The Weather
windy, Snow Flurries
THE PONTIAC PRESS
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VOL. 123 NO. 280
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PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 31, 1965—24 PAGES
State Apportioned Reject Compromises as Deadline Looms
France, NATO Hear Peace Envoy
LANSING (4) — Apportionment commissioners rejected two Saginaw-Bay City Senate compromises today as they neared their midnight deadline for re-districting the state.
There was no concrete evidence th^t the commis-V. * —;—sion could agree before - the court^ordered-dead*-
World Festive and Prayerful
line.
If the commission cannot agree, the next step will be up to the Supreme Court. y, | Democrat Robert Kleiner pro-j posed joining Saginaw with Mid-| land instead of Bay City but Welcome New Yeor,our ot
Road Mishaps Take livesrof 2-From-Area -
Today's Forecast Is Staggering: Freeze-Up Is Due
All Law Enforcement Agencies Strengthen Holiday Pcitrol Units
Withjfope for Peace
the bipartisan body — including Democrat Ivan Brown —voted and two others abstained.
NEW YORK (AP) - The world welcomes the new year tonight with joyous celebration and a prayer for peace.
It is a time of merrymakers, resolutions, popping corks — and cannons.
The West Germans will see 1IM in with a bang. They are all set to blow «p $15 million worth of fireworks, almost 50 per cent more than last year.
Republican William Hanna could get only a party-line 4-4 deadlock on his amendment to Kleiner’s proposal, which juggled four municipalities in the area.
Republicans have argued that Saginaw and Bay City, now joined in a district controlled by Democrats, should be split. Democrats until today had insisted on keeping the two cities together.
According to German folklore, the bangs and flashes of Sylvester (New Year’s Eve) are supposed to frighten off demons and evil spirits.
In the Moslem nations the observance of the new year may be somewhat subdued. It comes this year on the sixth day of madan, the Moslem holy month of fasting.
NO KISSING, DRINKING The Islamic faithful have been warned that kissing and drinking are forbidden.
Roman Catholics are looking forward to the new year as the start of a special jubilee proclaimed by Pope Paul VI to mark the closing of the Vatican Ecumenical Cowell.
Kleiner, who Said he worked through the night drafting his plan, said it breached two county lines instead of three as at j present but retained the Democrats’ concept' that Saginaw I should not be entirely split I
In New York’s Times Square — a traditional New Year’s Eve gathering place — a new $10, illuminated digital clock controlled by signals from the U.S. Naval Observatory will time the arrival of 1966.
Along some of the nation’ turnpikes, highway patrols prepared big urns of coffee in (Continued on Page 2, Col. 5)
Area law enforcement agencies have launched stepped-up road patrol programs as the holiday weekend opened with three major traffic acci-dents resulting in the death of two persons and serious injury of another.
Killed in Pontiac area accidents last night and this morn: iAg were John G. Stewart, 14, of 7235 Meadow-
_ The new year should arrive in wintery fashion tonight with' lows of 22 to 30 and occasional snow flurries. Cloudy skies and windy weather are forecast
New Year’s Day, tomorrow, will have variable cloudiness, cold temperatures and scattered snow flurries. Highs will range from 28 to 36.
Sunday’s weather picture has |)artiy cloudy weather with scattered showers and little change in temperatures.
Winds this morning were south-southwest at 15 to 30 miles per hour. Shifting to the west at 18 to 35 miles per hour late this afternoon, tney will become northwesterly at 15 to 25 miles per hour tonight.
Fifty-two was the low temperature preceding 8 a.m. today. The mercury was up to 57 at 2 p.m.-
P Reds Defiant as U.S. Seeks Negotiations
Bad Weather Halts Plan to Visit; Tjto; India Is j^eDct on List
lake, Bloomfield Township, and Donald K. Pearce, 26, of 134 Williams Lake, Waterford T o w n a h i p. In serious condition at Pro-
from the metropolitan area ofltlac General Hospital is Virgil which it is a hub.	jVandecar Sr., 48, of 116
The plan would have put Sens. Brooklyn.
Jerome Hart, D-Saginaw, and Robert Richards, R - Saginaw Township, into the same district.
The State Supreme Court earlier this year gave the commission 60 days in which to produce new districting. It did not, however, specifically throw out existing plans.
Democrats yielded to Republican proposals shifting outlying areas of a Muskegon-area Senate district, but the. GOP turned down over-all proposals incorporating the shift.
Again Republicans argued some population disparity should be permitted so that greater unity and regularity of districts, could be achieved.
But Democrats turned down the GOP’s plan which included disparities of up to 5 per cent.
State police have canceled all leave days for the weekend am} will have National Guardsmen assisting in patrol. The sheriff’s department will use some 20 reserve deputies for road duty.
"7.
PCH Student
Irons, Lutz, Pontiac Police Chief William Hanger and Waterford Township Police Chief William Stokes all warn that drunk drivers will go to jail. PHYSICIAN’S SON The Stewart youth, son of a physician, died five hours after car driven by his mother, Mrs. Maitland Stewart, was struck
Gets Final Driver Award
A Pontiac Central High School student has been selected as the final winner in the month-long safe-driver awards program.
ROBERT C. PIERCE
In Today's Press
Grid Bonuies Detroit owner of AFL champs ’ “out of money derby.”-PAGE 14.
Viet Conflict
Expect intensification if peace bid fails.—PAGE 4.
Bogus Money fortlines in counterfeit bills found in three states. -PAGE 8.
Area News........... I
Astrology ......... • 12
Bridge ......... .. It
Crossword Putle .... 23
Comics ............ It
Editorials ......... 4
Markets ..........  17
Obituaries ..........18
Sports...........13-15
Theaters .......... 84
TV, Radio Programs 23
WOmb, Earl........	23
ages ...16-11
Robert C. Pierce, 18, of 36 Sanderson is this week’s winner of a $25 U.S. Savings Bond awarded by the Pontiac Exchange Club.
The safe-driver awards pro-‘ gram during the month of December has been sponsored by the Pontiac Exchange Clnb, the traffic safety committee of the Pontiac Area Chamber of Commerce and the Pontiac Police Department Pierce watuated for pulling to the curb to’phrmit an ambulance on an emergency run to pass. Three other drivers failed to do so.
Oakland County Sheriff Frank W. Irons and Sgt. Karl W. Lutz, commander of the Pontiac State Police Post, have bolstered regular road patrol units for the holiday weekend.
broadside by a truck at Telegraph and Maple.
Bloomfield Township police said Mrs. Stewart had started to make a left hand turn onto Maple when the collision with the southbound truck occurred shortly after 5:30 p.m.
Mrs. Stewart and Melvin L. Marek, 31, of Livonia, the driver of the truck, did not require hospitalization.
New Yorkers in a Scramble
ITALIAN GREETS GOLDBERG—U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Arthur J. Goldberg (left) is greeted by Italian Premier Aldo Moro in Rome yesterday prior to their meeting on Viet Nam. Moro cut short
his year-end vacation to see Goldberg. Since the resignation of Italian Foreign Minister Amintore Fantani, Moro has been forced to shoulder added responsibilities.
Subway, Bus Strike Set to Start Tomorrow
Drug-Giving Errors j Tentative OK Said Not Uncommon 'n ^mmo
NEW YORK W - Public offi-
Hope Restoration of Supplies to Start Soon
By ALTON BLAKESLEE
dais and private dthmatfain-	Associated Press Science Editor
bled today for everything onh	|
wheels that could help keep thisj BERKELEY, Calif. — Many more errors occur ini
city on the move if the vast gjvjng drugs in hospitals than is commonly assumed,! WASHINGTON (AP) — After municipal subway and bus sys-	. t declared thi< week	'	lfour days of intensive bar«aln-
terns are shut down by a strike a researctl team declared tms weeK.	l negotiators in a gunpowder
tomorrow morning.	I They range from serious or occasionally fatal mis- plant strike have reached a ten-
Car pools were being hastily takes to errdrs or giving a prescribed drug at the wrong time, or giving a different brand of the same basic drug, said Kenneth BaAer of the University Cfnnl | nmnanvk Arkansas Medical Cen-JICUI UUI ll|JUliy ter Hospital in Little Rock.
_ f _	,	| A study six years ago in a
Prm Florida hospital showed that “at
* WASHINGTON M — Special presidential envoys carried America’s Viet Nam peace drive tc>: day to France’s President Charles de Gaulle and the North Atlantic Treaty Organization council. India’s Prime Minister Lai Bahadur Shastri is next on the calling list.
But the -only open response from the other side was a defiant call from President Ho Chi Minh of North Viet Nam for the Viet Cong to press on for “new and greater victories.”
The special envoys were U.N. Ambassador Arthur J. Goldberg, in Paris far* talks With de GauUe and a report to a hurriedly called session of the NATO permanent counoil.
Ambassador W. Averell Har-riman had a date with Yugoslav President Tito today following up his conference with Polish leaders in Warsaw Wednesday but had weather prevented his flying to see Tito. He is expected in New Delhi Saturday to see Shastri.
formed, Businesses began booking hotel rooms for employes.
Aoto rental and charter bus companies were swamped with reservations for business companies and groups of commuters. Commuter railroads prepared for extra traffic.
John V’ Lindsay, who will, take office as mayor at midnight tonight, announced that group-riding in taxicabs would'
NEW YORK (UPD—Bethlehem
be permitted.
He urged that private cars not enter the city except to bring in people who were required to work, and he said such, cars should be fully occupied. Lindsay made the pfea because of threatened traffic congestion.
Lindsay also suggested that employers work out “reasonable” staggered working schedules for their employes.
Pearce was killed, when his car and a semi-truck, driven by Elmer J. Sahrow, 60, of Mount Clemens, met head-on at 3 a.m. in Avon Township on Auburn near Adams.
NOT INJURED Sahrow was not injured. Vandecar was a passenger in a car driven by his wife Beth, 44, when their vehicle and one driven by Donald J. Card, of 4049 Island Park, Waterford Township, collided on Baldwin near Merrimac last night.
A passenger in Card’s vehicle, Russell Lotan, 19, of 640 Louns-bury, Rochester, was listed in satisfactory condition today in Pontiac General Hospital.
The AFL - CIO Transport Workers Union (TWU) has threatened a strike for 5 a.m. — an hour when New Year’s Eve celebration stragglers would be about the only jier-sons seeking transportation.
The full impact on the metropolitan area’s 15'million residents would not ,be -felt until Monday morning when the work week starts-
Press Will Publish Early Edition Saturday
The Pontiac Press will publish only one, early edition tomorrow so that Press employes may spend New Year’s Day with their families.
Normal publication will resume Monday.
Steel Corp. today announced a $5 per ton increase on large volume steel products in a surprise move that was expected draw fire from the White House.
The price increase was ah-nounced less than two months after the Johnson administration defeated attempts by the copper and aluminum industries to institute a round of price increases for their metals.
A $6 per. ton acrosi-the-board steel price hike in 1982 was defeated by President Kennedy, bat the steel industry. shortly' thereafter took another route—selected price increases—to obtain a higher return on a large number of steel items.
Bethlehem spokesman in Bethlehem, Pa., said the price increases would apply to structural steel which accounts for about 7 per, cent- of the entire steel industry’s sales on a tionwide basis.
The White House-had no mediate comment today on the announcement.
Acting Press Secretary Joseph Laitin told newsmen at the Texas White House “I have nothing on it now.”
least every sixth dose administered was in error" in some way.-
“Since the average patient received roughly six to,eight doses n day, this was a ratio of approximately one error per patient a day,” Barker said. Similar rates , of error have been fqund in other studies since then, he added, but a new experimental system in Arkansas of controlling drug administration has, in early Testing, ‘cut the over-all error rate by more than half.”
RATE REDUCED If giving drugs at the wrong time — not on schedule, for example — is'excluded, the error rate for ail other error types combined was reduced 82 per cent.
If giving the wrong brand is also excluded, the over-all er-(Continued on Page 2, Col. 3)
tative settlement that the administration hopes will restore some dwindling ammunition supplies for Viet Nam.
The rebuilding of critical gunpowder stocks conld resume after the New Year’s weekend if the 4,200 strikers at the (Min Mathieson plant in East Alton, approve the agreement reached here Thursday night.
"Early Retiring Creates Jobs'
DETROIT (AP) - The United Auto Workers said today its early retirement program created approximately 10,200 job openings during the first three months the plan was in effect.
The union said 9,200 workers retired before age 65 at the four auto firms and 1,020 retired under the same program at farjp implement manufacturers in the United States.
“To a considerable extent,” said UAW President Waiter P. Reuther, “early retirement... satisfies the need to create job opportunities for the unemployed, the underemployed and the young people entering the work force — and with a national unemployment rate of 4.2 per cent, we need those job openings.”
The retirements in the period from September, when the program went into effect, through November, were compared with 241 early retirements from the four ante firms in the same period of 1IM. .	,
. The union said its report fori year, the UAW said. This was the September-November period compared with 120 GM workers was the latest for which figures who retired prior to age 65 in were available.	(the comparable . three-month
The early retirement plan Penod °* 19M-
The early pension plan was won by-ibe UAW in 1964 protract bargaining with General Motors, Ford Motor Co., Chrysler Corp., American Motors Corp., International Harvester, John Deere and Caterpillar Tractor.
also took effect this month at approximately a dozen parts and supplier companies Whose workers are represented by the UAW.
The program provides an incentive supplement which can give a pension of as much as 8400 a month to union workers who retire prior to age
At General Motors, 5,280'work-ers retired under'tills program" in the three-month period this
AT CHRYSLER At Chrysler, there were 1,753
early retirements in the three months this year, comi with 59 in the same period last year, the UAW said.
At Ford, 1,931 took early retirement, compared with 45 the previous year, the union said.
The UAW laid similar figures for. American Motors were 224 .this year, 17jast year, and at International harvester, 646 this year, 40 last year.
After a meeting with French Foreign Minister Maurice Couve de Murville preliminary to his call on de Gaulle, Goldberg said his mission could not be described “in terms of hope, optU mism or pessimism,”
Bargaining for the month-long strike was switched to Washington Monday at the request of the Federal Mediation Service.
Chief Federal Mediator William E. Simkin said the tentative agreement was communicated to the White House and Pentagon and “everybody in the administration is gratified at this step.”
AMMUNITION LOW The 'Illinois plant is the sole manufacturer of a special gunpowder used in some rifle bullets, tracer bullets and 20 millimeter cannon shells which the government said were running low during tile strike.
But Pentagon spokesmen emphasized that, up to now, there has been no ammunition shortage in Vi^t Nam.
As for the question whether he had learned anything from Couve de Murville about possi-(Continued on Page 2, Col. 6)
VC Hit Billet; Pole Defects to Viet Police
SAIGON, South Vipt Nam (AP)—;The Communists blasted a U.S. enlisted men’s barracks and aimed a major New Year’s offensive at a provincial capital today but took a propaganda setback with the defection. of a Polish diplomat.
The Pole, Anatdl Slavinski of Lodz,' 25, ran into a Saigon police station this morning and asked for asylum.
Other Polish diplomats ran The agreement was initialed fa “■ demanding his by the three unions involved	***•* Mt sufienly
Thursday night.	when Vietnam
when Vietnamese police turned them down after a shooting match.
Slavinski was assigned to the Polish delegation on the. three-nation control commission.
The commission is a peace keeping agency created under the 1964 agreements on Indochina that freed the area from French rule and created North and South Viet Nam. Its other members are India and Canada.
SHOW DETERMINATION The Viet Cong gave a new show of their fighting determination on the eighth day of the suspension of U.S. air raids
ran KInw4li Uiaf Mom anil/ in
AP Plwttfax
HOLIDAY WARNlNG-Lt. Grover Paymi, traffic division chief of the Huntington Beach, Calif., Police Department, who is credited with the slogan “The Driver Who Drinks Will Have a Policeman for a Chaser,” springs from a water tumbler to prove he means it—touch to the surprise of William Mears of Orange, Calif. The trick photography situation was created by Clay Miller of Santa Ana, Calif.	i
on North Viet Nam ana in 4 (Continued on Page 2, Col. 7)
Income Tax Articles Will Start on Monday
Starting Monday, The Press wifi present a 14-part series designed to help oar readers save money when filing their 1985 income tax.
The series is “Cat Year Own Taxes,” written by tax expert Ray De Crane. It contains many belpfnl hints ta prevent wage earners from overpaying on their return, a < common error committed by . over two million people lari year.
m
■4
TWO
THE PONTIAC Pq^SS, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 81, 196J
Birmingham Area News
Art Group's Program for Youth Is Upgraded
\ Federal Curbs Near on Exhaust Fumes
; WASHINGTON (AP) - The, government moves closer today to national control of the air polluting materials which spew from cars and light trucks.
Proposed federal standards, to start with 1968 models, are being published in the Federal Register.
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Suggested changes dan be made during the. following 30 days.
Then the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare will make any revisions it deems necessary, and publish the regulations in the Register to take effect immediately. IMPORTANT STEP
“With these standards,” Welfare Secretary John W. Gardner said, “we will take an important step toward controlling pollution from the nation’s greatest single source of qjr pollution.”
But a . .department statement said air pollution research indicates automotive pollutants contribute to eye and throat irritation and possibly to major respiratory diseases in all parts of the country.
And it said studies alsd have shown vegetation and property damage attributable to such pollution in 27 states and the District of Columbia.
WOULD APPLY TO ALL [The federal rules would apply to all gasoline-powered automobiles and light trucks, whether manufactured in or imported into the United States.
They were developed following this year’s passage of the clean air act amendments which authorized regulation of vehicle discharges believed hazard to health or welfare.<
_	Among other things, the pro-
The secretary noted im posed standards would set max-similar standards already h.ave|imum aIlowabIe ratea for ^
been adopted in California starting with 1966 vehicles.
Senate Set to Block Appointment
LANSING (AP)—Senate Democrats plan to block confirmation of Maj. Gen. Clarence Schnipke as Michigan director of military affairs until court tests of his predecessor’s firing are complete.
Majority Leader Sen. Raymond Dzendzel, D-Detroit, confirmed Thursday that his forces do not think Schnipke should _ the job until Maj. Gen. Ronald McDonald, ousted by Gov. George Romney, has exhausted ■ his appeals.
Democrats would have rejected Schnipke Thursday, said Dzendzel, but they did not have the required 20 votes present as the Legislature formally ad-. joumed for the year.
When lawmakers return Jan. 12, there will be three days remaining before Schnipke would automatically take office.
HELD HEARING
Romney fired McDonald as adjutant general of the Michigan National Guard earlier this year after a lengthy bearing into National Guard irregularities. McDonald has twin cases in Appeals Court, one objecting to the hearing, the other to Sch-nipke’s right to hold office.
Romney first named Schnipke adjutant general, then director of the state’s military department, a new title created by government reorganization.
Dzendzel said Democrats have nothing personally against Schnipke. But he disagreed with Romney’s firing of McDonald.
| discharge of two major automo-ative air pollutants —hydrocarbons and carbon monoride. Hydrocarbons are a major ingredient in the formation of smog; carbon monoxide is a lethal gas.
The proposed standards for engines of 140 or more cubic inches cylinder displacement would limit tailpipe exhaust of hydrocarbons to an average of not more than 275 parts per million of exhaust and carbon monoxide to an average of 1.5 per cent by volume over the entire life of the vehicle.
36 RESCUED—Coast Guard helicopters and ships rescued 36 persons from this windjammer which hit a coral beef and grounded 20 miles southeast of Miami,'Fla., early to-
AP Photofax
day. The crew and passengers were taken to Homestead Air Force Base and to Miami Beach.
U.S. Spreads Peace Drive
(Continued From Page One) ble changes in the French attitude toward Viet Nam, Goldberg suggested that reporters ask 0ie French.
Goldberg was little more communicative after his meeting of an hour and 20 minutes frith de Gaulle.
He said he had told the French leader of “President Johnson’s earnest desire to. seek an early and honorable settlement of the Vietnamese conflict” and asserted that such settlement can be achieved only “at the conference table without prior conditions/’ ’ Goldbergimid*”^^ course expressed his own view which I will report to President Johnson.”
The envoy carried a message from Johnson to de Gaulle but it was not disclosed.
CANNOT SPEAK “I cannot speak for the gener-
36 Are Plucked From Sea as Vessel Rams Into Reef
BIRMINGHAM -The Bloom-
field Art Association has revamped its growing young people’s program along the lines of the adult schedule for the Upcoming winter term.
Five experienced, working artists have been added to the present staff of six to teach in the expanded program. The term starts Jan. 17 and will continue for 10 weeks.
Advanced students will work from live models for the first time in a new portraiture coarse, as well as file classes ffi diT painting afidZdrriring and perspective.
The portraiture instructor painter - sculptor Patricia Burnett.
Additional classes in introduction to art are being offered this term to met the increased demand.
ceramics, weaving, metal work
al,” Goldberg told newsmen	varifh
who asked whether de Gaulle C0URSES VAMED had made any constructive Placed according to age,
I suggestions for ending the Viet I yoimgster 6 to 12 learn the fun Nam war.	|of art by working in sculpture,
I Goldberg is flying home to-rawing, painting, printmiddng, night.	. J—-----------zr——7—
I Harriman’s next move was announced by the U.S. Em-
MIAMI, Fla. (AP) - The 96-foot sailing vessel Mandalay smashed Into a coral reef 20 miles southeast of Miami today, but Coast Guard helicopters
The average car without anMved aU 25 passengers and 11
exhaust control system gives off about 800 parts per million of hydrocarbons and 3.5 per cent of carbon monoxide from its exhaust
Less stringent standards were developed for smaller engines, including the small imported cars, because they discharge smaller volume of pollutants than the larger engines, the department said.
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Gardner warned that stiffer controls will be needed before 1980 when motor vehicles will be so numerous as to make the present standards inadequate.
Said the secretary: “That will pose an even more serious problem for the motor vehicle industry, and they should begin thinking about it now.”
Ex-Mental Patient,
83, Falls to Death
DETROIT (AP)—Art 83-year-old woman fell to her death from a room in the Roberts Hotel, police said. She was the fourth former mental patient in five months to fall to death at the hotel.
TTie body of Cathleen Naylor who, like ^ the other three women, was a former patient at Ypsilanti State Hospital, was found today.
The Weather
Foil U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY - Cloudy, windy and mild with occasional light rain or drizzle this morning, turning colder with scattered snow flurries by late afternoon. Highs today 55 to to with steady or falling temperatures by late afternoon. Cloudy, windy and colder with occasional snow flurries tomorrow. Highs 28 to 31. South to southwest winds 15 to 38 miles this morning, shifting to the west at 18 to 35 miles late this afternoon and becoming northwest at 15 to 25 miles tonight. Outlook for Sunday: Partly cloudy with scattered showers and little change in temperature.
I Velocity 1 m.p.h.
Om Year Afo la Pont lac
Weather: Dark, dlimal Hlflliad and Leweet Temperatures 1
Downtown Temperatures
Thursday's Temperature Chart Alpena , 44 17 Jacksonville 70 Or. Kaplde1	47	41	Kanabe City	a
Houghton	J7	14	Loe Angeles	40
Lansing .55	44	Miami Beach	75	..
Marquette	41	15	Milwaukee	51	14
Muskegon 5) 4t» New Orleans 74 ~~ Pension -	43	is	New York	51
Traverse C.	51	41	Omaha	44
Albuquerque	54	14	Phoenix'
Atlanta	44	41	r---------
Bismarck	M	1	I
Cincinnati
Denver
Detroit
DuMh
44 41 Pittsburgh 54 51
54 54 s. Francisco 55 41 54 S. S. Marie 14 41 14 Seattle 14 5) 44 Tampa 74 P 8 —Bp
44 41
AP Pholefax
NATIONAL WEATHER—Rain is forecast tonight for the Mississippi valleys. Snow is expected to fail over the Great north Atlantic coastal region, the Ohio, Tennessee, and lower Lakes region, the upper Mississippi Valley, the northern Rockies and the Pacific Northwest.
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crewmen from angry seas.
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The vessel, part of the fleet of Windjammer Cruises, was on a 50-mile run from Bimini Island in the Bahamas to Mianti when she hit the reef alpwfil a.m.
Drug Errors Not a Rarity
(Continued From Page One) ror rate was cut by 87 per cent. This is an error rate of 1.8 per cent of the total opportunity for errors, Barker told the American Association for tee Advancement of Science.
Other kinds of errors include failure to give prescribed drugs, giving the wrong drug to a patient, or too much, or too little of the prescribed drug, and giving a drug to the wrong patient.
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Dr. Barker’s coauthors were Dr. Wilson Kimbrough, search assistant for psychology, and Dr. William Heller, chief investigator of drug systems research at the Little Rock hospital.
FOUR DEATHS “Recently, in Pontiac, Mich, and in Boston,” Dr.' Barker reported, “a total of four persons died from medication errors.
“From the published reports of the Michigan deaths, it appears that someone put ether in a bottle labeled Surital — just 'temporarily/ of course. “However, oiir observers confirmed that such carelessness with labeling is common, and so such needless deaths will continue to occur.”
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'At the Arkansas medical cen-| ter, the new experimental centralized unit-dose dispensing System has been in operation two months.
SHARP REDUCTION	«!
A sharp reduction in errorsj covered 3,043 doses given in that time, compared with 10,348 given over a six-month period under the old system, Barker said.
Under the new system, each dose of drugs is delivered to the nurses in premeasured, packaged, labeled and ready-to administer form. Computer-controlled systems of medication could also help reduce error, he said.
Baiter noted that no adverse reaction of serious quences had been observed in tee Florida study, made at the University of Florida Teaching Hospital.
★	★ fr.
The causes for errors are 'complex, he said. Some are due to mistakes by nuries, some to dftoations, such as busy times; orders that are in error or are misunderstood. S o are t i m e s, there are no clues as to why an error occurred.
Most errprs probably are not even knowbAo anyone, including the nurses who made them, Barker added.
Twenty-five were flown to Homestead Air Force Base! south of here. Eleven others were taken in a patrol boat to the Coast Guard base at Miami Beach. All appeared in good condition.
It was a frightful experience,” said Wglter H. Ballard, president pHfie W. H. B. Chemical Corp. of Westchester, N.Y. WCH PARK’
'We were afraid the boat would fall apart. It was pitch dark and we were afraid of sharks.”
“We did some praying,” added M. C. Probst, 59, a teacher from Mansfield, Ohio. “We thank God we’re alive.”
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Probst said seas ran from three to six- feet, but the Coast Guard completed the rescue operation in 3V4 hours after the Mandalay first rammed into the rocks.
The Mandalay was the fourth of the Windjammer Cruises boats to run into trouble in five years. The line’s, owner, Capt.
New Year Prayer Is
Peace in '66	Em'! VC Hit "
An informant, who had re- i. ^	#
ported the plan earlier, said the| F'OlQ DGiGCiS (Continued From Page One) Ihurried trip was necessary be-1 .	.	.	cause Shastri is leaving Monday .	n /.
hcf» of teeing weary celebra-|for Tashkent( u.s.s.r., for a| fQ Viet POllCG
and hand design. Class' times are once a week after school or Saturdays.
Creative casting — miniature sculpture and Jewelry — is offered for the first time for the lS-to-18 year-old group. All phases, of casting miniature sculpture in gold, silver bronze will be explored from design to casting and finishing.
Another innovation is a printmaking 'class for young people.
. Uses and techniques of silk screening and relief painting processes will be featured.
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Printmaker and potter James Powell, another new instructor, will also teach students to construct their own printmaking equipment.
POTTERY IS POPULAR Pottery, a popular repeat course for beginners and advanced students, 12 to 18, teaches both hand building and thrown techniques. This term, staff member William Clover is introducing Raku, an old Japanese process of firing and salt glazing.
tors home safely.
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And everywhere the world awaited word on President Johnson’s- efforts to bring the war in Viet Nam to the negotiating table. Johnson has sent diplomatic missions abroad to talk to world leaders.
President and Mrs.' Johnson remained at the LBJ ranch in Texas, where White House press secretary Bill D. Moyers said they have no special plans for the evening. Chinese. Nationalist troops defending the Quemoy are under orders not to reply te routine Communist Chinese gunfire for three days starting today.
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____	_	__ The Quemoy defense command
Michael Burke, is in severailsaid the cease-fire is designed lawsuits resulting from troubles1 “to enable our compatriots on at sea.	{the mainland to celebrate the
AWAKE IN CABIN	y€ar, a"d *• annive^
-i , „ „ „ . ..	.. Jan. 1 of the founding of the
Clair Hall 59, Indianapolis, ^ ^ of ^ in 1912 Ind., real estate man, said he
his wife were awake in FREE COFFEE
their cabin when “we felt a couple of bumps like the keel was hitting.”
“Someone yelled for the captain,” he said, “and he came quickly and tried to pull the sails down. But'every time we hit, we hit harder.
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‘Hie waves drove us in until hit so hard we were fast.
‘But the only scarey thing was getting into the life raft. The waves rolled over the reef.
got hit by one that seemed 10 feet over my head, and It knocked me flat in the raft.” SON ASLEEP
When the Halls first felt the Jolt of the vessel against the barrier reef, their son, John, 13, was asleep in .the cabin.
‘My husband and I were on deck and when big waves hit the boat we would joke, ‘we just hit a truck,’ ” Mrs. Hall said.
Free coffee is being offered to motorists along the Massachusetts, Pennsylvania and New Jersey turnpikes.
And the Burlington, Vt., Free Press is offering for the fifth consecutive year to pay for funeral costs of anyone who plans to drink and drive New Year’s Eve. They have to register at the newspaper first.
Traffic patrols across the nation are being beefed up for the! holiday weekend.
★	★	★
Taking note of the mild weather forecast, Detroit Director of Traffic William Pol-kinghorn said:
★	★	★
“This kind of weather always induces speed, and coupled with drink and fatigue, it’s a ous situation.”
summit meeting with President Ayub Khan of Pakistan.
The embassy said Harriman! will stay only a day or two.
India, along with Poland which Harriman has already visited, and Canada where presidential assistant Mc-George Bundy has been, is a member of the three-nation control commission set np in 1954 for Southeast Asia. Somewhat in line with the attitude of de Gaulle, Shastri has been critical in the past of certain aspects of American policy in Viet Nam.
DEFIANT CALL The defiant call from Ho Chi Minh came in a Hanoi broadcast monitored in Tokyo, reporting a message from the North to the Viet Nam National Liberation Front — Viet Cong.
Ho claimed “glorious successes” in what he called “the valiant resistance war against the U.S. aggressors.”
In Moscow, Soviet Premier Alexei Kosygin demanded tonight that Americans withdraw completely from South Viet' Nam.
His statement reflected Russian scorn for President Johnson’s latest Viet peace Kosygin made the statement ix a group of Japanese newspaper correspondents.
'‘The Soviet government and the Soviet people condemn the U.S. aggression against the people of Viet Nam and they brand the aggressors with shame,” he said.
Kosygin, whose remarks were published in the government newspaper Izvestia, added:
“The Soviet government fully shares and supports the position of the DRV Communist North 'Viet Nam and the National Liberation Front Viet Cong about regulating the Viet Nam problem. The U.S.A. must immediately halt its aggression . . . and must withdraw its forces and dhnaments from South Viet Nam.”
(Continued From Page One)’ fiance of the intensive American peace maneuvers abroad.
One American was killed, another was missing and 10 Americans and one Vietnamese guard were wounded in the guerrilla raid on the military compound at Dalat, a mountain, resort 145 miles northeast of Saigon.
The area had been relatively free of terrorism.
Five guerrillas slipped into Les Ravines billet shortly aftpi midnight and opened fire with small arms and automatic weapons. Before fleeing they exploded two bombs, a military spokesman said.
Although U.S. fighter-bombers spared the North from attack tor another day, the big B52s of the Strategic Air Command roared in from Guam and pounded a suspected Viet Cong area in western Tay Ninh Province 75 miles northwest of Saigon near the Cambodian border. Asked to specify the target, an Air Force spokesman said: ‘Just about the whole area.” 430 SORITES
Other U S. Air Force and Navy planes and Vietnamese aircraft flew 430 combat sorties in the South, smashing buildings, sinking six sampans and strafing trenches and caves, the spokesman said.
Along the central coast, strong Communist forces were reported to have seized two outposts guarding the valley approaches to Quang Ngai city in a drive helped by heavy rain that hampered U.S. counterblows from the air.
One U. S. plane was hit by groundfire and crashed, presumably killing the pilot.
Other courses available for young people are Exploring New Materials, a class comprised of study and creative work in such media as collage, watercolor, egg tempera, inks and resists, and drawing and perspective, in which the class reviews Renaissance and other systems of perspective and applies them to a wide range of subjects.
The association office is at 1516 S. Cranbrook.
Avon Twp. Woman Is Injured in Crash
A 52-year-old Avon Township woman was listed in satisfactory condition this morning . in St. Joseph Mercy Hospital following a two-car crash yesterday afternoon.
Alma Sumner, 2885 St. Clair, received a fractured pelvis and collar bone in the accident at Wide Track and Saginaw.
She was*a passenger in a car driven by Grace M. Hoffheine, 28, of 2874 St. Clair, Avon Township. Driver of the other car was Claude A. Wiley, 55, of 162 Nevada, Avon Township.
Soviet Space Probe Is Corrected in Flight
MOSCOW (AP) - The Soivet space probe Venus 2' will pass “at the prescribed distance” from Venus, an official announcement said today.
The course of Venus 3, launched four days after Venus 2 was launched Nov. 12, had been corrected in flight “in order to bring it closer to Venus,” the announcement added.
lighter' Goes Bang
DALLAS (UPI) - A young woman picked up what she thought was a derringer shaped cigarette lighter and pulled the trigger to light up, and shot herself in the left index finger.
Timely Tips for Tipplers
NEW BRUNSWICK, N. J. m - You can tell some of the real drinkers, even before they have had a drink, according to a student of alcohol and its effects on drinkers.
“bn the way to the party the Voice gets louder, mildly funny, remarks are found to be hilarious, even drinking patterns are more carefree than usual before a drink is consumed,” says Robert W. Jones, associate director of the Rutgers University Center of Alcohol Studies.
“Moist people don’t really want to get drunk on New Year’s Eve — and they don’t,” Jones says “even by accident.” Both Jones and his associate, Dr. Leon Greenberg, discount word-of-mouth meas-sures designed to prevent intoxication.
★ ★ ★
Steak is as good as ~a glass of milk to “coat” the tommy in advance, because anything with a high protein content serves the same purpose. They advise eating a good meal before drinking much liquor. COFFEE MYTH
Both say coffee does not sober you up. “The only good it does is that you are not drinking alcohol while you drink the cqf-fee,” Jones says.
The coffee may prake yon np bat it won’t sober you np, Greenberg.says.
The best .bet is to space your drinks, one an hour would be ideal, they advise. “If you think you’ve had enough, wander around with a glass of ginger ale instead of Scotch^” Jones i
What to do about a hangover, nothing, according to Greenberg, who has been studying the effects of alcohol for 32 years and enjoys an occasional social drink. DRINK UNNECESSARY But Greenberg says studies have shown ‘ that a partygoer Who nibbles, the night through on snacks and. delicacies, smokes too much, and “runs around like a loon” will wake up the next morning with a hangover even if he didn’t have pny alcohol.
. ★ *' • .
To those that did imbibe, a couple of drinks the next morning' may bring temporary relief, “but it isn’t exactly the thing to do—it just postpones-the evij moment,” GreentNTg says. He adds:
A coU glass or water the first thing bn
awakening won’t make you drunk again, as Some say, it merely wakgs you Up enough to realize you are still drunk.
So suffer, if you’veTiad too much. Only time will help, although you can distract yourself by taking pills, he concludes. i
i iiiip
flIH'	'v.' \ .
\ " • '	;4|!
0
LOST HIS PUNCH?—Alabamir^Jov. George A. Wallace fractured a bone in his right wrist yesterday in Miami Beach, Fla., slugging a heavy punching bag*in a gym. Wallace, Alabama Golden Gloves bantamweight champion in 1836-37, said Ip didn’t know if foe punching bags are harder these days or if he was “getting old.”
THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 81, 1963
Dr Albert Schweitzer d even begin the study of n
until he was 90 years old.
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Betting Bug Brings 60 Years in Jail
BALTIMORE (UPI) - A 30-year-old accountant who won 15 bet on a Baltimore Colts football game three years ago then stole $1.5 million from firm trying for a repeat formance was sentenced to years in jail yesterday.
Howard L. Raley of more, married and father one child, wept as he told court, “I was just trying to even, and then quit.”
Raley added that he has been a compulsive gambler since he was 5 years old.
•He said thaT was rilckle dime stuff, playing cards with money he earned as a newspaper delivery boy.
The bug stayed wjth him, and; that $5 win on the football! 'game got him going on the big I binge, he said.
DAILY BET
May Alter Draft! Deferment Rule!
Ponder Wartime Basis j for College Students 1
WASHINGTON (AP) - Tt\e man-hunting Selective Service agency says. it is" considering revival of the Korean wartime | deferment standards fer college j students — which made it hard-| er for marginal students to get! draft exemptions.
Some 2.2 million students now hold deferments, and are re-only to be doing satisfac-work as full-time students accredited college
THjBMt
Traffic Safety Hints;
HO. 13
Concentrating an only ana part of the driving pktiMO1 will block lido vision temporarily. In fact, driver* have boon known to watch the car In the next lane to intently that they have ran into the car directly in front of them. Thl* can happen because while you orb looking at a part of the driving picture, the rest of it it constantly changing. Start new training yourself to move your eyas every two seconds—to see dose in front of you, far ahead, to both sides, and inte rear-view mirrors. You'll be a better driver because you'll tee more, and you’ll see it more quickly.
Brought to You by Your
Pontiac Area Chamber of Commerce
Traffic Safety Committee
MAY 1966 BE HARMONIOUS
.BLOOMFIELD MIRACLE MILE OPEN EVES. TIL 9
VP ‘PICKS POCKET—Vice President Humphrey dips a finger playfully into the pocket of 2-year-old William Blair III, son
of the. U.S. ambassador to the Philippines, during a break in A ceremony in Manila yesterday. Humphrey is on a brief Asian tour.
Raley admitted that in placing a bet a day ever since, he had embezzled $1,585,800 from his employer, the firm of Ramsey, Scarlett & Co. and its major subsidiary, the Baltimore!
Stevedore Co.
Raley said his betting was so regular that if he was sick and misled a day his bookmakers would call him up to see whatr was wrong.
He said his method of getting money for the bets was to take blank checks from the company and cash them for sums of
up to $30,000 each at the Mer- A rezoning request for the cantile Safe Deposit & Trust manufacture and sale of travel By DICK BARNES . ocrat, asks “how the governor Co. and the Equitable Trust Co. |$railer campers on Williams)	Mich (AP) _ Aican take credit for these pro-
R^c^tWeen-i1Hk!Chery i soaring state economy and Lp“m“ ---------------- M infrn-
and South Shaker will be con-L -	6	- -	■ ■■
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Board to Eye [Romney Riding High Rezoning Bid j on Rising Economy
"We’re looking at some things that might be done to find less) promising students,” a Selective Service official said Thursday.
we need more men-. . . one good place to look is going to be the students.”
The Korean war standards1 were dropped in 1962. Under them, class standing and per-, formance on a Selective Service qualification test were consid-j ered before a ruling on draft eligibility was made. INCREASING CALL A spokesman said the increas-ling draft board demands of the Viet Nam war — now responsible for about 40,000 draftees A month — has led Selective Service Director Lewis B. Hershey I to summon state draft chiefs to a series of conferences.
Among other things, the spokesman said, the officials will discuss possible moves to increase the number of;, men available for induction.
At the time of his arrest in'
, grams when we've been intro-
September, he said, he stiU “der^ at a future meeting rf[Democrats puts Gov. George Broadened school and univer-owed his bookmakers $228,0001th!, Waterford Township Board.	Michlgan in a strong «ty aid, senior citizen property
and was paying off his gamblmg	^ position 10 months ahead of his {a* rah*f and greatly expanded
debts at the rate of $30,000 althe Township Ptonning Commis-I^ clecUve test	j benefit for unemployed and in-
week with company checks. |?,on> ^ ProP?sed “oin* cha"*e| Though Romney’s 384,000-vote!Jured workers were *mong ma-is from public recreation dis- reejectjon vjctory iast year put'i°r measures passed. Romney
!£. %l>.40 U«ht industrial him into prominent mention fori88*8 70	^ ^ <*nt °fhis Pr*a,8° ,infudes me,n reiected for
district (M-l).	the 1968 Republican presidential'«ram	approval.	physical or moral reasons.
The applicant Is Charles ! nomination, some thought a1 WENT ALONG?
Booth.	- state legislature newly con- ..He didn’t get them when he
Another rezoning request fori expansion of a candy business I at Elizabeth Lake Road
DEATH THREAT Raley said he started to embezzle the money after his. debts reached such proportions that one of the bookmakers threatened to kill him unless he paid up.
Wishing You a Happy —----------NEW'YEAR—
We want to thank all our friends for their expression of good cheer at Christmas and the confidence ond evidence during the past year by-the business they hove given us.
“The Lord bleu thee and jkeep thee,
The Lord make Hiifaceehine upon thee, and be gracious unto thee,
The Lord lift up HU countenance upon thee, and give thee peace.” —Num. 6:24-26
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The state draft chiefs also will Sg discuss the Dec. 33 decision to Ill-review the cases of high school |ji: graduates who flunked the Selective Service mental examina- ;l# tion. Some of those men — now jjjj| classified 1- Y—maybe subject m to the draft. The 1*Y category $■:
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*3.90
Stive
Now!
Pleading guilty to live counts:11®!” will,not ™*2> b^f1 ot embezzlement and on. ^ the nppltcmtt, Man-> Wll-;,
2 U-M Protesters i | Are Reclassified 1 A' 1
had a Republican legislature'
I but this year he had to go1 I along,” said Dzendzel.	i
1 The Johnson" landslide and
-----------------, —J	reapportionment helped Demo-,
„ .h.rlr .l,-	jliams, has withdrawn her pro-lfrolled by Democrats could crats win control of the legisla-,
him 51 ^Wk *£kTTSe P0881	fWreck his natfe)nal *ma8e ture for the first time in tor eel NEW YORK (AP)-Two Uni- :
balding cterk told Judge	*	*	*	But the* governor, backing, decades	.versity of Michigan students:
Dulaney Foster: H I had any }ikewise has ^ recom.much of the year’s record tor-1 They were, however, four j who participated in a sit-in at • mended for denial by township rent of legislation, has sold him- votes shy of being able to over-'an Ann Arbor draft board have planners.	| self well enough that no Demo- |rlde vetoes without Republican I been reclassified 1A by their] &*•
TWO REQUESTS	juj j M
WOMEN'S NOVELTY
*5.00
money, I would gladly make restitution."
Foster sentenced him to six consecutive, 10-year terms.
Missionary Spys Rhodesia Ouster Tied’ to Politics
Your Choke of Green, Block, Brown, Navy Blue
_	local draft boards on Long Is- H
yet for the 1966 gubernatorial^ '-n,at led to executive-legisla-'land.	\M'
The plaimers will hold public race.	tive compromises, especially in	*	*	*
hearings Jan. 25 on two re- Many ranking Democrats say [money areas. Major exceptions! Paul H. Kanter, 20, "a junior, quests. One is for rezoning from privately that their 1966 candi- were the governor’s vetoes of,economics major, of Huntington, $£ C-l to C-2 a parcel of land at date probably will be sacrificial, bills expanding veterans’ tax|N.Y., said he had received .no- |§‘ Williams Lake Road and M59|just hoping to avert a Romney j benefits and providing a fund «ce of his toss of student defer-1 for a tavern.	Ilandslide which could balloon that small state-supported col*|ment wbito home on vacation.
The other b a special ap- |his P«»idenUal chances and win ieges could draw from if need-| Mrs- Alice of Flushin8- $;: proval proposal for construe- Republicans the State Senate, jgj jjy December arm-twisting jN.Y^ said her son Richard had j# tion of a church at Elizabeth I HAS A LAUGH ' I of some Republicans, Romney j received a similar notice from m | Lake Road and Airport. !• Bomney even laugh. that| avoided overrides.	**-' bis board.^	^ W.
The, The planners have approved a'what he calls “the Democratic!MOVING INCOMES	. i Both students were arrested M
dileinma” has! The governor said more taxes|during toe demonstration Ort,|J|
MEN’S CASUALS
CREPE SOLES
*5.00
SALISBURY (UPI)
Rev. Donald K. Abbott of Fal-|request for construction of a candidates’	URRHI
mouth, Mass., charged today bowling estabUshment on Me-,caused him to delay his own were’ needed to keep the state'is "and were^ subSirently cor^M
that he was being deported frominominee, stretching from Tele-announcement of whether he’lllsoivent by 1967-68, but incomeivicted on trespassinf	L-----iiK
his remote mission station injgraph to Pioneer. The applicantlrun for a third term or seek thejkegt leapfrogging his forecasts ;and given 10-day jail w-k® D) Rhodesia for disagreeing w i thjis R. C. Scribner.	U.S. Senate seat now held by The state surplus grew to $136 aether with $50 fines, Kanter
the' white regime of Premie? Ian	★	*	★	Democrat Patrick McNamara.^ million and many Democrats,«aid.
Smith.	Three other special approval! Democrats fdmit Romney’s Reared enacting an income tax —
★	★	*	requests have been denied byjlmaf>e. bas profited from the I during their first session in con-1
The American missionary said —1---------------i-j—	Ivear’* isaislation But th^v uv	o——*---------------------*1
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he qnd his family were declared [prohibited immigrants Wednesday and ordered to leave Rhodesia by Jan. 5. No reason was given for the.order, he said.
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the planning commission. lyear’s legislation. But they say[trol. Romney’s tax plans never The requests were for a retail |be’* taking jnore credit than got to the legislative floor, boat salesroom at 3630 Dixie, a I*’8 entitled to. ;	, Romney said this.week that a
used car lot at M59 and Alma	*	*,	*	hold-the-line budget for 1966-67)
and boarding of a horse at 106! Senate Majority Leader Ray-could just about be financed! Clayburn.	Imond Dzendzel, a Detroit Dem-|without tapping the surplus. .
Abbott said he could think of no reason for the government’s action against him "with the possible exception that I disagree with the present govern-; metit’s policies.”
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THE PONTIAC PRESS
# Wait Huron Street
FRIDAY, DECEMBER 31, 1965
Pontiac, Michigan
John a. Ban Secretary and Adrartlawf MnM
O. Mnwu.l joaoAM U>c»l Advertlatm
ROMNEY
State’s Fiscal Report a Warm 1966 Greeting
Gov. Georg* Romney’s year-end report on the state of the State should easily tbp Michigan’s best seller list.
Unprecedented- mTzjSmZZrTM ly heavy tax rev-enues and, augmented Income from other sources together with efficient fiscal management in the StatehOuse point to a $100 million treasury surplus.
★ ★ ★
The sizable increase in state income over last year is attributed mainly to the booming climate of Michigan’s industry, led by the automotive segment. Romney pointed out, however, that a healthy diversification in industry is indicated by the $1.3 billion spent in 1965 on new manufacturing facilities apart from the auto industry.
Other cheering statewide indices show personal incorri# 11 per cent and construction 26 per cent above last year’s totals, while employment is -ahead of a year ago by 145,700 and unemployment down by 22,000. The unemployment statistic is especially significant, reflecting as it does Michigan’s rate of 2.6 per cent as compared with the national percentage of 4.2.
★ ★ ★
Although there is cause for rejoicing in the State’s fat nest egg, making Michigan one of the few states not plagued by immediate financial woes, it is in one respect an embarrassment of riches for the governor.
It would seem tvYloom for the present at least any serious consideration by the legislature of the long-range program he advocates of fiscal reform eventually needed to keep the , State’s government economy in a sound and progressive condition.
★ ★ ★
Notwithstanding, we warmly commend Gov. Romney and his administrative organization on the glowing financial report that reflects their continuous regard for the public welfare, and agree with the governor that “Michigan is no longer a problem state, but a problemsolving state.’’
Spain Shows-New Face to Lands Once Sacked
At a time when U. S. concern is high over cracks in the governmental or fiscal structures of powers such as Britain and France, ferment in Africa and our own involvement in Asia, another nation is heard from. And signifying a welcome change of pace, the intelligence is favorable.
The nation providing it is Spain. —all but forgotten in the global climate of stress and strain. But signs ’ are plain that for Spaniards the pain in Spain is mostly on the wane.
Once a world power whose colonial empire embraced South America with a foothold in North America, Spain’s New World might crumbled during the last century Under the blows of Latin American Liberator Simon Bolivar and her- loss of Caribbean sovereignty resulting from the Spanish - American War. ’ . /	-/ . '
But between 1503 and i860, Spain extracted $l billion in gold and silver front Latin America while enslaving thousands of natives.
After her collapse in the West, Spain sank into several decades of economic and governmental chaos.
until in 1938 Gen. Francisco Franco overturned the royal regime and, while ruling with a dictator’s Iron hand, established comparative stability marked by slow social advancement.
★ ★ ★
Now, it appears that the course of the nation of 31 million people has come full circle and the erstwhile despoiler is about to becpine benefactor.
Such evidence comes from a recent meeting of the Organization of American States, where Spain’s ambassador evoked tumultuous applause with the announcement of his government’s intention to make available over the next ten years $1 billion in v credits in furtherance of Latin America’s programs for national improvement.
★ ★ ★
Thus has another nation — and a communism-hating one at that — aligned itself with the forces of progress Interested in the alleviation of poverty-ridden peoples.
Doubt Congress to Be Revamped
By WILLIAM F. ARBOGAST WASHINGTON (Ap)-A Joint committee is expected to come up early next year with a host of recommendations for modernizing Congress.
But if any proposals involve significant changes in the operation or structure of Congress, they aren’t likely to get anywhere.
The 12-member committee of six senators and six representatives was created by Congress last March and was given $150,000 to finance its studies and hearings. It has held numerous public hearings and is due to go out of business on Jan. 31. ‘
Many of the recommendations made to the committee by congressional students both Inside and outside of Congress would require changes which the practical politicians don’t seem ready to accept.
One of the dominant proposals has been to abolish the seniority system of advancement in the Senate and the House. Under the present system, a member can aspire to becoming a committee chairman or at least chairman of a major subcommittee simply by getting reelected often enough. NEWCOMERS EAGER Much of the clamor for a change—to rotate chairmanships or provide for election of chairmen in party caucuses—has come from members fairly well down on the seniority list.
Most senior members want no change that might keep them from getting to the top or might curb their tenure once they got there.
Republicans, as well as non-partisan students, have advocated a stronger staffing for minority members of committees. If the Joint committee should adopt this proposal, Congress might go along With it. It would provide more appointive, highly paid jobs.
* ★ *
Congress also might go along with recommendations to provide additional staffing for individual members. This, too, would provide some more good Jobs and could result in more efficient service. CHECK COMPLAINTS
The Joint Committee on1 Congressional Reorganization was created to see what if could do about complaints that the congressional machinery was too antiquated i and needed overhauling.
Not since 1946 has there been a congressional reorganization act. A joint committee that year made almost 40 recommendations, many of which were ignored.
* * ★
Opponents of any major changes in the congressional machinery have a strong argument going for them. The 1965 session, operating under the 1946 framework, set a record for legislative accomplishment. Its leaders aren’t too enthusiastic about tinkering with the machinery.
Verbal Orchids to -
Alex McAllister
of 96 N. Johnson; 85th birthday.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles P. Dodd of 368 Russell; 51st wedding anniversary. Mrs', Hattj|e Williamson of 845 Woodward; 86th birthday.
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond E. Parlette of Berkley; 53rd wedding anniveniary.
First, Leave No Stone Unturned—
David Lawrence Says:
War Issue May Not Help GOP
Succinct sign seen In filling station: “We don’t cash checks. Wei used to.” '
WASHINGTON - Discussion of the possible impact of the Viet Nam war on the 1966 congressional and 1968 presidential elections has lately led many Republicans mistakenly to believe that they will surely ben-efit by developments.
Much depends, however, on exactly what the war situation is< at the time the voters cast | their ballots.
It Is import- LAWRENCE ant to remember that a war can help the party in power to stay in office. The American people took the unprecedented step of electing Franklin D. Roosevelt for a third and even a fourth term while World War II was in * progress.
• The reasoning applied by the vote's in 1940 and 1944 can be repeated politically in 1966 or 1968 if there is a big war going on in Viet Nam. For the people do not want “to change horses in midstream,’' as the saying goes in politics.
* ★ *
The deeper the nation is involved in war operations, the more there is an incliniation on the part of the voters not to risk changes in the government in Washington.
STRONG SENTIMENT There is. a strong sentiment for keeping an administration in power also when other nations are in the midst of a war and the American people want this country to stay out of the conflict at almost any cost.
Back in 1916, President Wilson won a second term on the slogan, “He kept us out of war.” When, on the o t h e r hand, American ships were torpedoed less than six months later the people responded to a declaration of war with a dramatic manifestation of bipartisan unity. .
The one situation that has been referred to recently, as likely to be paralleled in 1966 or 1968 is what happened during the Korean War.
The American people never like any war but, once they get into it, they give it their full support.
WENT ALONG
They went along with President Truman’s decision to resist the invasion of South Korea in June' 1950 and to join the United Nations in an internationalized .operation to repel’ the
November but, If it is being, fought intensively, the administration' would surely benefit. Also, an early ending under honorable circumstances would be a feather in the cap of the Democratic administration.
An unfavorable reaction from the administration’s point of
Capital Letter:
view could come only if the Viet Nam war drags on without gettlhg anywhere and without full use being made of all power available — ground, sea and air forces, as well as trade embargoes and blockades of Communist ports.
Federal Agency Needed to Ride Herd on Parties
By November 1952, however, the.re was disillnsiomnent about the Korean War. That’s why the Democratic party loot strength at the polls ia 1952. History could repeat itself, " with the Democratic administration suffering in 1966 or 1969.
But there is another possible turn of events. Tha war may Unwind up in a stalemate, as did the Korean War. The voters will then heave a sigh of relief, especially as the draft calls are diminished to normal size and the troops in Southeast Asia are brought back home.
FEATHER IN CAP The Viet Nam war is hardly likely to be" won before next
By RUTH MONTGOMERY WASHINGTON -The ever-burgeoning federal bureaucracy is sadly in need of a “conscience” agency___________________
as independent as the Federal!
Reserve Board! to ride herd onl our two great! political parties,! and the ethical | conduct of elected officials.
The Senate Rules Committee’s shameful handling of the Bobby Baker case is proof that Congress is ill-equipped to deal in a nonpartisan manner with morality and ethics. ■
Now the Democratic National Committee has come up with a shabby subterfuge to evade the Corrupt Practices Act: a campaign book called “Toward an Age of Greatness.”
The slick-paper book contains 11 articles signed by Cabinet members and other top officials qxtplling the virtues of the Great Society. ,
Advertising in the book has been sold at $15,000 a page to big defense contractors and other industrial giants who hold government contracts.
KICKED IN
Railroads, shipping and airlines who scraihble for federal subsidies also kicked in to help' finance the 250,000 books, which are distributed free to party contributors who attend a series of fund-raising movie premieres. These are expected to raise another two or three million dollars.
The camouflage to get around the Corrupt' Practices Act is something called “State Committees on Voter Education,” organized by Democrats to get out the vote.'
The Republican Congressional Committee, instead of expressing moral indignation and demanding an inquiry, has cynically decided to follow suit with a publication of -its own about
a man with the wisdom of Solomon, the courage of William McCbesney Martin, and the power of a baseball czar who will say to both parties: “Refund the money, or prepare to stand trial under the Corrupt Practices Act.”
Congress should then appropriate a two-party campaign fund for presidential elections, shorten the duration of the campaign, and require that the television industry set aside some free and equal time for both standard-bearers.
We can’t legislate morality, but we can try to remove temptation.
(OlttrlbvM by King Future, Syndicate)
Voice of the People:
‘Small Businessman Fits Man of	Year De^
It isn’t often that I honestly agree completely with an editorial in any newspaper—The Pontiac Press * or any other:
★. ★	★
However, the editorial on “The Man of the Year” was excellent Your description was exact and extremely accurate to my mind. I wish more could be said or written about these individuals who truly are the backbone of our democracy instead of the multitudes of articles written about demonstrators and draft-card btirnen.
★ ★	★
** Congratulations, too, for your fine comments on Princess Margaret, Gordon McRae, the Central High : vocalists, and “Peggy” Allen. Best wishes for a hap-pier MHW,"..’' •
MARY COLEMAN ORCHARD LAKE
Suggests Each Motorist Pray for Safety With 712 traffic deaths over the Christmas holiday, it’a time for some concern on our part. The State and City traffic officials made a	sincere	effort	to warn the	people	and	gave	them	five
safety rules, but	in	my opinion they	left	out the	most	importaht
one — prayer. If each motorist would say a prayer for himself and for every driver on the road, and read Psalms 121, I sincerely believe we would have less traffic mishaps.
F. J. J.
‘We Need More Protection From Hoodlums*
It appears that' no one is safe anywhere. Just before Christmas our two sons went shopping and it is unbelievable that right in a shopping center a group of hoodlums closed in on them and started screaming that they were “frats” and begging our boys to fight them. Our sons are not cowards, but what chance would they have with twelve to fifteen hoodlums Who had obviously been drinking? In spite of our sons’ efforts to ignore their taunts and foul language, they were grabbed from behind and one -of them was hit in the mouth.
★ ★ ★
There is something terribly wrong with our society When an incident like that Can happen in broad daylight with hundreds of shoppers around. We need more police protection and something should be done to stop gangs of hoodlums who are roaming the streets looking for trouble.
A VERY IRATE MOTHER BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP
‘Patriotic Americans Accept Responsibility*
In honor of the Prince of Peace we string festive lights and buy loving gifts for our children. At the same time we are sending our sons to rain bombs and jellied gasoline on the children in Viet Nam. I wonder how many American mothers could do what we are asking our soldiers to do?
The truly patriotic Americans are those who accept our responsibilities and demand that our troops withdraw from Vist Nam, and that we cease our aggression against that tiny, impoverished nation.
JOANNE FIREMAN 1359 WHITTIER
Replies to Questions on Party Differences In answer to Paul A. Kern Jr., most of us could honestly state that we are confused. In regards to the difference between Republicans and Democrats, some thirty years ago the people became so dehydrated they had to repeal prohibition. The Re-1 publicans said mat they would allow beer to be made with three I per cent alcohol and the Democrats said that it must be three s and one half per cent alcohol.
★ ★ ★
We used to have a paper called the Constitution of the United States which the presidents used to go by, but apparently that was lost back in the late 1930’s and since then the presidents have had to think for all of us and do as they see fit. There wasj a revolution in this country because they had taxation without1 representation. The war was won and now we have taxation! with misrepresetation.
G. W. PETERMAN ; MILFORD
Reviewing Other Editorial Pages
and young members of the faculty.
We wonder if	Prof. Lynd
greets his students with a “Hello, suckers,”	like Tokyo
Rose, before proceeding to in-It is bad enough for American doctrinate them with the sins college	professors	to	get	up	in	patriotism and	the discom-
front of	their	students	and	glori-	f°rts a°d danger	of being a
fy the Viet Cong, who are daily soldier in Viet Nam.
Law-Breaking
Professor
Chicago Tribune
murdering American soldiers. But Staughton Lynd, the Yale associate professor of. history who helped organize the beatnik peace demonstration in Washington last August, has done even worse.
* * .*
He has taken off, at the invitation of the Communists, on a “fact-finding” mission to south-
It is sickening to hear this sort of psychological sabotage defended as freedom of speech -~a curious defense in view of the Communist attitude toward free speech. But Prof. Lynd, has gone farther than to exercise his asserted rights of academic freedom.
He has broken the law delib-
east Asia; and if he has gone eratety, and Yale can. hardly into North Viet Nam, as re- brush this off as the sort of ported, -he has broken the iavr idiosyncrasy one must expect and made hjmself liable for a from professors. We shall await $5,000 fine and five years* iff Wftrd as to what it and the deprison. Travel to certain com- partment of justice are going to munist countries is not per- do.about Prof.-Lynd*
mitted without authorization of	____\
the state department.
Chairman Bob Wilson of the Republican Congressional Committee says he plans to sell $15,-000-a-page ads for a publication next year.
TASK FORCES —
Tha revenue would be used to finance GOP education and research task forces, since the overwhelmingly Democratic Congress staffs the committees with-a preponderance of its own party faithful.
What is obviously seeded is
'Union' Message? Coming
The New York Daily Newt ■
Soon after Congress convenes, the President is to deliver his customary State of the Union message to that honorable body.
■ It is a rare President who can-refrain from shooting politics Thunks to men like Lynd, the into the supposedly non-political peaceniks -are more voluble at report.
Yale than at * most colleges.	*	*	*	-
Several thousand of them re- Aware of that frequent cently signed an appeal for Presidential weakness, lead-recognition of Red China. Most iug Republicans hi Congress of. the signers were upper class- plan,to get out a State ef the men, and graduate students, Union message of their own, who are perhaps beginning to about the time President feel the chilling air of the draft, Johuooa issues hit mnssugr
The trip was arranged by Dr. Herbert Aptheker, Communist party theoretician. He, Lynd, and a young man who helped to found the fur-left Students for a Democratic Society traveled by way of Moscow and Peking, and are ■aid to have entered North Viet Nam by way of Cambodia.
To be got Up under the supervision of Sen. Everett ii M. Dirksen (ID.) and Rep.|| Gerald R. Ford (Mich.), the GOP message is advance-1' billed as opposing tax boosts! for the Viet War, demanding a c o a’s t a 1 blockade of Red[ North Viet Nam, and urging!, cuts ta Great Society spend-’ ing here at home.
• > ★ * *j
We hope the Congressional Republicans will cm no account abandon this plan. An opposition party is supposed to op- -pose, constructively and sincerely. If .jt shirks that duty, it is flirting with political death.
Force of Habit
The Danbury (Com.) News-Times
A mother of nine was attending about tier 500th PTA meeting and suddenly bolted from the'room. “Goodness'” said one startled woman. "What got into her?"
“Nothing much,” come the answer “She suddenly realized she no longer had any kids in school.”
I
THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, DECEMBER! 31, 1965
FIVE
Milford Twp. Victorious
Camp Dearborn Tax Rate Is Upheld
CL._ I-	N'vNormaI daytime temperature
OllOp IS \~Ul for most birds is 101 degrees;
From Romeo School Plans
however, at night, nature slows down the bird’s chemical processes and their temperature drops 40 degrees.
MILFORD TOWNSHIP - The Michigan State Tax Commission has upheld the township’s 1965 tax assessment on Camp Dearborn.
The ruling more than triples Dearborn’s share of taxes here and gives other township property owners an average relief of Si per cent, accord-
ing to Supervisor William L. Mainland.
Hearing before the tax commission resulted from an appeal by the City of Dearborn regarding the assessment, which was based on a complete appraisal of the Dearborn-owned property made a year ago.
Mainland said it was the first detailed appraisal ever made by the township.
Previously, a Oat, lump sum estimate had been the basis for assessment, he said. INCREASED FUND The new assessment will provide the township with nearly 629,000 in tax revenue, compared
to $8,400 collected from Dear- not a matter of right because it involves the payment of parking fees.
The city also: claimed Milford Township was unfair, excessive
born last year.
The carnet appraisal set the value of the property at 66,167,260, compared to the 1964 appraisal of 6606,400, according to the supervisor.
The 626-acre park includes six lakes.
While denying the right of the township to tax Dearborn on personal property items, the State Tax Commission upheld the township in dismissing the two major complaints of the camp
owners. ______
PUBLIC PARK
Dearborn officials contended that Milford Township lacked the authority to tax Camp Dearborn, claiming the camp to be	f	... „ .. .
public park open to the public!?^* ®f ^ aPPralsa1’ Main' in general.
LOWER TAXES
property owners wfil have their
ROMEO — The board of edu-| lowest school tax rateTnrcmt cation has elimfoat^amachine ye „	shop addition to the high school |
y	because bids on a 61A million
The Huron Valley School construction program Were 6250,-' District tax would have been 000 over estimates.
656,40 per 61,000 of assessed j\The board will advertise tori valuation rather than 653.70 if inevMiids on the other claw-Dearborn had been success- Iroomrtd be added to the school.

and discriminatory in amount of the assessment;
....	*	* it
“Here, the findings of the tax commission, which made its own independent appraisal, were particularly gratifying in t h a t it confirmed the conservative ac-
Ptnllac Prau Phot*
CHAMPION FELLED—Old age finally caught up with this giant elm in. Pontiac Township and it had to be cut down. Reportedly one of the largest in Oakland County, the elm won first prize for its size in
a contest sponsored by the Oakland County Foresters Association in 1954. It has a girth measuring 18 feet, seven inches. The tree is on the property of Mrs. Thelma Sawdon, 667 S. Squirrel.
Township representatives replied that the use of the park by persons other than Dearborn residents is controlled and permissive and is
2 Covsins Held After Alleged Terror at Homes
MILFORD TOWNSHIP - Two 19-year-old cousins are being held for investigation today by the Sheriff’s Department after allegedly terrorizing the occupants of two homes yesterday afternoon.
Deputies said the pair, Delbert Spencer and Shelby Spencer, both of 772 Moran, Milford Tpwnship, gained entry to the neighboring houses on the pretense of using the phones.
The youths were taken into custody by Wixom and MUford police.
Four warning shots were fired by Wixom police when Shelby Spencer fled into a field behind the home of one of the victims, $lton R. Worden, 81, 2725 Wixom.
* * ★ " Four children alone in the adjacent house, 2737 Wixom, were the other victims of the. intruders.
The result is that township
ful in its appeal, Mainland said.
* "Instead of Dearborn’s carrying less than 1.5 , per cent of the property tax burden, it will now be required to meet five per cent of the current tax roll," |he staid.
“Thus an average relief of approximately 3.5 per cent will be experienced by other property owners throughout the township. * * *
‘Translated into dollars and cents, the savings will vary from just a few cents to upwards of 64,500 per taxpayer with the average approximating 620.’’
Conttjactr t o t a I i n g about 6600,000 for additions to the junior high schqol have been awarded, the general contract going to Devid Pettlbpne Construction Co. for 6447,600-The 'plumbing and heating; contract went to Lyons PlumbJ tag of Romeoior 6149,000.
Contracts were previous-! ly awarded for a new elemen-j tary school to be located at Camp Ground and 29 Mile. j Moeny for the building pro-j gram will come from a 61-4 million building program approved1 by voters last June.
Kelley Cites Year's Progress in Michigan's Fight on Crime
LANSING (AP) — A project|County, which led to his depart-
An average of 59 cents of1 each dollar spent for distilled {spirits in the United States is | for taxes.
Good Luck
We wish, all of you good fortune, health, happiness and a very successful year in \ 1966. Happy New Year!
Jerome
MOTOR SAt^S
1980
WIDE TRACK DRIVE FE 3-702!
ment’s petition for a grand jury investigation.
—An inquiry into the after-math of the Steren Assembly Club gambling case, including allegations of pressure on a key
bring* out new efforts and ideas in the fight against crime was one of his department’s] major activities in 1965, Atty.
Gen. Frank Kelley said Thursday.
Kelley said his white paper {witness, on crime will be issued-early CONSUMER FRAUDS next year.	I Kelley also mentioned efforts
_■	.	, . . .	. to combat consumer frauds—
But, he noted in a year-end ] incjUding a statewide network report, two major white papery privaUs and public agencies proposals already have been _an<j a crack-down on what he announced — compensation for	certain unscrupulous
victims of violent crimen and secon(j mortgage companies.
an immediate across-the-board „ ,_________..__.
pay raise for most police offi-1 He dferibed 1965 88 3 year of
cers in the state.	ln he W to *
abandonment of Mackinac ~ {Straits railroad ferry .service Kelley listed major investiga-iand of more than 300 miles of tions of 1965 as:	{northern Lower Michigan rail-.
-A soon-to-be-completed in- road lines, quiry in to the operations of /a court order kept the ferry the Peoples Community HospitalIciiief Wawaam operating be-Authority of Ypsilanti.	{tween Mackinaw City and St.
—A broad investigation into the tangled affairs of the Brook-dale Cemetery in Livonia.
—An investigation into allegations of ticket-fixing in Wayne
Ignace, he noted, and the Inter-1 state Commerce Commission upheld Michigan’s position on the proposed railroad abandonments.
Got Chance to Boast as Corn Contest Host _________________:__________l—t---------
Weather Was^urse of State Farmers in '65
' LANSING (AP)—This waning! year was one lit which the Michigan* farmer cursed the weather man, possibly praised the legislature and had an outstanding chance to boast about the state’s corn—and its com| farmers.
Adrian was host to the National Cornpicking Contest in November. The contest fields, on Victor Knierim’s farm, yielded a contest record 161 bushels an acre.
' ir. ★	★
And Michigan men took two first places and one second in the contest’s three divisions.
Knierim’s farm had the benefit of good weather,' though, while the central Michigan area went through the driest .June 2-July 31 period on record.
7 OKs PROGRAMS
The federal government approved emergency haying and grazing programs for 22 counties, but later rejected applications by 31 counties for a program allowing purchase of gov-|
ernment-stored feed grains at {75 per cenrorthe support price.
Besides the drought, which in {some cases wiped out whole corn fields, a series of tornadoes raked the state on Palm Sunday,^.causing more than $16 million Tn farm damage.
Then heavy rains delayed harvests and early frosts caused additional damage.
One of the, hardest-hit crops was dry edible beans, which yielded, a crop 27 per cent smaller than last year’s. YEAR-END REPORT
In the State Department ‘of Agriculture’s year - end summary, B. Dale Ball, director, said production of seven major fruits totaled 707,000 tons—down 12 per cent from 1964’s record yields- but still above average.
The 13 major vegetable crops totaled 605,340 tons, an increase over 1964 while wheat, oats and barley declined substantially. Despite. the drought, statewide com totals were down only | slightly. Soybean production
was up and sugar beet production was* down, by about 18 per cent from 1904.
4t - * ★
Even though reapportionment put city dwellers pretty much in control of the Legislature, the Michigan Farm Bureau reported that farmers generally fared well.
A major gain for farmers was a statewide meat inspection program which goes into effect Jan. 1.
NOT CRACKDOWN
The program wasn’t designed as a crackdown—but as a buildup for Michigan’s meat industry. Lack of inspection in some cases has cost Michigan producers lost sales in dealings with institutfons which require certain standards.
•May this New Year , see the fulfillment of all your brightest dreams. And to all our faithful -patrons who 1 made our .	^
dre*ms Jm
come truer “TTtank you’’!
JOE’S BE SURPLUS
IIN. Saginaw
Another long-sought measure set up a uniform statewide dairy inspection system. The problem here, farmers said, was too much inspection in some cases.
* * ♦
They complained that an inspector from one agency might have .very different standards than those used by the inspector from another agency.
Ball reported that two of the most stubborn animal diseases, tuberculosis and brucellosis, were brought to their lowest incidence in the state’s history. MOTH ERADICATED
And, after 11 years and nearly 6950,000 expenditure of state and federal money, the Gypsy moth was eradicated, he said.
The department f ound that aerial spraying -with Malathion
was effective in controlling cereal leaf beetle, but scientists at Michigan State University continued looking for ways to stop the pest completely.
★ ★ ★
Another major MSU project “Project ’80”—an effort to calculate what Michigan’s rural potential will be 15 years from now.
More than 100 scientists and about 350 rural leaders have been at work on the project. Reports on many areas of the rural economy were issued during the last year, some optimistic and some pessimistic. POTATO POWERHOUSE
MSU scientists were working on helping Michigan become a 'potato powerhouse.’’ A multi-ihillion-dollar potato processing plant opened at Greenville this
year, boosting the state’s pota-j to industry.
They also were at work 6n< some “crops" not ordinarily thought of 'when farming is! mentioned.
One is sod, which contributes 650 million a year to the Michigan economy and is the basis for one of the fastest developing agricultural industries in the state. .Sod acreage in 1965 totaled 20,000, up 25 per cent from' 1964.
Hr ★
Another is Christmas trees. MSU researchers are looking for ways to grow the ideal Christmas tree, which would grow up perfectly shaped without all the shearing and shaping,now used on about 90 per cent of the state’s Christmas free production.

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Jonties Read at Opdyke : f FE 4-1662	FE44I7M
PARTS ud SERV10E
M
TWO COMBS ,eve.
ItHE PONTIAC jPBgSS, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 81, 1966
Who Will
STAFF'S
Ch/ihOit Company
will give the proud parents of the First Baby of 1966
15 BOOKS of Gold Boll Gift Stamps
with which they can secure anything they wish for the baby or their home at the Gold Bell Redemption Center.
Plan For A Warm, Comfortable Home For Your Family With Marathon Fuel Oil,..
a firm staffed by people whose long experience and knowledge is dedicated to properly fitting baby, and children's feet.
to your proud parents we present a
Firsf* Baby's B Firsfees * it|
shoulcLbe
Stride-Rites
HOME FURNISHINGS INC.
FM RADIO
$*ridt-Rite designs, and build* shoes to guide little feet into pleasant comfortable steps that make walking a life-Hnw pleasure.
Wdrtd Wide proudly presents the new boBy with a Crib and Mattress, and wishas the child a lifetime ef happiness.
STAFFS
TV-RADIO
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JUNIOR SHOE STORE - ROCHESTER
For hotter quality Marathon Fuel Oil and com plot* burner sorvice, call us anytime. Our tolephono service is available day or night, 24 hours a day.
JUNIOR SHOE STORE - PONTIAC 928 W. Huron at Telegraph And soon to open a beautiful new W. Huron Street Store
770 ORCHARD LAKE AVE.
To make yohr arrival a happier occasion the merchants from this aroa havo a hort of gifts for you, your dad and your mother.
WELCOME
Pontiac
FIRST BABY OF
Congratulation
First Baby
Telephone FE 2-9181
(JU Jewelers 25 N. Saginaw St.
IN DOWNTOWN PONTIAC
Congratulates The proud parents and has for fha
First Baby Of 1986
a beautiful
We Have a JUNEDALE Family Size
HAM
For Your Proud Parents
We are happy to welcome You
First Baby
YOUR
Good Health Is
Congratulations
To The First Baby of 1966
We are happy to present the new arrival with their own
*25°° SAVINGS ACCOUNT
A Start For Those College Years Ahead
And We Hope Our
BABY €ARE WEIGH SCALES
Will Help Keep You Healthy and Hdp|^ Always
Primary Sat
Wo hove a
*5 Drycleaning Certificate
for your Mom pnd Dad
for your Mom & Dad. we have a
*5 Drycleaning Certificate
We Hop# MOM and DAD Will B# Our Guests , With A DINNER for 2 And Our Best Wishes
LASTJEAR9S WINNER
GRESHAM
CLEANERS
605 Oakland
71N. Saginaw Downtown Pontiac 4148 Dixie Hwy., Drayton Plains
SHERRY ANN MITCHELL
Daughter of
Mr. & Mrs. Gilbert A. Mitchell
SBluet your birthday, anniversary, wadding, graduation and other gifts at Enggasa.
DRY CLEANERS
111 W. Huron
NEXT YO ST. JOSEPH MERCY HOSPITAL
Week Gives You $5,38000 in 15 Years
mnded Quarterly at 4% -$1,480 Interest
*er Week Gives You *1,073 in 15 tears *er Week Gives You *1,375 in 18 Years
Congratulations
PROUD NEW DADDY!
Come In For Your FREE CAR WASH and POLISH!
F00DT0WN and PEOPLES
Super Markets
Congratulate the parents and welcome to the first baby of 1966.
Congratulations to the 1st Baby of the New Year
Bert Wishes to Moni, Dad anVtheFIRST BABY of 1966

Personally Selected
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uy you share the experience of every event that becomes one of life’s memories.
PONTIAC RETAIL STORE
65 Mt. Clemens St,
DOWNTOWN PONTIAC
1st. Soft Sole Shoes
for the baby
Congratulations to the mother, father and First Baby will be sent with flowers from
All 8 Peoples and Foodtqwn Markets carp a complete line of nationally known baby frods as wall as Grade A Choice meats, fresh fruits, vegetables and groceries.
FE 3-7951 I
SAUCED
559 Orchard Lake Ave. Phono 2-0127 V
has for the
first baby of 1966
A Taylor T6t DeLuxe
Walker-Stroller
Coiqjuduhfisiu
WELCOME FIRST BABY
The Management and Employees ‘ at
Montgomery Ward's
Congratulate the Parents and Their
NEW BABY
Our Gift to You is a
TINY WORLD
BATHINETTE and HIGH CHAIR
mitES
SB.....
(tv
J*'BS3ga3@
and doto of JgJ Sfl,* with tt
There are many occasions throughout the year when only
THE
HOME*FRbM THE HOSPITAL SET
(Sweater, Bonnet and Booties)
f I that the
FIRST BABY
will wear is One of the '
• many fine gifts from' the infants department
MOTHERS KNOW THEY SAVE ON ALL BABY NEEDS AT Kmart
Here are a few examples:
Bill Lewis Says
Good Lucky Good Health First Baby of 1966
We Hdvd A MOTOR MART NEW TREAD TIRE
For You With Many Miles of Carefree Driving With Your Now Family! .
The Best Of Lech In 1966	<
3 WAY
•	Nursery Chair
•	Potty Chair
•	Step Stool
Aad Has A Pair Of
Edwards
fbet Walker Shoos far the now baby
express your
sentiments.
U* L I 3 Pfoce	Thermal
JJW SWEATER Baby Chair I SET Blanket
p7-\ m \jv
JACOBSEN’S
EL01VERS
wiU be sent to the hoephal to the mother of the Fint Baby of 1966.
Chuck Wagon
580Q Dryden Road Dryden
Phone 796-2245
Pharmacy and Medical Supply
Junior Bootery
1888 W. Huron 114-8125
The Pontiac Press #
WAITE'S
Pontiac Mad Shopping Center
SHOE STORE
GLENWOOP PLAZA - North Perry Street Corner Glenwood I

right
THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 81, 1965
rCOMMEBCEl
NOW thru SUNDAY!
UNION LK. at HAtiOlRTY R0.k
EM 3-0661
EARLY MOW SUNDAY at S:SI
ALL COLOR PROGRAM!
Bogus Money Abandoned in Three States

WASHINGTON (AP) - Counterfeiters may be making more money and enjoying it less.
Phony fortunes in apparently abandoned bogus currency have turned up in recent days in 'California, Oklahoma and Texas.
A Secret Service official said today the finds were not related. But he said further details could not be made public because all the cases are under active investigation.
shoebox stuffed with $40,000, counterfeit.
Strong winds scattered $20 -bills across the street in Oklahoma City Tuesday. An off-duty policeman, Frank Ginter, .spotted them, and found sacks of bills abandoned behind a concrete post. More fake money was stuffed in a storm drain.
* * *
The cache filled the trunk of Ginter's automobile. Secret Service agent Pat Steele said the counterfeit bills totaled $467,-
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He did say that all of them appeared to be rather crude examples of the counterfeiter’s art. -
There has been no noticeable increase in counterfeiting activ-|-ltv nvw
'the official said. However, the amount of illegal money manufactured has been running at a|t" relatively high rate for several j years.
*	♦ Ar
| “It Is not unusual to find counterfeit money which has ! been dumped,” the official said. “However, it is unusual for three or four batches to turn up I in a short period of time.
the metal pldtes used to printiTwo Oklahoma men were ar-the money.	rested in Texarkana, Tec., on
the same day and on similar
SWEPT AWAY
Agent Forrest Sorrells said about $100,000 worth was-taken out of the river, and an estimated $400,000 to $500,000 more apparently was swept away by the current.
Two golfers called the Secret Service after they spotted the bills.
Three persons have been arrested, including two men police said tossed the phony bills into the river.
Two Oklahoma women were arrested in Springdale, Ark. Dec. 1$ on charges of passing counterfeit money. They were picked up when store clerks spotted the bills a& counterfeit
Secret Service agents fished two suitcases of bills from the Trinity River at Irving, Tex.,
Dec. 12. Both had come open, and there was a stream of money swirling down the river. The _____I ..._------------------
agentersahTthcy “also Tecovered * moments after receiving them?
\ EXTRA: “COCKTAIL. PARTY” t “SUPERMARKET”
“We find that as counterfeiter I sometimes makes a large num-ber of bills and then dumps j them out of fear or panic when J hediscovers they cannot be passed easily. Policemen sometimes find counterfeit money i left in theyvooda or in a building and usually there is little or no publicity in suCti cases.”
Here are some Vmples that ,did get publicity:	\!
| In Fairfield, Calif., ^Wednesday, the wind wafted a stream of big bills - $50s and $20s\-past a construction project Workers gave chase and found a I
Sean (007) Connery Is No. 1 in Britain
Colony of 'Bleeder' Dogs Aids in Study of Disease
charges.
FAKE BILLS	|
Both cases involved fake $20 bills.
Although the counterfeiting! problem is a continuing one, the! Secret Service does not regard j it as alarming. The $3.3 million in phony currency turned up ini the 12-month period which end-! ed June 30 is a lot of money. But it would have to be 100 times as| great to equal one per cent of the amount of legal currency.- !
The Secret Service seized 75, per cent of the counterfeit currency before it was circulated.
There were ,723 arrests for counterfeiting^ offenses during; BfTelSstIffiKaf yearl Thearrest I figure has varied very little 'over the past several years, j But the problems of combat-; j ting counterfeiting have grown in recent years with the wide-J spread use of a photographic printing, process.
Our wish is big and sincere . . of your patronage and good
. and so is our appreciation vill. See you soon, in 19$6.
OLIVER BUICK
21frQrcfrardLalct Ave. af WHliam8FE2-B1f 1
LONDON '(Jf) - Actor Connery — secret agent 007 in the James Bond series — has Beehjiamed Britain’s most popular movie star for the second
Hie annualNbox-office survey by the Londoir^iureau of the Motion Picture Herald listed the top money-makeK. movie of the year in Britain as Walt Disney’s “Mary Poppins,\star-
WASHINGTON (AP)—A special colony of dogs afflicted with the “disease of kings”—hemophilia—has been established in Oklahoma, researchers reported today.
It was the second recent report of the use of dogs to help study the bleeding disease that affects man.
A researcher at Johns Hopkins University Medical School previously told of the establishment of a colony of dogs afflicted with diabetes.	.
Another hemophilic animal colony also is maintained in North Carolina.
The latest report is contained in a letter published in the technical journal, Science.
STRONG BLEEDING
Hemophilia is characterized by a tendency for spontaneous j hemorrhaging, an& excessive bleeding after minor hurts or surgical procedures.
\ Caused by an hereditary deficiency of a clotting factor | in the blood, the disease has victimized a number of royal families over the centuries, but it’s not limited to royalty.
It occnCs almost exclusively in males but It transmitted through fetnales.	f
The Oklahoma researchers said their hemophilic pooches, Sean ^a8*es- had ^classic” hemophilia—functionally similar to the disorder in man—but that their disease is milder than that reported previously for another hemophilic animal colony in North Carolina. \
-Jail Is No Handicap
NOTTINGHAM, England (UPI) — Authorities at Nottingham Prison disclosed that; among books requested by pris-j oners at the jail was "How To! Win at the Races.”
SQUARE and ROUND
DANCING
ll S«th Btllmomti
CAMPUS BALLROOM
NEED HELP? USE PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED AQS. LOW IN COST. /FAST IN ACTION. PHONE 332-3181.
this mild form of canine hemophilia of thfe\animals and facilitates their
aMICHAEL ANDERSON Jft. tjUP
CATor WOMAN
or a thing too evil to mehtton? listen for the SCREAM in the bight look into the eyes of the cifealurej who rules the land of the living dead!!
GALA
NEW YEAR’S EVE PARTY!
Lite Entertainment Come Join the Fun at
MAlUMSl
LOUNGE
Thus, they said, permits greater longevity care during experimental procedures.
FREQUENT CASES
Episodes of severe bleeding are frequent, they said.
At least 1$ dogs with proven hemophfluk-pliis IS genetically predicted “transmitter” females — are kept in the colony at all times. And hemophilic femalesNqre bred to proven hemophilic males to obtain further subjects.
The venture—supported by a grant from the Nauqnal Incites of Health—is a cooperative effort of the Okuttyima StaV University College of Veterinary Medicine and the \of Oklahoma Medical Center.
The beagle colony is housed on the campus of Oklahoma State University in Stillwater.
SPECIAL POPULAR PRICES SPECIAL SCHEDULED PERFORMANCES
SPECIAL NEW YEAR'S EYE SHOW
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SO COME AS LATE AS MIDNIGHT AND ENJOY "THUNDERBALL"
n 21000 I MI1E v
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1
THE i^OM 11 AC FK&SS, FKluAl,	31, >1905
WINK
Odd Weaftier Hits Nation
By The Associated Press
A crazy-quilt weather pattern, a combination of winter and spring temperature*, rain, mow and warn and cold winds, crossed the nation toddy.
A wintry storm, with snow, ice, cold and strong northerly winds, whipped across Northern Plains and headed eastward. Temperatures dropped below zero across the plains of eastern Montana and the western Dakotas.
More rain and snow fell in the storm-swept Pacific- Coast region but amounts generally were lighter than during the first part of the week.
Cloudy skies ahd unseasonably mi)d temperatures covered broad areas east of me Mississippi River to the Atlantic Coast. The mercury hit record high marks for Dec. 31 early today in some Midwest cities, including 61 at Moline, 111. The weather bureau said readings in some cities equaled nighttime marks during the summer season.
COLD WARNINGS
Cold wave warnings were in effect in Montana east of the Continental Divide and the gusty winds fanned the Atctic air eastward into the Dakotas, and Minnesota. Near blizzard conditions were reported at Dickinson, N.D. Snow amounts up to four inches were expected in the Trtorm belt, fleavyfog in souths em Minnesota last night cut visibility to a few feet.
Rain fell in scattered sections from Southern California t? Puget Sound, increasing dangers of floods because of heavy rainfall in many areas fids week.
Firm Reveals Building Plans
Partial to Animals |care 01 her cat ' and M equal amount to the local church .KIRBY MOORSIDEf England asking that special sermons be (UPI) — Miss Irene Petch, who praached on kindness to ani-died last July, left 6280 for the | mate.
Consumers Power to Spend $134 Million
JACKSON (AP)- Consumers Power Go. plans to spend a record 6134 million on capital improvement projects in Lower Michigan next year.
Construction olans for the Pnnfiac Division are included-In the state figure and scheduled to be announced in detail late in January.
I Here's to you
I(and yours in
X the New Yearl-
I
S®hfte
Wlofse;:
MetamOra, Mich., 678-8201 "among.the hills"'
SsMMMmMlWSWSMM*
Damage from the heavy rain storms that hit Southern California was expected to total mil-. lions of dollars. Some 30 families in the Lytle Creek section of San Bernardino County wete evacuated from their homes after more than nine incl^s of fain caused flooding.
In the Midwest mild zone,! Minneapolis reported a temper-! ature of 47 Thursday night, tvlng the record for Dec. 30. Record marks for today included 55 at. Lansing. Mich., and 49 at Rochester, Minn.
RECORD HIGHS The mercury Thursday i __ reached 72 at' St. Louis and I I! Springfield, Mo., record highsl ■ for Dec. 30. Other record marks. { included 68 at Kansas City, 65 at Springfield, 111., and 61 at Burlington, Iowa.
IT KEEPS COMING — Service station employes shovel-snow yesterday from the roof overhang of a station in Nyack in northern California to prevent it from collapsing onto
AP Photofax
the gasoline pumps. Snow has been falling for several days Jn the area and more is expected today.
Mary Tyler Moore Turns
Queen for Viet GIs
The Icwer Michigan expenditures on construction and expansion orojects'.would compare invested- la. such projects this year, the firm said today.
I The projects are designed to improve gas and electric service to Consumers Power customers in 67 Lower Peninsula counties, said A. H. Aymond, Consumers board chairman, {and James H, Campbell, com-pany president.
TO ADD CUSTOMERS ' The company said it expects to add 20,000 electric customers, to its lines and more than 38,000 gas customers in 1966. The firm said it serves more than 950,000
Featuring
DOUG BROWN
and "The Omens"
2525
ELIZABETH LAKE RD. FE 5-2502
Pinup
By BOB THOMAS AP Movie-Television Writer HOLLYWOOD (AP)
saia xi serves more uioii w,uwii
electric customers and 670,000 I natural gas customers.	)
In the 1066 improvement pro- j gram, Consumers said, 675 mil-1 lion is earmarked for electric I projects, 6515 million for gas ex-1 pansion and 67 million for office ( Iery moment I can spare. I'm. will be sending, she wears a buildings and additions to office, j getting writer’s cramp but en-'form-fitting dancet’s costume service, fleet and warehouse ! , joying tt.	; ! slit down the front. Only the facilities.
1 “Some of the letters come,	■*-	1
Miss Moore, I saw your picture"X - illlegs are exposed. But then, Bet-.
in Stars andStripes, and I enj JJ* ^ ft ,	Grable did all right in anoth- Largest of the electric proj-
joyed it.
Wide Track Drive at W. Huron
Fine Fooels — Liquor SATURDAY 7 to 11 P.M.
International Smorgasbord
“Children % Price on Smorgasbord”
MONDAY NIGHT “BRING A FRIEND” SPECIAL One Dinner Full Price — One Half-Price
BUSINESSMEN'S LUNCH SPECIAL PRICES - COCKTAILS 4 to I DAILY
When I was back;™^"JV*J5££Her war.	ects is the construction of a
hnme mv wifp | th*n« tha*1 can do, compared to	wi» 385,000 kilowatt generating facil- |
usS to iv vS wha!: they’re doing over there ” be shedding he?bolLSS fo «t the James H. CampbeU used to say you Miry quoted some of the let-1“ shedmn« "er ,	“ y|steam-Electric Plant at Port ‘
iro1' E,	•
‘	"SiTHEY WONDER	“»* he"1®* <<* other purauite; ^ prowt scheduled tor
5U) allil 1 III giau ,	TKa MAiiUfl «trill AH<1 aDa* filial	. ..	.	_ .
to find out I
THEY WONDER	,	-	-	Pipi_____________
“It’s nice to know that some-j01* seriea will end after completion in March 1967. was right - in ^States	TtSSl SS* £
THOMAS
Would you pictures of those demonstrators I01 P001].	“ TOnunuesa 70,000 kilowatt power peaking
please send me	in Berkeley, and	we	begin to,amon*the CBS,eads'	iplant at Gaylord for use in!
a photograph?”	wonder...”	—- FILMS PLANNED	emergencies and at times of
The message! “All I have to look at are But Van Dyke has a logjam of P®** demand. Completion is in-was typical.snakes and the	Viet	Cong, nei-film commitments, as	does	pro-	tended in June 1966.
among the hun-J ther of which is	very	attractive,	ducer-creater Carl’	Reiner.	TO BUR D SUBSTATIONS
dreds	of	letters Mary Tyler	j A photograph of	you	would cer-Mary told her plans:	| consumers said major high
Moore	has been receiving from	tainly brighten	up	this fox-1 ‘Til go to Universal to start .voltage transmit" substations I
GI’s in Viet Nam. What started, hole....’’	I the first of 10 pictures. Or, if lt*s Lju ^ goUth of Flint and|
as a publicity stunt is shaping]	*	*	*	a bomb, the first of one. They east 0f Grand Rapids
up as	a full-scale move to make ] In the photograph	that Mary'have the options.”	to strengthen bulk power sup-]
her	a	pinup	queen of the Asian	plies to these areas.
war	»*, ««■*»	«***> mm Gas'deliveries to Consumers]
*	*	*	[I	I	.will be	increased	by 75 million
Miss Moore spends her:	mm	I ,	.*	i ■	I (cubic feet per day, beginning!
professional	life	as	the fully!I	tr\Ia	ir*	fnA	|	Nov. 1,	1966, the	firm said,	i
clothed wife	on “The	Dick Van|| f t?UUI tt	III	lilt? I TCYf 5	§	* *	*
Dyke Show/-	But	she	is also an |	I	Plans	call for,	conversion	of'
accomplished dancer and be-	Ray natural gas field In
neatti those brocks and aprons is	By The Associated Press	, Macomb County to a gas stor-
a w iste-w y orm.	Yuri Gagarin, the Soviet Union’s first-cosmonaut, says a age field, with accompanying
Alert press agents, realizing	...	.	Ljjui—
this, proposed that Mary pose| «rowin8 number of professions will take part in future space for some cheesecake photos that flights.
could be sent to interested serv- Gagarin noted in an interview with newspaper Red Star icemen in Viet Nam. A dozen ......	,	,	, .	,
photographers were invited to a that P|,ots. engineers, a scientist and a doctor have been up snapping session, competing to| already in Soviet spacecraft.
produce thd most attractive He described recent American space flights “a major | achievement” but salfi it would be a simplification to interpret
PHOTO APPEARED - A photograph of the photographers at work appeared in the overseas service newspaper,
Stars and Stripes. That prompt-
I additions of compressor transmission facilities.
Bob Hope Troupe Returns to the U. 5.
the U. S. accomplishments as first steps on an unexplored way.
Gagarin said Soviet space-ships Vostok-3 and Vostok-4 had flown in formation.
led the letters.
“It happened so suddenly that I haven’t been able to get the (photos yet,” said Mary during a break ip TV filming. “But rvelf been answering all the letters, (| turning out 25 to 50 a day in ev- f
'Self-Serve' Is Motto of Cincinnati's Mayor
chblet inn
CINCINNATI, Ohio (UPI) — Mayor Walton Bachrach served ran eviction notice yesterday to' the owner of the ‘Wheel Cafe,” which will be razed to make way for a downtown renewal project.
> The mayor owns the restaurant.	i
Actor Anthony Quinn and Miss Yolanda Addolorl, a member of a prominent Venetian family, have taken out a marriage license.
Quinn, 50, met Miss Addolorl five years ago in Italy and they have two sons, Frank, 2, and Dhniel, 1. He obtained a divorce last Jan. 21 from his first wife, Katherine, daughter of the late movie producer Cecil B. DeMIlle.
. He said the marriage will take place in Los Angeles “right after the first of
LOS ANGELES (AP) - A troupe of 63 entertainers — led] ■ by comedian Bob Hope — has1 returned to the United States! after a 12-day trip to South Viet (Nam to entertain U.S. troops, f “The morale Of our troops is just great,” Hope said on arriv-! ing at Los Angeles International ! Airport Thursday night. *
( Hope said it is the first war ij he’s seen that had an intermisr sion.
| “At An Khe, members of the : 1st Cavalry Division came right (off the firing lines to see our. I show. Then they fadetj back into |the jungle an hour and a half | later to continue the fighting.” |
Mour Ap/tearinji tty Popular Request!
MONDAY thru'SATURDAY
FRANK DITTO and FLOYD RAM
For an Eveniitjt of Fun and JEntertafoment Go, Airway!
I lESRS limited reservations
Ai/oottfl L,qftM
4825 Highland Rd. (M59) GO AIRWAY!
DINING at its best!
16 EAST PIKE STREET •«-«*.
Phone FE 8-9292
ThHandball
invite* you
GALA NEW YEAR’S EVE PARTY
Call FE 3-9879 for reservations . M-59 and ELIZABETH LK. Roads FE 3-9879
HAPPY NEW YEAR I
Here's wishing you the best of everything in 19661 And while we're at it, we'd like to thank you for your patroriage in the past .	. we hope to seryd you j
againl
From All of Us at . ELIAS BROS. -
HOME OF THE BIG BOY
Dixie HwyTpt Silver Lake Road
Telegraph, Road ot W. Huron Street

TEN
THE PONTIAC'PRESS,1 FRIDAY, DECEMBER 31, 196a
After 42 Absorbing Years
Mrs.	Tinney Is Retiring From Post Office
By MADELEINE DOEREN First Pontiac area postal employe to receive a certificate for 40 or more years’ service, signed by the postmaster-general of the United States will be Mrs. Homer C. Tinney.
Other certificates of recognition will be signed and mailed from- the regional office-in-Chi*-cago.
Mrs. Tinney worked 42 years under nine postmasters and 'for seven years has been secretary Uf Pontiac .postmaster, William W. Donaldson.
“Chauncey Harris followed Floyd Babcock,” she reminisced, “then came Joe Greenhalgh, T. W. Jackson, William Collins, George Stockwell, Leslie H. Dean, Robert Miller .and Mr. Donaldson.
HERE SINCE *21 “I was borij in Cass City and moved here with my parents in 1921,’’ said the former Morea Beebeheyser.
“After completing a business course, I became secretary to, Charles E. Rauhauser, Boy Scout executive, with offices in the old D. I. Oliver block on North Saginaw.
“After passing a civil service examination, I worked as temporary subclerk durihg the ‘ Christmas period in 1922. During summer vacation periods the following two years, I sub-
June vows are planned by Janice Marie
McGorman, daughter of the Jack W.
McGormans of Rochester and Harold E. Brautnick, son of Michael Brautnick, Corriganville,
Md., and the late Mrs.
Brautnick.
She is an alumna of Concordia College,.
St. Paul,
Minn.
stituted at the Pontiac post office.'A girl took my place at the Boy Scout office.
“No clerk appointments were made from the 1922 register so I wrote .the xivil service test again and was appointed classified subclerk by Mr. Babcock
Mrs. Tinney’s first duties were in personnel records and payroll. Then, she handled claims and inquiries about damaged packages, also losses and rifling of letters.
She informed the postal inspectors where there was a pos- -sible theft of the mails.
Distribution of the U.S. flags for deceased veterans and keeping an inventory , of these was among her duties as well as posting “Wanted” circulars on the bulletin board and taking these down when the offenders were apprehended.
“I am turning back to the government almost a year’s sick leave,” she said. “I have always been conservative in its use with a thought tacniutfi-foreseen illness.
“This is still good insurance for anyorfe and I have no qualms about losing it.”
BPW PRESIDENT
Mrs. Tihney who lives on Elizabeth Lake Road is current-. ly president of the Waterford-
JANICE MARIE McGORMAN
Clarkston Business and Professional Women’s Club. She served two years in this capacity a few years ago and was pressed into service again.
She is’chairman of the Waterford Township Blood Bank sponsored by the BPW for the past nine years.
—nrganfap
office blood hank in 1958,” she says, “and served as chairman until now, Charles Smalley and Roy Hukka will be cochairmen after I leave. They represent the Carrier and Clerk Associations.
h ,	★	★
“During my second year as " president, the Zonta Club sponsored Jutta Forwerk, an exchange student from Germany, in 1952. She made her home with our family the last half of her school year in Pontiac. We still keep in touch with her.”
Mrs. Tinney is past-president and currently treasurer of Alpha chapter of Beta Theta Phi sorority and was chairman of the Federal Agencies for the Pontiac Area United Fund for four consecutive years.
After completing both the standard and advanced courses in First Aid furnished by the American Red^ Cross, she was instructor for four years.
IN ‘WHO’S WHO’
She is listed in the fourth edition of “Who’s Who of American Women” under government-community service.
Her retirement plans are legion.
Miss Marlatt Recently Wed
Troy’s First Presbyterian Church was the scene of re-. cent nuptial vows taken by Susan Ault Marlatt and Joseph Benson Bidwell III. .
Parents of the couple are the Herbert E. Marlatts of Birmingham and Mrs. M. Kapeghian Bidwell of Philadelphia, Pa. and Joseph B. Bidwell of Troy.
Rev. A. F. Huish officiated for the couple who was attended by Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Holcomb of Saline.
A ★	*
A reception at Kingsley' Inn followed the ceremony. The , newlyweds will live in Houghton where the bridegroom attends Michigan Technological University.
There’s daughter Barbara (Mrs. Charles Murphy) also two grandchildren, Jeff and Pam.
Her Irish setter, Ginger, will have more time to run in the back Held with his owner.
“I have many friends in the post office. At Christmas, car-
that chimes, ture trips
are also on my agenda.”
What’s been in some of the damaged packages? Everything from bad honey bees to sleepy baby alligators and turtles from Florida. Once there were turnip greens from 1 Mississippi that spoiled and ruined two silk dresses.
MAILED MEAT There was a local man who opened a box of fresh (?) pork from the south. He filed his claim with a remark, “I just took it out and buried it.”
BPW Clubs Are Planning Special Tour
Husband Will Be Glad Later
Seek Medical Advice
By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN
DEAR ABBY; Recently I have become a stranger to myself.
I wake up every morning hoping I won’t have to see anyone^
I was always such a friendly person, I can’t understand i People try
call on me andiAR^^V j invite meH^jj|yMg places, but ll|HjfH9f usually t u r
them down with|l^'^^nM| some excuse.
If I do make^^H myself accept, for my bus- ABBY band s sake, I
become very nervous and just i wish I could get away from ' them.
Abby, I am 26 years old, have a wonderful husband and two adorable children. I have no reason to run away from people and nothing to be afraid of.
Do you think I am heading for . a nervous breakdown?
I. suggested going to a psychiatrist, but my husband is against it. He says it’s all in ; my head. Please give me some advice fast.
NERVOUS AND AFRAID
DEAR NERVOUS: Ask your family doctor to recommend a psychiatrist and to tell your husband why he did so. The psychiatrist may be able to tell you if it’s “all in your head.”
.* *. ' *
DEAR ABBY: When our Sunday school class holds its class meetings at a member’s house, there are always a few members who bring their knitting or handiwork. This irks me no end.
At the last meeting, the per-
son in charge of devotions had-to wait until one of the class members ^finished her stitches. Do you think this was right, and what should be done about it in the future?
IRKED
DEAR IRKED: Handiwork is out of place at a meeting where serious business is being conducted. The worst offenders are-insensitive to “needling,” so take a vote and let the majority rule.
About to dispose of a damaged package containing “a coffee pot smashed to smithereens” is. Mrs. Homer C. Tinney, Elizabeth Lake Road, who retired Thurs-
day after 42 years of postal service. She was secretary to Pontiac Postmaster William W. Donaldson for the past sevtn years.
Renewing friendships and establishing new contacts with business and professional women in Central and South America to learn more about their .cultures an<j .work will be the prime goals of officials of the National Federation of Business and Professional Women’s Clubs, Inci, when they embark on a Hemispheric Friendship Tour, Jan. 7-17.
★ * ★
Participating in the tour will be president Helen K. Leslie of St. Petersburg, Fla.; presidentelect Sarah Jane Cunningham of McCook, Neb.; hemispheric friendship committee chairman Marjorie da Costa of Reno, Nev. and Emma P. Hernandez of San-turce, Puerto Rico.
Starting from Miami, the tour will include San Salvador, Costa Rica, Panama, Colombia and Ecuador.
* * *
According to Mrs. Leslie,, the. purpose of the tour is “to renew contacts with business and professional women in several Latin American countries and make preliminary arrangements for the Second Conference of the Americas scheduled for C o s t a Rica in November of 1966.
“We hope to meet as many business and professional women as possible and tour such places as: housing projects, markets, farms, schools, medi-cal centers, missions and business places.
* ★ ★
“Friendship and fellowship are the bonds that hold womer together, even when they do not speak the same language. By reaching across the boundaries , and lines established by governments, we strengthen these bonds and -all peoples benefit,” said Mrs. Leslie.
Hills Residents Getting Ready
for Mgfnv Gala Parties Tonight
By SIGNE KARLSTROM
At the S.J. Lang hom^ Wednesday evening there wa gathering of close frie around their holiday-table .». . Judge and Mrs. Arthur E. Moore,. Mr, and Mrs. U. S. Bratton, Mrs. - Walter Gehrke, Mrs. Virgil Schultz, together with some of the younger set of the families.
Tonight there will be another group of friends-who for 25 years have spent the beginning of a new year together.
* ★ *
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Crook also entertained at dinner on Wednesday evening in their home on'Hupp Gr oss Road. Friends came from Mt. Clemens Detroit, Rochester and Armada. SUPPER PARTY
Mr. and Mrs. Hans Fredrickson will have a large group of friends in their home tor. New Year’s Eve supper.
The Kenneth Manuels on Karen Lane are entertaining friends <for 11 o’clock supper this evening.	_
Spending New Year’s Eve at home will be Mr. and Mrs. Ben D. Mills, with their sons, Ben Jr. and Roberta Ben Jr. will be entertaining some of his friends. * * *
Mr. and Mrs. Robert W. Chambers will also be at home. They presently have a visitor from Colorado Springs, Mrs. Lois C. Valodin, who is Mr. Chamber’s sister. She leaves
for her home on New Year’s Day.
ATBHCC
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest A. Jones will join the Robert Fishers and the Harry Hoyts at the Bloomfield Hills Country Club New Year’s Eve party.
Crystlne Jones who was at home during the holidays has returned to Gladstone, N. J. for some intensive training in riding. Mr. and Mrs. Ernest A. Jones II have been dividing their time during the holidays between their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest A. Jones and W. H. Krauses of Glengary Road.
* ★ *
Many others will be at Bloomfield Hills Country Club party this evening. The William May-berrys have reservations for eight; the Gordon Applequists .also have a table for eight; as
well as the J. Paul Bergmosers,
With T. Russ Hill there will be 10 and the Carl Kindis also has a group of 10.
With the Jack Frosts, will be Mr. and Mrs. Robert Dakin; the Ferd Pruchers, Charles Pattersons and Russel Robins will be in another group.
The George Russells and Mr. and Mrs. Oscar A. Lundin will be together and others who have made reservations are Mr. and Mrs. Don E. Ahrens, Mr. and Mrs. B. J. Powell, the Hanley Dawsons, Mr. and Mrs. H. B. Stubbs, the E. W. Hufnagles, the H. E. Johnsons, the J. A. Browns, the M. A, Mitchells, Mr. and Mrs. Irving Duffy and the William Mitchells.
★ • * *
Thomas B. Adams heads the entertainment committee at the club.
Says Almond-Eyed Wife Has More Voice Than Suspected
Patrice Chooses Pink and Red for Room
America’s Junior Miss of 1965, Patrice Gaunder .of St. Joseph, Mich. is. tradition - bound in her choice of room deqor but up-to-the-minute in the selection of easy-care fabrics and floor coverings.	r
A brilliant cyclamen bedspread of color-locked Eastman Chromspun acetate is quilted with polyester fiberfiU for lasting puff and lightness of weight.
The 9x12 oval rug framing the bed, of polyester and modacryl-ic, is machine-washable and • dryable. y
f * it
-Bright pinks and reds are ret pea ted in the charming wallpaper design, an interpretation of crewel embroidery, and in pillows and shortie draperies. White overdraperies soften the effect. .
* i. * e ( ■
The handsome furniture pieces are from The American Legacy Collection by Sprague & Carle-ton; a restatement of Ear.l.y American style executed frith flair and excellence of; detail and scaling.
A portrait photograph of Patrice and enlarged snapshots of
her experiences as the 1965 winner of the America’s Junior Miss
pageant in Mobile, Alabama,, are mounted on fiber board and
used as decorative accessories over the bed and writing table.
America's Junior Miss, Patrice Gaunder, has a redecorated bedroom.
ANN ARBOR—Most American men,probably won’t believe this, but ■a University of Michigan sociologist says that Japanese wives are far more verbal than American ones.
Associate professor Robert 0. Blood admits that he originally hypothesized that American wives would win the verbal contest, but his year’s research in . Tokyo on a Fulbright grant proved otherwise.
★ ★ ★
An authority on marriage and family life, Blood centered his research on 444 married couples living in three large governmental housing projects in Tokyo.
From his research, Blood has written “Love-Match and Arranged Marriage,” a study of two types of Japanese marriages and their comparison to American marriages. The book will be published by Free Press, a division of the Macmillan Publishing Comphny. DEPENDENT
Blood also noted that Japanese wives lean heavily on their husbands in time of trouble, “telling their husbands their troubles about twice as often as American wives do.”
“One due,” Blood writes, “is the greater Japanese emphasis on the importance of Understanding in marriage. Whereas wives put their greatest a s i s on companionship means primarily having
believe ill their (Tokyo
. husbands also ranked “understanding” most important more often* than Detroit wives did.)
“One reason perhaps is that Japanese people take their troubles more seriously than Americans,”- Blood states. “This is a sweeping statement, to be sure, but It was one of my: in-, delible impressions from my: year in Japan.”
MORE- SUICIDE
Blood adds that “an extraor-dinarily high suicide rate among* young adults (in Japan) testifies tola frequent sense of the futility of life in the face of an Oppressive .social structure." .
“Americans, by contrast,” Blood says, “tend to be incorrigible optimists. Nurtured on activistic Protestant brands of Christianity, they view the suicide as ‘chicken.’ flora in' a new country whose frontier only recently dosed and whose labor force is remarkably mobile, they see life and opportunity stretching endlessly on ... "
★ . ★ ♦
“Perhaps, then,” fllopd concludes, “American wives (and surely husbands, too) can manage half their troubles alone because they take them lightly.”
“This is not to say that American culture is necessarily better than Japanese culture,” Blood ' cautions.,	*	/
_,	*	★	* p~.	'
“From the standpoint of maw riage itself, tfyere is a weakness in the American system of self-reliance: Here are 'personal needs which the partner could in most cases meet if he knew about than. But instead.of turning to her husband, the American wife often turns to the TV set or goes to bed . . . the sociologist, says.
. k .r.

I to buy . wash-wears in Argent tina, ask for “lav-i-listos"—liter-! ally translated as “wash and jwear.” '
NOW
OPEN EVENINGS Dr. E. D. Van Deusen
•; font Specialist
5648 Highland Road OR 3-1335
/■ "
Meet Friends for 1 BREAKFAST and LUNCH Always Good Coffee
RIKER FOUNTAIN
L Biker Bldg. - lobby j
GAIL D. GIRARD
LOANN PRIEBE
LINDA J. BURLISON LORRAINE PIZZUTI JEANIE L. SEWELL DEBORAH N. RANSOM
LINDA J. MANNS
CHILDREN’S SHOP
MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER
Girard - Zilka
The Edward Girards of Highfield Street announce the bethrothal of their daughter Gail Dianne to Wayne J. Zilka, son of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Zilka of South Roslyn Street. He is a junior at Michigan State University.
Priebe - Felix
Announcement is made of the engagement of Loann Priebe to James Felix, son of Mr. and Mrs. William Felix of Brookdale Road. Her parents are Mrs. Donald Cutright of West Hopkins Street and Otto G. Priebe of Moore Street Mr. Felix attends Central Michigan University.
Burlison - Logan
A March wedding is planned by Linda Jean Bur-
lison and Walter Harry Logan, son of Mrs. Harley C. Alkire of Oak Hill Street and Walter Logan of North Perry Street. The bride-elect is the daugh* ter of Mrs. Conrad Burlison of Dora Lane, Independence Township and the late Mr. Burlison.
Pizzuti - Antenucci
Mr. and Mrs. William D. Pizzuti of Desmond Street announce the engagement of their daughter, Lorraine to Louie Antenucci, son of Mr. and Mrs. Nicholas Antenucci of Windsor, Ont.
Sewell - Galligan
May vows are planned by Jeanie Lynn Sewell,' daughter Of Mr. and Mrs. Everett P. Sewell of Longworth.Street, and David W. Galligan, son of the Roger Galligaijs of Clarkston.
Ransom - Savage
SUSAN D. PLASSEY
Has Answer for Helping Bored Teens
may Health, Happiness and Prosperity be lyours for 1966!
THE ROTUNDA COUNTRY INN
’ wishes you
A HAPPY and Prosperous NEW YEAR
Betty Ridley will 'entertain on the piano in our Williamsburg Lounge on New Year's Eve
• RESERVATIONS • 682-0600 2330 Pine Lake Road
Orchard Lake—North Shore of Beautiful Pine Lake
FANTASTIC
mum sale
One week Only-from Sun., Jan. 2nd to Sat. Jan 8th
OUR COMPLETE STOCK
SACRIFICED SAVE 1/8 and MORE
OPEN SUNDAY-NOON ’til 6 P.M. MON.-SATURDAY 10 A.M.-9 P.M.
(JaitHz <£fioji
270 S. Telegraph Rd., Pontiac FE 4-1850 ’
Delicate touche* of flumiago pink to the sweeping curves of the stylised black line drawing.give a refreshing sophistication to this new and s|»arkli|ig dinnerware pattern. On the popular Rhythm shape.
16 PieceOpenStock................ *5W
DIXIE POTTERY
5281 Dixie Hwy-	. OR3-1894
Food Ideas for This Reception
By Hie Emily Post Institute Q: My daughter is going toi be married here at home. There will be a stand-up wedding supper following the ceremony. Will you please be good enough to tell me how the table should be set and also what foods to serve?
I would appreciate any information you can give me.
A: For a stand-up supper, a •ingle long table Is set in the dining room. It is covered with a plain white damask doth.
In the center is a centerpiece of white flowers. On it are piles of plates (preferably white, or white and gold), stacks of napkins, and rows of spoons and forks at intervals.
' * * ★
If there is a bridal table, It is usually set elsewhere. If not, die wedding cake Is the feature of the buffet, put at the center of this table with a centerpiece of white flowers behind it or two floral pieces flanking it.
In evenly spaced places are such cold dishes as chicken | and celery salad or ham jinousse with chopped hearts of | lettuce and such hot dishes as (creamed crabmeat, chicken a la king, or chicken croquettes.: Whatever the choice is, there (are two or three cold dishes1 and at least two hot dishes. | Of first importance is to se- { led food [that can be easily eat-1 jen with i fork while the plate i is held ini the other hand. There (should also be finger rolls and sandwiches,, substantial	yet
(small enough to eat easily.
I There art dishes filled with fancy, cakes, chosen for looks as mud)- as taste. Usually there I are—also peppermints, cars-Jmels, and	chocolates.	Ice
I cream is the typical dessert.
! After-dinner coffee is put on a side table, as is champagne | or its substitute, punch.
Enroll
NOW!
Enrollments Taken Daily at Your Convenience
PONTIAC
BEAUTY COLLEGE
16% E. Huron . Phone FE 4-1854
Study the Jatest techniques' and hair IfbsHjpns.
Call Miss Wilson for further information
A June altar date is set by Deborah NaDeane Ransom and Pvt. Robert Earl Savage of Fort Knox, Ky., son of Mr. and Mrs. Earl Savage of Whipple Lake Road, Independence Township. She is the daughter of Rex B. Ransom of Liter Road, Orion Township ahd the late'Mrs. Lois Ransom.
Kehn - Fritch
Announcing the engagement of their daughter Patricia Ann, to Gerald Dalvid Fritch, son of Mr. and Mrs. Weldon L. Fritch of Weymouth Street*, West Bloomfield Township, are the Arthur Kehns of Pleasant Lake Drive. Her fianee attends Flint Junior College.
Manns - Carr
The engagement of Linda Jean Manns to Ronald Carr, son of the Ronald A. Carrs of West Colgate Avenue is announced by her parents^ Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Manns of-Joy Road, Pontiac Township. She attended Flint Junior College and her fiance is affiliated with Sigma Phi Omega fraternity at Western Michigan University.
Plassey - Brookens
The Richard G. Plasseys of Lakeview Drive, Orion Township, announce the engagement of their daughter, Susan Diane to Terry Lee Brookens, son of Mr. and Mrs. Merle L. Brookens of Cardigan Drive, Orion Townstyp.
performance-proved

rca Victor New
COLOR TV
•	RCA Solid Copptr Circuits
•	Glart-proof RCA Hi-UteTuM
•	Super-powerful 25,000-volt chaaal*
•	RCA AutomaticColor Puriflar o Ultra-aensitiva VHF/UHF tuner*
•	One-Set VHF fine tuning
New Year'* Day Watch the _
PARADE sf ROSES is COLOR
- ’ ■ ■ alto-
THE ROSE HOWL GAME
"After the $cle If* the Service The! Count*"
STEFANSKI
ELECTRONICS
1157 W. HURON	FE 2-6967
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) — . Swimming is an excellent answer to teen-age problems of boredom, violent outbursts and sexual misbehavior, according to Dr. Alfred Bochner, a research associate of Dr. Benjamin Spock.
Bochner spent more than a year studying 250 boys and girls who trained daily at a California awim club which has produced Olympic champions Don Schollander and Donna da Varona.
GOOD TRAINING
“Swimming In itself is Com-' pletely Inane as an activity/’ Bodmer said, "but It does train people to get organized and to live actively and with interest.”
Bochner also believes that for non-swimmers, similar programs such as tennis or learning languages should be Instituted.
“We live In a world where life could get very easy for human beings,” the doctor said. “What are the children going to do with all their energy? Here is a safe and interesting way to harness it.”
The Kingsley Inn
CALBI MUSIC CO.
119 North Saginaw	FE 5-8222
Enjoy New Year’s Eve DINNER AT
7ecfi
OPEN TO 4 AM.
in Bloomfield Hills
WOODWARD AT SQUARE LAKE RD. - FE 4-6630
■	l  * -	I •<
- CLOSED NEW-YEAR’S DAY
TWELVE
L# ^
THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 31, 1965
MMMNMfcMMl
Jacoby on Bridge
Vengeful Brazilian Kills 15 Gypsies
BEN CASEY
NORTH	si
' 4k A K 7 5 tm
♦	S3
♦	A842
WEST	EAST
♦	JB3	4k 10 9 6 4
VKQ	¥53
♦	10743	4 9 8 5
♦	QJ109	♦ K 7 6 5
SOUTH (D)
♦	QS V
V A J 10 8 8 4
♦	AKQJ
♦	3
Both vulnerable West North East South
marked as he put down the my, ‘^Probably down two.”
West looked it over mournfully and said, “How can it be down two with a dummy like that?”
South had no trouble going down one. He took two, trump finesses and West mhde both his king and queen, whereupon South really became mad.
20
Pass Pass Pass Pass
■^^Qpaaiaa.. laad-m.4 Q.
2% Pass 3 0 Pass 5 ¥ Pass Pass
West should not have said anything. It is good to remember j that you only need the words double, redouble, no-|trump, spades, hearts, dia-monds, dubs and the numbersi n...	iy’/' p«
n7ffiTWto^vWtrcarT7''on al" YdB, SOUTH, Mlfl!
■	^	. -.visj ' 1 PONTE ALTO DO SUL, Brazil
have worked this time but each (Un) _ A vengeance-bent Bra-wouJd fail against two combi-iZiUan killed 15 gypsies at a nations. The worst play, which is|camp near here Wednesday to finesse once and then play tneLjght jn a bizarre blood batn ace would lose against a single- which escalated the toll of a tim king or queen in the Westhighway accident to 17 hand. The Second-best play, dead 8	3	1
which is to play the ace immedi-i	*	*	*
ately,-would lose against king-] The trouble. started; earlier queen-small or king - queen and WedSa£y, when a motorist ac-two smaH in ibe East hand, andicidentall/r&n down and Wlled1
«;«• glrl«“• Wghw*j'-king-queen and k small trump. I Members of her tribe seized

THE BERRYS
Pass
the driver, decapitated him and set his head on a pole in | their camp.
That night, the slain man’s brother roared into the camp in :a station wagon.
____	!^‘‘iie^an^er^nd“Mttedl3"gyp^
:omplete bridge, conversation.! AAKi»»4¥AK18l4 4K5 ** sies as they slept in their tents By JACOBY & SON I Silence is golden. But that really What do you do now? w _ and shot down two who tried to re is a hand that almost did not affect South’s play. He fight in an all-expert had taken the best percentage
caused
rubber bridge game about 351 and it Just happened that the !
__| „ PR_____rj__H_____RR TODAY'S QUESTION j jj,e fjret voting machine was,
years ago. The best percentage did not work . Your P»r*ner respond«flvejused in Illinois for the 1908 pres-( *’ contract this time.	hearts to show two aces. Whai;idential election-when William!
do you do now?	Howard Taft defeated William
•■uwar Tomorrow |Jennings Bryan
slam
was
DRIFT MARLO
AWtWMaME5FRN7HER60ORD6;THREEfiUAf®5IO0UU»0gPBND(H " OTHERS, WHO WOULD DO MEA WVOR NOW AND THSN...ANP FINALLY PEOPLE WHO WOULP TAKE THE CHILDREN AND FW9S THEM ON.	m
THEY WERE 6ERMANS WHO, WHEN THEy DtP LEARN WHAT W4S HAPPENING AT »
AUSCHWITZ, RISKED THEIR LIVES TO RECEIVE MV CHILDREN.*	*
7--------mm m'~m---------vmrm*m*mtamm
By Ctrl Gruhert
ooowb
SANG BAtfe"
TWiKr
»PONS’
There are three plays at de-, clarer’s disposal with this card I combination. None will work if ’
EH
good one, although the bidding is not what one „ it
would expect to-' West ho,d* khl«-<iueen * sma11 would expect to- ^ p|ay ^ dM take
•North was wouW work a8ainst all combi-pretty proud of natk>n* exceP‘the actual his hand and re-1 The other two plays Would
BERRY’S WOilLD
By Jim Berry
* . ■&	' ¥	* W
Astrological Forecast
m ■ «
* * *
i oMtai
Festival Opening Set HOLLAND (AP)—Mayor Neb
By Dr. I. M. Levitt. Tom Cooke and Phil Evanr
ALLEY OOP
By V. T. Hamlin
w
CAPTAIN EASY
By Leslie Turner
CffiiMii
Gov. George Romney to attend the May 11 open- “More eremonies of the 1986 Hoi- wanl
© ms by NEA, Inc.
“More irate letters about your policy—from fathers who ited their daughters to finish school before getting married!” -
MYTHIC '|NT£RE6TrN6 MARTHA.'IT GIVES THE ENTIRE HISTORY; OF THE PLASTICS INDUSTRY/
tAOUy.U,t(J«n. » -^Ftb. 11): Steer I
Divorces
BOARDING HOLSE
I'VE BEEN READ' IN<3 SO RAPIDLY MY EYES AREA BIT [ W&ARY/ iLL-t-ER, AH-STROLL DOWN TO THE-CORNER FOR A CI6AR AND A BIT OF FRESH AIR /THEN tLL BE ABLE
THE LAST TIME Y<90 \ WENT FOR A ClSAR j
of,i new year‘5 EVE THE: MILKMAN j BROUGHT YOU HOME/ , YOU CLAIMED YOU PASSED OUT V6TANDIN6 IN LINE//
Interlochen Academy Is Recipient of Grant INTERLOCHEN (AP). ^ At project, to improve music education has begun at Interlochen] Arts Academy under a grant of j $221,000 from the U.S. Depart-! ment of Health, Education and! Welfare.
* *
The-Interlochen Honors Music Project, involving 42 students, grew from a suggestion by Dr. Joseph E. Maddy. He founded the summer < national music camp in 1928 and. In 1962, opened the Interlochen Arts Academy as a prep school for students talented in' the arts.
' Hotel Operator Dies
Grand rapids (apj -. a
former West Michigan hotel operator, Mrs. Ernest Greiner, M, died Wednesday in Grand! Rapids where she had resided with two daughters. She and her late husband had operated the Berlin Hotel In Marne and the Casnovia Hotel in Casnovia.
EEK & MEEK
By Howie Schneider
r BUT TM TH.LIM& A YOU - IF MX) DOWT PAY THIS BACK OUR . FRIENDSHIP ROVER! j
“MT
> ( HERE, KITTY—) VyOU POOR LI'L J	(suzy)
J V THING-y	
	
	
By Ernie Bushmiller
By Bud Blake
DONALD Dl’CK
•twajoiN© id ©ive the> BOVS their start in < ■J THE WORLO BANKING.1)
follow me ,Boys... \ I'M GOING TO LAUNCH ) yOU INTO THE WORLD J OW HIGH PlNANCE/^^
By Walt Disney
THE PONTIACVRESS, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 81, 1965
THIRTEEN
Rose Bowl Squads Rest for Showdown
State, Uclans End Workouts for Tomorrow
MSU Favored to Win by 14; Sun Returns After Heavy Rain-
All-Everything 1961-1965
This Is Your Life
WSXDENATCalir (AFT-~ Rival football teams, Michigan State and UCLA, were rested and ready to go in their Roae Bowl showdown on New Year’s Day.
Both the Spartan and Bruin camps were cheered by warm sunshine Thursday following a pelting rain the day before. The Rose Bowl turf was reported In excellent shape for the climactic contest and the weather was expected to.be brisk.
"A dry fiefc^won’t bother us at all,” commented Bruin coach Tommy „ Prothro, who has warned he will order a lot of passing. “Everybody on our outfit is 0. K. and ready to go.”
“I’m not conceding that they , are a better passing team than we are,” chimed in MSU coach Taffy Daugherty. “If they stop our running game, we might pass more than they do.” -APISA WELL'
Daugherty reported1 that his high-scoring fullback, Bob Api-sa, is “back to normal and 96 per cent well.”
Senior fullback Eddie Cotton will start the game, Daugherty said, promising that sophomore Apisa will make an early appearance.
k k k
Michigan State wa$ a 14V4-point favorite to continue unbeaten, untied and retain the Associated Press No. 1 spot in the national collegiate ratings.
The UCLA team has retired to a downtown hotel and won’t leave it before game time, except for a short 35-minute work-' out Friday, Prothro said.
Michigan State retreated Thursday night to a monasterylike compound operated by the Roman Catholic Passionist Fathers.
★ * •
Daugherty said he will workout his team briefly Friday', then take them in for a look at the Rose Bowl, tour the museum there and “soak up some of the tradition.”
Daugherty couldn’t resist one parting quip before he led his players into seclusion.
“I was told I was the first ■ Catholic coach to take a team into this retreat,” he said. “So I told the fathers I hope they had not used up all their prayers on the Protestants.”
By BRUNO L. KEARNS Sports Editor, Pontiac Press In short, this is the athletic life of Steve Juday, who will tomorrow lead the Michigan State Spartans in the 1966 Rose fiowlgarae-againstthe-Bruins Of UCLA*.' ’— --------—
•	Three sports star at Northville High School, I960. 62.
•	All-Oakland County quarterback, football season 1961.
•	All • State quarterback, 1961.
•	Winner of The Pontiac Press Outstanding Player Award, 1961.
•	All-County Class B basketball team, 1961-62.
•	All- County baseball team, 1962.
•	Outstanding Player Award as MSU freshman,
spring game 1963.
•	All-Big Ten Quarterback, 1965.
•	All-American by Associated Press, 1965.
In length, the many honors
STEVE JUDAY ’61 Northville QB
Bowl Card
Here are the remaining college football bowl games plus professiohal football championship and All-Star games, listing sites, competing teams and their records, starting times, television coverage, if any, and estimated attendances:
Depauw '5' Beats
as Stan Bahler Hits
SCHENECTADY, N. Y. (ft DePauw won the Union College Holiday Basketball Tournament Thursday night by beating Hope 77-67 in the third round, of the round-robin event.
In the opening game of the double header host Union] stopped MIT, 86-74.
Stan Bahler of DePauw set a tournament record with 37 points as he led the Indiana team to its third victory of the three - game tourney. Floyd Brady paced Hiqje with 19 points.
the punting and averaged 41. yards in 12 kicks.
CAGE CAPTAIN From football, Juday moved to the basketball court where he raptained.theaa6L&LNorth--villetrarirwhich also wenFun-beaten in 15 games in winning the W-0 championship.
The Juday-captained Mustangs were rated No. 2 in Michigan and lost in the state -basketball semifinals to perennial Class B power River Rouge, leaving Northville with an overall record of 20-1.
Northville cage coach Dave Longridge, took county coach-of-the-year honors with the Mustangs’ Dan Brown making the all-county team and Juday the1 all-Class B unit.
“Steve’s leadership was the key to our success,” Longridge commented when Northville finished the overall campaign with a 20-1 record.
Before his basketball shoes cooled off, Juday had his spikes on and was at his var-exciting to watch on offense- Jf sfiorfstop position when and wSs hailed as a tremen- the season started, dous defensive player In his Captain of the Northville safety position.	diamond team, Juday was the
He completed 61 per cent of ,ead'"« fitter on the squad his passes with 77	128 at- “ f* Mustangs won their
tempts for 1,112 yanls and third fnajor sports champion-nine touchdowns. Seven other ?hiP ,n ‘h® Wayne-Oakland TDs were set up with his pass- League with a 14-1 record, ing	Northville then entered the
As a runner, Juday carried All-Oakland area baseball 65 times for 403 yards, better tournamait sponsored, by The than six yards a carry. He ^ess and also wafted off with ran for 14 touchdowns and two championship by defeat ng extra points and finished 6th ^Class A. tacludtng
and accomplishments of this 6-foot and 176-pound athlete and the success of the teams with which he has played in his relatively short athletic career, could be bound into a solid- volume of rcodinfr——■ At Northville High School, which enjoyed one of its greatest years in athletics during the 1961-62 school, he was the king of sports.
UNBEATEN GRID TEAM Northville, under coach Ron Horwath, posted a 9-0 football record in 1962, winning the Wayne-Oakland League championship and finishing among the top 10 Class B teams in the state in the AP poll.
“He was Mr. Everything for our team,” said Horwath when it was announced that Steve was the recipient of the McAn bronze shoe •ward presented by The Pontiac Press as Oakland County’s outstanding football player for the 1961 season.
As a prep player, Juday was
COUNTY’S BEST - The top football awards of 1961 in Oakland County went to Northville’s Steve Juday, who won the Pontiac Press’ Outstanding Player Award, and Pin Ryan (right) Royal Oak Kimball coach who was named “County Coach-of-the-Yjpar.” • v /
on Oakland County scoring • with 86 points. " l Defensively,, he led the squad in tackling, intercepted seven passes, recovered six fumbles, averaged 25 yards on punt returns and 24 yards on kickoff returns. He also did
Southfield, 1-0. in the finale. r4 k k k
This boosted the three-sport record for football, basketball and baseball, led by. Mr. All-Sport Juday, to 41 wins and two losses.
AT MSU
At Michigan State, Juday limited his talents on the varsity side of football" and baseball.
His baseball batting average was a robust :342 last season, and his passing has broken. all Spartan records, including those of such names j as A1 Dorow, Earl Morrall and Gene Glick.
These are his passing records in three years:
Sfeve Juday
Michigan State Quarterback
Year	Att.	Comp	. .Yds	Id’s
‘1963	68	30	509	5
1964	148	79	894	10”
1965	tor*	89	1173	7
Totals	i 384”	198”	2,576”	21”
Totals 384		!■ 198!	2,576!	21!
Rose Bowl Rosters
TWO FROM ’61 - The 1961 All-Oakland County Football as presented by The Pontiac Press brought forth two 1965 All-America college players both from Michigan State. Ron Goovert (upper arrow) from Hazel Park and Steve Juday of Northville (lower arrow) were members Of the best county “l!” that year.
Two other outstanding players on that 1961 team in college ranks at the" University of Michigan this year were end Craig Karby of Kimball (top right corner) and halfback Dorie Reid of F e r n d a I e (lower right to Goovert).
* Started first game as soph, but. lost after six games because of shoulder separation.
' 1 All records for season or for career.
Picked as the team’s Most Valuable Player, All-Big 10, All-Ameriean and • the • outstanding jStudent-Athlete of college football, Juday’s biggest disappointment came a few weeks ago when he was shunned in the draft selec-tions of the pro football teams.
Tomorrow, before 100,000 Rose Bowl fans, Steve will be out to prove the pros wrong.
Past Rose Bowl Results
1 m	Barryt
45 'McAteer, Tim
50 Manning,, Don .........
58**Mlller, Jim .........
40 Murphy, Dennis ... 45‘*Nelson, Byron . ...
79 Paul, Rilk ............
82 Pearson, * Wade ...
.... Culver City. CaHf. .. » Anaheim, ’
. Sherman Daks,
..... Inglewood.	Calil.
.... Palmdale,	Call'
.	Newport B.,	Call
.... San Diego, Calif.
.... San Olego, Calif.
Appearance in Bowls Is 4th for MSU
If you’ve bet that Michigan State’s Spartans will be making their third appearance in a bowl game New Year's Day, you lose.
The team will be playing in a bowl game for the fourth time.
The Spartans downed UCLA in 1954, 28-20, and posted a 17-14 victory over the same squad in ' 1956.
MSUs other bowl appearance? That came in 1938 when the Spartans played Auburn In the Orange Bowl and suffered, a 6-0 setback.
.07 Separates Top 2 Scorers in NCAA Race
NEW YORK (AP) - Dave cllif'i Schellhase of Purdue and Bob R,CFresn£ ca'iik Lewis of North Carolina are
L0Ex«t»r' c*m' I *oc*ce<i i® the closest race in five Gien Ridge, n.j! years for the major-college h
St. Helen*, Calif. - - ■............
Shifter. Calif.
. Shatter, Calif.
Redlands, Califi
California 14. Penn State 1 1924—Washington 14, Navy 14 19*5—Noire Dame 27, Stanford 10 1924—Alabama 20, Washlntfoa If WV—Stanford 7, Alabama 7 im—Stanford 7, Pittsburgh 5 19*9—Georgia Tech l, California 7
1930—	Southern California 47, Pittsburgh 14
1931—	Alabama 24, Washington State t
1932—	Sduthem California 21, Tulane 12
1933—	Southern California 35, Pittsburgh t
1934—	Columbia 7. Stanford 0
1935—	Alabama 29, Stanford 13 1930—Stanford 7, Southern Methodist 0 1927—Pittsburgh 21, Washington 0 1930—California 13, Alabama 0
0 9 uvaoir wav. vs. uvn inwi. CalltornJa R.Jennessee 8. Fewest net yards rushing, 0-USC si. N*hr»«k» is	Alabama (IM5).	'
Fewest net yards passing, O-Oregon vs. Harvard (1920); California......Mft
FOwei
{Washington A Jefferson (1922).
1941—	Stanford 2
1942—	Oregon S'
1943—	Georgia 1
Nebraska 13 Ti 20, Duke M UCLA 0
I his All-
here the Spartans k AP AlhAmerica 1965 Coach-Of-The-team, and Michi-MacArthur Bowl
■PPRMK 45. UCLA 14 1940—Michigan 49, Southern California
1949—	Northwestern 20, California 14
1950—	Ohio State 17, CatNomla ’14
1951—	Michigan 14, California *
1952—	llMnols 40, Stanford 7
1953—	Southern California 7, Wisconsin 0
1954—	Michigan State 20, UCLA 20
1955—	Ohto state 70. Southern Calif lOSa-Mmoen State 17, UCLA 14 1957—Iowa 25. Oregon State 19 1950—Ohio Stete 10, Oregon 7 19594-lowa 30, CeUfornla 12 19*0—Washington 44, Wisconsin .
1961—Washington 17. ’Mlnnaaoti 7 Itii nimojoii 21, UCLA 2
ob narpmsM, -ipnn ....
42 *Kenney; Richard .. S3 Lange, Robert ... 24 Lee, Dwight 24 Lowthor, Charles . • ‘ »cas, Harold ....
ketball individual storing lead.
.This was revealed Thursday with the latest release of statis-tics through games of last Saturday by the NCAA Service Bureau. Schellhase leads Lewis by 0.07 points, the Purdue ace having scored 207 points in six games for a 34.50 average and Lewis 241 points in seven games for a 34.43 average.
O FO PT Pt*. Avf.
Dave Schellhase
lrllHWInMNII 21* ULLA 1 .	• «	T_ ,
1943—Southern California 42, -Wisconsin *71 College Holiday ,944-...inei, !7,wa*.n*on 7 •_	iTa^ament
1965—Michigan 34, Oregon State 7
— | .	,	.	| j 53**Owens, Alton .
Calvin Loses in Finals » p^.-j^o'
CALVIN (AP) — Central Statejp PnX*r!S«Spti '
116 Save, j—
Of Ohio defedted host Calvin 72*1}' -K Charii 70 in t^ championship game, *	.Ctm	m ti i,T
and Wheaton, 111., downed Cen-^ Techim, Davw ... ot	m -i-n »
tral College of Iowa, 9M1,]	gj M "
Thursday night in thejtelyinj*
Sr. ......... Buchanan,	Mich.
Jr. ........... A lea, Hawaii
Soph......	- Chicago, III.
Soph...... New	Haven, Mich.
Jr...... Royal Oak, Mich.
,$r............. Detroit, Mich.
Jr. .......... Toledo, Ohio
Sr....... Fort	Worth, Texas
Soph........ Beaumont, Taxes
Sr............. Canton, Ohio
Soph. .. Benton Harbor, Midi.
Soph......... Detroit, Mich:
Soph....... Fayetteville, N.C.
Jr. ....... Beaumont. Texas
Soph.......... .	Chicago, III.
Jr. ....... Orangdburg, S.C.
Soph. ....:. Essexvllle, Mich.'
Dedication 90 *Webster, George
57 ‘West, jerry ..... VI
'Denotes Michigan State Vasily fi
r. ........ Pittsburgh, Pa.
r....,....... La Porta, Texas
r----....... Vendalla, Mich.
r. ...... .*.. Anderson. S.C.
r.	.... . Durand, Mich.
tCo-Captaln.
Record in Bo^wl Event
NEW ORLEANS (AP) - Jim Ryun, University of Kansas freshman, cut almost six seconds off the Sugar Bowl record the . 1,500-meter run Thursday with a 3:42.7 effort, about equivalent to a 3:59 mile run.
FOURTEEN
THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 31, 1965
President 6f AFL Champs Agrees With Haftrs
Bills Owner Ralph Wilson Is 'Out' of Money Derby
NOT IN DERBY - Detroit business executive Ralph Wilson, owner and president of
American Football League, told The Press today that he joins George Halas of the NFL Chicago Bears in keeping out of the “insane” mon-• ey derby which the pros are conducting for college players.
By BRUNO L. KEARNS Sports Editor, Pontiac Press Ralph Wilson Jr., of the American Football League and George Halas of the National Football League have similar views about the skyrocketing bonuses and salaries being paid by pro teams to college draft choices.
Earlier this week, Halas, owner and coach of the Chicago Bears, said he was pulling out of the big money derby and offering his No. 1 draft choice LSU tackle George Rice,.to-any. NFL team who ‘wanS him."
“I agree with Halas,” said Wilson, president of the Buffalo Bills who last Sunday won their second straight AFL championship by routing San Diego, 23-0.
“We’re not going to get into this high bidding game either,” said Wilson, and we made that clear when we did not get into the derby for our top two choices. (Mike Dennis and Jim Lind* say, Mississippi and Arkansas linemen).
“We didn’t have" a No. 1 draft choice playing Sunday and don’t have a team of the great individual stars such as San Diego,” W.i 1 s o n added, “but we’ve got a ball club
I ifon*r care how many stars there are on a team you can’t win without that heart.” “Sure, we need new players and we’ll have to compete for them, but look at the rosters and you'll see plenty of
choices from 10th to 20th listed.”
money problems
Wilson emphatically pointed out that to get into money derby has and would create personnel problems. “There isn’t a. football player alive let alone an untested rookie worth 64-3-2 or any hundreds of thousands of dollars.”
% ■ ♦ ★
“We pay\our players good salaries, fainsalartes and this makes for a happy team, not a team-»f-indi
“This bonus dlrpy may last another year or two and die kids in this given period can say they were born at the right time. But a few years from now owners will lode back and
ask themselves how they ever lost their Perspectives.
“I am sincere when I say the common draft is what we need to bring sanity back to the game.”
The Bills’ president said he was sure that “Green Bay’s offer to Jim Grabowski was closer to 1600,000 than the |100,000 for three years which was reported.” /
“I know what Miami offered him and he certainly wouldn’t have signed for the $100,000. It—was- reported aa such to Teep tfie peace among the veterans.” . .
He also commented that the bidding for Donny Anderson of Texas Tech is “ridiculous” as was the situation for Tommy Nobis.
“When some of the owners look at the rosters and see how many of these big bonus babies have been just average players, they will realize the waste of it all,” he added. comments on tv
Wilson also commented on the recent NFL television package with CBS calling for $37.6 million for two years.
★ * *
“It was a good boost, but the NFL had to give 50 per cent more exposure .with night games, eight. TV HmihleheaH. -ersrjso toijstatnee ttnrat they really got less.
“They (the NFL) wanted a four year contract, but TV doesn’t want to take a chance. TV knows anything could happen to ruin the de-
mand with all this crazy player bidding which could bankrupt ■ few teaim in a couple years.”
“And besides, now the NFL is permitting other games to be telecast into cities where home teams are playing. The saturation point has long been reached.”
★ *
Wilson, whose primary business is insurance with his offices in Detroit, has interests in road building, trucking, oil drilling and horse racing. His trucking interests involve haul-
A graduate of University of Virginia and the University of Michigan Law school, he was a commissioned Naval officer during World War n at
mm.
Nicklaus Still PGA Tour 'Apprentice'
i	NEW YORK (NEA)-
Those who know Jack Nick-* laus say there’s only one ^ thing that can melt thd ice | cubes which house his nerve I ends—details.
I	His inattention to detail
1 took the relaxation out of his 1 winter restup.
I	His concern nowadays is
■ over whether or not he is
(going to be certified a bona fide Professional Golf Association professional in 1966.
If so, he’ll be eligible for 1 selection to pro golf’s pres-i tigious Ryder Cup team, a I personal pinnacle Nicklaus | badly wants to reach. If not, I he’ll have to wait another 1 three years, possibly more..
;	Nicklaus, as a-PGA ap-
| prentice, didn’t play the re*. I quired 25 tournaments this 1 year.
I	“I scheduled. 27 tourna-
I ments,” he said.' “I had to
cancel two of them because I got wrapped up in other commitments and I found I - needed some extra practice time to get ready for the National Open.”
CANCELS MIAMI
He didn't ebunt on the cancellation of the Miami Beach Open, which left him .one tournament short and Chin-high in those dreaded details.
In PGA circles, the law’s the thing and the rules are rigid.
Nicklaus applied for his PGA membership and was approved for tournament play—late in 1961. This meant he could play in the big tournaments, but he had to serve a five-year apprenticeship before he was eligible for full PGA membership and Ryder Cup play.
When he realized his
JACK NICKLAUS
plight a few weeks ago, he even tried to organize his own tournament, just to
make the required 25.
“The PGA turned it down,” he said.
“Now 1 have to file application to have the PGA waive the 25-tournament rule, which would give me my fourth year credit “Then, under the rules, I could get credit for my fifth year by going to PGA business school in, February.”
★ * ★
■ The 25-year-old Ohioan conceivably could get PGA certification in time to earn enough tournament points to make the 1967 Ryder Cup.
But why all the fuss over making the Ryder Cup team, alien at age 25 he has become the top golfer in the nation, or the world for that matter, and a millionaire to boot?
“It’s a goal and it’s an honor,” he said. “It’s added incentive to play well in all tournaments, because you .make the team according to how well you do on the circuit."
★
If the PGA rules against Nicklaus, however, he won’t get a shot'at Ryder Cup play until 1969, since thes matches are held every two years.
“We’re waiting for his application,” a PGA spokesman said. “He must show clearly that extenuating circumstances caused him to miss his 25 tournaments.”
But the PGA, like all disciplined organizations, is reluctant to make exceptions.
“I respect, that,” Nicklaus said. *.
Red Wings Regain Parker MacDonald
DETROIT (AP) - Veteran Parker MacDonald was turned to the Detroit Red Wings Thursday from the Bruins where he had gone last May in a package deal, the club announced.
The Bruins in exchange will get Pit Martin, 22, from the Red Wings’ Pittsburgh farm chib.
The 32-year-old MacDonald is expected back in Red Wings uniform in time for the New Year’s eve battle with the first-place Chicago Black Hawks at 11 Olympia Stadium.
In that spot since Nov. 28, will return to center between left wing Ron Murphy and right winger Floyd Smith.
★ ★ '
“We tried everyone on left wing with Gordie and Alex but only Ullman worked out and then it was a case of putting all our eggs in one basket,” Abel said.
'We wanted more balance,” he added.
An eight-season National Hockey League veteran, MacDonald had most of Ms big successes while working with Howe and
His arrival means a reshuffle whi]e he had only 13 goals last
I	of the Red Wihgs’ No. 1 line, season, he rigistered 33 assists.
II	MacDonald will assume his old I spot at left wing with Alex Del-
jvecchio and Gordie Howe, man-ager-coach Sid Abel said.
I RETURN TO CENTER
Norm Ullman, who had been
BASKETBALL SCOKES
Thursday's Collugu B—-------
TOURNAMENTS Lot AnfOtOI Clinic Championship UCLA 94. USC 74
Third Floco Vanderbilt 94. Purdue 72 Fifth Plata
Syracuse 113, St. John's, N.Y., Holiday Faatlval Tourney , Championship
Providence 91, Boston College 14 Third Place Army 71. Illinois 49
Fifth Place ,_n SI, Vlllanove 72 Par West Classic
97
Oregon State 42, Stanford 44 Third Place
Utah State 13, Arizona St. 77 Seventh Place Air Farce 49, Oregon S7
•la light Tourney Champion ship Kansas 71, Nebraska 41 Fifth Place
Kansas St. 90, Missouri 70
Championship Penn State 54. Florida 52 Consolation OePaul 00, Alabama V
Seattle 79, Arizona ft..........
Third Place California 12, Texas 77
Palnaettia Classic
Arkansas 47, Loyola of N
Dayton 75 Ctnselatlen Houston 19, Auburn 74
Ail-Cellege Tournament
City U. ! Third
Fifth Place '
Xavier of Ohio 90, Wyoming 04 Seventh Place
Bowling Green 15, Texas ABM 72 Triangle Doibleheader First Rsund
N.C. State 94, West Virginia 77 North Carolina 90, Utah 15
Queen City Tourney • First Round
Drake 10, Memphis fete 45 Holy Cross 04, Canislus 74
NON-TOURNAMINT GAMES Duguesne 14, Citadel 40 Cincinnati 117, Wake Forest 17
Southern Methodist 80, Connecticut 44 Harvard 94, western Ontario 42 Indiana Central 91, Wabash 74-CCNY 19. Brooklyn Col. 49 Valparaiso 70, Washington, Mo. S9 Idaho 197, Portland St. S)
MICHIGAN COLLEGE SCORRBOARD
FORT WAYNE, Ind. UP) - Detroit broke an eight-game National Basketball Association losing streak by beating Los Angeles 117-114 Thursday night.
★ * *
The Pistons, last in the West-
T ay lor (
St. Joseph's 97, temple 45 Third Place Minnesota 92. LaSahe 87
CMU Five Beaten in Tourney Final
MARSHALL (AP)-Taylor of Indiana edged Central Michigan 71-69 Thursday night to win the championship of the Marshall Optimist Basketball Classic.
Anderson of Indiana took third place by dropping Albion 96-66, and Ohio Northern took- fifth place by downing Adrian 197-79.
Ron Bocken was high man fix' Taylor with 30 points. Don iEd-wards was high for the losers
with 21.
Gary-Pate of Anderson poured in a dazzling 41 points to lead •11 scorers in his game. Tom Balistrere was high for the losers with 1|.
Berry Stechachultz led OMo Northern with 22 points-and Jim Ingeldue got 19 for Adrian.
■P... __________ Michigan 49
(Third Plow'
Anderson Ot^jJg Ohio Northom IDS, Adrian 79 Calvin Holiday Dedication (CBOf -1—k-
Contral
t (OhI
Calvin 71
Wheaton (III.) 92, Control (Iowa) 42 Far West Classic (Fifth Place)
Michigan 92, Washington State 81
........ .....n 74, waited Lake 54
Farmington 48, Wayne Memorial 53 Southfield 92, Ypslfantl 59 (ot) Chelsea Holiday Tourney Brighton 70, Ypsllentl St. John 40 Milan 74, Jackson St. Mary-40 Ypsllentl Lincoln 49, Stockbrldge 45 Downriver Tourney Gross* He. 74, Belleville 55
Swam Creak Holiday Tanmey
. Tech 51, Flint |t. John (Consolation)
Flint Band la 49. St. ApnesSl Flint Holy Redeemer 94, Fowtervllte 79 Swartz Creek
Field Conditions Uncertain
Piston Five Ends Skid, Beats Lakers, 117
four previous meetings this s
NFL Title Foes Eying Weather
Tarp, Hay Protect Green Bay Gridiron'
GREEN BAY, Wls. (AP)
The long range weather forecast! for Packerland calls for a little i rain and possibly a little snow for the rest of the week, leading!
Detroit lost a 10-point lead as Los Angeles tied the score at 113-113 on Jim King’s only field goal of the game with 1:08 to play, but two free throws by
era Division, had failed to beat John Barnhill with 26 seconds	-
division leader Los Angeles ini left put the Pistons in front iuP to a cloudy Sunday with the,
---;—'again.	ithermometer in the mid 20s and,
* ' *	*	perhaps a light dusting of snow!
■ II ||	|	■■ Jerry West hit a free throw!*01, big game.
Walled LakeDfew/ss:Msd	i
with five seconds on the docklan^in8- Green Bay has been |
I I	7 j rr but failed to get off a shot. .worktog all week on a damp
Is Loser, 74-55jsggjsl
12 of 29 shots from the wSRft ba^U ia,son£
10 of 11 free throws. Walt Haz-!thin* Uk*lemon ch,ffon Pie **
Cold shooting again doomed izard added 32 for Los Angeles ta cement crust'
Walled' Lake to defeat — the on 15 of 24 and 2 of 3, DaverDe- CAPACITY CROWD Vikings’ sfxth straight - last Busschere led the Postions with A capacity crowd of 50,852 is night in the Northwest Subur- 20 points on 9 of 20 and 2- of 2. assured for the National Foot-i ban invitational Basketball	*	*	*	ball League championship con-!
Tournament. "	■ Bill Russell boosted his career .test between the Packers and:
. * . *	*	I rebound record past the 16,000'the Cleveland Browns at 2:10
Redford Union Built a 64-40 mark Thursday night, as Boston p.m., EST Sunday at Lambeaur lead in the first three period beat the San Francisco War-lstadium.
and coasted to a 74-55 triumph riors 116-113.	I	*	*	*
over Walled Lake in the battle Russell pulled down 28 re-; The game will be seen andi
for seventh place. The Vikings bounds in the close one at Prov-jheard on CBS radio and televi- By The Associated Press hit less than 20 per cent of idence, R.I., making hi$ total!sion, with Green Bay blacked Donny Anderson will close out their held goal attempts for the 16,023, wMle J o h n Havlicek, out on TV.	j his brilliant varsity career, ri*
Abel commented that Howe and Delvecchlo “were very active” in bringing about MacDonald’s return.
MacDonald together with A1 Langlois, Bob DHlabough and Ron Harris were swapped in May for Ab McDonald, Bob McCord and Ken Stephanson,
MacDonald had six goals and four assists in 20 games for the Bruins.
★	★	★
Martin had one goal — ironically one that decided a game against Boston — in 10 games before he was sent to Pittsburg. He tallied six goals and five assists for the Hornets.
★	★	★
“It’s a good break for Pit,” said Abel. “It gives him an opportunity to play in the league and Boston has a bunch of lyoung players. I think he’ll be happy.”
NHL Standings
NATIONAL LU9UI
W L T Fit. OF O* Chicago ... 17 9> 3 37 199 72
........... 14 19 5 33 81 81
.......... 7 17 7 fl 44 112
....... 4 29 1 IS 44 124
ThurtOav'e Rawlti iot scheduled.
Today's Games at Detroit Saturday'! Games irk at Montreal at Toronto
3 Grid Contests Today Open Last Big Weekend
which time he was cited as one of America’s outstanding officers, and unfortunately for Detroit Wilson’s success in pro football has been in Buffalo.
And even though pro championships have been scarce in any sort of recent years for -Detroit, natives of this area can feel they have at least some contact with a champion — Ralph Wilson and the Buffalo Bills.
Cazzie Russell
Reported OK
U-M Ace Takes Spill in Wolverines' Win
PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) Michigan’s Wolverines had to settle for fifth place in the Far West Classic basketball tournament, but they got some good news Thursday night about teammate Cazzie Russell.
_________1, Michigan’s All-America performer, chosen the tourney’s most valuable player, gave everyone some anxious moments during the game in which the Wolverines downed Washington State 93-81.
His head hit the floor hard after a collision in the last minute of play and he was knocked mm. He needed help to the sidelines. No apparent concussion or other injury showed in X-rays.
★ ★ *
Russell’s injury came as he stuffed the ball through the hoop for his 91st point in the tournament, breaking the tourney record of 89 set by Mel Counts of Oregon State in 1963.
Oregon State dribbled off with the tournament championship, whipping Stanford 62-46.
MICHIGAN	t«A*H. *TAT«^ t
Clawson .. 2 34 7Den. KI'O . 7 MJ4 Darden ... 9 3-419Norr.Is ... 43-315 MyVir.::	4 3-4 IlMcKaan . 9 3-4 21
Russell .11 10-10 32S*aln . 2 2-3 4
Thompn 3 3-4 OTom'vik . 4 4-514
Dill .... 5 4-414Watler -OMO
Brown	...	0	1-2	1 Werner	..	0	0-P	0
Bankey	..	9	<H>	OPeeplas	..	0	GO	0
Nobel ...’.	0	(Ml	0
Gabriel	..	-9	90	0
Totals .. 33 27-34 93Totals M '7-211
saasss*" . .., a Jtii
Fouled out—Washington State, Norris, * Total fouls—Washington State 24, Mich.-
Former City Athlete Dies in Service
sixth game in a row.
Big Jump Grabs Title
MIAMI, Fla. (AP) - A Pensacola High School sailor, Allen Miller, rallied from 13th place to win the Junior Orange Bowl Gdf Tournament Thursday.
Miller fired a one-under-par 71 in the final round for a two-day total of 146 and won the event by ooe stroke.
Farmington captured fifth pl*ce and. climbed above .500 *ecred'*Heart t4|wijth a 68-53 romp over Wayne;
“—----------- * land Southfield too|c Ypsilanti,
ii i	• >92-68, in overtime for third
Garrett	Leans^
, In the [title game, Livonia
to AFL Teom ^°uey “ph ®«ruey, *u*-
At Flat Rock’s Invitational, Cranbrook dropped a 66-57 verdict "(o Melvindale in the fight for fifth place. Brighton topped Ypsilanti St. John, 70-60, at Chelsea; and Capac was a 78-52 loser to Marysville in the Bangor Tourney.
--------‘UNION WALLSD LAKE
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Mike Garrett, University of Southern California'star halfback, apparently will go to Kansas City of the American Football league, it was disclosed here Thursday.
Announcement of the move was .made by owner Dan Reeves of ths Los Angeles R^ms.
Garrett was the 20th draft choice of Kahsas City, but the No. 2 pick of the Rams.
The, Heisman Trophy winner iit his senior year with USC, Garrett was said to be worth 10,. 000 extra fans a game in Los Angeles.
(55)
FQFTTP	FQFTTF
llerke	4	2-19	14	©run	>	94
trnold	9	1-2	19	Bokfr	2	90
vebb	2	9-2	4	Carl	1	M
Aach	4	4-7"	14	Grinncl	3	92
lauer	5	54	15	Ashby	3	45	10
teldel	1	0-2	2	Norland	4	1-3	~
ahey	2	24	4	Hueblar	4	24
Bdimoitz l i-l Lehman . 9 90 . Mangos 2 2-2 4
Totals 29 1443 74 Tatelt 22 IMI 55 SCORB ■ Y QUARTERS ladford Union ........ IS H 24 14-74
ratted Lake .’... .. . II M 14 »-0S
Tom Sanders and Don Nelson Because of the slippery field, Ipaced the Celtic scoring. :Coach Vince Lombardi has had
★	*	*	to be careful with his limping
San Francisco led by as many warriors, especially Jim Taylor, i 10 in the third period, but	*	*	*
Boston raced back for an 86-86 The Packer fullback pulled a tie going into the final quarterjgroin muscle recently and is and broke it open hr the closing trying to nurse it back into moments.	(shape. As a result he has not
Havlicek got 32 points, San- been running full speed on the ders and Nelson added 25 soupy field. ‘ apiece, and Guy Rodgers topped Don’t get the idea that the the Warriors with 23.	ig«i» will be played in these
*	it	*	conditions. Lambeau Stadium
Elsewhere In the NBA - new-:rests cosily under a layer of hay
comers Rod Thorn with 20 and P™8 a tarp- ,	'
Joe Caldwell with 21 led the St. It wm be playabtoand sur-Louis Hawks over the Philadel- Prtsbigly good, depending upon phia 76ers 130-113.	the weather when they roll the
los anokles dbtroit	tarp back Sunday morning and
4 pub-c-s , £ ^remove the hay.
feSfr
Goodr'h
15 24 « V'Ar’It 7 3-3 17 TMUM 4 2-3 3 SomhlH 1 0-9 2 Kolls
0	2-3	2	Vauotet
1	0-9 2
2 2-3
in it
7 5-7 19
2347 114 Tstelt 44 25-34 ...
. S2SS=U?
Foul«d out—Los Angslss, ImhoH. DM Total fouls—Los Angeles 27, Detroit
[ With about 87,000 at stake for every winning share and $4,600 for. each loser, everybody expects another hard-hitting game like last Sunday’s' Baltimore-Green Bay battle. In case of a tie they will play sudden death overtime once again.
fle-armed sophomore Billy Stevens will be on the firing line, and a pair of richly talented all-star teams will have at each other in three games Friday ushering in college football’s biggest post-season weekend.
Anderson, the two-time All-American halfback, will lead Texas' Tech against Georgia Tech in the Gator Bowl at Jacksonville, Fla. Stevens, the pro; lific passer,-and his Texas Western teammates will play favored Texas Christian in the Sun Bowl at El Paso, Tex.
* * *
And at San Francisco, East will tangle with West in the 41st Shrine Game.
But the top ones come Saturday—the New Year’s Day spectacles. This time the four big bowls will show off the country’s six -leading teams, and tbe national championship will be at stake.
Top-ranked -Michigan State plays fifth-ranked UCLA in the
Rose Bowl at Pasadena, Calif.; Arkansas, No, 2, takes on Louisiana State in the. Cotton Bowl at Dallas; third-ranked Nebraska and fourth-ranked Alabama battle in the Orange Bowl at Miami; and sixth-ranked Missouri meets Florida in the Sugar Bowl at New Orleans.
★ " ★ ★
A special poll will be conducted by The Associated Press after the New Year’s action, with the national title going to the! No. 1 team.
Dixie.Howell, 47, one of the best baseball players ever produced in Pontiac, died yesterday at Andrews Air Force Base in Washington, D.C., after a brief illness.
Lt. Col. Howell, a bomber pi-, lot in the Strategic Air Command, was operated on in Guam shortly after being reassigned , there for combat duty in Viet Nam.
Complications followed his surgery and he was brought back to the Andrews AFB Hospital. Burial will be in Arlington, Va.
Howell graduated from Pontiac High School in 1939 after playing football, basketball and baseball, there. He was a standout in the city recreation baseball league and played professionally in the Texas League before entering the service..
He flew combat missions in the Far East campaign during World War H.
He is survived by daughter' Dixie 'tynn, 11 of Shreveport, La., and son William, 14, in Winnsboro: Tex. His parents, Mr. and Mrs. Jobe Howell (formerly of 47 Allison in Pontiac) now live in Church Road, Va., as does a sister Mrs. F. E. Clarke.
Another sister, Mrs. Charles Marion lives at 580 N. Cass Lake in Pontiac; and his brother Benny Howell lives in Fort Lauderdale, Fla.
USGA Tightens Rules on Junior Expenses
HEADLINER
Anderson may write his biggest headline after the Gator| NEW YORK (AP) — Junior Bowl game — with his signature golfers under 18 years of age on a pro contract Both Green j will not be permitted to accept Bay of the National Football expenses to events in which non-League and Houston of the juniors compete, the United American Football League are states Golf Association an-after the versatile Texas Techjnounced Thursday flash, and it might take a fabu-| 1116 USGA said, however, that lous sum to get him — some- ; there may be rare exceptions to thing like $800,000 in bonus and the new amateur rule which salary guarantees.	.becomes effective Saturday.
Anderson is one of many collegiate prizes who will be eligible to sign with the pros after bowl games.
Up to now, there hds been no limit on expenses which a junior might receive from outside sources. *
L

WJt TQNTI AC PRESS, FRIDAY, DBfcEMBKR 81, 1965
FIFTEEN
SNO-CAPS
4 FULL FLY
| I 1*iU J 30JWh.fc«d Hazard
|s FREE MOUNTING Sf

Detroit Given $150000 Gift for Boat Area
DETROIT (AP) - A gift of 1150,000 to establish a powerboat facility and memorial to Horace E. Dodge Jr. on the Detroit River was accepted by City Council Thursday. | Mrs. Anna Thompson Dodge, 95, offered the gift as a memorial to her late son, key figure in power boat races on die river prior to his death at age 63 on Dec. 22, 1963.
The memorial is to include launching ramps, a service area and a building near the city's Water Works Park on the river.
have a Happy New Year!
DICKIE LUMBER
2495 ORCHARD LAKE RD.
PHONE 682-1600
Announcing
A Consulting Service for Industrial and Commercial Building Projects
Why not let 28 yuan construction lsxperionco "package" your building problems and insure that the building you want is delivered at a price you can afford?
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I CONSULTANTS DIVISION
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Spartan Cagers Take 3rd Spot
Maul 'Army Quintet . for 97*69 Triumph
HONOLULU on - Michigan State ran and shot its way to a! surprisingly easy victory over U. S. Army Hawaii 9749 in a battle for third place in the second Annual Rainbow Classic Invitational basketball tournament in Honolulu Thursday.
The Spartans dominated the boards and repeatedly scored on tip-ins and short jumpers. Big Center Matt Aitch came up with his top effort of the tournament, tallying 24 points and grabbing nine rebounds.
Wings Gain Right to Swede Skaters
DETROIT (AP) - The Detroit Red Wings have obtained exclusive professional rights to two members of the Swed-ish National Hockey Club,
I Sweden’s national amateur team, a lied Wings spokes-| man said Thursday.
I The two are Tord Lund-i strom and Haken Nygren, both 29. Lnndstrom stands 5 The New Year will bring a jump in the price of i foot u and weighs ns pounds, bowling — local bowlers, though, needn’t be alarmed | and Nygren ft 5-foot and no unless they plan to bowl much in Detroit.	^is' marked the first time
A general increase of five cents per line for open, bowling will go into effect tomorrow at most Greater Detroit Bowling Propri-r
Kentucky has the worst all-time won-loss record of any football team in the Southeastern Conference. The Wildcats have won 60 games, lost 106 and tied 12 during 31 yews of com-1 petition.
For AN Typos of Quality
HOBBY
SUPPLIES... SEE TANDY CRAFTS
By JERE CRAIG
etors’ Association member La„egi Wonderland Lanes and establishments.
fouling out with four minutes left. Stan Washington scored 23, and John Bailey 14 as the Spartans came up with the top output of the tourney.
Ex-Detroit Piston Terry Dis-chinger of Army was high with 25 points and 14 rebounds but was erratic, losing the ball six times and hitting one of ten from the free throw line
MKHIOAN STATE ARMY ■ P T
Bailey
Wn
Baylor
Holmes
G f
> 1>I i« wngton 2 04 0 3-3 if . P. Davis 3 M 3 0-1 0 Smith	3 « ..
10 3-7 ^ Banker!	3 H >:
100 2 Davit t 4-8 24 Kltch*
Ojlphi
I [Twj
41 54-07
Fouled out—Michigan State C.urtlt, Ry-
Oltch'ger 12 MO 2
Army Paul
Total fouls, Michigan Stata 25, Army 20.
'Ylj
y
MJu.kv.
C4A7
eaA/
HOWE'S LANES
6697 Dixie Hwy. 625-5011
„r _	, , - sr. • This-will- put the cost for. a—
Stsvu-Rymal	-tir parties—
PLYWOOD SHEATHING 4x8	Par Sheet
H" CD				-.2.44
W CD		..3.12
. 4k"CD...	 		.. 3.95
%"CD					.. 4.40
Plugged 1 Side (touch handed)	
SAVE today!
SIDING, per square
Aluminum, without backer, white. Aluminum, with laminated backer, white...
24”
28"
KILN DRIED DOARDS	m
lx 6 Boards, surf. 4 sidesv85.50 m 1x12 Boards, surf. 4 sidos 89.50 #
majority of the sites will resume open bowling around noon and a few even later. Howe’s, •Cooley, Sylvan Lanes, Montcalm Bowling Centre and 300 Bowl will open by 10 a.m.
WEST SIDS LANES Monday Waat SMa C la talc Gamtt and Series—Joe Moryt, 235-279-205—719; Al PletZ, 249-264-711; Ed Gibbs. 234-214—442; Fran Bertram, 204-257-440. Team Seaton Highs—Huron ‘ | 1154-3179.
Monday Pontiac Motor Mixed i Gamas—Steve Treadway, String's
____ 210; Mershel Sams; 214. Woman'a
High Series—Betty Sams, 204-515. MONTCALM BOWLINO CENTRE Monday Trior league Igh Gama—Chuck Evans, 253.
LAKEWOOD LANES	I
Sunday St. danadlet's League igh Game-and Series—John Schmitt,! -514. .
100 BOWL
______JO (520).
Wednesday Pontiac Malar Intar-OfflCd High Gamas—Alvin Long, 245; Bill Smith, 217-2034 BID Logie. 200-210; Ed | Walanls. 215; Charles Walter, 214. I Wednesday Morning Coflee League High Gamas and\$erles—Alma Billing-in, 235—537; Marilyn'Ricketts, 200.
HURON BOWL .
Tuesday Railing Pin League High Games 'and Series—Marge Jacobin— 533; Gladys Matich, 201. Teanj.
. oints—Schumann Decorators, 44; Jacob-ten's Flowers, 43; Fashkmette Beauty, 40.
Monday Blind Bowlers Most Pint Over Average—Maxine Yonti I average), 05-75-102; Efflo Browning t average), 122-121; Irene Palltn, 120-120.
Monday Pontiac Oaneral Hospital Igh Gama and Sorias—Hazel Roberta. Starling Auto Porta, 201—547.
>May Our Lady at Lakes Mixed ah Gamas and Series—Dallas Mc-Sevain, 241-213-457.
FIR PLYWOOD 4x8, per sheet
1/4" AD	Interior,	good	1	aid#	.2.59
*A" AB	Interior,	good	2	sides ..... .7.56
V«" AC	Exterior,	good	1	tide.........2.18
H" AC	Exterior,	good	1	ojdo.........3.99
Vi" AC Exterior, good 1 tide ...... .5.35
Vfc" AC	Exterior,	good	I	tide........6:30
Vs" AR	Exterior,	good	2	tides........7.65
Cutting serrice on your full sheet ofPlywood U available at cath eating rates.
STEEL OARAGE DOOR
All-Steel d*ort, complete with hardware, lock
9x7....46.50	16x7....91.00
(Glaring on all doors available)
FELT, per roll
154b. 432 *q. ft. Roll........ 2.10
304b. 216 *q. ft. Roll...	. . 2.10
Aluminum Combination Windows, A|1I Sizes to "60 United incites" Each $10.95
Flr/FsL. (Construction, Max. 25% Std.)
14.	16	18	20__
kach	2x4	.56	.77	.92	1j07	123	128	153
Each	2x6	73	.91	124	1.58	1.95	221	2.46
kach	2x8	1.14	1.43	1.94	226	2.58	3jQ5	329
Each	2x10	151	1.88	246	2.87	32B	3.87	420
Each	2x12	2.10	2j62	3.14	3j67	4.19	4.72	524
5 Big Centers ____________ ^	^ to Serve Youl
107 SQUIRREL ROAD, AUBURN HElGHTS^UL 2-4800 Utica, TI1-2OD0-Wa*Wngton, ST 1-2811 -Boaiao, PL Mill -Lapeer, M0 445S1
CHURCH’S INC.
Sunoco
heating OIL
DEPENDABLE EFFI6IENT SERVICE
Call Ua-Then Forget f*-“We Keep 'Em Full”
spouse or best friend up to 6180 or even a $1.95 per person. This is equal to What is charged bowlers in prime-time leagues and will help offset the continuing cost rise.
A A ★	•
However, Pontiac area houses reported yesterday no similar rise in prices is planned immediately. Currently bowlers may open bowl for as little as three games for a $1 up to 55 cents per line.
This holding-the-Iine policy by the owners doesn’t reflect any sudden burst of holiday spirit or any reduction in overhead expenses. Nor do most feel the point of diminishing returns has been reached.
Rather the prime economic principle involved is supply and demand. Too many establishments now are competing for the large — though not unreached — number of participants.
Raising prices is an uncertain venture at most times since no. one can be positive of how unfavorably the pustomers will react.	-
Nor can any local keg site say it is doing all the business it can handle; most, in fact, are well below top volume operation.
Adding to the establishment competition problem is the prospect of a new bowling lanes iii Waterford Township. Plans for construction of one west of Telegraph and south of Menominee wer approved earlier this week by the township planning commission.
■k
Experience has shown that prices locally closely follow the Detroit pattern, but not the same timetable. Therefore, it won’t be surprising if by this time next year a general agreement among almost all local proprietors results in a price rise.
SPARE PINS
Meanwhile, the opportunity to welcome in the New Year with, a group bowling session appears excellent. Very few Friday night leagues will have their normal competition today and most houses will be opeii’ into the new year.
Collier Lanes, Cooley Lanes, West* Side Lanes, Orchard
It's Nst SIMPLICITY Unless It Carries The SIMPLICITY Trademark And Is Purchased From An Authorized SIMPLICITY Dealer!
Howe’s Lanes will close early ot have limited bowling due
the Red Wings went outside the United States or Canada to look for hockey talent, the spokesman said.
Halfback Still Critical
-JEBKKLEYr -Calif.-4AE)-^ Tom Blarfchfield, former star
Tomorrow morning, thejhalfback for the* University of
California, was reported slightly improved Thursday but still in critical condition with congestive heart failure.
Blanchfield, 21, was hospitalized Friday.
FREE!
VACATION IN FLORIDA with the pure haw at any car an our let. Oat aur lew prices and pat a Free Vacation ta Florida.
KING AUTO SALES
Cartier M-19 at Elizabeth Lake Rd.
AS THE HOLIDAY TRAFFIC INCREASES, BE CAREFUL AND ALERT. WE WANT ALL OUR CUSTOMERS AROUND TO ENJOY X WP^EW YlXR. SHOULDTOTnSDSTAWA NICKED FENDER OR DENTED SIDE PANEL YOU CAN RELY ON OUR EXPERT BODY MEN TO RESTORE YOUR CAR TO ITS ORIGINAL SHAPE AND BEAUTY .. . FOR LESS MONEY AND LEAST TIME. FREE ESTIMATES WITH-OUT OBLIGATION.
Jim Butcher**
Oakland Chrysler-Plymoutli, Inc.
724 Oakland Ave., Pontiac Phone 335-9436 Where Better Service Bringa ’Em Back
OPEN
NEW YEAR'S EVE 'TIL 1 A.M.
NEW YEAR'S DAY 12 to 12
Our Wish is big ■ and sincere ... and so is our ■ appreciation of your patronage and good will. See you soon, in 1966!
HAVE YOUR'BOWLING BALL FITTED AND DRILLED BY AN EXPERT! $700
One Day Service
BURKE
Lumber
4495 Dixie Hwy.
i OPEN		fMgpTjMMyl 1	HOURS	OR 3-1211-^|
		Itm.	OPEN WEEKDAYS MONDAY thru FRIDAY I
Fbowlingi			• A.M. to 5:30 P.M.
		mm mm	SATURDAYS from • A.M. te 4 P.M. J
DO IT WITH
Sno-away.
Simplicity Sno-Awey throws snow in spy direction through chute adjustable from operator's position. Seif propelled, ( easy-to-store, easy-to-handle, perfect for average homes.
6 hp SnoAway—cuts a 26-inch swath. 4 hp Sno-Away— cuts 2314-inch swath. See them today!
Lew Deem Payments./ Convenient Terms
I rr» LAWN & GARDEN CENTER
JJEma w r~ Open Doily 9 AM. to 6 fJL
923 Mt. Clement - PONTIAC - FE 2-3412
Time
to bid the Old Year Adieu and say.. Happy New Year To You!
SAGINAW it Lawrencu-BIRMINGHAM, 212 W. Maple
THE STYLE CORNER 6F PONTIAC

_^	_ THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 31, 1965
In 1965-
Newspaper Advertising Totaled
THIS IS MORE THAN MAGAZINES AND TELEVISION COMBINED
o	lift	^	X
Newspaper Figures are Still 6rowing
because
THIS MONEY IS PR0DUCIN6 GREAT RESULTS
* ’ ” /*
The Bureau of Advertising Forecasts
100% Increase in the Next Ten Years
4
We Are Well Into the Space Age. American Newspapers Have Been One of the Front Runners From the Beginning
With the Leaders Where Progress and Advancement are concerned, The Pontiac Press is Always Abreast of “These Changing Times.” 1	' \	f
TIE PONTIAC NESS
.	• '	■	•"	'• •	, s ? ■ o
THE PONTIAC PRESS^ FRIDAY, DECEMBER 81, 1965
SEVENTEEN
Most Prosperous Ever
Year of Records Ending
MARKETS
The following are top prices covering sales of locally grown produce by growers and sold by them in wholesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets as of Wednesday.
Produce
FRUITS
Applet. Delicious, Golden, bu. Apples, Delicious. Red, bu. ....
Applet, Jonathan, bu. ........
Apples, ^Macintosh, early, bu. .
Apples, Northern Spy, bu. ....
Apples, cider, 4gal. case ....
VEGETABLES
______	...	.-rr«p
Cabbage, Curly, bu. ....
Cabbage, red, bu.
Cabbage, Std., bu.......
Carrots, cello pak ......
Carrots, topped, bu. ...
Calory, Root, dz.........
Horseradish, pk. bskt. ..
Leaks, dz. belts.
Onion, dry, 50-lb. bag Parsley, root, dz. bchs. .
Parsnips, Vi bu . .
Parsnips, Cello P6k>~dz.
Potatoes, 50 lbs. .VVA>c...............-
Potatoes, 25 lbs. .....................*5
Radishes,' black, Vi bu.	I “
Squash, Acorn, Vi bu. .
Squash, Buttercup, bu. .
Squash, Butternut, bu. .
Squash, Delicious, bu. .
Squash, Hubbard, bu. .
Turnips, topped, bu.
stock market drove toward new highs in a year-end rally sparked by Bethlehem’s steel price boost. Trading was heavy.
Some averages were above their recent closing peaks on an intra-day basis and the question was whether they could hold their gains until the close of .trading for.1965. .,!_
Bethlehem’s $5-a-ton price increase for structural shapes and piling caught Wall Street by surprise. Steel stocks were narrowly nlixed at the opening but as investors acted on the news,
.; 125
Poultry and Eggs
DETROIT POULTRY
DETROIT (AP)—Prices paid par i____
*"	* Huo poultry: Heavy typo hem
— ‘—« 7-lj roosters heavy
20-»i light typo h type 24l*-25) broil Whitts 19-20.	-
. DETROIT EOOi
large 4042; largo
Trade Heavy in Year-End Rally
Market Aims at New Highs
NEW YORK (AP)
The
Bethlehem converted a small loss to a gain exceeding a point.
Other steels were up from 1 to 2 points.
The best gains by steels were trimmed somewhat , after a published item to the effect that government economists were displeased by the price increases. Wall Streeters-:mind-fui of the recent rollback in alu-. change.. Trading . ..was active, minum and copper prices— awaited further reaction but there was no immediate comment from the White House.
Aerospace defense stocks rallied as the U.S. peace offensive seemed to be ineffective.
The Associated Press average of 60 stocks at noon was up 1.6 at 358.5 with industrials up 3.2, rails up 1,0 and utilities up *3. The AP average was above its record closing high of 357.3 reached Dec. 22.
Prices were irregularly higher on the American Stock Ex-
Trade Efforts Said Lacking
Put Office Abroad, State Solons Urge
' By SAM DAWSON AP Business News Analyst NEW YORK (AP) — The United States rings out tonight most prosperous year.
Records fell right and left. But problems there were aplenty and at year-end ~ tensions were growing.
There was. a 'lot of excite-LANSING (AP) — A Senatejment in 1965,
Committee wants Michigan to'especially in the establish a trade • promotion!stock	market,
office in Europe.	(where prices
Seven senators, led by Sen. swung widely Gtibertr Bursley, -R-Ann Arbor,land trad«ig-vol-| chairman-of-the Committee on trme s oVretlr
International Commerce, visitediAnd govern-	{major problem last winter, at!
New York and nine westernjment and business squared off yearend was down around 4 perjpr,ces tnan d,fl European countries for threejfor -some notable showdowns ce,,t[ lowest level in years. And by themse,ves-
the course of the Viet Nam war — may make executives wary of adopting fixed patterns for their firms but generally confident that one way or another the 1966 economy as a whole will outdo even the record year now ending.
Americans this year produced some 6672 billion in goods and services, up from $628.7 billion in 1964, Many think 1966 might see this Gross National. Product soar to the $715 billion range.
ers kept retail sales mounting. At yearend some government officials were Worrying more about blocking the threat of inflation than about stimulating a civilian economy that could conflict with a military one.
Government also collided with some industries over its guidelines on wages and prices. The White House monitored the steel wage talks. It talked of releasing tons of aluminum and cop-Iper and* wheat from its strate-
DAWSON
jgic stockpiles,	and price hikes
Personal	incomes	rose	almost*0.p*s.	.r,e"
steadily	all	year	to	a	record 8cmded'	through	the
-	wiit— husmess,	world	there waa..un-
5 5 0n:?asiness- lest this foreshadowed
INCOME HIGH
$S4ft~billiuii; against !
|iif~T9647 ’The” joblesF TateT’a'
more controls over wage and
prices than did the guidelines
Ahead around 2 points were Computer Sciences, Northeast Airlines and Syntex.	I European
Coroorate bonds were mostlvW^kS'thllf^ c lover wages, prices, interest I labor shortages werV plaguing I	1	1	1
ic3e^ US Tr^turv ton^LThelr re|?,rt	.?f.naHrates’- antitrust actions, over- many employers needing high- A clash over easy money vs.
Alined «rross the hnarJ Thhrsday ,declai^ that Mich- seas investments - with signs L skilled workers.	* dear money enlivened the final
Doara ligan’s sales efforts are not of bitter battles to come. | Business profits kept rising all month of the year. The Federal (meeting fully the challenge of Still, 1965 turned out better 0n|year tQ total around $45 billion Reserve Board raised basic in-the international market place, the busmess front than most|aftertaxe u from $37 bilUon teres’t rates, saying tt feared the II	\# I fi I | I	In a rising European market, people expected just a year agojj,, 1964 Wage increases uver- economy would overheat and
I no	IMOIAI	Y ATm	hvrn^nnn	Michigan’s proportionate share tonight. And all the worries to- ^ around 42 f cent ,ar_ |t0Uch	off a boom with inflation.
I 1C	I iCVf	I VI |\	, JIUUX LAI IOI IUC	' sa,es appear *° ** declining’” day about H top uncertainty r est in several years, and a fast-
NEW YORK (ARI—Following It - selected slock tronioctloni on tho N York Stock Exchange with i----	'
I 7,093,537,606.95 S 1,032,404,149.31 5
Deposits Fljcil Yoir July 1—	___.}
57,405,939,957.46	52.048404.053.97 FSJST, _
W|tt^*'«^lltt|l64V43,r"^61,351440449Jl	gjj*,
CO,d A*u5w,104,915.19	15,307,700,171.91 Curt^Wr1*!
X—Includes 1200,985,217.66 debt not sub-^u" lect to stahPory limit.
■	——	IDenRIv 1.20b
OeycoCp ,50b Day PL-1.24 Deere l -4Ga Dklte Air 1 DenRGW 1.10
Net C
BOND AVERAGES led bit The Associated Praia 21 10 10 10 10 Rant ire. utn. Mr- L.vsj£5"Smi''3i
?* 79.4 100.0 16.4 114 90.3 Disney^ 40b i 79.4 100.9 16.4 91.6 90.3, OoSSLn JO. I	2*-'| DougAir 60b
4tVk
U- 4jv4 am 4 f
538k 539k S39k m	,416*	41'/j	486*	4 \
159	17'*	MU)	27Vk	-ft
17	76k	7V6	76k	4 V
64	109k	10V*10Sk	...
24	279k	2766	279k	+	V
—D—
12	34Va	341*	34V*	-f	0
4	XV*	20	20V*	+	V
5	KVa	326*	32V*	+■ V
12	SO*	S2Vk	526*	+ V
12	726k	70V*	72	+2
7	20V*	201*	20V*	4 *
2	349k	369*	M9k
I 179k 1
i 171* 4
I 100 J	07.1
02.2 101J
.21-2 2-llt*** ‘
East Air Lbt EattGF 3.19»
STOCK AVERADES	E Kodak 140*
Compiled by Tb* Aneclatid Prats EotenMf 2:20 10	15	15	61 EdgaGG - JOB
Ind. Rant Util. Stacks ElBondS kS lltipRaaNO. •
....... 523.1	193.6	lte.7	336.--
•rev. Day .
Week ago ..
Month Age .
ar^jT.:........pm	m	M
1965	Lew ......451.4	149.3	1124	300.0
Hfi	High	475J	1094	167.2	3324
1914	LOW ..... 406.6	15BJ	140.9	216.7
” 309* 309k 309k 10 31	300*309*
10 2376* 2311* 2379*
* 331* 329k 2M 9 1066 100* 100*
—E—
77 91	90	901*	-911*
* 2 107V* 107V* 107V*
09 11766 1111* 117
Covered Bridges Few
FRANKFORT, Ky « - Only 18 covered bridges remain in Kentucky, most in the Bluegrass - area.	•	"■
1166 , 12 vlW v
i 616*	1*6*
FMC Cp 1.20 FordMot 2.40 PortDalr .50 Freept S 1.10 FruenCp 1.50
ccct J:S
j'Jiec^.lO Gen Fds 2.20 GenMIlIt 1.40 Gen Mot 5.25a GenPrec 1.20 ' GPubSvc .49o lGPubUt 1.40 GTtl El 1.12 Gen Tire .00 GaPacific lb GerberPd .90 GettyOII ,10g Gillette 1.20a GlenAld .50a Goodrch 2.20 Goodyr 1.25 GraceCo 1.20 GranttCS 1.40 GtA&P 1.20* Gt Nor Ry 3 Gt West Flnl GtWSug 1.40a Greyhnd .90
Gulf MO 2.20a Gulf Oil 2 Gulf S Ut .72
Hook Ch 1. Hows* F til Houtt LP 1 HuntFds .51 Hupp Cp .
10 62	419* 62 r
tf	319s	3166	319k
134	516*	566*	576*	4
SI 1190* 11916 119V6 4 19	129k	12V*	126*	4
1	5966	5966	5966	4
126 10366 10206 1026*
4	40	40	40	4
17	66k 6V6	6V6 .
11	37Va	3666	37Va	.
41	461k	456k	4566	-
54	28’/*-	28'/k.	28'/*	4
14	571k	53	57V*	4
I	37	346k	37	4
75 119k -116* 116* .
5 649k 63V* 649k 4
RalstonPur Rayon ler 1.. Raytheon ■ .1 Reading Co
Reyn Tob 2 RheemM 1.21 RlchtOII 1.80
it said.
I The report said there was (ms?) High Lew List cm! I “little evidence of positive pro-J3 i»..i ill* 8i* t4k iratns» public or private, de-lfi^ *1 SiS	49i*	^	signed to cpsh in on these
ii 72	Tits	7i6t	*	(European trade) opportuni- P1
79 119k .15V* 16V* + W *. „ „
77 119'* 11666	1171*	ties.
16 69'/4 619* 6916 4 1*
I r 5666 ^h{HEAR REPORTS ___r____	Business and government ex-i|
10	iiv- ii>* ni6 t perts abroad told the commit-1
in •'* 476*	that* small and medium-)
” »6*	mi*	mi*	4	</« sized producers are" especially !
1	iaH	not exploiting potential markets.
IJ SX SS	The reP°rtf 831(1 the state de1 dren
2	4iv4	4166	4i66	partments of commerce, agn-
, « 439*	S'*	439k	+1* culture and tourism should es-
11	tSS	Til*	74v*	4	w tablish international divisions
SS* mm Si* +1'4 or offices.
53 429* 42j* 426k - j* it called for a Michigan office _ g	in Europie under direction of
a fast- The White House deplored this.
.«v f l »
t Successful i * Investing *
er rate than either prices or'saying economic expansion still productivity were setting. needed cheaper money and lots *	*	*	of credit.
The. year started out with! All. of the year’s events had Frerich President Charles dejtheir moments of reaction by (Gaulle calling for a world mone-jthe stock market. January saw tary system based on gold, and stock prices setting a record
t«0P 1.40b San -D Imper Schenley 1.40 Schering 1.80
b al 1.80	32 *
V 5Vh S7Mi 57'/r 63 OSH 04H 65Vb
16 69H 63H 43%
the Department of Commerce, a nonprofit joint business - government coloration for promotion purposes and an institute for international commerce at state university.
'j Brussels or Amsterdam were - 6*| suggested as sites for the Euro-iJ* pean office.

Jap»nFd ,42g JohnMan 2.20 JohninJ 1.20* JonLogan .80
0	500 498	498'* —IV* Std Kollsman
| 46	45V* 46	4-	6* ' StOII Cal 2.50
1	709k 70V4 70'/4 — 66! StOII Ind 1.70
) 90'/4 199k 90'* 4-1 ' StO NJ 3.15a i 10'* 10'* 10V* 4- Vk StdOII Ohte 2 l 309k 306k 309k 4- 14 SI Packaging t 70	691* 70	4-1	StanW»r 1.50
I 2166 28'* 2066 + 'k StaufICh 1.40 1 62	62	62	-	l*l5?*rlDrug .80
t 376k 376k 376k
:fsi!l Local Bank
39% + H|
; jj- r:sj Announces 2 Promotions
turning in France’s surplus dol-lahi for the metal. The U.S. % Treasury had one of its sharpest I gold losses in years.
By ROGER E. SPEAR S° fast were Yankee d°llars flowing overseas that President Q) “Our two married chil- Johnson called on U.S. corpora-are happy and prosper- | tions voluntarily to hold down ous. We haye been giving (overseas investments, and on U,S. banks to trim foreign loans and, the buying of foreign securities. At yearend these controls, still called voluntary,
LehPorCwn 1 Lati Val Ind Lehman t.92g LOFOIl 100* LlbbMcN .551 Liggett AM 5 Lionel Cora Llttonln 2.12* Litton IM wl LlvIngsO .431 LockhdAIre t Loewi Theat
27 219k «'* 219*
10 16'* 166* 16'*
19	79k	76k	766
0 32'* 3166 32Vk — 6k
r	ha*	io	to
I	199*	50<4	S9V*	-	1
)	3066	306k	306*
I	II	179k	179k	....
Mad Fd i.05g Magnavox 1 Marathn 2.20 Mar Mid 1.25 Marquar 25g MartinMar f layDStr 1.50 ..icCall ,40b Me Don A ,60b McKess 1.70 • idCg 1.70 ck 1.20*
152	56	S3'*	546k	4-11
—M—
60	409k	476k	40'*	4- 1
14	241*	24V*	24'*	4' '
62	129k	H6k	82	4-1
22	57'*	569k	569k	- '
3	31'A	309k	309k	- '
25	16	159k	1S8k	- '
74	221*	2196	2166
-19	54	539*	54	4- '
10	209*	20'*	201*	4 i
52 60 57Vk .5766 4- 1
15	47'* 466* 466k - 1
Two promotions at Pontiac {State Bank were announced today by Edward E. Barker Jr., j president.
Mrs. Juanita B. .Tarlton, 3285 (Airport, Waterford Township, has been named assistant cashier.
| William L. Shaw, 139 Draper, was named manager of the bank’s Opdyke-Walton office.-
them the maximum gift allowance from our large block of fine life insurance stocks listed below. We are retired with more than enough income outside of our stock list.' Besides insurance -stocks we own American Telephone; General Motors; General Foods; General Telephone; General Electric; U.S. Steel; Comsat. Should we take our profit in General Foods? Do you think we should buy more life insurance stock and more Telephone and Comsat now that the price is lower?” W.T.
A) You have at present well over $500,000 in life insurance stocks, which appears disproportionate. I like Telephone and Comsat as long-range holdings, but you" are already sufficiently represented in these situations and you should diversify. .1 would hold General Foods which is an excellent growth vehicle.
Switch U. S. Steel into Corn Products for better growth and with other funds I suggest stocks for capital enhancement, such as Eastman Kodak and Honeywell.
Roger Spear’s 48-page In-vestment Guido ^ available to all readers of thi$ column. Clip this notice and send $1.00 . with your name and address to Roger E. Spear, in care of The Pontiac Press, Box 1(18, Grand Central Station, New York City, N.Y. 10017.
(Copyright, 1005)
were being further tightened. SPURS BUSINESS The U.S. government spurred domestic investments and consumer buying by relaxing in February depreciation rules for tax purposes and clipping $1.75-billion off excise tax collections in June, with more coming next month.. Business stepped up buying equipment, and consum-
MlnerCh 1.20
—N—
l» Airlift 40	106 7216 2116 1
—	' 539k 5366 5
6 41V
NCnhR 1.20b NitDairv 2.60 Nat Dltt 1.40 UofaFuH 140 — G«nl .20 NitOypt 2b NLAMMjJB^
’ Tm io
•btrry JJ IngEI 1.20 ... Qgc la NYCOftt 2.0M NltgMF * “ Norm W
5	2666 26'- ------
15	769k	76V*	7696	— V6
6	S6V6	059k	059*	-f "
40	349k	34V*	S4V6	-
2	33	31	M	-
15	10'*	10	10	-
II 269* 1696 369*-25	70V*	TO'A	TOV*	-
49	64	61'*	62	J
19	159k	1596	159k	H
22	206k	199k	20
16	29'*	2866	29'*	-
24	4966	406k	4966	H
52	719k	7116	711*	6
Jnif Whelan UnMatch JO UnivOPd ' ■
WhiteM 1.40 Wilton Co 2 WlnnDIx 1.32 Wool worth 1 WortMngtn 1 Xerox Cp .70 YngitSht 1.00 Zenith 1.40a
Copyrighted b
Sales figure: Unite- —
Mrs. Tarlton joined the bank] S*	^ and worked as assistant
News in Brief
Bobby Hannor, 22, of 380 First
high. Domestic and international crises set prices back for a time and then they hit a new high in May only to slide badly through June.
PRICES HIGHER
Prices made still higher ground in October, again in November, and after much seesawing managed a record high at Christmas time.
Volume of trading was terrific much of the year, adding to the fears at yearend that speculative forces might be at work— one of the ingredients of past booms and busts.
• ★ *
So the year drew to a close with most Americans prosperous; many nervous, a majority confident; but with almost no one dead sure he had all the answers.
FBI Breaks Up Big Theft Ring; Millions in U.S. Property Stolen
CHARLESTON, S.C. (AP) — Bodne of Charleston and Miami, The FBI reports it has broken Fla.; and Melvin McEuen of what it describes an inside theft Long Beach, Calif, ring which hauled away millions The bureau said the stolen of dollars worth of government goods included diesel engine property from the Charleston parts, typewriters, insulated. Naval Shipyard.	jugSt and brass and metal fix-
Twenty-six men were indicted by a federal grand jury In Charleston Thursday in connection with the alleged thefts.
7 ecu u 1 ecu i lx. A*rw aiiu nuinca as assiaiaiil .	, .
8 8vUi to the manager of the Drayton £ld Jont,ac P°feth(s m™f -V- M „ Plains office for nine years. For rat ,he wa8r°bbed hof a $104'4,5 ii 2666 26'* MH11 the last year she has been inchfk andf51 ln «,bby assail‘ V%L%.Z1m the mortgage department at thejants near the end of Tasmania. 17 lsv* isw isvi	main office.	j Fiirt valued at $215 were real	uu	w* 4-	Vk' she has a son and daughter,[ported stolen yesterday	after-
14	49'*	4*vS:	^ and	18 8 member of the execu- noon from Waite’s Department
37	629*	6266	6266 4	vkltive	board of the Pontiac Wom-|store, 70 N. Saginaw.
«	4»6	406*	4066 +	w en’s	Bowling Association., i
35 tSt tst 251 wljoiNFn RANK	P#ntiac P°lice *re tavestigat-
« l«6 Si* IS*->*r® ED BANK	'ing theft of 20 batteries, valued
u 39^ 386* m-w Shaw joined the bank in 19621 at $200, from Pontiac Scrap, 135 « 203j* 202.203]4 4ij* and worked as assistant manag-jBranch.
’2 121V6120'* 1289* - <* er at the Baldwin Avenue office! '	__________
Tt>« A»*oci*ia<i Pro.. i9*5 prjor to bj, neW appointment. J < i «r oivi-l ^ hiember of ^the board of gov--j- . „ , -r* annuaijernors and chairman of school relations of the American Insti-?r.5?y72!2L.f5,t*&!tute of Banking in Oakland County, he is presently taking a
Among those indicted is Henry H. Harris, director of the navgl supply center’s storage division, and three marine engine dealers.
The FBI said that 20 of those indicted worked at the naval shipyard and that Harris ’played an important role in tne conspiracy by using his authority as director to transfer codefendants to, various places and by calling ‘safety meetings’ of personnel not involved to facilitate the'thefts and removal of property.”
ARREST 11
tures, plates and rods. It said $250,000 of property has been recovered.
WIDELY PEDDLED _
The , stolen property was allegedly sold to purchasers in Florida, California, Virginia, Louisiana, Texas and Oregon.
'Hiree commercial truck drivers were also among those indicted. The FBI said they would drive into the shipyard during one of Harris’ “safety meetings,” load up at- a warehouse without authorization and drive away.
FBI agents quickly rounded' up 11 of the men and said they hoped to arrest four others.
Eleven had been arrested previously and are free on bond.
The arrests climaxed a yearlong investigation of govem-Iment warehouse pilfering which (allegedly took, place between1 £^^7 6139 1959-1964. •	(Dakota Circle,
Business Notes
A 38-year-old Bloomfield Township man has been named to the board of directors of thea i r m i ngham-1 1 oo mfieldf Bank.
The appoint-1 meat of .Charles I
f .	Much of the property, the FBI
°,	...	, said, was sold to or through the
Stocks of Local Interest three marine engine dealers, all Figura* .«.r u.cimai point, or* •'o^* (indicted. They are Lamar Dennis of Net* Orleans, La.; Philip

oyo^.r*c^uquia!^ j course in business management ?Mng* throughout
d—Declared or paid In 1965J n„l.l_i ________________ not include retail i
OVER THE COUNTER STOCKS Quotations from the NASD are representative Inter-dealer prices of approxl-I nter-dealer markets
ADAMS
rldend. d—Declared n stock dividend, e—Paid . -Payable In stock during 1965,
e 2.80
*1251* 11 i 5«Vt <

,2 lion data, g—Declai - I“— *• Declaror1 -
or paid after slot k—Declared or pi
H	j	509*	a	-
■ Pac 240	2	56*	569*
la PW 1.44	2	356*	35V4	35'4
S'i'I	......
I—Called, x—Ex dividend. y-Ex Olvl-!
OhloEdls 1.06 OtinMath 1.40 pfh Elev | Outb Mar 40 OxtdPap 1.20
i 336* -
I 5716 571* S7V6 -
x—Ex divIdaM. y i ana sates In full, x-dis—E xr—Ex rights. — —
FedOStr 1.60 Fed Mog 1.00 ForroCorp 4 -----1 Cp 3
It	379*	37V*	379*	4>	6* j	PennDlxie J
7	271*	27	27	Penney IJOe
50	45	44	446*	4-	96	Pa PwLI 1.48
x61	4496	4496	44V*	p« RR 140*
-	15	2216	226*	226*	—	6k	Pemzoll 140
53	21	209k	fl	4-W	PMMtCo 140
2 .4666 4466 4666 + V* PfterC 1.20a
- 1? 7866 716* 706* 4- 6* Phalp O 3.40a 1*-219k 219k 219k - 1*|PWIp E| 1?4I
12	109k	1096	1096
28	259*	256k	256k
226	521*	516k	SIM"-
10	30V*	311*	38'*	-
33	71	701*	701*
130	3366	336*	33V*	•
115	37	3166	389*	•
43	136*	121*	12'6	-
11	65	64V*	65	-
4	36	3566	3566
66	639*	6316	629k
Consumers Declares a 4714 Cent Dividend
The board of directors of Consumers Power Co. has declared a quarterly dividend of 47W duttibu-j cents a share on the company’s WBB __ „. wgrrant*; wa-when "al? common stock, payable Feb. 21, '6 !52R?e!y'.	“’u*d- n0~N*,rt to stockholders of record Jan. 1
6* Lw-1"! bankruptcy »r receivership ok{ The rate in the preceding
being reorganized under the Bankruptcy .	, _r ,	°
Act, or securities assumed by such convj quarter was 45 cents per share.
iRtrirt equaiizatton1'tsx*°* *'*l**e*	*n'|There are 20,587,5650 shares of
ia|	v *.............'------* common stock outstanding.
!;4J .	i	' The board also declared a div-
66 ?roci(??B* "OWi .*ve^*01‘	1 Mend of $1.12% per share oh the
» Indus ........
mi 20 Ralls v......
65 Stocks ..........
4- 6* RONDS r 4266.40 Bonds -— ’6!IO Higher grade t 4 i* 10 Second grade t 4- 66 10 Public utilities ill Industrials .
....0645,35 ($4.50 preferred stock, $1.11 per
152 36+o so share on the $4.52 preferred
. 3404241J7	•	”
. 04.9940.0)
00.00-0.02 90.2140.12 .. 15.05 .
91.9040.01
AMT Corp.
{Associated Truck .......
Braun Engineering Citizens Utilities Class A Monroe Auto Equipment -.
Diamond Crystal .........
Kelly Girl
Mohawk Rubber Co.........
Detrex Chemical .........
Affiliated Fund Chemical Fund Centmonwealth Stock . . “ no Income K-1 ... no Growth K-2 Investors Growth .
____Investors Trust ‘A
Putnam Growth Ttlpvislon Electronics Welilhgton Fund Windsor Fund
stock, and $L04 per share on the '91.16 preferred stock, payable April 1, to Stockholders of record March 4,
executive vice president of Mac Main us,.
John & Adams, was announced (yesterday by bank officials.
1 f .	.	• a* J ^obn McCarthy of 5506 Farm-
aid Asked \AV INK Attnrirltinn ers Lane, Bloomfield Township “ ja¥myj^JJWLiailUH haS been named general sales y.i | . i r\ i manager of radio station WJR,
hikes interest Kstep®^11 HePrevi°usiyheia8iini'
lar, posts for radio stations in ' Albany, N:Y., and Louisville, A new higher earning rate on Ky. savings has been announced by
Capitol, Savings and Loan Asso- Orville Proksch, 1183 Ports-ciation, 75 W. Huron. _ r ■ ■*..
Beginning tomorrow, funds!™ ' will earn 4.4 per cent compound- ‘ ed quarterly compared with the b
. 14.55 10 J* 10.53 1141. 10.01 10.93
,. 9.93 10J1 14.83 I4J6 18.80 20.43
Thunkoys 1st dividends oeclared
fi- itk. ot Pay-Rata rlad Rscard tbit
previous rate of 4.25-per cent.
In making the announcement, Gifford W. McKibbin, president of the association; said that the continued healthy growth of the nation’s economy and the steady increase in savings accounts and earnings have made the rata increase possible.
mouth.
Township, has been appointed
manager	m
of the Ray iff -■ 1 O’-Nefl Real-1 ty firm, 3520 j Pontiac Lake,] Waterfordl Township.8 Proksch joined PROKSCH the O’Neil staff in 1958.
EIGHTEEN
THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 91, 1965
JAMES F. DANDO j DONALD K. PEARCE autontfbile accident this mom-\Service for James F Dando Service for Dbnald K. Pearce, ing at Auburn and Adams, Avon 70/qf 86 E. Princeton will be ill*, of 134-Williams Lake, Water- Township. aW\Monday at Voorhees-Sipleiford Township, will be U a.m. Surviving are his wife, Karen Chapel with burial in Perry	Donelson-Joh'ls Fu‘ A ‘ w" ||yM |
Mount Park Cemetery.
;	n*/ Ford Motor Co7, Detroit died Township; two sons, Matthewj
JUS- re“ived
served .the division 35 years. He was a member of Aldersghte Methodist Church. \
Surviving are his wife, Emma T.; two sons, James E. of Rochester and Richard C. of Waterford Township; and two-daughters, Mrs. ThelmaV. Preston and Mrs. Juanita E. Strong, both of Waterford Township.
Also surviving are 17 grand-j children; three
dren; ahd~a Sister, Mrs. Esther Larson of Pontiac.
his parets.yKenneth E. of neral Home. ■	Madisonville, Ky., and Mrs. I
Mr. Pearce, An employe of Herbert Robinson of Waterford
--	-	-........'[Township; two sons, Matthew
and Herbert, both at home; a brother, Kenneth of Waterford Township; and a sister.
r	I C ’J BEVERLY STANLEY
Soapy IS OG/Cf Service for Beverly Stanley,
' '	6-month-old daughter of Mr. and
n.^jw n,m [Mrs. Johnny L. Stanley of 196 Keaay TO KUll E. Wilson, will be l p.m. Monday in the William F. 'Davis' Chapel with burial in Oak Hill Cemetery.
| The baby died Wednesday.
nEtROTT f APWSpn Patrick Surviving, besides the parents,
for Senator
from 0* Senate in 1966 aiid:“.‘c' !”? ^ndmothers and all “within^ minutes” G. Mennen grandfather-
ANDREW A. GARNER j Williams wilPannounce his Sen-1 MRS. THOMAS GABBARD Service for former Pontiac!ate candidacyVDetroit Free PONTIAC TOWNSHIP-Pray-resident Andrew A. Garner, 79,JFress Managing Editor Frank j er service for Mrs. Thomas
of' Clearwater, Fla., will be 2 An8e,° said today.	. ULetha Banks) Gabbard, 84,»ofi	HANGS UP HIS GUN—Samuel W. Hardy,
p.m. Monday at First Baptist1 Angelo said also that Detroit 13116 Caroline will be 7 p.m. to- with the longest FBI service record outside Church with burial in Rose! May°r Jerome Cavanagh wants day at the Harold R. Daws! of Director J. Edgar Hoover, retired yester-Center Cemetery, White- Lake10 make the race for the Senate j Funeral Home, Auburn Heights.] day after 41 years with the bureau. Hardy
Township, by the Huntoon Fu- “u°less he can be talked out of) Service and burial will be Sun-j______'	________■_______________ .
neral Home.	>t.”	■ day by the Newman Funeral!
Mr. Garner, a former em-| .	. *	*	*	I Home, Beattyville, Ky.
ploye of Fisher Body Division, , ,^e 0 sa,d he based his con-1 ^rs (ja^bard died yesterday died Wednesday. He was a;clusi°^ on andK p,eces after a long illness. She was a member of First Baptist Church. |of evdance that been K member of the Christian Church Surviving is his wife, Kathryn™™1"8, over the,Pft few!in Beahyville.	|
*eeks and were solidly con- SurvX are four daughters I firmed in conversations amid Mrs MyrtL Reynolds of Jack^ son, Ky., Mrk. Leona Creech of Auburn Heights, Mrs. Evelyn Rush of Pontiac and Mrs. Margaret Nunham of Linden; and one son, Floyd of Lake Orion.
Also surviving are one sister, stepbrother, 16 grandchildren and 20 great-grandchildren.
Says Hitler Feared Jewish Ancestry
SAN FRANfHSCO (UPI) -rial point of decreeing that Adolph Hitler’s suspicion that henceforth no German girl could his grandfather was . Jewish.work as a servant in a Jewish probably touched off, bis purge work as a servant in a Jewish of the Jews — “the greatest household,’’Waite said, mass horror in history,’’ accord- made SURVEY ing to a leading historian.	„	,	■ . . .	... ..
Rotart G. L. Waite of WU-LH'^
Uama College eald there w.*1* ‘00‘1Af?k.	“L*
mapld*. that Hitler s
[grandfather was a Jew, but added “it must remain in doubt. It is possible;, it is not proven.” Bat, Waite said, there is a second and more important question. “Did Hitler harbor the suspicion, did he suspect karkly, that he might possibly have Jewish blood?
worked on many notorious kidnap cases in the 1930s. He plans to conduct schools for police officers and add to his collection of crooked cards and dice.
World News Briefs
ALBERT McLAIN the jollity of the annual Board Albert McLain, 67, of 34491 of Commerce party Thursday Coseybum, Waterford Township,{evening” at the Sheraton-Cadil-died this morning after a long!lac Hotel. iNness. His body is at the He said the stage was left en-Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home, jtirely to ex-Gov. Wllliains at the Mr. McLain was a retired em- party. While McNamara and ploye of Pontiac Motor Division. Cavaiiagh also were present'at Surviving are his wife, Mary; the affair, neither stayed very a daughter, Mrs. John Kresnakllong, Angelo said, of Auburn Heights; a stepson, On the Republican side,'An-Lippel Dildy of San Antonio, Igelo said, Gov. George Romney Tex.; ahd 14 grandchildren. '/Jwill run for governor, and Lt.
Also surviving is a sister, [Gov. William Milliken “proba-Mrs. Mary Jane .Gurski of blv will wind up being ‘draft-Wat'erford Township. . led’ to run for the U-S. Seqate.”
w
MRS. ROBERT McNEAL ORION TOWNSHIP - Service for Mrs. Robert (Dora A.) McNeal, 92, of 806 Hemingway will be 10 a.m. Monday at the D. E. Pursley Funeral Home, Pontiac. Burial will be in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy.'
Nazis Bormann, Mengele Said Dead
BUENOS AIRES, Argentina (AP) — Adolf Eichmann’s son Horst says former top Hitler aide Martin Bormann and former ' Auschwitz concentration camp doctor, Josef Mengele, are dead.
Bormann and Mengele are wanted in West Germany on war crimes charges.
★ . ★ *
The 26-year-old Eichmann said in an interview Thursday that Mengele died somewhere
I home of his grandparents, the little village of Dollersheim.
* * ★ *
“The purpose of the survey was to ascertain the suitability of the area for a Wehrmacht artillery range. The inhabitants were evacuated, the village flattened by artillery fire and the [graves of his grandparents ren-‘My answer to this question .dered unrecognizable,” Waite is emphatic: yes, he did so be-'said-	.
l,eve >•	*	I “Why? Was it not perhaps be-
*	*	*	cause Hitler had an irrational
I Waite discussed the psycho-compulsion to wipe oiit-qulte logical approach to facts about [literally — the ‘taint’ of Jewish the German dictator during a blood by obliterating the graves session on “The Historian’s Use of his grandparents?” of Psychology” at the 80th an-i nual meeting of the American'
Historical Association.
SOME EVIDENCE He told the historians there is some evidence, none of it conclusive, on the subject.
Hitler’s father was the illegitimate son of Marianne Schickelbrnber, he said, and at the time her child was born, she had been working as a domestic in Graz “in
Link Pope Pius toGerman Plot
the home of a Jewish family
chemicals in tobacco turn into I BERLIN (AP) — A Commu-substances similar to those be- nist East German court Thurs-lieved to cause lung cancer, he'day night sentenced a West Ger-adds.	{man to 12 years in prison for
★ ' *	*	‘allegedly trying to take a cari
MOSCOW (AP) - The Soviet I carrying his brother and twb	... FrankenberMr naidi
Union says “the most important W Gernan girb through the	money ^the moth- ;
space feat” of 1965 was Alexei; Berlin wall.	er after ^ birth-0y{ ^ chlldi a
Leonov s success March 18 as	*	* ■ * , fact which Hitler did not deny,
the first man to walk in space. His brother was shot to death	.	*	*
A yearend space review car-by East German border guards.	v.	^
ried by Tass Thursday noted| The	East Gaman ^
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -Pope Pius XII was secretly a key link in a aborted attempt by a group of German officers to prevent World War II by
_	. overthrowing Hitler during the
by the name of Frankenber- |winter 0; 193940, according to a
ger.”
He said there was also testi-
noted historian.
★	★ UK*
When the Pope became convinced the plot could not succeed, he personally Warned the allies to expect a westward thrust by Hitler’s armies, said Prof. Harold C. jDeutsch of the University of Minnesota, who
that “somewhat later an identi- Us agency ADN said the	JSKttim^m^Uhg of
cal exneriment was carried out Lf Hnref Snimnnhoronr u rac*ai laws, tuuer maac a spe _	*
_____	experiment was carried out 0f Horst Schoenberger, 24, of
in South America about four j by an American spaceman.” Dortmund was held in nearby months ago and, “Who in the U.S. astronaut Edward H.|p0tsdam. His brother, Heinz, 27,
Mm MrNpal HipH uP«tnrHnv monms a«° ana’ wno ln ulc! v	"-IrOlSuam. HIS oroiner, neinz, XT,
-fZ!*:	ytody world doesn’t know that Bor- White U strolled in space for 201was shot during the Christmas!
Snrvivtag are three sons, Clif-imann di®d in Berlin?”	minutes June SL	[night escape attempt,
ford and Robert of Lake Orion! There have been persistent	y .	j	*	*	*
Ark reports that Bormann escaped erfnce 10 America s space| MOSCOW (AP) — Soviet 'achievements mentioned theng^pgp^ announced today
4 Detroit Teens!
and Oscar of Waldron,
12 grandchildren and 15 great-^^when the Russians stormed grandchildren.
lin in May 1945 but all efforts to rendezvous of .Gemini 6 and 7 that retail prices on sugar, cot-
Color-Blind Can't Fill Bill
‘find him have failed. EXPERIMENTER Mengele, who took part in experiments at Auschwitz,
two weeks ago.
has
Hundreds Flee Arizona Flood
I ton fabrics and other goods will j be reduced in rural areas to ! bring them in line with city | prices, starting Saturday.
the American Historical Association yesterday. •
Deutsch said a Munich attorney, Joseph Mueller, who was an acquaintance of Pius XII, was recruited by the plot leaders to act as a go-between with the Vatican,
Col. Hans Oster and Hans Von Dohnanyi, two of the plot lead-By Hie Associated Press ie™, aaked Mueller to “persuade Four teen - aged Detroiters |he Vatican act as mtermed-
Higher prices for consumer were killed and two injured ^ with the British govern-goods in rural areas were estab-|when their cars collided on wet me,nt-
Several Cities Hit;
Happy New Year
From Duane and Ed
The past year brought us much success and we, vyant to express our__ grqtitu.de to all the friends andj:ustomers who made it possible.
EVANSS
6507 DIXIE HWY. 625-1711
Traffic Safety Hints:
NO. 14
Although you do nood to chock your roor-viow mirrors boforo pulling out into traffic or changing lanot, it is also nocossary to turn your hood and glahco back quickly. Why? You havo to compensate for the blind spots at the right roar and the left roar of your car whom your view is not covered by either mirror. And remember not to drive in another driver's blind spot at the rear left or right of his car for any length of time. If he can't’ see you in his rear-view miner, he may suddenly move into your lane.
Brought to You by.Your
Pontiac Area Chamber of Commerce
Traffic Safety Committee ,
been variously reported as living in Argentina, Chile and Paraguay. Young Eichmann was reluctant to name the South j HARVARD, 111. UP) - Know American country where he how you adjust a color television says Mengele died, set if you are color-blind? The Horst .Eichmann’s father was answer at Admiral Corpora- executed in Israel in 1962 after tion’s color television manufac- Israeli agents kidnaped him turing plant here is, you don’t, from Argentina to stand trial in •—'	*	* A	Jerusalem.
Periodic eye tests are given	* i, y
to all employed in the making LONDON (AP) — An Austra- Hundreds of persons were being, of color television sets to un-ijan medical researcher says I evacuated from along the Sattj earth those whose visqal defects-there may be less danger of River today as floodwatersi could effect "the quality of the iung cancer from roll-your-own raged down the normally dry recovers.	cigarettes than from manufac- channel through Phoenix. i
- While- no one has yet been tured ones.	j Residents in areas of Phoenix,
fourid color blind, several people Dr. E. * R. Threthewie writes Tempe. Scottsdale and Mesa have been found to have a color about roll-your-own cigarettes'headed for high ground. deficiency, and transferred to in a letter in the current issue of	*	*
other departments.	iLance, a leading British medi-'	|U,W| ,w	.
Ca'i°“n“i *	.	l^.rlTr'.ilm f^ .,cTr ^thf«r^.t|d»7 ’Af: A ctr driven by Adam,	for <h. .prlng.
Womon Dies in Crash	dTrt;irnh|tbSrwa'Si; p.ad er! 11 ^ performance
T, ROCK (AP)—Mary Sta- ment of Melbourne Universitytheuca[ clitrJbed uP«n	a recent seminar of ?!
yk, 74, of Belleville" was.show that manufactured cigl ** the vehicle and was res- sc^olt*^r™™« ^S.23 and Eight Mile Road,!
lished in 1928 when Soviet in- U.S. 23 near Whitmore Lake to-j
dustrialization was beginningday.Thefourwere among.il The Germans wanted a and urban workers were favored persons killed on Michigan high-:promise from Britain- that she over farmers in the govern-1 ways in the early hours of the would not attack during any ment’s economci policies. - [long New Year’s holiday week- coup and would negotiate a + i, +	end.	[reasonable settlement of issues
^	r*\ l n A .! Rural residents will save1 The Associated Press reports [after Hitler was eliminated.
One Death Reported about m minion rUbies ($444-[holiday weekend fatalities from .complete ZERO’
[million) by the new reductions, 6, P-m- Thursday night to mid-| outcome of it gjj .<after PHOENDt, Art, (AP)-'**
crash, all age 17 were Charles Laid ^ German officers rc. Warren Adams, John Cns Econ-Leived the British terms on Feb. omeas, Jeff Morrison and Don-U 1Q,n • aid L. Plattner.	’	' *	*	*
I The youths were returning to] ^ after weeks of waiUn Detroit-at high speed in two {or ^ repJy pius m ,.feU
?,ariLa/^ a	at himself compromised in the
5	. ... North Lake -south of Whitmore jeyeg o{ ^ western powers» ^
The sheriff’s office reported aj DEN,Y?R* * ” Schooldiil- Lake, State Police said. |decided to ffarn ^ of the at-...___like taxpayers, are fast XRIES TO PASS . -tack which he knew Hitler was
Machines Prod Pupils
Ex-Husbai\d Is Held in Fatal Shooting
ers if their performance lags.
ments by the physiology depart-^" ,n* r,v“r ~,n ™oin,!r Das*
FLAT. RC	--	-	------ --------------,
74. of Belleville was.show that manufactured ciga-;^”1 ** m—  ---------- — school officials here an anony-r^“r ” ,“ri~
killed Thursday five miles north rettes may bum at higher tern-the Salt River,mous student’s grade average -tv? SAdam, car ran onto the
when	in^hich^h^w0" ^hret^^e'savs^*"00^^IP1*01*01 said thev were forced to was transmitted to a Honeywell shoulder and veered back onto GRAND RAPIDS (AP)-Mrs.
ridfnVa^Tnn^r S	the water from dams computer center- in Boston ^ road) romng over as it re- Charla Jacobs, 26, was shot to
riding and another car collided.! At the high temperature some aboye phoenlx as dams reached!which, seconds later, sent back turned	the pavement. It cpl- death and her father, Charlw
Inear capacity because of heavy|a prediction oT that student’s tided with Stevenson’s auto, po-jSharp, 48, wounded in a burst ,runoff from December storms, 'grades for the coming year. ijce said.	[of violence climaxing a domes-
II HIGHEST SINCE 1941	i	*	*	*	i Stevenson and a passenger in tic quarrel Thursday night.
|i . ,	. ! The prediction was .based on his car, Donald Francis Buckley	* * ★	★
11 Officials were concern w ^historical grade samplings and Jr., 17, of Detroit, were treat-1 Held for investigation
C8MISO
NOW!
W« Use JET SPRAY WAX
YOUR CAR WAXED FREE!
fverytime You Have it Cleaned and Washed At
AUTO WASH
I MA Clean Car Rides Batter Lasts Longer”
149 W. Huron St.
I. Acrot* from Firestone!
■
; Forms for Tax Relief to Be Ready Monday
Applications forms will be available Moiiday at the I assessor’s office in City Hall for Pontiac hdme owners i I eligible for Senior Citizens Tax Relief.
City Assessor James E. Kephart Jr. announced today 1 that he had received the tax relief forms. Home owners,
1 he said, have until about March 15 to file for the tax I exemption.
Under a new state law, Act 27, passed this year,
I senior citizens 65 and over can obtain an exemption' on their property taxes np to $2,500 on the assessed $ value as equalized.
Kephart said home owners, either husband or wife,
I who reached their 65th birthday on or before Friday will § be eligible for the real estate tax exemption.
Hiis act applies to persons owning their home or I purchasing it under a mortgage or contract.
I THOSE ELIGIBLE	.
The tax relief is granted beginning with the 1966 tax I year to persons over 65 who earn less than $5,000 annually, i1 have lived in Michigan seven consecutive years immedi-I ately prior to application and don’t own properties in J Michigan with a total assessed value exceeding $16,000 I as equalized.	*	, •
I Persons applying for the tax exemption should bring f proof of property ownership and their birth certificate or i some document showing (heir date of birth, such as a | Social Security application or discharge papers for those I who -served in the Armed Forces, said Kephart.
Ij cause water Is Bowing into the numerous anaiyses stored in the ed at.St. Joseph Hospital in Mrs. Jacob’ I I Roosevelt Lake at the top of the	memory	Ann Arbor.	I Darwin. 29.
Salt River chain. Water was I spilling out of the dam for the' I [first time since 1941. If thej-! j heavy runoff continues, the re-||lease from the dam qrill have to be increased.
' Runoff into other reservoirs along the. six-lake chain also filled them to caoaciw. forcing [
! the release of more water.
1 The project has been in opera-, ition more than 60 years. In that [time, many businesses' and| [some homes have been built in! j*be area which once was river' bed.
! Another dam at Lake Pleasant, northwest of Phoenix, also!, was fuir and spilling water which created another threat on1 the opposite side of Phoenix, j FEAR MORE FLOODS More flooding also was feared-along the Gila River, where res-| idents of the Salford area were hard hit last week. There appeared to be no problem in! southern Arizona where lastj week’s rain caused more dam-) age (o crop land and more than, a million dollars damage to the! Tkicson sewer system.
A number of Arizona roads .and highways have been washed' out or heavily damaged by the . I flooding of last week and today.
| Darwin, 29.
's estranged husband
I
NEW ATTORNEYS—Presiding Circuit Judge William J. Beer congratulates two new lawyers, Robert E. Stout (left). 32. of. 380 Hjckory, Waterford Township; and James L. Carr, 44, of 1051 Canterbury, after swear-
Pontlac Prki Phot*
ing them in at a ceremony yesterday in the courthouse auditorium. They were among^26 county men ’sworn in :whO/ had passed the bar examination test given in August Y

NINETEEN
■ THE! PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 81, 1863
Washington News
'Early Bird' Edrnin Reported
WASHINGTON' (AP) - The Communications I Satellite Corporation reported today took in $966,000 from thp operation of the Early Bird satellite during the third quarter of 1965.
In its first quarterly report in history, COMSAT also said that as of Sept. 30, its total cash and temporary cash investments amounted to nearly $188 million. |
WASHINGTON fAP) - Civil-I WASHINGTON (AP) -ian pay rolls of the federal gov- James M. Quigley takes over as ernment increased by 19,178lacting commissioner of the new
during November to a total of 2,-547,871, a congressional survey showed today.
This put the total near the August peak of 2,549,985 for the current fiscal year that began' July 1.
federal water pollution control administration, established today under provisions of the Water Quality Act of 1965.
In naming Quigley to the new job, Secretary of Welfare John iW. Gardner said he intends to Agencies listing increases uae aU the tools at his depart-
Stockholders were further ad-|from October to November in-vised of the corporation’s plans I eluded	the Defense Supply
for the launching of two new Agency with a gain of 3,065; satellites in 1966 for Atlantic I Army, 2,258; Navy, 1,754; Post and Pacific commercial service Office, 9,837; Health, Education as well as for meeting the needs 'and Welfare, l,4i5; Veterans of the Space Agency’s Apollo iAdministration, 1,249, and Air clean water,” Gardner said, moon-landing program.	Force. 753.	•_[ .The sooner we all recognise
Other 1966 plans include the) ----------* ..... i^ebrnmunity ^ eoneermmd
construction of new COMSATI The civilian payroll for Sep-,‘®,low it by common action in earth stations in Hawaii and the tember, (atest month available, r“® “terest, the sooner state of Washington, and the was $1,483,571,000. The pay roll!?® w111 remove the dangerous
. 4^4.11.11__.a t_______	.. M	.	t. .	.	. r .	. thrPQf OrKink Awla4.	«...
meat’s disposal to save the nation’s streams and lakes from the threat of pollution.
“Our homes, farms and factories, our states and cities, *11 depend upon adequate supplies
Florists Funeral Directoi Cemetery Lots Personals Lost and f<
Help Wanted Male Help Wanted Female Help Wanted M. or Sales Help, Mol ~ Employment Age Employment Infoi Instructions—Schools Work Wanted Male Work Wanted Fei
Wa
- Installation of James McCor- data is collected and released mack as chairman and chief by the Joint Congressional Corn-executive officer of the corpora-mittee On Reduction of Non-tion. He succeeds Leo D. Welch, essential Federal Expenditures.
threat which exists to our nation’s supply of clean water.
★ * *
Quigley, assistant secretary of welfare, will serve as acting commissioner of the new department until a permanent bead is named.
Science Quiz
should fit rather tightly on thej supporting strip or rod, and the s nails should fit snugly into the I- holes.
NEXT WEEK: A Safe Shock-
By BOB BROWN PROBLEM: Tricky weights.
NEEDED: Two heavy blocks from tWo-by-four lumber, drilling equipment, a long strip of wood to fit into the holes.
DO THIS: Cut the blocks ofj	—«*.
two-by-four and drill holes A collection of the “Science! through the centers vas shjfwn.jFor You’’ experiments is in book! Drill smaller holes through thej form under the name “Science blocks and through the strip so Circus.” It is on sale in book-that the nail will hold the blocks stores, or may be ordered from! either at the ends of the strip! Bob Brown, the author, care of or close together. .	. iThe Pontiac Press.
Hold the strip in one hand (Copyr,,ht "* °*n*r>l FMtuT CorpJ and turn it back and forth with the hand as the pivot point.
TUESDAY, JAN. 4th EDITION
Regular  	Usual
Contract .. Usual
Display .... 5 p.m. 12/31
WEDNESDAY, JAN. 5th EDITION
Saturday, Jan. 1st 4 P.M. Dec. 31
Monday, Jan. 3rd 9 A.M. Jan. 1
THANK YOU FOR YOUR COOPERATION
Building Services-Supplies... 13
Veterinary..................14
Business Service ...........15
Bookkeyping and Taxes......16
Credit Advisors ...........16-A
Dressmaking and Tailoring.. 17
Gardening ..................18
Landscaping...... .........18-A
Garden Plowing............18-B
Income Tax Service.........19
Laundry Service ........... 20
Convalescent—Nursing .......21
Moving and Trucking........22
Painting and Decorating.,..23 Television-Radio Service.,...24
Upholstering...............24-A
Transportation
Insurance ____
Deer Processing .........  ,27
Share Living Quarters....33
Wanted Real Estate.......36
Rent Houses, Unfurnished.. :40 Property Management.... 40-A Rent Lake Cottages Hunting Accommodo Rent Rooms
Rooms With Board ...........43
Reilt Farm Property
Hotel-Motel Rooms ....______45
Rent Stores
Rent Office Space......... .47
Rent Business Property.. .47-A ! Rent Miscellaneous ...... , .48
juib luilu luimawi* ... •
Death Notices SW®*!??:
Police Hunt Candidate
- Try it first with the blocks for Meanest Thief of <65 close together and it is easy; i.
. try it again when the blocks are VALENCIA, Spain (AP)-Val-on the end of the strip and it is encia police today sought their! difficult. -	candidate for the meanest thief i
HERE’S WHY: Rotational in- of 1965. ertia increases as the center of He stoie a wheei chair owned! gravity of the whole system by ? i7.year-old Valencia youth, moves farther outward from the legless since the age of 3 when1 center of rotation.	he was struck by a train. The
Moving the blocks outwardin- youth used the chair to get to creases this distance. The blocks work.
DANDO. DECEMBER 10. INS, JAMES F„ M E. Princeton Avenue; age 70; beloved husband of Emma T. Dsndo; dear father of Mrs. Thelma V. Preston, Mrs. Juanita E. Strong, Richard C. and James E. Dando; dear brother of Mrs. Esther Larson; also survived by 17 grandchildren and thraa great-grandchildren. Funeral service will be held Monday, janu-
officiating. Interment rcit. Mount Park Cemetery. Mr. Dando will lie In state at the Voorhees - Siple Funeral Home after ] p.m. Saturday, January 1. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to J p.m. and 7 to f pm.)
GABBARD, DECEMBER ”10, IMS. LETHA BANKS, 31 It. Caroline, Auburn Haights; age 14; beloved mother of Mrs. Myrtle Reynolds, Mrs. Leona Creech, Mrs. Evelyn Rpsh, Mrs. Margaret Nunham and Floyd Gabbard; also -survived by one sister and one stepbrother. It grandchildren and 20 great-grand-_raye, service will be i at / p.m. today at the Harold Davis Funeral Home, Auburn
DISPUTE LOOMS-Lord Sempill, 72 (I week in Edinburgh, Scotland. A possible diq the successor to the baronetcy with a sex-ch in. line. Seqipill’s sister, born Elizabeth Fori nejiunced in 1952 she had become a man aqd name to Ewan Forbes-Sempill (right). Loro
Sale Houses Income Property
Lake Property...............51
Northern Property ........51-A
Resort Property ............52
Suburban Property...........53
Lots—Acreage ...............54
Sale Farms .................56
Sale Business Property_____57
Sale or Exchange
Business Opportui Sale Land Contracts Wanted Contracts Money to Lend Mortgage Loans:
Swaps
?5ale Clothing .
Sole Household Antiques
Hi-Fi, TV & Radios Water Softeners For Sale Miscellai , Christmas Trees j Christmas Gifts | Hand Tools—Mac Do It Yourself Cameras—Service I Musical Goods Music Lessons Office Equipment Store Equipment Sporting Goods Fishing Supplii i Sand—Gravel—Dirt | Wood—Coal-Coke—Fuel .
Pets—Hunting Dogs .........79
Pet Supplies—Service.....79-A
Auction Sales .............80
Nurseries..........'..... .81
Plants—Trees-Shrubs ... .81-A Hobbies and Supplies.......82
FARM MER(
travel Trailers Housetrailers Rent Trailer Space Commeiciql Trailer Auto Accessories .. . ... .91
Tires—Auto-Truck ...........92
Auto Service . ..'..... .93 -Motor Scooters
Motorcycles '...............95
Bicycles ..... ........... 96
Boats—Accessories ........ 97
j Airplanes ...............  99
Wanted Care-Trucks........101
Junk Cars-Trucks ....... 101-A
Used Auto-Truck New and Used Tn Auto—/Marine Ira
TWENTY
THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 81, 1965
EXCELLENT POSITION OPEN FOR experienced bookkeeper, Rotundr Country Inn, 300 Ptne Lake ltd. Orchard Lake. Call «4H0 toi
EXPERIENCED C66k - NIGHTS -steady smploymawf. Apply In pei eon—Town and Country inn—171
MEDICAL ASSISTANT
For Internists office, 5-dey we no Saturday*!, able to do N wock^oxportorscad, ret. 334-0SS4. MIDDLE-AGED LAOY,
cook, afternoons,! to 11. OR 3-99)9.
EXPERIENCED HOUSEKEEPER
--- 10 to INe In. Good —'
ME, private
Experienced cook and wait-
reesas. Apply In person, Eefmore Restaurant, 921 W. Huron.
EXPERIENCED STATION HELP with soma mechanical experience. - -wegea, si 10 per week. Bring ref. erences with you. Apply In person between t a m. end 4 p.m. Standard Truck Stop, U.S. 22 end
------ hospital, 2 school children,
1 child welcome, mmt.
NURSE'S AIDES, WILL TRAIN
OFFSET PRESS OPERATOR - EX-perlenced. good wages, be “* steady, good |ob tor right 420-1000.
RECEPTIONIST POR LARGE SIR ' auty salon, mutt be reply Pontiac Press

t laundry, live In, I isth, radio, TV. «4-i RN FOR ADVISORY CAPACITY
possible part - time, expi--------------
aides for all shifts. Apply
SHlfeT PRESSER FULL TIME, EX-
Flash Cleaners, 339 W
necessary. Apply
*; SHORT ORDER COOK, OVER :
fo6d t6wn markets
Applications are now being1 accept-lers. Apply et 7390 Highland Rd. GENERAL-OFFICE WORK, BOOK-
HElP POLIO PATIENT, LIVE I
. Reply to Pontiac t
HOUSEKEEPER:	FULL T I I
live fn or work days with transportation, Birmingham.
HOUSEKEEPER TO LIVE IN OR come mornings go home ever'— Taka cars of children while er It In hospital. Call after 4
., 3020 Indianwood,
Help Woutri M. #r F. «
COOK
so kitchen help — • d waitress — nights.
lays- wet Ricky's I
:eLlent salIs oppoRtu-ly. In the WONDERFUL WORLD : WHEATONWARE. Part time.
Work Wanted Female
RESPONSIBLE man or woman
i Pontiac with
Oeraid Rose,
Sales Help, Male-Female 8-A HOT SHOT, CLOSER
HAVE QUALIFIED\LEADS AND NEED MEN WHOXCAN SELL A PACKAGE UNOERxisOO, PICK UP A DEPOSIT OF HlO, AND MAKE SI30 FRONT END^MONEY.
PONTIAC AREA: RETIRED ...........
H lady, to service regular trading itomers, on a part-time basis.
Work Wanted Male
I CARNIVAL
By Dick Turner
CARPENTER WORK; ADDITIONS
Claude Ruby, OA
»round Pontiac. FE 4-9194.
Business Service
ELECTRli MOTOR SERVICE-RE-^airing and rswlndlrtq. 2IS E. Pika, ■ho^ FE 4-39S1_______________
SOUTH SIDE JANITOR SERVICE-mop, wax. buffing and window cleaning. FE 3-9400.
Dressmaking & Tailoring 17
Convalescent-Nursing
n ladles. Reasonable.
•°rvd ^de 11 ver^' to** tsslaned Fuller OR 3-8565. 		WAITRESS, APPLY AT BAU/yiANIS Restaurant, 400 S. Blvd. East, Saturday, Sunday or holiday work,
HOSTESS: Teds of Bloomfield Hilts has Un-	WAITRESS FOR RESTAURANT, NO nights, Sundays or holidays. Birmingham area. Ml 4-4333. WAITRESS For first doss counter-style coffee
attractive women, to work as a dining room hostess.- Insurance benefits, paid 'vacations, food allowance. apply In parson only.	shop, excellent tips, reliefs, Blue Cross, vacations. Extra pay for night work. Biff's,' Telegraph at Maple (15 Milo). 		
WAITRESSES
Dining Room and Curb
Full or part-nme. Paid vacations. Hossltlllntlon^g|^^«|tart|d
BIG BOY RESTAURANT
Ttlagraph A Huron or* Dlxlo Hwy. A
WANTED WOMAN FOR LIGHT housework and care of semi-1 ........................M2-4645.
WEEKEND * HOSTESS, ROTUNDA Country Inn, 3230 Pine Lake Rd. Orchard Lake. Call 482-0600. Ap-Ply In person._________________.
HOUSEKEEPER, 3 MORNINGS,
Start January 5th, own transporta- nwVTixiwn w p.m._
tlon, some child care. 447-0071. woman to DO BABY SITTING I HOUSEKEEPER FOR ELDERLY my home, 5 days, Clarkston are ----	^	— Call after 4. 425-0137. __
LADY TO KEEP HOUSE, 1 CHILD welcome, more tor homo wages. FE 44)358.
MATURE DEPENDABLE WOMAN
transp., S4S. Coll after 7
is required. 192-1102,
Help Wanted M. or F.
BEAUTY OPERATOR, MALE ... female, 5100 guarantee, call Randy West, 419-2300. Milford, Mich.
BLOOD DONORS URGENTLY NEEDED
RH Positive
Wanted
Man or Woman
FOR
MOTOR
ROUTE
IN
> Birmingham Area
at Once
' Apply to Mr. Stier.
Moving and Trucking AA MOVING
B0B,'S VAN SERVICE
MOVING AND STORAGE FREE ESTIM*TB* ROBERT TOMPKINS
QUICK POSSESSION
“Don’t worry about them rattling the door knob! After awhile they get worried and make a deal! ” .
Expressway
MOVING and STORAGE
_______FE 8-9497
WANTED PICKUP TRUCKS TO
Webb Fuel Co.
i, 391 S. Paddock,
Painting and Decorating 23
PONTIAC PRESS
CIRCULATION DEPT.
Employment Agencies
International Personnel Service, Inc.
dowt and doors installed or do-14-yourself. 'Superior. S30 Woodward Ft 4-3177. __________
Aluminum Siding
ALUMINUM SIDING SPECIALISTS. OLD AND NEW WORK. CALL JACK. SAVE THE JACK. OR 3-9590.
NEW HOUSE ANb REMODELING
Basement Waterproofing
Building Modernisation
All types of remodeling, kitchen cupboards, additions, attic rooms, recreation rooms, aluminum siding,‘roofing. Free estimates. No down payment. G & M Construction Co., . FE 2-1211. 86 N. Saginaw.
HOLIDAY SPECIAL 12’x24' basement recreation room, Includes prefinished paneling, hang-* ing celling, and floor till, t partition wall IndiMM with birch
JOHN TAYLOR, FLOOR LAYING. Sanding and finishing. 25 years experience. 332-4975.__________
Rental Equipment
BROWNIES HARDWARE FLOOR SANDERS - POLISHERS . WALL PAPER STEAMERS RUG CLEANER — POWER SAWS 952 Joslyn Open Sun. FE 44109
Landscaping
TALBOTT LUMBER Gilts servlet J m Building an«
325 Oakland
press
Moving and Storage
NEW ROOFS, REPAIRS. INSUREO ~~J ranteed. Call Tom, 482-4543. ROBERT PRICE ROOFING, BUILT-H roofing. Free Esf. FE 4-1024, ROOFING AND REPAIR. 442-4790, OL 1-4441
Nunery-Duy Cure
STATE LICENSED, TRAINED STAFF. Ages 2Vi thru 9 years. Laurel Day Tfuratry_4734100;
ROOFS: NEW, REPAIR General Maintenance	41- JNV
ROOFS, SHINGLES - OLD, NEW repelr. Gutter work; all jeaks
Painting .and Decorating
11 INTERIOR AND EXTERIOR painting, fret estimates, work guaranteed. Reasonable rates. 442*
material, 4850. FE 4-9444.
(XL AND DELMAR KITCHENS,[AAA PAINTING AND DECORATING basements and recreation rooms, Interior and exterior, free estl*
A-l Interior and * exterior attic basement, recreation room, kitchen amt bathrooms my specialty. Slat licensed. Reas. 402-0448.
PAINTING AND PAPERHANGING, minor repairs. PE 2-2479. PAINTING, PAPERING,. ..CAULK
>r replaced.'FE 4-2874 (a
Piano Tuning
Cement and Block Work
Guinn's Construction Co.
Ft 4-7477	~	-------
Ceramic Tiling
NEW AND REMODELING WORK, tl)*, state, marMt, Pontiac Tile S, Marble, 402-SS90.
Dressmaking, Tailoring
Plastering Service
PLASTERING, EXPERT PATCH prK, 20 years exp. 3354947.
A-l PLASTERING ANO REPAIR. Reasonable. George Lee, FE 2 7922
DRAYTON FENCE CO.
Fleer TiNng
ARROW PLASTERING CO. REPAIR old and new plaster and dry FE 5-4009.	_______
Hooting IwpgBed «
PLUMBING, HEATING. SEWER water lines. 3344443.
USED GAS ..AND OIL FURNACES.
Repair Pan* anif Replacements
COUPLE AND PET NEED UNFUR-' "ed house Immediately. Can a month. FE 4-2357.
. REROOFS-REPAIRS
RETIRED LADY OEStRES SMALL opt. with bath. Prefarrably tide of Pontiac, moderate Reply to Pontiac Press Box 47. SOLD HOUSE. WANT' HOUSE TO
out basamant. Areq of Baldwin.
Tree Trimming Service
3510.
EXPERT TREE SERVICE. TRIM-mlng and removal. 334-0044, •.
Lakes Tree Co., Trimming
Plantings — Removals Fireplace Wood -.625-1414
Lakes Tree Co., Trimming .
Plantings — Removals Fireplace Wood — 425-1414
Trucking
AND HEAVY TRUCKING, sh, tilt dirt, grading and gray-d front-end loadlng.'FE 2-0403.
TRUCK HAULING,
t, basement cleaning. UL 2-5040,
Truck Rental
Trucks to Rent
16-Ton pickups *	116-Ton Stsks
TRUCKS — TRACTORS AND EQUIPMENT Dump Trucks — Seml-Trsllers
Pontiac Farm and Industrial Tractor Co.
029 S. WOODWARD 4-0441	PE 4-1443
Open Dally Including Sundsy
WuB Cleaeere
BLOOMFIELD WALL CLEANERS Walls and windows. Ross. Satisfaction guaranteed. FE 2-1431.
chine cleaned. FE 4-1077.
QUALITY WORK ASSURED, PAINl 28?2 P8Berlnfl' wal1 wathlng. 473-
WE NOW HAVE
K*ngfl4horm°orBI High wood Villa
Transportation
GOING TO NEW MEXICO,
i Clarkston. UHHPmiMJMIIPUl). Alto many buyers for homes In other ar— Ask for Mrs. Rockwell. JO KINZLER, REALTOR. 5219 C Hwy. 474-2239.______
Apartments, Furnished 37
TOTAL ABSTAINERS CAN GET special low cost auto Insurance.' Just phone FE 4-8284. K. G. Hemp-
Wanted Children to Beard 28
Wanted Household Goods 29
..'II auction It or buy It.
B & B Auction
hie______________OR 3-2717
FURNI-
Wanted Miscellaneous 30
ALUMINUM, BRASS, COPPER AND
COPPER, I
OR 3-5849. ~
DESKS, FILES, OFFICE FURNI-Portable and office typewrit •ddlng machines, draftln)
Wanted Real Estate
SPOT CASH
FOR YOJJR EQUITY, VA, ....
OR OTHER. FOR QUICK ACTION CALL NOW. HAGSTROM REALTOR, OR 4-0398 OR EVENINGS
VACANT LOTS AND HOUSES Wanted In Pontiac and Waterford. Immediate closing. REAL v/' REALTY, 424-9975, Mr. Davis.
WE NEED LISTINGS TOM REAGAN, REALTOR Mtijj|m^	332-0154
BUYERS WITH
ROOMS AND BATH, SMALL BABY welcome, 535 per week with 1100 deposit. Inquire at 273 Baldwin
VACANCIES COMING UP SOON, and 2-bedroom apartments, I nlshed and unfurnished. Priced from 2119 to 5185 per month. Adults only. FE 5-4719._________________
Apartments, Unfurnished 38
only. Ref, required. FE 2-1090.
ROOMS AND BATH WITH STOVE and refrigerator furnished, 432.50 per week with 4100 deposit, small baby welcome. Inquire at 273 Bald-wln. Call 330-4054,
- ROOM UPPER, CLARKSTON area near 1-75 — heat furnished-couple pnly. 4100 and 4100 security deposit. Underwood Real Estato. .......... ans. 425-24)5.
425-1453. If m ■ROOJA UPP
Wanted Real IstafiP
field Hlllt. FE 2-2144*
1 TO 50
3MES, LOTS, ACREAGE PARCELS,, FARMS, BUSINESS PROPERTIES, AND LAND CONTRACTS irgently need for Immediate Sale!
Pontiac Daily 'til I
MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE —	----— -TYPE
$100,000
For land Contracts and Equities Immediate Action—Call Today
A. JOHNSON & SON
REAL ESTATE. & INSURANCE 17045^ Tejsjraph
•	$$ TOP $$
Paid tor all types of property and land contracts. Buyers v~'"T| Call Joe Relsz, or Jack Jolt.
J. J. J0LL, Realty A
■'*'*“*	442-0282 Ml 4-5573
CASH
48 HOURS
D CONTRACTS—HOMES
WRIGHT
Oakland Av«.___FE 3-9141
CLARENCE C. RIDGEWAY REALTOR
B W. WALTON	^■■1
MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE
LAKE FRONT HOME WANTED ** >od beach, lake tor water
I preferred or vacant lam 1.____
. Phone Walter Lewis 343-7941 OR 4-2222.
Ray Oftell, Realtor 3520 Pontiac Lake Rd.
OR 4-2222________OR_________343-7041
RETIRED COUPLE NEED MED------- .— with basement in sub-
I location
MSUO AREA, teacher .wants 3-bpdroom home around S15.000.
WE HAVE CLIENTS for good homes In mixed neighborttoodl’ Call us today for fast, courteous service. DORRIS 5 SON, REALTORS. 474-
UPPER APARTMENT, . ..rest of Clarkston near Big Unfurnished—445 and Securi-deposlt. Underwood Real Es-i. 425-1453. If no ans. 425-3415. DOMS AND BATH LOWER, t and hot water furlnshed. 334-I,"	;	,	_ I
)OMS, $93 MONTH, APPLY
$83 TO $111 MONTH
1, 2, 3 bedroom townhousss with up to 116 baths, large living a;eas GE equipped kitchens, sliding glas doors leading to redwood-screened
m pay-lls, OR
2-BEDR00M HOME
ce shaded let, 100'x125', 2-... rago, lakt privileges, good beach. 550 with 10 par cant down.
excejkyt^buy^for only $1,400
WARDEN REALTY
3430 W. Huron, Pontiac 333-7157 3 BEDROOMS, SKL500 Special value here! Off Baldwin. Vary clean owner-cared-for ranch. Include! carpeting, draperies, steel fencing. ONLY 4350 DOWN, EARLY POSSESSION.
C. SCHUETT Ml 6-8500 4-H REAL ESTATE
$9990
Rancher on your lot. Lovely 3 bedrooms, full basement, oak floors, FULLY INSULATED, Del-Mar finished cabinets. No nioney down.
Y0UNG-BILT HOMES
REALLY MEANS BETTER-BILT RUSSELL YOUNG, 5316 W. HURON FE 4-3830
AT ROCHESTER
5-room brick ranch on 416 acre!. 4 miles north of town. 118,500. Phono OL 1-0501 for details.
Fronk Shepard, Realtor
A HAPPY
AND
PROSPEROUS NEW YEAR
PIRST IN VALUE
RENTING
$59 Mo. 1
Excluding taxes and insurance ONLY
$10 Deposit
WITH APPLICATION
3-BBOROOM HOME GAS HEAT
LARGE DINING AREA
OPEN DAILV AND SAT. AND SUN. OR COME TO 290 KENNBTT NEAR BALDWIN REAL VALUE REALTY
For Immediate Action Call FE 5-3676 626-9575
HIITER
Ivlng room# Be attached g
Everett Cummings, Realtor
2503 UNION LAKE ROAD EM 3-3200 ______________343-7101
HAYDEN
3-BEDROOM
TRI-LEVEL
II Build on Your L
KENT
MODERN 1 BEDROOM APART-ment, stove, refrigerator and alr-condltlonlng, balcony overlooking lako on US 10 and M15. Adults • ‘ 025-2451.
MODERN 2-BEDROOM ment, stove, refrigerator, carpeted living room and" utilities, adults only. S73-71I4 attar 7 p.-
...-conditioned, sound conditioned, carports available, balconies, patios, no chi —| no pets, 1 bedroom, 4135. 1
REDECORATED, 2-B e d R O 0 utilities furnished, basement a washing faclUtlea. Children) cepted. No deposit required. -quirt 740 Wagner off Telegraph.
Rent Houses, Furnished 39
714 ROCKCROFT (ON TOWNSEND Lake, 3/10 ml. N. of Anderson-ville Rd., off Dixie Hwy.) Waterford, completely furnished, 2-bed-room tri-level, family room, gas heat, attached garage, 2 fireplaces, 4150 mo., security deposit rer ""'1 Open Sun. 2-5, 837-6424.
Rent Houses, Unfurnished 40
ROOMS, 2 BEDROOMS, PARTLY furnished. North. side. Immediate occupancy. $130 month. FE 4-5358.
CONVENIENT TRANSPORTATION, Bloomfield Hills, gentlemen, call 447-2802.
OCCUPANCY, ween, meld service; telepls peted, TV. Sagamore Mott
FREE ROOM AND BOARD . FOR school girl or working woman exchange for staying with d
MAID SERVICE, COFFEE, CAR-Tiled, TV, totephano, **' lagamore Motel, 719
NICE, CLEAN, WARM SLEEPING room for gentleman, no drinkers. Apply 255 State. 332-3302.
Id Ave. FE 4-1454.
R BOARD. 13516 OAK-
LOVELY WEST SIDE HOME -shower bath, pvt entrance. 2 employed men. Good home cooking.
Rent StOras __	4
LARGE STORE ON JOSLYN
Eves. Mr. Gregory, F&.2-5219 STORE AND OFFICES. HEAT, WA-tOr furnished, parking,-143 Oak-
Rent Office Space
>NE OFFICE FOR RENT IN small shopping center. Call . Tom Bateman ori jack Ralph >■7161.	*
uiilss
Rent Business Property 47-A
A HAPPY NEW YEAR TO ALL
JACK BE NIMBLE JACK BE QUICK
Bring your lick along and see t
410,750 - 10 per cent land contract, 470 per m WON'T BE HERE LONG.
HAGSTROM
REALTOR
900 W.. HURON
EVENING 482-0435
OR ,
Bateman
Realty
and Staff
Wish You and Yours A HAPPY NEW YEAR
Ve will be dosed Friday avan -through Monday morning.
BLOOMFIELD HILLS — VACANT -bedroom colonial, grey brick; lasement, BO'xISO' lot, patio, new arpptlng, ell bullt-lns, 2-car at-ached garage, walking to school! ind shopping, 441,500, will trath
BY OWNER
Ottawa - Drive. 6-room brick, conditioned, newly carpetad, large
Brown
ESTABLISHED SINCE 1*39
WATERFORD TOWNSHIP — L cated on nice large comer I with paved street. Two-bedroom bungalow - with attached carport, aluminum storms and oi‘ *■—“ “Real low cost housing
L. H. BROWN REALTOR
509 Elizabeth Lake Road Rh: FE 4-3544 or FE 2-4110 Multiple- Listing Servlet
... 3 ROOMS AND BATH UP 3 ROOMS AND BATH DOWN Cement garage-full basement
WRIGHT REALTY
FE a-»141 Evt». 1
AL PAULY
29S S.
WEIR, MANUEL, SNYDER & RANKE
PHONE: 444-4300
FHA Repossessions
Theta homes are all newly condltiohed.
NORTH POINT REALTY
$. Main	Clarkston
5-041	__________MA s-Taa
5904
GAYLORD
BRAND NEW IH-leye*,rx ‘o' show. Will finish an o suit. Lara* let, pH .aka Orion. Price 217.5 Ot.
Lawrence, VfL Gaylord
Broadway and PNnt MY 2-3*21 er FE )t493
LIKE NEW— 2-bedroom, I
FLOYD KENT,INC*
MM Dixie Hwy at FE 2-0)23 or FE
McCullough react
Lincoln Haights.-.fEUUUEIVaH on this extra sharp 3-b«droom C Cod home. Formal dining ro full basement, gas best, beau wooded lot, 75'x350', all brick terlor, all this and mors, < 813,950. Possession by Jan. 15.
Mixed Neighborhood
MODEL OPEN AFTERNOONS 1-5 AND SUNDAY
WESTOWN REALTY
NEAR PINE KNOB SKI AREA 9250 THENDARA BLVD. 2-bedroom, fireplace, part fur ishad, hlde-a-way In the hills. In mediate occupancy, S8.950, 44:
" SYLVAN REALTY 42-2300	'	425-141
If no ans. 334-8222________
room, large kitchen wit i and,, gas heat. Ready l Into tor only 417,448 wit
GIROUX-
REAL ESTATE
11 Highland Rd. M-99	473-78
ROCHESTER - WE TRADE
Ing In living room, 3 btdr dose to shopping confer in Walled Lake.' 75x220* Site. 811.000 - $59.64 plus tax and Insurance. Hagstrom Realtor, 4900 W. Huron, OR ' **“ or eyanlngs. 402-B435.________
WEAVER
AT ROCHESTER
3-bedroom ranch built in 1951 •O' lot. Aluminum storms M screens, Ito-car garage. Asking 112,250, terms.
MILtON WEAVER INC., REA In ths Village of Rochestei 111 W. University_«
343-2171.
i E. Detroit.
West Side Location
, 3-bedroom brick bungalow I rnmnd basement. Custom „... end In excellent condition. Draperies, carpets and, range lnel "‘" •t 014,900. Shown by appointr
LESLIE R. TRIPP, REALTOR-APPRAISER
FE J-016) (Evenings Ml 7-3279)
NEW
CUSTOM
HOMES
"UNDER CONSTRUCTION" Lake Angtlus Lakeview Estates. A Quiet, Secluded Area With Lake Privileges "LET'S TRADE NOW"
CUSTOM-BUILT RANCHER
r Three bedrooms, family room. Hemes feature split-rock exterior, sealed glass windows and screens - marble tills, full thick Insulation. plastered stalls, genuine ceramic tile baths, double —“ basins, natural ftrdplaca, floor latmdTy room, cvstoi.. tailed kitchen, bulltln appliances, basement, gas heat, attached plastered garage, paved drive, community water — Bite now and chedtt your colors — price, 427,990 tp 430,450 Including lot.
KAMPSEN
’! WEST HURON ST, FE 4-0971
IRWIN
PERKINS STREET
mH z your r This 1'6-story will"- provide Ing quarters. ... full-size dining room, nth and two bedrooms icome^of. 475 per rtwnfll
WEST SIDE
lout ovorythlng nbers of your * . In thw four-1
a?:
John K. Irwin
INVESTMENT
2-story, presently rented tor 4171 per month, large living ro — kitchen, 2 bedrooms, bath large enclosed porch down. 3
rooms, living room, kitchen ___
beth up. Gat boat. Waat side location, Slim » **	**
HANDYMAN
5-room frame house. Back Pontiac Press. Needs work. Location makes It. Ideal for person ^jwut-ToP. -"Paw —price tr,m $750 down.
INVESTMENT
5-temlly opt. building, was location, Clots to town DM It on Wool rental Investment. Nov-
Sislock & Kent, Inc.
1309 Pontiac State Bank Bldg. 1294____________________jSUj
KAMPSEN
Your Neighbor Traded—
Why pon't You?
Two-Way Fireplace-
tor the living room and kitchen make It cozy In this three-bed-room ranchor on the wei* ,J of Pontiac. The basement
finished in knotty pine, I____
woy and 2-csr attached garage.
Family Home—
with, three bedrooms, 23* llv teenywHh fireplace, 1W cor*
120' lot Is* nEely landscaped, coted In West Bloomfield Toi ship and dost In to all shopp centers and schools.
Contemporary Rancher—
Thres bedrooms, with • kttd lust for you Mother! A beaut. .. fireplace, full finished basement, central elr-condltlonlng system, closed In rear perch end so much more. Call us tor particulars and fiiM put ths REDUCED PRICE!‘I
WE WANT TO WISH YOU A VERY HAPPY AND PROSPEROUS NEW YEAR AND RESOLVE TO GIVE YOU AS GOOD AND PROMPT SERVICE AS WE GAVE ALL OUR 1945 CUSTOMERS.
SALES - STAFF: Dava Bradley, Emery Butler, Leo Kampsen, Lap Kerr, Rachal Levely, Fred Rote-year, HlWa Stewart, or Jo U|
Street MLS FE 4-0921
TIMES
Cherokee Hills
3-bedroom
newly carpeted, recreation ______
finished breezeway, 116-car garage. paved drlye, gas hsat, community water, blacktop street, situated on large spacious lot In an area of, custom-built homes. 3 minutes from the Mall. Only $17,950 with 41,795 down, " costs. Call early, .this one
Family
Located. near- General- ftospltal, never a vacancy. Each apart-
950.
Bungalow
City location, 3 bedrooms, mol dining room, basement, _ heat, 216<ar garage, vacant. Possession if closing. Only 44,500, terms. Coll for appointment.
21 Acres
o hill hero. Call us on a parcel of proparty and n an otter. You might buy It
WHEN YQU SEEK OUR SERVICE YOU
"JOIN THE MARCH OF TIMES"
Times Realty
KINZLER
NEW TRI-LEVEL
Refreshingly dlff
4-bedroom horns family, kitchen
10 Gl veteran.
JOHN KINZLER, Realtor
5219 Dixie Hwy.	674-2235
Across from Pockors Store Multiple Listing Service Open M
GILES
NEAR GENERAL HOSPITAL - I-
ORTH OF BLOOMFIELD ORCHARDS — Clean sharp 5-room bOngalow, vestibule entrance closet, 15-ft. family kitchen, gas heat, 1'6-car garage, beautiful evergreens and shrubs.- Only $11,-100. Terms
GILES REALTY CO.
J 5-4175	211 Baldwin Av«,
Mumatn listing service
Waterford
nlct 3-bedroom NMPHHiH pin, full basement, 2-car attached garage, carpeted living and dining room, largo corner lot, lake privileges, 315,000, terms or trod*.

____ _________ tile bsthl ges
walking distance to eiemen-, school and shopping. Priced Immediate sale.
ENJOY THE NEW YEAR
Buy tills lake-front home and tn|oy the many pleasures derived from lake-front living — boating, fishing, swimming, 3 bedrooms, largo living room, tils bath, all In excellent condition, s' rare buy ot 011,-500, land contract terms. ,
WATERFORD REALTY
D. Bryson, Realtor	OR 3'-127t
"*0 Dixie Hwy. Von W»“ ■“»
GETTING MARRIED OR
RETIRING?
'See this compact home with li
closet. Full basement, fa oil neat, aluminum awnings, storms and •croons. Cyclone fenced yard — beautifully landscaped. Lake privileges with pork. ONLY S9.950 — TERMS.
HAMMOND LAKE ESTATES
Lovely ranch home on quiet street In choice residential srsa featuring 4 bedrooms, 3 full til* baths, largo kitchen with bullt-lns. 23-ft. living room with fireplace. 49-ft. paneled family room with natural fireplace. Carpeted throughout. Full basement. 2-car attached garage,
landscaped tot._J/jxlUg**-
SMITH & WIDEMAN
CHOLIE
WEST SURBURBAN Two - bedroom bungalow. L .........	— - dining I
Vacant. About 4300
SOUTH SIDE Two-bedroom dining rooms
MILLER
MS 116 BATHS, FAMILY hoi H..j condition. 3 bedrooms, 1 basement, gas heat, lots of fr
rotisserls and
i, 116 baths, H'xl3* i
I paneled family rc
2-UNIT INCOME NORTH SIDE 45.-full price. 7 large rooms, prl-entrance. Haw gat furnace. A
Aaron Baughey, Realtor
FE 2-8U2.--- .
678 W. HURON OPEN 9 TO t
BEAUTY CREST OPEN
2 TO 6 DAILY 2 TO 8 SUNDAY
$15,550
YOUR CHOICE
Visit the all-new "Huntoon Shores Sub." 3 model homes to choose from, a delightful ranch with family room,- a spacious tri-levsl or a 2-story colonial; several elevations availhble in each. Your Choice at $15,550, plus lot, to includs storms and screens, wall-to-wall carpeting, attached garage, full paved drive, blacktop streets, an outdoor gas litt with every house, plus private lake front privileges. Airport Road between M-59 and Williams Lakt* Road. .
RAY O'NEIL REALTOR
3520 Pontiac Lake Road
OR 4-2222
THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 81, 106.5
TWENTY-ONE
H* H—m	m
TAYLOR
TRADES
WOULD-BE FARMERS
• 5- and 10-*cr* parcels, winter priced on II terms, buy before the anna rise In prices. WILL bundle suit. Cell us.
BARGAIN HUNTERS
Lake propertyi,' now winter priced, buy before the spring rise In prices. Call us.
Naw Suburban Colonial
Clerketen area. 3-bedroom, Ito baths, family room, basement, 3 car garage on l acre. 025.900. E-Z terms. Hurry.
TAYLOR AGENCY
Real Estate - building - Insurance d (MW) OR 4-0306
Sol* Homes -	,.
RHODES
LAKE ORION. »bedroom home .
extra large living room complete with i fireplace, hardwood floors, kitchen with buitt-ln electric stove and oven, ell heat, UO'xMO’ lot. Only *10,900. Terms.
NICE 4-room home arlth aluminum siding, nice kitchen, full basement, gas heat, large lot, iW'xltrr A real buy. Only tnjoo. Terms.
WEST BLOOMFIELD, beautiful 8-
. ARRO-
■Realty
WISHES
EVERYONE
A VERY
, Happy
AND
Prosperous; New Year I
CLOSED JAN. 1 AND 2
CLARK i
FROM TENSION TO TRANQUILITY. —In this quiet neighborhood, ttilal comfortable 3-bedroom Tri-Level, I custom built homo footuros dining room, f|replsce, family room, heat-1 ad breakaway, IVk. baths, attached i garage end like privileges. For; Detroit or Pontiac workers. Excel-1
iPffmPMPMMKg, fertile son, flowing stream. Only 133,500.
INDIANWOOD SHORES NO. ....
Moil location tor your homo, largo lots rtasonably priced. Coll today
ALBERt’j. RHODES, Broker
'BUD'
3-nt4.
Dally Co.,
INSURANCE AolifCY FOR SALE,, ner retiring, approximately SO ■ cent homeowners' business. Re-1 Pontiac Press box Si.
LISTINGS WANffcD
WALTERS LAKe OFFERS |raraRtemi| for ranches 11,473 Mel. 3
-----...	......Ions:	Clarkst
Orion RC. to Elton Rd., 3 bkx __3L - Mobewk- Orlve.
SYLVAN 613 H
Choice
trlteveis
5«| TIZZY
By Kate Osann For Salt Miscellaneoui 67

Resort Property
Lots—Acreage
Ml4M by 40b per cent, we expe ItU to be bottor,
STATEWIDE REAL ESTATE
business Opportunity Specialists 61 S. Lapeer Rd, FE 6-0000
Northern Bor
First offering, straight bar, class C and SDM. Seating capacity iso. Plenty of perking. Onto $47,500, LokeCIty.	i
K. L. TEMPLETON, Realtor
OWN YOUR OWN BUSINESS. MAKE $1,000 per month end up part jime
71 ACRES ON US 10, t35,0i
|H cent down.
res—lake lot too. $22,000.
Other acreage — VI acre, to St
Underwood Real Estate
"IS THE BIRlrJO SEE"	
"TRADE SPEd/lilSTS"	
Selectronlcs — A Partrldg* exclusive - traded over 036,133,000 In 1963, up to Doc. 13th. 9 apartment houses, r college, 60 motels, 6 ranches, 7 shopping renters' I trailer, parks, and 14 other mis-	
cellaneous properties. Tell us wbat you havt — what you want, and where yod want It, any place In tlte-U.S.A. Call today end tot Setoc-	
LIPETIME OF SATISFACTION -That's whet you'll receive when you buy this l-room brick ranch, ■mhURMv permanent
CLARK REAL ESTATE S101 W. HURON ST. FE 3-7*84 OR 3-1973 or FE 3-3146 Multiple Listing Service ■
O'NEIL
BE READY FOR THE NEW YEAR Vacant. 3-bedroom, located on ont of tho nlcor streets on tho nortf side of Pontiac across the roae from perk. Neat and clean one lots of room. Only $13,900, win
srr^^000' ....... - -
Two Big Lots MSU0 A red
(3) Mg surburban horns altos,
- 100 ft. X 200 ft. tech, Avon Township, noar Rochester Road,; easy access to (tolnts north and south. Priced at $3,000 each; only $300 down,, balance on land con-
"BUD" Nicholie, Realtor j
49 Mt. Clemens St.
FE 5-1201
AFTER 6 P.M. - FE 2-33701
Val-U-Way
Government Representative. DRIVE CAREFULLY
And start 1966 by calling u$ for low down payment homes like these—
$300 DOWN
A nest 3-bedroom homo priced at only $1,000. Has alum, siding, awnings and wood floors.
$350 DOWN
A 3-bedroom Reconditioned I
WE TRADE EQUITIES Over $3,000,000 sold so Isr In '63, ' I
List Here—All Cash ' for Your Hamel '|
R. | (Dick) VALUET j REALTOR	FE 4-35311
343 Oakland	Open 9-7
- iAfter hours FE 0-1904 or FE 4-0300
Frushour , Struble
CANAL LOTS
Choles building litas — 60x147.
Connoctod with Sylvan Lakt.
JACK LOVELAND
1110 Cass Lake Rd.
_____________Stt-ilSS__________
Clarkston Area Homesites
170'x413' lot, - $3,930.
OO'xtOO' lot - $1,000.
30 lots — 100'xlSO' — $2,730 up.
New homes — Colonial on 1-aci lot — $13,900.	.......	„„„
CLARKSTON REAL ESTATE •£»«• w *»«*»■
5036 S. Main	MA 3-3031.	.
city of pontiac - menomi- Sal* Lana Contracts
nee Road, fenced lot, 50'xl40‘, Ot-........ FE 3:7803.
HUMIDIFIERS
$9.95. Chandler Heating. OR 3-3633. KEEP CARPiT CLEANING PROB-lems small—use Blue Lustra wall. ----- Rant otoefi
BOWS, ARROWS. SUPPLIES Cana's Archery, 714 W. Huron BRUNSWICK POOL TABiE, SLATE —	"" 333-3346.
74 Farm Equipment
CAMPER USED AS MODEL ONLY, aluminum frame, lined and Insulated, fits long wheel base Chqvy pickup. 10 inches above c4b, reduced price. 4169 Foley, Wetor-
1963 JACOBSON fRACTOR, WITH mower, snow blade, chains wheel weights, 1373. IN]
ver, $313. I vara "Equipment is A Service, 6507 Dixie Htgh-'■ Clarkston, 613-7711.
without1 lights, sliding - doors, _ rifle buys. Michigan Fluorescent,! 391 Orchard Like. FE 4-0461.
MUST ItLL—1957_ CADILLAC J.IM-]
1, 613-1114.
GUNS BUY-SELL-TRADE ----..... — j Telegraph
____Shell, 373 .	____ ,
r. ICE SKATES, SPORTING GOOPt, new and used. We buy. seU. trade. Barnes-Hararaves Hardware, 743
GIBSON RIDINO TRACTOR, < tlvator, plow, disc, snow bl Bald Mountain Road.
THE LARGEST "REAL" ............
service store Ih Michigan. John Deere end. New Idea parts gators.
MMMP	BROS.
board, heat with enclosure and fe 4-0/34	FE 4-1662
dimNd'" — “ * * T*‘**~H Pontiac Rd. at Ondyke j
PRE-INVENTORY SALEf
son, 7003 M-59 W.________
POWERED HUMIDIFIER, S ' and service.-Call 602-1397. plumbing baroains. r Standing tollat, $16.95.	3
heater. S47.93I 3-plece ba $39.93. Laundry tray, trim.
eri, Cod hydraulic drive riding tractors, tractor cycles, and farm toys. Gold Bell Gift Stamps on merchandise in stock. Davis Ma-___ chlnery Co., Ortnovllle. NA 7-3292.
Used snow bloweAs, sso each
SEARS 6-h.p. tractor with snow blow-
LIKE NEW. BOLENS, 3-h.p. walking •roctor and snow blade, 0123.
KING BROV
Pontiac Rd. at O
\E 4-1662
tubs, 110 1
. Pint
SW.VSf
$3.93;
G CO.J
RECOMMENDED
That's right — Our many satisfied! clients hlgh'y recommend thet you, I too, consult WARDEN REALTY	----------------------
busineu°uwPE*nARE experts* in Salt Household Goods 65
THIS FIELD. Our top quality serv---------------—-------------
|£e *0.'. You no rnore	, 3.p,gCe BEDROOM,' $59; ELEC-
WARDEN REALTY	tnc and gas stoves, $15 to $79. re-
3434 w. Huron, Pontiac 313-7157	JS* *JJ*J
! RETAIL DISTRIBUTORSHIP AVAIL-1 jjJ 7?p|ece^inlng mom wlte7^4r •»! able. Training and financing ar- s-plece dinette set, S14, wringer “WRWAllfy. Cell wather. $39, odd bods, dressers ASk tor Mr. and chests. Everything at bargain i prices. Little Joe's Bargain Dept., 1460 Baldwin at Walton. FE 2-4842.
$3.89
Linda is quite unusual. She’s a dumb BRUNETTE!” Sale Household Goods 6
POOL TABLES-BELAIRE _ qUL-Q90a^ 353-6520.
SCHiELD-BANTAM- MUX7EL" L : crawler crane with backhoe. dr line combination, S4.300. Body-Ha son Equipment Ct	'
i evenings, 623-2017. i SELLING EQUITY O
Snowmobiles. Apache Camp trailers. Pickup Campers, Johnson Motors, Boats and Canoes. BILL COLLER, 1 mile E. of Lilpeer on M2I.
SNOWMOBILES
Fox • Ski - Doo - Ski - Daddle
CRUISE-OUT, INC.
3 E. Walton, Open 9-4. FE
FE
Lake a
JAYNO HEIGHTS mi. and Inside lots, one land County's most 4 natural lei— * paving. Only tlac. Starts a. — .
Will build to suit
natural lakes, city water, gas, Jr!9' "ig. Only S minutes from Pon- ' Starts at $50 per toot.. Ter
1 TO 50
LAND CONTRACTS
ntly wanted. See us hi
■FE 8-8447 evenings.
SPECIAL
20 A MONTH BUYS 1 ROOMS OF FURNITURE - Consists el:
-place living room suite with 2 step tablet, 1 cocktail table and ? tahto lamps.
-piece bedroom sufle with drasscr, chest, full si'* hi Innertprlng mattress
SPECIALS 5 2337 Ol
1 condition SAND, GRAVEL, FILL DIRT, TOP 41 soil, black dirt. Bulldozlno. axes-1
> HUt______________
77|STOP
* Wood-Coal-Coke-Fuei

value, $34.30. Lkvatorles, compli with faucets, $!4.93i toilets, $18. MlchlganmmMmra|pMttmre||
t Club, land development,
WARREN STOUT, Realtor '
1430 N. Opdyke Rd. FE '3-S165, Open Eves, 'til 0 p.m.
A-A-A BUY
Present balance $12,574, you piV| $9,431. Monthly payment$ $290.' Pays off In approx. 4 years. Cell or stop in tor full details.
WARDEN REALTY
.»! mlng pools, 7 bedrooms. 4 fire-13434 W. Huron. Pontlsc 333-71571T
. places, as well as tenant house and; —----------amnei ~
I barn, 2 private lakes with streams.,	ACTION
1 $100,000. Terms.	On your land contract, large or —
L _________ ... j .	, small, call Mr. Hlltor, FE 2-0179.
58_ACRES. near , 1-73 and Baldwin. Broker, 3792 Elizabeth Lake Road.
h Perfect for large motel complex,	----r.-;
,t subdividing, or retention for future Wanted Controcts-Mtg. 60-A
! commercial frontage use. Rolling, |	~-------—4.
, partially wooded, tenant house on	. TA ..
property. $69,600. Terms.	I TO 50
.LAND CONTRACTS
UrsRntiy needed See us b< you dioi.
WARREN STOUT, Realtor
R0LFE H. SMITH, Realtor
244 S. Telegraph
FE 34840 EVES. FE 3-7302
LAKE ORION AREA
Near blacktop road, 0 dean build-! Ing lots, each 62'x340', priced at $1,730 and $2,000 each. Will sell1 Individually or lVi or more lots asi required, gas In front of property.
C. A. WEBSTER, Realtor |
NAY 7729\______ OA 1-2515
SEASON'S ~\ GREETINGS! i
1965 Floor Model Clearance
Come Save!
Big Discounts Everything out before January 1st
gave—Sava—Sava
OOD HOUSEKEEPING SHOP < OF PONTIAC I. Huron St.	. PE 4-tSSSi
AIR CONDITIONER SALE
Drastic reduction on oil4 oir conditioners In stock SOS ana up
— own	$2 per Oreek
.FRETTER'S WAREHOUSE OUTLET! 1630 S. Telegraph______FE 1-7031
> l MORE IIME
BRAND NEW FURNITURE
3-R00M OUirliS
... ....^ ._ ...... . bookcase, .
9 xlT fug-included. All for $399.
WYMAN
' FURNITURE CO.
17 E. HURON	FE 4-4901
10 W. PIKE____________ FE 1-21301
SINGER
DIAL-A-MATIC
Zlg Zap sewing mechl
Leke. FE 4-0462._
TALBOTT LUMBER
chronK chilrij Mahogany paneling, $2.99 to i

>rd| Pets—Hunting Dogs
TOM STACHLER AUTO and MOBILE SALES
79
Black and Dtcker Walt saws.
1023 Oakland
makes designs,,r^meya* . Service jppliques, buttonholes, etc. Repos- VOlttBrus service tested. Pay ......to|
1 A, AKC CHIHUAHUA PUPS. IMA-I TODDS. 332-7139.
Il-A AKC RED DACHSUND PUP-!
IMATODD'S — 332-7139.___L.
Il-A POODLE TRIMMING, SHAM-| POOlnq, $3 up. 023-2073.
EverythirM' to med your needs
Clothing. Furniture, Appliances ___
WEDDING ANNOUNCEMENTS ATIa-1 DACHSHUND PUPS, $30 UP. I discount prices. Forbes Printing! AKC-Termt. JAHEIMS, FE 0-2330.1. and Office Supplies, 4300 DixieUkc MINI-TOY POODLE PUPPIES,
TRAVEL TRAILERS mce 1932. Guaranteed for ee them and gat a demo Ion at Warner Trailer Sales, /. Huron (plan to loin of /ally Byam's exciting carat
BOOTH CAMPER
Uumlnum covers and campa my pickup. 4267 CaFortst, v ord. OR 3-5526. _
BOOTH CAMPER
AKC BEAGLE PUPPIES, 3 WKS .j ^!N^ne?a0t67M9U*TAMAT'C	AND Ruk 1
CASH FOR LAND CONTRACTS
H. J. Var ........... * “
I OR 3»13SS*
CASH
for your aquity or
34163,$278 (Good) $2.50 Weekly 1^-$378 (B«tttr) $3.00 Weekly!g“rr; j
h payments. Universal Itv" SET, $75. REFRIGERATOR, $33J	'
nk’Sot.	m Musical Goods
uaeD REFRIGERATOR- S»95 __ 2! _	_ ~	^
Per Cent
421 W. Huron__________334-3677	0
WIDE ARMED^DAVENPORT AND GUITARS.' Electric - 1 Pick UP, chair, beige, $40. FE. 4-4961.	.	^----- -r —
v WYMAN'S
USED BARGAIN STORE
At Our IS W. Pike Store Only ____|
Odd living room tablet From s 4.43{ Many others—1 of a kind Occasional chairs From S 6.95	All sales final
bookcase __	S_9.95 Pontiac Percussion C
COME TO
THE BARGAIN BARN
AKC TINY TOP POODLE,
campers to choose from. Service supplies and storage. Hours 9 to I weekdays, closed Sunday.
JACOBSON
-r„| TRAILER SALES & RENTALS J3 3699 williams Lk. Rd- OR 3-598
Epiphone i
, regular $113 - Sale $60. .. elec., regular $149 — 1. Flat Tops, regular $49 — ]
dogs. E5TELHEIMS. FE 2 ILL PET SHOP, S3-WILLIAMS. F 44433. Canarlas and parakeets.
gas ;
$29 .fin $34 95 .. $59.951 -

ir Elizabeth L
... ..cCullough Sr. .	__
5143 C.M%"ll,.^h Uk. toad	I-ple<^^brand*newMwdtwsms:^^
[ LAND CONTRACTS. SMALL \ Double dresser, bookcase
WASHER $23. GAS STOVE, S33. ... frlgerator with- top freezer. $49. Dryer, $33. TV, S3S. Electric stove,!
matching coffee table, two) Us. V. Harris. FE 5-2766.	_
or lamps, all tor $109. Only WASHING MACHINES CONVEN-,
nClose Out Sale Bl
discounts. Earl Garri EMpIre 3-4006. SEASONED -1 A
mattress, two t
y C. PANGU3, Realty
" 630 M15	Orton
Call Collect NA 7-2015 CLOSED 'TIL JAN. 1
t spring and Innersprlng "wo vanity lamps. All -M weekly.
PEARSON'S .FURNITURE
ments. Michigan Fluorescent, 393 Orchard Lake. FE 44462.	1 ; Acrosi
Antiques
I- Conn Organs greatly ~raducad| r quick sale, no reasonable often
““"morris MUSIC PoSIKl Hd
SPANIEL NEEDS home, healthy, affection-1 , old mole. Pay for ad
MAKE YOUR CHOICE OF:
Streamlines—Kenskills Franklins—Fans—Cries and Monitors
65-A '
Y-KNOT
GALLAGHER'S MOVING SALE Pianos and Organs
llle Money to Loan
s large 4-b« ill baths, fai
PEACE OP MIND roorn’hbrne’wlth 2 full
In tweemlmt. V-car garage. Lake privilege*. All brick home close to town In prime location. $22,900.
NEW HOME FOR A NEW YEAR Ju«t in time for you to choose h colors of paint. 3-bed-
------ 'ull basement 2W-,
r lot In oxcellentj
ISO* lot-on blacktop, pas. lake privileges, $33 month. No closing costs. Call Mr. Fuller, mortgage department. Bloch Bros. OR 3-1295.
LOANS TO
$1,000
30" RANGE, dinette set, $37. Refrlgerator$, top freezer, $39.50. Other gooa ap plionces. Michigan Appliance Co.
I. Quick, f
room brick 900. 10 por cent down.
MODELS j
Sun. 2 to 8
CLOSED/NEW YEAR'S DAY ; For Sal« or Will Duplicdta West ridge of Waterford
AN INVITATION IS EXTENDED TO ALL OF YOU to Inspect our four furnished model homes, each completely different and Including a Spanish sty It. Wt'll -duplicata f'om $17,900 on your lot or you ma^elect
JACK FRUSHOUR MILO STRUBLE
REALTORS	MLS
FE 0-4025	_	402 13921
stouts!
■ Best Buys Today
Walk Right In—
Immediate possession on this newly decorated 3-bedroom brick! home. Select oak floors, 1W baths, walk-out basemant, gas heat, extra large lot, convenient to bus and school. Only $13,500
FE 2-9026
Is tho number to coll.
C'KLAND l(MN CO.
(^Pontiac State Bank Bldy
to 3:30 - Sat. 9
Sale Business Property 57
Coast-To-Coast|
TRADES I
Tom Bateman !
Redtor BUCKNER
Exchangor I
,,	' LOANS
Business Opportunities S9j	T0 $i(0wo
. -e uiTn oiDTc_Mi nxv, tun To cohsolldatt blllt Into one month-1 KU!SSJAS!i|v payment. Quick sorvlce with
NEW S-PIECE 19" PHILCO PORTABLE
----1—^j,-!	333-7796.
I-INCH USED TV
..	- r*3Ht7wpltoto«£^? -
B & J Bargain Store iTTnpVWMOTIPHIIIIR
160 BALDWIN AVENUE	TV Bargains, Immediate delivery,
ed and reconditioned furniture ilttte Joe's Bargain House. Bald-d appliances. Prices slashed on win at Walton, FE 2-6842.
Alter 23 '._____ — ________ ______
St. in downtown Pontiac — w« are moving to 1710 S. Telegraph Rd.|
$29 951 Open 9-91 Joslyn BRAND NEW COLOR
CANINE
COUNTRY CLUB
CLEAN
COMFORTABLE CONVENIENT BATHING GROOMING BOARDING HEATED FACILITIES
frigidairt
I. Phone 338-4463.
e models. Budget ti
PE
NEED CASH
CHRISTMAS EXPENSES AND BILL CONSOLIDAHON’
BORROW UP TO $1,000
36 month* to pay e insurance available
BEDROOM SUITE. KITCHEN SET. MOTOROLA 23" AND PHILCO 11"| UU	color TV. tor Immediate dallvary.!
Also used black and white pori-iF "	— FE 44002.
3, FE 54314.
Best Wishes for a
Holly Travel Coach, Inc,
13210 Holly Rd., Holly ME 44771 —Open Dally and Sundays—
CLOSE-OUT SALE 1965 NIMROD CAMPERS CRUISE OUT, INC.
41 East Walton, dally 04, FE 0-4402
Hobo Pickup Campers
SAVE — all you do li finish yeur awn cabinet work.
COMPARE - our quality and prlcet before you buy.
THEY ARE QUALITY BUILT I	HOBO MF6. SALES
Rear 3343 Auburn Rd.
Sat. and Sun. noon ‘till S p.m.
651-3337 anytime _____
MUST SACRIFICE!
Wolverlna 10' campers on'45 GMC
North Side-
Handy Man Special—
I Only $2,930 ca$h lor this small! I 3-bedroom homo beer Fisher Plant, .needs— extensive repairs ‘ar occupancy. Paved street,
Prosperous New Year richmanTrothers
SEWING CENTER
463 ELIZABETH LAKE ROAO FE 34201 >P CHRON AND NEW Ef b!°unf' J*r<^*'** its. $24.93 and up.
PEARSON'S FURNITURE
“\NEW RECORD PLAYERS I Also needles for mast ri
JOHNSON TV FE 0-4369
_ MINIATURE DACHSHUND PU
I Water Softeners i
| NEW FULLY AUTOMATIC
Baldwin I HAVE A NICE UPRIGHT PIANO
----- tor that party Maw Years eve, «0-l
66-A Smith Moving, coast Wide Unas. 371 E. Pika. 7
PERSONALIZED GROOMING POODLE SUPPLIES HOUSE OF POODLES
OR 34920
ACRES, 4k MILE FROM OAKLAND UNIVERSITY, CORNER —
SWIMMING POOL.
BLE MULTIPLE OWNERS. LI 1-3053.
CUSS C & SOM
Bar, lust outside Pontiac, almost $120,000 gros$. Liquor, only. Well established. Owner Is retiring. Make an appdtntmentl
j For .Sale Miscellaneous 67
_,2 HOSPITAL BEDS, NO MAT--. tresses, 110 each, can deliver. FE : I »-246t. {
2-ROOM GAS HEATER, 15,000 BTlj| furnace conversion unit. FE 1-1738. I -'3-PIECE PINK BATHROOM SET. I ’ Has built-in hand basin, $49.*l! 6. A. Thomspon, 7Q03 M39 Wait. | ,'9 SYLVANIA 4,000
LOANS
023 to 11400 Insured Payment Plan BAXTER A LIVINGSTONE
'LOANS
BEAUTIFUL WALNUT OFF ICE I Plastic Wail Itte
desk $00; chest of drawers $15; K	----
j crib and matching chest ^$25; 21" J
\rx\t UNOICUM RUGS S3.?5 EACH
,1
63!
$30; antique organ $«; relrlgiy-a-tor 029; Westlnghouse refrigerator $29; 3-speed record player, ( , like new $25; vacuum sweeper $10; -4-burner coffer grill 013; oak but-! let $13; matching Imported ‘ lamps $10 a pair; apartment electric range $15; restyled rored piano $75; -Ike new . range $59; Smith Moving, Cri Wide Van Lines, 371 E. Pike.
BRONZE SUMP PUMPS. SOLO
Mandolin, $23. OL 1-031*.
JUST IN TIME FOR THE NEW YEAR!
Plano* .... 132f up Organ .... 1429.25 up i . Complete Drum Set . . . $249 . All Brands of Guitars ... $25 up
MINCHELLA MUSIC
2373 AUBURN	731-1840!
__________ OTICA
ENRICO ROSELLI ACCORDION, cel lent, 3120. 333-7942.	-
EXPERT PIANO MOVING ' PIANOS WANTED -	— Service H
SUI- POMERANIAN PUPPIES, AKC REG. Kay Reasonable. Mrs. Fleming, 740 S. Saginaw, Lapeer. 664-2861.
PIONEER CAMPER SALES
H—zf.--------
POODLE CLIPPING AND GROOM-j Ing, any style. 6824390. L. Martin.
| REGISTERED BEAGLE PUPPY, $30
REGISTERED CHIHUAHUA PUP-ples. Chihuahua and Toy Fox terrier stud service. FE 2-1497._
TOY POODLE PUPS !X- Champagne* and whiles. 052-3467 -WHITE POODLE, FEMALE months, TtoJiHR
All size*, floor pians avanaon. Good buy* on loft-
Ellsworth Trailer Sales'
177 Dlxlo Hwy.	MA 5-1400
WOLVERINE TRUCK CAMPERS and sleepers. Naw and used $395 up. Alio rentals. Jacks, Intercoms, telescoping, bumpers, I a d d t r $■ racks. Lowry Camper Sates, 1321 S. Hospital Road, union Lakt. EM 3-30I1.__________•	__________
EM 3-70201
II RE
AIRED TERRIER, FE-
EXCITING Nfcw THOMAS ORGAN. Prices (tartlng at $479. Also comparable' Wurlltzor Totat-T organs, $795 up. Wurlltzar a Thomas pianos.
Terms. City ol Pontiac.4
BATEMAN
Opan bally 9:30-9:30
jackVagan
Ings, $100 value reduced to 050. No papers. Call 6314923. YORKSHIRE TERRIER PUPPIES. stud service. Poodles. PE 64793
Auction Sales
EVERY FRIDAY
I	.' DAVENPORT, GOOD CONDITION,
19654 HONDA SPORTS 90, TRADE] 025, PE 2-2771.
Sc«C«^SMcqUa, VSlU* *®11 l0r FREEZER TOP REFRIGERATOR.!
I $350. 363-0905.—	------1 $35; 30" stove, 030; 7-plece dinette,
FOR SALE OR TRADE FOR CAR $35; piono, $50; dining room set,1 ”6 PttdlTjBwMiyRun $ub-| $50; washer, $25; dryer, $23; bed-.
trical supplies. Crock.
bteck and galvanized pipe anu m-r -	T,”-. Li'i ziu
tings. Sentry and Lowe Broih«r« I «"d tuned, $300. FE 1-6915.
AT WATERFORD SALES
SPECIAL: SS'kIIK Driftwood, SO'xH' Namco. Space available. Open dally, 11 to • and *——-to 5:30. MS9 across rrom m 332-2915 and 673-3600.
, 12:30
Super Kem-Tona and
EVERY SUNDAY	2:00 P.M.
Sporting Goods—All Types Door Prizes Evsry Auction Buy—Soli—Trade, Retail 7 days
trti anu Turing, iw. re ;-wu.	i	Consignments Welcome
:nd| RECqNOlTlQNEDm| mANO^tSA^LLl ^ D[>„ ^AUCTION qr ^)?j
AT COLONIAL
wllngly Ui E OCCUP
PLAYER PIANO A
REWORKED
>r 8175. 335-3560.
division, Lokt Orton, $600 v Cell 332-3022.________________
I. C. Llpperd, 339 N
SELDOM USED TRADE-INS Thomas spinel 0395.
. Thomas spinet, less than a y
I HAPPY t
MRPPPmM I EAR FROM THE 44 PROULX FAMILY AT OXFORD COMMUNITY AUCTION, METAMO-- | RA, MICHIGAN.
I Plaint Gat Co.,
1400 square feet ot living For $17400 on your tot. fr accepted. Get our di
Southeast Area.
3 bedrooms, large separate dining an ment. Only $7,ln.
$ rooms, 12'xlJ' living ' kitchen end dining boat, an a tot tTrOW. down plus costs.
Lis* Kith Schrom and Call the Van
t JOSLYN AVE. FE >447li
CONEY ISLAND
Stainless stool equipment.
MICHIGAN.
Business Sales. Inc.	15?rJJSIS' *
4 LANDMESSER, BROKER I	-------------
Telegraph fe 6-15*2 s„u Household Goods
TRADE 4-FAMILY FOR 42*7.	____________________ 1
r income. Pontiac Press Box HOLLYWOOD BED COMPLETE,
_______ . good condition, $35. OL 1-1043.
64 HOUSE CLEANING: DINETTE SET,!
U------j dryer, refrigerator, chest at drav
HOOP, I ***"“
CASH ANQ CARRY I'xl' mahogany v-grova i'x7‘ mahogany v-grovt
* iT,9®!!'
NO SALE THIS WEEK AT OX->'* ford Auction.4 We buy estates. I large or small. 470-2323.
I Sale Clothing
210 E. Pike. St.,

DORRIS
AGELEU BEAUTY Of Inviting . ■ llsh charm In this ftraly designed 4-bed room family horn* located In Donoteon Park, top brick com true-tion, I4'x20' living room with marble fireplace, separate dining room an* spacious kHdwn with sating spaca. full basement, breezeway attaching toe garage and bea "4" 4 shaded backyard with 14“xir mar home. 03,730.
INCOME MINOED. 5-family aPR moot hem* will ahow you a yearly NET of around 0.9M. Good location near downtown Pontiac but
ROOM TO STRETCH a tiful comer lot IRK merely one of too out
Iicove; 15: I built-in!
garage 1 about toi tog fan prlca rad
sung expand-
, . DORRIS B SON, REALTORS J 1536 Olxto, ttow; _	?	0744134
MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE
fireplace, parquet f
FE 8-0466
Coast-To-Coast
TRADES
Tom Bateman
FE 8-7161
Realtor Exchangor
PARTRIDGE
"(S THE BIRD TO SEE"
"A SHOW BAR"
Show us another bar where H.,	...	_
cdowded every night.	Quality living Rooms
inriudex Regular $199 includes Bm.m.
65
CENT L
HOME FREEZER Full Femlly Size Holds 361 lbs.
All fast freeze shelves Bonus storage door
DRAYTON PLYWOOD
4111 W. Walton__________OR 3
i 7 CLARK HI-LO, A-l, $1,900.
a!*9 MODELS AND OTHEI
Jock Hagan J Music Center
51?	409 Elizabeth Lake Road
|FE 1-8900	_________ 332 0
SILVERTONE AMPLIFIER, speaker, like fww. Paid 070, a Ing, $40. Ml 64733.
9 to 9
k WEEK FOR RE- -
, sail $20. 335-

OF USED OFFICt nd machines. Forbes
1 GROUP BARGAINS j BEFORE INVENTORY
BRAND NEW FURNITURE NOTHING DOWN — $2.75 A WEEK!
3-R00M OUTFIT
KIDDY t/ArilMMC	CROSLEY REFRIGERATOR. 12 CU
MKBT VALUUflflj	, Wc fMt, condition, $33. Sin-
New — Used — Repossessed —I ger touch-and-sew chain stitch — Save 10 to 20 par cant. Call 4S1- pie cabinet with drawer, paid *424 between 4-7 p.m.	$400 sail $350 or take over
KIRBY OF ROCHESTER . | ments of $11.50 month, t -	1 90, <300. 087-4942, White
CO Dicrcc too A	I Hot water lto*t*f. 025. EE 3-27«fc ~M«w. "Forber~Prlntlnq ’Ottlce!
JO TICLC3, #ZYq LINOLEUM RUGS; MOST Sizls, Supplies. W* also buy mm Mra | $3.49, up. Pearson's furniture, 210	34767.
Name Brand Bedrooms I c. flik* st, pe 47011.____________ for dusty compete floors
-----	MOVING TO APARTMENT, MUST Use Liquid Floor Hardener
USED ORGANS
CHOOSE FROM
1AMMONO, LOWREY, WURLITZ ER, SILVERTONE, ETC.
Pr$250°m . GRINNELL'S (Downtown) 27 S- SAGINAW
YEAR END*' SALE
HALL'S AUCTION SALES
ii w. Clarkston Rd., Lske Orion |
Y 3-1871 __________ MY 3-61411
PERKINS SALE SERVICE AUCTIONEERS grateful to the client*, bid* ---d thousands of friend* who|
DETROITER—PONTIAC CHIEF
der* 1
0 have assisted Ir
in honorsble peace.

exceed to* rigid Blue Book standards tor heating, plumbing and electrical systems. You never gamble. You always en(oy the ultimate in safety, comfort and ra-
wides at bargain $
! 5 GRADE JAO»kE. HORSES FOR sale, priced from SI2S up. Terms.)
d BOB HUTCHINSON SAL^S I- 4301 Dixie Hwy.	OR 3-1202
Drayton Plains'
American saddle - brep Gilo-j Oxford Trailer Sales
tog, 5 gaiter*	<*•"«•	«*	- -
S-fflIO.
YEARS.
—r 0499.95 provneial Regular $399.9} 4i>toca set Regular $249 4-ptec* sat Regular 8169 4-placa tat
iow us anott g $165,000.
Show toe ^ va ft
i highwa
52! sell by Jan. 7: 3-lag drop-mat oval - Simple ---------------
table mad* In 1870, t Tlftony de- Bolce Bultfars Supply sign lamp, Sessions mantle clock, chimes, complete double bed, exc. condition. Westlnghouse leundromat washer, Westlnghouse electric dryer, Fluorescent desk lamp, tools,]
XGJ	(Penn.) Reel typo riding lawn-1
now <|99 mower exc. condition 30" cut. 1
.Sr $329 ——	m— ‘
i almost pays ait ttw Colonial Living Roorhs
wr with.«tora. mm	“j;
il CARLTON a
3 Opts Income 0110 monthly. Get hoot; Zoned com. Price reduced tor quick sal* wtto low down payment. Por Inspection and apprasial tat William I. Mitchell.
BREWER REAL ESTATE
B*?. °\
Rochester Rd.
, li Is going to MMh|4 J
wltt make this grow Your Investment to I inventory and sway you go. won i delay t a* today PARTRIDGE REAL ESTATE 030 W. Huron	FE 4-3381
SEND FOR FREE CATALOG
Fin* rocHnor chairs low at $49
7,000 aq. itt. of new furniture, mat tresses and bbx springs, refr4
. construction mlsc. garden tools', toy's Schwinn! bicycle, needs slight repair, l pr.t skis, binders and poles. 2606 Town MIH Dr. Troy, or call Ml 4-3767.
NEtCHI
DELUXE ZIG-ZAG
Sewing machine—automatic; cab-[
For the Finest in Top^uality Merchandise Shop .
MONTGOMERY WARD
PONTIAC MALL
GARA' -00RS
steel one piece, sectional, wood one flberglas. Factory ralacts In
-----— “-rage front remodel;
nates. Barry Door
i wn vnu anu	__________cm j-jwj____________
USED PIANOS MUST GO BEFORE!REGISTERED APPALOOSA MARE 1 DECEMBER 31, SAVE SSS Sohm- bred to Flashle Britches, welt er Grand, 5', Walnut. AAeson & broke, kid safe, will foal in April. Hamlin console. Mahogany. Bald-! also other registered mares some
llltorieiMkrililllllNtfMlfeielNaHrtafcaiMdPOtt; Gokten h 1
___________________________________ Rd. 3634677.
Coble-Nelson-----	1 -	1 ...
l, buttonho'es, etc. 1
fbX electric sowing rr
Ira. Free ostlmat Sales CO" 2300 Cm* mlngham. F E 2-0203 oi Taka' over payments” of 13.90* per i HIOE - A - BED, DESK, month tor 9 months or $53 cash' lounger el balance. Universal Co., FE 6-0906. hollywooo NEW 9x12. LINOLEUMS. USED. BUT	% ">"59"—"
like new stoves and refrigerators.	______
Evorythlng to moot your nwds	JIM'S OUTLET
at StoMirs. 1*3 N. Cass at wide	Jim^ wwilci
Track, FE 4-1710.	,
RANGE, FRIGIDAIRE. 40'', t06U-|'
UI Christmas decorations _.	cent off.
CURT'S APPLIANCE>13ltr Dixie Hwy,	FE
THE PIANO OR- ORGAN OF YOUR CHOICE. SEE THE HE CONN ORGANS TOO.
LEW BETTERLY MUSIC CO. (Across from B'ham Theater ree Parking _______Ml 440
REGISTERED APPALOOSAS AND;1
j I960 MODELS, 13 to 00 ft., S10-1M0 wide—end 2 story. Mariettas, Stewarts, Belvedere and the famous lightweight Thermo-panel Winnebago travel units. Alto good used units We guarantee trailer spec*., h gimmicks. wdh .J merchend1-
.. _______a customers.
Open 94, closed Sunday
-------- , 0r|gn M
Y 24721
t RIVER BANK ifeP%! Mobile Village
ACCORDION GUITAM LESSONS. Sales-Service . PuHnetkl - OR 3-3996.
Offic#
Hey—Grain—Feed	84
FOR SALE. HAY 425-0133	
hnaPredbee. .		U
ttere_B*eqpweiit___ 73
LARGE REACH-IN COOLER, POP 'lie, meat case, product cate, ith register, scales, aUcar. grind-3900 ftorryvllle Rd., Ortonvllle.
' APPLES—CIDER A score of varlqltos. Finest q ty. Bargains tn utility grades bu. up. swept Cider freshly pr« Oakland Orchards. 2205 East ( mere* Rd" 1 mil* east at M’t ~ 4 4 dally/
lust oft Milford Rd. 637-40*1. 1
Pontiac's Newest Mobile Home Park
seated in the heart of to* Pontiac area, on tho shore* of too Clinton River, with access to
to our naw large mobile homo display. Top quality liras *f mobile hornet to m vaur budget.
IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY
RIVER BANK MOBILE VIUAQE
/
X
TWENTY-TWO
TrfE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 31, 1965
Parkhurst Trailer Sales
FINEST IN MOBILE LIVING IS to 40 rt. Featuring N««r Mot Buddy 8IM II DM ML ’
Country CousImMYTtolL
FREE DELIVll
HOLLY PARK, CHAMPION PARK WOOD AND PARK ESTATES Low overhead — save real money
MIDLAND TRAILER SALES
^3JM7)
101-AiFereigN Cars
-----S INS VAUXHALL, ENGLISH FORD,
JUNK CARS-FREE TOW TOP 988—CALL FE MIG SAM ALLEH «. SONS. INC COMPLETE JUNK CARS, PICKED up. Free low: H. k H. *uw Sales A Service. OR $-5200.
Used Aete-Trach Ports 1 Ml
14" CRAGUAR-SS MEG WHEELS, fits GM call $70, 2, 13" enow tires, good shape. 677-3*43.
1957 CHEVY FRONT ENO, 1957 2-door body, 1962-211 engine. FE 4-9175.
Rent Trailer Space
_____ - FORD - COMET•FALCON
4-cyl., factory	—*— ***
” l SS7rTl'l7~
OR A
B.S.A. - HONDA TRIUMPH-NORTON 5-SPEED DUCATI
- K & W CTCtf-
YAMAHA
COMPLETE PARTS AND SERV-Ice on all foreign cars. Plus a I large supply of Renault parts, i Grimaldi Imported Car Co., $90 ! Oakland Ava. 33S-921I._______ .
New and Used Tracks 103
1960 RENAULT
no money down, we flnace: .plications accepted. Full pt only $97.
Tel-A-Huron
AUTO SALES 60 S. Telegraph FE 8-9661
ENGINE, 4-SPEED,
MJEROMd FORD, Rochester FORD Dealer, OL 1-9711.________________________
HAROLD
TURNER
FORD, INC.
464 S. WOODAWRD AVE. BIRMINGHAM	Ml 4-750
1964 VW CAMPER, EXCELLENT condition. B.000 miles. 602-3064.
; 1965 VW SEDAN, BEIGS, RADIO,
I959 1HC, model' Ic-tts, stakM,
1 2-speed axel, 025x20 10-ply	■
hydraulic tilt-bed with h
„ FE 4-0734.
Auburn, Utica end 7615 Highland) 19^0 FORD 4-WHEEL DRIVE, FREE-
Road, Pontiac.____________________ 1 running hubs, custom cab, Ilka
SUZUKI CYCLES, 50CC-250CC. RUPP new! Save! JEROME FORD -Mlniblkes as low 4s $129.95. Take! Rochester FORD Dealer, OL 1-9711. M59 to W. Highland. Right om1WI pORD PICKUP, EXCELI ENT Hickory Ridge Rd. to Demode Rd., condition, new tires, VO. J. C. ■ — ||d	........ • i. Realty, 3'"“'
Autobahn
Specials
0 Demode Rd., • 1 DAW-J
SON'S SALES AT TfPSICO L

1 9-2179.
1957 excellent condition, roof rack. Priced
MUST SELL 1962 CHEVY REPOS- M SESSION, V8 AUTOMATIC, POW- ? ER. NO $ NEEDED AND I
127
SUZUKI
year - 12,000-mlle warranty 250CC-6-speed ALL MODELS IN STOCK
TUK0 SALES, INC.
E. AUBURN, ROCHESTER 2-5363
1.1965 FORD VS-TON PICKUP, 'V-8, custom cab, radio, whitewalls. Only 11,000 miles. Save! JEROME FORD, Rochester FORD Dealer,
YEAR-END CLEARANCE
SALE ON 1965 MODELS-DEMOS USED BIKES
Now .on display - the fabuloi X-6 Hustler.
CUSTOM COLOR
730 W. Montcalm_____PE 4-9513 j
97|
1963 DODGE
,-ton pickup, I owner. Powder >lue, radio and heater, special, jll price $895.
OAKLAND
t| Autobahn
Motors. Inc.
Boats—AcMiiorlet
10' ALUMINUM BOAT, I $64.50. 10 yter guar an Bros. OR 3-1544—FE 4-4
1963 FORD F-350 STAKE, WITH cyl. (new engine) 4-speed Iran mission, —***'■' Hka n«*
17' DORSETT, MOTOR AND TRAIL
CLEARANCE!
1965 Models
Now On Display Pontiac Only MERCURY-MERCRUISER DEALER
CRUISE-OUT, INC.
........ Open 9-6 FE 0-4402
1963 EC0N0LINE PICKUP
heater, radio, whitewalls. Only—
$1,095
Crissman Chevrolet
, (on Top Of South Hill)
CORRECT CRAFT SPEED BOATS Turbocraft Jet Boats Splco Silverline Ski Barge Sylvan Pontoons Sallflsh »nd Porpoise Evlnrude Motors Interceptor Engines Eaton end Volvo Drives Soles—Storage—Service Beet Hauling We buy and sell used boats and motors
MICHIGAN TURBO CRAFT
Phont 6732442
DAWSON'S SPECIALS Glasspar boats, Steury-MIrro Craft boats, Evinruds boats and mot— Pamco trailers. See the AMF .... Daddler power sled. Big savings ---------. ——  -------ny. >skt M59
$ Hickory
HAROLD
TURNER
FORD, INC.
464 S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM	.
1*65 CHEVY V»-TON PICKUP, DE-luxe, V-8, maroon finish, In factory warranty. 81,695.
HASKINS CHEVY
^l_ _Jd wring layi..-.. to W. Highland. Right or Ride* Rd. to Denied* Rd. — .... follow signs to DAWSON'S SALES AT TIPSICO LAKE.
196S GMC VV-TON PICKUP. RADIO, heater, 17,000 miles. Like New! Condltlonl 81.695 JEROME FORD, Rochester FORD Dealer, OL 1-
ATTENTION-FREE STORAGE With complete reflnlsh lob, custom woodwork and flberglas specialities. Complete boat service. Pay next summer. Pick up and dellveiV. American Boat Works,
PINTER'S MARINE
1170 Opdyke	FE 4-0924
(1-75 at Oeklsnd University Er
OFF SEASON BARGAINS IN USED motors. 100 h.p. Mercury — 65 h.p. Mercury — ** | -
Phene 673-3442
ON DISPLAY
OWENS CRUISERS Chris-Croft Speedboats
WINTER PRICES .
Large Selection Of Used Boats Bank Rates - We Trade WALT MAZUREK -
Motor & Marine Sales
FE 4-9587 S. Blvd. at Saglnawj CLOSEOUT
Boats	Canoes	Motors
Lawn boy mowers	I
OWEN'S MARINE SUPPLY 396 Orchard Lake FE 2-8020j
1765 S. Telegraph
SPORTS CARS GALORE
4 EXCEPTIONAL LARGE STOCK OF SHARP SPORTS CARS
Two 1964 Triumph Spitfires
NwrnodDeed Caw 1 1959 CHEVROLET
No money down, we finance ... applications accepted. Pull price
Tel-A-Huron
AUTO SALES 60 S. Telegraph FE 8*9661 1 1
1999 CHEVY, REAL SHARP, *AVfe TEL-HURON AUTO
1365 W. Huron St._ FE 8-9973
959 BROOKWOOD STATION WAO-on, radio and heater, automatic IransmlMlon, power steering end brakes, lull price 8197, no money down, 81.85 per week. Call Mr, Brown.
Estate Storage
m S. lest Blvd.	' 333-7161
CHEVY IMPALA,JtHARDTOP, . -sight stick, 8350. 692A172-REPOSSESSION—1960 CHEVY iM-
MU8T DISPOSE OF — 1
1961 C0RVA1R.
No money down, wo finance: ... applications accepted. Full price only 1497.
Tel-A-Huron
-—Auto ^alIsf—-•
60 S. Telegraph FE 8-9661
*tw pad Deed Can W
MUST DISPOSE OF - 'Ml MERCURY convertible, shetpl No money down. Payments of 18.90 weekly - Cell Mr. Murphy at FE S-4101, McAulWte.	■
1961 COMET
Mow* Uwd Cm
PONTIAC I
OAKLAND
REPOSSESSION — M61 MERCURY convertible, no money down, —-ments of 16.87 weakly. Coll Mason at FE 5-4W1. McAullfta.
r, whitewalls, standard tram mission.
$1595
Homer Hight
MOTORS, INC.
LLOYD'S
Year-End
SALE
1962 COMET !
Sedan with 6-cylinder engine, automatic transmission, radio -and< heater, whitewall tires and i realty nice.
$45 Down or Your Old CorJ $795
Lloyd Motors j
1250 OAKLAND 333-7863 ,
t..ypm^3b.uinc:g/t^
tomaticT transmis- —
Ri^ossfciiidN - iwi ^6ntiac
hardtop, pew*r,__no money (town, payments ot 88J7 weekly. Call Mr. Meson el 23H101 McAuHtte.
1964 BONNEVILLE 2-DOOR HARO-top, full ppwer, 1-owner.or. 12,097
LUCKY AUTO
INI VALIANT HARDTOP WITH AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION, RADIO AND HEATER AND WHITEWALL TIRES, ABSOLUTELY NO
..CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Parks •• HAROLD TURNER FORD, Ml 4-7S00.
1963 Plymouth Fury
! - door hardtop, V8, automatic, whits, power steering. A reel nice :ar, priced to sell, year end clear-
$1395
BIRMINGHAM
CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH S. Woodward	Ml
- I968-AVA6LT4. AMOft—~
ward Ave., Birmingham. Ml 4-2735. top,
New and Used Cars
7 CHEVY-FORD-PLYMOUTH. CREDIT11962 FALCON, 3-DOOR, STICK, RA-——-	will	finance.	TIC!	dio,	heater,	excellent	condition,
, Ml	6-5500.	I	8595.	626-9623.	 _________i
DODGE RED, 2-DOOR HARD-|l962 FORD V-8 GALAX IE 2 DOOR! irfect 1st or 2nd car. power, 87*9. - No cash needed. No! g and	brakes,	full price	8300.1	payments till	Feb., Opdyke Mo- I”
C	251	Oakland	Ave. I	tori,	2230 Pontiac Rd.	at Opdyke. |
LUCKY AUTO

1963	Triumph Tl. „
Two 1964 Sunbeams, hardtop and Roadster	,
Two 1M5 Flat Roadsters 1965 Triumph Spitfire, wii Two new 1*65 MGB$, save *suo | New MG 1100 demo, fist $1,597
1964	Volkswagen, radio, only $1,395	'
19S9 Austin Healy 3000, wire wheels, first $777.
1962 Austin Hsaly Sprit* sharp, 8900. 30 MORE CARS TO CHOOSE FROM
1*42CHEVY IMPALA, 2-DOOR hardtop, stick, I, . . . 8999 full price, no cash needed, no payment till Feb., Opdyke Motors, 2230 Pontiac Rd., at Opdyke. FE 8-9237.
1962 CHEVY BEL AIR, 2-DOOR herdtop, $5.
LUCKY AUTO
$1795
BIRMINGHAM
CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH
1962 THUNDER8IRD
2-door hardtop, fan, now tires, po er steering and brakes. This a tomoblla is exceptionally dean ai can b* purchased for .1100 dow SS6.67 par month.
OAKLAND
mmsKATil ........
SION, RADIO AND HEATER AND WHITEWALL TIRES, ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN, Assume weakly payments of S7.44, CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Park* at HAROLD TURNER FORD, Ml
LLOYD'S
Year-End
SALE
1964 PLYMOUTH
Belvedere 2-door hardtop, VO matte, power steering, beautiful red with matching Interior, your
clearance —
$1595
BIRMINGHAM
chrysler>lVmouth
14 5. Woodward______Ml 7-2314
>64 PLYMOUTH 2-OOOR HARD-; top, 425 H.P., automatic Iran*-' mission, posltraction, radio, white-walls with warranty, rod, a smart i one, only $1,595. PATTERSON ! CHEVROLET CO. 1104 S. Wood-ward Ave., Birmingham. Ml 4-2735. 1954 PONTIAC, MOTOR, TIRES GOOD. Auto., OL 1-0060.
( 195* PONTIAC WAtMIff H
LLOYD'S
Year-End
SALE
1964 PONTIAC
Catalina 4 door sedan, power steer, log end brake*, automatic transmission. Smell down payment or your old cor down.r
$1895
LfoydJAaiQrs.-
1964 TEMPEST
Custom 4-door station wagon with • V-8 engine, automatic tronsmls-
PRICES SLASHED
AND SLASHED. AGAIN III 1265 Dodges—From $1,750.
HUNTER DODGE
- 1943 FORO "itoston.
1, McAullfta. .RTIBLE, FULL i, AM-PM radio.
Grimaldi
I EL CAMINO, LOW MILEAGE,
jNaw and Used Cars____ 1
BANKRUPT? SHORT EMPLOYMENT?
$600 cosh or equivalent trad
1963 CHEVY Vi-TON PICKUP, to owner, 6-cyllnder with , good condition, $1,000. Phone 1-5507.
LLOYD'S
Year-End
SALE
1963 CHEVY *
t - cylinder engine, automatic transmission, radio and heater, whitewalls tires..
$45 Down or Your Old Car $995
Lloyd. Motors
1250 OAKLAND 333-7863
1963 T-BIRD CONVERTIBLE,
Hunter, Birmingham 647-0955 power, eather ‘ — "
Hard J,^lS0&to0NtoMD power I ‘ V*l ** W JEROME Hkio!2PnNi Y 6udte,s' ,uM p#wer' FORD, Rochester FORD dealer NOW ONLY	I OL ,1-8711. '	•__________
ROCHESTER DODGE
Drive Away Cell 651-0100
_______ 251 Oakland Ay*.
PONTIAC RAMBLER-8UICK CRED- p ** —"—ns?	Will finance. TIC .-
_____Snow, Ml 6-5~____
1960 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE CON-1 .................... top, $600. -
j .	1	\ F i	'760 PONTIAC BON]
! Lloyd Motors ra:blu,wl,h
1250 OAKLAND
HAROLD
TURNER
FORD, INC.
464 S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM	Ml 4-7500
1964 TEMPEST 2-DOOR, RED, 4-cyllndor, straight stick, $1,247 full
:| LUCKY AUTO
1940 W. Wide Tr«
CATALINA VBNT1 co hardtop, double po c. condition. 363-7700,
JUST "
Rochostoi
1963 FQRD.^AIBLANE,
(Ik* now, 85 down;
ELUCKY AUTO
I* Track
huse spua beH; , J,964tF,?RD
ROME FORD, Rochester FORD1 Count™ Squire station wagon I Pooler, OL l-97t1.____ *'"
3 CHEVY BEL AIR '
ments of 89.87 weekly call •• irphy ef 335-4101. McAullfta,
NO MONEY DOWN-WE FINANCE
■ontlac REPOSSESSION -	1963 CHEVY
convertible. No- money-down, pay-6.5500 m*n,s o' $7-87 weekly. Call Mr.
Mason at 335-4101, McAullffe.
CREDIT
REASONABLE USED CARS OF many makes. Safe Auto. FE* ISdSHf.-. , ~	~	. 1
1966 GMC
W-TON PICKUP
With th* 0' box, hooter, dotrosteri oil filter, washers, seat belts, an backup lights.
$1845
H0UGHTEN & SON OLDS-RAMBLER-GMC
ROCHESTER________OL 1-974
SEE US LAST For A Great Doal . your now or used P
'hKEEG0 PONTIAC
SALES S SERVICE
682-3400
1963 IMPALA
rts coupe, V-8, auto., 81,395
1963 IMPALA
rts sedan* double power, ai _	95.
J] 1965 PLYMOUTH
Fury* auto.* radio* heater* dou power. 12*195.
ic VAN CAMP CHEVY
lAAILFORD
LLOYD'S
Year-End
SALE
._____ automatic transmis-
sion, radio and hooter, white-wall tires, Only $49 down and
HAROLD
TURNER
1959 Y-BIRD
I
FORD, INC.
___I  ■ _________,	_. J. WOODWARD AVE.
steering, automatic transmission, 1	rri1
radio and heater.	1964 FORD FAIRLANE WAGON, V-8,,
$35 Down or Your Old Car	'
$495'
Lloyd Motors
1250 OAKLAND 333-7863
E FORD Rochester FORD
1965 FORD COUNTRY SQUIRE, 10-' passenger wagon, V8 automatic, power steering, rwdlo, low mileage,; almost like new! JEROME FORD Rochester FORD Deeler* OL 1*9711.
12 to Choose From
$79 to $197
Your Choice No Money Down
Weakly payments $2.00 Excellent transportation cars WE HANDLE AND ARRANGE ALL FINANCING Call Mr. Dan it
FE 8-4071
Capitol Auto
312 W. MONTCALM
Just East ot Oakland
LLOYD'S
Year-End
SALE
■mHI|^HiBT96A GT0 Sport Coupe
qqq 704,0 i960 PONTIAC 4-DOOR.- STATION! Hes radio and hooter, 4 on th* floe JOO /00° waoon with rack on top, full pow-i power steering, factory air cot
LUCKY AUTO
dlttonlna,
"OAKLAND
1961 PONTIAC TRI-POWER, speed, new condition, very reoso able. FE 2-2764.___________
1961 PONTIAC HARDTOP WITH FULL POWER,-AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION. RADIO AND HEATER AND WHITEWALL TIRES, ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN, Assume weekly payments of $6.92. CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Parks at HAROLD TURNER FORD, Ml 4-7500.
11962 PONTIAC STAR j door power steering heater, push-button i sidewall tires, excellen 8700. Phone 646-6345.
LUCKY AUTO
1940 w. Wide Track FE 4-1006 or PE S-78S4 11965 TEMPEST WAGON, HYDRO-tnatic, excellent condition, 11,750. 627-3839.
1965 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE
________ sports coupe, red beauty wttti
CHIEF, 4- black Interior, still Jn warranty, nd brakes, Neal sharp. $2,495.
idk>, whit* HASKINS CHEVY____MA 5-2604
condition, 1945 GTO CONVERTIBLE,. R'E D
1965 MUSTANG "i GT Interior, this tional value.
1963 COMET
Convertible with 8-cyllnder line, Automatic transmission, ■- —■ I—Sir, whitewall. If
gln«
dlo
r't8P.«£	— '--r
Rambler! $59 Down or Your Old Cor
I., FE 5-9421.
LLOYD'S
Year-End
SALE
Ing and brakes, 8
A CpRVAIR. SPYDER CONVERT-
AUST SELL .1961 BUICK REPOSSESSION, Plectra 22s con VERTIBLE, WITH FULL POWER. ANY OLD CAR TAKEN IN TRADE. NEED NOT BE PAID FOR, CALL MR. BURKE AT 338-4528, SPARTAN.__________
GMC
FACTORY BRANCH New and Used Trucks FE 5-9485	675 Oakland
1961 BU(CK SPECIAL • lent conditioned ^sHck,
1964 CHEVY II, 2-D(
IOOR, AUTOMA-I. 338-8961.
14 CORVETTE STINGRAY
... 4-speed, Only *9.o*s.
HASKINS CHEVY
Tel-A-Huron
AUTO SALES 60 S. Telegraph FE 8-9661
960 FORD V8, STICK SHIFT, R dio, hooter, new tiros, $195 f price, no money down, we flnam WE FINANCE
King Auto
1964 IMPALA SPORT COUPE, Powerallde, power steering,
dlo, whitewalls, silver blue. SI__
PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO., 1104 S. Woodward Ave., Birmlng-
N0W IS THE TIME
New shipment of Jeeps, Trucks, Universal*, and wagons. Immediate delivery with plows, tops, hubs. Easy Financing and Bank Rates PONTIAC'S ONLY JEEP DEALER Complete Farts end Service
Superior
Rambler
Skeeier Snowmobile	I
Larsen Beets
HARRINGTON BOAT WORKS
"Your Evlnrude Dealer"
1899 S. Telegraph_______332-8033
Weiited Cars-Tracks	1011
BUYING SHARP CARS BUD MANSFIELD USED CARS 1S01 Baldwin. 2 blocks N. ot Walton ___________FE 2-1641
California Buyers
EXTRA
EXTRA Dollars Paid
FOR-THAT
EXTRA Sharp Car
"Chick th* rest, then get the pest" at |
Averill
AUTO SALES
987s	2820 Olxl* FE
HELP!
New
1966 FORD
F-100 Pickup
240 Cl 6-cylinder engine, oil fllti washers, fresh elr heater end < frosters. 5-7.75x15 4-ply tires. Ft erel tax and 2-year warranty. t
$1795	■
Ask tor Truck Dept. .
BUICK RIVIERA, 1965. TAKE-OVER payments. Private owner. FE 4-0903 — Ask tor Ron._________
FISCHER ■ BUICK
544 S. Woodward 647-5600
1965 BUICK WILDCAT COUPE, DE-luxe, lull power, alr-conditloned, ■MMW extras, blue, white Interior. otter. GM engineer. 332-8331.
Matthews-Ha rg reaves Chevyland
..... Ford 2-door 6	 $78
1957	Pontiac, all power .......$87
1956 Pickup, Ford, 46-ton 8147
1958	Plymouth 2-door ....., ,..8 67
Plenty ot lata models and trucks
ECONOMY CARS 2335 DIXIE HWY.
Pretty Ponies
1965 Mustangs ‘
7 USED MUSTANGS TO CHOOSE FROM
CONVERTIBLES HARDT0PS 2 PLUS 2's FULL EQUIPMENT As Low as $79 Down
HAROLD
TURNER
FORD, INC. ,
464 S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM _Ml 4-7500|
$1195
Lloyd Motors ’
1250 OAKLAND 333-7863
1958 MERCURY* GOOD CONDITION*
1964 MERCURY \ S.^“,lr.Xerindau,h°.m.^| 1250 OAKLAND'
Kdweek ly' 'payments ’of BlggglMUST PlSPCWg^T
4 CHEVY IMPAIA, 301 lower, 4-speed, red, clei - 1.. F E 5-5414. •
1965 CORVETTE STINGRAY FAST-back; full power, AM-FM radio, - conditioned, $3,500.	682-3216
REPOSSESSION-1961 FORD HARD-top. -No Money Down, payments of $6.87 weakly. Coll Mr. M*$on it FE S-4101. McAuHfto.
1965 CORVAIR MONZA CONVERTI-
•JEROME
1966
ECONOLINE PANEL VAN
signals, ''washers,*' right and lei side view mirrors, rear door gloat 5-650x13 tires. Federal tax an
FE 5-4101 ^
John McAullffe Ford 77 West Montcalm FE *-4t« (On* block E- ot Oakland A
1960 CADILLAC SEDAN DEVILLE.
LUCKY AUTO
car, special priced, S2.29S. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO., 1104 S. Woodward Ave., Birmingham.
SEE
LLOYD WALLACE
;(USED CADILLAC SPECIALIST)
1963 Imperial Crown
loor hardtop, blue, matching rlor, power steering and brakes, *	| other factory equipment,
FE 3-7854 nice, year end clearance —
-----Zl	$2095
BIRMINGHAM
chrysler-plymoOth
J965 MUSTANG COUPE, V-8 EN-glne, automatic, power steering, | brakes, 9,000 I miles. S2.19S. JEROME FORD. Rochester FORD; Dealer, OL 1-9711.
REPOSSESSION -
2-door. No money ____
of only 811-17 weekly.
HAROLD ' TURNER
FORD, INC.
464 S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM _Ml 4-7500
LLOYD'S
Year-End
SALE
GO!!
HfAUPT
PONTIAC
if $9.87 wtekly. Call N it 335-4101. McAullfta.
8 TEMPEST COUPE. AUTOMAT-c transmission. 4-cyl., 4 'barrel _ arbs. Good Condltior	N
FOR SALE BY1 OWNER, 1*62 PO»-tiac 9-p»ssenger station wagor total power, $1,350, 1960 Pontla. Station Wagon, S750. FE 8-1950
MUSTANG,
. Payments
RMRPmnMMp Call Mr;
Mason at 335-4101, McAullfta.
1*65 FORD LTD 4-DOOR HARb-l
SSd.,M^'r^! ORuSl
factory official car. Savel JEROME FORD Rochester FORD
Deeler. OL 1-9711	11 .___ mane Transmission.	,
MViLDISnOFno19m0nM.vSd5wnG $69 Down or Your Old Car 11963 PONTIAC
2-door hardtop* no nipney down, T	.....	Catalina coupt
1964 MERCURY
Merauder, with power brakes ’ and power steering, radio and heater, whitewall tires end auto-j matlc transmission.
LLOYD'S
Year-End
SALE
WILSON CADILLAC OF BIRMINGHAM
MI 4-1930
A«to-M<wi«w Insurance 104
state market. Top dollar, —I
MANSFIELD AUTO SALES
FE 5-5900
1104 Bl
in Av*.
FE 8-002$
Did You Know? VILLAGE RAMBLER
Fay* more tor ANY make used Coll tor Apnralul.
666 S. Woodward
MORE
MONEY
GALE McANNALLY'S
NATIONWIDE
FUR "CLEAN" USED CARS
GLENN'S
CANCELED?
REFUSED?
Young Drivers? I
Over IS years experience' Insuring; _ cancelled end refused auto. Local service — Payment plans.
€ALL TODAY FE 4-3535
Anderson & Associates 1044 Joslyn Avenue
Auto Financing
foreign Cars
105
I960 RENAULT
Moor, excellent economy, $3 SI weekly. W* handle and arrange *H financing. Cell Dan at —
FI 84071
Capitol Auto
1961 CADILLAC CONVERTIBLE, 1-
. mneaoe,'*full power, asking $1,700, ' but will accept reasonable otter. MY 3-4321.
LLOYD'S
Year-End
*SALE
1964 CADILLAC
2-door hardtop, full power, air conditioning.
$3695
Lloyd Motors
1250 OAKLAND 333-7863
4 $. Woodward ,
LLOYD'S
Year-End
SALE -
,	.... __ steering, whitewalls.
$39 Down or Your Old Car $895
Lloyd Motors
11250 OAKLAND 333-7863
..J.87 weekly. Payments ot $ weekly. Call Mr	-•
4101. McAullffo.
. Murphy at 335-
1*47 JEEP, 4-WHEEL DRIVE V top, snow plow and new I 127 Helen St. Rocheetor.
$1895
Llpyd Motors |
power brakes and power steering, automatic transmission, whitewall, tiros..,
$69 Down or Your Old Car 1250 OAKLAND 333-^863 j	$1595
1952 AND 19S7 OLDSMOBILES —;
SUBURBAN OLDS
HOME OF
Quality One-Owner Birmingham Trades,
1 • AT LOWEST PRICES 623 S. Woodward_____624 5111
McComb
CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH
IMPERIAL
OL 1-8558	1001 N. Main
ROCHESTER
1963 Chrysler Newport
4-door hardtop, beautiful blue, matching Interior, 2-way power. Priced to sell, year end clearance.
$1495
BIRMINGHAM
CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH .
1962 Ford. Galaxie XL
500 2-door hardtop, V-8 automat . Only—
$995
VroCT T?p'C I Crissman Chevrolet
KLbbLLn	ROCHESTER1* °* *°W> Hoi. Ml
WHITEWALL TIRES, ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY OOWN, Assume weekly payments of SS.92. CALL CReDIT MGR. Mr. Partes at HAROLD TURNER FORD* Ml 4-7500.
LLOYD'S
Year-^nd
. SALE .
1964 JEEP
Wegoneer with 4-wheel drive, fu.. power, automatic transmission, and really nlc*.
$75 Down or Your Old Cor 5 T ^-NT TT.^ir^
n	LLOYDS
Lloyd Motors v r $
1250 OAKLAND 333-7863, I ©ar-ILna
BOB BORST t	S ALE
LINCOLN-toERCURY 10 S. Woodward Blrmlng
MI 6-4538
DODGE
CARS AND TRUCKS Sales and Service
TWO 1965 CADILLACS
Executive cars, one * Fleet wood* . with air-conditioning. Brougham1
Save over $1,500 01
1964 Chrysler “300"
4-door hardtop, 17,000 mil**, m car warranty In lore*, power stM Ing and Brakes, extra* clean, ye
"* *^*11995 BIRMINGHAM
CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH - ~	”	Ml 7-23
1962 FORD STATION WAGON WITH VI ENGINE, AUTOMATIC ^ TRANSMISSION, RADIO ANb HEATER AND WHITEWALL TIRES, ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN, Assume weekly payments of $1.92. CALL CREDIT MGR. MR. PARKS AT HAROLD TURNER FORD, Ml 4-7S00.
Superior
Rambler
550 Oakland Ave.
9S5 CHEVY, GOOD TRANSPORTA-
tlon, $75. OR 30744._ ,
957 CORVrrft. COMPLETELY restored, $1,291. OR 24411 attar
PS - CHEVROLET. IaSpa!^ AUTO.
1951 CHEVY, REASONABLE
WILL
ACCEPT
GUNS, BOATS, MOTORS
Sunshine from a beanery Echo tram • steamboat whistle : ■ Stfurat turn** from an outboard motor or, almost anything movable
AS PART DOWN,
‘ PAYMENT ON ANY NEW OR USED CAR!
BILL SPENCE
HAPPY
NEW
YEAR
FromAHofUs
BEATTIE
ON DIXIE HW. IN WATERFORD "Your FORD DEALER Sine* 1930" "Home of Service after the saw"
OR 3-129V
SvSo**?! Lloyd Motors
“ 1250 OAKLAND
SHELTON
IMPgP—.. 3-speed, stlclc. Iron brakes, post-tract, heavy duty suspension, power steering, brakes, radio- $2,250. MA 4-2051.____
i 1959 AMBASSADOR
Station wagon*., ready to go at $|95 full price.
Village Rambler
644 S. Wo-4-J *—
BIRMINGHAM
1962	RAMBLER CLASSIC* WAGON, overdrive. EM 3-2612.
1963	RAMBLER CLASSIC WAGON, radio, hooter, auto., whitewall*, ex-cellent cond. $1050, 6264)111.
SPECIAL
1963 RAMBLER CLASSIC "668" 4-door. Excellent condition. A steal at only S79S.
. ROSE RAMBLER
963 LINCOLN CONTINENTAL, owner, low ml., extrtf clean' a accessories Including
1962 0LDSM0BILE “98" 1
4-door sedan, automatic transmission, power steering end brakes. | Smell down payment or your old
:ludlng air, apprsclal
COME
TO , THE
PONTIAC
RETAIL
STORE
WHERE YOU EXPECT | MORE . . . AND GET IT!I
i Lloyd Motors I
11250 OAKLAND 333-7863
er steering and brakes, whitewalls,
| maroon with white top,, drive this end you'll buy It. S149S.
Village Rambler
666 S. Woodward Ave. BIRMINGHAM___________ Ml 6-39M!
DON'S
SMALL AD-BIG LOT
SO CARS TO CHOOSE .FROM
,100
Top quality, one-owner new car trades to choose from!
1 65 Mt. Clemens
at Wide Track
FE 3-7954
1864 PONTIAC
Bonneville 4-dr. . hardtop, i power, auto. VI, $2,295.	.
1*84 FORD
VI, S1,7*S. ...I PONTIAC 2-dr., double power, auto.
INtBUiCK . LeStbre 4-dr. sedan, paw
677 S. LAPEER (
Lake Orton
MY 2-2041 .
LLOYD'S
Year-End
SALE
1963 PONTIAC
2-door hardtop, automatic transmission, power steering and. brakes. Small dawn payment or your eld cprdown. J1|495
Lloyd Motors
1250 OAKLAND 333-7863
SELECT USED. CARS
'65 PONTIAC Convertible .S_____
’*4 TEMPEST Wagon ... SUM
'68 RAMBLER Wagon ....... *395
‘65 PONTIAC Bonneville,
- discount	.. $1200
'65’PONTIAC Hardtop
discount	$1000
'64 PONTIAC 2-Door hardtop 82095 '84 PONTIAC 4-doer hardtop 820M ‘64 PONTIAC 4-Ooor Sedan 81895 '64 TEMPEST C*nv*rtM* *1795 '64 OLDS 3-Deor F-85	*1795
'64 RAMBLER Hardtop, leaded $19*5 '99 PONTIAC. Pull Power $ 395 *40 PONTIAC Wagon	*"
‘61 TEMPEST Wagen ...
*81 RAMBLER Wagon .  _
‘62 iRAMBLER MRR ..I. $ 795
‘62IPONTIAC Convetlbto...*1295
'42 PONTIAC Hardlap .812M
■63'MONZA, Buckets .v.i. *995
'63 FORD Gtlaxil ........ $1295
'63 PONTIAC Hardtop- ...  *1395
RUSS
JOHNSON
1 On MS6 In Lake Orton
MY 3-6266
1964 AMERICAN
5-door hardtop, beautiful one owr new car trade, exceptionally i< mileage, power brake* and st» Ing, automatic, tinted glaia, ret end heater, whitewall*, 11295 f price. Many mere to chaos* tram
Village Rambler
666 S. We ^	- *
BIRMINGHAM
.—tr stoerlnd a:™ brakes, (own this except tonally fins ‘ oblle for asllttle as 814S Superior Ramblar, 550 Oak-Vve., FE 5-9421.	_________
OLIVER
BUICK
*41 BUICK Convertible Special *2,295 '62 PONTIAC Star Chief 4-door N.19S
'63 BUICK Skylark Hardtop .. 81JM '64 BUICK Spacial Convertible *1,79J '64 FORD XL Convertibl* ... *1,995
'M CHEVY Biscayn* . ...... *1,695
'68 OPEL Wagon,_>sp#ad ... I 291 16 BUICK Wlldcii Hardtop .,
'65 PONTIAC Bora ■44 CHEVY impute Hardtop ..
*tt CHEVY Bel Air Wagon ..
*82 CHEVY Impel* Hardtop ..
'63 FORD XL'ConvartlUte .
II BUICK Sport wagon	tun
'64 BUICK Etectrp «daor . . . $2,393 ‘ISOLDS Cutlass 2-door ... S1.JM ‘81 BUICK Lasebr* 4-door .. tun '44 BUICK LaSebr* 4-door tl.HS
. 81.99S -. $2,695
. *1,995
OLIVER
BUICK
.-'■'I'
TgE PONTIAC PRMSS, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 81, 1965
TWENTY-THREE
—Television Programs—
Programs furnished by stations listed In this column ara aubject to ehango without notico
'	Channels: 2-WJBK-TV, 4-WWJ-TV, 7-WXYZ-TV, 9-CKLW-TV, 30-WKSP-TV, 56-WTVS
4
am I
FRIDAY EVENING C:M (2) News, Weather, Sports
„ (4) East - West Shrine Game (In Progress)
(7) Movie: “A Thousand and One Nights” (In Progress)
(I) Dennis the Menace (SO) Soupy Sales (SO) Big Picture .*
0:2$ (7) Sports 0:21 (2) Network News (7) News
(9) Marshal Dillon (50) Superman.
(SO) Science Is Fun
(50) Christopher Program 7:00 (2) (Color) Mr. Magoo (7) Car 54
04	(9) Movie: ‘‘The Monte
Carlo Story” (1957) Marlene Dietrich, Vittorio De Sica, Arthur O’Connell (50) Little Rascals (50) History of Negro People
7:30 (50) Sports Desk 7:30 (2) Wild, Wild West (4) (Color) Camp Runa-muck
(7) (Color). Flintstones (50) (Polor) American West
(50) French Chef 8:00 (4) (Color) Hank (7) (Color) Tammy (SO) Continental Comment
8:30 (2) (Color) Hogan’s Heroes
(4) (Color special) Orange Bowl Parade (7) Addams Family (50) Minnesota, Football (56) Doctors Only 9:00 (2) (Color) Gomer Pyle (7) Honey West (9) Telescope (50) Desilu Playhouse 9:30 (2) Smothers Brothers (4) (Color) Mr. Roberts (7) (Color) Farmer’ Daughter (9) Star Route (56) Festival of the Arts 10:00 (2) Trials of O’Brien (4) (Color) Man From U.N.C.L.E.
‘•fD'-Jimmy Dean (9) Tommy Hunter (50) Merv Griffin 10:30 (9) Provincial Affairs 10:45 (9) Roy Petty 11:09(2) (4) (7) (9) News, Weather, Sports 11:19 (9) (Special) New Year’s Message
11:30 (2) (Special) Scene 2 (4) (Color) Johnny Car-
Redwood Trees Face LBJ 'Ax'
Budget Bureau Puts
TV Features
Bowl Galas, Games
By United Press International ORANGE BOWL PARADE, 8:30 p.m. (4) Lome Greene narrates highlights of Miami’s King Orange Jamboree. (Program is repeated at 10:30 a.m. Saturday.)
MAN FROM U.N.C.L.E., 10:00 p.m. (2) Claude Akins plays voodoo-practicing dictator who has captured resistance leader U.N.C.L.E. wants freed.
"GUY LOMBARDO, TOff p.m:i7nTuTlHiBai^and " his RoyAl Canadians ring in new year at Hotel Roosevelt j in New York.
SWINGIN’ YEAR, 11:30 p.m. (9) Robin Seymour hosts j New Year’s Eve party featuring top tunes of past year; j the Supremes appear in person.
SATURDAY
JUNIOR SPORTS CLUB, 7:30 a.m. (7) Walled Lake High School wrestling team is featured.
COTTON BOWL PARADE, 10:30 a.m. (2) Allen Ludden and Marilyn Van Derbur narrate this telecast of parade in Dallas.
ROSE PARADE, 11:30 a.m. (2) (4) Walt Disney is grand marshal for 77th annual Tournament of Roses parade telecast from Pasadena, Calif.
COTTON BOWL, 1:45 p.m. (2) Arkansas vs. Louisiana I State..	*
SUGAR BOWL, 1:45 p.m. (4) Missouri vs. Florida.
ROSE BOWL, 4:45 p.m. (4) Michigan State vs. UCLA.
WASHINGTON (UPI) - President Johnson's economy hatchet may cut down plans for saving more of California’s majestic redwood trees from the woodman’s axe.
The Budget Bureau, it was learned today, has put a ceiling - reported to be $50 million — n the National Park Service’s spending plans for a proposed Redwood National Park.
The Park Service’s most i -ambitions-plan, calling foc-»
I 93,400-acre park, was eStlmaf-| ed to cost about $120 million.
I However, spokesmen for the j California redwood lumber in-| dustry have scoffed at. the Park Service estimate and contended it would cost at I least $200 million.
If the Budget Bureau holds [ fast to the $50 million ceiling,
posals it has advanced for consideration. -

Things Italian ACROSS writer 1	-Veneto 40 Age 4 "Eternal City" 42 Eucharistic wine • Itellen painter. M cup	Antwer to Prevlout Puixle^
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30 Tam gadget
21	Number
22	Brisk neu
23	British air
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group ( e Streets I
54 Permit 05 Front pan of
the head
56	Villa d-—
57	Land measure
58	Narrow
31 Melody 31 Narrow Sllet
34	Seine
35	Cretan mountain
3S----Morgana
37Taotst sect in

, 59 tfurl
9 late Italian singer (full name)
30 Volcano in Sicily
33 Protecting walls 36 Lower extremiUea 39 Part of
Japan 18 Italian
10 Double negation 41 Wrong!
60 Because	11 Russian name 45 Printer'!
DOWN	19 Pre position	measure
1 Shift	20 Graf — '	46 Sides in cricket
2 Concerning	23 Sudden	47 Small botUa
3	Summer drinkt invasion 48 Passably
-	1 24 Verdi o	-----------
25 Saint ol 27 Glut 29 Swarm
Review Nixed on Discharge
WASHINGTON (UPI) - A handle the matter in routine Navy review board has refused!fashion.”
to act on a petition which J**?™"0	°f
...	.	.	,. when thte petition would be fln-
would have given an honorable	^ ^	£
Marine Corps discharge to jection of the Oswald petition presidential assassin Lee Harvey was made by a military board Oswald, it was learned yester-1 while President John F. Ken-day.	nedy was still alive.
I The board said the petition, | r____________i.
submitted by Oswald’s mother,
presented no new evidence. Os- Sen. Carl Hayden of Arizona wald’s earlier attempt to have was a county sheriff when Ari-I his 1959 Marine Corps discharge zona was still a territory, changed from undesirable tou
(7) Clutch Cargo 9:30 (2) Tennessee Tuxedo (4) Atom Ant (7) Courageous Cat 10:00 (2) Mighty Mouse (4) Secret Squirrel (7) Porky Pig _
(9) Wizard of Oz 10:30 (2) (Special) Cotton Bowl Parade
- (4) (Special) Orange Bowl Parade (7) Beaties (9) Hawkeye 11:00 (7) Casper (9) Wrestling
11:30 (2) (4) (Special) Rose Parade
(7) Magilla Gorilla AFTERNOON
row
' 1:00 (4) Beat the Champ (7) News
1:15 (7) (Color) Movie: “Uncle Was a Vampire” (1961) Renato Rascel 1:30 (4) News, Weather 2:30 (7) All-Night Show 4:15 (2) News, Weather
SATURDAY MORNING
6:10 (2) News 6:15 (2) Farm Scene 6:30 (2) International Zone (7) Americans at Work 6:45 (7) Captain Kangaroo (4) Country Living (7) Changing Earth 7:36 (4) Bozo the Clown (7) Junior Sports Club $:00 (2) Happyland
(4) Milky’s Party Time (7) Crusade for Christ 8:30 (7) House of Fashion 9:00 (2) Heckle and Jeckle
(50) Probe
12:30 (7) Milton the Monster (9) Country Calendar (50) Conciliator 1:00 (7) Hoppity Hooper (9) Music Hop (50) People Are Funny 1:30 (Z) American Bandstand (50) Speedway International
1:45 (2) (Special) Cotton Bowl: Arkansas vs. Louisiana St. (4) (Special) Sugar Bowl: Missouri vs. Florida 2:00 (9) (Special) Cartero Carlos
(50) Championship Wrestling 2:30 (7) Club 1270 3:00 (7) Wrestling (9) Curling (50) Roller Skating 3:30 (7) Movie : “The Rose Bowl Story” (1952) Vera Miles, Natalie Wood 4:00 (9) Outlaws
(50) Cowtown Rodeo 4:30 ( 50) High School Basketball
DETROIT (AP) — Funeral 4:45 (2) Flying Fisherman service will be held Monday at (4) (Special) Rose Bowl: Michigan State vs. UCLA
12:00 (7) Bugs Bunny
(9) Nature of Things
' Newspaperman Dies
000-acre park.
20,000 ACRES AFFECTED One effect of a $50-million ceiling on the proposed national park might be elimination of more than 20,000 acres of.virgin growth from the south unit of the proposed two-unit park.
Cohelan and some conservationists have insisted that a large stand of virgin redwoods oo Redwood Creek south of the existing Prairie Creek Redwoods State Park be included in the national park. It is in this area, they say, that the world’s tallest trees — including one towering 367 feet skyward — are to be found.
If the Park Service is limited to the smallest of its three park plans, about 16,750 acres of virgin growth in the Redwood Creek area would be cut out of the park.
(7) (Special) Guy Lombardo
(9) (Special) Swingin’
Year
(50) Wells Fargo
U:15 i?LCathedral °f Tomor- UncasteTwia.Tr Chiles C.
Weber, a newspaperman for
25 years and Detroit Free I staffer since 1945.
Weber, 47, died Wednesday.
$:00 (2) Lone Ranger
(7) Wide World of Sports (9) Lieutenant 5:30 (2) Decisions
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honorable was also turned down.! * * ★
The Navy said the latest petition has been sent to the board of corrections of naval records! “which is now assembling all information on the case and will [
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Celebrators May Stay 68 Straight Hours
HOBOKEN, N.J. (AP) - For those hardy souls looking to celebrate an extended New Year’s Ette, Hoboken is the spot.	.
* k k
The city’s Alcoholic Beverage Commission announced it has, given permission to the 200 taverns here .to stay open for 68 straight hours, from 6 a.m. today to 2 a.m. Monday.
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Says	'People'Song Will
Bid 'Hello, Dolly' Goodby j
By EARL WILSON
NEW YORK — Composer Julie Styne told me a year ago that the “Funny Girl” Jit, “People- Who Need People,” would eventually be a bigger standard than Jerry Herman’s “Hello, Dolly!” — which at the time seemed a bit sacrilegious.
But after Mimi Hines’ successful singing of “People” when she took over the Barbra Streisand role, Styne repeated it more strongly:
“ ‘Dolly’ is one of those songs which reminds you of so many other songs. But ‘Peo-* pie’ is a first-time song. Twenty years from now when we talk about the great songs, nobody is going to play ‘Mairzy Doats.’ In my opinion, 'Hello Dolly!’ is in the same cate-WILSON gory as 'Mairzy Doats’—it’s a good novelty song.”
Jack Carter’s opening at the Americana Royal Box will be long remembered. His bustaceous glamour girl singer Marlene | made one ringsider very angry by flirting with him to the point f that she blew her breath on his glasses and fogged them. Jack also had some lines that startled me, such-as: “The Pope didn’t' go to California because he wasn’t sure he could get an audience with Sinatra.”
I Spoofing Robert Goulet’s stiff-legged walk, Carter said, i “Sir Lancelot... he doesn’t dancelot. . . because he’s got rust in his pancelot.” Carter privately told me that he’s II trying to make np with his wife Paula Stewart Who’s expecting in Hollywood .	. “I’ve been a naughty boy,” he said.
“Even when married, I’ve always had one foot out the door.”
★ ★ -
Well, that’s the way ty’s done, you%now . . . Henry Ford, and his divorced wife, Anne McDonnell Ford, were on the receiving line ... . \yhile his present wife, Christina Ford, was off in another section .of the big pre-nuptial party at Delmonico’s j with friends ... at the $25,000 shindig preceding dtr. Anne Ford’s 'marriage to stock broker Giancarlo Uzielli.
★ ★ ★
THE^ MIDNIGHT EARL ...
Jack Lemmon’s wanted to play the dallying dentist in the I ’Cactus Flower” movie — but Columbia can’t film it for another four years .. . Best performance in “The Chase” won’t be seen (where one of the stars got belted for making a pass at another. J star) . . . The White House switchboard no longer accepts calls for Chef Rene Verdon, who’s quitting, (The Loew’s hotel chain made him a fat, firm offer).
WISH I’D SAID THAT: Buying a new dress for your wife is like buying a new car—the base price may be less than the accessories.
REMEMBERED QUOTE: “Love your enemies — and they’ll wonder what kind of a deal you’re trying to pull.”—Quote. (EARL’S PEARLS: The current trend in women’s dresses ;es you wonder where they’ll be up to next.
The.H’wood wife whose husband didn’t buy her what she wanted for Christmas doesn’t exchange the gift—she exchanges the husband. That’s earl, brother.
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THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 31, 1968
ExfMct Viet War to Intensify If	Bid Fails
By EDWIN Q. WHITE
SAIGON, Sooth Viet Nam (AP) - High military and diplomatic officials in Saigon predicted today that if the Viet Nam conflict goes on, military activity will be intensified in IMS.
They expressed this view on the tat day of the old year as the ‘■““(Owing U.S. diplomatic peace oBtnsive gave rise to more optimistic outlooks in other parts of the world.
. if •	★	★
The prediction coincided with an announcement that U.S. tary strength in South Viet Nam has reached 181,000. The new
. . . and a Very Big "Thanks" to One and All
From
HOUSE OF BEDROOMS
Happy New Year
from
Town & Country Guidon Center
ISI2 Highland (M59)
year is expected to bring thousands more. There were about 23,0M American troops here last Jan. 1.
* * *
The last day of the year also brought a report that 34,585 enemy soldiers were killed in action in 1965. The figures for American dead during the year were put at 1,241 and for Vietnamese government troops at 11,000. Almost 6,000 enemy troops were said to have been captured.
STRONGER ENEMY
Pespite these figures, enemy military strength was said to have grown from about 103,(
* * ★
The figures, released by head, quarters of the U.S. Military Assistance Command, Viet Nam (MACV), listed an increase in Vietnamese armed forces dur-
ing the year of from about 611, 000 to 565,000.
★	w *
with the massive American buildup in 1965, the general military outlook was termed more favorable, but increasing infiltration of regular North Vietnamese troops cast an ominous shadow. One high military source said it now is believed the infiltration rate has reached a predicted 4,500 men a month.
★	. w ■ ★
The presence in South Viet Nam of seven North Vietnamese regiments is said to have been confirmed. The presence of one more regiment is termed probable and still another possible.
It also is believed that the North Vietnamese have brought with them 120mm mortar ments that have not yet I used in combat. They probably will be tested soon.
r
Junior Editors Quiz on-
SEASONS
SANDERS FOR RENT
TRAVIS
CLARKST0N
[APPLIANCE
QUESTION: Why does the earth have different seasons? ★ ★ ★
ANSWER: There are many mysteries about the creation of our planet earth. One such question, as yet unresolved by the experts is why the earth rotates around the sun always tfited at an angle of 23% degrees to the plane of its orbit.
Even if we don’t know what originally caused this, we do know that it is this tilt which gives ns the different seasons of the year.
Look at the top picture and find, roughly, the place-where you live. Remember that the earth makes one fuU orbit each year around the sun.
In the top picture, it’s summer; see how the arrows representing the sun's rays are shining down almost directly on North America.
That’s why the summer is warm. But in winter' (lower picture) North America is slanting away from the sun’s rays, which most pass sideways through a large part of the earth’s atmosphere.
Thus, much of the heat is absorbed. Consequently, the winter is much colder. It will help to study the lower left diagram, which shows the earth circling around the sun, yet preserving the same tilted axis all the time.
★ ★ ★
FOR YOU TO DO: Imagine yourself taking a trip to Buenos Aires, far down the eastern coast of South America. Would the climate there, in summer and winter, be the same ‘ as that back home? Study the slant of the sun’s rays hitting Buenos Aires and reason out the answer.
There also is evidence that the North Vietnamese have introduced heavy antiaircraft machine guns in organized units.
# •' # ★ '
Despite these moves, U.S. military men say the initiative now is held by the South Vietnamese and U.S. troops and their allies, bolstered by creasing firepower and mobility.
They concede, however, the Viet Cong and their North Vietnamese supporters still can launch quick, often destructive attacks, especially on government outposts and district towns.
RAIDS HURT
-raids Hiito - Ndrth - Viet Nam, now heading into the eighth day of a Christmas holiday halt, are said to have hampered infiltration and caused extensive damage to communication lines. They also are said to have hindered construction capability and to have had an impact on the economy of. the Hanoi regime.
There are, however, no claims that, the air attacks in the north have brought about a major change in the war.
* * *
The key to victory, in the view of high officials here, still is in the hands of the Vietnamese people who work the rice paddies and who live in the little hamlets and towns of the
tryside. One official summed it up this way:
Victory will take place when the people turn against the enemy. A large part of the population has been neutral. It has bent with the wind. Neither side has been able to give the people the security they yearn for. The escalation in 1965 sets a.trend of bringing about a moment of decision for the peasant farmers.
3 ALTERNATIVES These people now were seen as having three alternatives: Staying on their land, the choice most would prefer; moving to areas of government control; or joining the Viet Cong.
--------— ^-----ft— »— —r
The choice the people make, whether in providing intelligence or other active support or whether in remaining passive or antagonistic to the government, still is believed by many here to be the decisive factor.
“The people,” said one high
Striking Busmen Ratify Contract in Grand Rapids
GRAND RAPIDS (AP)-Strik-ing bus drivers voted Thursday night to accept a new contract offer from Grand Rapids Coach Lines Inc.,.but vehicles expected to remain idle over New Year’s until Monday.
The drivers voted to accept the new two-year pact by a vote of 89-21, President Arnold Heaney of Local 836 of the Amalgamated Transit Union said.
* +■■ ★
is company General Manager Ira W. Jackson said the buses could not be back in operation until Monday due to maintenance requirements, the buses have been out of action for. one week.
The drivers struck last Thursday after the old one-year contract expired.
American, “must and will: decide.”
BCONOMIC BOOM
The U.S. military buildup in 1965 was accompanied by an economic boom, according to figures released by U.S. military headquarters today.
♦	w	★
At year’s end, planned US.! construction projects in South Viet Nam were valued at almost |1 billion and civilian personnel! working on military construction projects were listed at more than 20,000. Last January these workers numbered only a few thousand.
*	*	*
Consumption of petroleum
uary to more than one million per month in December, the1 figures showed.
Imports by ship into South -Viet Nam rose 800 per cent andj intercoastal shipping doubled! from the January tonnage of 25,-
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Yank Visitor in N. Viet Reports No Reaction to Bombing Lull
MOSCOW (AP) - Prof. Staughton Lynd of Yale University said in Hanoi today there had been no significant reaction there to the current halt in American air raids on North Viet Nam.
Lynd was asked in a telephone interview what'reaction there had been, in Hanoi to the lull which began at Christmas.
“Nothing of any significance,” he replied.
★ * #.
Lynd and two other Americans, Thomas Hayden and Herbert Aptheker, arrived in Hanoi last Tuesday on a private mission seeking to clarify the position of the North Vietnamese government and the Viet Cong on peace negotiations.
Lynd is a spokesman for the toew left.” His wife said in New Haven, Conn., that he had gone 'because of his concern for peace.”
GROUP LEADERS Hayden is a founder of the Students for A Democratic Society. Aptheker, a frequent visitor to Moscow, is the leading theoretician of the U.S. Communist party.
The North Vietnamese invitqd Aptheker to visit Hanoi at congress in Helsinki, Finland, -m.	. ..	. 'and asked him to bring along
The wage and fringe benefit!^ or two other Americans.
had been in North Viet Nam. He; consulted Hayden and Aptheker! and then replied:
“We all agree that, in the interests of accuracy, we prefer) to wait until our return, when you cdn question us, to make sure the story is told fully and accurately.’i
They, expect to- be in' Hanoi another week or 10 days, Lynd said. He said he did not know what route home they would take.
Lynd said they had been informed of visits by U.S. Ambassadors W. Averell Harriman to Warsaw and Arthur J. Goldberg to Rome. He asked for further' information but had no com-1 ment. *
package amounted to about 20 cents an hour, Elmer Tyrell, the local’s treasurer, said. The old base pay was $2.26 an hour.
Wild 'Mother Goose7
NOTTINGHAM, England (UPI) — Children have been barred from evening productions of “Mother Goose” because the hall where the production ed serves liquor.
In the telephone interview, Lynd declined to comment on the results so far of their visit to Hanoi.
“We have been here only few days,” he said. “We feel it would be better to wait until our return to report on what we have found while here.”
GIVES ANSWER Lynd was asked whom they had met so far and where they
Follow our signs to a Happy New Year. Thank you for your support in the year
Mp°4
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47th Straight Rise for State Tax Intake
LANSING (AP) - Michigan’s booming business has provided a 47th straight month of increase in the sales and use tax going into the state treasury.
December collections marked a 17 per cent increase over! figures for December 1984 — j biggest jump in any of the 47, Imonths, the State Department of Revenue reported Thursday.
The department reported tax' 'receipts of $57,934,449 on $1.4j billion worth of retail sales and| transactions in November. It ;was the biggest collection yet' in the 1965-66 fiscal year.
Uninvited Guests Helped Themselves BARQU1SIMETO, Venezuela
(UPI) — Uninvited guests at birthday party Wednesday night apparently believed it is--more blessed to receive than to give.
When the invited guests turned out the lights to sing “Happy Birthday” to the guest of honor, thieves slipped into the house and stole the birthday cake and the phonograph which) was to have provided music for) dancing.
thanks to all our friends.
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GRAND RAPIDS (AP) — Ground will be broken Jan. 15 for a $450,000 home for the blind in Grand Rapids. The home will accommodate 40 residents.
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| PONTIAC, MICHIGAN^
» *
■ MAKEOVER RAGES
DECEMBER
1965
MICROFILMED BY
MICRO PHOTO omsioN
BELL & HOWELL COMPANY
The Weather
VOL. 123 NO. 280
★ ir’k ★ ★
PONTIAC PREP®
PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 81, 1965 —24 PAGES
State Apporti
•11	W	/	. ,
No Nearer Accord as Deadline Looms
• LANSING Ml —r Apportionment commissioners entered their final hottse of deliberation today, still apparently Jar from agreement on Michigan Senate and House districting.	,
They balloted/12 times yesterday on various dis-----------yj—7h--------tricting combinations but
World festive and Prayerful
Welcome New Year With Hope for Peace
NEW YORK (AP) - The world welcomes the new year tonight with joyous celebration and a prayer for peace.
It is a time of merrymakers, resolutions, popping corks — and cannons.
The West Germans will see 19M in with a bang. They are all set to blow op $15 million worth of fireworks, almost 51 per cent more than last year.
According to German folklore, the bangs and flashes of Sylvester (New Year’s Eve) are supposed to frighten off ‘ and evil spirits.
★ *
In the Moslem pations the ob-
*	servance of the new year may be somewhat subdued. It comes this year on the siktlHlay of Ramadan, the Moslem holy month of fasting. “
NO KISSING, DRINKING
The Islamic faithful have been warned that kissing and drinking are forbidden.
Roman Catholics are took^ ing forward to the new year as the start of a special jubilee proclaimed by Pope Paul VI to mark the closing of the Vatican Ecumenical Coun-el.
In New York’s Times Square — a traditional New Year’s Eve gathering place — a new $10,000
*	i nominated digital clock controlled by signals from the U.S.
Naval Observatory will tizife the arrival of 1966.
Along some of the nation’s . turnpikes, highway patrols prepared big ums of coffee in (Continued on Page 2, Col. 5)
time and ag^in the four Republicans and four Democrats opposed each other.
The commission, acting under State Supreme Court orders to reexamine districting approved in 1964, faced a midnight deadline tor action. .
Little compromise Was^ap-parent during yesterday’s session and differences appeared to harden over Senate districting in the controversial Bay City-Saginaw area. Republicans claim the two cities should be in separate districts.
They now are id a single district which elected Sen. Jerome Hart, a Democrat.
NO SPLITTING Democrats said they would try to draft a plan separating the cities. But yesterday, Democrat Henry Dongvillo said there is “no (splitting) plan I can draft in the Saginaw area that I can Support.’’
Later Republican William Hanna told Democrat Robert Kleiner he “cannot conceive of any Bay City-Sag-inaw districting I could support that yon would, vote for.” Political experts believe Um Democrats would lose a Senate seat if the two cities were spjit into separate districts.
Democrats yielded to Republican proposals shifting outlying areas of a Muskegon-area Senate district, but the GOP turned down over-all proposals incorporating the uhift.
Again Republicans argued some population disparity should be permitted so teat greater unity and regularity of districts could be achieved.
But Democrats turned down the GOP’* (dan which included disparities of up to 5 per cent. .
They consistently have argued that population equality must be the overriding consideration in districting.
Road Mishaps Take Lives of 2 From Area
All Law Enforcement Agencies Strengthen Holiday Patrol Units
Area law enforcement agencies have launched stepped-up r o a d^patrol programs as the holiday weekend opened with three major traffic acci-dents resulting in the death of two persons and serious injury of another.
Killed in Pontiac area accidents last night and this morning were John G. Stewart, 14, of 7235 Meadow-
PCH Student Gets Final Driver Award
A Pontiac Central High School student has been selected as the final winner in the month-long safe-driver awards<program.
WWW’ Robert C. Pierce, 1$, of 36 Sanderson is this week’s winner
ROBERT C. PIERCE
In Today's Press
Grid Bonuses Detroit owner of AFL champs “out of money !_derby.”— PAGE 1$.*
Viet Conflict
Expect intensification i peace bid fails.—PAGE I
Bogus Money Fortunes in counterfeit bills found in three states. -PAGE I.
Area News'........... 5
Astrology ,.,i..... 12
Bridge,..............]2
Crossword Puzzle .... 22
Comics ............  12
Etitortals .......... 4
Markets ...........  17
Obituaries .... . . . . . II
Sports .......... 13-15
Theaters ...........  M
TV, Radio Programs.. 2$
Wilson, Earl........23
Women’s Pages ... 14-11 1
awarded by. the Pontiac Exchange Club..
The safe-driver awards program during the month of December has been sponsored by the Pontiac Exchange Club, the traffic safety committee of the Pontiac Area Chamber of Commerce and the Pontiac Police Department.
Pierce was cited for pulling to the curb to permit an ambulant* on an emergency run to pass. Three other drivers failed to do so.
Peace
Spreads
tiac General Hospital is Virgil Vandecar Sr., 44, of 116 W. Brooklyn.
Oakland County Sheriff" Frank W. Irons and Sgt. Karl W. Lutz, commander of the Pontiac State Police Pest,
patrol units for the 1 weekend.
State’ police have canceled all leave days for the weekend and will have National Guardsmen assisting in patrol. The sheriff’s department will use some 20 reserve deputies for road duty, w w w
Irons, Lutz, Pontiac Police Chief William Hanger and terford Township Police Chief William Stokes ail warn that drunk drivers will go to jail. PHYSICIAN’S SON The Stewart youth, son of a physician, died five hours after a car driven by his mother, Mrs. Maitland Stewart, was struck
broadside by a truck at Telegraph and Maple.
Bloomfield Township police said Mrs. Stewart had started to make a left hand tarn onto Maple when the collision with the southbound trade occurred shortly after 5:14 p.m. Mrs. SteWart end Melvin I* March, 31, of Livonia, the’ driver of the truck, did not require hospitalization.
*
Pearce was killed when his car and a semi-truck, driven by Elmer J. Sahrow, 60, of Mount Clemens, met head-on at 2 a.m.
a $25 U.S. Savings Bond in Avon Township on Auburn
near Adams. -NOT INJURED Sahrow was not injured. Vandecar was a passenger in a car driven by his wife Beth, 44, when their vehicle and one driven by Donald J. Card, 20, of 4049 Island Park, Waterford Township, collided on Baldwin near Merrimac last night.
A passenger in Card’s vehicle, Russell Loton, 19, of 640 Louns-bury, Rochester, was listed satisfactory condition today in Pontiac General Hospital.
Today's Forecast Is Staggering: Freeze-Up Is Due
The new year should arrive in wintery fashion tonight with lows of 25 to 32 and occasional snow flurries. Cloudy skies and windy weather are forecast too. v
New Year’s Day, tomorrow, will have variable cloudiness, cold temperatures and scattered snow flurries. Highs will range from 30‘td 35.
Sunday’s weather picture has partly clendy weather with scattered showers and little change in temperatures.
Winds' this morning were south-southwest at 15 to 30 miles per hour. Shifting to the west at 18'to 35 miles per hour late this afternoon, they will become northwesterly at 15 to 25 miles per hour tonight.
Fifty-two was the low temperature preceding 8 a.m. today. The mercury was up to 50 at 1 p.m.
New Yorkers in a Scramble
Subway; Bus Strike Set to Start Tomorrow
NEW YORK m - Public officials and private citizens scrambled -today for ’everything on wheels that could help keep this city on the move if the vast municipal subway and bus systems are shut down by a strike tomorrow morning.
Car pools were being hastily formed. Businesses began booking hotel rooms for employes.
Ante rental and charter bus companies were swamped with reservations for business companies and groups of commuters. Commuter railroads prepared for extra’ traffic. John V. Lindsay, who will take office as mayor at midnight tonight, announced that group-riding in taxicabs would be permitted.
★ ★ ★
He urged that private cars .not enter the city except to bring in people who were required to work, and he said such cars should be fully occupied. Lind* say, made the plea because of threatened traffic congestion.
Lindsay also suggested that employers work out. “reasonable”^staggered working schedules for their employes.
'The AFL - CIO Transport Workers Union (TWU) has threatened a strike for 5 a.m. — an hour when New Year’s Eve celebration stragglers would be about the only persons seeking transportation. The- full impact on the metropolitan area's IS million residents would not be felt until Monday morning when the. work week starts.
Press Will Publish Early Edition Saturday The Pontiac Press will publish only one, early edition tomorrow so that Press employes may spend New Year’s Day with their families.
Normal publication will resume Monday. - ~/v
France, NATO Hear Envoy; folds Defiant
Bad Weather Halts Plan to Visit-Titoy India Is Next on List
ITALIAN GREETS GOLDBERG—U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Arthur J. Goldberg (left) is greeted by Italian Premier Aldo Moro in Rome yesterday prior to their meeting on Viet Nam. Moro cut short
AP Photofax
his year-end vacation toi see Goldberg. Since the resignation of Italian Foreign Minister Amintore Fantani, Moro has been forced to1 shoulder added responsibilities.
Drug-Giving Errors Said Not Uncommon
By ALTON BLAKESLEE Associated Press Science Editor BERKELEY, Calif. — Many more errors occur in giving drugs in hospitals than is commonly assumed, a research team declared this week.
They range from serious or occasionally fatal mis* takes to errors or giving a prescribed drug at thejtative settipment that'the ad-
WASHINGTON (AP) — After four days of intensive bargaining, negotiators in a gunpowder plant strike have reached a ten-
PoleWinsRace for Freedom
wrong time, or giving a different Brand of the same basic drug, said Kenneth Barker of the University of Arkansas Medical Center Hospital in Little Rock.
A study six years ago in a Florida hospital showed that ‘‘at least every sixth dose administered was in error” in some way.
“Since the average patient received roughly six to eight doses a day, this was a ratio of approximately one error per patient a day,” Barker said. Similar rates of error -have been found in other studies since then, he added, but a new experimental system in Arkansas of controlling drug administration has, in early testing, “cut the over-all error rate by more than half.”
RATE REDUCED If giving drugs at the wrong time — not on schedule, for example —-is excluded, the error rate for all other error types combined was reduced 82 per
SAIGON (UPI) - With four of his fellow countrymen in 'hot pursuit, a Polish officer of. the International Control Commission (IOC) today raced into a Vietnamese police station and asked for political asylum.
★ . ★ ★
Police identified the officer as 1st Lt. Anatole Slawinsky, an interpreter with the Polish delegation of the three-member ICC.
They^said Slawinsky bolted out of the compound housing the Canadian, Indian and Polish ICC members this morning and down a street toward the police station. I Four more Poles roared aft-ew him in a Jeep, and nabbed Slawinsky at the door. i e, - *	*
But the Polish officer was rescued by Vietnamese police who scuffled briefly with the Polish diplomats.
MASS ARREST The white - uniformed police had tried to arrest aii the Poles under the Jmpressioh that they were engaged in some kind of nonpolitical brawl.
When they separated Slawin-sky,Ji$ bolted into the station, shouting in English, “I want to dee an American and be a Vietnamese citizen.” -
'Early Retiring Creates Jobs'
DETROIT (AP)-The United Auto Workers said today its early retirement program created approximately 10,200 job openings during tigs first three months the plan was in effect.
The union said 9,200 workers retired before age 05 at the four auto firms and 1,020 retired untile saipae program at form implement manufacturers in the United States.
The retirements is the period. frem September, when the program went into effect, through November, dm compared with > 211 early retirements from tee four ante firms hi tee same period of
“To a considerable extent,” said UAW President Walter P. Reuther, “early retirement, satisfies the need to create job opportunities for the unemployed, the underemployed and the young people entering the work force — and with a national unemployment rate of 42 per cent, we need those job openings.”
e. *	*
The early pension plan was won by the UAW In 1164 contract bargaining with General Motors, Fhrd Motor Co., Chrysler Carp., American Motors Corp., International Harvester, John Deere and Caterpillar Tractor.
The union said its report for the September-November period was the latest for which figures were available. j./
The early retirement plan also took effect this monte at approximately a dozen parts and supplier companies whose workers are represented by tee UAW.
The program provides , an incentive supplement which can give a pension of as much as $400 a month to union workers who retire prior to age 65.
• * k k :
At General Motors, 5,280 workers retired under this program in the three-month period this

year, the UAW said. This was compared with 120 GM workers who retired prior to age 65 in the comparable three-month period of) 1964.
AT CHRYSLER	3
At Chrysler, there were 1,758 early retirements .in the three months this, year, compared with 50 in the same (feriod last year, the UAW said. '
At Ford, 1231 took early retirement, compared with 45 the previous year, the union said.
The UAW said similar figures for American Motors were 224 this year, 17 last year, and at International Harvester, 046 this year, 10 last year.
If giving the wrong brand is also excluded, the ever-ail er-(Continued on Page 2, Col. 3)
Tentative OK in Ammo Strike
Hope Restoration of Supplies to Start Soon
ministration hopes will restore some dwindling ammunition supplies for Viet Nam.
The rebuilding of critical gunpowder stocks could resume after the New Year’s weekend if the" 4,200 strikers ^t the Oiin Mathieson plant in East Alton, 111., approve the agreement reached here Thursday night.
★ k ★
Bargaining for the month-long strike was switched to Washington Monday at the request of the Federal Mediation Service.
Chief Federal Mediator William E. Simkiq said the tentative agreement was communicated to the White House and Pentagon and “everybody in the administration is gratified at this step."
AMMUNITION LOW
The Illinois plant is the sole manufacturer of a special gunpowder used in some rifle bul-tracer bullets and 20 millimeter cannon shells which the government said were running low during the strike.
But Pentagon spokesmen emphasized that, up to now, there has been no ammunition shortage in Viet Nam.
The agreement whs initialed by the three unions, involved Thursday night.
WASHINGTON (ft — Special presidential on-carried America's Vilet Nam peace- drive today to France’s President Charles de Gaulle and the North Atlantic Treaty Organization council. India’s Prime Ministerial Bahadur Shastri is next oft the calling list.
But the only open response from the other side was a de_ fiant call from Presidents Ho Chi Minh of North Viet Nam for the Wet Cong to press on for “new • and greater victories.”
The special envoys were U.N-Ambassador Arthur J. Goldberg, in Paris for talks with De Gaulle and a report to a hurriedly! called session of the NATO permanent council.
Ambassador W. Averell Har-riman had a date with Yugoslav President Tito today following up his conference with Polish leaden in War-, saw Wednesday but bad weather prevented his flying to see Tito. He is expected in New Delhi Saturday to see Shns-trl.
After a meeting with French Foreljpr Minister Mauricce Couve de Murvllle preliminary to his call on De Gaulle, Goldberg said his mission could not be described “in-terms of hope, optimism or pessimism.” j' k • k k „ , .
As for the question whether he had learned anything from Gouve de Muryille about possi-(Continued on Page 2, Col. 6)
HOLIDAY WARNING-Lt. Grover Payne, traffic division chief of the Huntington Beach, Calif Police Department, who is credited with the slogan “The Driver Who Drinks Will Have a Policeman for a,Chaser,” springs from a water tumbler to prove be means tt—much' to the surprise of Wll-' liam Mears of Orange, Calif. The trick photography situation was created by Clay Miller of Santa Ana, Calif.
.	r , t.i.
Cong Blast Billet, Warn of Offensive
SAIGON, South Viet Nam OB The Viet Cong blastema U.S. enlisted men’s barracks at Da-lat early today and threatened a major New Year’s offensive against a provincial capital near the U.S». Marine beachhead at Chu Lai.
The Communists gave this new demonstration .of their determination to fight on the eighth day of the suspension of U.S. air raids on North Viet Nam and-in the face of intensive |U.$. peace maneuvers abroad:
One American was killed, another was. missing and 10 , Americans and one Veit-namese were wounded in the guerrilla raid at the military compound, at Dalat, a mountain resort 145 miles northeast of Saigon.
The area had been relatively^3 free from terrorist activity.
W k
A band of five guerrillas slipped by guards at Les Ravines billet shortly after midnight and opened fire with small arms and automatic weapons. DETONATE BOMB Before fleeing they detonated a 250-pound bomb at the southeast comer of the billet and less than a minute later set off a 150* (Continued on Page 2, Col. 7)
income Tax Articles Will Start on Monday
Storting Monday, The Press will present a 14-part series designed fo help our readers save money when ffitof their 1865 income tax.
The series is "Cat Your Own Thh;’’ written by tax expert Ray De Crane. It tarn* tains many helpful hints to prevent page earners from lag on their return, a i error committed by
THE. PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 81, 19M
FBI Says Millions U. S. Goods Stolon
BIRMINGHAM -The Bloom- ( field Aft Association has re- i vamped its growing young peo-1 pie’s program along the line? of i the adult schedule for the upcoming winter term.	»
lutomotive pollutants oon-to eye and throat irrltaf d possibly to major respK diseases in all parts of
CHARLESTON, S.C. (AP) -|Tbe FBI reports it has broken [jwhat it describes an inside theft
*— — mkiok t%m«1 A/l nlUOir WmHIIaMC
Five experienced, working artists have been added to the present staff of six to teach in the expanded program. The term starts Jan. 17 and will continue for 10 weeks.
Advanced students will work from live models for the first
Is offered for the first time for the 13-to-li year-rid group. AH phases of casting miniature sculpture in gold, silver bronze win be explored from design to casting and finish-
Naval Shipyard.
I Twenty-six men were indicted by a federal grand Jury in Lcharlestan Thursday in connection'with the alleged thefts.
★, Vr ★
Among those indicted is Hen-I ry H. Harris, director of the 'naval supply center’^ storage division, and three marine en-
by using his author-tor to transfer code-various places and safety meetings’ of it involved to facili-
saw	m mi
rw
Federal Curbs Near
$ ■- ’ ■ ■
on Exhaust Fumes
WASHINGTON (AP) - The government moves closer today to national control of the air polluting materials which spew from cars ,and light trucks.
Proposed federal standards, to start with 1968 models, are hieing published in the Federal Register.
Suggested changes can be made during the following 30 days.
Then the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare will make any revisions it deems necessary, and publish the regulations in the Register to trice effect immediately. IMPORTANT ^STEP “With these standards,” Welfare Secretary John W. Gardner said, “we will take an important step toward controlling pollution from the nation’s greatest single source of air pollution.”
The secretary noted that similar standards already have been adopted in California starting with 1966 vehicles. .
But a department said ah cates ai tribute tion am ratory the country.
And it srid studies also___I
shown vegetation and property damage attributable to suqh pollution in 27 states and the District of Columbia. wguu) APPLY TO ALL
The federal rules would it..| to all gasoline-powered automobiles and light trucks, whether manufactured in or imported into the United States. .
They were developed following this year’s passage of the clean air act amendments which authorized regulation of vehicle discharges believed hazard to health or welfare.
Among other things, the pro-posed standards would set maximum allowable rates for the discharge of two major automo-ative air pollutants -hydrocarbons and carbon monoxide. Hy-
Senate Dems Set to Block Appointment
LANSING (AP)—Senate Democrats plan to block confirma-formation of Maj. Gen. Clarence Schnipke as Michigan director of military affairs until court tests of his predecessor’s firing are complete.
Majority Leader Sen. Raymond Dzendzel, D-Detroit, con-finned Thursday that his forces
the job until Maj. Gen. Ronald McDonald, ousted by Gov. George Romney, has exhausted his appeals.
Democrats would have rejected Schnipke Thursday, said Dsendsd, but they did not have the required 96 votes present as the Legislature formally adjourned for the year. ,
When lawmakers return Jan. IS, there will be torte days remaining before Schnipke would automatically take office.
HELD HEARING
Romney fired McDonald adjutant general of the Michigan National Guard earlier this year after a lengthy hearing into National Guard irregularities. McDonald has twin cases in Appeals Court,' one objecting to the hearing, the other to Sch-nipke’s right to hold office.
Romney first named Schnipke adjutant general, then director of. the state’s military department, a new title created by government reorganization.
Dzendzel said Democrats have nothing personally against Schnipke. Kit he disagreed with Romney’s firing of McDonald.
drocarbons are A major ingradient in the formation of smog; carbon monoxide is a lethal gas.
The proposed standards for engines of 146 or mpra cubic indies cylinder displacement would limit tailpipe exhaust of hydrocarbons to an average of not more than 275 parts per million of exhaust and carbon monoxide to an average of 1.5 per cent by volume over the entire life of the vehicle.
The average car without an exhaust control system gives off about 866 parts per million of hydrocarbons and 3.5 per cent of carbon monoxide from its exhaust
Less stringent standards were
do not think Schnipke should get developed for smaller engines,
including the small imported cars, because they discharge smaller volume of pollutants than the larger engines, the department srid.
Gardner warned that stiller controls \dll be needed before 1986 when motor vehicles will be so numerous as to make the present standards inadequate.
Said the secretary: “That will pose an even more serious problem for the iftotor vehiclp industry, and they should begin thinking about it now.”
Bethlehem Announces Steel Price Increase
NEW YORK (fl—Bethlehem Steel Co., the nation’s second largest producer announced a $5 a ton price increase today in structural steel shapes and piling.
E. B. Bickford, vice president, said die increase, effective with shipments tomorrow, was made because of growing industry acceptance for lightweight, higher-strength steel.
The Weather
FnU U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Cloudy, windy and mild with occasional light rain or drizzle this morning, turning crider with scattered snow Harries by late afternoon. Highs today Si te 16 with steady or falling temperatures by late afternoon. Cloudy, windy and colder with occasional now flurries tomorrow. Highs 31 to 35. Sooth to southwest winds 15 ts 30 mflas this morning, shifting to toe west at 13 to 35 miles late fin afternoon and becoming northwest at IS to 25 miles tonight. Ontloek for Sunday: Partly cloudy .with scattered showers and little change in temperature.
DEAD DINOSAUR? — This huge earth-moving machine, looking like some sort of mechanical dinosaur lying on its back, sprawls along an embankment at a road construction site in Montgomery, Ala.,
yesterday. The operator jumped clear as the machine started to turn over, and was unhurt. Later the machine was righted and -put back to work, only slightly damaged by the overturn.
36 Are Plucked From Sea as Vessel Rams Into Reef
MIAMI, Fla. (AP) - The 96-foot sailing vessel Mandalay smashed into a coral reef 26 miles southeast of Miami today, but Coast Guard helicopters saved all 25 passengers and 11 crewmen .from angry seas.
The vessel, part of the fleet of Windjammer Cruises, was on a 56-mile run from Bimini inland in the Bahamas to Miami when she hit the reef about 3
Twenty-five were flown to Homestead Air Force Base south of here. Eleven others
were taken in a patrol boat to the Coast Guard base at Miami Beach. All appeared in good condition,
“It was a .frightful experience,” said Walter H. Ballard, president of the W. H. B. Chemical Cbrp. of Westchester, N.Y. ‘PITCH DARK’ *
We were afraid the boat would fall apart. It was pitch dark and we were afraid of sharks.”
We^id somj} praying,” added M. C. Probst, 59, a teacher from Mansfield, Ohio. “We tyank God we’re alive.”
Drug Errors Not a Rarity
(Continued From Page One) ror rate was cut by 87 per cent. This is an error rate of 1.8 per cent of the total opportunity tor errors, Barker told toe, American Association for w Advancement of Scl-
Other kinds of, errors, include failure to give prescribed drugs, giving the wrong drug to a patient, or too much, or too little of the prescribed drug, and giving a drug to the Wrong patient.
Dr. Barker’s coauthors were Dr. Wilson Kimbrough, research assistant for psychology, and Dr. William Heller, chief investigator of drug systems research at the Little Rock hospital.
FOUR DEATHS “Recently, in Pontiac, Mich, and in Boston,” Dr. Barker reported, “a total of four persons died from medication errors.
“From toe published reports of the Michigan deaths, it appears that someone pat ether in a bottle labeled Surital — just ‘temporarily,’ of course. “However, our observers confirmed that such carelessness with labeling is common, and so such needless deaths will continue to occur.”
Hougmon
Lamina
At the Arkansas medical center, the new experimental centralized unit-dose dispensing system has been in operation two months.
SHARP REDUCTION
NATIONAL WEATHER—Rain is forecast tonight for the valleys. Snow is expected to fill over toe Great asrti) frtfodte coastafregion, the Ohio, Tennessee, and lower Labs legion, the uppar Mississippi Valley, the northern Rod^js sod tto Pacific Northwest.
(Continued Front J*age One) hope of seeing weary celebra-tors-home safely.
Probst said seas ran from three to six feet, but the Coast Guard completed the rescue operation in 3V4 hours after the Mandalay first rammed into the rocks.
The Mandalay was the fourth of the Windjammer Cruises boats to run into trouble in five years. The line’s owner, Capt. Michael Burke, is in. several lawsuits resulting from troubles at sea.
AWAKE IN CABIN *
Clair Hall, 59, Indianapolis, Ind., real estate man, said he and his wife were Awake their cabin when “we felt a couple of bumps like the keel was hitting.”
“Someone yelled for the captain,” he said, “and he came quickly and tried to pull the sails down. But ever;) time we hit, we hit harder.
And everywhere the world awaited word on President Johnson’s efforts to bring the war hi Viet Nam to the negotiating table. Johnson has sent diplomatic missions abroad to talk to world leaders.
President and Mrs. Johnson remained at toe LBJ ranch in Texas, where White House press secretary Bill D. Moyers said they have no special plans for toe evening.
Chinese Nationalist troops defending the Qiiemoy islands are under orders hot to reply to foutine Communist Chinese gunfire for three days starting today.
"Die waves drove us in until we hit-so hard we were fast. “But the only scarey thing as getting into the life raft. The waves rolled over the reef.
got hit by one that seemed 16 feet over my head, and it knocked me flat in the raft." SON ASLEEP When the Halls first felt the jolt of the vessel against the barrier reef, their eon, John, 13, as asleep in the cabin.
“My husbimd and I were on deck and when big waves hit toe boat we would j6ke, ‘we just hit a truck,’ ” Mrs. Hall said.
A.sharp reduction in errors covered 3,943 doses given for that time, compared with 16;348 given over a six-month period under the old system, Barker srid.
Under toe new system, each dose of drugs is delivered to the nurses in premeasured, packaged, labeled and ready-to administer form. Computer-controlled systems of medication could also help reduce error, he «aM.	^
Baiter noted that no adverse reaction of serious consequences had been observed in the Florida 'study, made at the University of Florida Teaching Hdspltri.'
The causes for errors are complex, he said. Some lure due to mistakes by nuTses. some to situations, such as busy times; orders that are in error or are misunderstood. S o m e.t i m e s, there are no'clues as to why an Wror occurred.
Most errors probably are not even known to anyone, including the nurses who made them, Barker added.
New Year Prayer Is Peace iii'66
gine dealers.
The FBI said that 26 of those indicted worked at the naval shipyard and that Harris 'played an important role ih the conspiracy ity as direc fendants to by calling ‘ personnel not jnvohi tate the thefts and	—
property." _	.
ARREST 11 FBI agents quickly rounded up li of the men and said they hoped to arrest four others. Elv-en had been arrested previously and are free on bond.
The arrests climaxed a yearlong investigation of govem-pilfering which
______m J
and perspective.
The portraiture instructor is painter - sculptor Patricia Bur-
*A»e Quemoy defense command said the cease-fire is designed “to enable our compatriots mi the mainland to celebrate the new year and the anniversary Jan. 1 of the founding of toe Republic of China in 1912.’!
FREE COFFEE Free coffee is being offered motorists along the Massachu-Pennsylvania and New Jersey turnpikes.
And toe Burlington, Vt., Free Press is offering for toe fifth consecutive year to pay for funeral costs,, of anyone who pl«n« to drink and drive New Year’s Eve. They have to register at toe newspaper first.
allegedly took place between 1959-1964.
Much of the property, the FBI said, was sold to or through the three marine engine dealers, all indicted. Tljey are Lamar Dennis of New Orleans, La.; Philip Bodne of Charleston and Miami, Fla.; and Melvin McEuen of Long Beach, Calif.
The bureau said the stolen goods included diesel engine parts, typewriters, insulated juggt and brass and metal fixtures, plates and rods. It said $256,666 of property has been recovered.
WIDELY PEDDLED
The stolen property was allegedly sold to ^purchasers in Florida, California, Virginia, Louisiana, Texas and Oregon.
Three commercial truck drivers were also among those indicted. The FBI said they would drive into the shipyard during one of Harris’ “safety meetings,” load up at a warehouse without authorization and drive away.
i Area News
. Group's Program for Youth Is Upgraded
tag”
her innovatlbn isji; print-j class for young people.
I___t and techniques, of silk
screening and relief painting processes will be featured.
I classes in introduc-are being offered to met the increased
I VARIED Placed according to age, youngster 6 to 12 learn the fun of art by working in sculpture, drawing, painting, printmaking,
Viet Cong Blast Billet, Threaten Major Offensive
(Continued From Page One) pounder 36 yards away, a U.S. military spokesman said.
Along the central coast, strong Communist forces were reported to have seized two outposts guarding the valley approaches to Quang Ngai city in a drive helped by heavy rain that hampered U.S. counterblows from toe air.
One U. S. plane was hit by groundfire and crashed, presumably killing the pilot.
Printmaker and potter James Powell, another new instructor, also teach students to construct their own printmaking equipment.
POTTERY IS POPULAR , Pottery, a popular repeat, course for beginners and advanced students, 12 to 18, teaches both hand building and thrown techniques. This term, staff member William Clover is introducing Raku, fin old Japanese process of firing and salt glazing.
Other courses-available for young people are Exploring New Materials, a class comprised of study and creative work in such media as collage, watercotor, egg tempera, inks and resists, and drawing and perspective, in which the class reviews Renaissance and other aystems of perspective and applies them to a wide range of subjects. \
The association office is at 1516S. Cranbrook.
Avon Twp. Woman Is Injured in Crash
D.S. military officials saw toe thrust as 9 possible forerunner of a campaign against Quang Ngai, 30 miles southeast of the U.S. Marine beachhead at Chu Lai.
changes in the French attitude toward Viet Nam, Goldberg suggessted that reporters ask the Frenfch.
Traffic patrols across the nation are being beefed up far the holiday weekend.
Takipg note of the mild weather forecast, Detroit Director of Trafflc'W Ilham Pol-kinghom srid: 4	)
DANGEROUS
‘This kind of weather always induces speed, and coupled with drink and fatigue, it’s a dangerous situation.”!'
Perhaps one way to hnild np courage to. face toe new year is to eat some roast lion. An inn in Plymouth, Mich., is offering, 'roast lion in wine sauce, with soup and desert included, at $5.86 as part of its
When we felt it slam onto the rocks, we said, ‘There’s that truck again’'.”
All passengers were on deck jin less than 10 minutes, she said. While the rafts were being inflated, they stood on theTilgh side of the sharply tilting vessel and waves broke across the £ew Year’s menu, deck.
LAST TO LEAVE
Four young skindlvers were among the last to leave the vessel.	‘. _1(;
“It’s a good thing I had my snorkel.with me,” said one of them, Rene Shupak, 19, a University of Miami stiident.
TALKED MORE
Goldberg was little more communicative after his meeting of an hour and 20 minutes with De-Gaulle.
He said he had told toe French leader of “President Johnson’s earnest desire to seek an early and honorable settlement of the Vietnamese conflict” and asserted that such settlement can be achieved only “at toe conference table without prior conditions.”
Goldberg said De Gaulle “of course expressed his own view which I will report to President Johnson.”
The envoy carried a message from Johnson to De Gaulle but it was not disclosed.
Their life raft sank, they said, and they had to swim to a helicopter lift The others were Jose Egozi, 27, Miami; Richard Quick, 27, of - Newburgh, N.Y., and Tremper Seltzman, 28, of Rhinebeck, N.Y.“:
Fort Ord Reports Case of Meningitis
FORT ORD, Calif. (AP)-Ft. Ord, closed less than a year ago when meningitis killed a’number of recruits, has another case.
Army spokesman said it is the fint'ease since the post was reopened for baric training April 1. The post had bejn closed since Dec. 1* 1964, after ah ‘outbreak , of meningitis that killed 15 men and affected more than 100 others.	.
Coroner Now Rules Actress' Death Accident
LOS ANGELES' (AP)-Ac-tress Marie McDonald’s death last Oct 21 was accidental, not probably suicide as' previously ruled, says the cohnty coroner. * * *: * *
Dr. Theodore Curphy srid Thursday a team of consulting psychiatrists and psychologists “based their finding on a review of toe victim’s pftst life and her normal pattern of living.”
Min McDonald, 42,1 was found dead at her dressing table in her suburban home. The death certificate said she died of “active drug intoxication due to multiple drugs.”
Dr. Qurphy said the actress had been taking medication In’ some time,, particularly following a gastric operation earlier this year.
U.S. Spreads Peace Drive
(Continued From Page One)
PROVINCIAL CAPITAL The city is capital of tire province of the same name 330 miles northeast of Saigon a few miles inland from the South China Sea.
Reports from toe battle area indicated that toe Communists including North Vietnamese troops, had captured Minh Long, a district headquarters 15 miles south of Quang Ngai, and an outpost near Son Ha, another headquarters 15 miles west of the provincial capital. The attacks scattered, the South Vietnamese defenders who apparently were trying to link up with friendly troops.
A 52-year-old Avon Township woman was listed in satisfactory condition this morning in St. Joseph Mercy Hospital following a two-car crash yesterday afternoon.
Alma Sumner, 2885 St. Clair, received a fractured pelvis and collar bone in the accident at Wide Track and Saginaw.
She was a passenger in a car driVen by Grace M. Hoffheine, 28, of 2874 St. Clair, Avon Township. Driver of the other car was Claude A. Wiley, 55, of 162 Nevada, Avon Township,
Flying over Communist positions north of Minh Long, a spotter reported “a fantastic number of enemy- troops to real deep ditches shoulder to shoulder, with camouflage over their heads.”
U. S. planes pounded the area and pilots estimated they kitted 86 enemy soldiers but reported no evidence of ft Communist withdrawal.
Soviet Space Probe Is Corrected in Flight
MOSCOW (AP) — The Soivet space probe Venus 2 will pass ’at the prescribed distance” from Venus, an official; announcement said today.
The course .of Venus 3, launched four days after Venus 2 was launched Nov, 12, had been corrected in flight “in order to bring it closer to Venus,” the announcement added.
'Lighter' Goes Bong
DALLAS (UPI) — A young woman picked up what she thought was a derringer shaped1 cigarette lighter and putted the trigger to light up, and shot herself in the left index finger.
CANNOT SPEAK "I cannot weak for the'gener-
ri,” Goldberg told newsmen who asked whether De Gaulle had made any constructive suggestions for aiding the Viet Nam war.
Goldberg i? flying home tonight.
Harriman’s not move was announced by toe US. Embassy In New Delhi. An informant, who had reported the plan earlier, said the harried trip was necessary because Shastri is leaving Monday for Tashkent, U.S.S.R., for a summit meeting with President Ayah Khan of Pakistan, The embassy said Harriman will stay only a day or two.
India, along With Poland which Harriman has already Visited, and Canada where presidential assistant McGeorge Bundy has been, is a member of the (hnenation control commission set up far 1954 for Southeast Aria. -
Somewhat in Hue- with -the attitude of De Gaulle, Shastri has been critlcrif to the past of certain aspects of American policy Viet Naim
LOST IDE PUNCH?—Alabama Gov. George A, Wallace fractured a bone to his right wrist yesterday to Miami Beach, Fla., slugging a heavy punching bag to n gym. Wriiace, Alabama Golden Gloves champion, bantamweight, 1936-37, said he didn’t know to toe punching bags are harder these days or If be was “getting old.”	.. .
HZ
x


THE PONTIACTVRKSS/FRIDAY. DECEMBER 31, 1965
In 1965
Newspaper Advertising Totaled
- MS IS MORE THAN MAGAZINES AND TELEVISION COMBINED
Newspaper Figures are Still Brewing
because
THIS MONEY IS PR0DUCIN6 6REAT RESHIfS
The Bureau of Advertising Forecasts 100% Increase in the hJexf Ten Years
We Are Well Into the Space Age, American Newspapers Have Been one of the Front
Runners from the Beainning
^ With the Leaders Where Progress and Advancement are concerned, The Pontiac Press is Always Abreast of “These Changing Times.” . Tt”- V . V
■ ramus ms
wmm
UPP^f!

- % *
THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 81, IBM
BAKE OVER PAGES
TEEN
MARKETS
Hie Mowing ere top ' prices covering sale* of locally grown produce by growera and sold by them in wholesale package lots. Quotations are fornisbed by the Detroit Bureau of Markets as of Wednesday.
Prdduc*
- Applet, DeHdeut R«d, bu.....
Applet, Jonathan, bu. .......
Applet, MaalMeei, early, bu. .
Applet, Nenttam ley, bu......
Applet, dear, 4f*l. cate ....
VSSSTASLM
Berts, tapped, bu............
Cabbage, Curly, bu. ........
Cabbage. rad. Hi. ...........
Cabbage, Std., bu...........
Cerrata, lopped, bu.1 ....
Celery, Rapt ta...........
Hortbradltn. pk. btkl. . .
Leekt, dz. bcht. .........
Onion, dry, 5Mb. bag . Part lay, reel; dt bcht. .. Parsnips, Vb bu. .......
Potatoes, If K ........
Redlthet, black, Vi bu. .
Squash, Detlcieus, bu. Squaah, Hubbard, bu. Turnip*, topped, bu.
Poultry and Eggs
Mid par
9
20-22; light type hani 7-l> roatti . type 24to*25; brollart and fryer:
Whiles If-20.
T DETROIT EOOS DETROIT (AP)-Cgg prices dozen by first receivers (Including While! Grade A [umbos 4l-4*( ■» large 40-42; large 3M0; mediums 14! 27; smells 20-31; Browns OMii f M 31',-3*; mediums 25-24; checks 24-29.
CHICAGO BOOS, BUTTER CHICAGO (AP) - Chicago Mercentl Exchange — Butter about tleady; whol sale buying prices unchanged ta W lei. er; 43 Mere AA *094; 92 A 60V,; 90 s mil mt»i	•	—
Eggs steady; wholesale buying prices
CHICAGO POULTRY CHICAGO (AF)—(UIDA) - Live poultry; JMtMNW buying prices * --■
higher; roasters. Tjjfrll;
Last "65 Session Under Way
Stock Market Active, Mixed
NEW YORK (AP)—The stock market was mixed in active trading today os the last session of 1965 got under way amid news that Bethlehem Steel had announced a steel price increase. Steels spurted.
Bethlehem was. off % at 40% * before the news had chance to permeate financial circles but hr a few minutes it was up 1% to 41%.
Chrysler rose U.S. Steel opened on 1,500 2,000 shares, up % at. 52V4 and .soon was at 52%, up % before trad-
ing was baited dtie to an influx of ‘
Jones & Laugh lin rope 2 to 72%. Lukens Steel gained 2% at 56.'
OPENING BLOCKS Opening blocks included: Sperry Rand, up % at 22% i 10,000 shares; Ford, changed at 54% ,.on 4,500; and Allegheny Corp., unchanged at 1S% on 4,300.
t
at 54 on
GeneralMotors rose % to 103 on 3,000 shares; General Elec-
tric gained % at 119% on 2,000 shares.
ON MM SHARES , International Telephone wai ur % to 00% on 1,000 shares.
Standard Oil (New Jersey) dipped % to 90% on 1,000 shares.
Montgomery Ward apd American Can advanced fractionally. Santa Fe eased % to 33%.
' * ft *
Thursday the Associated Press average of 60 stocks rose 1,0 to 356.7.
Prices were Irregular on the American Stock Exchange.
The New York Stock Exchange
NEW YORK (API-Following ll
ol selected slock Iron tod Ions on Itu R_
---- Stock RitdibW with 10:30 prices;
I BOW — i 334* + Ml
Amerada 2.M ‘ lib
AmBdcst 1*60 -Am Can 2.M AmCyon 2.10 mEIPw 1.12 nil i.i*a m FPow T
4	3344	334k
I	31V.	31	tvm	T
1	77	7444	78W	+
I	739k	739k	739k	j+
15	419b	41Vk	419k	+
Livestock
DSTROIT LIVESTOCK
4 enough aH| quotation!.
CHICAGO UVRSVOCK CHICAGO IAP)-(USDA)-Hogs 3,500; 1-2 190-225 lb butchers 2l.00-a.75; l-J 350-400 lb SOWS 23.50-24.25.
Cattle TOO; taw Iota good to low cholci 950-M50 lb {laughter steers 25.00-25.75; good 24.00-2450; several netttogaa mixed g od and choice 500-1,oft lb slaughter heifers 24.00-14.75.
JlgelowS 1
SSL?.
American Stocks
Aaroiet .50a	13 3344 3144 3394
ArkLaGos 1.34 12 4*94 429k 4294 Aopmora 72 2 7-14 2 514 2 7-14 +1‘1* Asad Oil A «	“	*
Atlas Cp wt
Brown Co .40 CompbChlb Con So Pet Cdn Javelin

Cal Pock .00 Caium Hoc l CompRL .4541 Comp Soup 1 Bn Dry 1 CdaPac l.50a * CorOP LI 1.21 Carrier 1.40 CartarW AOs
Color JT roc 1 CelonosaCp 2 ' Cenco Ins .30 Coni SW 1.34 am 1.40b
toHsira
Up IM
Felmt Oil .15 4 494	84* IM -
Ply Tiger U4» 40 894 5744 2I_ -Gen Dove!	27	49k	49k	49k	-
Glint Yel AOs	45	1294	1*94	1244	+ ■
GotanoM-	39	294	29k	fib,—W
Gl Soo Pot	429	- fit	K
Gulf Am Uf	13	ltta	1090
Hycon - Mfg	1	159k	1590
I trim Core	4	191	194 *.
Kaiser Ind	43	1194	1190
Mackey Air	*	994	*90
McCrary wt	a	4	59k
HgwAk^ang 7
i +'w
Scurry Rain Signs! OIIA I Sparry R wt Slolham in
12 309k 30 VO 30<k -
Treasury Position
WASHINGTON (API—The cosh posllk of me Treasury compared with corn
____ __________________J1,351,440,04931
X-Totsl Debt—
22L229452.994.34 319352409,342.91 Gold Asseh—
13407,104,915.19	t|407,70A170.fl
X—Includes >200,915,217.64 debt ^ --tad to stotutary limit.
ROND AVI
m
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1*84 High	2.9	in ’	MJ	92.2	*44
1944 Low	Si	1114	074	90.1	**J	1
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1*44 Nigl .4754 149.4 1$
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A Optic 1.25b A Photo 20p A Smelt L40o
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» 149b 149k + TOW 72 -4-1'
I 429k 42’k -
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4 -05fl ID 140
33Vk	33V,
I	7496	749k	7494	+
I	29k	29k	29k'
* 29%	29V, - 29V,	-
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1	119a	159k	119k	—
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4 M9*	3094	3094	—
2	.4594	4594	4594	+	Vk
4U	44	44
*4^94	32	a
10	42Vk	4Uk	42 .....
13 47	449b	47	—Ik
10	11A	Ilk	Ilk	— tk
240 42	401k	419k	-Hlk
4 42Vk	42'k	41Vk
I Pap 1.20a	37 309k 3
JohnMsn 2.20	14 549k . 3
KsysorRo .40 Kennecett 5 KornCLd 2.40 KlnibClork 2
1	54 V,	541k	54V,
23	409k	401k	40Vk	.....
4	499k	459b-	4*9b	—	9k
*	*594	MVk	MW	+	44
135	IMk	1894	109b	..
1141	42'k	43	+
.	10	20	199k	20
18	22	22	+
21	411k	43 "	431k	4
14	501k	50	MVk	4
I 309k IMk 309k
u
1 119k 119k l(9k 12 3599 359k 3594
1 301k 5894 30V, .........
3 419k 419k 419b 4 Ik
I 73 V, 73 V, 731k
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Lehman 1.92g LOFGIs 2.50a 'MOttfiM 5 mol Core —llonln 2.521
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Lorlll*n|Ll.St
LTV .50 Luckyltr 1.40
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SSHSta 1A0
2	439k	439k	419k
T	151k	litk	151k	. ..
13	aw	n	aw	4 9k
4	471k	4591	4714	4 9k
2 349k 149k 349k 4 j 4	2299	1294	2294	- W ;
44	541k	M	.5414	4 9k
a	319k	3IW	31Vk	.....
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1	449b	409k	4Hb4-U
I	14	16	14	-9k
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1	2714 271k 271k ...
11 3394 339k 3394 . .. a 42Va 429k 42Vb 4
4 53Vb 53Vk MVk —
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» 53Wf51 53Vk + V»
I 43	41
Control Data Com Pd \M CoxSdcas .40 CrewCol 1.34* Crown OMR Crown Zell J Cruc StT 1.20 Cudahy Pk Curtis Pub Curt Wr 1
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W	'»W	MV,	38V,	4	Vk
I	M	5594	5394	+	Vi
18	419b	41	419k	41Vk
3	4314	43V,	4M-	'	**
1	539k	539k	539k
jI-lS| + 9k
9 Vk 71k	7V4
17	Mg	109k	109k	,
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8	341k	141k
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29 Mi..WH 1994	'
13 551k 5514s 551k -
2	20V, |M 201k .....
3	aw aik aik — w
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2 4494 4494 tfOA 4 I 219k flta 214k - Vk
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I 209k 109k 4 lk
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R	ffli	8K	11H	— Vk
4	tag	(M	0094	- 9k
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I	419k	410k	41ta	.....
349k	3494	4 9k
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Gillette l.20a Glen AW .50a Goodrdi 2.20
Gi West RF InT GtWSug 1.40a
a	549k	54	54V,	+ '
14	2494	Eta	2494	+1
40	35	349k	349k	— '
5	419k	419k	411k	—4.
• W	1194	119k	u*	4 Vk
1	411k	411k	419k	— “
191219k 219k »9k ...
47	479k	4414	471k	—
1	63V,	M9b	63Vk	- ..
25	58Vk	SI	6	49i
3	269k	2494	249k
—H—
5 ,	47	44H	47
3”	279k	279k
7	4194	4194	4194
IlySuo l.M ...mosta i.6o MmOw i.io
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5	459k	4S9k	,451k 4	9k
7	748b	749k	74H 4'9k
3	529b	52	8 —a
4	209b	209k	209k +
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2 559k SS'k 55'k 4
IntMlner 1.20	1
'8*3*4#
1709% 41Vk
2	30	JS	31	....
*1	7494	709k	73	42Vk
2	7594	759k	759k	-	M
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5	3794	37'/,	37V,	+	'h
\	3794	R79b	379k	.
. 0 1094 1229k 1894 41
0	njb	aw	219k
3	169k	1494	149k —lk
a V/»	79k 79k 4 Vk
4	»	319k	3194	-	91
4	55V.	aw	5SW 4	Vk
4 711k 711k 7U4 ' M
4	30M	2094	3Mb	-f
a	to	ii	a	4
4	24W	14W	249k	.
13	32V,	32 V.	32'/,	-+
2	4394	439k	4394	.
M	499k	489k	499k	4
4	39	a,	a	4	..
52	54	53W	54	42V,
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Textron wl kol .25g wal OH . RB 1.I0O Trans W Air Transom .50b Tronsltron Trl Cant .33h Twont Con lb
... Carbide 3 Un Sloe i.i2 lUnOIICsMM
Un Tank 1 ‘ UnAIrL 1.50a UnRAIrc 1.40 UfittCp .— Un Frulf UGoaCp ' USDorax >m USGypsm 3a US indst .120 US Lines 2b
orquor .25g •rtlnMsr T ogStr^M
McDonA ,40b McKms 1.70 MoodCp 1.70 Merck 1.20s
MorrellCo 11 Motorola 1
Hot Fuel 1.48
S	47W	479k	47W	..
12	MVk	MVk	249b	4
34.. i2v,	iiw	aik	4
11	MW	549k	54'/,	-
1	31V,	31V,	31'/,	+
13	14	1SW	14	— tk
M	O	219k	a	'
11.5394 5394 5394
*	2194	MVk	28V,
3	STVk	571b	57W	—	Vk
8	47’/k	469k	469k
5	479k	479k	479b
II	7Mb	70'k	70'/.	...
7	OW	25'b	25V.	+	Vk
10	479b	471b	47W
1	aw	52W	529k
4	Oik	32Vk	32'k
20	479k	471k	479k
1	10W	1094	lOVk
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14	MW	Bw	Oib	4	W
4	3*94	»W	»W	4	94
*	Mlk	MW	34V,	4	W
4	249k	2494	2494
|U|	144 lfi.
2	Oik	25V.	2594
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M	aw	7114	719b 4194
4	MW	S3W	53W -	‘
3	74W	7*94	7494 —
4	Mlk	I5W	I5W 4
14	.MW	3494	34'A 4
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14	34W	3494	3694	—
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32	79k	7V,	79k	■*
20	35V,	35V,	35V,	4
» 1494 .894 5494 4 9k
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12 4 SW 5W 4 MW 43W 63W - V.
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3	779k	779k	7794	-	‘
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14	3094	20	209k	+
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LANSING (AP) - A Sen committee wants Michigu to establish a trade - promotion office in Europe.
Seven senators, led by Sen. Gilbert Bursley, R-Ann Arbor, rimirman of the Committee on International Commerce, visited New York and nine western European countries for three weeks this fail.
Their report given the Senate Thursday declared that “Mich-' sales efforts are meeting fully.the challenge of the international markat place. In a rising European market, Michigan’s proportionate share of sales appear tube declining,” it said.
The report said there-was little evidence of positive programs, public or private, signed to cash, in on these (European trade) opportunities.”
HEAR REPORTS Business and government experts abroad told the committee that small and mediumsized producers are especially not exploiting potential markets.
The report said the state departments of commerce, agriculture and tourism should establish international divisions or offices.	V
It, called for a Michigan office in Europe under direction of the Department of Commerce, a nonprofit joint business - government corporation for promotion purposes and an ‘ |flj | for international commerce at a state university..
Brussels or Amsterdam were suggested as sites for the European office.
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OVBR THS COUMTRR STOCKS _ jotatlans from the NASD art representative Intar-dsalar prices of approximately 11 ajn. Inter-Sealer markets change throughout the Say. Prices So —“ Include retail markup, markdown ~
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Put Office Abroad, State Solons Urge
By SAM DAWSON APBwtMssNswfAasly NEW YQRlt (AP) - The United Stetss rings out tonight its most prosperous year. Records Ml rjfit and ML But problems there ware aplenty and at year-end tensions were
There we* lot of exd in 1966, especially in the, stock market/ where .priceeJ swung widdy and trading voT-l umV soared.
And government and business squared off for some notable showdowns over wages, prices, interest rates, antitrust actions, overseas investments — with signs of bitter battles to come, ft * ft
1, 1965 turned out better on the business front than most people expected just a year ego tonight. And all the worries today about the top uncertainty —
Local Bank Ahriduhees 2 Promotions
Two promotions at pftitiac State Bank were announced today by Edward E. Barker Jr. president. %
Mrs, Juanita B. Tarlton, 3285 Airport, J Waterford Township, has been named assistant cash-
William L. Shaw, 139 Draper, was named manager of the bank’s Opdyke-Walton office. *
TARLTON
Mrs. Tarlton joined the bank in 1955 and worked as assistant to the manager of the Drayton Plains office for nine years. For the last year she has been in the mortgage department at the main office.
She has a son and daughter! and is a member of the executive board of the Pontiac Women’s Bowling Association. -JOINED BANK ShaW joined the.bank in 1962 and worked as assistant manager at the Baldwin Avenue office prior to his new appointment. .
A member of the hoard of governors' and chairman of school relations of the American Institute of, Banking in Oakland County, he is presently taking a course in business management at Oakland Community College.
Consumers Declares a 4716‘Cent {Dividend
The board of directors of Consumers Power Co. hks declared quarterly dividend of 47% cents a share on the company’s common stock, payable Feb. 21, to stockholders of record Jan. 1 The rate in the preceding quarter was 45 cents per share. There are 20,567,5650 of common stock outstanding.
The board also declared a d idend of $1.12% per share on ( 14.50' preferred stock, |1.13 per share, on the $4.52 preferred stock; and $1.04' per shard on the |l.lf preferred stock, payable Atadl 1, to stockholders of record March 4r
Most Pros]
Year of Records Ending
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■ DAWSON I
By ROGER E; gPEAR
Q) “Our two married children are happy and prosperous. We have been giving them the maximum gift allowance from our large block of fine life insurance stocks listed below. We are retired with more than enough income outside of our stock list. Resides insurance stocks we own American Telephone; General Motors; General Foods; General Telephone; General Electric; U,S. Steel; Comsat. Should we take our profit in General Foods? Do yon think ,we should buy more Ufe insurance stock and more Telephone and Comsat now that the price is lower?” .W.T.
A) You have at present well over 3500,000 in life* insurance stocks, which appears dispro-portionate. I like Telephone, and Comsat as long-range holdings, but you are already sufficiently represented in these situations and you should diversify. I would hold General Foods which is tin excellent growth vehicle.
Switch U. S. Steel into Corn Products for better growth and with other funds I suggest stocks for capital enhancement, such as Eastman Kodak and Honeywell.
•
Q) “I am single and in seven years I will retire with my income in a much reduced bracket. I will then have a higher exemption on federal income tax. It occurred to me that from a tax standpoint, Ii would be better off holding Series .E savings hoods than holding cash ia. tile bank. Interest on these bonds may be deferred to maturity and is not until then subject to federal income tax. Is my idea sound?” t*.R. A) I believe your reasoning s entirely sound. I have received many letters along these
the course of the Viet Nam war may maka executives wary of adopting fixed patterns for their firms but generally confident that ooe way or adotbar 1 the 1161 economy its a whole ! will outdo even the record year now ending.*
Americans this year produced some 3672 billion in goods and sarvicM, up from 309.7 billion in 1964, Many think J966 might see this Gross National Product to the 9715 billion rang*. INCOME HIGH Personal incomes rose almost steadily all year to a record 3540 billion, against 3495 billion In 1964. The jobless rate, major problem last winter, at yearend was down around 4 per cent, lowest level in years. And labor shortages were plaguing many employers needing highly skilled workers.
Business profits kept rising all year to total around 345 billion after taxes, up from 337 billion in 1954.* Wage increases averaged around 4.2 per cent, largest in several years, and a faster rate than either prices or productivity were setting, ft ft ft The year started out with French President Charles de Gaulle calling for a world monetary system based pa gold, and turning in France’s surplus dollars for the metal. The U,S. Treasury had one of its sharpest gold losses in years.
So fast were Yankee dollars flowing overseas that President Johnson called on U.S. corporations voluntarily to hold down overseas investments, and on U.S. banks to trim foreign loans and the buying of foreign securities. At yearend these controls, still called voluntary, were being further tightened. SPURS BUSINESS The U.S. government spurred domestic investments and consumer buying by relaxing in February depreciation rules for tax purposes and clipping $1.75-billion off excite tax collections in .June, with more coining next month. Business stepped buying equipment, and consum-
cruals on Series E bonds, like ail other government bond interest, is subject to federal income tax.
Nevertheless, it is also, true that if people so arrange their purchases that maturities fail into their retired low-income years, they may pay little or no tax on their deferred interest.'
Roger Spear’s 48-page Investment Guide Is available to all readers of this column. Clip this notice
to Roger E. Spear, In care «f The Pontiac Press, Box lilt; Grand Central Station, New Yorh City, N.Y. 19917. (Copyright, 1991)
News in Brief
Bobby Hannor, 22^of 199 First told Pontiac police this morning that be was robbed of a $104.45 check and 91 in cadi by assailants near the end of Tasmania.
Fur* valued at 3211 were reported stolen yesterday, afternoon from Waite’s Department Store, 70 N. Saginaw.
Pontiac police are Isveetigat-ing theft of 20 batteries, valued at 3260, from Pontiac Scrap, 135 $ranch.
ere kept retail sales mounting.
At yeirend some government officials were worrying more about blocking the'threat of. inflation than ritont stimulating a civilian economy that could con-, flkt with o military <xta.\ Government also collided'with me industries over its guidelines on wages and price*.'The White House monitored the steel wage talks. It talked of releasing tons of aluminum and copper and wheat from ilp strategic stockpiles, and price hikes ' in the metals were quickly rescinded. But all through the business world there was uneasiness lest this foreshadowed more controls over wage and prices than did the guidelines by themselves.
'-ft ft ft *
A clash over easy money vs. dear money enlivened the final month of the year. The Federal. Reserve Board raised basic interest rates, saying it feared the economy would overheat and touch off a boom with inflation. The White House deplored this, saying economic expansion still needed cheaper money and lots of credit.
All of the year’s events had their moments of reaction by the stock market. January saw stock prices setting a record high. Domestic and internation- ■ al crises set prices back* for a time and then they hit a new high in'May only to slide badly through June.
PRICES HIGHER Prices made still higher , ground in October, again in'November^ and' after much seesawing managed a record high at Christmas time.
Volume of trading was terrific mudi of the. year, adding to the fears at yearend that speculative forces might be at work — one of the ingredients of past^k booms and busts. ^ ftjjjft'- ft ■
So the year drew to a close with most Americans prosperous, many nervous, a majority. confident, but with alnlo8t no one dead sure he had Wl the answers.
Falling Limb Lot of Trouble
ST. JOSEPH, Mo. (AP) - A falling tree limb in a residential area here involved four different city departments.
.. : ft	ft	ft
The limb crashed through a city light wire starting a small fire. The fire department was called.
Police stood guard until the firemen arrived.
ft	★	ft
The city lighting department was called to repahr.the broken line, and the city street department was called to sweep up the debris.
Business Notes
Police News on Computer
CHATTANOOGA, Tenn. UD -Information in the Chattanooga Police Department’s new central records bureau, ranges from wanted criminals to “who has btan^ bitten by a dog today.”
The department was the first in Tennessee to adopt the new system of police reporting and records keeping recommended by the International Association of Chiefs of Police.
Each complaint called in to the police station is recorded on punched computer cards in the central information center.
Information on aqy complaint uf records of crimes can be given almost instantly to querying -officers.
A 38-year-old B1 o o m f i e Ld Township man has been named to the. board of directors of the< Birmingham-Bloorofieldf Bank.
The appoint-l
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ADAMS
F. Adams, 61391 Dakota Circle, executive vf ee president of MacM anui,
John & Adams, was announced yesterday by bank officials.
John McCarthy uf 5506 Farmers Lane, Bloomfield Township has been named general sales manager of radio station WJR, Detroit He previously held similar posts for radio stations in Albany, N.Y., and Louisville,
Ky- ■ > ..
Orville Proksch, 1113 Portsmouth, Avon Township, has been appointed sales manager of. the Ray 4)-’-Ne i 1 Realty firm, 3520 Lake, a ter ford Township. PROKSCH Proksch joined the O’Neil staff in 1169.
Covered Bridges Few
FRANKFORT, Ky. (I) — Only II covered bridges remain in Kentucky, mostfn the Bluegrass
Dog Trained to Take Pill
ACTION, Ind. OR - Boots, a small dog beldhging to Mr. and Mrs. Duane Julius, takes his own medicine while they are at work.
There was no one to give Boots his digitalis (rill at noon, so Julius trained his dog to ex;„ pect a marshmallow promptly at that time.
Then be devised a dock mechanism to open the lid of box. Hoots is there when the dock strikes, ready for his pill concealed in the marshmallow.
Savings Association Hikes interest Rate
A new higher earning rata on savings has been announced by Capitol Savings and Loan Asso-ciation, 75 W. Huron. ~
Beginning tomorrow,' funds will earn 4.4 per cent compounded quarterly compared with the prerious rate of 4 JS per cent *	.★ ft
In wMng the announcement, lifford W. McKibbin, president of vne association, gdd that the continued healthy growth of the nation’s ecnmty and the steady increase in savings accounts and earnings have made the rate m-, possible.
THE PONTIAC PfrESS, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 31, I9ti5
—-Television PrograTns—,
Plograms furnished by staffoi* listed to felt cdumn are subject to change without notice n 3-WJWC-TV, 4—WWJ-TV, 7-rWXYMV, t-CKLW-TV, 80-WKSD-TV, 94-WTVS	**"
FRIDAY EVENING f:M (2) News, Weather, Sports
(4) East - West Shrine Game (In Progress)
(7) Movie: "A, Thousand and One Nights” (In
(9) Dennis the Menace (M) Soupy Sales (91) Big Picture 8:25 (7) Sports 9:39 (S) Network News (7) News
(9) Marshal Dillon (SO) Superman (89) Science Is Fun 9:45 (7) Network News
(38) Christopher Program 7:91 (2) (Color) Mr. Magoo (7) Car 84
(9) Movie: “The Monte Carlo Story” (1967) Marlene Dietrich, Vittorio De Sica, Arthur O’Coonell (SO) Little Rascals tSO) History of Negro People
7:10 (SO) Sports Desk i 7:90 (9) Wild, Wild West
(4) (Color) Camp Runa-muck
. (7) (Color) Flintstones (SO) (Color) American West
(69) French Chef 1:00 (4) (Color) Hank (7) (Color) Tammy (89) Continental C om ment
8:90 (1) (Color) Hogan’s Heroes
(4) (Color special) Orange Bowl Parade (7) Addams Family (80) Minnesota Football (58) Doctors Only 9:90.(2) (Color) Gomer Pyle (7) Honey West (9) Telescope
« (SO) Desilu Playhouse „ 0:90 (2) Smothers Brothers (4) (Color) Mr. Roberts (7) (Color) Farmer’s Daughter (9) Star Route (86) Festival of the Arts 19:09 (2) TrMls of O’Brien "(4) (Color) Man From - U.N.C.L.E.
■„.*	(7) Jimmy Dean
. (9) Tommy Hunter (50) Merv Griffin 10:90 (9) Provincial Affairs 10:41 (9) Roy Petty 11:00 (2) (4) (7) (9) News, Weather, Sports 11:10 (9) (Special) itfsw Year’s Message
11:19 (2) (Special) Scene 2 (4) (Color) Johmy Car-son
(7) (Special) Guy Lombardo
(9) (Special) Swingin' Year
(SO) Wells Fargo '
12:15 (2) Cathedral of Tomorrow
1:00 (4) Beat the Champ (7) News
1:15 (7) (Color) Movie: “Unde Was a. Vampire’ (1961) Renato Rascel 1:29 (4) News, Weather 2:10 (7) All-Night Show 4:11 (2) News, Weather.
SATURDAY MORNING 6:10 (2) News .
6:15 (2) Farm Scene 9:99 (2) International Zone (7) Americans at Work 8:45 (7) Captain Kangaroo (4) Country Living (7) Changing Earth 7:99 (4) Bozo the Clown (7) Junior Sports Chib 8:00 (2) Happyland
(4) Milky’s Party Time (7) Crusade for Christ 8:80 (7) House of Fashion 8:00 (2) Heckle and Jeckle (4) Jetsons
TV Features
Bowl Galas, Games
By United Press International
ORANGE BOWL PARADE, 8:90 pjn. (4) Lome Greene narrates highlights of Miami's King Orange Jamboree. (Program.is repeated at 10:90 a.m. Saturday.)
MAN^FROM U.N.C.L.E., 10:00 p.m. (2) Claude Akins plays voodoo-practicing dictator who has captured resistance leader U.N.CJL.E. wants freed. ,
GUY LOMBARDO, 11:99 p.m. (7) Guy Lombardo and his Royal Canadians ring in new year at tlbtel Roosevelt
SWINGIN’ YEAR, 11:20 pjn. (9) Robin Seymour hosts New Year’s Eve party featuring top tunes of past year; the Supremes appear in pesson.
SATURDAY
JUNIOR SPORTS CLUB, 7:30 a.m. (7) Walled Lake, High School wrestling team is featured.
COTTON BOWL PARADE, 10:90 a.m. (2) Allen L_____
and Marilyn Van Derbur narrate this telecast of para in Dallas.	r
rose Parade, ii:3o ejn.- (2) (4) wait grand marshal for 77th annual Tournament of rade telecast from Pasadena, Calif.
COTTON BOWL, 1:45 pm. (2) Arkansas vs.
State. ■
SUGAR BOWL, l:4S p.m. (4) Missouri vs. jfaorida.
ROSE BOWL, 4:45 pm. (4) Michigan StaM vs. UCLA.
(7) Clutch Cargo'
9:30 (2) Tennessee Tuxedo (4) Atom Ant.
(7) Courageous Cit * 10:00 (2) Mighty Mouse (4)SacrefSquirrel (7) Porky Pig (9) Wizard of Oz 19:30 (2) (Special) Cotton Bowl Parade	*».
(4) (Special) Orange Bowl Parade-(7) Beatles (9) Hawkeye 11:00 (7) Casper (9) Wrestling :
11:90 (2) (4) (Special) Rose (S^Mqgilla Gorilla AFTERNOON
12:00 (7) Bugs Bunny
(9) Nature of Things
Newspaperman Dies’
DETROIT (AP) — Funeral service will be held Monday at Lancaster, Wis., for Charles C. Weber, a newspaperman for 25 years and Detroit Free Press suffer since 1946.
Weber, 47, died Wednesday.
2:30(7)
4:90 <9)
' (50) 4:30 (SO)
rrestling Curling Roller Skating Movie: “The,Rose Bov 1 Story” (1952)1 Vera MU », Natalie Wood |H Outlaws
Cowtown Rodeo High School Basket-
Redwood frees FacetBJ'Ax
Budget Bureau Puts Ceiling an Park Fund
WASHINGTON (UPI) - President Johnson’s economy hatchet may cut down plans for saving more of California's majestic redwood trees from the woodman’s axe.
The Budget Bureau, it was learned today, has put a ceiling — reported to be $80 million on the National Park Service’s spending plans for a proposed Redwood National Park.
The jiak Service’s mast plan, calling for a park, was estimat-cost about $129 million. :ver, spokesmen for the redwood limber in-have scoffed at die Service estimate and tied it would cost at least $299 million.
If the Budget Bureau holds fast to* the $50 million ceiling, the Park Service would probably be limited to a modification of the smallest of three park proposals it has advanced for consideration.
.. it *	★
That proposal, calling for a 61,851-acre park, iscertain to into trouble with conservationists aixl Rep. Jeffrey Cohe-lan, D-Calif., who has introduced legislation to provide for a 90,-000-acre park.
7km ACRES AFFECTED One effect of a $50-million ceiling on fee proposed national park might be elimination of more than 20,000 acres of virgin growth from the south unit of the proposed two-unit park;
Cohelan and some conservationists have insisted that a large stand of virgin redwoods on Redwood Creek south of fee existing Prairie Creek Redwoods State Park be included in fee national park. It if In this area, they say, feat fee world’s feUest trees — Including one towering 307 feet skyward -r- are to be found.
If fee Park Service is limited to the smallest of its three park plans, about 16,750 acres of virgin growth in fee Redwood Creek area would be cut out of the park.
4:45 (2) (4) Mi
5:00 (2) (7) .	(9)
5:30 (2)
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Flying Fisherman . (Special) Rose Bowl: in State vs. UCLA Ranger Vide World of Sports ! Jeu tenant 3 tecisions
WJM760) WXYZfl 270) OaWfOOO) WWJ(950)
FRIDAY BVRNINO
WWJ, Nan, Sport,
CKLW, Nows, Music WJBK, TIN Croon Hornot WCAR, Now*. Joo Bocorollo WXYZ. Nows WFON, Nows. Sports WHFI, Undo Joy Show «:!•—WJBK, Nows
WWJ, Phono Opinion
Wfr NdM. Sports WJBK, Fulton Lowit Jr. JiSB-WXYZ. |« Morion WJBK, News, Music, Spar
Fi, Dinner Concert
till-WXYZ, Loo A Music, »■—
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Celeb ra tors May Stay 68 Straight Hours
HOBOKEN, N.J. (AP) - For those hardy souls looking to celebrate an extended New Year’s Eve, Hoboken is fee spot.
* ★ • *
The city’s Alcoholic Beverage Commission announced it has given permission to the 200 taverns here to stay open for 68 straight hours, from 8 a.m. today to 2 a.m. Monday. -
— Radio Programs-
WCABQ130) WPQN04A0) VY1Hgl480|¥l(t4F|illllft4.1^
WWJ Phono Opinion' SiM-WJR, Nows, Music WWJ, Nows, Emphasis,
iCtoe—wxyz, Doonv Toy lor wow
MllB-WJR, Nows, KoloMO-ll:W-WWJ, NCOM Final WJR, NMS JPMB WCARV Rx, Health Hill—wcar, Ron Rom WJR. MMK WWJ, OMirniBM SATURDAY MORNING
WWJ, Nows, Form
. Nor WJBK, WFON,
ltd—WJR, ltd—WJR, Music tiW WWJ, Nows, Monitor WCAR, Nows, Jock Sanders WJR. Nows, Music WHFI, Unplc Joy — t:to—CKLW, Nows, Joo Von 10:10—WXYZ, Stove Lundy, Musk. Nows ■WHFI, SHI Boric,
MM|C' iitoo—wjr. Nows, Spam,
WFON, News, Bon Jolw WCAR, NOWS, BIN Dob
whfi, an a km
WJBK, Ooorgo Totoo CKLW, MB* Joo VaR WXYZ. Nows, Musk ltd—WJR, Norm
CKLW, Noon, Dave Shafer
3:00—WCAR, NOWS, SOCOrMto
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WASHINGTON (UPI) - A Navy review board tub refused; to act -on a petition which would have given an honorable Marine Corps discharge to presidential assassin Lee Harvey Oswald, it was learned yesterday. ^
The board said fee petition, .submitted by Oswald’s mother, presented no new evidence. Oswald’s earlier attempt to have his 1959 Marine Corps discharge changed from undesirable to honorable was also turned down.
• * dr ★
The Navy said the latest petition has been sent to the board of corrections of naval records which is now assembling all information on fee case and will
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55										60		-21
Says	'People'Song
Bid "Hello,	Dolly
By EARL WILSON
NEW YORK — Composer Julie Styne told me a year ago that fee “Funny Girl” hit, “People Who Need People,” would eventually be a bigger stahdard than Jerry Herman’s “Hello, Dolly!" — which at fee time seemed a bit sacrilegious.
But after Mimi Hines’ successful singing, of “People” when she took over the Barbri Streisand role, Styne repeated it more strongly “ ’Dolly’ is one of time songs which reminds you of so many other songs. But ‘Peo*
| pie’ is a first-time song. Twenty years from I now when we talk about fee great songs, nobody is going to play ‘Mairzy Doats.’ Id my opinion, ‘Hello Dolly!’ is in fee same cate-
WILSON gory as ‘Mairzy Doats’—it’s a good novelty song.”
Is Jack Carter’s opening at the Americana Royal Box will be long remembered. His bustaceous glamour girl singer Marlene made one ringsider very angry by flirting with him to the point that she blew her breath on Ms glasses and fogged them. Jack also had some lines that startled me, such as: “The Pope c go to California because he wasn’t sure he could get an audience wife Sinatra.”	...
Spoofing Robert Goulet’s stiff-legged walk, Carter said, “Sir Lancelot... he doesn’t dancelot. . . because he’s got nut la his paneffot.” Carter privately told me feat he’s trying to make up wife his wife Paula Stewart who’s expecting in Hollywood . . . “I’ve been a naughty boy,” he said. “Even when married, I’ve always had one foot out fee door.”.
★. Ik ★
Well, feat’s the way it’s done, you -know . . . Henry Ford and his divorced wife, Anne McDonnell Ford, were on the receiving line .. . while his present wife, Christina Ford, was off in another section of the big pre-nuptial party at Debnonico’ with friends... at the $25,000 shindig preceding dfr. Anne Ford’ marriage to stock broker Giancario Uzielli.
* * *
THE MIDNIGHT EARL ...
Jack LenunfMi’s wanted to play the dallying dentist in fee 'Cactus Flower” movie — but Columbia can’t film it for another four years ... Best performance in “The Chase” won’t be seen (where one of the stars got belted for making a pass at another star) ... The White House switchboard no longer accepts calls for Chef Reno Verdon, who’s quitting. (The Loew’s hotel chain made him a fat, firm offer).
WISH FD SAID THAT: Buying a new dress for your wife is like buying a new car-fee base price may be less than the accessories.	*	.
REMEMBERED QUOTE: “Love your enemies — and they’ll wonder what kind of a deal you’re trying to pull.”-Quote.
EARL’S PEARLS: The current' trend in women’s dresses makes you wonder where they’ll be up to next.
The H’wood wife whose husband didn’t buy her what she wanted for Christinas doesn’t exchange the gift—she exchanges the husband. That’s earl, brother.
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