. : In return, the Rangers acquired goalie $200,000 Sought Due to Injuries in Tiger Gome OAKLAND, Calif. (UPI) - A woman fan who was hit in the face by a baseball pitched deliberately into the crowd by a Detroit Tiger player on May 26 filed a $200,000 damage suit Thursday in Alameda County Superior Court. Mrs. Mary S. Alemida, 52, San Leandro, claimed she suffered a three-inch gash over her eye, a fractured cheek and a concussion. The suit asked $50,000 in general damagfes and $150,000 in punitive damages. The suit named the Oakland Alameda •County Coliseum Inc., the Detroit Tigers, Inc., six unnamed companies and 100 “John Does.” The incident occurred in the sixth inning of a game between ’the Oakland Athletics and the Tigers when relief pitbher Jack Aker of Oakland “beaned” Tiger .outfielder Jim Northrup and a pldyer brawl followd. During the diamond melee, a spectator tossed a beer can into the Tiger dugout and an unidentified placer leaped out and hurled a baseball into the crowd, hitting Mrs. Alemida. Don Caley and right winger Wayne Rivers. Both played at Kansas City in the Central League last year. Allan Stanley, a defenseman who had played 20 NHL season, was drafted from Toronto by the Quebec Aces of the American League, one of 18 players drafted by AHL and Western League teams from the NHL at $15,000 per man in the reverse draft. R R R Others picked included goalie George Gardner of Detroit, who was pidqed by Rochester, goalie Jack McCartan of Oakland, star of the U.S. Olympic teamj in 1960, who was chosen by San Diego and forward Ed H o e k s t r a of Philadelphia, picked by Denver. The NHL Writers Association announced the selection of veteran Montreal forward Claude Provost as winner of the first Bill Masterton Memorial Trophy. Cager Reggie Harding Is Hospitalized With Bullet Wounds in Leg DETROIT (AP) - Reggie Harding, former Detroit Pistons basketball player, was shot and wounded Thursday night outside a home on Detroit’s East Side. Harding, 26-year-old seven-footer, was reported in satisfactory condition at .Detroit General Hospital, where he was held in police custody for investigation of armed robbery. Police said Harding was shot after he went to the home of Morris Williams, 25. Harding, armed with a gun, knocked on Williams’ door and when ^ Williams saw him, Williams opened fire, police said, Harding was wounded in the right thigh and left leg as he fled. Also hit in the flurry of bullets was Ella Lyons, who was standing on a porch across the street from the Williams home. Also arrested was Milton H. Bowler. 43, who was charged with violation of narcotics laws. Policfe said four guns and some narcotics were confiscated in tins anreata. TgE PONTIAC PRESS, FllIDAY, JUNE 14, 1968 m 1 ^ The folloiHng are top prices covering sales of locally grown produce by growers and sold byi them In wholesale package lots.' Quotations are furnished by the State Delegates Stock Mart Continues Decline Like Humphrey Bureau of Markets as market continued to de-| NEW YORK (AP) — The International Paper, Jones & April 1 that a new record for of Wednesday. Produce Apples, Northern Spy, bu. Apples, Northern Spy, C.A., bu. ------ -----, c Red, C.A., bu. ,, Apples, Steele R Laughiin, General Motors andi volume had been made. Goodrich. National Cash Register and I American Smelting were down about 2 points eac^ of about ^ point or Beets, dz. bch. Onions, green, dz. bchs. Mustard, bu. dine in heavy trading early Friday. The ticker tape on the New st.50 York Stock Exchange ran three |;5J| minutes late as losses outnum- bered gains i by about a 2-to-l more were - taken by Gulf & i.7s ratio. j Western, Sperry Rand, Chrysler, , «75j ★ * ★ United Aircraft, Homestake, }.M Declines of leading issues ran'American Can, Control Data, Ji mostly from fractions to 1 or 2 IBM and Liggett & Myers. , w points. I The action followed a record Many stocks showed little or trading day on the big board, aiss no change, among them Ameri-jwith 21.35 million shares traded, can Telephone, Litton Industries, I It was the fourth time since Several Hope Ted Will Be Running Mate LANSING (AP) - Michigan delegates to the 'Democratic Spinach, bu. LETTUCE - SALAD GREENS Lettuca, Boslon, c.. Lettuce, Leaf, bu. Lettuce, Romfine, t Poultry end Eggs DETROIT EGOS DETROIT (AP).-(USDA)-;Egg prices paid per dozen by first receivers (Including U.S.): I----- iiimtx), 3«-41i extra Ian i medium, J5-27; Analysts expected more caution as Friday trading began. They noted, however, that inflationary pressures were still convention who say If *Vr ^ave made up their minds Inirnff ® ^ ' '"•; are overwhelmingly in favor of ® * * * I Yice President Hubert H. Hum- On Thursday the Associated Party’s presiden- Press average of 60 stocks fell I .3 to 343.2 Prices were mixed on the American Stock Exchange. The New York Stock Exchange NEW YORK (AP) - New York Stock! Exchange selected morning prices: | -A- g ACF I 1 2.20 37 61 15 42 1344 13'/8 + AmNatGas 2 21 3844 J8 38'/4 -t- ' Am TAT 2.0 321 4? Hogs 250; U.S. 1-2 220-22S pound rows and glHs 22.00-22.50; 1-3 2 21.50-22.00; U.S. T-' ---------- -------- iA sn.17 on choice and prime any grz otatlon. CHICAGO LIVESTOCK CHICAGO (AP)-(USDAI-^ogs . 1-2 190,235 lb bi^tebers 21.50-22.50; ai I I5 >lb butchers 2 .00/ 4 prime I 22.75-23.00; irySug 1.4i nCyan 1.2^ fiElPw 1.52 Home 1.20 22 63V4 63 63 —1 5 22 22 22 — : 39 36’/, 36Vz 19 70 .... . ,. 43 53 52Vj 52Vj — Vz 17 87 86'/, 86'/4 — ’/, 124 27V, 27Va 27W - 44 20 51 I 32'/4 32V, 32'/4 . 75 2644 26 2644 -t- '/, 18 3644 3644 3644 — 1.4 41 66'/4 65'/4 65'/4 — '/a 39 2244 2244 2 77 19 1844 1844 — '/4 Anacond 2.50 Anken Chem ArchDan 1.60 32'A 32'/4 —IV, Armco StI 3 Armour 1.60 u -ix-x, 4444 44,4 — ArmCk 1.40a 186 7144 71 7144 .. Ashid on 1.20 AssdDG 1.60 Atchison 1.60 Atl Rich 3.10 Atlas Ch .80 Atlas Corp Avco Cp 1.20 13 4344 42V, 42>A .. 6 7744 7744 7744 - 45 36W 36/s 43^^ 43%—1 27 45% 45V8 45% — 9 39 38V» 38% ... —S— 19 28'/, 27H 27»i — '/a 9 65'/a 65'/, 45'.% .. 53'/a 53'/li 53'/a + 32 33Sti 33'/, 33'/a 4 64 5846 57H 58'/, .. StJosLd 2.80 StLSanF 2.20 StRegP 1.40b Sanders .30 SanFeInt .30 Schenley 1.30 Schering 1.20 Sclentif Data ScienData wl SCM Cp .60b Scott Paper i SbdCstL 2.20 .- — - SearIGD 1.3 0 18 50'/, 50 Sears Ro 1.20 Seeburg .60 SharonSt 1.50 |hejl^OII 2.30 2 4744 47V, 4744 — '/, 3 66V, 46'/7 66'/a — 67 154V, 152',^ 153'/6 -1 7 104 i02'/l 103'A -1 . 122 4946 48'/6 48’/, -4 '/, 51 28’/6 28'/l 28’/, - " 10 52 Sinclair ____ SingerCo 2.40 SmlthK 1.80a SduCalE 1.40 south Co 1.08 SouNGas 1.40 SoutPac 1.60 Sooth Ry 2.80 Spartan Ind SperryR .30e SquareO ,70a StBrand 1.40 Std Kells .12p StonCal 2.70 21 2544 2544 2546 4 18 40'A 39 , J9'/6 128 66W 6544 65V, — /6 6 5546 54V6 5546 4- 46 44 25'/, 2444 2444 - '/ 600 56 5446 54V, -? 69 2046 20V6 2046 — 1 43'/ii 43'/6 43'A 9144 9146 — 46 1 3846 3846 3846 — 16 67V, 67 V, 67’/, 2 92 "• -- IS 69 .. .. 6 34V, 34V, 34V, —K— M% + % 5 25% 25% 25% . ' 21% 20% 21% + V« ' 9 109% lOSVa 108% —V 20 37% 363A 37% — 2 16% 16% 16% + 44 16% 16 16 — ■’" 12 23% 23% 23% . 6 587/b 58% 58% — 22 17% 17% 17% .. “ 81Va 81% 81V4—1 1 41 41 + 387/8 38% 38% — 200 82V4 81‘/4 81'/4 —1 25 11 11 n 26 59Vt 583/4 59 + 122 963/4 96 96 4- 17 23Va 23% 23% -r 6 26% 26Va 26Va — 3 50Vs 50% 50% + 21 36% 36V4 36Va + % —M— 12 27% 27Ve 273/4 — 7 38Va 38% 38% — % 13 297/8 297/8 297/8 - % 86 49’/4 49 49 '^1% 34 53V4 527/8 53 + Va 11 37®A 37% 373/4 + % 67 23Vj 23Va 23Va — *' 37 49V4 49V4 49'/4 — ’ 48V4 48»/4 48V4 4* % 40% 40% 40% — % 5 287/% 28Va 28% — % _____... . „ 7 80% 80 80 . . . US Indust .40 84 31% 30% 30% ~ 7/. ------------- ... ^ ^ 45 — V 21 27% 27% 27% — 1 8 62% 62% 62% — 1b 38 66 65% 65% % US Lines .50p USPIpe 1.20 28Va + % 42 42U .. . .. . 18 55% 54 54 —2% 34 91 90% 903/4 — •' 9 42% 42 42 -+ 3 22% 22% 22% — 16 1167/% 116% 116% — 1 22% 22% 22% — 93 44% 44 44% — 33 307/% 30Va 30Va — 50 427/8 42Vs 42% — 5 30% 30Va 30Va 38 28Va 28% 28Va 48 337/8 33% 33Va — - 14 1393/4 139 139% — ’ XlO 21% 21% 21% — —N— X42 34% 33% 33% -1 5 49 487/% 49 — % 6 48% 48% 48% — % 89 145^/% 144 144 —2V4 17 44 43Va 43'/% .. .. 13 39Va 39% 39% + Vi 3 28% 28V% 28% + % 44»/% 44% ...... 57% 57Va — % 63 63 ^ 7^ .. .. . 47Va 48 — 3 15% 15% 15% .. ...... 41% 41'/% — % .. ..... 38% 38% — '' 6 287/8 287/% 287/8 — 41 19% 19»/f 19»/% — 34 104% 103 103 —1 -. 43 38% 38% 38.% + V4 31 43% 43'/% 43% - % 7 89Va 88 88 —IVa 3 60%. 60% 60% 4- % . % ■+ Va !l% 21% — V% .9% 19% + 54 36% 36 36% — % 4 27% 27V% 27% ...A. 14 45% 45% 5% ........ 26 35% 34% 34% — % 37 . 57% 56% 57% — V4 —P— J1 32'/, 3m 32"ii .... 5 2 ’/A 27V, 27V. ... " • '/I levs lew — vt 22 22 -------- 3'/a , 23Ve 23'/a . ■■ '3S’/y 34’/, — W Varian Asso Vendo Co .60 Va El Pw Stock Exchange Gen Mills .so ............................JT!3+o.i*;........... Indusirlar .................. 61.15 f 0.34, GenMot Transportation ............. 54,52 -f 0.12 GenPrec UtllttV .................... 42.33 •fo.oe opubyi Flhince .................., .. 65,33 -1-0.34 GTel El .... ie ' 4IW 41W 41W 60 5e'/t — H - „ie'/, ales ie*/ii-v, 7 54'/i |4Va ?8'/i -V H 0 3 43 43 72 S3W BT/O 03W ie 45 M 4040 10 26W 26W 26'/0 72 4iw 40VO 4im . 2 'A 23'A 23'A .. I 3 ’/O . 33’/, 33W .. i 3fA 67 67'/, + '/O StOllOh 2.50b ...... .......... St Packaging StauffCh 1.80 Sterl Drug 1 StevensJ 2.25 StudeWorth 1 Sun Oil 1b Sunray 1.50 SurvyFd .56e Swift Co .60 TampaEI .72 e 64V0 64 Ind. Bells -------------- , -42.0 -H.4 +.3 ■41.6 489.4 21U 143.3 345.1 .. 487. 210.2 143.0 343.5 . 482.0 204.5 142.7 338.5 . 473.1 192.1 142.7 328.8 462.5 194.5 148.2 327.1 487.4 210.2 154.1 343.5 35.6 165.6 135.1 299.1 ...............493.2 209.6 159,1 342.6 1967 Low ............413.4 159.4 136.5 292.8 Week Ago .. Month Ago . Year Ago ,. 968 High . Dulcimer Tones LINCOLN, Neb. (AP)-God-fried Schumacher, 91, salvages parts from discarded pianos to create a new instrument — tiie dulcimer, a type of zither that sounds similar to a hafpsi-choyd. Schumacher has built several from salvaged wood and metal fixtures of old pianos. / NEW TAKEOUT PLACE - Chicken in a Drum, a carry-out service, recently opened at 3128 Huron, Waterford Township. Chicken dinners for one to six people, drums of chicken, and barbecued spareribs are ail PonllAc Pruts Phott available, according to manager Everett Stoner. Side salads are also sold by the pint. Hours are from 10 a.m. to 11 p m. Friday and Saturday and from 11 a.m. to ip p.m. Sunday through Thursday. Associated Press poll reveals. But delegates are undecided as to what—if any—role Sen. Edward M. Kennedy should play at the August convention in Chicago. Several delegates expressed hope that Kennedy would be the vice presidential nominee. ★ * R A total of 39 Michigan delegates said they would vote for Humphrey. Only three said they supported Sen. Eugene M. McCarthy, D-Minn. However, 36 delegates said they were undecided as to which candidate they would support. Some added that it was possible a man not cur-' rently viewed as a candidate could capture the nomination. MOST CONTACTED More than three-fourths of Michigan’s 102-member delegation was contacted during the poll. The remainder could not be reached for comment. One delegate said he would vote for Edward M. Kennedy on the first ballot as the presidential nominee. Another said he would vote for former Gov. G. Mennen Williams. * ★ * Kennedy, brother of slain President John F. Kennedy, has not announced any plans since Robert F. Kenedy last week in Los Angeles. Alex Ott of Plint said he had received a tremendous response from persons in his area wanting Kennedy to be named to the second spot on the Democratic ticket. STRONGEST TICKET Humphrey and Kennedy would make the strongest ticket, added Sen. Coleman Young, D-Detroit. Several delegates said they had heard reports that Kennedy would seek the presidential nomination or be pressured to accept the vice presidential Baffling Economic Problem Is It Inflation vs. Jobs? By JOHN CUNNIFF AP Business Analyst NEW YORK - During recent months the job situation has been at its best in nearly 15 years and in-f 1 a t i 0 n at its] worst in about | 17 years. And in that relationship lies one of t h e most baffling problems of practical economics. The problem is this: can ; free economy obtain full employment without inflation? Or, seems to have been demonstrated, is a point reached where a scarcity of labor inevitably means higher prices? ★ ★ ★ The reasons for this diabolical Some people called and said Ted Kennedy is ghing to run," explained Murray E. Jackson of Detroit. “I don’t believe it, but if he did it would be a different ball game altogether. Many explained that it is speculation at this point to say what Kennedy iKdll do. NOW UNCOMMITTED Nearly all delegates who said they supported Robert F. Kennedy for the nomination are now uncommitted. Joseph B. Sullivan of Detroit, a former Kennedy supporter, said he now leans to McCarthy. •R ★ ★ However, Sullivan added. I’m not sure he understands the foundations of the problem. A philosopher and po^ he is, and grand things they are, but I’m Pot sure they make him qualified to be president.” Colorado Firm Bought by Chain With Local Ties The half-century-old Charles . Wells Music Co,, Denver, Colo., has been purchased by American Music Stores, Inc. AMS president Jack J. Wainger announced recently. AMS is the parent of WKC Furniture Store and Grinnell Brothers music stores in the Pontiac area. ★ * ★ The cash sum w disclosed. Expansion planning begins immediately, according to Wain* ger. Nel chungt ... +.2 Noon Thun. 6.2 87.3 Prev. Duy . 64.2 87.1 Wuuk Ago . 64.5 87.4 Month Ago . 64.2 07.4 Yeor Ago . 71.3 92.2 1960 HIgli ..66.3 80.9 ... Lovy .. 64.0 06.3 70./ High..73.0 95.6 Low .. 64.6 86.1 81.2 92.1 84.9 CUNNIFF search for economic growth with stable prices and full employment. Growth and stability have been achieved at one time or another since then. But full employment at the same time has been reached in definition only. INTERIM GOAL In 1966, when unemployment was reduced to 4 per cent, the administration claimed its “interim goal” had been reached. At least for the time being, this was “full employment.” An Unofficial goal of 3 per cent then was set. True, the rate of joblessness has slowly been approaching that goal. But so has inflation been growing. ★ * ★ A situation seems to exist, therefore, that for the time being aborts the best intenUwis I force in May accompanied by inflation of about 4 per cent. SECRET TAX The low jobless rate meant that 75.9 million workers had jobs and only 2.8 million Wfere without employment. The bi{^ rate of inflation meant that a man earning $10,000 a year was secretly being taxed at the rate of $400 a year. It isn’t a surprise either to find that some economists now feel that an economic impasse has been reached and that one or the other—inflation or ]ot»— must soon give way. it looks as if jobs mi^t be the los< relationship are not obscure; a of economic planners. An ob-scarcity of labor means that vious solution Is controls on wages are bid up, causing prices also to rise; a scarcity of labor means that low productivity workers must be hired. Despite this relationship, the Employment Act of 1946 committed the government to a wages, prices and credit, but such controls mean the cessation of a free economy. In the absence of controls, is not strange to find the extremely low unemployment rate of 3.5 per cent of the total' GIs Find 32 VC Missiles SAIGON (AP) - U.S. soldiers scouring Saigon’s rocket belt Thursday found 32 enemy missiles and killed 26 guerrillas. But despite the 12,000 allied troops combing the area, the Vietcong fired four rockets into Tan Son Nhut airbase, killing one American and damaging a plane. Saigon itkelf escaped attack for the third straight day. ★ ★ ★ The biggest cache of rockets was found by men of the U.S. 1st Infantry Division six miles northeast of the capital. They uncovered and destroyed 22 rounds of 107mm Chinese rockets, which made their first appearance in the Vietnam war ist February. Troops of the U.S. 25th Infantry Division accounted for Iff of the big 122mm Soviet rockets with which the Vietcong has been blasting at Saigon since May 5. Nine were found in four sampans submerged in a canal nine miles northwest of Saigo and the 10th was located at firing site five miles northwest of the capital. News in Brief Willie J. Hawkins, 40, of 73 Henry Clay yesterday reported to Pontiac police that his garage had been broken into during the night and that an outboard motor and fishing equipn\ent, valued at a total of about $460, were stolen. Rummage. St. Paul Church, 165 East Square Lake Road, Bloomfield Hills. Saturday, June 15, 7 a.m. to 1 p.m. Clothing, washer, dishes, furnSture, stove, swing set. —Adv. Rummage Sale — Four-Towns Methodist Church, Saturday, June 15, 9-12, Cooley and Loc-haven Rd. —Adv. A U.S. spokesman said the firing site had been used in the shelling of Tan Son Nhut' Wednesday, when at least 10 killed four Vietnamese and wounded 26 other civilians, including two Americans. The spokesman said there were 17 patches of ground charred by rockets blasting off from the -site, plus 14 . crude launching tripods and 12 aiming stakes. ★ ■R ★ The 26 guerrillas were killed in two clashes, and six U.S. soldiers were wounded. In addition to the thousands of allied troops searching in a radius of seven miles around the capital, the distance from which the big enemy rockets can hit the city, more radar equipment reportedly has been installed to pinpoint the enemy launching sites for counterfire. ■R ' > R While U.S. military officials believe they can reduce the rocket attacks on Saigon, they say there is no way to eliminate them. The Vietcong always will be able to sneak a few men and rockets through the allied trols, they say. Antique Sale: Pilot Club, 835 Menominee. Corner. Ontario, Sat., June 15,8-3.-Adv. Saturday, June 15, 4 p.m. to 7 _ m., beef barbeque will be held at the United Oxford Methodist Church; 21 East Burdick. To benefit the Methodist Youth Summer Camp. Adults $1.50, children $1.00. Tickets obtainable from the youth. Come_ as you are. —Adv. .... Garage Sale: June 15,16, from 'm ova Toll 10-6, 435 l^ilVersity Dr. -Adv. Lower-Courf Bill Received by Romney LANSING (UPI) - The long, sought and highly controversial bill to reorganize Michigan’s lower courts officially went to Gov. George Romney Thunday. House Speaker Robert E.. Waldron, R-Grosse Pointe, said the bill came fi'om the printer and went to Romney’s desk at 4:30 p.m. Romney now has 14 days to the minute to sign or veto the measure. R R R If he does neither, it becomes law without his signature. He was expected to sign it so machinery for election of 102 to 182 new district judges this year can get roUling. SEVEN DAY Eligible cities will have seven days after the bill becomes law to decide whether to exempt their municipal courts froni ^ law's proyisimis — a factm* tliat Waldron said prompted him to announce when the bill went to Romney so they can decide what to do. ::::::: Ml ....... 124.4 10 Higher grade ral 10 Second grade ral 10 Public utilltln . 10 Induatrlals ...... . 74.91-0.01 . 62.2S-0.07 . 75.11-0.02 . 7».iW.01. . I2J0+0.01 ACCUMULATIVa Pec PowSLt . RSOULAR ir ..25 G Business Notes Roderick V. Wiley, Pontiac Motor Division’s national busi-e s s management manager, was honored recently with certificate of appreciation from General Motors Institute. Wiley of 6425 jj,Wing Lake, loomfleld Township, was honored for his 20 years of participation as a guest lecturer WILEY Very Cold Cash NASHVILLE, Tenn. m -Police are hot on the trail of a thief who made off with $322 in extremely cold cash. The stolen money, in a bank sack, was taken from its hiding place in the freezer at a 1 o c al restaurant. ' in the GM Institute Dealership Management Program. PFEIFFER BAISCB Two men were promoted as of July 1 at Michigan Se«nkM» 'Tube Co. Carl E. Pfeiffer of 2559 Bradway, Bloomfield Town-ship, has been elected corporate executive vice president dl' Michigan Seamless Thbe Co. and sub.sidiaries. Walter E Balsch of Brighton was elected president of the Standard Tube Co., division of Michigan Seam* less. R R R Pfeiffer is a member of Qie board of diractmn of the parent 'qnd subsidiary compi^^.