Effect of Passing of Kowalski Eyed DETROIT W - The body of Joseph J. Kowalski, the House Democratic leader who died Saturday, lay in state today while leaders in both parties ponder the political implications of his passing. The death of the Detroit Democrat ends the 55-55 Republican Democrat deadlock in the house and shifts a one-vote edge into the hands of the GOP. The shift could be of major sipifi-cance in* the coming weeks when Cong Casualties High in Attack on U.S. Troops BAU BANG, Vietnam (iP) - Two crack Vietcong batallions hurled themselves at a smaller, untried American armored unit today but were smashed in a dazzling display of American firepower and maneuverability. ★ ★ ★ Three Americans were killed, but the enemy left 223 bodies on the battlefield. One senior American commander said the Vietcong may have had more than 500 dead and wounded. the estimated 750 Communists apparently gambled on a lightning strike that would quickly overrun the 300 Americans and their armor and artillery position 31 miles north of Saigon. But a mass grave dug by a bulldozer was the fate of scores ^o rushed the U.S. 9th Division positions moments after a mortar attack lifted. ★ ★ ★ The communists screamed “Americans die” and Vietnamese battle cries as they streamed out of the nearby woods. American commanders shouted commands as their men fought like pioneers of, a frontier wagon train under Indian attack. U.S. planes and ground reinforcements turned the tide. Sharp Escalation o mier GUAM (AP) — President Johnson’s avowed intent to focus his Guam con-feroice on foe works of peace clashed today with a call by Premier Nguyen Cao Ky t(x a sharp escalation of foe Vietnam war. Johnson also got a report from his own close advisers that foe Communists are doing some escalating of their own. At the first formal conference session, atop the highest hill on this damp tropical island, Ky jn his opening public statement questioned whether foe time had come for the United States to bomb Hanoi, block foe harbor at Haiphong and expand the war Into Laos and Cambodia. The public expressions of such questions made it apparent that Ky thinks the United States should do all those things. But both Secretary of State Dean Rusk and Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara, meeting with newsmen after foe sessi repeatedly that there was no ( of escalation. ★ ★ ★ Rusk contended that Ky raised his questions only in foe context that Hanoi is unwilling to sepk peace. MORE INTENSE However, both McNamara and Gen. William C. Westmoreland, the U.S. commander in Vietnam, said Johnson was told that the fighting in South Vietnam is becoming more intense and the Communists are stepping up the tempo of their offensive operations. McNamara said the chief executive’s military advisers reported: “The tempo of the war Has increased' significantly in recent weeks but, despite this fact, they biMieve foe trend bf foe war is in our favor.” He said the Communists are using new weapons—rockets and bigger mortars— and are making ah unsuccessful effort “to seize foe initiative.” “The enemy is by no means beaten,” said the defense chief, “but he is no longer capable of winning a military victory.” NO SPECIFICS Rusk, McNamara and Westmoreland said several times that the afternoon of talk produced no discussion of sending more American troops to Vietnam — above those already planned—or about specific military measures. Rusk made one announcement to newsmen: He said Johnson will nominate Henry Cabot Lodge, who is resigning as ambassador to Saigon, to be a full-time ambassador at Imge. ★ ★ ★ In that^'position he will change places wifo foe Stale Department’s top troubleshooter, Ellsworth Bunker, who is replacing him in Saigon. Rusk said the emphasis in the first round of talks was on the civilian side-political processes, pacification, economic matters. He said talk of military affairs was conffopd to a brief report. He stressed twice that, as he sees it, the government of South Vietnam is in full accord with the search for peace. GATHERING ON GUAM—President Johnson salutes as the national anthem Is played after his arrival yesterday at the Guam Airport. With him is South Vietnamese Premier Nguyen Cao Ky, who arrived shortly after the President. The two leaders later went to naval headquarters to begin talks on Vietnam. the House will handle one of the major partisian issues of this legislative session — Gov. Romney’s tax bills. The GOP already controls the Senate by a narrow margin. Republican control of the House, too, could allow Romney’s proposals to squeeze through if partyline votes shape up. * ★ ★ Most political observers say that at this point party-line votes seem likely on the tax bills, BRAIN HEMORRHAGE Kowalski, 59, died of a brain hemorrhage he suffered Thursday during a Democratic leadership conference in his Lansing office. A House member present when Kowalski was stricken said the former House Speaker (1965-66) slipped into nneon-sciousness almost immediately. Kowalski never came out of the coma. ★ ★ ★ Elected in D e t r o 11 ’ s 19th District, Kowalski had served in the House since 1949, winning 10 successive terms. FLOOR LEADER He was first named Democratic floor leader in 1959. The body was in state at Ted C. Sullivan Funeral Home in Detroit. Funeral services were set for tomorrow, with burial to follow Wednesday in Milwaukee, Wis., home town of his wife. The death of Kowalski broyght words of praise and respect for the lawmaker. ‘KNEW HIS CAUSES’ Romney called him a dedicated public servant who “knew his causes and fought relentlessly for them.” ★ * ★ Former Gov. G. Mennen Williams said: “May God give us more men like him.” > * * • House Speaker Robert E. Waldron of Grosse Pointe said the logs of Kowalski will be “keraly felt by ail of us in the No Arsenic Is Found in Milk Tests conducted this morning by the State Department of Agriculture Dairy Division showed no trace of arsenic in milk stored at the Michigan Milk Producers Association (MMPA) Depot in Imlay City. A hold order on the milk had gone out following a tip last night to tl)e Detroit Police, Department that the milk had been ARCHIE M. BARNETT City Merchant Is Dead at 68 The poisoning tip was in advance of a series of three explosions last night at foe homes of MMPA truck drivers. The incidents were the latest in a 6-day-old milk holdout begun last week by the National Farmers Organization (NFO) across a 25-state area. , ★ * * Expressed aim of the NFO strike is a Ijioost in milk prices — two cents a quart. Officers of the Lapeer State Police post are investigating three suspected dynamite explosions in the Imlay-Brown City area. Reports were received from Edwin Martus, 6329 Burnside, Brown City, and Robert Jurn, 411 Wheeling, Imlay City, of explosions in their front yards during the night. A third explosion was reported by Ervin Radelt, 7543 Ross, south of Imlay ' City, who said foe exptosive had gone off in the roadway in front of his home. * ★ w All three men are drivers for the MMPA, according to police. No injuries were reported, though foe blast at the Jurn home was of such force to spread glass from two front windows inside and outside the home. State Police Cpl. Wilbur Bond reported some of the glass hit a crib inside the home in which an infant was sleeping. The child was not hurt. This latest episode of violence in a strike which has already seen a number of gunshot cases has prompted attorneys for Glenn Lake of North Branch, president of the MMPA, io file suit in Ingram County Court. (Continued on Page A-2, Col. 5) " if.Z .. Long-time downtown Pontiac merchant Archie M. Barnett, 68, died today after a one-month illness. * * ★ He had been associated with his brother Sidney in Barnett’s Men’s Wear, 150 N. Saginaw. His body is at the Kaufman Funeral Home, Southfield. Barnett, of 2741 Woodward, Bloomfield Hills, was a life member of the Elks Lodge 810, Roosevelt Lodge 510, F. & A.M., and Temple Beth Jacob. Surviving are his wife Laura; a daughter, Mrs. Stuart Winkelman of Port Huron; a son, William of Chicago; and three grandchildren. ★ ★ ★ Also surviving are three brothers, Sidney of Pontiac, Maurice of Bloomfield Hills and Marvin of Birmingham, and six sisters, Mrs. Robert Moore of Pontiac, Mrs. Samuel Silver and Mrs. Samuel Babcock, both of Huntington Woods, and Mrs. Samuel Magidsohn, Mrs. Edward Rosenberg and Mrs. David Gold-farb, all of Flint. Poison Prevention Week Focuses on Child Deaths By L. GARY THORNE Asst. City Editor-Suburban Prevention—foe best treatment! This is the advice reiterated this week —National Poison Prevention Week — by both medical and legal authorities in combatting accidental poisonings, which last year accounted for more than 2,(KK) deaths across the country. The Pontiac area recorded one poisoning death last year, according to the ! Poison Control Center at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital. The poison center’s records reflect an upward trend in accidental poisonings, which largely affect children under 5 years of age. . In 1966, the St. Joseph center treated 568 cases, as compared with 438 in 1965 —an increase of approximately 30 per cent. Telephone Inquiries also showed an Increase last year, jumping from 907 in 1965 to 1,274. According to clerk Miss Eleanor Zimmerman, the last two years have seen a new “^isoning” inqui^. “We get one or two calls a week now on birth control pills,” Miss Zimmerman said. She added that these are not poison except in a large quantity. POISON CONTROL CENTER The local poison control center was established at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital in 1957. Dr. Robert Mason, current director, has been the head of the center since its founding. Aspirin remains as the most common cause of childhood poisonings. The federal government, however, is slated to take steps to help combat the problem. (Continued on Page A-2, Col. 3) In Today's Press Area News Rochester civic leader profiled; “Like school” program launched in Highland. — PAGE C-1. New Comic Strip A typical businesswoman Robin Malone uses wealth 'to help mankind — PAGE C-6. Allergy Series .........C-10 Area News ..............iC-1 Astrology ..............(C-6 Bridge . ........ Crossword Puzzle . Comics ............... C-6 Editorials ..............A-8 Markets .............. C-9 Obituaries .. ........ . . D-5 Sports .............D-1—D-4 Theaters ................C-8 TV-Radi%Pn»graiis ......D-11 WQson, Eu-1 . ..........D-11 Wonien’i Pages . . It's Been a Whale of a Winter! Hang on. Only one more day and winter gives way to spring. And what a winter! With heavy snow and freezing drizzle predicted as a finale, winter’s snow total to date chalks up a muscle aching 55% inches as compared to last year’s total of 23% inches. It all began Nov. 1 when the weatherman predicted the first snow flurries of the season. Normally, a few lacy flakes float lazily earthward, melting as they hit the still warm ground. This year, that innocuous prediction turned into a blizzard that dumped seven inches of snow in two days. As If warning\pintiac area r^idents, that this year Winter meant bpsiness, November again \i1outed the countryside with a six-inch howling storm, snarling traffic, snapping electric wires and closing mimy area schools. mRZERO December Christmas shoppers won’t forget the near-zero terajperatures which launched the Yule shopping season. The nose-nipping cold gave way to sleet, fog and rain. But people weren’t discouraged as five more inches of snow carpeted the ground practically insur- ing the fellow with the white beard of smooth sledding. Then came New Year’s Day, marked with sleet and flurries, making party revelers happy to stay home and recuperate from the night before. Life was serene as it progressed to- More Snow? What a Way to Go! Looks like spring will come in wearing a mantle of white as the U.S. Weather Bureau predicts a two-to-four-inch snowfall by tonight. Hazardous driving warnings are in effect for foe| area, awaiting the storm which slummed into Michigan early today. ★ ★ *. . The snow is expected to become mixed with riain by late afternoon. Lows toniidit will range in the low 30s. The Boow, sleet and rain will glVe way “T to a partial clearing of skies tomorrow with little temperature change. Spring will! be a little kinder Wednesday as sunshine and higher temperatures brighten the agenda. 100 jPER CENT Winds are 8 to 16 miles swinging |rom the southeast to' east. Precipitation ^ob-ability today and tonight measures 6.00 per cent. Low temperature reading in downtown Pontiac registered 31 prior to 8 a.m. By 2 p.m. it warmed to 32. ■<* ward the warmer days of spring punctuated by flurries, sleet and fog. 10-INCH SNOWFAIX That is untii Jan. 26, when a 10-inch snowfall paralyzed traffic and foe county. Employes were marooned, police were shuttiing emergency cases to the hos-pitais and snowmobiles were the accepted method of travel. In February, foe local ^oundhog wouldn’t even get up for his annual interview. He’d had it as had most area residents. But 01’ Man Winter wasn’t about to give up. He dumped 12V4 inches more snow and sent February temperatures plunging to a minus-8 for two days. 1 He tempted\foe wintw-ityeary with a \few days of balmy temperatures as March skipped in like a lamb but couldn’t resist getting in a few last licks as he prepared to depart in a flurry of hazardous driving warnings and fre^g drizzle. FRANK W. STEERE Funeral Slated for Former Exec Service for Waterford Township industrialist Frank W. Steere, who died Friday at the age of 82, will be at 1:30 p.fh. , Wednesday at the Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home. Burial will be in White Chapel Memorial bemetery, 'Troy. ★ ★ ★ SteerCj form# president of Steere En-gineerinj^ Co., maintained a large estate as a wildlife sanctuary for many years. He offered it to the township for a civic center several years ago, but withdrew foe offer when it was not accepted. Steere served as chief of foe industrial division of foe Detroit Ordnance District during World War n. Surviving are two sons, Frank W. Jr. of Akron, Ohio, and Morris R. of Grand Rapids; a daughter, Mrs. James Ritchie of Royal Oak; a brother; a aster; and eight grandchildren. Steere of 4230 S. Shore, Waterford Township, graduated from foe University of Michigan in_ l9l^. Two years later he organized foe Steere En^eer-ing Co... He purchased foe Lloyd Construction Co. and later foe Owosso Boilw Works, merging them all into foe Steere Engineering Co. wifo main offices in General Motors Building, Detroit. (Continued on Page ^A, Col. 2) LI’L ONES “Fate is against us. Hie only kids in the neighborhood who have color television are girls.” ik A—2 THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, MARCH 20, 1967 Curfew Is Ordered in African Violence DJIBOUTI, French Somaliland, (AP) — French Gov. Louis Saget ordered a dusk to dawn curfew in the African sector of Djibouti today following a savage street battle over Sunday’s vote to keep Uiis territwy linked to France. Six Africans were killed and 30 wounded. hi, * In a broadcast, Saget said he had authorized security forces to shocrt curfew breakers on sight The IJrench police and army, reinforced by 300 French para- Somalis who lacked identity troops flown in today, main- papers were rounded up and tained an iron hold On Somali carted off in military tnu^. District 6, the teeming shanty-i Leaders of the Proindepen-town which was the center of dence Popular Movement party, the violence. including its president, Moussa The entire African quarter ,Wris, and political secretary-was sealed off and surrounded general, Hassan Gouled, were by barbed wire entanglements, detained. SAIGON (AP) - South Vietnam’s military leaders Sunday nig^t Slaved a draft constitution for the counby without chancing it, apparently clearir^ the way for a return to civilian tro<^, guard mobile units arid hours of the announcement that police. ithc referendum mi the future of A house-to-house search was R’ench colony in Africa carried out for arms. Scores of'had resulted in victory for yot- ----------ers opposing independence. Angry mobs stoned police patrols moving through the Somali district, which had been cordoned off with barbed wire. The police fled for their lives. Crowds of Somali men and women stood behind barricades i flung across narrdw streets and alleys, hurling abuse at army reinforcements. A helicqrter circled overhead, dropping Boise bombs into die mob. Cars were set afire and drums of gasoline spilled on the street Return to Civilian Rulers Appears Cleared in S. Viet ished its job a week ahead of schedule at Premier Nguyen Cao Ky’s request so he could take the completed document with him to show President Johnson during their current meeting on Guam. The new constitution, unanimously aniroved Saturday by the Mmstituent assemt \ drafted it. yrill become law when it is given final approval by the ruling armed ^ council. The leaders’ action apparently makes final approval certain. ★ ★ ★ Ibe constitution must be promulgated by May 3 and provides for election of a civilian president and vice president within six months after that. National elections for a two-house assembly are .to follow within a year. ★ ★ w The 117-member assembly was elected last September to work on the document, and fin- Firm's Truck Used for Loot . Bloomfield Township police today are investigating the bredc-in of a trucking fim in which about $10,000 in goods were carted away in a van truck belonging to the company. niieves broke into Trudc Unes, bic., 1410 Ftaiik-lin, sometime yesterday, police said. ★ ★ They took oftioe equipment. Including a calculator, billing machine and typewriters, took items from the freight dock, such as televisions and a color TV-stereo, police said. ★ w ★ The stolen goods were loaded on a truck and removed from the premises. The empty vehicle was found about three blocks away, according to police. DETROIT (AP) - Funeral Slated for Former Exec ______________ More and,when making a call, that means!telephone trunk lines in the “ m an attempt to form a wall of more telephone users are getting the trunk line is being fully used area, and the company had . , irround^ valuable flames against the Frenchmen, “beep - beep - beep” instead of and can’t handle'any more calls, planned a 5 per cent increase ............................................................ state.” said Miles Welter, Mich.| But last year the cempany had.lfd devices and access to wires, igan B^’s plant extension en-|to order 11,000 mbre trunk-Hnesj-SOIL DIFFICULTIES gineer. ‘More than half of that more than double the usual rate Tj,g fu-mg g^d that in some Then rocks began to fly; |“ri|»g-ring-ring” when they call Three armored cars foUowed|in me Detroit nletropolitan area by steel-helmeted troops Why? charged the barricades, firing!^ Heavy traffic W jamming the machine guns and throwing gre- circuits in the nation’s fifth largest city. Sgre- nades and tear gas bombs. The Somalis fled into a maze of alleys that lace the teeming shanty town. (Continued From Page One) Field offices were located in New York, Boston and San Francisco. The entire Steere business was sold to the Semet Solvey Engineering Co., a subsidiary of the Allied Chemical and Dye Co. about 1926. ★ * ★ Steere remained with the company as a consultant until 1933 when he moved with his family from Scarsdale, N Y. to his 250-acre Watkins lAike farm where he designed and patented a fOr- BARBED WIRE BARRICADE — French Foreign Legion troops are jeered by Somalis as they set up barbed wire barricades in Djibouti, French Somhliland’s capital, yesterday. The soldiers blocked off the Somali area of the city following a flare-up of violence after yesterday’s referendum resulted in a decision tq keep the tiny territory linked to France. Heavy Load Jams Detroil Phone Circuits Birmingharn Area News .Report Due on Burial ^ of Phone, Power Lines BIRMINGHAM ^ The City health dub, etc., and desires an Commission will receive a re- agreement with the dty to ob-pwt at its 8 p.m. meeting ^ tain additional inking in the ni^t on the exposes and dim- Edgewodd, Grlmt and Floyd culty invdlved In placing over- area. -head power and phone lines be-i The Y/states its wUhngness low ground, ^ to piy Ms diare for the facili- * ■. *'• ■ * ties ^di would also be used The commissioq recpioted the by/partidpants in James Park companies ta . supply me esti-haictivities. mates last November. Tim phone company said to bmy lines in the business d^rlct alMie would cost $250,OQO, with the city’s share put a( $180,000. Fot the entire city to have the company report states. The power ciBftpany ^SVe a rou|h estimate d between $800 and $500 for instigation for each lot, but added tire cost of reoverhead equipment vtould be extra. •k i In addition both firms pointed _ _ the walls of the wood and cardboard shacks, the troops pushed through the mile-square district snuffing out pockets of resistance. Armored cars cleared away the barricades. STRIKE A general strike called by the for service has outdistanced the company’s plans for expanding facilities, and despite the addition of lines, “We’re still considerably short of the trend,”, said one official of Michigan Bell Telephone Co. ‘Intrastate toll calls creased more in Michigan last year than in any otiier state in the Bell System,” said J(rfm S. is going right into the metropol-n area.” ‘But we still can’t meet the demand for service.” Welter said there are 100,000 ProiSdependenc. Party Move-|North, general traffm manager ment seemed largely effective. P«>Pto are Many Africans who turned upl“«"f telephones more than we for work were sent home for»P°“^‘* possibly anticipate, fear of reprisals. Most shops, INCREASE IN CALLS offices and bars were closed, “in Detroit alone we’re han-Queues formed outside (me of dUng an average of 12,038,000 few bakeries to remain v.niia n day. Last year we ran open. Poison Errors Hit Children AWARDED MEDAL He was named president of Michigan Gas Association in 1928 and was awarded the Beal Gold Medal hy the American Gas Institute. Steere collaborated with Dr. Raymond Bacon and Dr. William Hamor of the Melon Institute of Indnstrial Research of Plttshnrg, Pa., in their two-volume work on American fnels. Active in community affairs, Steere was president of the Pontiac Chamber of Commerce; ------ from 1937 to 1940, and was'overdoses. All medicines should named chairman of the disaster,1*® locked up, they point out. about 11,039,000.’ How can a caller tell when the trunk line he is on is overloaded with calls. If you hear a fast “beep-| beep”' when you dial a number;“^ ^ ^ that means the circuits are tied (Continued From Page One) Beginning July 1, a new n striction will be placed on tl. number of tablets contained in each children’s aspirin bottle. ★ ★ ★ The new regulation, according to authorities, will not eliminate of expansion. Pontiac’s facilities are considered some of the worst in the area. Test for Poison in Milk Proves to Be-Negafive ' (Continued From Page One) places, due to soil conditions, it is dlmost impossible to have underground facilities. Also both firms point out . Jut-eenstruction work ii .at a premium due to a large expansion program-In the area and that the work may have to wait years If the city decides >th ftos pledged full coop-> aifon*oh project. * ★ ★ The commission will also receive a request for additional The lawsuit asked for a national President Oran tJjySs^tTSaS permanent injunction to restrain ^ Staley and what were the NFO from interfering with | as 13 known Michigan the deliveiy and marketing of i members or leaders, milk. ' DATE NOT SET L^lditional facilities such swimming pool, handball courts, The NFO will have 20 days to answer the complaint filed with Ingham County Circuit Judge Marvin J. Salmon. A These included Donald Brown of Armada, William Mahaffey of Brown City and Alton Tolan of Columbiaville. • • * Dan Myers, information director for the association, said five up between you ahd the party you are calling. The “beep-beep” is faster than the busy signal. + * * If you have to wait a long time before getting a dial tone group of Americah Red Cross of Oakland County in 1951. k k k He was a member of First Presbyterian Church, Detroit Athletic Club, International Rotary Club and International Torch Club. The Weather Full (i.S. Weather Bureau4(^rt PONTIAC AND VICINITY - Wet snow mixed with rain and freezing drizzle hit the Great Lakes region early today, bringing hazardous driving warnings to the area and predictions of up to four inches of snow by tonight Tomorrow will be cloudy with possible snow flnrries and little change in temperatures. Wednesday outlook: Slightly warmer. Lownt temper(tur* priceOlnB I •.»).: At S «.m.: Wind Velocity l-U m.p.h. I Direction; SouttMeet - Eett I Sun Mts Mey at «;45 pirn. • Sun risei Tueidey it 1:31 Moon sets Tueidey at 4:11 e. Moon riiat today at 12:01 p. Weekend In Pontiac Weettwr: Cold Partly m ____________ -J 12 Detroit 11 a.m.........M Escanaba 31 II Duluth n 12 m...........34 Qr. Raplde » 34 Fort Worth 17 Ml '...33 Houghton 31 17 indianapolli 41 34 --------— 35 32 Kansas City 45 41 PRECAUTIONS Following is a list of precautions to provide the best treatment-prevention: • Lock your medicine cabinet and keep the key out of your "hlld’s reach. • Store medicine separately from other household products. Keep those products and medicine in their original containers. • Be sure tiiat all products are properly labeled, and read before using. . • Always turn on* the light when givingtir talungrBw^ftoe,' • Refer to medicines by their proper names. They are not dies. Clean out your medicine cabinet periodically. Get rid of old medicines by flushing them down the drain. • Be sure all poisons are clearly marked. • Screw bottle tops tightly on poisonous substances. • Keep poisons out of reach of childreh. Budget Bill hr OU Goes to Committee A bill appropriating $5.8 million for Oakland University in the next fiscal year has , a committee-in the State House ;ativ< of Representativ The measure, calling for the full amount requested by OU, was one of 13 bills for support of public colleges and universities which Rep. George F. Montgomery, D-Detroit, intro-oliiced. The total package is for $222.8 million. Combined budget requests of tiie state’s The lawsuit named the NFO as a voluntary organization witii headquarters , in Corning, Iowa, and active in Michigan although not licensed to do business in the state. Also named in the suit were 2nd Name Urged for Halloween WASHINGTON (UPI) - Sen. milk tank trucks have been Philip A. Hart, D-Mich., today punctured by buUets since Fri- proposed g i v i n g Halloween a day night, including one in Pontiac. No one has been injured in any of the incidents. Charles King of Owosso, an NFO spokesman, said there was no reason to blame the NFO for incidents. name -UNICEF Day.” ★ ★ He said the largest single mon- j ey-raising effort for the United' Nations children’s Fund is that of American youngsters who collect contributions at Halloween. Milk for Viet Orphans CapfaliTlssOes Draft Call for Cows DETROIT (AP) - An Army captain, worried about the .....................lAhaadMita. friend. Miss Mabel Russell of Detroit. ties were for $268 million. Gov. Romney cut the total to $214 million in his recommendations to the Legislature. k k k The governor cut to $4,612,136 the amount recommended for OU’s appropriation. dance of orphans in wai^tom Vietnam, has issued a draft call of his own: /Cows for active duty in Vun^Tau. ^e captain. Dr. Robert Watson of Henderson, Ky., has al-I ready succeeded in establishing most of the things a dairy t^-eration needs, except cows. His determination to c a r r y through on the project is & plified by the fact that he asked for an extension of his Vietnam tour of duty, which is to end in six months. Watson is stationed at the military hospital ai Vung Tau, a coastal town of 50,000 about 100 miles south of Saigon. His appeal came through a longtime What Lent Means to Me NATIONAL WEATHERr-Snow will fall tonight, says the weather bureau, in the upper Lakds region and the upper Mississippi Vhlley. Rain or rain mixed with snow is forecast for mndi of the central third of the nation and the northern ^eifle states. DR. 0. TATROE (EDITOR’S NOTE - This is the mhina series of articles tfirough Lent writfen by prominent Pontiac area citizens.) * : BY DR. DON 0. TATROE Supt. of Waterford Township Schools We live in the jet age. It’s a time of rapid tech-nologic8l.£|ip]iige y^en our values are challenged and our traditions ignored. WeVe tempted’'t()diy1^ilve'‘ . for “kicks”, to take the inunediate; thrill over the enduring, the valuable, the beautiful. Lent, however, offers a time for reflection when each of us should mirror hfS actions against the ideal self which he wants to become. It is a time for reassessment, for having another look at our life goals and our directi(xi and for renewing our conviction to do better, to be better, to serve better. Of groups, JayccSes, toe VFW, Girl Scouts and so on,” Miss Russell, 49, said, “all are Veiy intorested. They have to take it up with their boards before any definite action can be taken, , “This is a people-to-people project,” she said. “We haven’t asked the government for help, although we may eventually ask them to help transport the cows to Vung Tau. But so far toe project has no official support.” Protestant chaplains in the area of Vung Tau have chipped in $600 to help buy cows for the dairy project. Miss Russell said. The money will be deposited I a Detroit bank, she said, and parceled out when necessary to get coofrol of a cow. she said. “'They need about 150 cows and we don’t have nearly gbiMOney^ fop-ail of them.” Watson contacted Australian breeders for cows and their )rice was $800 ahead, she said, [n Singapore it was cheaper, but still between $400 and .. ‘Xm afegid R, we can’t get some donated, we won’t ever make it,” Miss Russell i ‘We have a long, long way to go.” Watson has gotten some of the grout^work laid. Road Toll Down I LANSING (UPI) - State Po-* lice provisional traffic figures' showed today that 304 persons! have been killed on Michigan’s streets and highways so far this jr^to41' ■ year, compar^ to 414 during the “But cows are expensive,” isame period in 1966. For Your EASTER PamVng ^ TONI Home Permanents Oentle, Regular and Super “^taflutor $2 sallan—Toni, with hidden body ... to hold the ihapa o( any hair tyle. Until 2 per parson. $3.75 TONI Uneuriy Permanent....... 43.39 $2.26 TONI’Uncurly ReHIle .........$1.33 SIMMS51 EASTER Pieturo Taking Costs Less When YoMBuyAII Your Photo Needs Here At SIMMS CAMERA DEPT. KODAK KODACOLOR Color Snapshot color film for snapshot cameras — 127-620-120 sizes for Easter pictures. Limit 5 rolls. PRE-PAID KODACOLOR Color Film Processing 12-Exp. Roll Mailer 23# Genuine 'TECHNICOLOR' for 12-exposura rolls of 127-620 ond inslamotic films. After taking your Easter pictures, just drop the mailer into the mailbox and alter processing they'll be returned to your home. Limit 10. Picture in 10-Seconds POUROID Swinger Camera Film Block 'n < film for the Polaroid Swinger Comero —snop your picture and see it developed ir 10 seconds. KOIUK ItlSTAMATtC 304 Fl^cube Camera Set With Electric-Eye $47.50 Value Drop In loading —no guessing with automatic electric eye lor perfect shots, fidsheube for 4 shots wHhout changing bulbs. Set has color film, batteries and floshcubes. $1 holds. Rattity and AC Operation REALTONE 1S-TRS. Portable Radio W9.95 Valud 14’* Model 1634 radio is on dxlro hi-powered portable. 16,tron$-sistors, AM broadcasts, oper^ otes on batteries or AC house current, l-yr. warrOnly. $] SIMMSIL THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, MARCH 20, 1967 A—8 Following Supreme Court Ruling Admitted Killers Free to Roam EDITORS—A who killed,justice, but concede that sud^ his mfe and five c/iiijfrcn leentjstatutes might be declared; by free m\New York r^pdly bf- |he highest court to unconsti-Cause his confession toas ifie tutional. ' basis of the case against hifn. \ A presidential crime commis-SimiJar instances around the sioa studied the problem and country have stirred a good deal seven of its 19 members said the of disquiet and controversy situation calls for amendment of about the Supreme Court decision which triggered them. Law enforcement officials are casting about for uxiys to modify the ruling. The scope of their efforts and the debate surrounding them, along with the far-reaching effects of One Supreme Court’s Miranda ruling, are reported in depth in the following article, based on a nationwide AP survey. By HAL COOPER NEW YORK (AP) - Some admitted killers and rapists walk the nation’s streets May because of a Supreme Court decision sharply limiting the use of cMifessions in trials. Police and prosecutors say they are handcuffed. ★ ★ ★ State legislators talk d ___ laws to redress the balance of the Constitution. A Shnate Judiciary subcommittee studying the implications of the courtls 5 to 4 decision last June 13 has received similar suggestions. But some lawy« witnrases opposed a constitutionar amendment, saying a future court might soften the ruling. OPPOSES ATTEMPT Atty. Gen. Ramsey Clark told i House Judiciary subcommittee he was against any such attempt to override the court. 'T doubt that anything serVe as a model tat state legislatures to Consider in revising criminal cOdM., ' * *1 * \ “We must not be faced with the spectacle of the acknowledged criminal freed merely because a policeman is unable to guess liow five judges of the Supreme Court will vote on a particular issue,’’ said Taft. Concern over the situation came to a focus on Feb. 20 when Jose Suarez, 22, a New York factory Worker, was set free despite his corifession that he slew his wife and five children. Acmss the country, there have been many similar cases had been violated and^^ laid down this set of Adelines; ' “The prosecution may pot use stateriidnts, whether exrailpato-ry or inculpatory, stemming from custodial interrogate^ of; the defendants unless it dunon-! strates the use (rf procedural; safeguards effective to secure the privilege against self-incrimination. ifc ★ ★ “Prior to any questioning, the person must be warned that he has a right to remain silent, that any statement he does make may be used as evidence against him, and that h^ has a right to the presence of an at- All This Week at Simms Complete WAtCH OVERHAUL L With PARTS and LAfOR at ttiis price ... ybOr watch will be dijasiembled. cleaned and oiled, # # — adiusted ond timed electron!- Mmmi colly, senulne foctory parts used and you got full year guarantee on labor. Parts include stems, crown, mainspring or balance stoff ot this price *Bodly rusted watches, outematics, chrenos and broken irnFmmmmFm ^ YOU Can WIN YOUR ^ EASTER HAM At SIMMS 32 hams to go yet-abMiutely free no purchase necessary, |o0 ask for Ham tickets everytime you're in SIMMS, Here’S Today’s FREE HAM WiNflERS . , . s ,.— ------------I iKHi w me presciife ui aii ai- involving murder, robbery, rape tpj.pey either retained or ap- or kidnaping. The Supreme Court decision came on an appeal by Ernest A. Miranda, 26. He was convicted for that at this time,’’ said Clark. Rep. Robert Taft Jr., R-Ohio, introduced in the House a bill authorizing the appointment of ‘masters of examination’’ to supervise interrogation of suspects by federal law enforcement agencies. He said it could' from a street in Phoenix, Ariz., driving her into the desert and raping her. GUIDELINES In ordering a new trial, the pointed” Justice Michael Kern of the New York State Supreme Court decreed that by these rules Suarez must go free. His confession was the only evidence against him. Said Justice Kern: “Even an animal sTich as this one, and I believe this is insulting to the URGENT! SHORT NOTICE! PERSIAN RUG AUCTION !■■■■■■■■■■■■■■ A NOTE ABOUT THE SALE ■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■ ! TMi It in «Mtmlly vnluiMt ami fint stock of Orltnlal and Paralan Carpats and Ruga to ba jS ind knotting In Intricato paltorni at dIHoranco Immodlatoly wittiln a groi y ovtlat of Orlantal and Paralan h Holiday Inn of America 1801 Telegraph Road, Pontiac, Michigan Monday, March 20, at 8 P. M. Sharp .Big ■ EXHIBITION: 6 p.m. Til tin;)e af sale. All Rugs ■ ■ orean viewfaryaurinspectian. Catolagsayailable. " IncHtdad In nut tMpmant In tmall and Inrga aim, alrlefly tha lintti gradat af KIRMAN, KISHAN, ■ORJALOO, lAROUK, tOKHARA, ISPAHAN, BAKHTIAR, MESHIO, APOHAN, BCLOUCHISTAN, HAMADAN, AROeilL, ROYAL AUBISSON (INDIAN), HBRIZ, BHOUMr TABRIZ, JOOSHieAN, KAZVIN, SHIRAZ NAIN, BTC. Co B. Charles SPECIALIST AUCTIONEERS 2550 Elmwood Ava., Kcnmorc 17, N.Y. — Phong U'^4-4433 TERMS: CASH, CHECK, or AMERICAN EXPRESS save ^20 here on ‘ARVIN’ Aspeaters Stereo consolette in walnut veneer cabinet $99.95 value 98 About $150 Value Complnte movie outfit to take Easter movies and movies of any event . . . Kodak M4 Super 8 camera with electric-eye, drop load, easy to operote and you get the Argus 838 projector with automatic threading plus the roll of Super 8 color film and batteries all in this deal. Use your credit card to take it home with you or $I holds in free layaway. majority opinion written by”"™*^ kingdom, must be pro-Chief Justice Earl Warren said^®^^®*^ all the legal safe- Miranda’s constitutional rights 4" FREED f' xjj makes one’s blood run Icold and any decent human being’s stomach turn to let a thing like this out on the street.” Suarez whs the fourth man freed in New York murder i cases since the beginning of 1967; on the ground that they had not | SI been advised of their right to' counsei before they confessed. I I*?I In Miami, Fla., a Dade Coun-| Ity jail guard, Harold Algar, and ^ ;bail bondsman Earl Mixon went tree on charges of helping an accused bank robber, George LeMay, escape jail. Their as-|serted confessions were ruled to f be inadmissible. I ★ ★ ★ % In Los Angeles, Don C. Robin-son, 22, accused of killing a bar-pi tender in 1962, was acquitted on I a retrial last July 12 after the ^ Supreme Court overturned his m original conviction. Judge Adolf m Alexander, who presided at the ^ retrial, told the jury: “Y-ou acted on facts as presented to you. But I would like to tell you that 'i' this defendant is a confessed killer. His confession could not be used because of decisions of 4 the Supreme Court of the United States.” ★ ★ ★ ” In January, the case against Harry A. Solberg, 21, charged with slaying a 31-year-old Connecticut housewife, collapsed when the judge threw out an incriminating statement claimed to have been made to the police. NOT FUIXY ADVISED The court said Solberg had been advised of his right to counsel, but not that the state would provide one if required. On March 16, 1966, Paul Wightman, 71, a clerk at a hotel on the edge of Seattle’s skid row, was shot and killed in a $30-robbery. Four days later Harry Laverne Van Devanter,, 21, was arrested. ★ * * Police said he made a voluntary statement admitting the shooting and told them where to find the pistol. On June 30, citing the Miranda guidelines, a judge suppressed the alleged statement and dismissed the case. ★ * A Dist. Atty. Arlen Specter of Philadelphia predicted that two dozen confessed slayers would escape punishment in that city this year because of the Miranda ruling. Said Specter: “I. think we ought to stop complaining about it and do our best within the limits of the Miranda rule* until we have a chance to relitigate it by taking another case up to thei Supreme Court on the same subject.” INEFFECTIVE Charles E. Moylan, Jr., state’s attorney for Baltimore, said he saw no chance that state legislation would be effective since no single act of a single legislature could affect the U.S. Supreme Court.” Moylan noted that a bill proposed by Sen. Jbhn L. McClellan, D-Arlc., chairman of the Senate Judiciary subcommittee to admit voluntary confessions as evidence would apply only to federal courts. SINUS Sufferers Here’s good news for you! Exclusive new “hard c(ffe” SYNA-CLEAR Decongestant tablets act instantly and continuously to drain and clear all nasal-sinus cavities: One “hard core” tablet gives up to 8 hours relief from pain and pressure of congestion: Allows you to breathe easily—stops watery eyes and runny nose: You can buy SYNA^ILEAR at your favorite drug counter; without need for a prescription: Satisfactioh guaranteed by maker. Try it today. SIMMS-98 N. Saginaw-Drug Dept. INTRODUCTORY OFFER WORTH ^1.50 Cut out thit ad — take it to Simma. Purehaia one pack of Syna-Clear 12'i and roceiva on» more Syna-Clear 12 pack FREE. ^ Your Clothing Needs for^ Easter and Spring Are Here at SIMMS at Bigger Savings 79«« • deluxe 4-speed record player with 4 speaker sound system • two 6" woofers • integral speakers ore sound mounted • ploys all speed records • tubular lightweight tone arm with turnover cartridge • features instant play cool operation, long life • contemporary lines • full factory guarantee. Boys’ 2-Pc. Rayon-Acoiafe Easter Suits • First Quality • American Made Regular ■! $3.98 Value Smart irridescent sharkskin of 74% rayon, 26% acetate, just like grown-up atyles. With notched Eton Style-Scotchguard Treated Boys’ 4-Pc. Suits Simms, 98 N. Saginaw St. First Time Ever-Just ^ in Time for EASTER MOVIES ‘KODAK & ARGUS’ Super 8 Movie Set -You Get All This at SIMMS ff.odak Electric-Eye Movie Camera Argus Super 8 Movie Projector Large Movie Screen Super 8 Color Movie Film * Batteries Included •KEYS 'Scotchguord' treated to resist spots and stains. Striped brown or green jacket with matching pants, boxer style waist, plus dress shirt. Sizes 2 to 6. Main Floor Girls’ 100% Amel Washable Spring Toppers Pastel pink or white topper for the little 'l girls in the family. 100% Arnel tri-^,1 acetate with 100% acetate lining. Fully washable. Sizes 4 to 6x. Main Floor KORATRON-Permanent Press BOYS’ Corduroy Fonts Regulor $3.49 volue, corduroy need pressing and holds tho crease. Elastic back pants for school and casual wear. Sizes 3 to 7. Main Floor |99 Proportioned-Perm. Pressed Boys’ Pants Values to $5.98. Ivy style in regular or slim sizes 12 to 18 or husky Sizes 8 to 20.. Wash and dry but iron them. Tan, olive or black. __________ Boaewnt 2«; Loafers - Oxfords -Saddles - Parents Boys’ and Girls’ Shoes All First Quality $5.95 377 For girls. Straps, ties, patents, white dress, saddles and loafers. Boys' styles include oxfords and moc-loafers. Sizes 816 to 13’/2 and 1 to 3. SIMMS..™. TODD M. imiCNEL 248 StrathiBora, Ponliae BERT JOHNSON • M2 Oakland, Holly II M F.QILMbRE 221 Jutfson, PmitlaD JEAN OROUIN Mil EMora, Union Lk. 1121 Eiannni, Orayten WILLIAM J. MOORE JOHN MUNRO 114 E. Howiird, rontiae 1T2 Mill, Pontiae m Winnars Drawn ly Bra. W. M. Smith, SI MeKinnIay, Nntiae If your name it li.ted above, jurt come info Simm* adyerti.ing^ ^^^dept. during .tore hour, and pick up your ha bring proper identification with you. r I_____TUI SIMMS OPEN Q.„ TOMTE Until 9 P.M. TUES. and WEDS. 9 A.M. to 5:30 P.M. 2nd FLOOR SPECIALS TnaR.9a.m.to5:3NP'!g! 1 20-Gal. Garbage Can GALVAMIZED Complete With COVER Take It Home II ^ Heavy duty galvanized I con - ] Tonite and Tuesday. ' I Tonite 6 D.m. fi> q p SPECIAL SHAKESPEARE' a Spin-Cast Reel PUSH- BUnOM 1 Take ; —2nd Floor | ^Tiiatt. a a.m. to 8:30 p.wL I Pre-Season SUPER SPECIAL 50-Ft. Garden Hose 3/8 Inch Plastic | Take It | Home For Strong 2-ply vinyl plastic hose for gard^, , lawn and car washing uses. 6^°®* XC are .Wedord for ony fou^. ^red 1 100 feet of hose per person. -2nd $2.99 Seller •-Now I White Mellf pot [J>°nd.2aheshigh: 1 for a finer looidry domp or dry. '.lm» 1 PV ^SIMMS.!»,^ SHEW the PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, MARCH 20, 1967 ONE COLOR A—6 Not Scheduled, Say Detroit Sponsors AhE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY^ MARCH 20, 1967 Antichurch Art Barred DETROIT (AP) — A painting ghowing Christ emerging fropi St. Peter’s Basilica as the buildT ing’s dome tumbles to the side was barred Sunday from a one-man exhibit at Etetroit’s International Institute. The painting, “Resurrection; 2000 A.D.,’’ was banned on or ders of Albert Ferrari, president of the 150-member Club Italia, sponsiH- ot the exhiUt of wwks by Dino Cocci. Cocci is a 35-year-old Rome engineering student turned art-i ist. His painting shows cardinals’ hats flying through the midst of the debris (d St. Peter’s. Cocci, no longer a practicing Catholic, said the painting was meant to show what he termed the corruption (rf the church. And he added that the emerging figure symbolizes the hope the simplicity and poverty of Christ would burst out of the organized church. Ferrari, a Catholic, said thef painting, could not te included in flic exhibit since it originally was not scheduled among the paintings to be shown. He said there had been calls of protest in the wake of a newspaper story saying the painting would be included. ■A- ★ ★ . Cmifronted by Cocci about the banned painting, Ferrftri told him: “Dino, this isn’t your personal exhibit, it’s the club’s.” Envoy Is Chosen for Geneva Session WASHINGTON (UPI) - Undersecretary of State Eugene V. Rostow will r e p r e s e n,it, the United States at the 2^d plenary session 88* REQ. 1.11 full size tank fits all standard torches and camp stoves. Buy several at tl\is low price. Hardware Dept, Sava 1.54 SNGGZE ALARM 3*^ REG. 4.98 Wakes you gently, lets you drowse 10 minutes, then rings again automatically. Watch Dept, Sava Now! CEILING TILE 9’/2* REQ. II’A Helps insulate, brighten any room. 14-inch .insulating board, 2 coats of white paint. Home Improvement Dept. Special Purchase! GEHUMIOIFIER *59 Removes up to 17 pts. moisture daily frorh 1,350 sq. ft. arpa. Automatic shut-off. Heating Dept. Save 1y22 UTEX 3" REQ. 4.99 Improved formula^ more durable, has washability you've looked for. (Ulors and white. Paint Dept. OII’N MONDAY TOHU FRlDA'i 10 \.M. TO 9:00 i\M. ! SAT( KDA\ \M TO 0:00 P.A1. SI ^l)\^ 12 \O0\ TO |>.U •602-1010 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY. MARCH 20, 1967 MURDER SUSPECTS-Mi-chael E. Riley (top), 19, and Eugene G. McKenna, 17, both of Revere, Mass., were charged with the stabbing-strangulatiop of Jack Landau, 42, a prominent stage and television producer. They were arrested in Boston. Marriage licenses •nd'ciSJStei.-- Zurbrick, Keego Harbor •”S ®w«n^lyn S. Younoa Clarkston Wal&W.Mror P.»G^p\vn«■ ConSSil 'cr4l.!'!l=''rd..r"."’'"‘”“ ifiiwJl-'a' Bloomfield Hllli and ADi!*" Lansing Arthur M. Adama, 277, Crystal Lake •nd Flora B. Alston, 572 AAontana Stephan D. Rowe, 4745 Jamm and Cathlw M. Way, 4473 Jamm ’^•■1 ?°''*l 0*1' •I'll Kathleen L Bird, Clarkston G en W. Elsworth, Keego Harbor and Paula J. Burch, Waterfor™ “ Donald L. Wlllen, 995 N. Cass Lake and •*05['!'o Wlllon, Huntington Woods i Comorlne L. R^elvln, 249 Whitfeirore 1 sh?,r,2^7 5jii,’?i•"<' «■; L.»e,'wa?e*r'.*o';3'’“' Donald R. Berger, Lexington, Kentucky and Linda L. Disbrow, Holly Austa P. Richmond, Clarks M. Jordan, 179 W. Strathmore . David B. IWacklnder, Troy I*™ ,1- Martin, Rochester Eric A. Thomson, Lake Ohio Beyyly E. Hastings, Milford Arthur A. Beatty Jr., 242 Lake and Gall A. Lake, Lake I Bill W. Daniel, 59 Edison an A. Morgan, Livonia Banning, Ga. Troy Holly and Phyleetus J. VanWagoner, Iherry L. Pohiman, Fenton Charles F. Lamoreaux, ooum Lvon and Jean Stubblefield, Milford M^WItf Ibi '^•W’9 4" % land. Election and work- ' I shop. I WEDNESDAY ^ i Woman’s World Series, I 10 a.m., The Pontiac Mall. * “Your Growing Glory” by | I " - . Donnell Thomas, hair s • stylist. The Thomas Glenn Suras (Janyce Lynne Schwabland) were wed Saturday evening in a ■ candlelight service in the First Presbyterian Church, Ann Arbor. Their -—parents are Dr. and Mrs. John C. Schwabland of Ann Arbor and the Eugene Suras of Orion Township. MRS. T. G. SURA 3Sf Genuine Very Easy to Install .. MOSAIC They are TILE 12"xl2" Sheets! Genuine CERAMIC TZLE VINYL RUBBER TILE 9 x9'' . I VINYL ASBESTOS TILE 9"x9" ......7k ? 1 SOLID VINYL TILE.. 7L] i MICA 29*‘s.rr/ J PLASTIC WALL TILE .... .1'-2*-3'r. New Styrofoam CEILING TILE ACROSS From The MALL 2255 ELIZABETH LAKE RD. FRONT DOOR PAAKINO \ FE 4-5216^ Open Mon., Thurs., Fri. 9 to 9 ' Tues., Wed., Sat. 9 to 6 n B-2 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, MARCH 2Q, 1967 i II I • Only MM efftr •och 9 m«n»h> \ | ^ • Groups, Cofhimos and Portent ■ I Over 12 Yoon Slighriy Additionel | 1 KENDALE'S ... Photographers l| I 45 W. Huron FE 5-0322 or FE 5-3260 || -j| MRS. G.G. HANSON Snap All Snaps Wash-and-wear clothing dries in better shape when all the openings are closed. CHILDREN OUTGROWN SKIS, SLEDS, TOBOGGANS? SELLj All snaps, buttons and zippers THEM WITH A LOW COST PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED! should be closed before wasb-AD. TO PLACE YOURS, CALL 332-8181. ! ing. Special Offer! PERM SALE Famous name permanents, reduced for a limited time! • Fashion Cut • Conditioning Shampoo • Superb Salon Permanent • Cream Rinse Beauty Salon 11 N. Saginaw St. FE 5-9257 Safin Gown for Bride on Saturday A classically sfyled goiA crystal white satin with Pointe ' de Venise lace was chosen by Nancy L. Richards tor her marriage in the First Metho-dish Church to Gary Gene Hanson of Clarkston. The bodice of her gown was designed with a crescent curved neckline. A squared chapel train was framed in lace. * * * She carried a chapel bouquet of Phalaem^is orchids for the Saturday evening vows to the son of the Gust F. Hansons of Two Harbors, Minn. Her parents are Mr. and Mrs. Gerald M. Richards of Joyce Street. Maid of honor fw her sister was Mary Beth Richards, with cousins Barbara Benson and Carol Richards as attand-ants. Curt Hanson served as best man for his brother. William and Bruce Bratt were ushers. The couple left for a wedding trip to Minnesota following a church pklors reception. Poll/s Pointers Readers Are Kii^d DEAR READERS ~ (^, for put in bobhsr idns or clampa. the spaiA to print all your won-When writi^, use a pa|wr-derM Painters for Harold’s wei^ to hold the paper.—K^. wife, who has lost her l^.arm.-Your 8|di1t of sharing is ewer-whetndng and the wo^ of en-coursgemoit, along with the iwayan of those srtio have terei siudi a situation are most touching.-POLLY DEAR POLLY -1 hope my honsekeepiiig Pointers will, make tilings easier for Har-(dd’s wife. Keep a board with a long nafl or spike protmd-ing np throngh the top to nse EASTER FLOWERS Special EASTER CORSAGE Cymbidium ORCHID Three Medium Blooms - Other CORSAGES Fresh Blooming Plants LILIES - AZALEAS - TULIPS DAFFODILS - HYACINTHS - MUMS Flowers Telegraphed Any Place in the World! Pearce Floral Co. 559 Orchard Lake Ave. OPEN FRI. ond SAT, MARCH 25-26 8;30 'til 9-EASTER 'til NOON Plenty of Free Pttrking Space T Phone FE 2-Q127 Detroit, Birmingham, Bloomfield Hills ond Intermedioto Points and other similar things G.B. DEAR POLLY-My b lost his arm over 30 years ago and there is little be cannot do. has always earned a living. Harold’s wife YriU find her way in her own good time, suggestions are for the way you,, Hardd, can help. ★ ★ ★ Take care of your own needs as much as you can. Clean up after yourself. Give her ample space to wwk in. Try working with one hadd yourself to better understand what she needs. Push the center of the item Be handy and unobtrusively do to be'peeled onto the nail to any jieavy lifting. Learn to work hold it in place. If the board ^th her as there is as much slides while peeling «■ cutting for you ^ learn as there is for food, put a rubber sink pad her. Over the years her heart under it. I^q be so full N, Or/'Oaorga Falloa TuMday Cunehnen I....12dK>-12-43 "Over Temptotion" It's tune-up timel Only $ 0/5 smea •hi cmm n nw imm >111 iim-m ny aaki ir mSil NMif nKMN! Call Miy! J-POINT HOME TUNE-UP 3. Oe-lint thread handling mechanism. 6. Lubricate machine. 7. Inspect and lubricate motor. i DOWNTOWN PONTIAC l«.(4 ••<■><»««*• IHCiNn^/* j -Tjxr singer TIAC a»ALL hW m * w mm M-m. This Is an enconragement to try more dlfficnlt tntks but do not expect praiae always and DO NOT PITY YOURp Use Wisdom InSelections If you’re the fashion age where mini-skirts are out, keep in mind that plain stockings too are ni(H*e elegant for the mature Woanan than textured hosiery, particularly white. When stirring anytldng„ I set the bowl on a damp ^hclotb |to keep it frcnn tur^g. If the .contents are to be beaten until I very stiff, hold the bowl between' your knees. Also, there will be less breakage if you wash dishes in a plastic dish pan. i I pin my left coat sleeve to ^ the inside of a coat pocket with FaV^onawrAge/’ adds how-^ ety pins pm again about j^gt color and texture halfway up the sleeve. I make the left sleeve shut at the bot- A new booklet suggests stockings of yght beige or taupe. The booklet, “Looking Your tom, making two pleats to narrow it. Embroidery Tips Knot threads with as small a knot as possible when embroidering and pull them at the back under a part of the design already worked. This an outside comer or a| keeps the underside of the door edge in the room end then' work neat. When playing cards, the handiest thing to stand the cards in is a six-foot folding rule. To pin your hair in pin curls, .turn the hair and press the curl for hose are appropriate with country clothes. LOW IN COST. FAST IN ACTION, PHONE 332-8131. NEED HELP? USE PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED ADS! As The Poet Once Said, “A Woman’s Hair Is Her Crowning Glory.” Miss Sharon Qstrander, our Manager, will be happy to advise you in selecting the nibst flattering wig or hairpiece for you. Be the beaufy you want to be... almost at once. If your hair doesn’t do everything for you that you wish it did, drop in and tee how easily and how soon you can be transformed into the “Yon” yon really want to be, the lovelier you he’s looking for and hasn't found, or thinks he’s lost Yes, do come in when yon have a few minutes to dream. Try on a wig or two or more to yonr heart’s content T1ien,^walk out, looking and fe^ng lovelier than yon ever thought you could. We have . a complete aervice department at the most reasonable rates. So, call for an'appointment... or better still... drop your wig or hairpiece off with ns. WeTl make you look your lovely best all over again. e in and meet Miss Joanne Pursell, our hair stylist. mi MM P 794 Woodward Ave., Honn: — Monday Thru Saturday lO to 6 Birmingham Phone 642-6777 THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, MARCH 20. 1967 B-3 PrideCan Hide Hunger, Need for Aftenf ion By MUm£L LAWRENCE DEAR MRS. LAWRENCE: Thou^ I am an <»ly child (fged 32) itiy mofter and I > hdve never ^ot alcteg. Bnt sinc^ my dad’s death three years ago, I have done all I know how to be a real daughter to her. * I know that I don’t mean anything to her. She is a mnsic teacher and has two girl stndents boarding with her. When I go to see her all she talks about is.how talented they are and how proud the is of them. This Christmas I asked her if she wanted me to spend it with her and she said “Suit yourself.” Then she hung up m me. . . ANSWER: That was rough. But let me put this idea into your head. It is this: If we par-, cuts sense your disappointment to us, It may be impossible for us to tell you we need your affection. We feel so ashamed of our failure to get it that our pride RUGS WASHED 50i ■ WoVo Equipped for naxas Siza Washas" : Bitte’n’Clean * fRIGIDAIRE UUNDROMA1 • SMhiburn PsrtdnsforMCani ximjuuuuuuLm: Insists toat we pretend we don’t want it We behave exactly like that fox in toe story ]ffho scorned toe grapes Ito eonldit’t veach. It’s a phony scorn. Our yearning fw yoiff* affection cannot really be squashed. It voices itself in spite of our scornful {nide. And one of our favorite ways of telling you we want it is cultivating the admiration of other people’s children and then flaunting our suc-is in front of you. We do tois, not becabse we hate you but to seU you (and ourselves) the notion that we are wwfhy of your love. Which 1^ he piwisely vrtiat your n^|ier is doing by enthusing over hm: girl students — these substitute daughters of hers. It’s not too Inight of her, of course. But toen it may be toe only way her iwide will allow her to tell yon toe truth. Anyway, do try again. It’s asktog a lot of you, because I know how seriously you children take the phony acts we put on. Nevodieless, I wish you could find the courage to \augh at this look of Spring at Weirds ... in young-look dresses that put you so beautifully in tfie mood of the season. Fashion hewDihakers in Amel® triacetate crepes and crisp acetate-q>fton cords that stay blithely unruffled, need little care. AAisses' sizes. ® Two-tone leafy-prints on o brown or green ground; Amel® crinkle crepe; with side-tied collar. 12 to 20- 17.99 (D immaculate-look of a trimly tailored two-piece ocetote-cot-ton cord, blue, green or brown and white stripes. 10-18.11.99 ® Sleeveless Arnel® crinkle crepe print in navy, green or taupe; flutter of pleats for o full skirt. 10 to 18 13.99 269 N. Perry 430 Orchard Lk. Ave. Pontiac Mall "CHARGE IT" ON WARDS CONVENIENT CHAR6-ALL CREbiT PLAN OVEN MONDAY THKU FRIDA Y 10 A.M, TO 0:00 f\M. SATTRDVY 0::^>0 A.M. TO 0:00 P.M. \ SlADV'i 12 \00\ TO P.M. . 682-P)10 B—4 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY. MARCH 20, 1967 By Member of Automotive UAW Joint Study Guaranteed Pay Cost Reported Blaze Kills Boy in Bedford Twp. REDFORD (AP)-An 11-year-j Harry Clarke, died wl?en flames old boy died Sunday in a fire i burst into his upstairs bedroom, that heavily damaged his par- * ★ * ents home in Redford Township.] The boy’s parents and two oth- 2 Police said the youth, Dennis R.ier children, Bwmie, 13, and Doi^' Clarke, son of Mr. and Mrs.laid, 6, escaped. , ^ / DETROIT (AP) —Atjleast one! written into of the automotive Big 'ITiree re-iyear. portedly has begun a joint pre- Neither the union nor the liminary study with the United] company Would confirm or depy Auto Workers on the costs of a;the report, but it came from a guaranteed annual income usually reliable source in a po-wbich the union says must be sition to know. The source ask- !w contracts this ed that neither it nor the com-)any be named for toe time )eing. LIFE INSURANCE FIRE INSURANCE Businats Ownart Packaga Homa Ownart Packaga AUTO INSURANCE Safa Orivart... Cancallad OTHER FORMS Sicknast and Accidant.,. Bonds Boats ... Hospitalization “1 . nW ANNUAL Choice of Sparkling Finishes! "STARLITE" 4-DRUM SET S«t includes: 5ki" x U" snore drum, 14" x 22" _ - _ boss drum, 9" x 13" tom tom, 16" x 16" floor /I Q"5 tom; 1 cymbal holder, tom holder, hi-hot pedal, it I 7 cymbol stand, sticks ond brushes. Sole Speciol! FUN-FILLED BONGO SET Outfit Includes maracas, cloves and instructions. 6” TUNEABLE BONGOS Superbly-construcf- I set peorl finishes. GRINNELL'S. Pontiac Mall, 682-0422 Downtown Pontisc, 27 S. Saginaw St. FE 3-7168 Use Your Charge, 4-Pay Plan (90 days same as cash) or Budget Terms 18” Union officials, however, confirm preliminary joint studies are under way at General tors and Ford on demands Of UAW skilled tradesmen three months before actual negotiations begin. Douglas Fraser, UAW Chrysler director and codirector of the Skilled Trades Department, said he had asked for similar discussions with Chrysler Corp. N RECORD UAW President Walter P. ther is on record as saying he will sign no new contract in 1967 that does not embody a plan under which a workman will know at the beginning of a year what his income will be for that year, any layoffs not withstanding. This has raised the specter of strike, and at least one industry source concluded: “Mr. Reuther appears to be suffering his triennial delusions.” Contract have spanned three years since 1955. I ★ ★ ★ The union concedes it has no firm, fixed plan as of the moment, but says it is testing several alternatives in computers. It also insists “the gap is small from where we are to where we want *to go.” ★ ★ Under supplemental unemployment compensation paid by the companies on top of regular state unemployment compensation, it is possible for a laid-off i workman to draw up to 62 peri cent of his normal take-home pay for as much as a full year. FIGHT OFF DEMANDS The companies have fought off Reuther’s demands for a “ anteed annual wage” since 1955, and have given no indication they would not chance a strike to kill off this time what is now termed “a guaranteed annual income.” < Early this year Reuther talked ■ ‘salaries instead of wafees,’" but switched to “guaranteed annual income,” pointing out salaried workers are subject to layoff without pay. ★ * ★ Reuther also has said that contracts replacing those which run out Sept. 5 at GM, Ford and Chrysler must contain a substantial pay increase and equal pay for Canadian work's. On top of this, delegates re-r^senting some 200,000 UAW skilled tradesmen set up some costly demands of their own at; an Atlantic City convention last; week, and Reuther promised to! work for their inclusion. LINES OF DEMARCATION The tradesmen want lines of demarcation spells out for skilled classifications, with no one required to perform any work outside his specialty. They also want compulsory overtime abolished and the right to strike when any company farms to an outside contractor work in the plants which UAW memers feel should be assigned to them. In addition, they demanded ‘no tampering” with a cost-of-living escalator which has added 16 cents hourly to pay since 1964. While lagging sales ing inventories of 1967 models have resulted in production worker layoffs, the union says cheered lustily by toe skilled, among whom toe union conceded preconvention unrest. The UAW tried and failed last summer to win year-ahead reopening of contracts to gain the skilled at least a 50-cent hourly increase immediately. Some del- many skilled tradesmen are carried placards de- maintenance and other chores that do not necessairly decline with production. PROMISES CHEERED Reuther’s promises tracts. Reuther, however, tied bimself to no fixed sum. Companies are cognizant of the tradesmen’s unrest. Ken Bannon, Ford Department director, and Leonard Woodcock, UAW vice president and GM chieftain, confirmed they have sat in on joint committees studying skilled trades! prd[)lems. A Ford spokesman | any details discussed were by agreement with the union confidential. ★ * ★ Joint prenegotiating study committees also were set up Ini 1964. Their jobs, both toe union and company said, were to sift out facts. A Professional Sch0ol of Business since^896 * Associate in Accountiiy * Associate in Commerce’ , * Associate in Secretarial Science THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY. MARCH 20, 1967 B~5 /C ^Mnlor Editors Quiz o zoos Giving Secret Service Fits 'Master Counterfeiter' Is on the Loose WASHINGTON (UPI)-Some-where in America, probably traveling alone, there is a 65-year-old “master counterfeiter” who is giving the Secret Service fits. Right now, he is believed to be turning out nearly perfect $10 bills. He never m^es very many of them; he seems more. ice, told of the case at a closed note,” Kelley said, “1 think he' “This man is apparently jot MMini of a Hodse Approt»ri- is doing tWs to annoy us more doing it tp make money,” lel-ations subcommittee Feb. 8. than anything else.” i i His testimony was made pub- IspEcui pappr f^y^ded He lives very simply lie today bPECIAL PAPER land travels alone by bus . . .1 ifoiu ™ - ocL described Williams as a|(and)i has never produced S n«' counterfeiter” who uses great quantity of notes.” Manon Williams, 65, with no, a special sensitized paper Hiia MTlOMMYLIMi : HtIR PieCES-PERNMEim MUill 'I ■ Start now by calling for an appointment ;l RAID,ILL’S SHOPPE The Good Honsekeeping Shop of Pontiao has acquired the remaining inventory of the Wayne. Gabert Appliance Store. This quality merchandise is now being offered at . . . TREMENDOUS PRICE REDUCTION! Here’s a Real Opportune for the Thtiftyl GENERAL ELECTRIC Fir$t Time at this low price ALL NEW 1967 PORTABLE i'V Only S1.69 weekly . Warranty* Service Delivery "With all deluxe features^ includes dl chan, hels—instant oil switch, earphones ahd jack r-tespt^ally for a gei^itd tV in the house-^;Weijdis"bidy l2W'|bs<’' $4950 Delivered! Serviced! Guaranteed! EASY TERMS! America’s No. 1 sweeper. It beats—as it sweeps—as it cleans. Has throw away bag. Come in today! Convertible. Disposable BAGS EASY TERMS-3 YEARS TO PAY Free Service, Warranty, Delivery^Save! $5.Q0 Monthly- 2-stage blower for every cleaning need. Swivel nozzle, adjustable bi;ush. Does any kind of carpet, even bare floors. Lightweight and easy to use. Weighs 7 pounds. We Sell Only the Top Quality Name Brand Appliances THE GOOD HOUSEKEEPING STOP OF PONTIAC, MICH. 51 WEST HURON STREET-OPEN MQN. & FRI. *TIL 9 P.M. FE 4-1555 I'HE PONTIAC TRESS, MONDAY, MARCH 20, 1967 mRrcow This perky popcorn rabbit and gaily decorated eggs are deliciously assembled %vith help of a flavorful com syrup mixture. ^Easter is the time of two fold Joy. First are the religious festivals and secondly, the happy times — of rabbits, chicks, parties, gay hats, and colored eggs. Looking bright and ready to wish everyone a very happy Easter is this ribbon bedecked popcorn rabbit. All pink and white, he is perfect for the centerpiece on an Easter brunch or dinner table and " he is eatable, too. As modem and convenient as today s foods, he can be made in a jiffy. Popcorn that pops in its own foil frypan is combined with a light com syrup mixture for easy shaping of both rabbit and eggs. Sitting gaily on a nest of tinted flaky coconut, he is surrounded with*brightly colored eggs lavishly decorated with flavored frosting. The eggs and the rabbit can be sliced and served in place of cake with ice cream for the dinner dessert. Or just enjoyed as a delicious sweet for munching. Of course, it’s quite possible that one of the younger set will want to carry an egg or two around in an Easter basket and enjoy a bite every now and then. EASTER RABBIT AND EGGS 1 package pops-in-a-pan popcorn 1 tahlespoon water 3/4 cup light corn syrup 3 cups sifted confectioners sugar 24 large marshmallows 1 teaspoon vanilla . ' I Pop com according to package directions. Put popped com into large greased kettle. In saucepan, mix together water, corn symp, and 1 1/2 cups confectioners sugar. Cook uncovered, over low heat until bubbly, stirring occasionally. Stir in remaining sugari Remove from heat. Stir in marshmallows and vanilla, continuing to stir until marshmallows are melted. Pour syrup over popped corn and toss quickly until all corn is well coated. With well greased hands, mold into desired shapes. TO MAKE RABBIT: Form rabbit’s body by shaping syrup coated popcorn ' into a large egg, about 7" x 4". For the head, shape popcorn into a small egg, 3" x 21/2". Then, for.tail, a 2" popcorn ball and 2,2" long pieces for front feet. Assemble rabbit by gently pressing popcorn together. Allow to cool thoroughly. TO DECORATE RABBIT: Make up frosting recipe. Tint one-half of it pink and use for decorating ears, nose, and mouth. A decorating tube is handy for this. Qut a red gumdrop in half J and use for eyes. Cut 3 pipecleaiiers in half and f)la( 3 on each side of rabbit’s nose for whiskers. If desir§^ toothpicks could be used instead of pipecleanj Frost pipecleaiiers with pink icing. For the^Sal touch, a pink ribbon bow at neck.: TO MAKE EASTER EGGS: Make up, basic recipe for Easter Rabbit. Divide popcorn into 4 equal parts and set aside. Divide cooked syrup into 4 equal parts. Add a few drops of red food coloring to one part, a few drops of blue to second part, a few drops of green to third part, and a few drops of yellow to fourth part. Add each colored syrup to one part of popped popcorn and mix until all corn is well coated. Shape each colored batch o£ popcorn into 4 eggs. Makes 16 Easter Eggs. SGGS; 'I'lfltfV^ning frosting to desired c^H|^ decorate [elted chocolate or candies cainibte used decorating. ^Creaipy Frosting: 1/4 cuphuUer or margarine 2 1/2 cups sifted confectioners suga^ 2 tablespoons milk 1 teaspoon vanilla Cream butter until fluffy. Gradually add sugar, J tinuing to mix until mixture is smooth and cre| . Stir in milk and vanilla. Tint as desired. TO MAKE AN EASTER HAT Follow the directions for preparing popcorn and symp mixture for Easter rabbit. “When making symp, melt 1 square unsweetened chocolate in cooked symp and add 1/2 teaspoon almond extract. Mix popped com and chocolate symp mixture together. Press enough of syrup coated popcorn into a greased one quart bowl to fill it. Let stand a few minutes. Meanwhile shape rest of popcorn into a 9" X 1 1/2" ring. Unmold popcorn in bowl and place dome side up in center of circle to form crown of hat. To decorate, put a ribbon of frosting fabric at base of crown and decorate with flowers or a bow. ' • "1: 1 package . 1 cup finely 1 cup sugar Pop corn acco] aside. In sauce]^ cook,^ stirring oc( vanilla. Pour ovei coated with syrup, melon mold. Let stan! frosting and melted ch^ THE BIG EGG 1 cup light COl 1 teaspoon i IrtrOrpan popcorn pped dry toasted peanuts peanuts; set ^r low heat and to package directions. Mix popped coj lix together sugar and com syrup. Plgi ally until sugar is dissolved. Ren^j^Rup |rom heat. Add id corn-peanul^ and mi^|^^Hrpopcorn kemeils are ito a large Easte^^i^jj^^Rs mixture into a greased inmold. Decorate egg with THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, MARCH 20, 1967 •H- Income Tax Evaders a Tiny Minoriiy By JOHN PIERSON Ididn’t botiier to file income tax WASHINGTON (UPI) - Let’s |retarns? face it. i AraericaiB pay their lyj^SUAL CASpS ^ ^ 1.A jl These cases got publicity pre- That maji be a J® jcisely because they are unus- begin a piece on tax evasion. I But it’s true. p^y taxes. But 80 million What about George A. Ed- wards, the Ohio carpenter who filed eight false tax returns for 1963, and collected ei^t refund checks? Or Lewis Green, the Memphis, Tenn., tax practioners, others did. Out of 80 million American taxpayers, only 1,824 were cmivicted of evading federal taxes last year. awuvu..o, Internal Revenue Service Who prepared more than 750 esUma^ that it coUfts well false tax returns for his clients ®ver 97 per cent of the taxes and thereby cheated the govern- jdue. ment out of more'than $100,000? How do dishonest people cheat * * ★ Ion their taxes? One way is Or Nashville rock - and - roll Isimply to not- file a return, singer Gene Allison who justlThat’s a misdemeanor. Another way is to file a return but not to report all your income on it. 'ihat’a a felwiy. 'veasury experta estiniwto. that some $25 billion pf \ iih come falls to get reported .on income tax returns and that this costs the government about $4 billion a year in taxes. Anotoer popular way of evading taxes is to claim more exemptions or deductions than you’re entitled to. * * Yet another way to cheat is to put in for mcve than one refund. CAUGHT BY COMPUTER I One man filed 98 refund 'claims in a single year, from jdifferent addresses ar(M the ! country. How are tax ! caught? i In the past few year^,Amputees have taken vvjt a big I share of the job, riwough it still takes men >o crack the hard cases. I Now, wlA you file your tax I returns,^ information on it is transfAed to magnetic compu-I ter tope and then sent to the national computer center In Martlnsburg, W.Va. RUNNING RECORD There the government maintains a three-year runlng rec(xd of your taxes. The numbers fitnn yonr.re-turn are matched with the numbers from your W2 wlfli-holding statement pins dividend and Interest statements, which companies and banks are required to supply to the IRS. YANKEE OUT ON A LIMB? REDUCTION IN INCOME? GC OVERBOARD AT CHRISTMAS? IN FINANCIAL DIFFICULTY? Maybe now 1» the time for you to tee M.C.C. ond get out of debt on a progrom that will fit • NOT A LOAN! • ONE PLACE TO PAY! Michigan Credit Counseiiors 702 PONTIAC STATE BANK BLDG. FE 8-0456 OUR 13th YEAR Mamhar olhoth Iht Amtriqan and Miohigan Astoeiation of OradH aetor... Locally Ownad and Oparatad! FRIGIDAIRET 1967 Jet Adion Washer spins clothes Caster, drier than anv other brand! LADIES SPRING EASTER skirt; VALUE A-linea or tlim line ikirti. Belted or no waist stylet. Dacron, cotton er poplin fobries. Sizes 8 te 18. ^ OPEN NIGHTS TIL 9 FOR LATE SHOPPERS LADIES SLEEVELESS LACE SHELLS A e r y I I e tricot trimmeid solid Itce shells. Nylori back zipper. White, pink, blue, mint, peach, lamon. S-M-L I" LADIES NYLON nn HALF-SUPS L«» trimmad fintly dtlail-•d itylti. Smri te tt“ thedew peneli. S-M-L. nn, AN ESIABLISHMENT PROVIDING / BHIROOMS, BATH. ETC. AND U^ALLY FOOD, FOR THE'ACCO'MMODATIONpF TRAVELERS. OUR ETCS. ARE FABULOUS netrrtgcwl*.wunoliceHo™ Is mm. R1«M im«* In we oitt. m<«t exc^fl places in Iho world-Merxihatigino in^e ™ l.jl W| downtown ChlcaoOiThenth^areetc5^like our Well-Of-The-Sea, world jreport it, me Martlnsburg mnownad non fhnd restai^nt... College Inn, America's first supper monster" is going to get you. chib... Celtic Room, m^ng place of politicians and celebrities... 1500 i -k -k -k lipoma snd auttea frw^.00, etc. But so jnuch more tten just a ho-tolR. jf yo„ ^ fety^n last year /jsscmK-AiCJU^ zioxTBXB but don’t file this year, the BawntssnCMeaqe^OnlylWye-fnHatel-RBiMlelph.eMiiLaSaHa ;‘‘monstCr” iS going tO knoW it. jwiLL MAKE DEDUCTION If you owe back taxes from last year and claim a refund fw this year, the computer is going to deduct your unpaid taxes before it gives you your refund. If you claim more than one refund, it will find that ont, t BOYS 3 to 7 10 WAY SUITS - • -../''vr > CLEARANCE GIRL’S SPRING DRESSES M Ntt»-. hmeusui OFFEU! WillBe Furntii •12" AM CLOCK RADIO Wol(t up to mune AM Clock > Tablo Radio. Wako*to-Mutic control. Fin-) quoiity clock, n - brookoblo ‘‘nr ^ i nVFR HOOVER VACUUM With Attachments $gS8 M a gV' GE Walkie Talkie 6-TRANS. RADIO HOOVER Vacuum Claantr 2-P«sition switch taiascoping antanno. % mila ronga. Fin Shirt Pock.t 1^60 M6" $431 CHICK YHUR OWN DRISS SIZE IF YOU ARE SIZE 20 YOU CAN... BE A PERFECT SIZE 14 IN LESS THAN 90 DAYS IF YOU ARE SIZE 10 YOU CAN ... BE A PERFECT SIZE 14 IN LESS THAN 90 DAYS IF YOU ARE SIZE 16 YOU CAN ... BE A PERFECT SIZE 12 IN LESS THAN 90 DAYS IF YOU ARE SIZE 14 YOU CAN ... BE A PERFECT SIZE 10 IN LESS THAN 90 DAYS • Facial Contouring • Ultra Medtm Huolth • Mtehanleal Body Pontiac’s largost bit TV’s. Choose arson, Dumont, 2 inghouso.......... «63 saloetion of Porta-Admiral, Em-, RCA, Wast- .’59- Westinghouse Full Size Port TV ALL PHICES ON IN-STOCK MEBCHSMDISE - F.O.B. STORE ONLY rCef/t/tnntof Tritnwall No-Frost 17 Cu. Ft 2-Door SILTON AUTO. GAS DRYER o OIMI Cycle Tlmw- o rmmtf Mure OuMo o extlutlvt DmMo. tin Oryino o Bitlia UrH Copo-clly o ZIikho. Band. Changed from missing to dead, hostile: ARMY ARKANSAS - Ptc. Fraddia L. F Blythavllla. Missing in action: AIR FORCE Lt. Col. Polar J. Fradarlck Died, nonhostile: ARMY ALABAMA — PIC. Nila A. Dra NAVY GEORGIA — Gunnart M .. Clamants, Sopsrton. I CpI. Doyla W. MICHIGAN - Pvl. Rsbart C. Mo- Missing, nonhostile: Ceramic Tile Bargains for floor, wall, crystaline. Was 69e Now 0 j® «. Ceramic Wall Tile 4'/«x4'/4 39® VINYL ASBESTOS TILE 9x9 1/tS A g% First U Quality ■■Each ■■ and Up SPECIAL SALE ON ARMSTRONG TESSERA VINYL CORLON 395., V Yard Yard 3 PoHerns Only Pre-Fim'shed 4x8xle orchard, may have a chance to broaden that view this summer. The State Board of Education has approved a $523,199 federally supported project to develop programs to meet the needs of these children who follow the crop harvests into various areas of NQchigan. Efforts will range from taking them, to visit such places as the police station and the post office, places ’ftey likely haven’t seen before, to improving the English of those whose basic language is Spanish. “In four or five Wfeeks, we can’t do a great deal in the academic areas," said Louis Kocsis, Michigan coordinator for federal aid for disadvantaged children. ★ ★ ★ “We’d be In a better position to carry on auxiliary services concerning health needs and cultural enrichment,” he said. “This is all part of becoming part of the American culture, too.” UPT025,000 Depending on how well Michigan’s crops grow and how successful farmers are in recruiting migrant workers to help pick them, the state could have as many as 25,000 migrant children up to age 17 this summei-. We’re going to have to devise a record-keeping program on these youngsters,” Kocsis said, “to make certain that their educational and health records are available when they move so there will be no duplication of efforts. “These youngsters don’t speak up too much,” he said. “This record keeping is awful- ly Important,” Kocsis added. “It should also be valuable when they return to their home base state.” SPECIAL PBOGRAM For about 60 per cent of the children, this is Texas, which conducts a special six-month migrant education program each winter. Michigan has no compulsory school attendance law in effect in the summer and the older migrant children will be working on the harvests^ Kocsis said. But, he added, that doesn’t mean the department will concentrate entirely on youngsters too young to work in the fields. Educators are working on evening programs that would involve the whole family, including reading classes for adults who need them. STORYTELLING These family sessions,, which could be held right in the migrant housing areas to make the migrants feel more comfortable, might also involve such things as storytelling — sometning the migrants are acquainted with, but which ban be used to improve conununication skills, Kocsis explained. Kocsis said the migrants tend to have an attitude that they can’t expect much more out of life than existence. But, he said, the parents have indicated to educators that they want their youngsters to have an^education and to develop skillsifor other types of work. Tytime a migrant is in Michigan is too short for vocational education, he said, “but in the of counseling we can Uy to make them think of vocational education. * ‘This would enable them to get out of the vicious circle of migration,” he said. The ex-village preshteid (1963) and charter councfi-man (1967> is cfirrently rounding up contribufions for a centennial histwy of the area. UNDAUNTED Without a budget, Boeberitz has.n^ed Martin L. Boyle as justice of the peace, replacing ^mes Van Leuven who was recently elected to the Milford Village Council. Boyle, 39, of 758 Sweetbriar, will conclude his second term as a township trustee on April 10. He is an attorney in MUford. ★ ★ ★ . In other recent action, the boai^ authorized Hubbell, Roth and Clark engineers to complete a study and develop an operating plan to create a sanitary land-fill operation on Old Plank Road. Tlie old township dump is being turned into a land-fill operation to meet Oakland County Health Department requirements for.licensing. By the Associated Press Nine persons, including a Vietnam - bound soldier home on leave, died in Michigan highway accidents over the weekend, State Police reported. Army Sgt. Gerald L. Harris, 27, of Dearoorn Heights was killed when his car careened through a dead-end street barrier and into a concrete railroad abutment in a Detroit park early Saturday. Harris was the father of five. Others killed were: Dennis Bruce Niemisto, 19, of AAUWtoHear Two Legislators ROCHESTER — State Reps. Donald Bishop, R-63rd District, and Allen Rush, R-71st District, will diSfcuss current state legislation for the Rochester branch, American sAssociation of Uni-versify Women, at 8 p.m. Wednesday at the Avon Township Library. ★ ★ ★ Mrs. George Mosher, Michigan State Division AAUW legislative chairman, will be a guest of the group. Gub delegates will be attending the AAUW’s legislative day program April 5 in Lansing. Plans are under way for the fifth annual Art Fair to be held May 7 at Oakland University, according to Mrs. David Boddy and Mrs. Richard Jance, co-chairmen. ★ * ★ Hostesses for the March meeting will serve with Mrs. James Norton, chairman. China Puzzle Is LWV Topic WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWN-IHIP — Relations between China and the United States will be discussed at the general meeting tQmorrow of the West Bloomfield League of Women Voters. •nje meeting will follow a noon luncheon at the main library on Orchard Lake Road. The program is based on a new League of Women Voters publication “The China Puzzle.” 'Mrs. Robert Cutler and Mrs. J. F. Crowther will trace the history of Chinese-American re-latiwis from 1843 to the present. ★ ★ ★ PerscHis wishing baby sitting Iservice may call Mrs. W. M. Roberts, 4909 Broomfield, Kr- Pupils Perform for Enrichment OPERETTA STARS - Pupils at Duck Lake Elementary School, Highland Township, reenact a scene from a play produced recently as part of a conununity schools program financed with federal funds. They are (rrorn left) Laura Cameron, 1633 Valley, Highland Township; Kathy Allard, 7720 Bis-cayne, White Lake Township: Mark Green, 1893 White Lake, Highland Township; Pam House, 1551 Duck Lake, Highland Township; and Diane Patrum, 2860 Hardiman, Highland Township. Road Toll Includes Vietnam-Bound Gl INegaunee, when he was thrown from the car he was riding after it struck a parked car in Ne-gaunee Sunday. Dave Lee Van Doefelaar, 8, of Hudsonville, when struck by a car while riding his bicycle on Fort Sheldon Road in Ottawa County Saturday. Marshall Beacers, 18, Flint, killed Saturday when the car in which he was riding veered off U.S. 23 near Dundee and smashed through the medial) guard rail. Mrs. Avie Spangler, 19, Ecorse, killed Friday in a head-on collision with a car which police said was traveling the wrong way on 1-75 near Monroe. Ruth Ann VandenBrooejc, 24; George Smith, 54, and his wife, Elizabeth, 43. all of Belding, killed Saturday when their car ran off M44 near Belding and mashed into two trees. John Richard Hines, 55, of Taylor, whose car swerved into a guard railing at a U.S. 27 intersection near Alma and threw him out Saturday. By JANICE KLOUSER IlIGHLAND TOWNSIIP -Take a bunch of rough and tumble grade school boys, dress them in fancy period costumes and tell them to dance and sing their way through a school operetta. Sounds like the results could be mayhem but boys (and girls) at Duck Lake Elementary School in the Huron Valley School District appeared to enjoy it. It’s all part of a new enrichment program started in January with $9,000 in federal funds received under Title I of the Secondary and Elementary Education Act of 1965. Most of the credit for the community school idea belongs to Principal William Rose who admits to a long-time interest in Flint’s Mott Community School Program after which the plan at his school is patterned. The idea is to give children experiences they might not otherwise have and, hopefully, as a result, imbue them with a more positive attitude toward school. NEGATIVE ATTITUDE Because of their backgrounds, many of the children have a negative attitude toward school,” said Rose. “We hope this program will make it more interesting so they will do better in school.” The program started small but is constantly being expanded. Rose said he hopes to initiate something new dv-ery week until “we get all the people involved that we possibly can.” Activities are^held after school from 4 to 5 p.rm,. in the evening from 7 to 9 and rome on Saturdays. For the youngsters, activities' include arts and <7afts, a drama club which just completed its first production, a hobby cl^, a camera club and. sevCm sports. ADULTS INVOLVED Adults become part of the program through knitting, cake decorating and art classes. To promote family togetherness, there are roller skating and monthly ifaystery trips which can be attended <^y by family groups. There are plans to start a preschool story hour next month and a story hour for first and second graders who want to stay after school. “We’d like to put in a reading and math program for parents,” said Rose. “We have the staff but no parents. “They seem to be more interested in .recreational activl-ties.” He said there are about SO parents actively engaged in the three current classes. About half the school’s 677 students are Involved in tha ‘We’re very pleased with lha turnout of the youngsters,” ha said. “And they’re all well-behaved.” The students seem to be behaving better in school, but the success of the program is hard to evaluate, ha said. far, we’re real pleased with the project,” he said. “In fact, we couldn’t be happier.” ""Get the blanket off my back-free! Finance your carwith Community National Free! A handsome washable car blanket In colorful red plaid, with handy carrying case just for financing your new car with Community National before April 1st hit service. Low “thrifti-loan” bank rates. Up to 36 months to iep>y« Ask your dealer, or at your nearest Community National office. Chief Pontiac says, "Keeps whole tribe toasty waran." One more personai service from the bank that cares Ghi»uii 4AL I Bi NATIONAL I bank Now 21 offices in Oakland and Macomb Counties G*-2 THE PONTIAC PRESS. MOND^y, MABCH 20, 1967 Gambler, 2 Police to Be Senfenced DETROIT (AP) - Convicted gambler Russell TriL'tc and two former River Rouge policemen today faced an April 7 court date for sentencing on a conviction of conspiring to obstruct iustice. Trilck, Stone and Walter Wood were found guilty the charge by a Wayne County Circuit Court jury. ♦ * ★ Trilck and Stone were also convicted of conspiracy to bribe police. It was the second time the trio had been tried on the charges. BIMOfi, Bahamas ^AF) — sible arrest in New York; would “Tears in the Midst bf Joy, Adam Clayton Powell ddivered bring viblence and rioting. before a congr^atiM of nearly his “victoiy speech" on Pahn * * * ‘ 1,500. • otto Ms Sunday but not b AP Wlrtph^ EX-POUnCIAN DIES -Edward Martin, 87, former Republican governor and U.S. senator fr«n Pennsylvania, died Saturday in a Washington, Pa., hospital. During his two terms as senaotr, he was known for his opposition to deficit spending and conunun-ism. He retired in 1959. The verdict was returned urday before Judge Edward S. Piggins by a jury of nine women and three men. 'Mau Mau' Group at Work in Harlem Powell AAessage Is Brotherly Love 8 huge con- 'A| the Harlan chimdi about gregation at Harlem’s Ai^ssini-10 membas of a black national- an Baptist CSiurch. Instead of a pulpit, Powell spoke frixn the wMte coral stqis of tbe Bimini Hotri. The message was brotherly love. i *★ ★ Some 72 hours before he delivered the sermon, Powell announced he had “reluctantly’ decided against returiiing to Harlem for Palm Sunday. He said he was staying on the is- ist group who call themselves ..........stalked out vriien ttie associate pastor, David N. Licoririi, warned of “etxremist elements in our midst.’’ LEAFLETS DISTRIBUTEO The Mau M^ meiMtors had distributed leaflets at the door proclaiming their readiness to “prevent Adam Gayton Pow-eU’s arrest.’’ Their walkout dame about The Rev. Ucorish said, want to congratulate our piudor because he was not pushed ^ that element in Harlm seel' to destroy this conununity. “We’ve heard some strange voices in this community.’* RED HEX-METS Police said several of the Mau Mau wore red constructioi helmets and at least two carried what were described as “ornamental’’ b^onets or sc^ bards. In Bimini, Powell held forth for seven n^utM/ m a sermon entitled “Ride Oh, King Jesus.’’ He told his audience to think not of black and vritite butbf the brotherhood of man. ‘What the world needs is King Jesus to ride on until the fitting ends of ^^am and black and whites to live together in racial harmony,’’ he said. His audience was composed equally of blacks and wMtes. The natives wore their Sunday while the tourist garb ranged from bikinis to saUing outfits. A ione Boy Scout was in uniform. Powell forewent his ^ng Sunday to prq>are Mslhew port was* brief srtmon, tiie same somon',^^ he had laepared to deliver in ’ Harlem. , 4 i But bef(H% Powell arrived to deliver his message. Chuck Stone, Ms administrative assistant, saM Ms boss is staying op Bimini for two {Hlnoary reasohrt “He won’t go bade to New York until he's certain he not be arrerted,” Ston “And there is no reasem to go to Washingtm at He no Ittoger ' there.’’ Assumes Dufies / DETROIT (AP)-F sodated Press i redee Gareau, 32, ffiipwd Ms dt^es A County’s first ] usual Gareau’s apppi^nent to by Mel county Board of ^pervisors. A 19&9 graduate M Wayne State Uni-versity./Gareau has worieed for UniteMTess Intematioial and, mospecently, the Detroit News. I Cars Derailed YPSILANTI (AP)-El^t cars Of a westbound New YiX OiKsC ^ 'jctA^^ccZi^.*. .1. ^ .. id, d(£-4<^iUa&^ tb udi*i^7MiaCdjL Cdc*cdCd, idfido 6 THE PONTIAC PRESS for Home Delivery Dial 332-8181 IRREE COLORS It’s a Pleasure to Shop and Save at FOOD TOWN f PEOPLE'S SUPER MARKETS W FOOD MARKETS I ■ Hictiland Road 112M Baldwin Ave.. 11215 Cooley L«ki Rd. I »» »>k>kw n,,t i 1 2S3 AttIUM | 465 L PIKE ST. I 7MAUIURNST. I III OKCMAAB UKE A»L ■ FRIEHDLY SERVICE •LOW PRICES EVERYDAY • PLUS GOLD BELLSTAMI ATr(diiimal BoMay FavoritB EASTER SHOPPING FOOD TOWN 1 PEOPLE'S FOOD MARKETS SUPER MARKETS J-S.-I == I — I^Ussl-srl = I WE WILL CLOSE 12-3 GOOD FRIDAY AND ALL DAY EASTER SUNDAY HYORADE WEST VIRGINIA Hxm 79^ We Always Reserve the Right to Limit Quantities of Merchandise PESGHKS SLICED CQC MNN** Per Lb. NSUl iQc nuiY 24 Size lO-O&Tray I9« lOMATIES BEEF LIVER Popps or Peters suceD BOLOGNA BOROEf^ Glacier Club V lllICK cllKg Pineapple m MEL-O-CRUST WHITE BREAD 1'/4 Lb. Loaf ^ .CHISE& ^ SANiORN ^ CMFEE 1 FAVORITE 1 . # BOX ' PEAS 1 r MATCHES HEINZ TOMATO SOUP lO’/^Oz. Can C—^ THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, MARCH 20. 1967^ Jacoby on Bridge NOEtH (1» , A AKt7<5 V A ♦ AKI «AQ4 MOl r 10543 EAST AQJ94 V92 ♦ Q 10 3 4^ 10763 *3 VKQJ876 ♦ 7653 ♦ K2 North-South vulnerable Weat North JUst South 2 dh Pass 2 tr 2 A Paas 3 V 4 * Paas 4 V 4N.T. Pass 5 A 8N.T. Paas 7V Paas Paas Pass Past Pass Pass Pass forcing bid and play the jthe fact that he is sure that By OSWALD & JAMES JACOBY In his first Blue Book, the late Ely Culbertson described the fwcing two bid with the negative no-trump sponse. While Ely did not invent this bid (actually it was invented I by Oswald Ja-j coby and Waldemar von Zedtwitz with a lot of help from Ted lightner), he did make it an integral part of the Culbertson system and the bid is still used by practically all the bridge-playing publip. There Is one small gronp which does not nse it. That group is composed of the top players. These top players nse two clubs as their strongest others ei(her as specialized stroi^ bids or we^ak bi(^s. ^e two club bid has three distinct advantages over regular two bids. It eliminates the negative two no-trump response so that the weak) hand does not become the no-trump declarer. It releases the ottier two Uds for other purposes and on many occasions it keeps the bidding lower. Today’s hand illustrates this third advantage. South is able to bid his hearts three times without going past four hearts. He has a sound positive rp-sponse but is afraid of a misfit. After South’s third bid of hearts, North realizes that his ace is sufficient heart support and goes into Blackwood. Of course, South shows no aces but North’s five no-trump not only asks for kings but also guarantees the four aces. South’s bid of seven hearts is based on this knowledge plus hu king of clubs will be a very valuable card. If North had opened with two| front spades the partnership might still reach die grand slam. However, they would lose one early Fire investigate DETROIT (AP)-Firejofflcial6 today soug^ the cause of a Sqs which six fire compania speift one and a half hours fighting he-, fore bringing it umter centred. The blaze started Saturday in the rear of a downtown Detroit dress shop and spread to the of tM store. round of bidding because South A pesticide detection iabwa-tory mounted oh a truck can be used In the field to detect poisonous residues before the BOBIN MALONE Bgr Bob Labbets By Carl Gnibert By Art Sansom Q—The bidding has been; West North East South 1A Pass 2 A Pass 3 A You, South, hold: AJ2 VAKSS 04.33 AAQ82 What do you doT A—Bid four no-trump. Yon plan to fo to a slam but there is one ehanoe in a million that your partner doesn’t hold an aee. Blackwood guards against ra'«ms!ir- MMrad J. from Paul I_ HaroM a. from Valentina v. Priti Barbara from John C. Saar" Margaret M. from Chariot Mjvtlla from Thomaa J. 1-- Esthar E. from Horbort C. Hoppa Raymond M. from Kathy L. Sutton' Margaret J. from Jotaph 6. Pllo Jana M. from Edgar W. Barne E. from Gaorgo A. Rupay —. P. from Robert P. Snyder fdWi A. from Thomai W. FItIdi Dock from Luella Roblnian Klrlty A; from Basil H. Banner Jack 0. from Shirley E. Frizzle ^.f’lssjsir »h5.fSrcSr*w.”j.;ii"-'^* Eater u from GtLanc B. ArimtronB THE PONTIAC PRESS. kONDAY. MARCH 20, 1967 C—7 Romanian Technician Is Profiled By HAtiss NEUElboUlkl BUCHAREST, Romania (AP) — If he could, Ion Pascu would «pend his vacatira in Italy, driving a West German car. He likes French movies and an occasional bit of British beat music, but he would not want his daughta* to wear miniskirts. Ion Pascu is not exclusively interest in the West, however. The slim, good-looking worker is one of Romania’s 1.6 million CoiMiunist party members and he is proud of what his country and Ws family have achieved during the past few years. • ★ ★ ★ As a maintenance mechanic in Bucharest’s Dada textile factory he supervises West German equipment — “very good.’’ Pascu is 30 and makes 1,600 lei a month, including overtime. ABOVE AVERAGE Under the official tourist rate of exchange, which reflects buying power, this is $88.88' a month, about 20 per cent above average for an industrial worker in this Balkan country. Thirty per cent of Romania’s labor force are women. Ion’s pretty 29-year-old wife has a job in the same plant. As a labpfdJ toiy assistant she makes IJOO lei, putting the Pas^uS’ combined monthly income at a relatively high $150,. * * “Right, how, we have not much Money ieft," Pascu told a rafter who talked to him in a vrae shd> close to the newly built housing areas ringing the capital. “We have spent all our ready money furnishing our apartment,’’ he explained. The Pas-cus moved into the new place in 1963. It includes two rooms, a bath, kitchen and a storage closet. $10 A MONTH They pay $10 a month for it, Including heating, gas, electricity and other fringe costs. He estimates the family’s monthly food bill at about $55. Regular working hours for the couple are 7 a.m. to 5 p.m. with a sh(»t Saturday, making a 48-hour week. Ion can turn in maximum of 120 hours of pa overtime per year. For every hour additional he gets time off. Once a month he attends a party meeting. * * -k When they have picked up their 6-year-old daughter. Mi-haela, at the factory kindergarten, Ion reads Sclntela, the party newspaper, or his favorite spyts magazine. Carpa.......... mrpati, which sell at 2% lei — about 14 cents — for a pack of 20, is his favorite brand of cigarettes. The party newspaper seeks to curb smoking but Ion fears he’ll get fat if he stops. WATCH ’TELEVISION In the evening, the Pascus usually watch television on their 17-inch Soviet set — “very good.’’ Operettas are among his favorites. He likes to listen to beat music occasionally but he emphatically dislikes the Beatles hairdo and miniskirts. Both styles have virtually vanished in Bucharest after a morality campaign launched by the Communist youth organization. ★ * ★ In about five years, Pascu hopes to have saved enough money to buy a car. His favorite make is Mercedes, a German car predominant among Romania’s top government officials. He realizes this would be too expensive, so he would be satisfied with a Renault, which is to be assembled in Romania starting in 1969 under an $80-million contract with the French. k * k For want of a dreamed-of vacation abroad, the Pascus spent $6.11 for a 12-day holiday at a , union recreation center on the Black Sea or in the Romanian mountains. Cars, motorcycles and bicycles bought on the installment plan in Belgium in 1965 represented a total value of over 115 million dollars. (AdfwtlMtiMnl) How People 50 to 80 May Apply for Life Insurance If you'r* between 50 and 8( you may still apply for the san-kind of life insurance available when you were younger. You handle the transaction entirely by mail. No one will call on you. No obliga- We’ll tell you how to apply to put this policy into effect at an in,r troductory rate for the first month. Just tear out this ad and mail it today with your name, address and > year of birth* to Old American, 4900 Oak, Dept. 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TOP VALUE STAMPS We Reaenre Tha Right te Limit Quantltlat. T J WITH THIS COUPON ON ~ WITH THIS COUPON ON ■ ANY 2 PACKAGES a ANY 2 LOAVES S ■ ECKRICH iMEL-O-SOFTSANDWICHi ■ SMOKEES ■ OR KROGER RYE BREAD! P Valid thru Wad., Mar. 22, 1967 -J Valid thru Wad., Mar. 22, 1967 ^ ^ I of KrogerOat i Ea*l. Mich. IN at Kroger Oat, B Eoat. Mich. ■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■'■ ■aMBJiJUi 9 ■■■■■■ p ■■ ISI . e And fteme Effective At Krpgar In Oat. And Eatt. Mich. Thru Tuat., Mar. 21.1967. Nona Said Te Daa(^art. Copyright 1967. Tfie Kroger Ca. e—8 THE PONTIAC PRESS'. MONDAY, MA«€H 20, 1967 'Retired' March Back on Set By BOB THOMAS AP Movie-Tefcvislon Writer HOLLVW^D - It is a pleas-wre Uii ref^ that retirement rumor^ about FYedric March have been raag-gerated. By whom? Freiic March. Last June, the two-time Oscar-winner — “Pr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde,’* 1 9 3 1, “B e s t| Years of Our] Lives,” 1946 declared in this space that he’d had it with the acting business. He had just endured a harrowing location for “Hombre,” and he opined that he was ready to ‘‘hang up my hat.” Now the 69-year-old March and his wife, Florence Eldridge, are back in Hollywood to star in a CBS Playhouse drama for fall release, ‘‘Do Not Go Gentle Into the Good Night.” ‘‘The title comes from Dylan THOMAS ‘Thomas’ poeni about the approaching death of his father,” Inarch explained;^ “George ^aefdr (the 'fV producer-director) sent us the script, and Florence Was enthused about it. had to accept her judgment, because she also read and «i-thused over ‘Skin of Our Teetti’ and ‘Long Day’s Journey Into Night,’ which we did they wili finish the CBS drama a few days before the April 10 Oscarcast, the Marchs do'not plan to stay over to attend toe awards. The actor has allowed his Academy mem-bersMp to lapse. ‘1 wasn’t sdeing oiough of toe pictqres,’^ hq ei^ “and 1 todn’t feel it was i _ for me to vote (f I hadn’t seen them ali.” March bears the distinction of being toe only two-time winner to scwe* his victmies ov« a long period of time — 15 years apart. His first Oscar was also toe occasion of toe only tie in Academy history; that demonstrated how toe academy could be manipulated in those early years. In the play, March enacts a retired carpenter who is sent by his children to live in an institution for toe elderly. He is a cantankerous soul who is soothed by another resident, played by Miss Eldridge. In toe end he decides to go back to his own house to finish oul his days. As for his own retirement. BbrlifiiillielMt' SPECIAl. , ^ cOc Short Stack, One Pattie of VU IsOO A.M. Sautage and Coffee. to 11:30 COME IN AND TRY OUR STUK SPECIAL, Served Daily Ectnuw RESTAURANT 929 W. HURON ST., PONTIAC OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK Including idav 5 A.M. to 8 P.M., Fridayi 5 A.M. to 9 P.M. , Dem Pushing for Band to Toot Congress' Horn NOW at 7:00 and 9:15 RODGERS WIMERSHIN^ MSD'IM btarring DEBORAH KERR/mBRllER^ fHWlltBniBM OIIDICTCTIilRWIItUll 'iPMHiTTI All Yew INCLUDES: Salad, Braad, Butter, Coffee MONDAY SPECIAL ONLY ^1 Deere Open 1:0e P.M. Short SuWepta T:1S P.M. Feature liSS P.M. Only Max von Sydaw atjetm By DICK WEST , United Press Intoraational WASHINGTON — Rep. W liam Jennings Bryan Dom, ] S.C., was quoted recently i saying that Congress should have its own marching band. He told Roll Call, a Capitol Hill weekly.'lJ that the organi- ' zation of a band. and drill unit within the Capi-' ,tol police force might help im-I prove toe congressional “image.” I According to Roll Call, Dom 'envisioned a ceremony comparable to toe chan^g of toe guard at Buckingham Palace in England.” ^ Well, gosh and gee whiz!| iThat’s about the best idea I’ve heard in a long time. I get all misty-eyed just thinking about I. have always felt that Congress was a little short on ceremony, and such rituals as it has are lacking in pageantry. A LONG WAY A band would go a loilg way toward bridging toe pomp-and-circumstande gap. Dora’s proposal, however, will not find easy going. Being by nature meek and diffident men, his colleagues may feel that having their own band would be putting on airs. I recall a few years ago someone introduced a bill to probide House members with their own flag. NO SALUTES But when they ran it up on the House floor, nobody would j salute it. Then there is toe matter of toe Capitol’s weak west wall. Architect J. George Stewart jhas warned that strong vibra-I, like maybe a sonic boom, lid make toe wall collapse the Capitol dome. Until such time as the west iwall is either replaced or re^ j paired, it might be wise to put a mute on toe sousaphone. WOULD BE GLORIOUS i Ah, but it would be glorious ^ if the band could be formed. There are so many occasions where a little band music would be appropriate. A ceremony comparable to toe changing of toe guard at Palace could be! arranged when the cops on thei night shift come on duty. And that would only be the starter. ★ * * Take each fall, immediately after adjournment, when senators and representatives take -off on junkets to various parts of the earth. The band could give them a proper send-off. TRAVEL MEDLEY I can see toeih now, marching off to toe airports, docks and depots, white toe band plays a medley of “Anc^s [. Aweigh,” “Faraway PllSes It With Strange Sounding Names” s and “Around toe World in 60 And when a congressman is nseated, as happened recently^ to Adam Clayton Powell, toe band could be on hand to cere-| monialize his departure. “I Shall Return” might be toe appropriate tune. Sales Warning DETROIT (AP)-The Detroit Board of Education haR issued a warning that no book salra-men represent Detroit public schools. 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THE PlOyTlAC PRESS, MONDAY, MARCH W, 1967 D—1 'Case Considered Closed/Says President Resignations Turned In by Three Illinois Coaches GHAiaPAIGN, iu. (AP) Unois* three scandal-involvel coadies reluctantly resigned Sunday, 24 hours after the B|g Ten issued an ultimatum that they be fired or the university face indefinite suspenami from the conference. The action 1^ (ootbalt cioach Pete EUiott, baskethaU Coach Harry Combes and assistant Howie Braim ended a tfaree-mbnth ordeal stenoming from a $20,000 afiiletic slush ftmd. ★ ★ ★ Dr. David D. Henry, univer-' pr^ent,uwho revealed, the emstmce of tiie fund to the Bi^ Ten and fought to the end to save file jobs al the coaches, accepted file resignations. .“Under the mandate til the intercolle^ate conference of facul^ representative^ , the case isi amsidered closed inasmuch as the three coaches re^ linquished all duties with the Atldetic AssociathHi as of this date,” Dr. Henry said. LOSES BATTLE On Saturday, Dr. Henry lost his final round in an attempt to show cause why the coaches should not be fi^. TTie faculty rei»^ntatives told Illinois to fire the coaches by Tuesday or face indefinite suspension from the conference. The scandal broke in December, when assistant athletic director M«1 Brewer, bypassed ftir the afiiletic directwship which had opened with the Dec. 1 resignation of Doug Mills, revealed to Dr. Henry the existence of the fund. In addition to the ouster of the coaches, five athletes were declared permanently ineligible for participating in the fund, which made illegal payments of $9 a month to $50 a month. Several players left school and three others were handed one-year suspensions from competition. CoadHif-Year Savon Class A Crown m Voices Hinder Tiger Pitcher By the Associated Press ;but pulled up as he saw Wick-WINTER HAVEN, Fla. — ersham could catch it. Baseball is supposed to be a thmking man’s game, but De- LEAP FROCr—Detroit Tigers’ shortstop Tom Matchick isn’t playing leap frog with Boston pitcher Dennis Bennett. He’s using Bennett’s head in keeping his balance after making a throw to first in double play attempt in a weekend at Lakeland, Fla. Ben- «P WlrtphoM nett was forced at second when teammate Jose Tartabull grounded to second.' Bennett pitched no-hit ball for the five innings he ’ked against the Tigers. Bosox won Sat-lay, 3-2, and yesterday, 7-6.' Sag Continues Rally Produces 6-5 Leaf Win Howe Scores Twice; Playoff Hopes Wane DETROIT (AP)-THeir playoff prospects reduced to a splinter-thin hope, the Detroit Red Wings began a three-day respite from the National Hockey League wars today, wallowing in injuries, ineptness and fifth place. Detroit blew a 4-1 first-period lead in dropping a 6-5 decision to the husUing Toronto Maple Leafs Sunday afternoon. The defeat, combined with Montreal’s 4-4 tie with Chicago, left Detroit 11 points behind the Canadiens in a waning battle for the fourth Stanley Cup playoff berth. ■k -k if In the other NHL game. New York beat Boston 3-1 to clinch Its first playoff berth in five yearS^The Red Wings play New York on Detroit ice Thur^ay. The Red Wings and Montreal each have six games to play and Detroit would have to win six while the Canadiens lose six to gain a tie for fourth place. In that event, Detroit would make the playoffs with more victories. Manager-Coach Sid Abel was somewhat resigned after Toronto scored four goals in the final period to overtake Detroit. “We’re going nowhere and they’ve got second place to fight for,” said Abel. Toronto and New York are tied for second with 67 points each. Detroit outshot Toronto 13-9 in the first period as Gordie Howe scored twice, and Alex Delvec-chio and Floyd Smith once each. But the Wings got only 15 shots on former teammate Terry Sawchuk in the final two stanzas while Toronto bombarded rookie Detroit netminder George Gardner with 28 shots. Bruce MacGregor scored for Detroit midway through the final period to make it 5-3 and then the Leafs caught fire and rallied to win. troit Tiger pitcher Dave Wick-ersham wasn’t thinkmg, he was hearing voices. k k k Wickersham deliberately let a popped bunt fall in front of him Sunday, then picked up the ball and threw to first base, letting the winning run score from third and the Boston Red Sox beat the Tigers 7-6. The loss evened Detroit’s Grapefruit League record at 5-5. With the Tigers ahed 6-5 going into the last of the ninth, Wickersham struck out Joe Foy. George Scott singled to right. Russ Gibson singled to center Then Wickersham spread his arms and let the ball fall, pounced on it and threw to first while Gibson dug for home with the winning run. Wickersham looked stunned for a minute, then trudged off the field with his head down. Later, in the clubhouse, he said, “I thought I heard someone yelling ‘let it go, let it let it go.’ ” Pistons Sit in Cellar; Club to Draft Second DETROIT (AP) -There’U be no flip of the coin this year to see who gets first and second spots in the National Basketball Association college drafts. Detroit has a solid hold on second. Last year the Pistons and New York sat in the cellars of their divisions with identical records. A coin flip awarded first choice in the drafts to the Knicks, who picked former Michigan star Cazzie Russell. Detroit chose Dave Bing of Syracuse, who turned into one of the NBA’s top rookies. WIND UP SEASON This year the Pistons again sit in the Western Division cellar after winding up the season with 135-129 loss to San Francisco Sunday night. Detroit is 30-51 for the sepison. 'But Baltimore lost to Philadelphia 132-129 to finish the season in file Eastern Division cellar with a record of 20 victories and 61 defeats. TTiat means the Bullets have first choice in the drafts. k k k her NBA action^ Sunday night, Boston whipped New York 124-113 and Chicago topped Los Angeles 122-109. ■nie Pistons led during early play Sunday, but the Western Division champion Warriors pulled away during the final two minutes for the victory. Bing led Detroit scoring with 35 while Eddie Miles added 29 and Dave DeBusschere 25. Rick Barry, had 39 for San Francisco to bring his season total to 2,775 and win the NBA scoring championship. k k k Eastern Division leading Philadelphia made its record 68-13, best ever in the NBA, with the trium[rii over Baltimore. WUt Chanlberlain poured in 37 points, 26 in the second half, to lead the 76ers. Gus Johnson was high for the Bullets with 28. SAN FRANCISCO DETROIT OFT • F Barry 1411-13 39 Bing 14 7-10 Hetiel 7 i-4 19 Miles 12 S-5 Thmond 8 8-9 22 Harding 3 1-2 Nmann 0 l-l ^1 DBcre ^ 10 5-5 Hat Trick Paces Port Huron Win By die Associated ^ess Mark Reynolds banged in three goals and paced the Port Huron Flags to a 104 pasting of the Muskegon Mohawks in International Hockey League play Sunday night. In other games, Dayton downed Toledo 7-5 and Des Moines coasted past Columbus 5-3. 'k * COMEBACK -Manfred Hersacher started slowly in his doubles’ event Saturday during the Pontiac Motor Tournament at Huron Bowl, but he finished with a 300 game. Rolls 300 Game and George Thomas singled past third, scoring Scott and tying the game. 1 Wickersham walked Jose T’ar-tabull deliberately to make possible a double play at any base. Bob Tillman pinch hit for wining pitcher Jose Santiago and popp^ a bunt between Wicker-sham and the third base line. Gibson had started for home 11 5-7 27 Murray Total* 50 35-44 2-2 2 VArOle 3 2-2 Totlll 52 23-29 23 33 34 45-32 24 33 34—127 fouls—Son Francisco 21 'Attendanca 4,812. Bowler in Strong Finish When Manfred Hersacher overcomes a bad start in tournament bowling he does it with a giant stride. Hersacher of 7280 Pontiac Lake Road Saturday ^id something the best boiylers in the Pontiac area haven’t acc^omplished this season at Huron Bowh he rolled a 300 game. •k ★ ★ Competing in the doubles phase of the annual Pontiac Motor Tournament, Hersacher began his three-game series with a 128 game, then upped his pace to 169. He carries 160 and 143 averages bowling at Howe’s Lanes and Orchard Lanes. He put together 12 strikes In his third game to finish wlfii a 597 actual series and the highest game at Huron this season. North Carolina 98. Boston Collag* 10 Virginia Tech 88, ovartlmi Indiana 51, ____________ Midwest Regional Championship Houston 83, Southern Methodist 75 Kansas 70, Louisville 81 Texas Western 49, Wyoming 47 National Invitation Tournament Southern llllnols"?!r'Marquetta 54 Consolation NAIA Toom*">«"t St. Bendlct's Kan., 7 “It was one of the most em-barrasing things I’ve ever done in my life,” he said. “I don’ have any excuse. I should b hiding somewhere.” Tiger Manager Mayo Smith said, “Really and truly, I don’t know why he did it. He , completely blank. I’m just glad happened in an exhibition game. If this had been the regular season, I don’t know...’’ Joe Sparma started for Detroit and had control problems, especially with his curve. Boston jum^ on him for three runs in the first, two of themj| coming on a single by Thomas. Detroit got one back in the second on an error, two walks nd an infield out. The Tigers got another in the top of the fourth on a hompr by Ray Oyler. SCORE TWO Boston scored two runs in the fourth on a walk and three singles, all off Wickersham. Detroit picked up one run in the fifth on an error, a walk, an infield out and a single by Jim Northrop. Pershing Rips Flint Central by 90-66 Score Will Robinson Feted Before Tilt; Simpson Scores 43 Points EAST LANSING (AP) -Robinson, a man two generations removed from slavery, relaxed today and savored a couple of honors any basketball coach would be proud to hold. His Detroit Pershing team won the state (^ass A basketball title with an awesome 90-66 victory over gutty Flint Central Saturday night, a few hours after the Michigan High School Coaches Association named Robinson Coach-of-the-Year. k k k “This has to be the highlight of my career,” said Robinson, a veteran of 24 years in Detroit Public Schoois and the first Ne-to be selected top coach by the association. “Remember gentlemen,” he told fellow coaches and officials at the award banquet, “I’m just two generations removed from slavery.” ONE LOSS Pershing’s Doughboys, ranked fourth in the final Associated Press poll, ended the season with a 21-1 record; the lone loss a one-point defeat at the hands of arch-rival Detroit Northwestern in the Detroit City League championship game. ~ '' upset Northwestern in the tournament on its way to the title. Csntral Washington 108, Morris Harvey National Junior Collogo Toumoim Championship Moorly, Mo., 58, San Jacinto, Pasa- Cameron, Okie. 91. Ranger, Tex., 77 Northwest Community, Powell, Wyo., 102, Burlington, Iowa 85 '''--ennes, Ind., 73, Dodge City, Kan., Nashville Business 47, Raytown, Mo., I consolation Wayland Baptist, Plainview, Tex., a 2 0 Jones, 2b 0 0 0 1 : 2 0 0 0 Tllimn, ph »1 0 0 38 4 10 4 Total* 37 7 15 E—Lohrer, Andrews, Santiago, ____ DP—Freehan and Wert. LOB—DETROIT 1, Boston 12. 2B—Wert. HR—Oyler. SB-Thomas, S-;T|llman. SF—Olyer. Tlme-2:40. Attendenco-2,357. ---------------r— The Doughboys, wAh Ralph Simpson scoring a record 43 points and 6-foot-8 center Spen-Haywood controlling the backboards with 17 rebounds, wore down Flint’s Indians in the final five minutes of play for their first state title. k k k It was the first title for a Detroit public school since Detroit Northern won in 1930. Detroit teams did not play in fiie tournament from 1931 to 1961. Simpson, a junior guard playing his first year of high school ball, was fantastic, hitting 21 of floor shots (58 per cent) in surpassing the old tournament single game scoring mark of 42 points set by Ernie Thompson of Saginaw High in 1962. CLASS A DET.PERSHING FLINT CENTRAL Haywood 514 Film Ctnlrsl ____ Fouled out — Bacon, Bowers. Total Fouls - Pershing, 15, Flint : 12 18 28 12-88 CHAMPS CLAIM NET—Detroit Pershing players Granville Cook (40) and Ralph Simpson (14) are held by teammates as they take down the net after winning the state Class A basketball title Saturday night in Jenison Field-house. Simpson poured in 43 points during the 90-66 conquest of Flint Central. Menominee '5' Really Flying EAST LANSING - Menominee High may have set a style in flying to the Class state high school basektball championship. The Maroons from the extreme western Upper Peninsula flew to the state capital Friday for the windup of the 42nd annual schoolboy cage windup. The airplane trip, first ever for tournament, left Menominee well rested for a couple of tough games. The Maroons upended favored Lansing O’Rafferty on St. Patrick’s Day in the semifinals and then won the championship with 63-59 victory over Willow Run Saturday night. PERFECT SEASON Mount Pleasant Sacred Heart and Flint St. Matthew added undefeated basketball seasons to perfect 9-0 football se sweeping to respective Class C and D championships. Sacred Hart, 26-0, outmanned Detroit All Saints 66-53 and St. Matthew contained Ewen’s foot-9 Terry Conrad to win in Class D by a 75-67 score. Menominee was the only UP team to bring home a championship. Wakefield was eliminated 56-55 hy Sacred Heart in the C semifinals and Ewen, tired from 71-65, four-overtime victory over Adrian Catholic Central in the D semis, wilted under St. Matthew’s fast break. Both Ewen and Wakefield drove more than 500 miles to Lansing. Menominee, with Pat Miller pouring in 28 points, overcame 35-31 halftime in nipping Willow Run. The losing Flyers played most of the second half witoout 5-foot-8 star shooting ace John Thomas, who netM 18 points and four personal fouls in the first half. Thomas was high for Williow Run with 22 points. Menominee held only a two-point lead in the finai 11 seconds when Dave Haglund hit a pair of crucial free throws to seal the victory. Sacred Heart, with three play, ers over 6-foot-5, held a 29-28 halftime edge over All Saints before breaking the game open in the second half. All Saints, with four juniors and a sophomore in the starting lineup, couldn’t contain the Irish from Mid-Michigan as the game wore on and finally succumbed to the superior height advan- Actually, the slow start In the doubles was a letdown. He bowled his singles event first and hit 620 actual. ★ ★ ★ The 300 is his first sanctioned one, having a 27$ high previously. Hersacher has been bowling nine years. TENSION EASES—Emotion that built up during three weeks of tournament play was release In a good cry by Menominee High School coach Robert Krysiak shortly after he end the team received the trophy for winning the Class B state basketball cham-idonship Saturday at East Lansing. Ki^siak buried his head on the shoulder of Bill Kelly: No. 44 is Dewey Bellisle. Smiling player at right is Patrick Miller. % Cage Champs Here is the All-Tournament team selected by ’The Associated Press foi-Ipwing the 1967 Michigan High Schooi Basketball championships; Spcncsr Haywood, Dat. Par-Ralph Simpson, Dat. Pershing Tim Bograkos, Flint Cantral Pat Millar, Manomlnaa Mika Hackatt, Mount Pleasant b Sacred Heart ; Second Team ^ Bob Boudreau, Flint St. Matt. I; Bob FrantI, Ewen 1 Freels Bacon, Flint Central p John Sparla, Flint SI. Matthew i; Mika Funnell, Mount Pleasant Sacred Heart J947 Prep Bisketall Finals CLASS A I Det. Pershing 90, Flint Central 1 CLASS B 83, Willow Run 59 CLASS C Totals Menoml.... Willow Run Foulei- -Total 2-2 4 Atkins .2 0-0 4 DIshman 0 0-0 0 21-24 43 Totab 35 9-19 59 ............,*11 13 14 14-83 18 19 11 13-59 Garza Sladlsh Kulick Molnar BuckI LSAIgTS^MT. FL*. ,*C^ N^ 1 Natal I M 1 2 5?" ^ Jackson 5 ^2 l 2 04) 4 Simons 4 M 1 3 00 8 Volsin 0 >2 . 2 2-3 8 Murphy 0 (FO 0 0 0-,0, 0 McOuaM 0 OO 0 23 7-10 53 Totals 2S18-28 88 « ^........... IS 12 IS 1S-.dS tart ......... 15 13 19 19-44 tEN OFT 10 4-4 24 5 30 13 4 OO 0 .INT-ST. JMATHW Sparla 11 7-9 r ■lU Tatab 10 7-14 47 Tatata linoSTS - Ewan It, St. Matttiaw - 12,222. i D—2 THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY. MARCH 20, 1967 SERVICE CENTERS SUNDAYS/ 12-5 P.M. DAILY . to 9 P.M. M ONTGOMERY WARD Big outbursts in the singies {snd team events over the weekend at 300 Bowl brought to a climax one of the more noteworthy Pontiac Woman’s Bowl-i ing Association city tournaments. Not only did a new leader ap-pearcin 4he team event Saturday, the top five places changed. Then Sunday Pmtiac’s Shirley Grusnick emerged as the singies champion with sparkiing 703 total, surpassing the previous leader by 34 pins. HIRI't WHAT Wl ROI • Initall new linings • Install fluid • Check seals, master cylinder • Bleed'brakes • Adjust and lubricate hand brake • Road test car for safety • Check wheel bearings, fluid lines STANDARD HEAVY DUTY 14“ 19“ SELF ADJUSTING $3 MORE Big Scores Climax Wqm&fSi Pin Finafe 0 was liigh-lighted by a record-s^iiBg U7S winning doubles score. Althou^ no duos chall^ed the all-Ume high score set by Mable Wilson ^ her daughter Carol Carter, both from Pontiac, earlier in the tourney, new second and third-place teams developed Sunday. ★ ★ ★ The Waterford - Lake Orion pair of Hilda Hicks and Jean Bigler grabbed the runner-up spot with 1260; and third place The 34th annual P W B A went to Wilma Cerre and Bon- Rolls 702 in ABC Dad's Turn in Spotlight MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP) -Les Zikes Sr., of Chicago, father of one of the world’s greatest amateur bowlers, came into his own Sunday when he fired series to take first place in the regular singles division of American Bowling Congress Tournament. Zikes parlayed 20 strikes and only one open frame into games of 210, 237 and 255 as he unseat- Ailing Mofson Sets Record COLLEGE STA’nON, Tex. If) — Randy Matson’s hand too sore to throw the shot Saturday, but the Texas A&M weight star broke the National Collegiate Athletic Association record with a toss of 200 feet 7% inches. The world’s shot put record-holder at 70 feet 7V« inches had to forego the shot in a triangular meet with Rice and Louisiana State because of strained ligaments in the back of his hand. ’The world recwd in the discus is 213 feet 11% inches. The American l^rd is 210 feet • ed Ed Malck of Gardner, 111., who led the singles for a single day with a 697 total. Les Zikes Jr., of Palatine, 111., 1 a three-time ABC champion. He has won numerous international titles, including the 1963 World All-Events and the 1964 I n t e r-American All-Events crown. TAUGHT SON His father, who tau^t Les Jr., to bowi, has never achieved national tenpin fame Les Sr., has bowled seven times in the ABC without a sipificant score. Zikes, 56, manages a Chicago bowiing center. His first piace singies score was the best series of the 16-day-old tournament until R^dle of St. Louis popped in a 258-225-233-716 series on the final team squad of the day. Randle had 21 strikes to Zikes’ 20. ★ ★ ★ Despite Randle’s big contribution, the Golden Eagle team St. Louis totaled only 2,890 and failed to crack the top 10 standings. If Les Sr., remains unbeaten when the ABC ends May 7, he will receive an automatic berth on the U.S. team which petes in the world tournament next July in Malmo, Sweden. nie Coan, PQntiac entries, who hit 1244 handicap. Regaining a title Saturday held in 1962 was the Spmt Center TVophies team. Captained by Shirley Burpee, the Pontiac women rdled a 3015 total during the flnal team squad of this year’s tournament. This was 20 pins better than the 2995 figure posted by Selma’s, captained by Wante Siple, on the preceding squad. Three other teams on the two squads also bettered the 2938 winning total of last year and leading mark this season until Saturday. Pat Donner of Waterfwd Township retained first place in the Actual All events division.^ The champimiship trophies and prize monies—gl40 in the team event,. $100 in doubles, $70 singles — will be presented at the PWBA Open Meeting April 16 in the Elks Lodge. ★ ★ The final I) Lants Guttir Stilt, 300 Bowl, Pontiac 10. Baldwin Party Stort, Oxtord Barthlawno Butintn Sve., Doris Boucard, Clarkston Mariano Robinson, Walltd Lakt *64 Linda Yatts, Watarford Nancy Jarrall, Pontiac lII Events With Handicap — Carol Car- Po*nt?8c High I tarn uto Parts, High DoubI uairna Haxa ir. Union L Taam Actual Saritt — Hunloen't, tiac, 245 (alto high High Tournament ________ ________.. Carol Carter, Pontiac, 271 (also high tournament handicap t"‘" HONOR FOR COACH-Veteran Utica football coach Barney Swinehart (left), who was inducted into the Coaches Hall of Fame in Michigan, receives his certificate between halves of the Gass A high school basketball championship game at East Lansing Satur- AP WIraphela day from E. Dale Kennedy, executive secretary of the Michigan Education Ai^a-tion. Swinehart, now director of finance for Utica Community Schools, coached tiie Utica football squad from 1942-60. Pontiac Boys' Club Wins State Crown The Pontiac Boys’ Gub junior basketball team reigns as state chamiMons after winning three games on its home court Friday and Saturday. The local quintet upended Ypsilanti, 34-20, in the title game, holding the losers to no field goals in the final quarter. Roosevelt Washington played a fine game rebounding and ied the scoring with 10 points. ★ ★ ★ Mike Johnston also was instrumental in rebouQding, helping the smaller host cagers to offset their lack of size throughout the tournament. Spearheading the cham- dropped in 16 markers in the 35-30 semifinal viefeay over Highland Park. Coach Stephen Moore and the champions wili journey to Detroit’s BiOomer Buiiding Thursday for the state Intermediate Tournament. Pontiac finished second there last season. Hockey Title Won by Detroit Team Oscar Ramirez, who won the outstanding player award in the tournament. He scored 17 points in the final half as Pontiac upset Royal Oak’s Soutii Oakland Boys Club, 32-28, in the first game; and he HOUGHTON (AP)-The Burton Title junior hockey squad from Detroit sewed up first piace in the National Juvenile Hockey Tournament at Hough-Sunday by defeating Wilmette, Illinois, 4-1. TTie Detroit team has defeated ali the other teams competing in the round robin tourney. It scored victories over Saint Paul, Minn., 4-0; Eagle River, Wis., 10-2; Hancock,. Mich., 6-2; an Marquette, Mich., 4-0. Stock Drivers Cloud Picture Southeastern '500' Taken by Pearson BRISTOL, Tenn. (AP) -There were those who thought the Southeastern 500 would provide a clue to the outcome of the 1967 Grand National stock car racing championship. They couldn’t have been mora wrong. The hard-fought, 250-mile race over the half-mile Bristol International Speedway indicated only that 1967 could well be the most competitive year in stock car racing history. ★ ★ * David Pearson Was the winner, but unlike last year’s race which he clearly dominated until a broken timing chain cost him victory 20 laps from the end, this year’s race was a free-for-all. SOUTHEAST 'SOS' RESULTS 1— David Paarton, Spartanburg, S.C., 1967 Dodga, tsm 2— Cala Yarborough, Charlotta, N.C., 1M7 Ford, S3,(H0. 3— Daral DIarIngar, Charlotta, 1747 Ford, Charlotta, 19*7 District at Flint Local Swim Teams Trail lester placed fourth and POylStiac fifth Saturday in the irtheast District Michigan ICA Swimming Meet team toils at Durham Pool in Flint. Rochester’s Bruce Feather-stone turned in one of the top performance’s of the day as he streaked to a district record 2:04.6 ih taking the 200 - yard freestyle. ★ ★ ★ Flint led the six-team outing vrith 867% points. Saginaw was second with 597. Pontiac swimmers placed third in the midget and junior divisions and fifth in the prep class. Rochester wound up fourth in the prep division and placed fifth in the other two sses. TEAM SWIM TOTALS .. Flint 8*7'/,; 2. Saginaw 597, 3. Bay City 438; 4. Rochastar 390; 5. Pontlat Midgat DIvIslM lay Relay — Pontiac (Francia .......... "-1 Dauw, John 50 Freattyla - Chrli Jacquat, Rochaa-ir, 27.1. 100 Fraaityla — Paul Karas, Rochav ir, 1:03.1. 200 Freastyla Relay — Rochastar (Paul ..eras, David Zink, Heath Foxiaa, Chris Jacques) 1:54.9. Junior DIvIslan 200 Fraastyla — Bruca Faatharstona, ochaster, 2:04.* (Naw District Racord). 50 Braaststroka — Bob Coulura, Ra-chastar, 32.9. TIGERS Now on Sale by Mail TICKETS FOR ANY GAME AT TIGER STADIUM 'Wlt0rt ikt fJamt of lli0 ^am0 it 3un ^OPENING DAY Tutiday, April 18th-.Tigari vi. AngtIi 1st of th« 72 Rig Dotts for 1967 44 Nights 12 Sundays 2 Holidays 7*. I, 9-9......._.......Rad Sex IS*, 19*, 20*........ Senator* 21*, 22, 23-23..........Yankaes 25* 26,* 27*............Oriole. 8*-8* 9* 10*.,....While Sox "11*. 12, 13............Orioles 18*. 19. 20-20...........Miens 22*. 23*-23», 24..........Twin* 4-4, 5*. 6*..........Athletics '5*. 16, 17...........Senators .Rad Sox I’/............... Yankee* i*' 19*, 20, 21-21.... 23*, 24* 25*...........Rad Sox 26*. 27, 28............Senator* 30-30...............While Sox 31*. June l*....„.„.....Indians 16*, 17 18..___________Athletic* I9*-19*. 20*......_______Angels 21*, 22....................Twins 27*, 28* 29*............Indians 3()*, July 1*, 2....White Sox '-NisM Can* Sept. Sap). 28*i 29*. 30, Oct. 1...Angal8 Box Sooti $3.00 Rogorvod $Z.SO ' . - ORDER NOW FOR EARLY DELIVERY -,r Send check or money order (peyable U. S. currency) toi Ticbt OepartmenI, Tiger Staduim, Detroit, AAich, 48216 THE PONTIAC PRESS. 3IONDAY. MARCH 20, 1967 Cincinnati Pitcher Looks Sharp D-3 Braves Lose Two Catchers in Short Game Ity "Hie Associated Press ball game marred by injuries to Ri^t-baoder Sammy Ellis allowed only one hit in six innings' Sunday as the Qncinnati Reds blanked Atlanta AO in a raiSfCurtailed exhibition base- Braves catchers Joe Torre and Gene Oliver. Oliver suffered a cracked bone on the back of his right hand in the first inning and is expected to be sidelined from two to three week^ Torre, who replaced Oliver (^behind plate, split the indexfinger on his right hand and wifi^be out of action about a week. Hank Aaron’s infield single was the only hit off Ellis before rain halted the game after the sixth inning. Deron Jiduison had two hits and Tommy Harper scored twice, pacing the Reds’ attack. the other Florida exhibitions, the New York Yankees beat die Mets 1-0 in Fort Lauderdale, St. Louis to(*.the C3ii-cago White Sox 7-5 at St. Petersburg, Houston nipped Htts-burgh 2-1 in 10 innings at Fort Myers, Los Angeles topped Baltimore 8-0 at Miami, and Philadelphia shut out Washington 4-0 at Clearwater. Cleveland blasted California 8-2 at Tucson, Ariz., and San Francisco topped the Chicago Cubs 8-5 at Phoenix, Ariz. Kansas City edged Minnesota 54 ii 10 innings in Caracas, Venezuela. Fritz Peterson and Thad Til-lotson combined to throw a three-hitter for the Yankees. Peterson allowed only a single in six innings. A walk, Mickey Mantle’s single and a force-out provided the only run. A three-run burst in the sixth staked the Cardinals to toeir victory over the White Sox, St. Louis’ third straight triumph. Tigers Drop Six LAKELAND, Fla. (AP)-’The Detroit Tigers have trimmed six players from their spring baseball roster and ordered the six to minor league clubs. The six are pitchers Bill Butler, Daryl Patterson and Jim Rooker, infielders Tim Marting and Don Pepper and outfielder Wayne Redmond. Sonny Jackson’s 10th inning single drove in Ron Brand for the winning run in Houston’s de-dsion over the Pirates. Consecutive homers by Wes Parker and Jeff Torborg snapped a 3-3 tie in the eighth and sent the Dodgers to their victory over the Orioles. Dave Johnson had a three-run homer for the loser. Chris Short, Ruben Gomez and Pedro Ramos combined for a four-hit shutout for the Phillies, aiort allowing Uiree hits in six innings. ★ ★ * Cleveland scored five runs in wild first inning and ti against the Angels. The Giants won their third straight, getting four runs in the first inning and 15 hits in all off Cub pitching. A walk, a balk and Dick Green’s run scoring singip in the 10th won it for the A’s in Venezuela. Kansas City has won three of four from the Twins in their South American trip. Michigan Skier Sixth STOWE, Vt. (AP)-Sue Fletcher, 17, of Marquette, Mich., placed sixth Saturday in the girls slalom of the National Junior alpine Championships on 5,000-foot Mount Mansfield near Stowe. Her tiine was 1:35.95, seven seconds klower than the winning time. AP WIrtphoto HIGH FLYING FLYER — Jack Hoeft, a junior at the University of Dayton, makes a bid for the net after the Flyers downed Virginia Tech, 71-66, in overtime Saturday to win the NCAA mid-east regional. Tournament officials at Evanston, HI., however, raised the basket and Hoeft had to hang on to the rim for about 45 seconds before it was lowered. He came down with net in hand. Houston Coach Unsure Team 'Mean Enough' By the Associated Frees ithe Cougars’ 83-75 victory over Guy Lewis still thinks UCLA Southern Methodist in last Satis headed for a fall, but thejurday night’s NCAA Midwest Houston basketball coach isn’t sure his Cougars are mean enough to push the Bruins off their summit perch. “We lack the killer instinct, and I don’t know if that will be fatal against UCLA or not,” Lewis said Sunday as the Cougars began preparing for their NCAA tournament date with the unbeaten, top-ranked Bruins Friday night. ★ ★ ★ The second half of the semifinal doubleheader at Louisville, Ky., pits North Carolina’s slick young Tar Heels against surprising Dayton. Elvin (Big E) Hayes heads Houston’s talent parade and Lewis hopes the 6-foot-8 pivot-man, whose 31 points triggered Canada Unveils Newest Threat Among Runners HAMH.TON, Ont. (AP) -Ray Tucker, a 20-year-old Mc-Master University freshman, is Canada’s newest threat among middle-distance runners. Tucker streaked to an impressive victory in the l,00^yard event at the Highland indoor track and field meet Saturday. His victory over two strong U.S. runners followed week’s decision over Bill Croth-ers in the 880-yard lest at Halifax. Crothers sat out the Hamilton meet because of an injured foot. regional final, will prove the regional final, will prove the big equalizer against UCLA prodigy Alcindor. Big Lew poured in 38 points as the Bruins ousted University of Pacific 80-64 in the Far West regional for their 28th straight victory. ★ * w Fourth-ranked North Carolina, 264, gained the semifinals by whipping No. 9 Boston College 9&80 tehind Bob Lewis’ 31 points in the East regional and unranked Dayton, 24-5, outlasted Virginia Tech in overtime 71-66 for the Mid East crown. CAPTURE NIT Southern Illinois, the nation’s No. 1 college division team, capped an impressive bid for big-time recognition by capturing the National Invitation Tournament title at New York with a 71-56 triumph over Marquette. The victory was the 19th in a row for the Salukis, who t<^ped nine major opponents. In the NIT consolation game, Rutgers’ Bob Lloyd tossed in 44 points for a four-game total of 129, breaking the tournament record of 124 set by Maurice Stones of St. Francis, Pa., 12 years ago, as the Scarlet Knights raced past Marshall, W.Va,, 93-76. Consolation winners at the four NCAA regional playoffs were Princeton, which downed St. John’s, N.Y., 78-58; Indiana, which beat Tennessee 5144; Kansas, which got past disappointing Louisville 70-68, Texas Western, which nipped Wyoming 69-67. Francle Kraker of Ann Arbor, Mich., was clocked in 2:15.3 to win the women’s 88Q. The meet mark of 2:17.1 was set last year by Roberta Picco of Toronto. Bob Findlay of Toronto won the mile event in 4:10.5 over John Fath of Fordham. Peter Buniak of Toronto was the two-mile winner, defeating Dick Sharkey of Michigan State. Boston 3. D»..».. -Cleveland 8, Chlcaoo, N, 0 Cincinnati 4, New York, A, 1 Pittsburgh 2, Philadelphia 1, i; Los Angeles 10, Baltimore 3 Kansas City 10, Minnesota 2 Sunday's Results Boston 7, Detroit 6 St. Louis 7, Chicago, A, 5 New York, A, 1, New York, N, City 5, Minnesota 4, 1( Cinclrtnayrs, Atlanta 0, 0 Innings, rain " ston 2, Plttsburah 1, 10 Innlnos Angelas 8, I Cincinnati > la. Los Anpeles Birolt at West Palm Baltimore at Ta New York, A, at I. Chicago, A, at N St. Louis at St. Pi 'p?ttsbu*gh vs. Boston at Winter Haven, la. Chicago, N, vs. San Francisco at Scotts-•i«. Aril. fornia vs. Cleveland at Fla. Pittsburgh v la. Chicago vs. California \ al. Chicago, A, ta, Fla. New York, derdale, Fla. s. St. Louis at Ft. Myers, San Francisco at PI IS. Cleveland at Hoitville, vs. Kansas City at Saraso-A, vs. Detroit at Ft. Lau- NBA Standings 45 .444 32 (Regular Season Ends) Boston 124, New York 113 ----------135, Detroit 127 os Angeles 109 12, Baltimore 129 :hlcago 122, >hlladelphla to games Tuesday's Games t Boston, 1st In be$t-o(-5 Los Angeles at San Francisco, ' NHL Standings xChIcago ... Toronto ... New York . Montreal ... Detroit .... W L T Ptt. OP OA . 38 15 11 87 23’ . 28 24 11 67 11 Saturday's Results Montreal 4, New York 2 Toronto 9, Chicago 5 Boston 5, Detroit 3 Sunday's Rasulto Montreal 4, Chicago 4, tie New York 3, Boston 1 Toronto 6, Detroit 5 Today's Games No games scheduled. Tuesday's Games No games scheduled. International Neckay Laagua Toledo 6, Des Moines 3 Port Huron 5, Columbus 2 Fort Wayne 4, Muskegon I Sunday's Rasults Dayton 7, Toledo 5 Des Moines 5, Columbus 3 Port Huron 10, Muskegon 4 Cassius in Seclusion NEW YORK (UPI) Gay went into seclusion today for a final boxing session in preparation for Wednesday night's heavyweight title defense against Zora Foiley at Madison Square Garden. See the 1967 TRIUMPH Easy Terms Immediate Delivery ANDERSON Sali^B and Samoa 1645 S. Telegraph Rd. FE 3-7102 Special From Nortfs... HOT KOSHIR STYLI coRiraBm SANDWICHES NOW "WE TMIHK ITS TN8 BEn M TOWIP Lunclwons Daily! A Variety of Sandwiches, Salads and Hot TAKE HOME SOME DONUTS! • HUOEVMIETV «/U.WAY6 FBESH NORTY’S DONUT CENTER 29 N. SAOINAW, Cor. Lawroneo FE I491T Sale Ends Wed., March 22 FOREIGN CAR nUIIIEDO SPORTS CAR Ulllltllu WARDS DARRIES A BROAD LINE OF TIRES AND BATTERIES TO FIT MANY OF THE FOUOWING GARS • Volkswagen • Triumph • Renault * Mercedes-Benz * Jaguar * Hillman • Fiat • Austin SPORTS CAR RIVERSIDE® NYLON Builf exclusively for foreign cars with continental rolled fread edge and special tread design to give you great cornering and stability; 4-ply nylon cord body for stamina and strength. Sports profile. Get Wards Low Prices Before You Buy! FA«U^ Razer $eimn» COMPARE! * 4-PLY CONSTRUCTION V LIFETIME QUALITY GUARANti ' HIGH SPEED PERFORMANCE ...THEN BUT Riverside^ ST-107 e Exclusive RIY-SYN compound gives extra mileage for savings e Full 4-ply nylon cord assures greater safety pIaiJ.S9 F1.T. Slaekwoll Tabalau SlMt Sole Price Each Plat P.I.T. Each •loekwall Tvbelata Silts Sola Price Each Piet F.I.T. Each 6.90-13 10.44* 139 7.75/730-14 7.75/6.70-15 15.95 221 223 6.S0.I3 11.45* I.SO 8.25/S30-I4 8.15/7.10-iS 17.95* 228 223 7.00-13 6.95/6.50-14 13.95* 1.93 1.93 835/830-14 8.45/730-15 19.95* ^56 233 735-15 6.40/630-1 Si 14.95* 2.04 2.04 8.85/9.b0-l4 8.85-l5i 21.95* 2.14 2.77 2.77 7.35/7.00-14 14.95* 2.08 8.00/820-15 21.95* ^ •With tradd-!ti tirw off your car. Whitawalli S3 mora aach. Pontiac Mall OPEN MONDAY THRl FRIDAY 10:00 A.M. TO 9:00 P.M. SATURDAY 9:30 A.M. lO 9 P.M. SI NDAY 12 NOO> I'O P.M. * OK2-191(i D-4 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, MARCH 20, 1967 Announce Publinx Honor Roll Local Golfers Highly Rated Three local golfers whose names figure prominently in city golf tournaments were named to the 1967 Honor Roll of the Michigan Publinx Golf Association at the group’s annual meeting last night at Rochester Country Club. Named to the Honor Roll were Paul Bada, the present Pontiac title-holder, plus former city champions Dick Robertson and Ron Rothbarth. BHX CURTIS Claiming the No. 1 spot on the MPGA list was Bill Curtis of Farmington, a 33-year-oId tured the group’s medal play championship Ipst year at Bald Mountain. A close second to Curtis was Allan Thompson, 37, of Pleasant Ridge. A native of Scotland, Thompson was runner-up to Curtis in the medal play event last season and placed high in the MPGA handicap tournaments. Robertson, the 1963 Pontiac champ, led the local trio by grabbing the No. 3 spot on tiie H(^or Roll. Bada landed the No. 5 spot, and Rothbarth, a Clarks-ton player who led the city golfers in 1956, ranked ninth. OTHERS NAMED Also named to the Honor Roll were Roy Iceberg of Southfield (4); John Flp^ of Troy (6); Ray Clemons of Madison Height (7): Lee Gohs of Redford Township (8); and Terry Hoy ol Highland (10). The honor roll is a rating by the MPGA of its members plishments in compe^tion. Along with naming its Honor Roll, the MPGA also announced its 1967 schedule wiiich opens « , witti a handicap event April 30 f at Rochester Country Club and closes with another handicap event in October at Bald Mountain. Squash Tit list Injured; Forfeit Win Awarded BUFFALO, N.Y. (AP) tom Achilles tendon sent defending champion G. Diehl Ma-teer to the hospital Sunday and gave Bill Danforth of Pittsburgh and Sam Howe of Philadelphia the National Doubles title of the U.S. Squash Racquets Association. Mateer, of Philadelphia, and partner Ralph Howe of New York were locked in a 12-12 tie with Danforth and Howe in the first set of the title match when the injury occurred. Hie match was declared a forfeit, the first time in the tournament’s 3^year history that title had been awarded in that Mateer has been on championship teams nine times and he and Ralph Howe, Sam’s brother, were favored to gain their third straight title. AAU Boxers in Cobo Ring Texas Golfers Capture Title Two Close"Wi#276 for Three-Stroke Win HOUSTON (AP) - It took only a par 71 on the final round for Stan Binion and John Paul Cain to win the Champions Cup Invitation Golf Tournament. Binion, from Abilene, Tex., and Cain, from Sweetwater, Tex., wound up with 276 for a three-stroke margin over their closest pursuers. Since they played for the host Champions Club, it was the first victory by a Houston team in the better-ball event. Windy, cloudy weather Sunday kept scores up. None shot better (han the 70 which enabled Tommy Cruse and Carl Ahrens of Houston to tie for second at 279 with Ed Hopkins and Wilson Schoellkopf Jr. of Dallas, who posted a 73. Indianapolis veterans Dale Morey and Ed Tutwiler placed next with 281. Jack Ewing and Arnold Kirschenmann of Bakersfield, Tex., finished with a 70 for 284 and fifth. The group will play its 36-hole medal tourney at Hickory Hollow June 10-11. ’The state Publinx Match Play tournament is scheduled for August 2-5 at Swan Valley Country Club in Saginaw. Thompson, Pleasant RIdga; 3. Dick —Pontiac; 4. Roy IcatMrg, Sooth-j. Paul Bada, Pontiac; 6. John Floch, Troy; 7. Ray Clemons, Madlun 33 Amateurs Battle for State Crowns DETROIT (AP)-Thirty-three amateur fighters, 14 of them state Golden Gloves champions, will battle in Detroit Cobo Arena tonight for Michigan AAU open division titles. Two of the entries, 132-pound Qulencelan Daniels and 139-pound Willie S. Richardson Jr., both of Detroit, won national Golden Gloves championships. They hope to add the state AAU titles, go to the national AAU tournament in April, to the Pan-American games later in the year and to the 1968 Olympics. Twenty-six fighters will participate in elimination bouts beginning at 7:30 p.m. Only two fighters each are entered in the 112-pound and 119- Champ Rallies to Keep Crown in Women's Golf RECEIVES GOVERNOR’S CUP-Dan Sikes, winner of the Jacksonville Open golf tournament, receives the governor’s trophy from Florida Governor Claude Kirk Jr. yesterday. Sikes shot a 279 for the 72 holes of play. Sikes Eyes Masters’ Bid After Jacksonville Win DICK ROBERTSON Rochester Country Club Hills • Best-Ball - May 30-21 — Inter-City Tournament — Rochester Country Club (Detroit, Chicago, Milwaukee, Toledo, Fort Wayne), une 4 — 2nd Handicap Tournament — Lilac Brothers une 10-11 — 34 Hole Medal Play Hickory Hollow une 12 — Pre-Qualifying (It hole National Publinx — Burroughs Farr une 19 — Qualifying (34 holes) h July 14 — 3rd Handicap Tournament Northwood ugust 2-3-4-S — Stale Match Play Championship — Swan Valley (Saginaw). August 20 — 4th Handicap Tournamr-* Miss Fotbergill Wins in Battle of Lefthanders PHOENIX, Ariz. (AP) - In a battle of left-handers. Dot Foth-ergill of North Attleboro, Mass., defeated Millie Ignizzio of Rochester, N.Y., for top money in the Professional Women’s Bowling Association’s Phoenix Open. ss Fothergill, 22, outpointed her opponent . 605-515 in the three-game final set Sunday night to pick up the $1,850 first prize money in the $12,000 event. PETERSBURG, Fla. (AP) — Defending champion Marilynn Smith rallied from six strokes off the pace and captured the $12,500 Orange Blossom Classic Golf Championship Sunday. Miss Smith, of Runaway Bay, Jamaica, birdied the 3rd, 7th and 9th holes and bogeyed only the 10th for a final round of 2-under-par 69 on the Sunset Golf and Country Club course. Her 283 total edged Clifford Ann Creed and Sandra Haynie by two strokes. Miss Creed, who set a course record with a 65 in the second round, slipped to 76 in the final day. Fla. (AP) — Dan iSikes has convinced hometown Mends that he is the city’s best golfer, and now he would like to show officials of the prestig&packed Masters-that he belongs in that tournament. The 36-year-old Jacksonville lawyer bolstered his bid for an invitation to the Masters by winning the Jacksonville Open Sunday, and now ranks fourth among the contenders for two Vacancies at the Augusta, Ga. tournament. pound bouts, as well as only Dennis......... s Merritt of Grand Rapids and Chuck Haynes of Detroit entered in the heavyweight division. In the 178-pound class, Floyd Lewis will take on Mike Brown of Port Huron or Larry Charleston of Detroit, which ever one wins their preliminary 'match. Mi«rllynn Smith, $1,975 75-72-43-49-283 Clidord Ann Creed, $1,350 73-4^71-74-285 Sandra Haynie, $1,350 74-70-70-71—205 Mickey Wright, $975 71-71-75-71-200 ■ -y Kimball, $000 70-72-74-74-290 ry Mills, $475 74-72-70-73-294 ....'fa LIndstrom, $575 737379-40-293 Judy Torliumke, $427.50 75-74-72-74-295 Marlene Hagge, $427.50 ' 74-747374-295 Kathy Whitworth, $427,50 7372-7373-295 Barbara Romack, $427,50 730040-72—295 Sandra Palmar, $300 73737372-294 Ruth Jessan, $300 78-737471-294 Patty Barg, $300 73747472-294 Captures Tennis Title PHOENIX, Ariz, (AP) - Second-seeded Stan Smith of Los Angeles won the Thunderbird Invitational Tennis Tournament men’s singles title Sunday by defeating unseeded Allen Fox, Los Angeles, 7-5,6-3. Ailing Pitcher Rejoins Pirates FORT MYERS, Fla. (AP) -Billy O’Dell, veteran Pittsburgh Pirate pitcher, revealed Sunday he has Addison’s disease. O’Dell, 35, was hospitalized until early last week and reported to spring training camp Friday. Slight Crack in Future WINTER HAVEN, Fla. (AP) — Tony Conigliaro looked ahead to what he hopes will be his “best year in baseball’’ today a therapy ‘ treatment was prescribed for a slight crack in the shoulder. The Boston Red Sox slugger made a hurried flight to Boston for X rays and extensive examination Saturday after he was struck on the left Moulder by a John Wyatt fast ball in batting practice. “Tony shouM be swinging a 'Bargain' End Pete Retzlaff Calls It Quits The win by Miss .Fother^l kept Miss Ignizzio, who won $1,-150, from taking her third straight PWBA event after having won last week at Tucson, Ariz., and at Pompano Beach, Fla. bat in a week and playing in twQ weeks,’’ Dr. Thomas Tierney, the club physician, advised the Red Sox after studying the X rays in Boston. The 22-year-old outfielder discharged from Santa Marla Hospital, Sunday afternoon and returned immediately to the Boston training camp for treatment by Bed Sox trainer Buddy Leroux, who was correct in his initial diagnosis of a scapula fracture. PHILADELPHIA (AP)-Pete Retzlaff, acquired by the Philadelphia Eagles in 1956 for $100, will announce this week his retirement from professional football after 11 years as one of the National Football League’s top offensive ends. It was learned that the 34-year-old Retzlaff recently notified Eagles’ coach Joe Kuhar-ich that he has caught his last I, and intends to devote fulltime to his radio and television sports announcing jobs. He’ll make it public In a day or so. Also, Retzlaff is one of the leading candidates under consideration by President Johnson for the national physical fitness director’s job recently vacated by Stan Musial, when the former baseball star became general manager of the St. Louis Cardinals: 'f turned out to e one of the biggest “bargains” NFL trading history after Vince McNally, then general manager of the ^gles, bought the onetime South Dakota State star from the Detroit Lions for the waiver price of $100. Sikes, $20,000 richer after winning the third tournament in his seven-year career as a pro, hopes to nail down a bid with top finishes in the Pensacola, Fla., and Greensboro, N.C., tournaments. PUTTS WELL ‘My putting has really been good,” Sikes said after taking the Jacksonville title by stroke over 38-year-old Bill Collins, club pro at Purchase, N.Y. Sikes, whose finishing 73 gave him a |2-hole total of . he was a little surprised that he finished on top because he had led all the way. Collins, 38-year-oId ex-Marine trying to make a comeback on the tour, won $12,000 for his second-place 280 after a closing 67, five-under par. Bob Gajda, head pro at Forest Lake in Bloomfield Hills, turned in a pair of 77s over the weekend and finished well back at 297. Mike Souchak, new pro at Oakland Hills in Birmingham, wound up with a 299. Bill Collins, $12,000 Gay Brewar Jr., $4,25 ------olbart, $4,250 . ioBlby, $4,050 Gary Player, $2,500 ..... Billy MaxwtII, $2,500 .... Jack Cupit, $i50O ....... Mason Rudolph, $2,500 .. Doug Sanders, $2,000 ... l®li flan'i Tomorron't Job fc Kaluraliois.' ENROLL TODAY... LORN ELEimiONICS BE PREPARED FOR A RICH, REWARDINC CAREER! NEW CLASSES ARE NOW FORMING • DAY AND EVENING . .. FULL AND PART TIME OPENINGS • ELECTRONIC ENGINEERING • ELECTRONICS TECHNOLOGY • ALL COURSES V.A. APPROVED ... CALL OR WRITE TODAYI .. 47-49-7373-279 French Skiers Nip Austrians Cornell Takes Hockey Title Winners Also Capture Four All-Star Berths SYRACUSE, N.Y. (AP) -Cornell’s national champion hockey team has four players on the all-tournament team of the 20th annual National College Athletic Association hockey tourney. The four were selected to the team Saturday night after Cornell skated its way to 4-1 victory over Boston University and the NCAA hockey championship. Wally Stanowski, one of the all-tournafnent players, scored one goal and assisted on two others as he led the Big Red to the first NCAA crown for an Eastern. team in 13 years. In addition, Cornell is only the third Eastern team to win the title. The all-tourmament team Is led by goalie Ken Dryden, who set a tourney record by allowing only one goal in the two games. His teammates include Stanowski, defenseman Harry Orr and center Mike Doran. Wingers Tom Mikkola of Michigan State and Jim Quinn of BU round out the squad. Captures Golf Crown BANGKOK (J) - Vetera Tomoo Ishii of Japan won the $12,000 Thai Open gold championship Sunday, shooting a one-under-par 71 for a four-round total of 283. VAIL, Colo. (AP) — The men and women skiers of France will leave here this week wreathed in victory as predicted, but they will be looking over their shoulders at the Austrians as they head for Jackson Hole, Wyo., and the Wild West Classic March ,24-26. Prance defeated Austria by only three points, 231-2M, in the American International team races that ended here Saturday, thanks mainly to the brilliant racing of Jean-Claude Killy. Killy picked up 60 points in the team races by winning all three events—slalom, giant slalom and downhill—and capped his performance with a victory in the Vail Trophy giant slalom race Sunday. .. 71-437347-200 48-7371-72-281 .. 4372-72-49-201 , 704371-72-282 . 737149-72-202 . 71437370-203 . 73737470-284 72-72-7370-285 737372-73-285 7149-7471—285 49-7349-74-205 7371-7440-284 Bruce Crampton, . ., ________________ Bob Varway, $1,400 ..... 75437372-200 Bert Yancey, $1,350 .... 73430370-209 —ry Mowles, $1,350 ... 71-737471-209 Nagle, $1,350 7371-7372-209 ---- $1,350 . 74437372-209 Jr., $1,050 74-737472-290 I Gall _______Iberger,________ , Charlie Slfford- $745 . Ed Griffith, $745 Tom Welskopf, $745 . Dean Refram, $745 c—,. Bg,rd, $745 Bruce Devlin $745 . . Dave Ragan, $1 BobW Nichols, Ed F^rgol, $57! .. 737372-73-290 72- 747370-291 , . 7370-7370-291 71-72-77-7t-291 737377-71-291 73- 72-74-72-291 7447-7373-29 71-71-7374-29 7374-71-73-29 .. 73437473-29 7372-71-75-29 . , j2-74747i-2F .. 73-737473-292 .. 7471-7374-292 .. 7371.73-73-292 jlfgRMCE SEf industrial! ELECTRONICS INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY \ 2457 WOODWARD a WO 2-S66BB DET.4B20I \ Gentlemen-. Please Rush Information to. DON \NICHOLIE ■ , 53% West Huron S FE 2-9194 FE 4-0581 ■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■I 3. Helnl Messner, Austria 1:44.04. I Schranz, Austria 1 7. RudI Sailer, Austria 1:47;00. I. Guy Terlllat, Franco 1:41 LIFETIME SUARANTEE Tuboion NOW Triad Plus Tax UNITED TIRE SERVICE 1007 Baldwin Ave. J Mm. From Downtown Pontiac viERINE h OPENS SATURDAY AT 8:30 P.M, MARCH 25-MAYai DETROIT RACE COUR8B CASH • EXPIRES I MARCH 31, 1967 The Above Coupon Is Good on Any TUNE-UP as cash value in (Limitad Offer) Bump and Paint Servioe Is Our iSpecialty CARL E. REYNOLDS, Sar*. Mfr. DOWNEY HOURS: Men. and Tliuro. I A.M.-I F.M. Tgdl.,Wdil.,FiLIA.M..|F.M. * eioodd All Oar Saturday OLOSMOBILE 550 Oakland Avenue - Pontiac 1 Bleok South of Montcalm FE 2-8101 goooAear QUALITY CAR CARE VALUES BRING YOUR CAR TO THE EXPERTS Protect your car from winter’s ravages. Trained, expert operators will apply Sure-Sealing Compounds to save ■your cat’s appearance. Ask about our complete rust-proofing offer! MMCH SERVICE SPECIAL! Brake & Front-End Offer 895 .. asiS.”-"'- Regularly $g.B5 8| Now Only... Adjust brakes, add brake fluid and test. Repack front wheel bearings. Align front>end. correct camber, caster and toe-in. Balance both front wheeli. Rotate all four ...ON ALL SERVICE WORK-TAKE UP TO 12 MONTHS TO PAY Complete Brake Reline EASY BUDGET TERMS $125 Pay as little as... kh We teline front & tear brakes, rebuild hydraulic system including wheel & master cyls., machine all drums, flush brake lines & replace fluid, new front grease seals & shoe return springs, cloan-inspect & repack front wheel bearinga. pA FREE AUTO Z.J SAFETY CHECK JUST CALL FOR APPOINTMENT...NO OBLIGATION! Spring Tune-Up Time di«lt7l.U.liul.'plai9.rt>, 8eyl.ntot«l.u pluwm. 144 $2 Hck fw WilM tan, ilr.c«i4lll EASY BUDGET TERMS! Clean and space plugs; reset timing & points;* adjust carburetor & choke; clean fuel bowl, air filter & battery; check Ignition wires, condenser, distributor cap, starter, regulator, generator, fan belt, cylinder comp., battery. PRICE-BRKAK SPECIAL I PRICE-BREAK SPECIAL liWII 20-Gal. Trash Can $J44 unbreakable plastic Rubber Floor Mat $219 Exclusivt Limit two to a customer at this price. No rust, no rot. Lock-Lid handles. Ribbed construction. Grey, black lid. Limit two to a customer at this price. Deluxe quality, door-to-dobr ityle. Crested design. Six benutiful colors. good/^ear SERVICE STORE 1310 wide Track Drive FE 6-6123-HOURS: THE PONTIAC PliKSb. MONDAY. MARCH 20. 1967 D—5 Pontiac Area Deaths LeRoy Aiken D. E. Pursley Funeral I Home, Pontiac. , Former Pontiac resident Le-! ® Michael roy Aiken, 63, of North Miami a daughter, Sandra Beach, Fla., died yesterday. His body is at Lithgows pu-j*™^ ^ ® i Beach, fT"’ ®'®"P Donaldson Former Pontiac resident J. Glenn Donaldson, 63, of Denver, Colo., died yesterday. Mr. Donaldson, an attorney, was a founder of the Donaldso, Hoffman and Goldstein law firm I in Denver. He was Colra-ado State Inheritance commissioner and chairman of the War Labor Board for nonferrous metals industry. Surviving are his wife, Frances; a son, Thomas of Denver; two daughters, Mrs. Charles Gorsline of Deliver and Mrs. Alain Fiquet of Paris, France; a brother, WiUiam W., Pontiac’s postmaster; and a sister. Memorials may be sent to Dr. Ernest Cotton, Asthma Fund, Colorado Medical Center, Denver, Colo. Mrs. David Mitliken LAPEER — Service for Mrs. ....................... ^avid (Bertha) Milliken, 86, ...a and sisters. Including Mrs. 1°/ J^ir will be 2 p.m. Clarence Gunther and J o h n Wednesday, Muir Brothers Fu-Boston, both of Pontiac, and Home. Burial will be in Mr. Aiken, a painter while he lived here, was vice president 0 fthe Overhead Door Corp. of Miami. Surviving are his wife, Thelma; his mother, Mrs. Katheryn Aiken of Miami Shores, Fla.; and a sister. Carl E. Boston Service for Carl E. Boston, 67, of 52 Thorpe will be 1:30 p.m. Wednesday at Donelson-Johns Funeral Home, with burial in Perry Mount Park Cemetery. Mr. Boston died yesterday. He was a retired GMC Truck & Coach Division inspector and was a member of Elks Lodge 810. Surviving are his wife, Marie C.; two sons, Ray 01ms of Pontiac and Robert Boston of Champaign, 111.; and a daughter, Mrs. Kenneth Day of Wausau, Wis. Also surviving are three broth- Refused to Leave Auto Carjeens Towed to Jail A Waterford Township police;-1 for the car, he informed the i 4 From County on man held the trump card last night for a group of Pontiac youths who refused to leave their car after they failed to produce an automobile regish-a-tion certificate. Elected to Statewide driver and five passengers he ! Policy-Making Body was going to imponnd the ve- ; *’*®*®' Oakland County members oi Phelps contacted a service sta-1 Republican State Central tion for a tow truck. The youths j^°™™Ttee were elected to four became irate and refused to get I the 12 executive committee 1 u . oecame iraie ana retusea 10 get,'" wnuninee Patrolman Gleim Phdps had car even after the!Positions of the party’s stete- stoidied the vehicle on M59 near Cass Lake Road in the township for exceeding the speed limit. When he discovered no one had a registration certificate front end of the vehicle had been i wide policy-making body at its lifted by the wrecker. I meeting in Grand Rapids re- Over $200 Stolen From Home in City YOUTH FUND-William K. Hanger (left), Pontiac chief of police, accepts a $1,000 donation from the Pontiac Optimist Club to the police department Youth Benefit Fund from Steve Tzineff, Optimist president, Sgt. Herbert C. Cooley (right), an Optimist Club member, said the fund, implemented last week, will be devoted exclusively to promoting the welfare of deserving and needy Pontiac area youths in an effort to prevent delinquency. Officials Fear Effect Actress Sisters More than $200 in cash was stolen from a Pontiac man’s home, it was reported to city police early today. Chester B. Thomas, 50, of 543 S. Sanford told investigators he discovered the money was missing from a dresser drawer when he returned home to find several rooms ransacked. So Phelps instructed the driver to tow both the youths and their car to Oakland County Jail. TWO GOT out I Two of the passengers got out of the-car before it reached the jail. The others- were booked on disorderly person charges. Pleading not guilty to the misdemeanor charge at their arraignments before Waterford Township Justice Kenneth Hempstead this morning were Jimmie Cabil Jr., 17, of 180 Prospect; Ronnie Williams, 18, of 432 S. Paddock; Her-shal E. Owens, 17, of 240 Harrison; and Robert L. Calhoun, 18, of 21 Edmund. cently. * * * Richard Sandersmi of Clawson was elected chairman of the campaign policy committee. Sanderson, a statistical engineer for General Motors Truck and Coach Division, is chairman of the Issues and Research Committee in Oakland County. Mrs. John P f i s t e r, 2849 Buckingham, Birmingham, was elected vice chairman of the Committee on Party Organization and Mrs. James Carey, 2691 Binbrooke, Troy, serving her second state cen-' b'al term, is secretary of the executive committee. In the county’s 19th District, Dale A. Feet, 4260 South Shore, Lum Cemetery. Mrs. Milliken died yesterday. A retired teacher, she was a member of the Trinity Methodist Church, the WCTU, and the Lapeer County Retired Teachers Association. Surviving are three daughters, Mrs. Carl Gustin of Fern-dale, Mrs. Melville Rutherford of Royal Oak and Mrs. Gerald Chowh of Lapeer; two sis- Clyde P. Hardiman Jand Mrs. Percy Husted of La-A graveside service for Clyde f'^e grandchildren; and P. Hardiman, 73, of 423 Highla f® great-grandchildren, will be held at 10 a.m. tomor- ^ row at the Oak Hill Cemetery. Hillard Rumph His body is. at the Frank Car-| WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWN- six grandchildren. Mrs. William Grigg Service for Mrs. William (Sadie) Grigg, 84, of 54 will be 2 p.m. tomorrow at the iWessels Funeral Home, Pleasant Ridge. Burial will be In Oakview Cemetery, Royal Oak. Mrs. Grigg died Saturday. of Romney Tax Plan Gov. Romney’s proposed tax plan will compound the fiscal woes of already struggling city governments, according to representatives of 11 South Oakland municipalities. meeting hosted by Hazel Park officials Saturday that pas! of a state income tax would all but kill chances of local governments to levy a tax on Again Rivals Vie for British Honor as Well as U.S. Oscar They will appear before Hempstead for trial at 9:30 a.m. Waterford Township, former Police said the burglar appar- April 11. Bond was set at $50 Oakland County GOP chairman, ently heated some food on a for each suspect. iwas elected chairman of the stove while in the house. There * ★ ★ jWays and Means Committee, was no sign of forcible entry, Oh, yes. The towing bill was' ^ certified public account- they said. LONDON (AP) - Vanessa and Lynn Redgrave, already They further predicted at a!income. !rivals for Hollywood’s Oscar, I The Romney plan Includes nominated for the income levies of 2'/2 per cent Film Academy Award to ........ - ithe best British actress of thei $25. Michigan's Junior Miss Loses Out to Arkansan ruthers Funeral Home. Mr. Hardiman died Saturday. He was a former employe of GMC Truck and Coach Division and was a member of he Pentecostal Church of God. Surviving are his wife, Grace; nine sons; six daughters, all of...... x aim iwui Pontiac; two sisters; and two daughters, Mrs. Eileen Medlen® representative of the brothers. of Waterford Township and Mrs. State Board of Education. Mildred Pohn of Pontiac. * * * Dr. Allan ’Thomas, chairman SHIP - Mrs. Hillard (Ethel R. Rumph, 72, of 1575 Naylor died yesterday. Her body is at Hun-toon Funeral Home, Pontiac. Surviving besides her husband are three sons, Duaine of California, James of Oregon and Merle of Pontiac, School Chiefs to Talk Money The National Junior Miss title I world is still a wonderful was won by Rosemary Dun- place." rna nac:, x„..r.cn °f Little ROck, Ack., oVcr! Shc wos crowHed by outgo- on individuals, 5 per cent on ™ r 'Sefr chkf rivaT^ '^“•'^nd. ing junior miss Diane Wilkins corporations and 8 per cent ' Michigan’s Junior Miss, Kath- of Wauwatosan, Wis. School superintendents from Oakland County systems will meet tomorrow to discuss Iheir districts’ financigl problems of financial institutions. In turn, the assembled may-jrs, commissioners, managers and finance directors almost unanimously supported a “piggyback” levy of 1 per cent, to be collected by the state and returned to local units. Abraham Klassen Service for Abraham Klassen, Herman J. Schelp 60, of 3571 Watkins Lake, Water- HOLLY - Service for Her-ford Township, will be 5 p.m. man J. Schelp, 75, of 212 Michi-Wednesday at Florin Funeral gan will be 2 p.m. tomorrow at Home, Benton Harbor, with the Dryer Funeral Home, with burial there in Crystal Springs Cemetery. Mr. Klassen died yesterday. He was an employe of the City of Sylvan Lake. His body will burial in Lakeside Cemetery. Mr. Schelp died Saturday, He was retired from Grinnell Broth-ers Piano Factory. Surviving are his wife. Mar- $1,350 Is Stolen in Waterford Twp, be at the Lewis E. Wint Funeral I ion; two daughters, Mrs. Wil-Home, Clarkston, until 10 p.m. liam F’ree of Flint and Mrs. 1 Melvin Caryl of Holly; a broth- Surviving are his wife, Selma er; six sisters; and four grand-G.; four brothers and four sis-1children. ters; two grandchildren; and --------------------------- ' three great-grandchildren. Jessie H. Stirn Service for Jessie H. Stirn, 82, of 299 Clifford will be 7:30 p.m. tomorrow at the Huntoon Funeral Home. Burial vyill be In Forest Cemetery, Toledo, Ohio. Mr. Stirn died yesterday. He was formerly a construction carpenter. Surviving is a daughter, Mrs. Wilma Garvin of Pontiac. Mrs. Grace Chester PONTIAC TOWNSHIP -Mrs. Crface Chester, 27, of 3164 Hen-\ydaJe died today. Her body is of the State School Finance Study, is polling school administrators for the official survey he’s conductiong. ★ ★ ★ 'The study deals with problems and status of finance and organization under provisions of Michigan statutes. The meeting will be held at 30 p.m. in the offices of Oakland Schools. Burglars escaped with about $1,350, mostly cash, after breaking into a safe at Dixie Dairy, 49 N. Telegraph, Waterford Township, yesterday morning. Township police said the intruders gained entry to th« building through a window. The safe is located in an office adjacent to the dairy counter. A watch, t w o wallets and checks worth about $200 also were reported missing at first, but later recovered. OCC Assistant to Head Group Walter J. Fightmaster, director of community services at Oakland Community College, has been elected president of the Detroit Society for Programmed Instruction (DSPI), it it * Fightmaster will move up from the DSPI vice presidency April 15. The organization draws its membership from persons with educational responsibilities in business, industrv and educational institutions which implement the use grammed mstruction. Backing for the piggyback plan was apparently sparked by two widely held feelings; • Property owners, corporations and small business will get some form of tax relief under the Romney proposal — municipalities will not. • State government is already handing out “mandates” for local units -- a 56-hour limit on firemen’s workweek without providing for revenues needed by cities to underwrite the changes. STATE LAW State law will require South Oakland communities to adhere to the firemen’s work limit by July 1 of this year. Pontiac was placed on the 56-hour schedule in 1964 by a special city vote. The uniform city income tax — 1 per cent on residents and '/ii~per cent on nonresident workers — has been advanced by the Pontiac Finance Study Committee as a solution to the city’s financial “crisis.” The committee reached the deci^n six weqks ago, supporting an income proposal by a 20-2 vote. * ' * * Members voiced even then, however, concern that a state levy on income would have an adverse effect on passage of an income measure in Pontiac. is Elizabeth Taylor. ★ * * - It is the first time sisters have competed for the British award in the 20 years of its existence and the first time in 25 years that sisters have been rivals for the Oscar. In 1942, Joan Fontaine won it from her sister, Olivia de Havilland and touched off a feud that has not died completely. The American Oscars will be presented April 10. 'The British awards will be presented in London April 25. ★ 4 Vanessa, 30, was nominated for both awards for her performance in the movie “Morgan.” Lynn, 23, was nominated for both awards for her performance in “(ieorgy Girl.” VIRGINIA WOOLF’ Miss Taylor was nominated for both prizes for her performance in “Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?” * * * The fourth nominee for the best British actress award is Julie Christie, last year’s winner for “Darling.” She was named this time for “Doctor Zhivago” and “Fahrenheit 451.” ie Fliss'of 24625 W. 10 Mile Road, Southfield, received aj $500 scholarship for being one of the finalists. Goods Worth $500 Stolen Items valued at more than $500 were stolen from a Pontiac' home while the occupants were on vacation, city police were told Saturday, Joseph Jackson, 66, of 20 Evelyn told police the stolen items included a wedding ring set, a radio, bracelets, watches. Investigators said they found no sign of forcible entry. Property Damage Ceiling Up The runners-up are: First — Susan Virnis of Wells, i Minn., who received a $6,000 c scholarship; Second — Barba^ra Specht of New Braunfels, Tex., $4,000; Third — Julie Fleece of Hono- a lulu, $2,000; Fourth — Sharon Ginn of f; Plainfield, Ind., $2,000. Other finalists, receiving $500 i Teen-agers today are oftenl®^^°^^*’®*’*P® Margaret 3:35 p.m. His condition was de- criticized for “getting too Po^tiand^ Ore., Annjscribed as serious Friday, terested and too involved,” but Faygfleville, N. C.,| * * ★ Susan Courtney of Mount Pros- Driver of the car, Frederick pect. 111., Barbara Lias of Wex- c. Berden, 41, of 91% Tebeau,^ ford,. Pa.; Jennifer McFadden Pontiac Township, told police of Enterprise, Ala. and Carol the boy ran suddenly from the Fagan of Phoenix, Ariz. I curb in front of him. America’s new Junior Miss gets a $10,000 college scholarship and a trip to New York with her title. She is the daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Forest Dunaway works as a speech therapist. i.S. ant is employed by the Kresge Cfinr it it it The chairman of the executive committee is Howard Payne of Redford Township in the Wayne County portion of the 19th Congressional District. Boy Struck by Car Is Listed as Fair 12-year-old Pontiac boy, struck by a car near his homo Friday, remains in the intensive care unit of Pontiac General Hospital. Kevin L. Prater, son of Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Prater of 238 E. Pike, is now listed in fair condition with injuries received when he was hit at East Pike and Paddock about America’s new Junior Miss is proud of her generation because ‘we want to put the right foot forward and step in and do all we can tohelp^ut.” Miss Dunaway believes that as long aypeople can get together from foreign countries and from the United States . . .: and talk things out, then thei Soviet Major Gives Nixon Poor 'Marx' Flier Builds WW I Plane Accident Reporting Law Is Changed Aide Will Work on Reading List Rohert L. Fichtenau, director of English for Oakland Schools, has been appointed to serve on a reading list revision committee of the National Council of Teachers of English. The committee will revise the “High Interest-Easy Reading Book List” of the council, a professional organizatiim of about 110,000 members and subscribers- Secretary of State James M. Hare'an-I nounced today that several changes have I been made in the state’s financial respon-” sibility reporting law on accidents to make it easier for “responsible motorists” with habiiity insurance. The revisions include a higher ceiling on property damage and a new provision involving insurance coverage. No financial responsibility report is required now by tbe state if all vehicles involved in an accident are covered by liability insurance (public liability and property damage), Hare said. Another major provision raised property damage limits from $100 to $200, to coincide with higher costs of auto repair. * w ★ Hare said that persons involved in accidents have to report the accident to the. Department of State only if; • ’There is more than $200 damage to (1) your ovyn vehicle, (2) to the other RHINEBECK, N.Y. (J)-Richard King, a 34-year-old schoolteacher and private pilot who has logged about 500 hours the air, has realized his boyhood dream of building a World War I plane. Starting with a FrencWej signed, castor oil-lubricated, 80-horseps>wer LeRhone engine, he worked nearly three years to produce a Sopwith Scout tighter plane. He spent a year in preparation, teaching himself welding and the fundamentals of airplane construction. vehicle or vehicles in the accident, or (3) i to any property belonging to others. i • Someone has been killed or injured. | • If any of the vehicles in the accident * are not covered by liability insurance at | the time of the accident. | MUST BE SUBMITTED | “If any of these provisions are true,” said | Hare, “all vehicle owners or drivers must ' submit the accident report, Form FR43, furnished by the Michigan Department of State. , “This has nothing to do with accident ; reports compiled by the police or insurance companies,” Hare said. “They will con* tinue to handle their own accident reports.” it * it Financial responsibility reporting forms are available at local police or sheriff’s offices; insurance companies handling liability insurance, branch offices of the Michigan Department of State; or the Department of State in Lansing. EHEBlZBlBEHZmEHHHEEHOHDHHHlZ NEW 7-FT. VACUUM CLEANER HOSE Braided Clothi All Rubber MOSCOW (AP)-A Red army major in Soviet central Asia told Richard M. Nixon today that instead of traveling around inquiring into political conditions, he should stay home and read Karl Marx. ‘You should get a textbook of! Marxism and you’ll find it has 1 everything you need to know,” the major, a member of an army theater group, said in a goodmatitred meeting at the airport in Samarkand. Nixon, U.S. vice president under President Dwight D. Eisenhower, flew back to Moscow today from Samarkand, the Medieval capital of Asian empires. E Nixon has been in the Soviet Union for four days as part of an extensive tour to study political conditions. Soviet leaders refused to meet him, but in West European countries he conferred with premiers and other leaders. Expert Guidance Without Obligation from i F , jF: WINTER DISCOUNT SAVE 10% Whether you need assistance in selecting a family memorial, or advice on cemetery requirements, take advantage of our experience. No obli^- '__________ tion. We'll counsel you, assist Monuments you in every way. And, we specialize in fully guaranteed Barre Guild Monuments. today. COMPLETE INDOOR DISPLAY FOR YOUR SHOPPING CONVENIENCE Memorials for Over 72 Years INCH MEMORIALS, INC. CVR’PS APPLIANCXiS Paetory Authmined White Dealer 6484 WILLIAMS UKE ROAD OR 4-1101 864 N. Perry FE 5-6931 Garl QY. JJotuli QJonalJ Jl. ^ohttt Our Service to Veterans Is Exemplary . . . Veterans of our armed fof'ces have definite provisions in their behalf. ’The procedures of military honors and courtesy, should be provided. We of the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home have high respect for every person who has served to our armed forces, We aid to the filing of necessary military papers. We conduct with care and tognity, the military funeralt^^ arTlionor due everyone to our armed forces. CPkone federal 4-4511 ^tukinq Oft Our ^j|j|||3 li"" 855 WEST HURON ST. PONTIAC THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY. MARCH 20. 1967 Couple Recalls Old Farm Days PONTIAC PRISS CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING INDEX NOTICES GARDEN GROVE, Iowa Mr and Mrs. NeMon Coffey of Thanks .................... 1 .looking back on 70 years of ............2 marriage find Ufe on a farm to-! ...........3 , day vastly different than when eiArii*, ( Xh they wed in 1897. IK bi^Vtiis i Today 91-year-old Coffey still Cemetery Lots............4-A raises vegetables and has an I Personals .................4-B orchard, while his wife*, 88, Lost and Found raises house plants and cultivates large flower gardens in summer. - Help Wanted Mole^.. EMPLOYMENT In the early years, Mrs. Cof- Help Wanted Femajfc..... ...................Help Wanted M.^r'f. ... fey recalls, she made all the clothes for her 10 children, baked six loaves of bread every other day, made soap, cold- Death Notices WIIHam Btrnctti (Harrlette) Silver, Wrs. Samuel (Sylvia) _____________ ______ Lillian Moore, Marvin, Sidney and Morris Barnett. Fundral arrange-mentsi are pending at the Ira Kaufman Chapel, 11325 West 9 boston; carl E.d March \9. 1 52 r of Mrs. Kenneth Day, Ray brother of Mrs. Clarence Gunther, Mrs. Corden Stephens an'' '"n" Boston; also survived k Cemeterjf. Mi home.(Su^i^sted visit' Soles Help, Male-Female...8-Aj Employment Agencies........ 9' Employment Information .. .9-A | r mother of Sondro d Michael Allen C packed meat, canned fruit and! Instructions-Schools .......10 vegetables, churned butter and washed clothes on a rough wash- Coffey walked behind plows and cultivators, made hay, milked cows, butchered hogs and cattle and spent long hours in the field. Hungry Bear Begs Sweets for Work Wanted Male ........11 Work Wanted Female.......12 Work Wanted Couples .... 12-A Building Services-Supplies...T3 Veterinary...................14 Business Service.............15 GRIGG, SADIE, March II Seneca; age 65; dear Neile R. Currier; deai Bookkeeping end Taxes......16 Credit Advisors .........16-Ai Supper LEAVENWORTH, Wash, ilfh-Mrs. Penelope Ells, who works at the Squirrel Cage Restaurant west of here, has one customer who eats and then ambles off without paying. He is George, a wild bear which she has been feeding for the past seven years. • Coming down from the nearby mountains for his customary handout, George stands on his hind legs begging for his favorite tidbits. At first, he ate mostly candy bars but now eats almost anything, she reports. He has a special fondness for fruit juices, ice cream and peanut butter. Dressmoking and Tailoring. .17 Gardening ..................18 i Londscaping ..............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 .............25 Insurance...................26 Deer Processing............«27 WANTED 73; beloved husband of Grace Ived by nine two sisters _ ------------ . av- -------- 8 J'ue^ay.^March 21, t'ihe Frank Hardiman s, si* ---------------- ------- I two brothers. Graveside serv-Tuesday, March 21, at 10 a.m. M Oak HIM Cemetery. fM. Hard]-. i Funeral e M; be- anSchlldrbn. dren and three great-gr Funeral service will — ___ Wednesday, March 22, at 4 p.m. at the Florin Funeral Home, Benton Harbor. Interment In Crystal Springs Cemetery, Benton Harbor. Mr. Klassen will lie In state at the Lewis E. WInt Funeral Home, Clarkston until 10 p.m. tonight at ' which time he will be taken to the Florin Funeral Home for serv- Wanted Children to Board..28 Wanted Household Goods...29 Wanted Miscellaneous......30 Wanted Money..............31 Wonted to Rent............32 Share Living Quarters.....33 Wanted Real Estate........36 MOORE, MYRTLE B., March 19. 1967; 1050 School 'Street, Indiana, Pennsylvania; age 79; dear mother of Mrs. Thelma Mae Murdo, Mrs. Dora June Sprage, Mrs. Rozalia Chadwick and Aloart and two great-grandchildren. Funeral service will be held Thursday, March 21, at the Robinson Funeral Home, Indiana, Pennsylvania. Interment In Oakland Cemetery, nidlana. Mrs. Moore was RENTALS OFFERED 4, ETHEL ROSE, March V . 1575 Naylor, Union Lake; 72; beloved v Apartments-Furnished .....37 Apartments-Unfurnished ...38 Rent Houses, Furnished____39 Medlen, Mildred John, James, Medien, Mildred Pohn, John, James, Dualne, and Merle Rumph. Funeral arrangements are pending 'Grades Unaffected by Car Ownership' URBANDALE, Iowa (AP) Car ownership by high school students does not affect grades, research by David W. Teigland, an Iowa ^ucator, reveals. Teigland, a former driver education teacher and now principal of Urbandale Junior High School, studied local high school students in a research project for Drake University’s College of Education. To isolate the effect of regu- Property Management... ,40-A Rent Lake Cottages.........41 Hunting Accommodations 41-A Rent Rooms.................42 Rooms With Board.........'.43 Rent Farm Property....... Hotel-Motel Rooms..........45 Rent Stores ...............46 Rent Office Space .........47 Rent Business Property...47-A Rent Miscelloneous.........48 STIRN, JESSIE H„ March 19, 1967; 299 Clifford Street; age B2; dear father of Mrs. Wilma Garvin. Fu* neral service will be held Tuesday, March 21, at 7:30 p.m. at the Huntoon Funeral Home. Inter-•“* Forest Cemetery, Toledo, r. Stlrn will lie in state at Ohio. Mr. S formerly of Watkins : W., March 1 Df Mrs. James Ritchie, f Mrs. fi and Coins H. Steere. Funeral REAL ESTATE Sola Houses ................49 Income Property.............50 Lake Property..............51 Northern Property .......51-A Resort Property ...........52' March 22, at 1:30 p. Sparks-Griffin Funeral ferment in White Chape Cemetery. Mr. Steere state at the funeral h gested visiting hours 3 7 to 9.)_________________ lar driving, he matched drivers Suburban Property.............53 and nondrivers on the basis of Lo s-Acreage ..................54 age, sex, intelligence test scores ® — ........... and average grades received in ® Business Property ••••57 the ninth grade. Checking their, Sale or Exchange.............58^ final grade averages when theyl FINANCIAL | finished school, Teigland found no significant difference between the driving and nondriving groups. Junk Car Owner Has Big Problem GOLDEN, Colo. (AP)-Dan Business Opportunities......59 Sale Land Contracts.........60 Wanted Gontracts-Mtges...60-A Money to Lend...............61 Mortgage Loans .............62 MERCHANDISE Swaps ..................... 63 Sale Clothing ..............64 Sale Household Goods .......65 Antiques................. 65-A Mosely has a dilemma. He has Hi-Fi, TV 8i Radios.............66 been ordered by the county «>n-l Water Softeners...........66-A ing department to get rid of a For Sale Miscellaneous .... 67 yard full of junk cars he has Christirfas Trees............67-A collected. . Christmas Gifts .._.......67-B He tried burning them, but Hand Tools-Machinery...........68 was told that, due to air pollu- H Yourself.................69 tion, he must stop the practice.! Comeras-Service ..........70 He tried hauling them to the .........’‘v7' dumping ground only to be told; Lessons ...................71-A| by officials there was no room. Office Equipment.............72 The zoning department still; Store Equipment...............73 Insists Mosely must dispose of Sporting Goods ...............74 the ancient vehicles. ' , Fishing Supplies-Baits......75 1 Sond-Gravel-Dirt ..........76 _______________ _______________ Wood-Coal-Coke—Fuel ... .77 .rirEfT:,iNsuRANCE_ j Pets-Hunting Dogs .........79 j,.' Pet Supplies-Service.....79-A ..............8o; h time they Nurseries .................81 Plants-Trees-Shrubs ....81-A Dial 334-4981 or 332-8181 Pontiac Press Wont Ads NOTICf T( ADVERTISEk: OS RECEiVEp BY mil BE PUBLISHE FOLLOWING D; 1-Doy 3-Oayi 6-Doyi 7M 8.64 13 44 loio 16.80 if kindness during the recent thankni) Rev. Lee LpLonel Pontiac Press and staff, f, Dept. Si and ^ark! ‘ remembered. The F day, March 27, 1967, i y specifications may I ! Hobbies ond Supplies FARM MERCHANDISE .82 X"nTall’L*s“;S! UveStOCk ..................... 83 « Meats ........... .......83-A Hoy-Groin-Feed ............84 ...................88 oaioanb county'courrHous9 | Form Produce .......86 ^"'poItiaT MichiSa^ Form Equipment.........87! Telephona 338-4751' _____March 13 and 20, 1967 AUTOMOTIVE March 20, 1965. God saw you getting weaker So Ha did what Hi thought best) a County of Oakland. OAKLAND COUNTY BOARD ot AUDITORS And whispered "Come to rest." NOTICE ok PUBLIC HEARING TO BE HELD IN THE VILLAGE HALL, 425 GLENGARY ROAD ON APRIL 4TH, AT 8:00 P.M. Amendment to Zoning Map of th Village ot Wolverine Lake, Michigan Property to be zoned Commercial Ir eluding that portion already zoned Corr Travel Trailers ........ Housetrailers........... Rent Trailer Space.... Commercial Trailers .. Auto Accessories . ....88 ....89 ...90 ,...90-A .91 Sadly m Virginia Announcements Oakland County, H greet 40' 20" 272 25' thence 1041.52 thence S 900'. Property to be zoned R-M I Oakland County, Mich. Desc'd as btginning at the N cornar of said .Sec. 21 S « IRENE SAVICH Tires-Auto-Truck ............92 Auto Service ................93 Motor Scooters...............94 Motorcycles..................95 Bicycles ....................96 Bjoats-AccessOries ..........97 Airplanes .......... Wanted Cors-Trucks ......101 Junk Cars-Trucks.........101-A Used Auto-Truck Parts . ..102 New and Used Trucks........103 Auto-Marine Insurance ...104 Foreign Cars................105 New and Used Cars ^.........106 ANNOUNCING ANOTHER DEBT AID INC. office. 710 RIker Building; branch of Detroit's well known Debt Aid, Inc. to serve -the Pontiac Community. GET OUT OF DEBT - AVOID GARNISHMENTS, BANKRUPTCY, REPOSSESSIONS, BAD CRED " AND HARASSMEJ4T. '■— helped — ------ “■ LOSE WEIGHT SAFEL Oex-A-Olet Tablets. Only ---------— Bros. Drugs. SHERM OEUMAN IS NOW WORK- BOX REPLIES At 10 a.m. today there [were replies, at The Press Office iii the fol-I lowing btiies: 2, 5, 10,15, 18,19, 20, I 28, 40, 50, 66, 67 COAT*. FUNERAL HOME DRAYTON PLAINS______________674-0461 J. QODHARDT funeral HOME DONELSON-JOHNS Funeral Homo "Designed f- ------ Huntoon so years FE 2-Ql SPARKS-GRIFFIN FUNERAL HOME "Thoughful Sr--- Voorhees-Siple FUNERAL HOME. 332-0378 Established Over 4 Cemetery Lots 5 GRAVES AND MONUMENT OLD FASHIONED HORSE DRAWN sleigh rides are exclling Winter tun. Includes Spagneili Dinner or Hot Dog-----• -- - ------ins party includes farm toi Groups of 20 or more call i '“UPLAND^HIU'S FARM AFTER THIS DATE ly debts contracted ON AND AFTER THIS DATE, March 17, 1967, I will not be responsible for eny debts contracted by any other than myself. Jessie J. Keel, 1401 Parkway, Pontiac, WEDDING PHOTOGRAPHY BY Professional Color. Free brochure available. 330-9079 anytime. LOST: SMALL BEA(3LE, BLACK, ;, husbands pet, reward. OR hundreds of People Use Them Every Day to Do Jusi That . ' Profitably! YOU CAN, TOO! LOST - sma’ll broWn da<:hs- Lake '^Rd. and Hillsboro Rd. ^a* Big Lake, Reward. 625-4533. __ _ LOST, BLACK FEMALE POODLE, vicinity of Dixie 1 Dr. Reward. 674-1738. ___ ... ..... as to amount owed and number of creditors. For those that realize "YOU CAN'T BORROW YOURSELF OUT OF DEBT." Home appointment arranged anytime AT NO CHARGE. ...99 IHours ►2|Mon. —............ FE 241181 , (BONDED AND LICENSED) , BIDS WANTED ON A CARPENTER BODY SCHOOL BUS No. 1S-MOTC7R IN EXCELLENT CONDITION, - MAY BE SEEN AT BUS LOT, 2M0 WAUKEGAN, AUBURN HEIGHTS, MICHIGAN, FROM I TO 4 P.M. MINIMUM - - “ ----- REQUIRED. SOB- ;; THE 1964 CIVIL RIGHTS ■: UW PROHIBITS, WITH X C E R T A I N exceptions, x DISCRIMINATION BE-: CAUSE of sex. since :;:;SOME OCCUPATIONS ARE ;X X CONSIDERED MORE AT- -X tractive to persons X; . ARE PLACED M y UNDER THE MALE OR >• FEMALE COLUMNS FOR I;!; CONVENIENCE OF READ-:-. ■X ERS. SUCH LISTINGS ARE X-X; NOT INTENDED TO EX-X' CLUDE PERSONS OF -X ;X EITHER SEX. :■/, I MEN TO assist an EXPANSION pany — average 510,000 $142.50 WEEKLY SALARY lert young men for bra illon work, ages 18-25, $435 FEE PAID FINANCE TRAINEE 21-28 High School Grad ITERNATIONAL PERSONNI $5,000 AIRLINE TRAINEE AGnm HIGH SCHOOL GRAD. No Experience 1080 W Huron $6,000 FEE PAID COLLEGE DROP-OUTS Training program In all fields INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL A GOOD OPPORTUNITY” DRIVER SALES ^ PONTIAC AREA inmi^^perm >T BE 21 MUST Call after a i 363-0238 A PART-TIME J08 A married man, 21-34, to worl 67^T9^S^.•rt!^•.:5•p.rr d only. ; ’ Sudia- ALL AROUND HANDYMAN FOR apartment. 1740 Huntlngwood Lane. Bloomfield Hills. 847-8950.____ AMBITibUS AND NEAT APPE^R-Ing men (or Rust^leum. dellverV - urs 0:30 to 5 -- ' ___Salary plui cor...... appointment call FE 3-7147 MivMirtin. days w •/* ACCOUNTANT, SHARP, MUST BE able to handle tax procedures. Nice locatlen. $5,500. Call Angle APPLICATIONS NOW BEING T, Apply Miracle Mile Drive Theater, 2101 S. Telegraph, F AHENTION RETIREES Full time security F ditrons. Apply' Mr. Warren*Sherman Prescriptions. 3869 W. Maple AUTO DEALER NEEDS MAN 1 II dealership Cl perlehce prete kl Chrysler d, 6B4-M91. BRIDGEPORT OPERATORS portunity to become skilled In all phases of automation assembly -uh company equipment with ------- in this field. Clyde W. Mapler Trgy. BUS BOY ED, PART TIME. taurant, Keego Harbor. CAB DRIVERS, FULL OR PART CAR WASHERS, I CARPENTERS Rough-union. Year-around 332-9123.____________ COLLECTOR me. Call FE 3-7256 (o COLLECTION, DEPENDABLE ,..vc. .. u. liberal benefits - Car furnished, 55,200. Call Angie Rook, 334-2471, Snelling and Snell- COOK, DINNER, EXPERIENCED, club or hotel, good wages, paid vacations, sick leave, plus working conditions. Apply In person. Orchard Lake Country Club, 5000 W. Shore Drive, Orchard Lake. commercial refrigeration frigeralion. Highland. Mich., or CONTROLLER TRAINEE Notional retail organization has on excellent opportunity for 0 graduate with 0 B.S. degree in Business Administration o r Accounting or equivalent experience. Send complete resume to Pontiac Press Box 38. DIE LEADER Progressive dies, *^*350^*^' Sanford, Pontiac. 335>4563. DRAFTSMAN, ELECTRICAL AN6 mechanical, exp. GEMCO ELECTRIC CO. ■■ Crooks Rd., Clawsbn Evenings Port Time 3' men needed Immediately lor part time evening work. Must be neat, mature, married and have good work record. Call 674-0520, 9:30 a.m. to 0:00 p.m. EXPERIENCED CABIHETMAKER 1300. I WELL DRESSED MEN TO DE-llver advertising material. $15 per ------- ---------- "‘5-2640. ------------ ,____^snlngs. Mount Clemens. Utica and Birmingham Included. Banded Guard Services, 441 E. Grand Boulevard, Detroit. LO B-4152, )0-4 f ■“ GROOM w. 1800 HILLER RO„ __________ 363-0009.__________ HANDYMAN FULL TIME, FOR carpentry, plumbing, electrical work, painting and mfsc. malnte-and good personality. 5358200. HANDYMAN Mature, for office building maintenance wbrk — full time. Apply HUNTER AND OAK STANDARD Service, BIrminghaih. Job openings for shift manager and driveway salesman, Excellent starting pay and fringe benefits. Call 646-5300. I. D. GRINDER, 0. b. GRINDER". , overtime. M-59 at Pontiac I INSTANT MONEY le operators, a: k Immediately. Phone . $450 TRAINEE DRAFTSMAN 18-25, high school or college drafting. Mr. Hofer. INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL • 334-4971 $10,000 UP ENGINEER Mechanical, Industrial, electrical. Trainee or experienced. Fee paid. Mf. Hofer. INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL •"10 |5. ----- etc. Come In and apply. Office Open 6 a.m. to 6 p.m. NO FEE Employers Temporary Service 65 South Main, Clavifson 2320 Hilton Rd., Ferndala 27320 Grand River, Redford PAID DAILY LATHE HAND AVIATiON TOOL & GAUGE CO. 24490 Telegraph Rd. SOUTHFIELD, ad, good pay and all fringe benefits, exc. future for right people. Apply SEA-Ray boats. 925 N. La- MAN OVER 30 WHO LIKES F uring and wants steady of work. Retirees considered. S complete resume with pay info -------to Pontiac Pr-........... 1 CARS. MUST HAVE own tranu. (3ood pay and iTInga benefits. .OwliKt Ok* Lewe, Au-delte Penfiac. I» Maple Rd. (IS Mile Rd.) Troy. I FOR ^ N E A A L WORK wnd steal and midibiery sales. St know how to use cul dl. jjlvd. Supply, FE 3-7001. Men Wanteci Now To Train As Accident Investigators Insurance campwiles desperately need men to InvectigeM. ttie helt-milllon accldtMs, (Ires, tiorm, wind and hall losses ttiat occur dally. You cen oem lop money In this exciting, fast moving field. Car ‘-—■-‘-Id ... emenses paid. No selling Previous present 'until medy "to today, AIR A8AIL, ---------- ABSOLUTELY NO OBLIGATION A division of U.T.S., Miami, Flor- Insuronce Adjusters Sch'pol Dept. >'1145, Suite, 5. 406 West 34lh Street, Kansas CHy, Missouri responsibilities; Ideal working conditions; | ‘TaRAPATA-MocMAHON Associates, Inc. Bloomfield Hills, N CALL MR. HAYES Sets., $40 fo $75 week, monthly guarantee^ ^B*'kl PART TIME EVENINGS. MARRIED sr 21. Call 332-8670, 5-7. i equipment Softener S,u Supply Co., 682-6600 n major corporations on existing ^“^OCL DIE MAKERS Maple, Troy, Mich. TAB OPERATORS lase call Personnel Office. N m equal opportunity employer through Friday, each week. Apply In person Birmingham Bloomfield bank. 1040 E. Maple Rd., Birmingham, Mich. Mr. Joseph H. WANTED EXPERIENCED SIOERS. TOP WAGES. RETIREMENT PROFIT SHARING PLAN. GUARANTEED YEAR ROUND WORK. GROUP HOSPITALIZATION. CALL 332-5231. -ANTED EXPERIENCED BUMP-er siralghlener, good starling wages, paid Blue Cross. Call col-Inri. Don or DIck, Flint Plating = Stewart Ave. SU 5-5371. WANTED - TRUCK MECHANIC, with experience CMC V-12. MA S-! WE ARE HIRING REAL ESTATE salesman In Oakland County. Call Bill Jennings, 37411 Grand River, Farmington, 476-5900,_____________ S1.75 per hr. 648-2581. R LEADING PON- perlence necessary. Only those who can start Immediately need apply. For personnel IntervSw Phone Pontiac 33^3218 from 9 to 1 p.m. or Royal Oak—545-1293.________________ Help Wanted Female Imformetlon call FI I want to earn. For PO Box 91, Drayton Plglns. $70.00 - YOUNG TYPIST NO. EXP. NECESSARY MALE PRODUCTION HELP WANT- MANAGER TRAINEE, 21, HIGH School grad. Coltege helpful. Must be dependable, $4,800 plus. Call Angle Rook. 334-2471, Snelling and Snelling. MANAGER T>WTT-PUTT (»LF COURSE Must be promotional minded, hard worker end like people. We will train you, $500 mo. plus bonus. Apply H. Bloch, 1301 E. Mc-Nlchols, Detroit. MAINTENANCE MAN WITH GEN- MEN TO WORK IN SERVICE STA-tion, attendants, mechanics and wrecker drivers. Must be over 25 years of age with local refs. Full time only. Exc. wages. Vacation with ^y. Shell Station, WoodvVard $325 - $400 GENERAL OFFICE Receptionist, typists. varied positions. I paid. Mrs. Nichols. INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL .......------------ $350-$450 Stenos and Secretaries typing 55-40, shorthand,, 80. Fai paid. Mrs. Plland. IN|ERNAT I ON AL_P E RSON NE L _ 1880 §.■ Woodward B'ham. 842-0288 $350-$500-BOOKKEEPER ^^I^NTERNATI^ONAL PERSON^Ej.^ AAA-1 CORPORATION APPLICATIONS NOW BEING TA en for concession and cashlei Apply Miracle Mile Drive Theater, 2101 S. Telegraph, Po tlac. Apply between 1 and 4, B^Y SITtlR, LIVE II 8 MY BABYSITTERS Agency In 10th year opening branch at Cass Lake, no fee. to register: Cell 542-9742 dr 8024432. 6ARMAIO, DAYS. AGE 23-25, NO -n efter 8, (toll's Inn, S JUTH EAST PONTIAI OPPORTUNITY Growing manufacturing company has a responsible posttibn for (a career minded woman) 1 girl position requires a thorough wiedge of bookkeeping, payroll, >unts receivable, etc. Salary BURROUGHS SENSIMATtC OPER- ceTvable,. Exc. opportunity In new administrative offices of multl-slato —— “—-Yrillng only to ucts Co., 1804 E BOOKKEEPER, BURROUGHS t counting machine. Prestige pi tion. Open now, $400. Call Jo M ‘in, 334-2471, Snelling and Snelli CLEANING WOMAN. Tejegraph^ai COUNSELOR, IF YOU HAVE THE ability and' desire to work with people. Call Jo Martin, 334-2471, Snelling and Snelling. COOK FOR EVENINGS 5 TO 12 p.m. Full or part time. Waitresses for days or nights. Reel's Drive ■- OR 3-7173. boOK WANTED TO WORK 12 NOON plus benefits For further In COUNTER WOAAAN, TOP PAY, meals, uniforms, paid vacation. Hunter House. 199 N. Hunter, Blr- I train. Call 646- DENTAL OFFICE ASSISTANT Union Lake area. Need mature gl.. able to assume responsibility of general dental office. Experience desirable. Reply ir ------- Ing to Pontiac Press Box h DEPENDABLE THOROUGH CLEAN- and rets. 674-2815. in for Thurs., own tr Romeo 752-3551. DRY CLEANING INSPECTOR, EX- Blrmlngham Cleaners, 1253 Woodward. Ml 4-4620. n. 674-2811. 5395 Dixie Hwy I. Hours 12 noon, HOUSEKEEPER, CLEANING AND 2-3839. t OR 3-5876, FE 4-6538, FE IMMEDIATE OPENINGS EXPERIENCED STENOGRAPHERS SECRETARIES-TYPISTS JOIN THE "WHITE GLOVE GIRLS" PROFITABLE PART-TIME WORK HOUSEWIVES-EX-CAREER GIRLS Call MANPOWER FE 2-8386 and pleasant working conditle Please apply at 1-Hour Martinizl Miracle Mile Shopping Center, R THIRD SHIFT - APPLY nursing this Nursing Home. 338-7152, ext. 60 more information. COMPETITIVE SALARY Bloomfield Fashion Shop evening girls Call 9-4, Moi. I. WIxom. ' In Pontiac office. i> single and high e. Salary ot $124.50 r. Williams 338-0359 tions desirable, not qualifications by li Press Box 2. REAL ESTATE SECRETARY SALESLADY Experienced In better ready-lo- ASSISTANT MANAGER BLOOMFIELD FASHION SHOP PONTIAC MALL SECRETARY FOR f with SI tookkei SELL TUPPERWARE work. No Investment i Free training. 052-4300 c w A N T FAST R E S U L T S ? USE P^ESS W ^ gratifying. A N T PONTIAC DRIVE-IN THEATER HAS an Immediate opening lor an office girl. Applications taken after 6:30 p.m. 2435 Dixie Hwy. . Sherman Prescriptions, 3669 A D S 332 SECRETARY NEEDED FOR SUB-urban country club, payroll t -rience. Ask for Mrs. See. Ml 4- J experience. Call 644- THE PONTIAC PRESS. .MONDAY. MARCH 20, 1967 PRICE REDUCED sao. NMt 2 bedroom h side off BsMMn, b heef, herdvsor* *' closets and c_,_____ 1 scre^ neer seheolt Move IrtvfoV ISSO. R. J. (DICK) VALUET REALTOR FE 4-3531 I Ave. Open 9~T FE S-97M or Fr44M7 34S Oakland Ave. D-8 THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY. MARCH 20, 1967 iRWm soiAMlG'NHL WEST SIDE FOUR BEDROOMS Fnur ' IX Bmiiwn OppqiliMlHai M Sola HaoMhalMaadi OWN YOUR OWN BUSINESS. FULL or part thha. Pontiac aru, small tovutmant. Good potwiflal. 444- 4-YEAR. BABY CRIB, EXCELLENT ' SSt^ MM8w“'*'**‘ "*■ *’ TRAILER PARK Orul Potanitol. Located West at 9x12 Linoleum Rugs . $3.89 Solid vinyl THa 7e u. Vinyl Aibattos till 7C aa. dty with approxlmalaly 550 toot lake frontoga on nice sandy beach. 38 trailer tots, 20x48 ctutahouM, 4 l^lns, ^wash^and^Mlh Inlaid tliTw' to aJ Plm ShS>-2355 Ellzatiaih Lake A<;toss From the Moil" resort operation along with the yurly operation. Excallant loca- WASHER AHD.QRYER SET. Wl 1 Mil|er\Rtalty ! in W. Huron ' FE i-OMi VENDING ROUTE FOR SALE -Detroit luburbaii, Flint and Pontiac area. Exc. locaHona. Groning S1,-200 per moniti. Gutn and capiules. Call 3I3-3W-3Ti£^ Eye«._______ WONDERFUL OPPORTUNITY TO Service Station dealer. Fine ... come, good future wllh financing JOHN K. IRWIN & SONS Realton 313 West Huron - Since 1»25 Euying or Selling Call FE 5^" ^nlng Call FE S4003 Mackinaw Bridga, I ZIOtZAG TVjB ____*6 FISHER~^A«P, t ipeakert. 1 Ampex Tape Deck, IGarrerd turn table. FE SmSH. Goodyear Service Store GOVERNMENT SURPUJS '»^appam range, s mos. old. Brown , S45; 21" TV, S45; "■ all Itemc good C"' s, FE 5-2264.____________ NORTHERN LAKE FRONT. Modern ------------------------------- recently built. Near |.n.^Could b. year ,w„v Les Brown, Realtor sot Elizabeth Lk. Rd. (Across from the Mall) Wideman SPRINGTIME AHEAD Flowert will bloom. En|oy I In this lovely trl-lavel with carpeting throughout, 2 large vanity, paneled fi rAnm udth flrepleco, custom ■■■■ards and bullt-lns I. 3 bedrooms large I. Brick and alum, ad drive, large lot. ’ll like It, only 129,500 1 SYLVAN CITY RHODES" b,-th. Tun- p-rfcr LAKE ORION lakefront ■''' ‘ " large rooms, 3 benrmm. 1'/i baths. This seen to be appreciateo. only down, balance land coniracf. .. ?nl”*NDYMANS SPECIAL. Suburban, •a in, 4 privileges,! OXFORD. Large 9 room home. Ideal! for the large family, oil heat,! 00 X 154 foot lot, v/2 ca 'i rage. Only $21,200. Terms. - - ! today on this one. . neighbor »" blacktop '"" highway. Only SOSOO, 20 per ceW down, balance land contract. See r-i, 9<»« *l»0 bedrooms f*," Inyor may buy this one tod *3500. Call on thU PM$p Heese.n Bwtan. INDIANW%D SHORES NO. 60 apartment size REFimERA-tor, excellent condition, S29, 30" electric range, US, G. Hr ' — ' 5-2744. Sate Land Contracts 1 TO 50 LAND CONTRACTS Urgently _____________________________ _ . [BRONZE OR CHROME DINETTE WARREN STOUT, Realtor “i«' brand new Large end 1450 N. Opdyke Rd. FE $,0145 JJ?" Open Eves, 'til 0 p.m. | Sts! $24.95 up. ACTION i PEARSON'S FURNITURE !210 E. CP A BASSETT MAPLE HARVEST TA-! ble. Wkm nmw. cost m seM tor S. NA 7-3$S7. - CALL AND SEE. I. 0. WIDEMANy REALTOR 413 W HURON 334-453« ^MILLER AARON BAUGHEY, REALTOR LAKE-FRONT 5-BEDROOM home luit north of city. O' of sandy leke-tront beech. l -- ' " i^Si homXs"/cSd' r«ticte: THREE-UNIT INCOME .°"jy S Approximately $300 per mt TIGHT BUDGET! Two-bedroom walking distance to Fisher Bodv. schools and stores Priced at It down, balance 4tBm7RWMS.TRVERlr.rr.a« ''^MULTIPLE LrSTtNG SERVICE^’^ " T^rSInoJ™ " KAMPSEN TRADE I TRADEI TRADE I COMMERCE Only 10 per cent down MGIC for this three l^room aluminum '••♦“'■InB "''IhB room wlthl brick fireplace, nice dining area, Kitchan with dinatta. Two ca**“**’~ tile baths, fireplace In base ^*'ls**!aroaMflo'^'1oo) the lot next door (same size be bought separate. Priced e‘ ♦50 With terms available. PRESTIGE HOME In a reputable area . . features you will enloy. L., „„„ noom, three Bedrooms, family i“ ALV1l,5O0'Vequf^"' OLDER HOME i NORTH SIDE with $3,000 down on land contract, bungalow featuring three bedrooms, full base- Kitcher meot, living room, dining room, 2- •'***' ' cer garage. Pontlec Schools . n'd™sSp'^ en-ocre tracts .i! Three ! deal locotions VuVimrt, M any to choose from .... E njoy country living S elect today ' WHEN YOU SEEK OUR SERVICE )ss YOU In. "JOIN THE MARCH OF TIMES" S; Times Realty “ ’ 5690 DIXIE HIGHWAY R 4-039f REALTOR Open 9-9 Pall ANNETT 00 ACRES - ALLEN RD. SEC. M, Deerfield Twp., Livingston County. 524,000, terms. PE 2-2144. Smith. CLARKSTON ON PERRY LAKE RD. " RAY O'NEIL REALTY, INC. c 3520 Pontiac Lake Road 1:| OR 4-2222 MLS EM 3-0531 "FE 5-8183 WATERFORD AREA Four-bedroom brick bungali 4 Acres-3 Bedrooms Ideal for modlum ROtpHESTER AREA - ZB™478' por-' WOODED PARCELS - 2 fivo-acrt parcels north Baldwin Rd., high and dry, good access to Pontiac. Only $5,500 each with terms. Warren Stout, Realtor opdyke Rd. PE 54145 Choice Building Sites Clarkston area Ve^^ seclud 3792 Elizabeth Lake Road.i „... .OR LAND CONTRACTS,'-smell discounts, private. FE 2-J941. i Wanted Contracti-Mtg. 60-A 1 TO 50 ' i T.S«t LAND CONTRACTS n excellent Urgently needed. See us before Convenient you deal. RbrFE H. SMITH, Realtor um KUka^IS.^'^' "^fe mus 244 S. Telegraph Rd. '_____Open Eves, 'til 8 p.m. ______EVES. FE 3-7302 CASH FOR LAND CONTRACTS. FACTORY BUILDING I,_or^" i, FE CHOICE COMMERCIAL CORNER Approximately 3 acres with frontage on M24 hetwaan i Orion and Oxford, developing arba e location for many FRETTER'S APPLIANCE CO. LORED TV, FLOOR MODEL, Tonsole. 194^ model. Ust • $111. Twms. 14.75 par mo. B- F. Goodrich. 1 ,7X1; LOOKING FOR A SECOND ! tor the cottage or kidi’ duced tho price on my Inghoutt record pieyer, AM redid from $75 to S tor rock end roll recorn* ana acraoming DJ'a playing the top S,000 tunes. FE 2-9477. a'KT.i TV - FE 1-4549 For Sale Mifcellamoui 67 r LEAST 10 PER CENT ny kind of heating If you deal now during off saa- ROOMS OF COTTON CARPETING and pad, blue end white, 170. FB 8-2202._________________ OUR OFFICE SPECIALIZES land contract collections. FLOYD KENT, REALTOR 2W N. Saginaw__________FE MIPS and bath on first floor, largo! only. —- "om on second floor, , . . c'rh'2!! Uficlerwood Real Estate ‘9^ f“^',OHon Sch»ld“^ MM mx^e ^Hw^,_ C^ dormitory full - gsr m and Dixie Hwy.-M2 bathS/ Over acre close to Teleon larage. Rd., Ideal for small shop at r of property. Good 3 bedroom m ern home In front. $25,000. terms ELIZABETH LAKE n choice area, perk tested, large lot d, $7,200. DIXIE HIGHWAY 107 ft. frontago, SOO ft. deop, zi commercial, closa to Pon Includes a house that -converted to ■ duplex. BATEMAN COMMERCIAL DEPARTMENT 377 S.^-^le^raph Rd. After 5 call FE 4-0109 Money to Loan ^ homeTauto LDAN CD. 7 N. Perry SI. Pontiac living room suite, 2 step CHEST OF DRAWERS (NEW) $18.95 Up PE ARSON*rpU*RN ITu'rE 218 E. Pika FE 4-7881 Calling Ilia - wall paneling, cheap. B8.G Tile. FE 44957. 1875 W. Huron 14^ WOLVERINE BOAT, TENT trailer - UL 24257. 32'X21' DOUBLE COMPARTMENT stainless sinks with frame, $24.95. G. A. Thompson, 7885 M59 W. DISHWASHER, IVi YEARS OLD. Needs minor repair. Exc. condl* tion. Cost $200 new. Will sacrifice for $30 335-3724. 1947 WESTINGHOUSE REFRIGER-ator. 1947 Crown range. Spring-field 18 h.p. tractor and attachments. OR 21221. ^ DUNCAN PHYFE TABLB, 1 1 chairs, $25. 48" gas stove, $58. { Sofa bad, $35, other mlsc. OR ! 3-9638. ANCHOR FENCES $25. G.^HarrlirFE's-WM. FREIGHT DAMAGED (SLIGHTLY) - 1 bedroom 2 living rooms, $1)9 aa. Little Joe's, FE 24842. GOOD refrigerators 841, GAS or electric stoves $15 up, used Maytag Washers $47. Used fuml-tura of all kinds at bargain prices, easy taritts. LITTLE JOE'S TRADE-IN DEPARTMENT. Bald-. win at Walton. FE 24842. BRACE YOURSELF FOR A THRILL the first time you use Blue Lustra to clean rugs Rant electric sham-pour $1., Hudson's Hdwt., 41 E. Walton. BRACE YOURSELF FOR A THRILL the first tlma ydu uu Blue Lustra to clean rugs. Rant Electric sham-pooer SI. Brownlu Hdwa. 951 Joslyn. CRATE-MARRED AND DINGED 3*-and 48gallon water hutars (ram $38.95 up. G. A. Themptan. 7885 M59 W. GAS AND ELECTRIC DRYERS. Ra-conditlonad and reasonable. MICHIGAN APPLIANCE CO. 3282 Dixie Hwy. ^73-8011 CAFETERIA TABLES, FORMICA top, 4 stools that fold In. UsU, In HOUSEHOLD SPECIAL 3 ROOMS OF WATERFORD RANCH HOME excellent condition. Drapes, c . tains end carpet to stay. Just move In and enjoy the 200' long t------- lot. See this new listing today. WEST SUBURBAN. Aluminum sided hnme In excellent coni'-------- Id fleors, new kitchen imllght rd in b glassed porch, $14,950 with h l-C^ FE 2-0262 670 W. Huron St. Open 9-9 lings ^E 4-0921 stoutS Best Buys Today 'ORDER NOW" Beal the expected spring Ini in building casts, will dut on your lot or ours, 3-bei aluminum rancher, colonial oi level homes. Featuring oak l/i baths, ceramic tile. sills basement, attached 2,« them? We'r I of 1-75 - i $4750, $950 down. I 5 ACRES, Corner parcel, good land ling, $39,500. Terms. i Investment. $4750, U95 4514 Dixie, rear | aO""- AL PAULY !io ACRES, pleaSant lend end ex- C|i!en; lor h^^. property with edditloi to parking space. Tote 000, terms. T4 FT. DIXIE HWY. FRONTAGE — 341 ft. road frontage at res of droperty. Approx. $20 per troi loot on Dixie Hwy. Total prlci $15,000, terms. Floyd Kent Inc., Realtor 22M Dixie Hwy., at Telegraph E M123_________or FE 2-73< CASH Cash for your equity. Cash for !-Pl*ce land contract. Cash lor your chairs an ----- '■ • bohind In | credit Is _ ------- W-IMAN . , B u FURNITURE CO. Johnson & Son, Realtors 17 e. huron fe s-isoi Telegraph FE 4-2533')« W. PIKE . FE 2-2150 _ RgpRigERATOR $2S, LOANS BAXTER I. LIVINGSTONE For Thr Finest In Top-Quality Merchandise ' Shop At Montgomery Ward Pontiac Mall E. Pike St.. FE 4-7801. Lake ^■’operty A-l LOG-LAKE F 2 stone fireplac-, _ ... ment, 65' frontage. $20,400. FLATTLEY REALTY ..™$'i:s8i have the locetlon, home and’lo'ke and front you've always dreamed about, on t Mother will be pleased to know wall It’S* the kitchen Is really sharp 1-49 . ., ........... with a bulll-ln oven and range, further information contact .......... Oh yes, and don't worry about the Dale A. Dean, Coldwater, MIchl-fenced yard to pen. 49036 -------- COLDWATER AREA » i iges and year-around homes " *5'L5,rh a lew choice lots are available; tin™ ie Chain of Lakes In the Cold- KS xL'Im; r Area. (7 lakes). Near the; * ' expressways^, ^orj n.c,, -270-2377. atures living room, din-! VON REALTY I. Offorod at only 41l,-l"' ss^s’s'L ,, I "Buzz" i BATEMAN' HAROLD R. FRANKS, Realty %-ACRE LAKE FRONT 3-bedroom log with studio living room and fireplace, attached garage. A beautiful spot with nTco side of Cedar* Island* Lake”"Price; $10,000. Everett Cummings, Realtor 2583 UNION LAKE ROAD EM 3-3200 343-7181 ! RETIRING TO FLORIDA? Warren Stout, Realtor !Bateman realty win guaranteo - E 5-8165 ;!l*f Of your present home and -------assist wnu in the purchase of your Tt home. Call for details. ANOTHER BARGAIN! I 3-BEDR<)OM BRICK: Ono-floori rancher In the city and lust I years old Newer subdivision and school t. PANGUS INC., REALTY OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 10 M-15 Ortonvlll CALL COLLECT NA 7-2815 A-l BAR-CLASS C Jwner retiring. This Is really landy. Husband and wife open ion. Includes masonry bulldini ! bedrooms, both, carpeted Ih ng room and carport. Acre lo 0"lv *»'«» *>' 1)5,000 down. Will consider tredi _____________________ LIVING ROOM SUITE, M" TS LOANS JO S3& $1,000 KELVINATOR REt^RidiRAtOR, K on tirst visit. Quick, friend-_____335-1897_________ LOANS March Scratch & Dent Sale New GE Portable TVs Goodyear Service Store 95. G. A. Thompson, 7005 AW FURNACE SALEI IMMEDIATE IN-stallatlon. Low prices. Also wo Install aluminum siding, windows, expert |ob. Coll A I. H Solos 425-1501 or 473-0343._____________ HOMELITE, 990. U" CHAIN SAW* $125. Opdyka Hardwarap FE MW* KEEP CARPET CLEANING PROB- /. HURON ST. 334-99$7. COMMUNITY MATCHING DANISH WALNUT hutch, room divider, dining f "' ..................$75. Good conditlon-332-2044. highest bidder. Pontiac MAYTAG WRINGER WASHER^ ’’ FE 2-3222 KENMORE^GAS STOVE, NEW D06 IT^ TSlfe IPENSIVE TO clear a> ana upholstcry wim Pim jstre. Rent electric ; . Hudson's Hdwo., 41 ! Swope ACE AUTO PARTS -land — good busines e, reas. 332-9400. JACK LOVELAND 2100 Cass Lake Rd. 482-1255 ROCHESTER SUBURBAN 50 N. OpdYko Rd. fE 5-11 EQUITY TRADE CAPE COD loan and attractlvo 7 room ho hadreoms, full bosemeni, , 2 cor garage, carpet ceramic In scaped 75 x . neighborhood. I HURRY ... TO THE PHONE on thl* .h..« ranch. Frushour 4E PHONE - call us Is sharp 3-boProxlmof«ly M fruit troH to meke your investment truly profitable. There 1s e fruit stand with water, elKtrlc end walk-ln cooler also e levoly brick ranch home with e flraplece and heetod gereg» A fully aereened summer:4nuie with water end electric, other out-bulWIngi and Ideal^ Idcetad on e Eiedctog rood. t39,900. JACK FRUSHOUR, Realtor tm WIHIams Lake Rd. MLI 674-2245 i ON L-C. LAKE FRONT $19,200 Sharp 3 bedroom lake front home, garage, aluminum storms and screens, hardwood floors, plas-ttrod wells. Attractive tiraplace ei; situated on beautiful landscaped lol. Several choice building lots aOilt-ablo. TED'S McCullough realty 5440 Highland Rd. (M59) MLS CALL THE ACTION LINE 474-2239 KEATINGTON Beautiful lake-front and lake-privi- *" lege lots available. Plan to live on this beautiful new town In Orion', m .rope mo n Township. Models open 1-4 dally,'northwest i HOWA*RD t“"kEATING CO. I 22060 W. 13 Milt Rd. Birmingham ,0,450 lot. 3 ml. » BUSY TAVERN Jd clean money-maker |u: from Pontiac. S-room a on 2nd floor. Low rent MAYTAG WRINGER WASHER - r, $75. Call F ., FE 4-1442 - 14 i $49.95. Marred. ■ * Orchard :t diffartncd. FE 4'9466. kPCHE CHIEF CAMPING TRAILER with add-a-room. Sleeps ? for cabin KK' ----- ... . -gfi ^2-6S6t. SELLING COMI^TE $24.50 35 Rotshlrti ,,4,5 batfuba, tolleti, shower stalls. IrreguSts, tetrlflc values.,Michigan Fluorescent, 393 Orchora Lk., FB *Mi - 1. NEED VENTILATION? CALL BOl. NECCHI AUTOMATIC HOT DOGS-ROOT BEER NEW 4-BEDROOM COLONIAL, OR-ion area, for small farm or aero- age. OR 3^191. _______ | WANTED: USED FURNITURE Dishes and mlsc., tor casi 332-0347.___________________ hems, embroidery account balanco**of° $4% ily or full cash price $44.20. MAN BROS. SEWING CEN- k. OR 3.7044. I. Also i NORGE ELECTRIC STOVE, GOOD NORGE OIL SPACE HEATER. SO-! condition, M5. FE 3-'“' - - —- — outside service. Sparkling ch Property incl. for Just $10,000 du™„ - Your BONANZA If you hurry. Warden Realty * Sale Clothing LAKE LOTS FOR TRAILERS NEAR Claire Mich. Call Boyshorr LI 7-7400 or write P.6. Be Royal Oak, Mich. Ih carport. 1 corpoNng, g J at 413,900* NO. 90 HILLTOP VIEW LAKE FRONr Overlooking \ r SYLVAN VIL- LAKE FRONT ESTATE Lovely log home situated on lai to give you that Northern atm to give you that Northern atr phera. includes 3 bedrooms, Jat living room with studio celll and gorgeous stone fireplace, I basement with walk-out door lake side and attached oarage. F price $24,500, terms to suit. C J. A. TAYLOR AGENCY sal Estate — Insurance — Building 32 Highland Rd. (MS9) OR 4-03W Eves. EM 3.9937 or EM 3-7S44 Ion Waterford FRONT HOMES - NEW AND for""thl. ^rear- u$«l -L. Dally Co. EM 3-7114. . Lots Of DORRIS Priced at $39,000 with terms. |'f° YOU'RE RICH DON'T READ THIS ADI Bl you would not bo Intorasted large beautifully landscaped .... -“'~2 swimming pool. ending rolling I dosl^ed tor •"'Ih 3 large "wllS*® tonced outside „„ »™rHrounH »P--lnkilng systom. 3^iodr(SS“ brfS gold carpeting over oak fl this 13x10 Hying room, m 1 baths, full basamont with stool and sliding gloss door Anchor fenced backyard an attached garogt. CLARKSTON STARTER HO Sharp as a tack detcribi dapper little 3-badroom hi this DEMAND area, lull bi with gas heat, carpetad livtn — kitchen with eating spec dy covered back porch ai cte^tencad backyard. $11,95 FOUR BEDROOMS. Popular aa$t side location, family home supreme with 1 bedroom down and 3 bedrooms up. Brand new carpatlnr n spacious living room and din ng room. BaaulTfully modarnizai kitchen and bath, toll baaamani heat 4nd garage. 1119*0, FHJ „ DORRIS *1 SON, REALTORS 534 DIxlo Hwy. 47441324 MULTIPLE Listing service^ 1 tw h-........... St£ind'iso»rirs.k.f?;!SK I $29,900 and bargain , terms evall- Ith blacktop St...... TRADE your '-OPEN SAT. I DAILY by ‘ TRANSFERRED? NATIONWIDE REFERRAL SERVICE Will locate yeur new, home tor you. No chargt; call tor mare do-tolls. BATEMAN REALTOR-MllS FE 8-7161 union’lake*'*^*rochestei^ EM 34171 0L1-851B •175 Cammaret Rd. 73* S. Roch. Rd. 330-9294 Sislock & Kent, Inc. ---------Slate Bank Bldg. __________^295 S1-A Northern Property GRAYLING AREA wooded camosltes, _____ state forest miiaa on 1.75. f.......- par can Write Mich. a oft 1-75. $2,000 -lawn - 1 par a ' I. Box 491, Ki Rtu^Pr^rfy CLARKSTON, PONTIAC — jj4,j ......$wlm Ntar prissway. < Brw. 6a3»133 Lo^Acreoge ACRES FOR PRIVACY, PLEAS-ra, bivaatmant. FE 3-314T LADY'S WINTER ( $20. 335-4419. , SIZE 14,1 ' WALTERS LAK_ Privileges, savaral scenic large homasites - hills - trees - $1,500. Owner. 425-18M er 334-0222. R°“''’R R°R sale. -ish. Grossing $2,000 por Sale F»ms 5 ACRES - HOUSE ANI 7 ACRES - house and i 10 ACRES - house and 20 ACRES - vacant, fro 15 ACRES — house and 34 ACRES - house and 34 ACRES - house and MILTON WEAVER, In In the Village of Ri University DISTRIBUTORSHIP BUSINESS your own for deluxe candy .>,u drug spaclalltas selling to taverns, restaurants, stores, ate. Direct factory connection with comploto pro gram and high cash commissions, ovorwrilts and bonus. No Invest mant, but must be bondabla N< age limit. Part or lull tlmo. Writt CHEX, Inc., 291.0 N. 14th St., Phlla, Pa. 19132. GROCERY MEAT MARKET, GAS 49 ACRES, HOUSE AND BARN, n' — lust off paved ,900. Cash. Frnntl*r Estate Co. 338 Pine, HORSE FARM 50 ACRES aland, 5 miles ws . Modem 12 stall hk and garage. $404100. Tarms. C. PANGUS INC., REALTY OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK ” *CALL COLLECT NA °a»' Sale BasjgaM P^rty 57 200 FT. FRONTAGE ON WALTON Blvd., 300 ft. deep. Near th- zoned commercial, 1000 iq. dsr block building. Price .............'“^S!?to.r Call Mr. I r particular!. OR 4 Across From Moll 202 It. frontage on Ellzi Road, plus Trontags o ^'t!ll;; kiroei*. 10(01 lano area *J.33S sq, 9. containing a maionry bldg, laving over 104X10 sq. It. sully :onverted to any eenfiiharelal UM, n addition to a heme which can la removtd.WIII divide. Tarmt. Annett Inc., Reoltors E. Huron $t. SOHMO Hot Opdn Evanlnga It Oundaya I- , 2 hydraulic chairs, 5 nd 4 shampoo bowls. FE "S. 335-7590. WEDDING DRESS, SIZE ^ skirt, chapel train, Ai»n, 335-4372 attar 5 p.m g® l‘ ! Park.' C KITCHEN TO LEASE - PONTIAC Lake Inn • ----- - • on Pontiac PARTRIDGE "IS THE BIRD TO SEE" INCOME On Huron Strut. 4 units. *«y$, rull.. Near. Pontiac General Hospital. $4,400 Income per year. “"'Y 032,908 with N$y tarms. GROCERY with SDM bur 0, wine Carryout. Located to Tro^ Area sfart- Real Eitato. n54n0 plui Inventory PARTRIDGE REAL ESTATE IIBOW. Huron, FE 4-3501 OPEN NITELY 'TIL 9:08 SEND POR FREE CATALOG PARTRIDGE "IS THE BIRD TO SEE" Baiutitol 100 acru right li PfoorM*--Bound to tx divided hatoro long. Excatlar portunlly tor capital gains I mant. Will trade tor Oakland ty or Income property. 122 ACRES Rolling, woodid, tost tl strum. Lots * county road SEWR'Vi,‘‘MTXL^G PROM DRESSES 1 pale yellow floor length, A powder blue brocade strut lengtt formal with ball skirt, worn once size 5, $10. 1 white ballerina lengtl size 7, worn onct, $18. Coll OR n 1AM 5:30. RANCH A Ml 4-2195T" , EXC. CON- REPOSSESSED SINGER SWING- dltlon, $45. 474-2198, before 4 Sale Heui^old Goedi 6S WHAT YOU'D EXPECT TO PAY 3 ROOMS FURNITURE Brand new 1967 styles NICE RANOE-REFRIGERATOR $367 $2.50 PER WEEK LITTLE JOE'S Borgain House [441 Baldwin at Walton, FE 24142 Acru of Free Parking =(«. til 9) Sat. 'HI 4 EZ Terms KIDNEY STYLE SOFA, 96" grun. Matching chair, FE 54344. BASSINETTE, 2 AM3NTHS OLD, Glenwood Plaza Shoppir (Next to K Man FE S-0904 Ask tor M- *-■" - 2 PIECE LIVING ROOM, $45l and isbie sat, $20; bedroom ut, $45; poster twin ■ beds, $20 aa.; relrigerator, $40; itove, $30; mapN couch, $25; desk, $15; chut, $35; 3 Rooms Furniture BRAND NEW ' $288 $2.50 Weekly PEARSON'S FURNITURE 210 E. Pika FE 4.7181 ;E bedroom SET, (grand mw) , PEARION'I FURlin^B PFAFF AUTOMATIC ZIG ZAG Sewing n "-pie isli $5 PER MO. OR $49 CASH BAL., Te 4-0905 :T MOD Ig-zag. D c. Gua; OIL FURANCES, FAIR CONDITION suitable for temporary heat. $15. Blvd. Supply_________FE 3-7881 PHILCO REFRIGERATOR, A - 1, condition, apt. size. 593 N PHILGAS HOT WATER HEATER, 4IHiallan, glass llnad, fully automatic, very good condition, $40. 9471 Bonnio Briar. Pontiac Lika. 059.95; PLUMBING BARGAINS. F rTI toilet, *14.95; SILgallon $49.95; 3-pleca bath uts, laundry tray, trim, $19.95; tfalls wltti trim, $39.95; 2towl sink. $195; lavi., S2.95; tubs, *28 and up. Pipe cut and threaded. SAVE PLUMBING CO., 141 Bald-wln. FE 4-1516.____________ REFRIGERATOR Whirlpool 14W CU. fl. ;to. defrost, 2-door, extra Ig. fraazi Final clou4uti. In original factory cartons A give away at $181 $5 down, $2.50 wk. FRETTER'S APPLIANCE CO. ■ ~. Telegraph TWO l^MP, 4 - FOOT FLUORES-cant lights. Ideal tor work banchat. Call at factory ihewroem. Michigan Fluorescanh 393 Orchard Lk., FE 4-8442 - 10. SINGER ZIG ZAGGER I cabinet, makes blind hams, tonholas, etc. No extras buy. Pay account balance U20 or 137.62 total cash pr.__. Call CERTIFIED SEWING AT 343-2422. SINGER ZIG ZAG . Maple cabinet. automatic "Dial i $53 CASH or [Payments of $6 per mo. UNIVERSAL CO. FE 4-0905 SAVE MONEY Hava your old furoltur raupholftarad. Hundreds .. ______ and eelera. Fm ast. FE 34174. - $4,82 manthjy _ _______ mCHI^' BR%i! slvi^ UPRIGHT Pliito, *25, wilL bd--frloerator, 195. Drep-lld - OR 34709. UPRIGHT freezer, PAID $480 McrIflea, 1275. Ext. cand. f 12. USED refrigerator . WYMAN^S At^^'f’l.T^fiiWtSly' STOCK REDUCTION SALE ,25 Mr cant, off an all furott ^ rULLT (yUAKANTSKD Kirby Service & Supply Co. 2417 DIXIE HWY. 474-2234 Den't miss thasa goad buys. Fur. niture, rOfrlgarator $25, clothing ■H Wnds, dishes, etc. Stop, look. Adeline's Resale Shop, 1310 Bald-wto Ava. Open 9 till 4 Mon. thru RUMMAGE SALE - 294 BALDWIN SPRINGFIELD THE SEASON'S HERE! BOY'S BASEBALL SHOES 111 W. LAWRENCE «'g"!’F!rror,Ci,.'!!5? IPrsoVE-KR^"®** -Mika us in bftor. SAL€0N MCCULLOCH SAWS REDDY-HEATERS 50,08* BTU ( Cants par hour to run. ROCHESTER HoughtPn PoWer Canter 112 W. Unlvarslly 451-701* For Site Misceltamooi 67 TALBOTT LUMBER yg Ollclarid_______^ FE 4^595 TUB ENCLOSURES, GLASS ONLY ® |H,EPHERD PUPS WITH Collie markings. 332-4791. WANTED TO BUY Leaded glasa lempi or le glass lamp ihades. FE 4-9Wt, Wanted: uonel trains, i WASHED wiping RAGS low as IS cents lb. 2S lb. boxes Id 3o6 lb. bales - — — ■wnoos. - Olvd. Supply SSS-TMIS Mnri TMl^MKhimry 68 Blvd. Supply 333-7M1 SOO S. E Dogi THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY. MARCH 20, 1967 BRAND NEW - ON YOUR TRUCK i^MAN SHEPHERD PUPS, Al beauties, stud service. UL 2-u' camp-malea, an truck campers. in' and marine to__ ALSO - We carry Franklin, Cree, and AAonllor travel trailers, sale prices, some will be heated t. and Sun.-thru Februaty. PpODLE BEAUTY SALON-- POO. OR 3E203. Real.___________ POODLE PUPS, MINI-TOYS, SIL-AKC. SM-3628. POODLE CLIPPING AND SHAM-_ poo, very reas., fay appt. FE 5-a09S. registered toy fox terrier puppies, white toy poodle, to] " terrier and chihuahua stud REGISTERED^TbY FOX TERRIER : POODLE, FE- 71 AT GALLAGHER'S IT. PATRICK DAY SALE Buy your piano or ogran — now during this once a year event at ■avingi up to $500. Free lessons. s. 334-4235. A CONSOLE PIANO $399 GALLAGHER'S 1710 So. Telegraph FE 4-05M Open Eves., 'til » p.m. - lARITONE UKES. 121 AND $26. All Mahogany. STORY & CLARK ORGANS $585 and up MORRIS MUSIC $4 S. Telegraph Rd. FE 2-0567 ______Across trom Tel-Huron Black fender bassman amp. Cherry leslie organ speak- er, model 251. Call bet. 3 p.m. 674- 1947, att. 3 p.m. 335-0187._^ Eko bass guitar, MAGNATONE piggy back amplifier. 335-160). FENDER DELUXE AMPLIFIER with tremolo, exc. condition. $125. FE 2-4996. AULBRANSEN MAHOGANY CON-~~'e 3-peddle piano, 5 yean old. Iginsi price $650 .Will sacrifice. Original pric OR 3-7394. HAMMOND SPINET ORGAN, Walnut, almost like new $AVE-$AV E-SAVE BETTERLY MUSIC CO. Ml 6-8002 Upright ^nos priced t sell, smith Moving Co. 10 S. Je sic. FE 4-4864. Used chord organs, 2 mai ual, oil walnut with bench, s month. Smiley Bros., Music 119 No. Saginaw, FE 4-472)._ USED PIANOS AND'ORGANS Uprights from $49.00; Grands Iron $149.00; Organs from $249. Grinnell's Downtown 27 S. Saginaw Home of the Pontiac Hammond _________Orjgan Society_____ ■“ WURLITZER AND THOMAS ORGANS AND PIANOS INSTRUCTIONS AND INSTRUMENTS. JACK HAGAN MUSIC 469 Elizabeth Lake Rd. 332-0500 1192 Cooley Lake Rd. 363-5500 SILVER POODLE STUD SERVICE, miniature. AAA 4-2083.______, tiny toy POODLE PUPPIES, Whites and silvers, 7 weeks, ' * Istered, $45. 674-2)25. WHITE SPAYED CAT. 1 YEA old. $10. OR 4-0042 after 4. WHITE POODLE PUPS, AKC. WHITE STANDARD POODLE, $50. 1 DOUBLE AUCTION Wed., March 22, 7 p. BOOTH TRUCK COVERS AT JOHNSONtS , ^ . 'W e- Walton \ \ Ti E 4414101 , ' FE)4rI8S3 CENTURY YELLOI^TONE WHEEL CAMPER storage and closet space (yes »"n tefo ” TPv'v* never 1966 MODELS, ONLY 3 LEFT 16'/i' MALLARD, sleeps 6 19' SAGE, Sleeps 8 21' CENTURY STACHLER TRAILER SALES, INC. 71 Highland (M59) FE 2-4920 VILLAGE GREEN MOBILE ESTA New and dllferent. 2215 Brawn Near 1-75 and M-24. F E5-2777. engine OVERHAULS, 6 CYCLIN- der, $95; 8-cyllndel-, $135. Gi- teed—terms. John Hicks Si Troy, 689-9892. ____________ THIS WEEK SPECIAU CUSTOM —lob, $85. Free pickup and PICKUP TRUCK CAMPER, 12'X6'x-6', alum, siding, full Insulation, PICKUP TRUCK CAMPERS Over 30 Different models On display at all times BILL COLLER Camping Supplies NEW SERVICE DEPT. B8.B AUCTION WOLVERINE TRUCK CAMPERS and sleepers. New and used, $395 up. Also rentals. Jacks, Intercoms, telescoping, bumpers, ladders, racks. Lowry Camper Sales, 1325 Sporting Goods ' 74 Plonts-Trees-Shrubs 81-A 2 LARGE Black walnut, v and 'n circumference. Dorris Arntz. Meybea Rd., Clarkston. 1 EACH - 357 MAG) 41 MAG; 44 APACHE POW WOW Oft-ground floor always dry, big beds (or bra#s and squaw- - ARABIAN, WELSH, POA STUD service. KenLo. 627-3792, eves.* NEW CLASSES NOW - $27^y all the answers. Apaches cost llt-fle-start at $495. EVAN'S EQUIPMENT 1507 Dixie Hwy. 625-1711 BUY - SELL — TRADE^ IV Guns-720 W. Huron-FE 4-7651 GET A JIGER. 0 PONIES, MARE AND FOAL __________OL 1-4286 _______ REGISTERED THOROUGHBRED year old mere, OA 8-1903 eft. SMALL PALAMINO HORSE AND $50. Cell after 4 Young Corn Fed Beef illve or ready (or your (reezi /3 or whole. Slate Inspected. 61 -A RELIABLE 24 HOUR COM-plete Mobile Home s— ups, repairs and cleai brands of furnaces, pli sewers, roof leeks, eh till \C ES AVAILABLE, ed park. Natural gas. - . oeing taken at 963 iMie St. Hrs. »-J. I 8. J MOBILE HOME SERVICE 3 2-BEDROOM MOBILE HAME. nrKSS' 2-BEDROOM, MUST SELL, $1650. 338-8658. 10X50 1963 DETROITER, $700 DOWN, take over payments. 673-5930. , 338-1379 after TIZZY D—9 Pre-Spring Sa|e only M'xll' Pmcwood; i SEE OUR COMPLETE LINE OF tr _ WIDE IN 5 DECORS.^ WE HAVE 4 ONLY. DEMOS AT A giant savings, we will not KNOWINGLY UNDERSOLD. IIa'iT AVAILABLE NOW, LARGE NEW "‘•iral gas, dor------ ■■ ces. Pontiac Park. FE 5-9902. 1 BSA 650 SCRAMBLER, WORK 965 HONDA 150 CC, EXCEL condition, crash helmet and goggles, $325. 682-7328 after 4. I 125CC Scrambler _-.:ZI Intern----- 6-day trials Over 200 cycles on display Low down payment — easy terms. ANDERSON SALES A SERVICE " Telegraph_____________FE 3-7102 BSA MOTORCYCLES 1967 LIghtenIhg's, Hornet's, ! fire Mark ill's,,Tuirmr. Sfarflre 250's. BULTACO - ROYAI_________ HODAKA-TIRES ACCESSORIES .,---- "—j—Trlumph—2-cycle CLOSE-OUT SALE UP TO 50 PER CENT OFF w 1966 Yamahas. 250 Big Bears; Twins, 80 Jets. Dealer dis-ontinuing merchandise. Lake Or. HONDA s,90, .1500 MILES. HOT HONDAS I ! Scramblers', Super Hawk's, 450's, Super 90's, 160's; 50‘s and trail Excellent parts and service. Easy terms - Immediate delivery. ANDERSON SALES A SERVICE 1645 S. Telegraph______FE 3-7102 SUZUKI cyclesTsocgSoccTrupp MinIbIkei gs low as $139.95. Take M59 to W. Highland. Right on TRIUMPH TIGERS 1! Bonneville's, TR-6's, Daytona 500's tory'tramiid mechln1« Easy terms — Immediate delivery ANDERSON SALES A SERVICE 645 S. Telegraph_______fE 3-7101 By Kate Osann “She’s not home . . . thank goodness!’’ New eml Uied Traekt 1G8 I FORD W TON PICKUP, •dio, heater, whitewalls, et___ sb, 19JI00 ml exc condition. 152- GMC TRUCKS and Campers Keega Sales and Service itowjiadJIlted Cen 1965 eUlCK LaSABRE 2 DOOR hardtop, automatic, power steering, $1795 at MIKE SAVOIE CHEV-ROLET, Birmingham. Ml 4-2735. CADILLAC, 1961 SEDAN DEVILLE, 1962 CADILLAC M300R HARDTOP, -utl power; $1095 at MIKE SAVOIE IH^ROLET, Birmingham, Ml 4- 'se jeep picxup, A-i, si,/vs. Complete partSe Service end Equip-Give us a try before you buy. Grimaldi Car Co. 900 Oakland_____________FE 5-9421 SPECIAL $1875 FULL PRICE New 1967 Jeep Universal ROSE RAMBLER-JEEP EM 3-4155 Wreckers Heavy Duty One Ton 1961-1962 GMCs Complete Ready to gol John McAuliffe Ford TRUCK,DEPT. 277 West Montcalm FE 54101 LUCKY AUTO Beats — Accessories USED BOATS 18' Badger. 120 h.p. Mercrulser. 1-0 camper lop. Galley, V-bur' ‘ -dem trailer. Elec, winch Complete ................. ' Starcraft aluminum cruls canvas. 75 Evinrude, tr Many extras. Complete . Alabama Buyer s all makes and models, hlgh-buyer in midwest. Bring your "It only takes e minute" to Gel "A BETTER DEAL" al: John McAuliffe Ford 630 Oakland Av». ____^FE 5-4101 DOWNEY Oldsmobile Used Cars TOP DOLLAR FOR CLEAN USED CARS 3400 Elizabeth Lake Road 334-5967 338-0331 Boats — Acceisoriet 97 1 HORSE POWEI Ski-Dou Polaris Sno-Traveler •8 low as S695 LARGE SELECTION OP Gun and Sports Canter 15210 Holly Rd. HollVe ME 4-i Open Dally and Sundays 28' HOUSETRAILER HOOKED L retady to live In park, $1,275. Telegraph Rd., Pontiac. C SKI DOG'S GUNS-CAMPERS CRUISE-OUT, INC. $3 Walton Dally 9-6 p.m. FE 8-4402 Sand—Gravel-Dirt 76 CINDERS OR SLAG FOR DRIVE- wpy dr parking lots. OR 4-1456^^_ IrYSTAL TRUCKING - SAND, gravel, black dirt, del., 674-3367. _ L. AND A. TRUCKING, TOP SOIL, black dirt, sandstone, gravel, grad- Ing, 625-3074._ _________ PONTIAC LAKE BUILDERS SUP-ply. Sand, gravel,, fill dirt. OR •■-I534.____________________ AUSS LEMON DUMP TftUCK SERV- Wood-Coal-Ceke-Fuel 425-5263 after 6 weekdays. Al Sat. 8. Sun. White birch delivered, $i8 a 32-1704. Pets-Hvnting Dogs 79 BALES ALFALFA BROME, 1960 PEERLESS. 10'X46', EXC. CON-dltlon. 334-0061. __________ 4 WILL DELIVER, 801 SCOTT '4 1st AND 2nd CUTTING 1966 PONTIAC CHIEF 12 must sacrifice. 335-0639, \ LOOKING FOR A FARMER Farm Equipment . DAVIS MACHINERY TAKE - OFF-LIGHTS-HYDRAULfC. POWER ___DRAULir E ONLY $895. MANY OTHERS COME IN AND SAVE KING BROS. FE 4-1662 FE 4 Pontiac Rr* ----------- MASSEY-FER6US0N Snow blowers, blades, tire chains, and garden tractors. Pony — -------------------------- ’Hhlson Lawn 8. Garden lO black miniature poodles 6670 Dixie Hwy.__673-0330 STmmicks!” $m''io'“$?o ‘'MTh.ahS WINTER CLEARANCE ‘'r'NA^awr'*'* USED TRACTORS, LOADERS, ^CHlHuFmWpsrAtCTo trencher^ BLADES, PLOWS ■ TRAILERS. ALSO GOOD DISCOUNTS ON NEW TRACTORS AND IMPLEMENTS. Pontiac Farm and °WENS 26' FLAGSHIP CRUIS- UrKSO' LIBERTY MOBILE AMERICA'S FINEST SELECTION OF NEW AND A-1 USED MOBILE HOMES NOW AT TOWN & COUNTRY MOBILE HOMES Today is the right time to purchase your new home. le Midwest's Largest Mo- le Homo Dealership. DIXIE HIGHWAY AT TELEGRAPH “-59 at CRANBERRY LAK" 674-3320 Exclusively showing at lY OWNER, AVAILABLE APRIL 13, 1966 Parkwood, 12'x52', carpeted, 2 bedrooms. Gas heat, partly ALL BREED GROOMING TO BETTER SERVE YOU Complete Professional Cart HOUSE OF POODLES 1810 Dixit Hwy. .... AKC BRITTANY PUPPIES, PER-mantnt shots, wormed, will hunt this fall. Also 3-yr. Brittany,'Chit, drtn's pat. 624-1314.______________ Akc beagle boogey stud sarvica. FE 0-3171.________■ Akc miniature poodle pup. AkC MINIATURE AND T POODLES, BLACK $400 TAKE OVER PAYMENTS 1965 16' telf/i-ton Fleetsida, cus-h.m radio, excellent condl- X, excellent condition, $995. Autobahn Motors Inc. , Authorized VW Dealer i 'll"* Miracle Mila 1765 I. Telegraph FI 0-4531 SWING INTO SPRING SALE 'BIRMINGHAM TRADES' 1966 BUICK SKYLARK 8-cvlinder engine and | $2288 $2488 1965 BUICK ElEaRA 4-Door Hardtop. Power steering, power brakes, white with turquoise trim. One owner and only $2188 es, 10,000 actual miles, $3288 1963 RIVIERA Full power, factory air cond Ing, gold with matching Ini u $1688 1965 BUICK ElECTRA 225" Convartibit. Dark grtli jll po^r, and one owner. Onl $2388 1965 BUICK wildcat 4-Door Hardtop, matic, radio, heater, full p Only 21,000 actual miles. $2088 1963 BUICK 5KYIARK 2-Door Hardtop, Automatic, radio heater, power itaarlng, 0-cyllndar white with black vinyl top, al $1288 1963 BUICK Eltctra 4-Door. AufomoNCp ri ‘•*“**- powtr tfttringp pe $1288 -DOUBLE CHECK--USED CARS- 545 S. Woodward I ^ D—10 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, MAflCH^^. 1067 Nwr —i MCmt 186 ■ tfM DOOM MOOR. STICK SHIFT, S LET Blrmln^m. Ml F273S. Pretty Ponies 1965 & 1966 MUSTANGS SEVERAL USED MUSTANGS TO CHOOSE FROM CONVERTIBLES HARDTOPS 2 PLUS 2's FULL EQUIPMENT Priced From $1295 ' As Low As $49 Down And $49 Per Month HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. <64 S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM__Ml 4-7SW I FORD WAGON. 363-5517 AF- ONE-STOP TRANSPORTATION CENTER VALU-RATED USED CARS 2-YEAR WARRANTY 1965 PONTIAC Catalina 4-Door Sedan .....$1995 1964 OLDS Vista Cruiser Wagon.................$1695 Red Finish, Matching Interior 1965 OLDS Starfire Convertible........!.......$2195 1964 OLDS '88' 4-Door Hardtop..................$1495 1966 OLDS Luxury Sedan.........................$3295 1965 OLDS Delta '88' 4-Door Hardtop ..........$1995 1964 PONTIAC Grand Prix 2-Door Hardtop .. $1595 635 S. Woc3dward Ave. Birmingham 647-5111 Nmr aiii Used Cars 1*62 FALCON ^DOOR. AUTOMATIC, RADIO, HEATER, WHITEWALLS. FULL PRICE S4*5 ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Assume weekly payments of $4,*2 CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Parks at HAROLD TURNER FORD COUNTRY SEDAN non Power brakes, steering. s. 338-2152 after 7. 1*65 FORD GALAXIE dgpr hardtop, VI, a. dto, haatcr, power steering, t . beautfful fomi green wHh Made nylon top, rich llnw sold silk bi-torior wm knoe deop coMtb Sir-m full prict, m down and V' per month. Sytar or ear warrenfy. "It only lakes a minute" to John McAulifiPe Ford W. OEAL" at: 10 Oakland Ave. fe S-SIOT 1966 FORD lataxle 500 hardtop. New car War ' ranty. Power aqulppad, eulomel-, Ic, radlOi,heelor, whitewalls. Full P'’lo» 11*25, only $4* down and weekly payments of $14.*2. HAROLD TURNER 1*63 FORP GALAXIE 51 ---- ...Ilo^, one owner, S» RADEMACHER CHEVY-OLDS, In On US 10 el MIS, MA 5-5071. 163 FORD HARDTOP, 2-OOOR, I automatic, sharpest one In toy Kessler-Hahn Chrysler-Plymoulh On Dixie - Clarkslon — MA 5-2635 BIRMINGHAM GAlAXY 500 2 DOOR, 8 automellc 09*5 at MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET, — -■ 1*66 ^MUSTANG ^OT HARDTOP, VI,, /Takes a minute" to Get "A BETTER DEAL" at; John McAuliffe Ford 630 Oakland Ave. 1964 FORD 2 DOOR WITH I CYL- 964 FORD 500 XL 2 DOOR HARD-top. Radio. Hooter. Auto. 3*0 Cl eng. Good condition $1200. 692- 1964 FALCON SPRINT CON-VERTIBLE. BUCKET SEATS, AUTOMATIC, RA-DIO, HEATER, WHITE-WALLS. FULL PRICE 1)095, ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Assume yveekly payments of ».65. CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Parks at HAROLD TURNER FORD, Ml 4-7500. I FORD GALAXIE 500 HARD-IP 2-dopr, ebony black with red iterlor, radio, heater, automatic. mile new car warranty. "It only takes a minute" to Get "A BETTER DEAL" at: John McAuliffe Ford 1630 Oakland A 11964 FORD GALAXIE hardtop V8 aulomatlCy f $, 097 • ---------- • hardtop V8 $1y097 full pi LUCKY AUTO 1965 FALCON . ---------- . stick, radio, heater, whitewalls, red with red Interior ,1)095. RADEMACHER CHEVY-OLDS, Inc. On -----at MI5,.......... 1965 MUSTANG FASTBACK, BUCK-et seats. Taka over payments. 682- RUSS JOHNSON YOU SAVE Up to $901.26 ON THESB 1967 DEMOS 1967 Grand Prix Coupe with an outstanding gold finish, blac ■utomatic, radio, rear seat speaker, doubla 1967 Bonneville FDoor Hardtop with the signet gold finish and a black lop, wh walls, automatic,^ stereo tape, double power, Brougham trim, tin windoyys, power seat and vents. Air conditioning, wheel discs. 1967 Bonneville Hardtop Coupe with linden green tinisl matlc, povwr staering and brakas, tinted 1967 9-Passenger ASK FOR RUSS OR KEN JOHNSON PONTIAC-RAMBLER On M24 - Orion - MY 3-6266 >65 FORD GALAXIE 500 HARD-top, V8, automatic, radio, heater, power steering, brakes, candy apple red with a black Interior, showroom condition, $1,688 full price. $88 down and $53.61 per month. 5 years or 50,000 mile. New car warranty. "It only takes a minute" to Get "A BETTER DEAL" at: John McAuliffe Ford 630 Oakland Ave.________FE 5-4101 1965 FORD GALAXIE 500 2-DOOR hardtop 8-cyllndar, automatic, power steering, $1,495. MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET, Birmingham, ' 1965 Mustang 2-Door Hardtop with V8, stick shill, radio, heater rM with whit* interior ONy— $1695 BEATTIE "Your FORD DEALER Since 1930" On Dixie In Waterford at the doubla stoplight OR 3-1291 MARMADUKE By Anderstm and Leemiiig il 4-7500 FE 5-4101 Now wd U«>d Care T06I 1*641 RAMBLER CONVERTIBU, $7*5 MJMtKE SAWIE CHEVROLET,: 1*64 RAAkBLER CLASSIC 4-DOOR, 1*65 AMBASSAMR 4 DOOR. V-l fully eqluppOd Including tacto^ alr.i Only $15*5.00. VILLAGE RAMB-i Grimaldi Cars 1966 Forci LTD Hardtop 4 door, with radio, healer, steering, brakes, automatic, V8 390 engine, only— $2395 BEATTIE "Your FORD DEALER Since 1930" On Dixie in Waterford at the double stoplight OR 3-1291 New and Used Core 106 LINCOLN CONTINENTAL, 1962, 4-hardtop, full power, factory call nights or Sundays, 541-5856 1960 COMET 2 DOOR WITH tomatic ti——- -SAVOIE ham. AM 2-DOOR, AUTOMATIC 333-7542. Riggins, dealer. '40 PLYMOUTH WAGON 1943 MERCURY MONTEREY HARDTOP, POWER, AUTO-AAATIC TRANSMISSION, RADIO, HEATER, WHITE-WALLS. FULL PRICE $895 ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Assume weekly pay-i^ts of $8.6S CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Parks at HAROLD TURNER FORD, 1965 COMET Hardtop, 4-speed transmission, radio, healer, whitewalls. Full price $1395 only $49 down and weekly payments of $10.92. HAROLD TURNER 1965 MONTCLAIR MERCURY, Power brakes and steering, new tires, exc. cond. 1 owner, was $1750, will sacrifice for $1650. OR 4-" ' Kessler-Hahn On Dixie — Clarkston — MA 5-2635 NEW IN THE AREA? Drive a new or used car Ke^o Pontiac Sales. Call Mr. Clay 1964 VALIANT DELUXE STATION Wagon, automatic, radio, hr—— -— Warranty. Only $1095. 1965 FORD Country Sedan. Automatic, radii $1395, 'only $49 down and weeki payments of $10.92. HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. 464 S. WOODWARD AVE. Ml 4-7500 ! FORD CORTINA 2-DOOR. price, $695. ROSE RAMBLER SALES, 8145 Commerce Road, " Ion Lake. EM 3-4155. 626-0287! ■LUCKY AUTO FE 4-1006 1*40 W. Wide Track VERY REASONABLE '65 Falcon Lika New 2 Door '69 Dodge Radio and Heater . '57 Pontiac Wagpn............ '54 to '58, 5 Convertibles, Pontiac Cadillac, Plymouth $75 UP Plenty of others and tew trucks ECONOMY CARS 2335 Dixit Hwy. SHOP IN COMFORT IN OUR INDOOR SHOWROOM 1965 MERCURY Porklone Convertible ... Only 17,000 actual miles. Automatic, pc bucket seats. Hard to toll from a new one. 1966 PONTIAC Catalina 9-Pass. Wagon . Dark metallic green, automatic, power st< Really $harp. 1965 CADILLAC Coupe DeVille................... Special Eldorado paint, full laathar Intorl dltionlng. Extra nice. 9-Passanger Wagons. Light blue « 1966 CADILLAC Convertible . 1964 TEMPEST GTO Hardtop ................................... Aytometle, power ttoering, power brakas, exceptionally citan. One o> 1964 CADILLAC Sedan DeVille ... ............................. Full power, air conditlonad, one Bloomfield Hills owner. 1964 CADILUC Convertible A Real Sparkler. Rad witt $1995 Save $3395 $1735 $439? $1495' $2395 Save 1350 NORTH WOODWARD OF BIRMINGHAM Ask For Rich Kroll PHONE Ml 4-1930 Look at This BRAND NEW 1967 Mercury Two-Door Hardtop $2498 1967 Mercury .Intermediate 2-door $2078 1967 Cougar $2498 VERY SPECIAL BUYS Hillside S 88 2 DOOR HARDTOP, SUPER 88 HOLIDAY .. -Utomatic rad'- ---■ steering brakes, . ilsslon complete i...„. guaranteed by McAuWfe Ford -Mint condition all the way. $r*^ fi^^prlce, $88 dowii and $42.01 | "It only takes a minute" to Get "A BETTER DEAL" at: John McAuliffe Ford 630 Oakland Ave. 1*63 OLDS F-85 CONVERTIBLE CpEvS'oLrfr Birmingham; 1 4-DOOR HOLIDAY, "It only takes a minute" to Get "A BETTER DEAL" at: John McAuliffe Ford 630 Oakland Ave._____FE 5-4101 _ OLDSMOBILE DYNAMIC 88. Power steering. S, AQUA MIST, 4-DR. “Don’t just stand there, folks . . . Call the police!” New and Used Cart 106 dition. 1962 Rambler.’ Transporta- wer steering, brakes, whitewalls, wheel __________ II factory equipment. Now $275 BIRMINGHAM CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 1963 PONTIAC CATALINA HARD-*--1, automatic, radio, heater, pow-steerlng, brakes, deep metallic Get "A BETTErOEAL" at: John McAuliffe Ford 630 Oakland Ave. FE 5-4101 Kessler-Hahn WHITEWALLS. FULL PRICE $795, ABSOLUTELY NO DOWN. Assume weekly payments of $7.66. CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Parks at HAROLD TURNER FORD, Kessler-Hahn Chrysler-Plymouth Clarkston 1963 GRAND PRIX,- CLEAN, GOOD-looklng car, private owner, power steering, brakes, power windows, air conditioning, AM-FM radio, VI-brasoqic speakers. Fair price: $1,- 1963 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE CON-vertibla with .automatic transmission and power, $1,195 at MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET, Birmlng- ham. Ml 4-2735._________ 1963 TEMPEST 4-DOOR SEDAN, V8, automatic. Only $895. Kessler-Hahn ChrysteriPlymouth • On Dixie — Clarkston — MA^2635 MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET, 'air- 1964 PONTIAC Bonneville Brougham. Black with black vinyl top and matching Interior. Only $1695 BOB BORST Lincoln-Mercury 520 S. Woodward , BIrminghar 646-4538 I964_ PONTIAC CAT^LINA^ HARD- top 2-door, : loaded with ................ pick at $1,388 full price, $ 1964 PLYMOUTH FURY, 2-DOOR! Get "A BETTER DEAL" at; «‘i5i John McAuliffe Ford 630 Oakland Ave.______FE 5-4101 964 PLYMOUTH CONVERTIBLE, baby blue with matching top and trim, even air conditioning, $1,295 at our winter price. Kessler-Hahn lUST SELL, 1965 RED-WHITE IN-terlor 2-plus-2, 321 HO, 4-speed, vibrasonic radio, heater, full pow- SHOP THE "GOODWILL USED CAR" LOT FOR GENUINE VALUES PONTIAC RETAIL STORE >64 TEMPEST LEMANS 2-DOOR hardtop VO automatic, 1 owner, new-car trade In $1,297 full price. LUCKY AUTO 1940 W. Wide Track THE NEW AUDETTE PONTIAC NOW SERVING 18HlMapU?,"acros/jI^^^ 642-06Q0 WOULD YOU BELIEVE? NO CASH NEEDED-BANK RATES 1962 Ford V-8, * pass. wgn. . —,1 Pontiac 9 pass, wgn...... 4 Ford Pickup ............. OPDYKE MOTORS 2230 Pontiac Rd. at Opdyka : 8-9237_____________F E » STAR AUTO SALES We loanee. Credit no problem. 1962 PONTIAC, BONNEVILLE, 2- LUCKY AUTO Feeg Pontiac Sales'"cairMr. 'ctoy >64 PONTIAC CATALINA, 4-DOOR, auto., double power, I owner, exc conditin. $1200. FE 8-3738, eves. Ing, brakes, win- ---- --------- Silver-grey and black. Sharp body. $1495. FE 8-1215 1965 PONTIAC Convertible Bonneville, with V41, automatic power steerln^,^ brakes. Only — HAUPT PONTIAC )n N. Main St. . Clarkston ____________MA 5-5500 ' Kessler-Hahn ! _ . Chryslar-Plymovth DIxlf - Clarkston - A6A 5-2635 ! RAMBLER WAG. .. 1964 VW 2-DOOR. RADIO,' HEAT? R, WHITEWALLS. FULL price $945 , ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Assume weekly payments of $8.65. CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Parks at HAROLD TURNER FORD, Ml 4-7500. ---- iTuj ruivu —i J Galaxie 2-Ooor Hardtop We Make the Good Deals-Not Just Talk About Them! New ond used cors must move fast in this deoler-j ship.' That's why ourl salespeople give you oc-| tion — and the best deal! first. We don't wont to lose 0 sole, and we don't. No haggling, no fuss, just lots of sales made doing’ forward manner. Con we help you today? 1959 T-BIRO I $ 5971 1964 BUICK WILDCAT i 2-door hardtop, sliver gray black top, full power. No payment until: May. $89 down. ASKING ONLY - $1697 1962 T-BIRD Garage-kept condition. Full power. No payment until May. $89 down. ASKING ONLY - $1189 1960 CADILLAC Hardtop, full power, prestige for i^nies. No money down, as is $ 697 1964 FALCON Future hardtop. Beautiful maroon black interior. Automatic. Tremendous buy at $89 down. Asking only $1189 1965 PONTIAC Convertible, power, Birmingham payment until May. Asking only $1789 1960 CHEVY Wagon V8 automatic, tremendous cheap but sharpl Asking only — $ 545! 1966 DODGE Charger V8, power steering, power Asking only — SPARTAN DODGE 855 Ooklond Ave. FE 8-4528 OAKLAND Chrysler - Plymouth 1963 MERCURY , Colony Park 9-Passengar. Automatic, power stearing, axcWlant condition I Solid whito. MONDAY ONLY— ....$1095 $1545 1962 MERCURY 4-Door Sedan, V-8, automatic, power steering. Transportation Special at Only- $ 565 1965 FORD warranty letti Only- $1685 1963 PLYMOUTH Sport Fury Convertible. V4, Reedy to go at Only- $995 1963 DODGE Polara 4-Door. V-l, automatic, radio... power steering, power brakes. Ready lor the road at Only- ....$995 1963 CHEVY / wlthawhHa-fep. 1963 MERCURY station Wagon, »-Pai8angar. V4, automatic posmt atatring and brakas, radio.' Only- $1095 1965 PONTIAC 2-Ooor with a V-l, automatic, power staarlng and brakas, blue Inside and outi Now Only $1995 1962 PONTIAC $ 795 1962 CHEVY Corvair 4-Door with automatic, radio and whitawalls. Now Only $ 495 1963 CHEVY Impale ^Doar Hardtop. V-8, automatic, power staarlng and $1295 724 OAKLAND AVE. FE 5-9436 THE HEART OF OUR BUSINESS IS THE SATISFACTION OF OUR CUSTOMERS 1960 DODGE $ 95 4-Dwr Sedan. Automatic. A real kantpertatton 1957 BUICK $ 395 Automatic,'power staarlng and brakat, radio, haalar. Special car, apaclal price .......... 1961 OLDS “ $ 595 "18". Automatic, power itearlng and brakat, radto, heater. A beeuty cerefully ctred tor . 1961 COMET $ 595 Deluxe Sedan. Automatic, radio, heetor. A food second car ........................... 1962 CHEVROLET $ 695 station ^Wagon. V4, autometlc. lee It seen. It's 1963 FORD $ 995 roomy wagon and will give g^ service'. 1963 PONTiAC $ 995 Catalina Coupt. Automatic, powar itaaring and brakes. This Is good vslus ........... 1966 MERCURY $1895 Breezewey Sedan. Automatic, power, eha ewntr, with factory wsrranty ................ 1966 MUSTANG $1995 "Fastback." Almost nsw. Bssutiful red finish. ^ Automatic, power, radio, heater. A buy ... 1966 IMPALA $2195 Wagon. ^**"7 loaded, powar. Save a mpnlh't 1966 PONTIAC $2295 Tempest Custom Wagon. V4, eutometlc, power steering and brakes. You won't believe S300 mllte. 1966 BUICK $3295 Riviera Gran Sport. *" - ---- - LINCOLN-MERCURY 1250 Oakland 333-7863 $1995 ■ BOB BORST Lincoln-Mercury 520 S. Woodward Blrmlnghai __________44S-4538___ 1*65 GTO LEMANS SPORT COUPE. Good buy. 338-2578. Ic on consol*. Must » Kessler-Hahn ChrVsIer-Plymouth I Dixie — Clarkston - 1*60 RAMBLER WAGON - R 1*62 AMERICAN 2-DOOR SEDAN. Real Economy Chai— — to sell. ROSE RAM 8145 Commerce Rd. >64 RAMBLER AMERICAN 440 . door hardtop, red with a tu-ton trim. Extra sharpl $0*5. Kessler-Hahn Chrysler-Plymouth On Dixie — Clarkston — MA 5-263 OUVER BUICK 1966 OPEL Sport Coupe $1395 Heater and defrosters. 4-speed, whitewalls, rod with red bucket seats. Now only................... 1964 ELECTRA 1965 RIVIERA 4-Door Hardtop **!1**'' 'R'"*)ws, powar seats, radio and whitawalls. Slivtr finish. ~ ^ . Sport Coupe Wfh full factory equipment Including powar f ttoering and brakes, whitewalls, whit* with $1895 whit* buckets, radio. Only— $2595 1966 ELECTRA 1966 ELECTRA Sport Coupe 4-Door Hardtop Full , factory equipment, powar sletrlng and SliJyl'VF**' f"*' Bluemist with black vinyl top, matching blue ' Interior, full factory equipment with radio. $36so\ tinted glass and whltpwall tires. Only— $2999 Ask for Honk Schloefor or Vern Sheffield (Sales Mgr.) ■196-210 Orchard Lake Ave. FE 2-9165 SAVE - SAVE - SAVE 9th BIRTHDAY SALE TODAY'S one; SPECIAL St(y ra'eS'ytoV"'.*"" 1*65 PONTIAC, Catalina 4 - Door Sedan that has all the equipment tor easy and economical driving, save a lot today. $1395 1965 FORD Cortine 4-Door. Beautiful white with red leather bucket seats. Economy plus first dess S1095 1*65 CHEVROLET Impala I-Door Hardtop. 327 V4 angina, powar steering, power brakes, automatic, blue with black vinyl top, WOWI $18*5 , 1962 BUICK 4-Door Hardtop. Pow-‘ er steering, power brakes, auto-matlc, 1 owner and low miles. $10*5 1*64 CHEVROLET Impale *-Pat-senger Stetlon Wagon. Has rack on top. low mileage, 1 owner, has all the goodies, only one like 1* *1695 1*63 CORVAIR. Beautiful red finish and most aconomlcal. Priced to tell et only 15*5 1 1*62 PONTIAC Catallne Sedan. ^ 5' Power brakes, power steering, ^ eulomatic transmission, 35,000 guaranteed actual miles and one ■ <>*»«'■ S9*5 1965 PONTIAC Bonneville invertible. Low mileage, 1 owner and almost like new. We call this one the black beauty. *21*5 1966 PONTIAC, Cetellna 2-door hardtop, power brakes and steering, automatic transmission. A company DEMO car, light aqua Hnlsh .,..12595 1*64 PONTIAC Catalina Convertl-1. ble with beautiful platinum finish and sparkling black top. Buy now d and save much-w, $1595 1*65 PONTIAC 4-Door Sedan. It has a solid white finish. Want to save lots of money? This It your chanc* t13*5 1964 CHEVY Impala 4-Door. V4, power brakes and itoaring, automatic, radio, haatar. Look no further, this It It ^ $1»5 5' mmsm i 1*63 BUICK Wildcat 2-Door Hardtop. Has a solid white finish with 1 red leather Interior, bucket seats, ! console: Let's go first clast now. :... *14*5 195* PONTIAC 4-Door Hardtop. Her* Is wonderful transportation. Has power brakat and powar ttearing. Here's your chance to rtally tavt $145 1961 BUICK Elactra "225" 4-Door Hardtop. Full power. Lat'a go boatV**5 1 1*64 CORVAIR Monza with auto-1 matlc transmission, radio and heater. This on* It almost Ilk* new Inside and out $**5 1965 CORVAIR Monzt, Corta Con-vertlbl*. 4-tpetp tranimiaaion,. radio and haatar. A red and white baauty ready to go. Priced t)3*5 1M5 MUSTANG Hardtop. Btaufl-& 1, ’HJ'I*?, *lnl$(v rad laathar buckits. Only $1405 i 1*63 CHEVROLET Impale 2-Door j Hardtop. Automatic transmission, V-B angina, 39,000 actual mllat j and on* owner. Ilk* new .; $12*5 1*60 PONTIAC Bonnevllla Hardtop. Factory air, Uu* wllli a vinyl top. Look No AAort .. $2*95 '»« CHEVROLET Impala s-Door Hardtop. Mw brakat and Otoar-Ing, 327 V-8 angina, automatic, naw car warranty 521*1 ! 1966 PONTIAC, Catalina 2-door twrdtop, power brakat and steering, automatic transmission, nice white finishr a company DEMO car 525*5 1*64 BUICK Riviera. Hat a beautiful beige finish with gold laathar bucket seats. Let's go rtal first clast now $20*5 1*5* CHEVROLET Impala E-Door Hardtop. You buy ini luck 550 Dick Phillips-Tbmmy Thompson, Soles Mgr. A PONTIAC-BUICK , • ’ 651-5500 '---^OPENi MONDAY and THURSDAY TILL 9 P.M. j 855 S. Rochester Rd., Vi Mile South of Downtown lochester THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, MARCH 20. 1967 D—11 —Television Programs— Piogramt furnished by stations listed in this column are subject to change without notice Tp^nCIfT (R) Remn •:0D (2) (4) News (7) Movie: “Invasion of the Animal People” (i960) John Carradine, Robert Burton (R). (50) Superman (R) (56) Frilly Giant 1:15 (56) Science Is Fun •:30 (.2) (4) News (9) Twilight Zone (R) (50) Flintstones (R) (56) What’s New 7:M (2) Truth or (4) Gewge Pierrot (9) Movie: “The Black Scorpion” (1957) Richard Denning, Mara Corday (R). (50) McHale’s Navy (R) (56) Creative Person 7:30 (2) Gilligan’s Island (4) Monkees (7) Iron Horse (50) Honeymooners (R) (56) Let’s Lip-Read «:00 (2) Mr. Terrific (4) 1 Dream of Jeannie (50) Perry Mason (R) (56) Great Books 9:30 (2) LuciUe Ball (R) ' (4) Captain Nice (7) Rat Patrol (56) N. E. T. Journal 1:00 (2) Andy Griffith (4) Perry Como (7) Felony Squad (9) (Center Stage (50) Movie: “Action L. the North Atlantic” (1943) Humphrey Bogart, Raymond Massey, Alan Hale (R). 9:30 (2) Family Affair (7) Peyton Place (56) French Chef 10:00 (2) Best of Mike Douglas (R) (4) Run for Your Life (7) Big Valley (9) Front Page Challenge (56) Folk Guitar 10:30 (9) Don Messer’s Jubilee (56) Cineposium 11:00 (2) (4) (7) (9) News 11:15 (50) Alfred Hitchcock (R) 11:30 (2) M 0 V i e: “S c a r a-mouche” (1952) Stewart Granger, Eleanor Parker. (4) Tonight (7) Movie: “Mr. Belvedere Rings the BeU’ (1951) CUfton Webb, Joanne Dm, Hugh Marlowe (R). (9) Movie: “Serena” (1962) Patrick Holt (R). 1:90 (4) Beat the Champ (9) Window on the World 1:15 (7) News 1:30 (2) (4) News (7) Wanted—Dead or Alive (R) TOMORROW MORNING 9:15 (2) On the Farm Scene 6:20 (2) News 6:30 (2) Sunrise Semester (4) Classroom (7) Wonders of the World 7:99 (2) Woodrow the Woodsman (4) Today (7) Morning Show 7:55 (9) Morgan’s Merry-Go-Round 9:90 (2) Captain Kangaroo (9) Romper Room 9:30 (7) Movie: “Three Wise Fools” (1946) Margaret U.S. General Dies of Heart Attack SAIGON (UPI) _ Brig. Gen. Alfred Judson Force Moody, assistant commander of the U.S. Army 1st Air Calvary Division, died yesterday of a heart attack a week after arriving in Vietnam, aides said today. He was 49. * * * The general, military assistant to Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara for three years before coming, here, died at his quarters at the division headquarters at An Khe, 260 miles northeast of Saigon. TV Features Captain Nice a Sot? CREATIVE PERSON, 7:00 p.m. (56) Program returns with profile of London animator Richard Williams, who shows how he creates an animated TV commercial. CAPTAIN NICE, 8:30 p.m. (4) Bigtown gets sob-bering news: Captain Nice is found drank in the street. N. E. T. JOURNAL, 8:30 p.m. (56) ”Homefront/1967” examines effect of war on home town America. PERRY COMO, 9:00 p.m. (4) Perry’s guests Include Woody Allen and Connie Stevens. CENTER STAGE, 9:00 p.m. (9) Buddy Greco hosts singers Frankie Avalon and Susan Barrett. O’Brien, Lionel Barrymore, Lewis Stone (R) 9:45 (56) English VI 9:00 (2) Merv Griffin (4) Living (9) Bonnie Prudden Show 9:10 (56) Come, Let’s Read 9:30 (9) People in Conflict (56) American History 9:55 (4) News (56) Let’s Speak Spanish II 10:00 (4) Reach for the Stars (9) National Schools (50) Yoga for Health 10:10 (56) Of Cabbages and Kings :25 (A) News ■ 10:30 (2) Beverly Hillbillies (R) (4) Concentration (7) Virginia Graham Flaw Is Seen in Amendment 'Doctors Must Judge President's Disability' By Science Service CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. -Physicians are needed on a panel to judge when a president is incapable of performing his duties, the executive director of the American Association of Medical Clinics said here in suggesting a remedy for a “grievous and calamatous flaw” in the 25th Amendment to the Constitution. Dr. Edwin P. Jordan, writing in the Virginia Law Weekly of the University of Virginia, said the panel names of appointees could be sent to Congress by the president himself as the first of h i s presidentiai dutes. A small group of lawyers, political scientists and physicians should be included, he said. The mechanisms set up for dealing with presidential disabilities and vice presidential vacancy “are political in naUire whereas circumstances can arise under which valid decisions can be reached only on the basis of medical judgments,” Dr. Jordan said. Several examples dealing with the changeability of disease illustrate what could happen to a president in office. Dr. Jordan explained. He cited the case of leukemia. * ★ ★ At the time diagnosis is made,” he said, “there is no disability — mental or physical — which would interfere with conducting the duties of the presidency. But after a year and a half of a' remaining three-year term the disease has progressed in spite of treatment to a point at which the president is so fatigued that he is unable to perform more than half of the things he is supposed to do.” (9) Ontario Schools (50) Peter'Gunn (R) 10:35 ( 56) Chil^en’s Hour 10:50 ( 56) We Speak Spanish I 11:00 (2) Andy Griffith (R) (4) Pat Boone (7) Supermarket Sweep (9) Mr. Dressup (50) DickoryDoc 11:05 (56) Let’s Read Spanish 11:25 (9) Tales of the River Bank 11:30 (2) Dick Van Dyke (4) Hollywood Squares' (7) Dating Game (9) Friendly Giant 11:45 (9) Chez Helene AFTERNOON 12:00 (2) News (4) Jeopardy (7) Everybody’s Talking (9) Take 30 12:25 (2) News 12:30 (2) Search for Tomorrow (4) Eye Guess (7) Donna Reed (R) (9) Communicate (50) Movie: '“The Very Thought of You” (1944) Dennis Morgan, Eleanor Parker (R). 12:35 ( 56) Let’s Speak Spanish 12:45 (2) Guiding Light 12:50 (56) Come, Let’s Read 12:55 (4) News 1:00 (2) Love of Life (4) Match Game (7) Ben Casey (R) (9) Movie: “Lease of Life” (1954) Robert Donat, Kay Walsh (R). 1:10 (56) Children’s Hour 1:25 (2) News (4) Doctor’s House Call (56) Arts and Oafts 1:30 (2) As the World Turns (4) Let’s Make a Deal 1:55 (4) News (56) American History 2:00 (2) Password (4) Days of Our Lives (7) Newlywed Game 2:20 (56) Book Parade 2:30 (2) House Party (4) Doctors (7) Dream Girl (50) Love That Bob 2:45 (56) Let’s Talk Spanish 2:55 (7) News 3:00 (2) To Tell the Truth (4) Another World (7) General Hospital (50) Topper 3:25 (2) (9) News 3:30 (2) Edge of Night (4) Vou Don’t Say ■ . (7) Nurses (9) Swingin’ Time (50) Johnny Ginger 4:00 (2) Secret Storm (4) Bozo (7) Dark Shadows (56) Choice: Challenge for Modern Women 4:30 (2) Mike Douglas (7) Where the Action Is (9) Fun House (56) Social Security in Action 4:45 (56) British Calendar 4:55 (4) Eliot’s Almanac 5:00 (4) .George Pierrot (7) News, Weather, Sports (50) Alvin (56) Cineposium 5:30 (7) Network News (9) Cheyenne (R) (50) Little Rascals (56) What’s New 5:55 (4) Here’s Carol 'Romney Must Show His Stuff He'^ Highly Desirable for '68, Says Javits WASHINGTON (UP'I) - S Jacob Javits, R-N. Y., yesterday said Michigan Gov. Gewge will “have to demonstrate his ability to last the course” if he wants the 1968 Republican presidential nomination. Interviewed on the television show “Senate News Conference,” Javits said Romney was a “highly desirable” choice for progressive and Republican moderates to back for the 1968 nomination. Javits said he felt the best way to repair the GOP debacle of 1964 was for progressive and moderate factions in the GOP to consolidate behind a candidate. “The most likely one now ieems to be Romney,” Javits said, “but he still has to demonstrate his ability to last the course.” * -k -k Other advice over the weekend for the Michigan governor came from Rep. Melvin Laird, R-Wis., chairman of the House Republican Conference. NATIONAL AFFAIRS His advice: Don’t get Involved in national affairs yet. Laird said he believed Romney is stiU the leading candidate for the 1968 presidential nomination, bnt “he should realize that two years is too long to keep up the momentum” of a campaign. Laird said Romney had made a serious mistake in trying to deal with such complex issues the Vietnam war without quate preparation. * * -Sr In Laird’s Judgement, Romney set himself up unnecessarily for inevitable crossfire on Vietnam from dozens of reporters by taking his swing last month in Alaska and several western states. * ★ ★ “The governor could be using Ownership Atwwr to frsvioui Punto ----- (ab.) 10 Paity Biiztuio 51 Meidewa 12 Ann; prieit S3 OMiatic told (ooU.) S41>1^ group - 18 Bodont in Sa^ Padfle 14 Blackbird of SO Vigor (co|l.) cuckoo familp S8 Appmriata 15 Malarial favJ^ SO^oi^ '(Pi.) 60 Landed 16 Portent properttea ISEve'a ion (Bib.) 62 Moat auiUbla M Cavalry aword DOWN T—i;- . Curved bone 36151 (Roman) ffiP^ofcandlei llDaaionia 12 Frienda (coll.) 38 Own 27iM)heaummlt Teaaa 17 Recent 41 Bishopric 83^ericM _ 8 Steamship (ab.) of dawn 44 Dressed humorist (IPSO- 4 Japanese 22 Arena secUon 46Angry \ . o“fo»ri 24 Pharmaceiitica1'-'47 European SUseof salt 48Dines 35 Supply f 1967 j on the ground that they had not been advised df thoir right to* counsel before they confessed. | In Miami, Fla., a Dade Coun-| ty jail guard, Harold Algar, and bail bondsman Earl Mixon went free on charges of helping an accused bank robber, George LeMay, escape jail. Their asserted confessions were ruled to be inadmissible. ★ * In Los Angeles, Don C. Robinson, 22, accused of killing a bartender in 1962, was acquitted on a retrial last July 12 after the Supreme Court overturned his original conviction. Judge AdoU Alexander, who presided at the retrial, told the jury: “You acted on facts as presented to you. But I would like to tell you that this defendant is a confessed killer. His confession could not be used because of decisions of the Supreme Court of the United States.” * * * In January, the case against Harry A. Solberg, 21, charged with slaying a 31-year-oId Connecticut housewife, collapsed when the judge threw out an incriminating statement claimed to have been made to the police. NOT FULLY ADVISED The court said Solberg had been advised of his right to counsel, but not that the state would provide one i|,requir^. > On March 16, 1966, Paul Wightman, 71, a clerk at a hotel on toe edge of Seattle’s skid row, was shot and killed in a $30-robbery. Four days later Harry Laverne Van Devanter, '21, was arrested. * ★ ★ Police said he made a voluntary statement admitting the shouting and told them where to find toe pistol. On June 30, citing the Miranda guidelines, a judge suppressed the alleged statement and dismissed the case. ★ ★ ★ Dist. Atty. Arlen Specter of Philadelphia predicted that two dozen confessed slayers would escape punishment in that city this year because of the Miranda ruling. Said Specter; ,“I. think we ought to stop comj)laining about it and do our best within the limits of the Miranda rule* until we have a chance to relitigate it by taking another case up to toe Supreme Court on the same subject.” INEFFECTIVE ^ Oharles E. Moylan, Jr., state’s attorney for Baltimore, said he saw no chance that state legislation would be effective; ‘since no single act of a single legislature could affect the U.S. Supreme Court.” Moylan noted that a bill pro-_ Dsed by Sen. John L. McClellan, D-Ark., chairman of the Senate Judiciary subcommittee to admit voluntary confessions as evidence would apply only to federal courts. All This Week at Simm: Complete WATCH OVERHAUL I With PARTS and UBOR at mis price ... your watch will b« I disassembled, cleaned ond oiled, . ■ m r — -adjusted and timed elactroni- mmJ. colly, genuine foctory parts used and you get full year guorontee 1 on labor. Parts include stems, crown, mainspring stoff of this oriee *BcKily rusted wotcfiei, autematics, chrenos and bioken I [ crystals at small extra cost. . I OVERHAUL AND WATCH CLEANINO Only . . . 5.95 | WATCHES SIMMSil (ABvwlistnwnl) (A«vtr«sunwnli SINUS Sufferers Here’s good news for you! Exclusive new “hard core” SYNA-CLEAR Decongestant tablets act instantly and continuously to drain and clear all nasal-sinus cavities: One “hard core” tablet gives up to 8 hours relief from pain and pressure of congestion: Allows you to breathe easily--stops watery eyes and runny nose: You can buy SYNA-CLEAR at your favorite drug counter; without need for a prescription: Satisfaction guaranteed by maker. Try it today. SIMMS-98 N. 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Main Floor KORATRON-Permanent Press BOYS’ Corduroy Fonts [99 Regular $3.49 volue, corduroy that's Koratron treated to never need pressing and holds the Proportioned - Perm. Pressed Boys’ Pants Values to $5.98. Ivy style in regular or slim sizes 12 to 18 or husky Sizes 8 to 20.. Wash and dry but iron them. Ton, olive or block. ___________________BoBGWGnt Loafers - Oxfords -Saddles - Pafents Boys’ and Girls’ Shoes All First Quality $5.95 For girls. Straps, ties, patents, white dress, saddles and loafers. Boys' styles include oxfords and moc-.loofers. Sizes 8V^ to 13’/2 ond 1 to 3. Simms, 98 N. Saginaw Sf. TWiJGan 1 EASTER HAI 32 hams to go yat-obaolutel juat oak for Ham ticfcota ovaryl WIN TOUR ^ II At SIMMS y froc no purchaac nccoaaary, ime you're in SIMMS. RiTOiroiii* TODD M. TWICHEL 141 Strathmora, Pontiac F. GILMORE 329 Judsen, Pontiac lERT JOHNSON • M2 Oakland, Hally JEANDROUIN 1919 Bdora, Union Lk. KEN HARRIS 11 Moyar, Oirford, PAUL ARAMS 9321 Elniwead, Drayton WILLIAM J. MOORE . 114 EsHewcrG, Pontiac Winners Drawn By Mra. W. H. JOHN MUNRO 112 Mill, Pontine Smith, II MoKinnloy, Pontiae If ybufname it Hated abov«, just come into Simmaadyertiting i ^apt. during atore houra and pick up your ham. Ploaao^^ bring proper Identification with you. SIMMS OPEN TONITEUnKI 3 P.M. TUES. and WEDS. 9 A.M. to S:30 P.M. 2nd FLOOR SPECIALS ........... I 20-6al. Garbage Can GALVAtilZED Completo With COVER Take It Home for ,1 ^ Heavy duty galvanized 1 Tonite and Tuesday. I I S P.m. ffl 9 p.m.-.Tu.« I 'SHAKESPEARE . Spin-Cast Reel PUSH- ■UTTOM 1 Take I 1 whh stor I I---- "“2nd Floor | Kre-oeuwii - 50-Ft. Garden Hose ^3/8 Inch Plastic Take It Home For I Sirong 2-ply vinyl ploslic hoM lor florden, I lawn and car washing uses. „ | Tpling. or. shsndord lar any fau^.« I 100 leol ot hose per persan. -2n 9:30 \.VL TO 0:UO P.M. SI M)\V 12 \no\ ro .") P.M. • 602-1010 THE PONTIAC PRESS, J>IQNDAY, MARCH 20. 1967 A—7 AP wirtphal* murder SUSPECTS-Mi-chael E. Riley (top), 19, and Eugene G. McKenna, 17, both of Revere, Mass., were charged with the stabbing-strangulation of Jack Landau, 42, a prominent stage and television producer. They were arrested in Boston. Marriage Licenses cJnYJi. P.^irj.V«WrT’’ *"•' Donald L. Wlllen, 995 N. Cas) Laka and iKi!'"’' Kun'lnoton Woods* Billy F. Wilson, 212 Branca and k Whittemora Randy L. Galehouse, Flint i ^_Harold I ....—I A, Kriega'r7watc, .uiu ana isla P. Richmond, Clorkston Richard A Driggs, Troy and Garaldina Martin, Madison Heights John J. Howa, Drayton Plains and Linda L. Mirada, Clarkston John M. Kraus, 655 Third and Darleen M. Jordan, 179 W. Strathmore Troy and Kath- [II w. Danlet, 59 Edison and Katharina , 2427 Elizabeth —1 Orton wti w. uaniai, sf -----—' L. Dahn, 59 Edison Ronald T. Welko, WIxom and Ruth A. Balon, WIxom Jeffrey P. Hall, 270 Stata and Florence D. James, 1026 Cherrylawn Jerry L. Manmng, 92 Elm and Neassle “ *-----son, 92 Elm O. Sharp, Fa ------ .... Morgan, Livonia . Wagner, Waterford and Ruth A. Valllns, 2510 Sllvarside Lawrence R. Allison, Ft. Banning, Gi anri Shnmn I I AHma* F. Lamoreaux, South Lyon Frank A. Blondo, Bloomfield Hills and Janice M. Hamlll, Southfield Joslah B. Tilton III. Waterford and Norma B. Holder, 1919 Elsie Roy E. Taylor, 600 Roblnwood and Ann M. Smith, 209 Parkdale i Thomas G. Sura, Lake Orion and Janyrce L Schwabland, Laka Orion William E, McCormick, Troy A Susan J. Larson, Royal Oak Darid L. Shank, Auburn Heights and' Mary E. Turner, Auburn Heights william L. Morris, 223 Reymont and Rita A. Nelson, Union Lake . Eyseylo Alvarado Jr., Holly and Hilda M. Atkinson, Holly ------h R, Tracy, Clarkston and . Sardyn, 54 S. Avery A. Cole, Si h Lyon , Keego Harbor a Susan L. McFarlanJ, Ferndale Mark P. Wagner, Union l Roberta J. Albright, Union Lake Robert J. Barrett Jr., Union Lake and Ellen M. Hall, Milford Terry G. Engel, SagInaW, Michigan, and Lois L. Erickson, Birmingham Thomas M. Richmond, Long Beach, California and Gladys M. Buchanan, ffrey C. Clark, lerkley end Susan Curtis C. Baber Jr., Walled Lake ai Darlene L. Aubry, Walled Lake ------J M. Roberts, 111 Northfleld Russell H. Smith, 63 Utah and Betty J. Smith, 61 Utah Donald W. Daevey, Clarkston and Wanda L. Venters, Clarkston instant polish shines stainless steel TflRNITE STAINLESS STEEL POLISH the perfect polish for FLATWARE • RANGES • SINKS KITCHEN APPLIANCES POTS •MOULDING-TRIMS ACTS INSTANTLY DISSOLVES TARNISH ON CONTACT Gives brillitnt, lasting lustre; adds tsrnish-resisUnt finish; needs no bird tubbing. No "all-purpose” metal polish can equal TARNITE lor Stainless Steel because TARNITE copes with the properties of this one metal, far better, faster and cleaner. TARNITE makes your Staipless Steel things glisten like new, fast- and without any hard rubbing. Try TARNITE today. 9 m. houitfwWtfiv. , MOST HARDWARE STORES^ 3 Povfers Try to Agree on Troops, Costs forW. Germany WASfflNGTON (AP) - U.S.; Briti^ and West German officials try today to wrap tip nego-tiatams wi how many troops should be stationed in West Ger-many — apd who should pay far ' thdm. I But Soiate Democratic leader Mike Mansfieid is already on record against one potential element of an agreement: West German purchase of $500 million in U.S. Treasury notes as a means of offsetting U.S. trot^ T- . * * "ntat is hardly a solution to the fuiylamental question which is raised by the continued disproportionate deployment of a United States military establishment of six divisions plus dependents — many hundreds of thousands of Americans — |n Europe two decades after the end of World Warll," he said. Mansfield has offered a reso- lution in the Senate favoring a troop cutback. 3-POWER NEGOTIATORS The three-power negotiators — John J. McCloy ftw the United States, Minister of State I Gewge Thomson for Britain and Ambassador George Duckwitz for West Germany — said in December that combat potential of the North Atlantic Treaty Organizations must stay intact because Communist military potential is unchanged. * * ♦ i The question is whether the United States will accept the $500-millton bond offer and what West Germany will do to offset Britain’s spending for about 55,-000 men in Europe. ★ * ★ The Briti^ have already rejected a West German offer to make purchases ofj $87 million in Britain. The British contend their yearly cost is $250 million. Look your Sunday best this §orner Saginaw and Huron FE 4-2511 Shop Monday, Thursday, Friday and Saturday Til 9 P.M. look for *67 "Seaminghj” hugging lines end at the waist then go on in. fuller measure. That’s just half the beauty of this demi-fit coat whose tailoring-for-the-petite proves that you and Shaguioor jaro perfectionists. 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Third Floor Pure Silk Sheath Pure and simple... and oh, so versatile. The full lined sleeveless sheath loomed of imported Duoppion* silk with easily accessorized jewel neckline, self-belt to wear or not. Choose from Navy, Pink, or Black in sizes 10 to 20 and 141/2 to 221/2. Fashion Accessories for Easter from Waite's - Straw Handbags M to m Chooto from soft or hard ilrow bogs in hon-dlg or clutch stylts. Solids and fwo-tpno baoded in o multiluda of colon. Handbags... Straff Floor Hansen Gloves to ^9 Beautiful Hansen gloves to go with your Easter costume. Cottons, leathers and nylons. Ail in lovely Spring shades. Gloves... Street Floor Easter Jewelry *1 .0 *15 To complement your Easter dress or suit. Choose from a wide assortment of pins, eor-rings, necklaces and beads. Jewelry... Street Floor • Phoenix Fashion Hosiery *1.35-*1,50-»1.65 Mokt your lags, ihina with fashion baouty on Eostar Doy. Salac fashion shodai to complamant your costume. Hotiary.... Straat Floor THE PONTIAC PRESS 48 West Huron Street MONDAY, MARCH 20, 1967 Pontiac, Michigan 48058 Hawu a. Finnuis Richws M. Fmecmi Tretsurer and rinanc* Ofllc«r It Seems to Me .. . Statistics on Traffic Deaths Reveal Encouraging Facts Are traffic conditions really as 1935......... .....15.9 "bad” as we’re led to believe? To 1945...............11.3 some extent, the problem is a mat- l^^®......... .... ter of sheer mathematics. The traffic .............. Increase is simply overwhelming even These “vital statistics” simply in-though the percentage goes down. dicate that our increase in highway if if if deaths is due to the enormous in- Our National Safety Council un- crease in traffic. Per car and per mile, earths some interesting and illu- we’re progressing. We’re weighted minating facts. In 1935, we had down by total statistics. 13.7 fatalities for every 10,000 j^g almost impossible for us to vehicles. In 1945, that dropped to understand the enormous growth in 9.1, then down to 6.1 in 1955, and j •, j • • ta j r- u in 1965, it was 5.4. daily dnvmg. It defies comprehen- Progress? Definitely. sion. The actual death figures are It sounds encouraging. certainly depressing, but compara- The same ten-year periods show tively, we seem to be improving, the following deaths per 100,000,- if if ' 000 vehicle miles; Allah be praised for small favors. Red Attraction . . . . Inside sources say the average Russian is all agog over something that’s about to happen. The five-day week is coming. It’s actually on the way. ★ ★ ★ At least Ivan has been so advised and he’s placing more faith in this announcement than he has in the last two dozen “promises” that vanished in thin air. Of course, this particular millennium hasn’t actually arrived, but it’s one of the big attractions the Head Red has tossed over the Kremlin walls. Of course, the.five-day week would provide a “weekend.” ★ ★ ★ And would you believe it—there’s no Russian word for “weekend.” It’s that unknown. Wail of Discontent .... There’s a tiny but amusing wail of discontent crossing the Country. Several newspapers have carried letters complaining about the amount of space given the Kennedy clan. But some may want more. Who knows? ★ ★ lAr One lady writer in a mid-western publication asked plaintively: “Can’t you silly newspapers bunch all the Kennedy stuff and run it Tuesday — or Thursday — so we can skip it easily?” Lady, that’s impossible. Millions may want more. ★ ★ ★ It’s our job to print what happens and let you choose yourself. Personally, I think the Jackie Kennedy bit has been badly overdone and I’ll wager Jackie thinks so, too. I think she’s a swell gal. Bobby and Teddy are in public office and are vocal and newsworthy. And that’s where it rests. Damage Investigation .... Senator Bibch E. Bayh, Democrat from Indiana, plans a personal trip this year with 'a group of investigators to'try and evaluate how much damage has been done to this Nation by the Warren Supreme Court. ★ ★ ★ Law enforcement has rocked and reeled under the many “findings” that favor the criminals, the Communists and their ilk. Agencies enforcing the statutes have had confessions brushed aside and life has been made rougher, tougher and meaner for policemen, deputies and law upholders. ★ ★ ★ Many people fear a further decline of criminal justice and this trip is one “Washington tour” that the Nation will receive with three loud cheers and a standing ovation. And in Conclusion . . . . Jottings from the well-thumbed notebook of your peripatetic reporter: Guess I’ll have to rent my TV set next fall ...........“To Tell the Truth,” ‘Tve Got a Secret,” “What’s My Line” and a couple more favorites are going down the drain. Oh, well, the baseball season will open soon and there’ll be a lot of night games..............Europe is plan- ning a grand sound signal for the blind. When the lights |;urn green for pedestrians, a beeping sound will notify the blind it’s, time to cross. ★ ★ ★ Gabrietla Farinon, shown here, is the top feminine TV announcer in Italy. Someone’s overlooking a good bet by not putting her in a regular show. . A Stanford University researcher is currently working on a computer GABRIELLA that will be able to spell words fed into it by voice alone. I’ll enjoy seeing it work on these: enough, through, plough, laugh, dough, hough- ............. Remem- ber when they couldn’t get phonograph records to play back the letter “s”? It couldn’t say “specie” to save its life and they still have trouble with “s” today. ★ ★ ★ Arnold Forster, General Counsel, International Council Anti-Defamation ^ague of B’nai B’rith says broadcasters are lending their airwaves to bigots, kooks and extremists just to attract an audience.'His organization is increasingly concerned ............. . U.S Tobacco people are currently picking up some $50 million in England because of Great Britain’s refusal to touch tobacco grown in Rhodesia . ______ Dept. of Cheers and Jeers: the C’s—Pontiac merchants who kept their walks clean this winter: the J’s—Pontj^ac merchants who failed miserably. —HabolS a. Fitzoebald Voice of the People: What A Time For Such A Caller! David Lawrence Says: Liberals Ignore Union Victims WASHINGTON-To engage in street demonstrations and otherwise to express dissent is supposed to be a right of, the individual guaranteed as free speech under the First Amendment to the Constitution. Yet none of the so-called “liberals” or civil - liber- LAWRENCE ties organizations has initiated any “marches” or picketing to protest the action of a union which seeks to punish a member because he doesn’t believe in the strike weapon and wishes to continue to work. Even the Department of Justice, in an argument just made before the Supreme Court of the United States by the solicitor general, Thur-good Marshall^ contends that unions must be recognized virtually as a form of government and that they have the right to use “coercion” to enforce their will. In the current case, which arose in Wisconsin between the autoworkers’ union and the management of an AlUs-Chaimers plant, the union did not expel the employes who refused to strike but instead imposed a fine. When the present case was ruled upon by the U. S. Court of Appeals in the Seventh Circuit, the decision of the National Labor Relations Board in sustaining the union’s position was at first upheld. ★ ★ ★ After a rehearing, however, this decision was reversed, and the fines were found to be a violation of the federal law. DIl^IPUNARY MEASURE S<|licitor General Marshall, in arming the case for the labor board, said a few days ago to the Supreme Court that the union had a right to impose a fine as a disciplinary measure and that this did not take away the-employe’s job rights. Marshall added: “There is a, right to speak np, and to join the union. In return, a‘ member takes on the liability of union government. “The coercion that exists in Verbal Orchids Wright W. Feneley of 35 E. Howard; 89th birthday. Mr. and Mrs. Elisha C. Hubble of 36 Bennett; 54th wedding anniversary. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Treece of Milford; 54th wedding anniversary. Mirijon Noorian of 532 Orchard Lake Ave., 92nd birthday. Mrs. Elsie Piddington of 1225 W. Silver BeU; , 82nd birhtday. Anon V. Dennis of Birmingham; 84th birthday. this case is for the purpose of union solidarity. Congress was not talking about this kind of coercion; it was talking about the kind of coercion associated with lead pipes.” ★ ★ ★ If the Supreme Court should rule that fines may be imposed as a means of discipline when a worker refuses to participate in a strike, labor unions next may assert their power to expel a member for this form of dissent and deprive him of his job altogether. This is analogous to the authority exercised in the Soviet Union, where the Communist organization, whenever it pleases, designates the jobs for which only a member of the Communist party may be hired. Bab Cansidine Says: Nuts Appear in Season for Assassination Probe NEW YORK-There should be no scarcity of New Orleans pralines d u r i n g the T season. All the nuts s e e m to have assembled there for Jim Garrison’s “solution” 6f the Kennedy rison’s “con- .CONSIDINE spiracy” do not seem to be persons who could conspire well enough to gain entrance to the gents’ room at Grand Central. Gwrison’s “mystery” witness, one P. e r r y Raymond Rosso, was a mystery indeed. The mystery is that he was brought to die stand. He has been under psychiatric care for seven years, he said on cross-examination. We’re waiting for a leak that will tell ua what “—” means. Both men have denied that this dialogue ever took place. The two met and shook hands several days later when the new attorney general was sworn in. Early the other morning, in the shrouded hours of Arlington National Cemetery, they made up part of the little mourning party that moved the casket of John Fitzgerald Kennedytoits permanent crypt. Wonder how Time will treat the retraction. Best guess; With stony silence. ‘Police Officers StrUve for Safer Place to Live* As wife of a police officel*, I wish people 1 would stop trying to find fault with our officers. The majority of tiiem are clean, honest-living inpn trying to make a better, safer place for us b live. At times we send them to work wondering if they’ll be back. ____ HOPING FOR BETTER * _ Discusses Organizing New Area High School I attended a meeting regarding tiw organizing ; ik>UM Pu#aor. bolds (otM tootb nrmor To and talk In mora comfort. Juit iprtnklo a little PASnnn on four platoa No Kummr, gootr taata at feeling Checka denture toeath. turea that lit are eeeantlal to bealtai v deatikt regulaHy. Oat BUY, SELL, TRADE - -: USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! New Shipent of General Electric Color TV’s Jijst Arrived! NO MONEY DOWN CONVENIENT TERMS HOMEWARD BOUND—Britain’s Princess Margaret and her husband. Lord Snowdon, pause last night at Kennedy Airport in New York before boarding a flight for London. ’The couple stopped in New York for more than an hour between flights. They had been vacationing in Nassau. Rounding S. America Weather Hides Yacht PUNTA ARENAS, Chile (AP)i naval vessel and a British ice - Foul weather hid Britain’s patrol ship that were trying to solo yachtsman. Sir Francis rendezvous with Chichester. | Chichester, today as he was be- lieved rounding the rocky tip of South America on the last leg of his voyage around the world. Winds were strong and waves as hi^ as 20 feet were reported off Cape Horn. The Chilean air force said more bad weather was moving into the area Chichester has called “one of the toughest sailing areas in the world.” No one in this port on the Strait of Magellan knew exactly where Chichester’s 53-foot Gipsy Moth IV was. Static interrupted radio communications with the yacht, although one operator reported Chichester, 65, said Saturday night be was 180 miles from the cape. Radio operators were also unable to contact an Argentine Newsmen tried to fly over the waters but their plane could not get south of Cape Horn. | “You need a great deal ofj luck to get around the hom,’’| Chichester said before sailing from Sydney, Australia, Jan. 29.; “I’ll get round or bust,” he added. ; There is only one navigation light at the cape and Chichester was reported planning to pass I as far as 100 miles south of it to avoid any chance of running aground. Chichester reached Australia i Dec. 12 after what was believed to be the longest solo sea voyage in history — 13,700 miles from Plymouth, Eng‘ around southern Africa to ney. Queen Elizabeth II ^ght-ed him for the feat. 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MONDAY, MARCH 20, 1967 State Youth Devhes'Sonar Glasi^s fpr Blind LANSING CAP)-B(*by Mosesi in addition, he said, SBingt'Tm proud of We have 5 bUnd, but if be wits on his earirfiones which ptvtx the ears, ^glasses he can Jiear n»es, utility as Kay’s System ................“*■ poles and hales in thC .sidewalk, die wearer frorii The glaraes have a sonarlike sounds around him. device in the frame. It sends out sounds waves, too high pitched for humuis to hear, and if the waves strike an object, they bounce back to a receiver which turns them into a beep, beep, beep that 13-year-
of earphones and a device that I looked like a flashlight, which the blind person waves around jto test for soundings around One of the paradoxes of civili- him. Dean’s father, a professcff at the college, was n the difference between a metal pde and a tree, between strret pavement and a manhole ftllH termine what directiffi he is going.” lyhile the gtasses help Bobby Ihe’woods, he can.sffllTet ^ between a cuih and and disoriented if he can’t de- set of st ;/s^, ^ sQU have Sm- can't tell the dfffreence between a man and a woman. 11th Annual /sum NEW YORK (AP) - Jumping to conclusions : A majority of the women who give money to street beggars are overweight. Beggars are so aware of this themselves that they rarely even try to wtoe a haM luck tale to a skinny gal. The school subject kids seem to dislike most is history — perhaps ^because they unconsciously realire Qiey’ll be making it themselves the rest of their lives. Judging fnnn the shop talk of housewives, the biggest problem most of them have is not the conduct of their husi children but where on earth they can buy a lampshade that wUl look right in the living room. After seeing the fans at a innfessional wrestling exhibition, you are forced to the conclusion that the only 1 people in the araia are the sweaty gladiators in the ring who are paid to be there. zation is this, the less people walk, the higher soar the prices of shoes. ^ Few things are as wearing to the ears as the fellow who has been 30 years in the big city and ' keeps assuring one and all that he’s, “just a pore li’l coun-, try boy.” One of the advantages of the coming leisure, when it is predicted we’ll only work 20 hours a week, is that it’ll give time by Thursday to have his last Sunday’s newspaper at least half read. ★ w w The odds are a thousand to one that the next vendor of hot chestnuts you meet in Manhattan won’t have manicured fingernails. No small man ever really is quite satisfied with his life until at least one tall girl falls desperately in love with him—and proves it by starting to wear low-heeled shoes. Dean put the device into glasses frames “because a person uses his head as his directional scanning device anyway. And, this way, his hands are not encumbed with iny device.' Sturdy Record Cabinet Holds 200 Record Albums! Ont of our finest Moreh-ot-Progress volues, this popular record cabinet stands’25" high, 27" lonq. Coscade walnut finish with brass trini. Room for your portable phono on top! ortly 16“ .RCH EVENT .. ______JING OUR CONTlNjUED GROWTH AND PROGRESS WITH SPECIAL PURCHASES FROM LEADING MANUFACTURERS. New 2-in-1 Record Rock Doubles as a Phono-TV Stand only Our versotile new rock con be used os o phonogroph or TV storjd . . . tnokes on ideal end toble or snock toble. too! Holds 120 albums! Walnut finish top with y chrome-ploted squore tube legs! GRINNELL'S, Pontiac Mall, 682-CM22 Downtown Pontiac, 27 S. Saginaw St., FE 3-7168 Use Your Chorge, 4-p4y Plon (90 days same as cash) or Budget Terms____________________ Cblorodr face red! ^un Confr-Q/ ^-has Products to fit Any Budgets FOLDING _ Aluninmn Awnings ^. YOUR CREDIT IS GOOD AT SUN CONTROL! BUY NOW-NOTHING DOWN! PAY LATER! CiM iiH-« cd Us...letUsSlww You sniiitiiiiiiiM b by far your leaf Buy! OPEN SUNDAY 104 P.M. DAILY M P.M. FE 6-0462 2^W.8Mile»d. V4 Miles West '4 Miles Wes )f Telegri^ ICeaSMe r Oeirt. |DaMt»ef ' l Ben«iiehein.S«itMeU l TeMe I PeUikey' ffcl-lliol ””•'*** .lAV.MSWllMSWa- M74* I at I42MI 347-Mii We Design ■ We Manufacture ■ We Install • We Guarantee Occasionally, in the course of keeping more than 3 V2 million Michigan Bell phones in service, we slip up. It may be we didn’t arrive at the hour/ and on the day we said we would to inst^ a telephone. Or we promised special phone service or equipment, only to find it /Wasn’t immediately available. Or we charged / a Long Distance call to the wrong bill. If any of these things have happened tP you, you’re in the small minority. But we apologize just the same. If your phone service has beoi perfect* you’re in the vast majority. But color our face red anyway, since we’re straining twice as hard to keep your telephone one of the most reliable, trouble-free services you’ll ever enjoy. Michigan Part of tin Nstioimrido Bell Syatsm THE PONTIAC PRESS PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, MONDAY, MARCH 20, 1967 B-r itWm • '"j ‘ h ^ M/ss Ruppel in a Whirl of Parties By SIGNE KARLSTROM On April 15 at 2 p m. in Kirk In The Hills, Thomas H. Risk Jr. will claim as his bride Pamela Charlotte Ruppel, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Richard p. Ruppel of Bloomfield Hills. Thomas is the son of Mrs. Thomas H. Risk of Birmingham and the late Mr. Risk * * * Recently, Pam was honored at a luncheon and kitchen shower with Mrs. John R. Phelps and Mrs. Ernest Ristau as joint hostesses in Mrs. Phelps’ home on Walnut Lake Road. Last Thursday, there was a morning coffee, recipe and pantry shower in the home of Mrs. Robert F. Conner. Wednesday, Mrs. Arthur Merrigan will give a luncheon and kitchen shower in her home at Orchard Lake. ★ ★ ★ On April 5, Mrs. Charles Brook and Mrs. George Jaaksi are honoring Pam at a luncheon. Two cousins of Pam’S, Mrs. LeRoy Hocking and Mrs. Robert Trumbo of Utica, will give the “spinster dinner’’ on AprU 12. / Mrs. Risk will D#^,hostess at the Orchard Lake Country Club for the rehearsal dinner on the 14th. WORD FROM SON Dr. and Mrs. Donald Young have received word that their son. Captain Donald Young, will go to Bangkok. His assignment has been in Vietnam, working vsrith a team of doctors at the hospital there, teaching the civilian people. Besides Captain Young there is a doctor from Seattle, Washington and one from England. Sorority Hears Two Reports hfrs. Calvin Warner, parliamentarian of Alpha Alpha chapter. Epsilon'Sigma Alpha sorority, reported on by-laws at a recent meeting in the Baybrook Drive home of Mrs. Elmer 0. Johnson. Mrs. Bert Anselmi reported on a preferential reception slated for April 11 in her home on Deer Run Road. ★ ★ The “Jewel Pin Dinner” will be held at Topinka’s Country House on May 11. Heceiving the pins will be Mesdames: Ernest Mallecy, LaMae White and Robert Kraud. Michigan State University seniors, Kathleen Louise Bird and Richard Thomas Williams, exchanged vows Saturday in the Clarkston Methodist Church. Their parents are the Reginald R. Birds of Independence Township and Mr. and Mrs. Edward T. Williams of Royal Oak. Let Burden/of Truth Be Guilty One's M^dic Says ‘Don’t Tell’ y ABIG^ VAN BUREN ing a boy named Ernie. If Ernie DEAR ABBY: Please tell By ABIGj DEAR ^BY: Your answer to “DON’T KNOW,” as to whether to tell l)br fiance about a previ-0 u s /i n d i s-j crejiion wasl^ misjfeading. You^j. s^id, “If he ^ ^ks, tell him /the truth. Other-/ wise keep quiet; he may never ask.” May I quote i Father John' Egan, an emi- ABBY nent pre-marital counselor, who had this to say on the subject: “Neither partner has the right to burden the other with guilty knowledge. To do so is cowardly, as it attempts to share a burden that belongs to the ‘guilty’ one alone, and could lead to an unhappy distrust that might spoil the marriage. Better that each should presume, in charity, that each enters marriage with a clean slate.” Call this self-delusion if you will, but I have been assured by other sources thht it is more conducive to good mf^ntal health than to “tell all.” AN M.D. IN SAN RAFAEL ★ ★ ★ DEAR ABBY: I think I can improve on your answer to the girl who had a boy in her past named Bernie and was marry- ing a boy named Ernie. If Ernie DEAR ABBY: Please tell asks her what went on between “DON’T KNOW” that you b her and Bemie she sh6uld tell ^ from a girl who D0ES KNOW, For intimate little dinner parties signs for Ford dealerships. Exquisite here in her Franklin home, Janet Heideman in a dark velvet sheath, Miss Heideman plans details with as much cctre as she applies her “functional beauty" logic in uses in her presentations of interior de- wardrol/e as well as work. She Designs Auto Showrooms Newlyweds Honeymoon in Bermuda By JEANNE NjELSON That young woman holding all the aces In her hand is Janet Heideman, Ford Motor Company’s answer to a rapidly changing consumer atmosphere. As a showroom designer, she is “dealer’s choice” in the high stakes game of automobile merchandising. The position of dealership interior designer for Ford Division is a company innovation that began with her employment about two years ago. The need arose from ever-increasing requests qf private dealers for help in establishing more attractive and functional surroundings. The company was also establishing more of its own and leased-out facilities. That a woman should be chosen for this high powered job te yet another sign of changing trends within the autatnotive world. Leaders in the field have come to grips with the fact that the distaff side is the real economic force in today’s purchasing. Under Janet's skilled fingers, out go the old carnival-like looks of yesterday’s showrooms. The new Is serenely contemporary. Starting with dealer-approved basic blueprints, the talented Miss Heideman formulates a flexible rough layout. But this is just the beginning of each of the 30 or more job assignments she completes in a year’s time. Geographical research is a must. “What works well on the West Coast often is unrealistic for a another locale,” she says. And adds, “This is also true of customs and attitudes and * must necessarily be a prinje factor in the design interpretation.” / Although she’s a firm believer in facilities having their own identities, she does stipulate that they must relate to the general community and geographical characteristics. After she has made final selections on floor coverings, furniture, lighting fixtures, construction materials, electrical outlet placements and display elevations, alt must be recorded with alternatives in a written presentation. Finished sketches of the whole facility are inclu^. This part of the job is done in her De^born office. Towards the completion pf the remodeling, she makes a tnp to the location to check final details. She confides that “this is one of the “fringe benefits” in her job—an opportunity to jet here and there on a liberal expense account.” Bpt this University of Michigan’s College of Architecture and Design graduate hasn’t limited herself to just dealer showrooms. Recently, she desiped and colaborated in the writing of a dealer’s handbook and has worked on the symbolic sign soon to be used at all dealer- During her college days, Janet designed homecoming floats and booklets and has done a number of booths for the Travel Show. After graduation she worked at Knoll Associates Design Studios in Birmingham and was involved in the new desip of the main Bank of the Commonwealth. Sleek is the only word to describe both the girl and her wardrobe. A trained eye has pided her thinking on clothes so that the basic timeless styles she chooses are fashion right wherever she goes and whatever she does. But with the artist’s sensitivity she creates unusual touches with a scarf or piece of jewelry whose contrived placement illuminates the overall look. Whatever spare time 'is left from her job and dating (she’ll say no more on the seriousness of this), is spent sailing, swimming, working at Bloomfield Art Association and Cranbrook Academy of Art on oils, water-colors and weaving. If that’s not enough, she also makes most of her own clothes. And, as an active member in the Oakland County Young Republican group, she campaigns with the best of them along with designing the hand out ma- Honeyrnooning in Bermuda are the newlywed Thomas Glenn Suras (Janyce Lynne Schwab-land of Lake Orion). The couple was wed‘Saturday evening in a candlelight service in the First Presbyterian Church, Ann Arbor. Matron of honor for her sister was Mrs. Joan Rae Fink. Attendants were Mrs. Michael Sura of Mt. Pleasant and Linda Koch of Warren. Michael G. Sura was h i s brother’s best man. Ushers were-Werner Zanier, James Downey, Richard Sawicki, James McGowan and Carl McCahill. WATTEAU TRAIN The bride wore a floor length gown with Watteau train in ivory silk satin with Alencon lace appliques. The bodice had a modified Empire waistline with re-embroidered Alencon lace encircling it. Her flowers were a white gardenia cascade. * ★ * Parents of the bridal couple are Dr. and Mrs. John C. Schwabland of Ann Arbor and the Eugene Suras of Absequami Trail, Orion Township. A reception in the Washtenaw Country Club, Ypsilanti, followed the rite. The newlyweds are graduates of Michigan State University and Western Michigan University respectively. him it’s none of his business. And if he gets tough about it, she should tell him to get lost. Any man who would insist on knowing a lady’s past would be a devil to live with. EXPERIENCED DEAR ABBY: You should have told pON’T KNOW who was afraid her fiance would ask her some embarrassing questions about her past to answer in this way: “Don’t ask me any questions and I won’t ask you any, 0. K.?” BEEN THERE DEAR ABBY: If you let a person go ahead and think something that isn’t true, isn’t that the same as lying! I don’t apee with you that the girt shouldn’t tell her boyfriend everything about her past because he thinks she’s a “nice” girl, and she really isn’t as nice as he thinks she is. After all, even if she made only one mistake, she’s not pure anymore, and she should have to pay for it. HIGH MORALS s DEAR ABBY: If you want it straight from the horse’s mouth, (“jack-ass” would be more like it), here it is: Don’t tell your * future husband anything. I made the mistake of answering all his questions and now I am the sorriest woman on earth. Oh, he did me a favor and married me anyway, but he has never let me forget it for a minute. If I had it to do all over again I wouldn’t have been so honest. TALKED TOO MUCH Final Session Wednesday will be the last YWCA Ladies Day Out program of the winter term. Any interested woman may attend. At noon there will be a co-. Operative luncheon and display of projects from classes. and she wants to give her some good advice. If you HAVE TO tell yop ,^friend, go ahead and teir him. But don’t give him any names. PLENTY DEAR ABBY:\About the Ernie and Bernie qu^ tell or not to tell:” Tqke it froii a man. I p^ped t from my wife s' men in her life, i have been married for n years, it still bothers me,^ I am sorry now that she ev^ told me. POMPANO BEACH \ Calendar TUESDAY ^ Fashionette Club of Pon-tiac, 7 p.m., Adah Shelly I Library. Crowning of " i queen. Frances Willard union, i Women’s Christian Tem- | i perance Union, 7 p.m., | I home of Mrs. LeRoy Sha- | fer of South Paddock I Street. Rev. Lola Marian i will speak. Oakland District Nurses ’ Association, 7:30 p.m., William Beaumont Hospi-: tal. Panel on “Continuing I Patient Care.” Partici- i pants are Adele Welsh, | Helen Millen and June Mock. Oakland County Dental Hygienists’ Society, 7:30 p.m., Michigan Bell Tele-phone Company, North- v land. Election and work- i ^ shop. I j WEDNESDAY | Woman’s Wmrld Series, | 10 a.m., The Pontiac Mall. ^ “Your Growing Glory” by Donnell Thomas, hair I I stylist. “t The Thomas Glenn Suras (Janyce Lynne Schwabland) were wed Saturday evening in a candlelight service in the First Presbyterian^ Church, Ann Arbor. Their parents are Dr. and Mrs. John C. Schwabland of Ann Arbor and the Eug^e Suras . of Orion Township. MRS. T. G. SURA I MRS. R. T. WILLIAMS Area Couple Speaks Vows in Clarkston The Clarkston Methodist Church Was the setting for evening vows spoken by Kathleen . ■ and Richard Thomas Williams on Saturday. Wearing a gown of ivory silk faille with Empire waist and Chapel train, the bride carried a bouquet of Stephanotis and a white orchid. A mantilla of Alencon lace completed her costume. Lynn Ellsworth of Clarkston was maid of honor for the daughter of the Reginald R. Birds of Allen Road, Independence Township. Attendants were Mrs. Richard Danielson of Coldwater and Mrs. David Haviland of East Lansing. Anne Birtsas whs flower girl. Michael Maas of Royal Oak served as best man for the son of the Edward Williamses of Royal Oak with ushers Reginald 0. Bird of New York City and George Moeller of Grand Rapids. The newlyweds left for a honeymoon in New York City after a church reception immediately following the ceremony. They wiH graduate froin Michigan State University in June. 391 Genuine MOSAIC TILE Very Easy to Install . . . They are 12"xl2" Sheets! Genuine CERAMIC TZLE VINYL RUBBER TILE 9 x The Only Permanent Floor! 49! 1 VINYL ASBESTOS TILE 9"x9" 7® f Ea. :: 1 SOLID VINYL TILE .. UA i MICA , . With Gold Fleck . .. 39°hf,./ New Styrofoam CEILING TILE ACROSS From The MALL 2255 ELIZABETH LAKE RD. FRONT DOOR PARKING FE 4-5216 open Mon., Thurt., Fri. 9 to 9 ' Tuet., Wed., Sat. 9 to 6 B—2 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, MARCH 20, 1967 NEW MAMBER SKCML 8x10 Photograph 49 • Only on* oH»r •oeh 9 monlhi • Groups, Cmtumot and Portent Over 12 Yoort Slightly Additional KENDALE^S ... Photographers l| .... FE 5-0322 or FE 54260 11 Tuot., Thurt. 12-«:30 - W«d., Fri., Sot. 9-S 11 '•jI 45 W. Huron ^HIS OFFER ENOS IN 7 DAYS-Phono for Appointmont MRS. G.G. HANSON Snap All Snaps Wash-and-wear clothing dries in better shape when ' all the openings are closed. CHILDREN OUTGROWN SKIS, SLEDS, TOBOGGANS? SELLi All snaps, buttons and zippers THEM WITH A LOW COST PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED! should be closed before wash-AD. TO PLACE YOURS, CALL 332-8181. i ing. Special Offer! PERM SALE Famous name permanents, reduced for a limited time! • Conditioning Shampoo • Superb Salon Permanent • Cream Rinse ;*2®* Beauty Salon 11 N. Saginaw St. FE S-92S7 Satin Gown for Bride on Saturday A classically styled gown of crystal white satin witth Pointe de Venise lace was chosen by Nancy L. Richards for hw marriage in the First MeQio-dish Church to Gary Gwe Hanson of Clarkston. The bodice of her gown was designed with a crescent curved neckline. A squared diapel train was franied in lace. * ★ ★ She carried a chapel bouquet of Kialaenopsis orchids for the Saturday evening vows to the son of the Gust F. Hansons of Two Harbors, Minn. Her parents are Mr. and Mrs. Gerald M. Richards of Joyce Street. Maid of honor fw her sister was Maiy Beth Richards, with cousins Barbara Benson and Carol Richards as attoid-ants. Curt Hanson served as best man for his brother. William and Bruce Bratt were ushers. TTie couple left for a wedding trip to Minnesota following a church parlors reception. Poll/s Poinfers Readers Are Kind DEAR READERS (^, for put In bobby pins or clamps, the spaoe to |»1nt all your won- When writi^, use a i»per-derful Planters for Harold’s wei^ to hold the paper.—MRS. wife, who has lost her IMt arm. Your s|drit of sharing is dver-whelmi^ and the words of encouragement,' along with the iwayers of those udio have miss-tered suidi a sitptioa are most touching.-POLLY DEAR POLLY -1 hope my ■ ■ - ■ ill EASTER FLOWERS Special EASTER CORSAGE Cymbidium ORCHID Three Medium Blooms Other CORSAGES Fresh Blooming Plants LILIES - AZALEAS - TULIPS DAFFODILS - HYACINTHS - MUMS Flowers Telegraphed Any Place in the World! Pearce Floral Co. 559 Orchard Lake Ave. OPEN FRI. ond SAT. MARCH 25 26 8:30 Til 9-EASTER Til NOON Plenty of Free Parking Space PhEne FE 2-ol;^ 2 Deliveries to Detroit, Birmingham, Bioonifield Hills and Intermediate Points G.B. DEAR POLLY - (dd’s wife. Keep a board with a long nail or spike protruding up through the top to use when peeling potatoes i^les and other si^ar things My husband First Methodist Churcli PONTIAC "A Week of Evangelism" Monday fvenbts Sendee.7:30 PAA. "TheieisAWeyOutT OR. GfORGf A. FALU>N, .12:00-12-45 "Over Temptation" lost his arm over 30 years ago and there is little he cannot do. He has always earned a living. Harold’s wife vdU find her way in her own good time. My suggestions are for the way you, Handd, can help. ★ ★ ★ Take care of your own needs as much as you can. Gean up after yourself. Give her ample space to work in. Try working with one hadd yourself to bet-..... ter understand what she needs. I^sh the «nter of the item Be handy and unobtrusively do ^ *5 any heavy lifting. Learn to work hoM it m place. K the Ixwd ^jh her as there is as much sbdes whUe peeUng or ^tting for you to learn as there Is for food, put a rubber sink pad her. Over the years her heart *t- Iwill be so full of love for your I use such a pad under my standby devotion that her loss breadboard to keep it from slid- will seem almost like a blessing, ing when rolling pie crust, -'it is strange how things work MRS.V.T. lout. DEAR POLLY — When a pef-1 Now my husband is doing son loses an arm it takes ^th most of the work for me aa^ I time and patience for both the am crippled with arthritis. Cood* amputee and family to learn to juck and God bless y«u both, live with this loss. I have done — ONE WITH A SENSE OF so since the age of seven. Fam- VALUES and friends should, and will, ivaise you for your accomplishments. This is an encouragement to try more difficnlt tnsks but do not expect praise always and DO NOT PITY YOURp It’s tune-up time! Only 9 4/9 SINSU gni CMM It Nur IWM IIN UN-M «qr niki If Mfot NWif aiCliiM! (fill Miy! J.POINT HOME TUNE-UP 1. Adjust, btitnee tensions. 4. Adjust belt tension. Z. Adjust fabric handling mechanism. 5. Check,wiring for safety. 3. De-lint thread handling mechanism. 6. Lubricate machine. 1. Inspect and lubricate motor. DOWNTOWN MNTIAC "fori* in North SMimw------------- piwM mm> PONTIAC AtALL SINGER Use Wisdom in Selections Whoi stirring anything,, I set the bowl on a damp dishcloth to keep it tom turning. If the .contents are to be beaten until jvery stiff, hold the bowl between' your knees. Also, there will be less breakage if you wash dishes in a plastic dish pan. If you’re the fashifm age wttbre mini-skirts are out, keep in mind that plain stockings too are iiK«e elegant for the mature woman textured hosiery, particularly A new, booklet stockings of l^ght beige or I pin my left coat sleeve to ‘X booklet, "Looking Your .................................................. ■ adds however that color and texture the inside of a coat pocket with, p„shionable safety pins and pin again about ^asinoname haifway up the sleeve. I make the left sl^ve shut at the hot- tom, making two pleats to narrow it. / ★ -A ★ When playing cards, the handiest thing to stand the cards in is a six-foot folding rule. To pin your hair in pin curls, turn country clothes. Embroidery Tips Knot threads with as small a knot as possible when embroidering and pull them at the back under a part of the the hair and press the curl design already worked. This against an outside corner or a| keeps the underside of the door edge in the room and then' work neat. Thu ioving it your* ■ Wrighl'i you'ro buy-:ing direct from the manufacturer — eliminating the usual "middle-man" coil. You con be sure of fine quality end EASY BUDCET TERHS OR 90 DAYS CASH WILLIAM WRIGHT Furniture Makmr$ and VphnUt*r»r$ 270 Orchard Lake FE 4-0558 SmrmlmgOuktamdCeum^ OwerSS Tmur$ LOW IN COST. FAST IN ACTION. PHONE 3324181. NEED HELP? USE PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED ADS! As The Poet Once ^aid, “A Woman’s Hair 1 •T' 1 f. ■ - j Is Her Crowning Glory.” Sharon Ostrander, o«r Manager, yUl be happy to advise you in selecting the most flattering wig or hairpiece for you. Be the beauty you want to be... almost at once. If your hair doesn’t do everything for you that you wish it did, drop in and see how easily and how soon you can be transformed into the "You” you really want to be, the lovelier you he’s looking for and hasn’t found, or thinks he’s lost Yes, do come in when’yon have a few minutes to dream. Try on a wig or two or more to yonr heart’s content Then, lyalk out, looUug and feeling lovelier than yon ever thought you could. We have .a complete sorviee department at the most reasonable rates. So, call for an appointment... or better still.., drop your wig or hairpiece off with ns. We’ll make you look your lovely best all over agsin. Come in and meet Miss Joanne Pursell, our hair stylist. SIM P 794 N. Woodward Ave.y Honrs: — Monday ’ntru SatnTday 1(9 to 6 Birmingham Phone 642-6777 THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, I^IARCH 20, 1967 B-3 Pride Can Hide Hunger, Need for Affenf ion By MUmEL LAWRENCE DEAR MRS. LAWRENCE; Though I am an only chiW (aged 32) .my moth^ and have never'gqt alo^g. But since my dad’s death thr^e years ago, I have done all I know how to be a real daughter to her. Now I know that I don’t mean anything to her. She is a music teacher and has two girl students boarding with her. When I go to see her all she talks about is.bow talented they are and bow proud she is of them. ’This Christmas I asked her if she wanted me to spend it with her and she said “Suit yourself.” Then she hung up on me. . . ANSWER: That was rough. But let me put this idea into your head. It is this: If we par-. ents sense your disappointment In us, it may be impossible for us to tell you we need your affection. We feel so ashamed of our failure to get it that our pride insists that we pretend we don’t want it. We behave ex-acUy like that fox in the stmy who scorned the ^apes he conidn’t reach. It’s a (diony scorn. Our yearning fw your affection cannot really be squashed. It voices itself in spite of opr scornful i»-ide. And one of our favorite ways of telling you we want it is cultivating the admiration of other people’s children — and then flaunting our suc-in front of you. We do this, not because m hate you but to seU you (and ourselves) the notion that we are worttiy of your love. Which may be preo^y w|iat your motiier is d6ing by enthusing over her girl students — these substitute daughters of hers. It’s not too M^t of her, ot coarse. But Bien it may be the only way her pride will allow her to tell you die tmih. Anyway, do try again. It’s asking a lot of you, because I know how seriously you children take the phony acts we put on. ^^HAG TYPE' RUGS WASHED 50' ® We’re Equipped for "Texas Size Washes” Brite ’n’ Clean * fRIGIDAIRE UUNDROMAT < V Parkins for M Carat JNeumode FOR EASTER I 82 N. Saginaw St. Neverflieless, I wish you could find the courage tq \augh at this one of your mother’s. Wien she starts raving about taw wonderful are these strangers’ children, I wish you could just at her and say, “Oh, come on, you know you like me, too!” It just might work. If it lesn’t, O.K. You’ll just have to let her be what she thinks she be. But don’t you g( on your high horse, too, and tell yourself that her hunger for your affection doesn’t exist. MRS. R. J. WILLIAMS Spain to Be Home for Navy Pair Brenda Sue James became the bride of Yeoman 2.C. Richard Joseph Williams, U.S.N., in vows exchanged Saturday afternoon in Our Lady of the Lakes Catholic Church. Following their Airway Lanes reception, the couple left for a tour of Spain. They will reside in Ronda, Spain, where the bridegroom is stationed. Mrs. Harold R. Martin was matron of honor for her sister who wre a white Chantilly lace over silk organza floor length gown with A line skirt and chapel length train. * ★ Ik A bridal cap trimmed in seed pearls and matching lace cradled her imported silk illusion veil. Linda McClard and Janis Cole were attendants with Cathy Martin as flower girl. * ★ ★ The bridegroom’s father, Richard M. Williams Sr., was best man. Ushers were Richard M. Williams Jr., and the bride’s brother David James. Parents of the newlyweds are Mr. and Mrs. Richard M. James of Edna Street and the senior Williamses of Pittsburgh, Pa. Catalim says: Trust the care of your clothes to your Sanitone Certified Master Drycleaner^ Famous clothiers like Catalina recommend our Sanitone Certified Master Drycleaner keep clothes looking new longer. Only Sanitone drycleaning restores both the original brightness and original feel of the fabric. Sanitone I Or0aiMaslaTJfydemir Pontiac*$ Only Authorized SANITONE Service Center ALL PERMANENTS 3951*595 11 HIGHER Includes All This: 1 — New Lustre Shampoo 2 — Flattering Hair Cut 3— Lanolin Neutralizing 4— Smart Style Setting NO APPOINTMENT HOLLYWOOD BEAUTY Open Mornings at 8 A.M. . 78 N. Saginaw Over Barley Mkt. 338-7660 Grow Indoor Garden This Year Want to grow an outdoor garden this winter? You can by using (me of those electric ’’greenhouses” vdiich lets you start seeds and grow plants in any room. \ Tq really enjoy the pret^ vision of flowers growing in your home, just sponge the transparent walls occasion- ally with warm soap or detergent suds and rinse water to remove dust and splashes. Keep Canvas Dry When doing ne^lepoint, never allow your canvas to become damp, for this will cause poor stitching. The Ron Gamble 'TV SHOW Will Feature An EAS’TER TOUR of our Lake Orion Florist Shop and Greenhouses on EIWI” TUESDAY, MARCH 21 7:00 P.M. on Channel 4 jAem ^ jtoWERS Lake Orion S. Broadway As You Enter Orion MY 2-2681 * SWING INTO SPRING Take the spirited, light-hearted way with fashion’s new dress hits D’iscover all the bright, light, airy«look of Spring at Wards ... in young-look dresses that put you so beautifully in the mood of the season. Fashion newsmakers In Amel® triacetate crepes and crisp acetate- , cotton cords that stay blithely unruffled, need little care. Mines* sizes. ® Two-tone leafy-prints on a brown or green ground; Amel® crinkle crepe; with side-tied collar. 12 to 20. 17.99 (b] Immoculote-lopkofo trimly tailored two-piece ocetote-cot-ton cord. Slue, green or brown and white stripes. 10-18.11.99 0 Sleeveless Arnel® crinkle crepe print in navy, green or taupe; flutter of pleats for o full skirt. 10 to 18 13.99 Pontiac Mall "CHARGE IT" ON WARDS CONVENIENT CHARG-ALL CREDIT PLAN OPEN MONDAY Tlimi FRIDAY 10 A.M. TO 0:00 P.M. SATrmuY 0:;?o a.\i. tm o:(io p.m. V SIMIW 12 NOON TO :> P.M. . 682-1010 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY. MARCH 20, 1967 By Member of Aufbmofive Big 3, HAW Joint Study of Guaranteed Pay Cost Reported DETROIT (AP) -At Iea?t onej of the automotive Big Th*-ee reportedly has begun a joint preliminary study with the United] Auto Workers on the costs of a; guaranteed a n n u a 1 income which the union says must be written into pew contracts this [year.' Neither the union nor the {company would confirm or depy the report, but it came from a usually reliable source in a position to know. The source ask- \ ,r" IMSOMNCE PROTECTION 1 LIFE INSURANCE 1 Mortgage Lifo ... Savings Plan Rotiromont Incomo... Education 1 FIRE INSURANCE 1 1 Businott Owners Packago Homo Owners Package I 1 I AUTO INSURANCE Safe Drivers ... Cancelled I 1 OTHER FORMS Sickness and Accident... Bonds ed that peither it nor tiie company be named for Oie time 3eing. ★ * ★ Union officials, however, confirm preliminary joint studies are under way at General Motors and Ford on demands of UAW skilled tradesmen three months before actual negotiations begin. Douglas Fraser, UAW Chrys- Boatt... Hospitalization IITH ANNUAL In addition, they demanded 10 tamperiog” with a cost-of-living escalator which has ^-ed 16 cents hourly to pay since 1964. While lagging sales and growing inventories of 1967 models have resulted in production worker layoffs, the union says many skilled tradesmen are working six-day weeks on toolsl and dies for 1968 models and on cheered 1 lustily'by the slulldd, among whom the union conceded preconvention unrest. The UAW tried and failed last summer to win year-ahead re-qiening of contracts to gain the skilled at least a 50-cent hourly increase immediately. Some delegates carried placards de- Blaze Kills Boy in Redford Twp. REDFORD (AP)—An 11-year-1 Harry Garke, died when flames old boy died Sunday in a fire burst into his upstairs bedroom, (that heavily damaged his par-1 * ★ ★ lents home in Redford Township.j The boy’s parents and two oth-Police said the youth, Dennis R.1er children, Bcmnie, 13, ami Don- * Clarke, son of Mr. and Mrs. I aid, 6, escaped.______ Choice of Sparkling Finishes! "STARLITE" 4-DRUM SET S«t includes: Ski" x U" snore drum, 14" x 22" _ boss drum, 9" x 13" tom tom, 16" x 16" floor Ol Q95 tom, 1 cymbal holder, tom holder, hi-hot pedal, ^ I X cymbal stand, sticks ond brushes. Sole Speciol! FUN-FILLED BONGO SET Outfit Includes maracas, claves • n d instructions. ^ 18” TUNEABLE BONGOS Superbly-constructed bongo set in pearl finishes. GRINNELL'S, Pontiac Mall, 682-0422 Downtown Pontiac, 27 S. Saginaw St. FE 3-71( Use Your Charge, 4-Pay Plan (90 days same as cash) or Budget Terms ler director and codirector of|maintenance and other chores; the Skilled Trades Department, that do not necessairly decline said he had asked for similar] with production, discussions with Chrysler Corp. ON RECORD UAW President Walter P. Reu-ther is on record as saying he will sign no new contract in 1967 that does not embody a plan under which a workman will know at the beginning of a year what his income will be for that year, any layoffs not withstanding. This has raised the specter of strike, and at least one industry source concluded: “Mr. Reuther appears to be suffering his triennial delusions.” Contract have spanned three years since 1955. j * * * i The union concedes it has no firm, fixed plan as of the moment, but says it is testing several alternatives in computers. It also insists “the gap is small from where we are to where we want *to go.” ★ * ★ Under supplemental unemployment compensation paid by] the companies on top of regular] state unemployment compensation, it is possible for a laid-off workman to draw up to 62 per cent of his normal take-hoqie pay for as much as a full year.i FIGHT OFF DEMANDS | The companies have fought off Reuther’s demands for a “guaranteed annual wage” since 1955, and have given no indication they would not chance a strike to kill off this time what is now termed “a guaranteed annual income.” Early this year Reuther talked of “salaries instead of wa^es,” but switched to “guaranteed annual income,” pointing out salaried workers are subject to layoff without pay. | ★ * * Reuther also has said that! contracts replacing those which run out Sept. 5 at GM, Ford and Chrysler must contain a substantial pay increase and equal pay for Canadian work's. On top of this, delegates re-r^senting some 200,000 UAWj skilled tradesmen set up some costly demands of their own at! an Atlantic City convention last week, and Reuther promised to’ work for their inclusion. LINES OF DEMARCATION The tradesmen want lines of demarcation spelled out for skilled classifications, with no one required to perform any work outside his specialty. They also want compulsory overtime abolished and the right to strike when any company farms to an outside contractor work in the plants which UAW memers feel should be assigned to them. manding either $1 an hour or]confidential. 25 per cent raises in new contracts. Reuther, however, tied himself to no fixed sum. , Ken ' Bannon, Ford I?epar^-' Inent director, and Leonard Woodcock, UA\W vice president and GM bhieftain, confirmed they have sat in on joint committees studying skilled trades problems. A Ford spokesman! said any details discussed were by agreement with the union Joint prenegotiating study committees also were set up in 1964. Their jobs, both the union] and company said, were to sift] out facts. I \ ‘y' A Professional School of Business since 1896 * Associate in Accounting * Associate in Commerce’ * Associate in Secretarial Science Pontiac Business Institute Save on Foshion Coots Repriced in time for Easter! Hurry ond choose your spring coot, repriced for great savings, from our collection of many styles, luxurious fabrics,, fashion colors-sizes for all! IS88 22>s PENNEY^S MIRACLE MILE ^TORE HOURS: 9:30 A M. to 9 P.AA. CHARGE IT! THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, MARCH 20, 1967 B—5 Giving Secret Service Fits 'Master CounfQrfeiter' Is on the Loose WASHINGTON (UPI)-Some-where in America, probably traveling alone, there is a 65-year-old “master counterfeiter” who is giving the Secret Servijc ■ Right now, he is believed to be turning out nearly perfect $10 bills. He never nudces very many of them; he seems more; interested in making a simple | living than in scoring big. Thomas J. Kelley, assistant director of the Secret Serv- ice, told of the case at a closed note," Kelley said, “I think he hearing of a Honse Appropri- is doing this to annoy us more ations subcommittee Feb. 9. than anything else.” His testimony was made pub- special paper .. I He ^esJibed Williams as' a Kelley identified the nmn as “master counterfeiter” who uses Marion Williams, 65, with no a special sensitized paper of his permanent address. “We have own formula, jbeen arresting him since 1924.”j : he said, but Wlhams is pres- probably take the secret of Paiir “with him to his | g te -spots. j grave, or to prison during his I “Regarding this particular | next sentence. ' “This man is apparently not doing it to make money,” Kelley added. “He lives very simply ahd travels alone by bus . . . (and) has never ^roducpd a 'great quantity of notes.” I Thus far, Kelley said, only six iof the bogus $10 bills have! I turned up since Williams was! ! released from prison in 1964 after serving ao 11-year sentence !for mpking fake twenties. Our Sales Department WILL BE OPEN Wed, Evenings for .e I ® J • comply llBf of drafK ini( Slid ontinotrinc tuppliot! Mon., Tuos., Thurs. ond Fri., 8:30-5 BLUE raiNTCO. 1134 W. Huron, 2 IHn. W. of Totagroph CHILDREN OUTGROWN SKIS, SLEDS, TOBOGGANS? SELL THEM WITH A LOW COST PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED AD. TO PLACE YOURS, CALL 332-6181. QUESTION: When and where were the first zoos established? ★ ★ ★ ANSWER: People have always enjoyed collecting animals. Kings and nobles of China and the other Eastern countries, as well as Greece and Rome, housed interesting animals on their estates. But such collections were not open to the public. We show an Egyptian princess admiring her favorite animals. It is said that the zoo of the Jardin des Plantes, set up in Paris in 1804, was the first collection of animals for scientific study, but these animals were not on public view until much later. In England, the Royal Zoological Society acquired a large animal collection hi 1829, and designed the first public zoological gardens for them. This was the famous Hyde Park Zoo in London, which led to the founding of many other public zoos. TTio first large zoo in the U.S. was in Philadelphia. It was established in 1859, but not opened to the public untU 1874. Now, many large U.S. cities have zoos. Among the largest are the Bronx Zoo in New York City, the National Zoological jPark in Washington, D.C. and the zoos in St. Louis, Chicago, Detroit and San Diego. At Least 500 Years Is Needed to Clean Great Lakes Pollution By Science Service | WASHINGTON - The Great: Lakes are now so polluted that! jf all the factories, sewage sys-l terns, ships and whatnot simul-! taneously stopped dumping their | wastes into them, the natural water flow into the lakes would take up to 500 years to cut down the contamination by 90 percent. ★ ★ ★ The cleanest of the Great I.akes are Erie and Ontario, but even they would require two decades to remove nine-tenths of their pollution, reports Robert H. Rainey of Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Tenn. The How rate into the upper lakes, however. Is slower. I.ake Michigan could not be rleaned out in a century, and If no pollution had been added to I.ake Superior since Christopher Columbus sailed for the new world. It would still be contaminated, if it bad been as filthy to start with as ; it is now. The use of mathematical models and other tools may help to save the lower Great Lakes, Rainey said, but the upper lakes are much deeper and have many dead pools and barriers to natural water flow. ★ * * The sorry state of these upper lakes, he said, is “a major disaster for which there is no apparent solution.” The 18 million vacationers who visited New Mexico last year made recreation and tourist travel the state’s second major industry, ranking only slightly behind petroleum-mining in dollar value. RAZLEV L/ CASH MARKE.T K 78 NORTH SAGINAW STREET SPECIAL TUESDAY & WEDNESDAY Downtown Pontiac Store Only! SHANK*^ ^Bun PORTION PORTION _45L 551 Peters BONELESS enneui ALWAYS FIRST QUALITY ^ Crepeset nylon combines pure luxury with easy care in Gaymode® lingerie Softly textured Crepeset® nylon tricot is unlike any other. It's fobulously elegant, with a pebbly crepe surface that's lovely to look at, but most important, a joy to wear.'Pebbling' makes Crepeset light, airy, less clingy next to you. And it's beautifully opaque-needs no shadow panel'mg. When it comes to care ... relax! Handle it like any nylon tricot. It only looks and feels dellcatel Nylon lace trims are perfectly exquisite... colors ore lusciousi Shift gown In lush postels, S,M,l,.... $9 Elastic leg briefs In white, pink, blue, peach, S,M,I,.... $2 Proportioned sHps: white, block, peach, pink pink. Ice blue, lilac, more. Full slips, 95 Half slips,.. $4 Boby dolls In ice blue, pink, sunbeam, S,M,I, ... 99 PENNEY'S MiRACLE MiLE STORE HOURS; 9:30 A.M. to 9 P,M. CHARGE iTi THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, MARCH 20. 1967 Take o LOHG LOOK at your INCNK T0 *5 If taxes ore o pain in the neck to you, let BLOCK do gompt the lob. In no time, your pgryHNs return It prepared, double-checked and guaranteed for oecuracy. Try enjoying toxet for a change. !WB America's Largest Tax Service with Over 1500 Offices 20 E. HURON PONTIAC 2255 ANNEX MIRACLE MILE 4410 DIXIE HWY. DRAYTON PLAINS 429 WALNUT ST. ROCHESTER Humphrey Counters Contention Viet Buildup to Follow Talks—2 Senators WASfflNGTON (AP) top Elemocrats calation of the Vietnam war say tiiey believe increased U.S. military pressure will follow President Johnson’s current strategy meeting on Guam. Senate Democratic leader I Mike Mansfield said Sunday he .w, )>« ■ Twolpartment. He would not elabo-se es-|rate except to say hi^ informa- Aijterfcaa troops in the Mhkcmg Delta area ««-jtrolled by the Vietcong. [cannot foreclose the possibility lof an esealatiffli of the war,” he said. And Sen. J W. Fulbrighfof [Arkansas, chairman 0 fth^ fe in the Johnson afeninistijation.” He said the Rj^blicaai party will have to haV^ cl^lji de-fin^ a^roativd t6 the------------‘ ■ JaV^|s;said he feels “that be-cmse<|he President has person- Kennedy wrote Time toap-zine feat its report of a cussing Asians.” confrontation between Johnson I ahd Kennedy on war policy was “hi^ly innacurate.’■ ■ They ion, result in an acceptable so- concerning the cessation ol bombing in North Vietnam are considered. In a statement Saturday night on the nation’s political outlook, fee private and nonpartisan National Committee for an Effective Congress Safe both parties have “factions moving in many directifflis, wifeout central purpose or evfei party purpose. Unless the Vietnam conflict is well on its way to settlement by the end of this session, the 90th Congress, and the President’s own party, may fragment into a series of warring factions. "This would create bitterness which no appeal to slogans or national unity would cover or diminish. Hovering in the wings are demagogues, such as (former Alabama Gov.) George Wallace, preparing to exploit any such disruption.” TOOTHA^CHE ora-jel^ country. H will not, in my opin-i" al^ife'polltipi strains with Sen. Kennedy, this should not be al- ciety from fee point of view of lowed to cloud the objectivity with which recommendations Look Foreward to Sjpring • • HAIR (lilHTlONlE^mLlNG HAIR PIECES-PERHAIATS ;Sfort now by calling for an oppointmont RAADALl’S SHOPPE Mass., says, he found “some-|clashed in a meeting featHen- HOUfEKEEniK The (iQoil Housekeeping Shop oi Pontiac has acquired the remaining inventory of the Wayne. Gabert Appliance Store. This quality merchandise is now being offered at • • . Delivered, Serviced Warranted EASY TERMS NO MONEY DOWN $7.00MontUy- Hnrty in for onr lowest price ever. Giant 12 cn. ft. 16.7 sq. ft. shelf space—2-door antomade defrost. EASY TERMS-3 YEARS TO PAY Free Service, Warranty, Delivery-Save! Electric Brooi Lightweight $5.00 Monthly 2-stage blower for every cleaning need. Swivel nozzle, adjustable bijush. Does any kind of carpet, even bare floors. Light, weight and easy to use. Weighs 7 pounds. We Sell Onjy the Top Quality Name Brand Appliances THE GOOD HOUSEKEEPING SHOP OF PONTIAC, MCH. 51 WEST HURON STREET-OPEN MON. & FRI. TIL 9 P.M. FE 4-1555 THE POXTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, MARCH 20, 1967 nmrcw ,a -P % !tw '4i *,i I m...: ^ ■/ This perky popcorn rabbit and gaily decorated eggs are deliciously assembled with help of a flavorful com syrup mixture. Easter is the time of two fold joy. First are the religious festivals and secondly, the happy times — of rabbits, chicks, parties, gay hats, and colored eggs. Looking bright and ready to wish everyone a very happy Easter is this ribbon bedecked popcorn rabbit. All pink and white, he is perfect for the centerpiece on an Easter brunch or dinner table and ’ he is eatable, too. As modem and convenient as today’s foods, he can be made in a jifFy. Popcorn that pops in its own foil frypan is combined with a light corn syrup mixture for easy shaping of ' both rabbit and eggs. Sitting gaily on a nest of tinted flaky coconut, he is surrounded with brightly colored eggs lavishly decorated with flavored frosting. The eggs and the rabbit can be sliced and served in place of cake with ice cream for the dinner dessert. Or just enjoyed as a delicious sweet for munching. Of course, it’s quite possible that one of the younger set will want to carry an egg or two around in an Easter basket and enjoy a bite every now and then. EASTER RABBIT AND EGGS I package pops-in-a-pan popcorn 1 tablespoon water 3/4 cup light corn syrup 3 cups sifted confectioners sugar 24 large marshrnallows 1 teaspoon vanilla Pop corn according to package directions. Put popped com jnto large greased kettle. In saucepan, mix together water, corn symp, and 1 1/2 cups confectioners sugar. Cook uncovered, over loW" heat until bubbly, stirring occasionally. Stir in remaining sugar. Remove from heat. Stir in marshmallows and vanilla, continuing to stir until marshmallows are melted. Pour syrup over popped corn and toss quickly until all corn is well coated. With well greased hands, mold into desired shapes. TO MAKE RABBIT; Form rabbit’s body by shaping syrup coated popcorn into a large egg, about 7" x 4". For the head, shape popcorn into a small egg, 3" x 2 1/2". Then, for tail, a 2" popcorn ball and 2,2" long pieces for front feet. Assemble rabbit by gently pressing popcorn together. Allow to cool thoroughly. TO DECORATE RABBIT; Make iq) frosting recipe. Tint one-half of it pink and use for decorating ears, nose, and mouth. A decorating tube is handy for this. Cut a red gumdrop in half i and use for eyes. Cut 3 pipecleaiiers in half and plaa 3 on each side of rabbit’s nose for whiskers. If desir® toothpicks could be «ised instead of pipeclea^ Frost pipecleaners with pink icing. For the Jpal touch, a pink ribbon bow at neck. TO MAKE EASTER EGGS; Make up basic recipe for Easter Rabbit. Divide popcorn into 4 equal parts and set aside. Divide cooked syrup into 4 equal parts. Add a few drops of red food eoloring to one part, a few drops of blue to second part, a few drops of green to third part, and a few drops of yellow to fourth part, Add each colored syrup to one part of popped popcorn and mix until all corn is well coated. Shape each colored batch of popcorn into 4 eggs. Makes 16 Easter Eggs. ^GGS; 'FiBflPfmning frosting to desired con^B^decorate [elted chocolate or candies car^M^e used Mecoratipg. ^Creamy Frosting; 1/4 cup butter or margarine 2 1/2 cups sifted confectioners suga\ 2 tablespoons milk 1 teaspoon vanilla Cream butter until fluffy. Gradually add sugar,! tinning to mix until mixture is smooth and crei Stir in milk and vanilla. Tint as desired. TO MAKE AN EASTER HAT Follow the directions for preparing popcorn and symp mixture for Easter rabbit. When making symp, melt 1 square unsweetened chocolate in cooked symp and add 1/2 teaspoon almond extract. Mix popped com and chocolate symp mixture together. Press enough of syrup coated popcorn into a greased one quart bowl to fill it. Let stand a few minutes. Meanwhile shape rest of popcorn into a 9" X 1 1/2" ring. Unmold popcorn in bowl and place dome side up in center of circle to form crown of hat. To decorate, put a ribbon of frosting or fabric at base of crown and decorate with flowers or a bow. THE BIG EGG IrirO^an popcorn 1 cup fineltf 1 cup sugar Pop corn accol aside. In sauce]^ cook; stirring oc< vanilla. Pour ovei coated with syrup, melon mold. Let stani frosting and melted ch(^ I cup light hoi 1 teaspoon m to package directions. Mix popped peanuts; set lix together sugar and com syrup. Phj^H^r low heat and ally until sugar is dissolved. Ren^^Vmp from heat. Add id corn-peanul^ and mb^^^Hrpopcom kernels are ’ to a large Easte^yj^^^pRs mixture into a greased mmold. Decorate egg with B—« THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, MABC|I 20, 1967 1 Income Tax Evaders a Tiny Minorily By JOHN PIERSON Ididn't bother to file income taxi WASHINGTON (UPD-Let’s I returns? fade it. Americans pay their i^nuSUAl CASES taxK. I ^ i These cases got puWcity pre- That mfiy be a funny way to . g, they are ups- begin a piece on tax evasion. .pj^g^g pj^^gg jj^g^ But it’s true. pgy their taxes. But 80 million / What about George A. Edwards, the Ohio carpenter who filed eight false tax returns for 1963, and collected eight refund checks? Or Lewis Green, the Mem- others Out of 80 million American taxpayers, only 1,324 were convicted of evading federal taxes last year. Another way Is to file a re-irn but not to report all your ^income on it. That’s a felony. Treasury experts estimate that; Some $85 billion in-cditie fails to |iet reporM otf income tax returns and tiiat this costs the government YANKEE vHiKEB meiunic about $4 billion taxes. year in Another popular way of evading taxes is to clafin more exemptions or deductions than ■nm, lai pracUMiers, Tie Internal Rave™, &r»l« you’re enBlIed to. si toTlS Yet totother to eheat 1. Sd\“eS eratL\\“g»er.,-«e. _ _ , ^ to Jt to !<«■ tttor. than un. to- ment out of more'than $100,000? How do dishonest people cheat tuna. Ion their taxes? One way is CAUGHT BY COMPUTER Or NashvUlc rock- and - roll simply to not file a return, singer Gene Allison who justlThat’s a misdemeanor. end and Interest statements, which companies and banks are required to supply to the IRS. One nm filed 98 refund claims in d single year, from different addresses around the country. How are tax evaders caught? In the past few years, computers have taken over a big share of the job, although it still takes men to crack the hard cases. j ★ Now, when you file your tax returns, the information on it Is transferred to magnetic computer taps and then sent to the IRS’' national computer center in Mhrtinsburg, W.Va. RUNNING RECORD There the government maintains a three-year runing recwd of your taxes. Hie munhers from yoar.re-Jjnjro' turn are matched with the numbers from your W2 with- AN ESIABLISHMENT PROVIDING BEDROOMS. BATH. ETC, AND USUALLY mOD. FOR THE'ACCOMMODATION OF TRAVELERS. CUB ETCS. ABE FABULOUS „ ,„eiv. w.g., d«etoi downtown Chicago. Then there are etcs. like our Well-Of-The-Sea, world ; report It, me MardnsDurg renowned ion’food restaurant. „. College Inn, America's first supper monster is going to get you. ckib...CeWc Room, meeting place of politicians and celebrities... 15001 * * * rooms and suites from $9.00, etc. But so much more than just a ho-tol.' jf fjjgjj g return last year HOXJSBi but don’t file this year, the •.oniyi)ff».-/itHo».i-a.mioiiiii.cii*,ii«wto j’ monster” is going to know it. . ISSntSl’TS'x'JSSto «*“ msDUcnoN _________■ _____________________________ If you owe back taxes from ■■■■^HHBlli^HHMaa^HaHHill^llast year and claim a refund fw this year, the computer is g»-ing to deduct your unpaid before it gives you your refund. . If you claim more than one refund, it will find that out, too. The computers al^o help select returns to be audited. IRS agents audit 3.5 million out I of more than 100 milion returns each year. Audits turn up additional tax cheats. In addition, IRS agents through the country keep their eyes and ears open and reap the paper to see who seems to be living higher than his reported income would allow. Every year, IRS gets some 20,000 tips about tax cheating Ifrom jealous neighbors, dls-Igruntled employes, spurned girlfriends, and the like. IRS ■doesn’t encourage spying and give rewards only when claimed. In 1965, rewards totaling >97,731 went to 792 informants. OUT ON ALIAAB? REDUCTION IN INCOME? 60 OVERBOARD AT CHRISTMAS? IN FINANCIAL DIFFICULTY? AAayb* now ii tho fimo for you to too M.C.C. ond got out of that will fit • NOT A LOAN' • ONE PLACE TO PAYl Michigan Credit Counsellors 102 PONTIAC STATE BANK BLDG. FE 8-0456 OUR 13th YEAR Mambar oHwth Iho Ameriean and Michiian Atioeialion of Credit John M. Hanson, Direetor... Locally Owned and Oporatod! FRIGlDAlREitl 1967 Jet Adioii Washer spins clothes faster, drier than am other brand! Jewelry Stolen DETROIT (AP)-^am Gruber, owner of the London Chop HouS^e, told police Sunday thieves took $10,650 worth of jqwefry fittm his Detroit home. E I «CDA1l,lMltnMidnMli How there's even more action in Jet Action! • "Rapidry-lOOO" spin whirls out • Jet-Away Rinse “jets*' away Hn^ scum—no lint trap! a Jet-simple mechanism—no belts, pulleys, goarsi *219®* CIMP ELECRIC, Ik. 3465 Auburn Rd. UL 2-3000 FE 4-3573 J Itylat I* n»r«l pri"** jaeket *110 tklrt. I daukU braastad atyla and 1 aingla braa.tad narfalk madal. PERRY AT MORTCALM - OPER RIGHTS TIL 9... SURDAVS TIL I GIGANTIC OPEN STOCK MAPLE BEDROOM SALE ..................— ... . . . . . . .. \\1J^ 1H*.$A8WAW-Fe a Easy 1|mily-&udget Payments. OPEN STOCK SOLID MAPLE And Select Hardwood Colonial Furrfiture With Genuine Micarta Tops Eorly American at Hs warm and friendly besti Sturdily built of solid maple and select hardwMds for years of service. Finished In mellow spicetone to bring out the old time warmth . . . Antiqued brass hardware. Dustproof construction. Genfer-gulded, dovetailed drawers glide open easily. Buy a lUife or just the pieces you need. RED. NOW H. 59.95 Drotser & Mirror 49.88 J. 44.95 4>Drower Chost 34.88 L 22.95 Panel Bod....... 16.88 M. 44.95 Ranch Desk-Chest 29.88 SEE OUR FINE ASSORTMENT OF COLONIAL FURNITURE ON SALE B. 69.95 Double Dresser & Mirror 59.95 C. 54.95 5-prawer Chest....... 44,88 PARK FREE IN WKC’S LOT AT ^ OF STORE -OPEN MONDAY & FRIDAY NIGHTS ’TIL 9 THE PONTIAC PRESS. MOXDAY, MARCH i Gifts and Visitors Surround Girl, 2, Rescued From Well K the bottom of the old well besidei300 in the Big Thicket country of I dug has been fUled andlchild, she didn’t realize what itjthe big brown eyes - apples,|Jr. of Houston, the founder of a her grandmother’s back porch, southeast Texas. They sought smoothed over. was all about. She just thinks oranges, cpdy, cookies, a|the Mercy Corps. f All day Sunday, strangers out Theresa atxl photographed “Oh, she’s so. excited,” said she’s having a good time.” |stuffed rabbit. | a ptdjjed up- at the weatherbeaten, her where the well used to be. I her grandmother. Opal Allem- Many of the visitors brou^t i The gift she liked best was the [ BUY, SELL, TRADE — USE - . -1—i . . .1 I \. . » / i.i- At Li * *U« £ ^ nr OJII IDAV'TTAP DDITGC WAKPr. AnCi VOTAW, Tex. (AP) - Two- tl year-old Theresa Fregia had a doll bigger than herself to play with today, a gift from the man punw uimv ms. TTvcmniiifvtiM.il,i..s. h..wv m.v ~ —,..w -i— ----------- -------.. — --- -- « . - - who plucked her from death at tin-roofed house in this town ofllTie giant crater the rescuers I ang. “But ju^t like any other [presents for the little girl with ! big doll from Ransom W. Bill' PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS} AP Wlrtphotoi AMBASSADOR DIES - Wil-Uam R. Rivkln, 47, U.S. ambassador to Senegal and Gambia, died Saturday of a heart attack in Senegal, the State Departriient said. Rivkin, from Muscatine, Iowa, had served previously as ambassador to Luxembourg. nX\l i COLOR TV SPECIALS I HONE SOLO BEFORE I P.M TOOM-MOM. I $449.95 BE cor' * r ^ - * . LIMITED QUAMTITY BARGAIR SPECIALS 1“ BEFORE 7 “"*257 ;»281 Jackie Not Set for Book Furor Thought It Would Be Disregarded—Author W-STEIIEOAFFUANGES SUNBEAM ALARM CLOCK Attractivo cose. Ae» NEW YORK (UPI) - Mrs. John F. Kennedy at first believed the book, “The Death of a President,” would be disre-, garded by the American i>ublic, bound in black and set aside toj collect dust on dark library I shelves. { ★ ★ * ! She had little inkling the book I she commissioned to tell the story of her husband’s assassi-i nation and the turmoil of gov-1 emmental change would create | an IntematiOTial furor. When the tumult erupted, author William Manchester said yesterday, “Unbelievable charges were made, un-forgiveable words spoken and treasured friendships r u p-I tured.” Manchester said Mrs. Kennedy and others attempted “to surpress vital facts” contained in the controversial book. His accusations appear in an article in the current issue of Look magazine entitled “William Manchester's Own Story.” It will appear on newsstands tomorrow. The book was serialized In Look. * ★ ★ He also accused the former i first lady of inciting Sen. Rob-j ert F. Kennedy into a “tigerlike” rage to a point where he demanded the project be abandoned. WRITTEN ASSURANCES This in spite of the fact, Man-diester said, that both Mrs. Kennedy and the senator had given him written assurances they would not try to censor the manuscript. Manchester said Mrs. Kennedy “blazed high as a bon-Tire” before the recent court battle over deletions she demanded from the text. And the author said that as early as mid-1964, he found “almost impossible to establish any satisfactory professional contact” with either the widow or the senator. * -k * But Manchester retained his admiration and praise of Mrs. Kennedy. ‘REMAINED TRUE’ Long after the controversy •urrounding the book is forgotten, Manchester said, history would recall that “In our hour of disgrace and confusion, Jacqueline Bouvier Kennedy^ who had lost more than any of lis, held us all together, remained true to the leader we had lost, and, in kindling that Arlington flame, rekindled our national pride.” But, he said, Mrs. Kennedy did little to help him research the book. “Although Mrs. Kennedy had asked me to do it,” Manchester wrote, “I can think of only three doors she actually opened for me, none of them vital.” ★ Mrs. Kennedy originally asked Manchester to delete some 6,472 words, the author said, but settled for I,60( “In sum,” he wrote, ‘ per cent of the deletions proposed in her behalf did not volve her. They were an extension of the attempt to surpress vital facts.” * * * Manchester charged that Mrs. Kennedy’s private secretary, Pamela Turnure, was permitted to read the manuscript ; “hacked out 77 passages m^9T SMI?"" *277■ " *52 $80 $439PACKARD-BELU8” - COLOR. ^ *139 GE 9“ *5231 I $199.95 Philco Con- |||| I .01. .TV. 2*2 ‘I- * lUII PORTABLE COLOR TV) T- _ ...$2591 all include free 90-day service I $114.95 RCA Vl^r 12** portobi* , UHF. 4 only. ■ $149.95 [ St«r*o comb, with Al^ . $199 $10*’ ^4” $21 DORMEYER FOOD MIXER 10 powwful >pMdf. 7 bowU. D.f.chpbU "$2988“ $119.95 Sunday on $69 fiS’-irA' $122 $951 $551 »7D *i 14.95 GE 12" port- SOO 1 able. Battery or plug- | il 19.95 SQQ portabla TV lele. UHF. WllW n MAM. vre. modolSe •. • *149.95 SOI 1 portable TV. UHF/VHF. 91|| 1 *169.95 Hatpoint SOD automatic woiher. 1 ^|||| only *199.88 Zenith Cen- et| ,olefteTV.282et,.ltt. 01 XI UHF/VHF. Juehl... . iWM | rrmarwatu^-- $100 eol.. lonly *139.95 Admiral 18" SO A ^ble TV. 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FREE DELIVERY AND FREE 90-DAY SERVICE CONTRACT TOP BRANd COLOR COMBINATION AN?TMTodio'°SoHd^«U^^^^ FREE DELIVERY ■v W m and service FREE DELIVERY WHIRLPOOL AUTOMATIC DRYER L ui.kland'. Ipw fack-bottem prict Whiripmll 2 cyd. .laclric, l.mp.nihir. ml«Mon, llm I tmoolh drum. Sal* fw all 1! SPECIAL HOOVER UPRIGHT VACUUM CLEANER Automatically odjuBtB for rug $495 BIG BARGAIN! HOOVER POWERFUL VACUUM CLEANER • Walks an blr • King •!» bag Watt'modi Jvar TElp"*”* OUR NEW LOW PRICE! $24’’ WITH COMPLETE SH CLEANING ATTACHMENTS GENERAL ELECTRIC Stereo COMBINATION Combin.t >t*l*a Hi-Fi with AM-FM *138“ ADMIRAL 14-INCH UHF/VHF PORTABLE $g988 GENERAL ELECTRIC COLOR TV r.lgh. |ud 24 Ibi. UHF/VHF. * $19988 RCA VICTOR Stereo COMBINATION ^68 SPECIAL SAVINGS ON THESE BIG FAMILY SIZE PHILCOS FROM HIGHLAND! PHILCO 4Q CU.FT. I Q DELUXE FREEZER «4S2 Ibt. tupplyolfr Ihdh' AdKi *to*wJ* t.W contm* *Book-Bhalf" storage do©r hat axtws daep shalv8B. Specially low Hi0h* *158 INCLUOn FREE DELIVERY, SERVICE AND INSTALLATION INCLUDE FREE DELIVERY and SERVICE' PHILCD 12 cu.fT. i 2-DOOR i REFRIGERATOR | The big refrtgerater eectlen never needs defrestingl True lera degree top freeaer holds 90 Ibi. freien | food supply. Full width porcelain *179 WHIRLPOOL 14 CU. FT. 2-DOOR REFRIGERATOR ^■ers. SepaVatelrevEer holds 109 lbs. Do^ry ba Uorog. dX S* $198 / NO MONEY DOWN • 3 YEARS TO PAY PONTIAC MALL SHOPPING CENTER TELEGnAPH ROAO, Comer Elizabeth Lake Read OPEN PAILY 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. • PHmiie83-2330j B—10 THE PONTIAjg^ PRESS. MONDAY, MARCH 20, 1967 Mission to Aden May Trigger Strife UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP) -i A U.N. special mission «ets out for the British territory of ^en today in t^ face of threats from anti-British politicians that its arrival will set off widespread terrorist violence. The missimi is to recommend ways for the United Nations to help fH^pare and supervise an election before Uie British pull out la Uieir foothold on the Arabian Peninsula next year. It might help prevent a war over Aden between Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Republic. nie chairman of the missiwi i Is Ambassador Manuei 'Perez Gueirero of Venezuela. The other tWo, members are Apibassa-dors AMussattar Shalizi of Afghanistan and l^ssa Leo Kei-ta of Mali. * * ★ They are to confer with British officials in London this week, interview Adenis living in Cairo and Jiddah next week and reach Aden April 1 for an indefinite stay. LOCAL SHEIKHDOMS Aden is now part of the Fed-eratiiHi of Sduth Arabia, made up of local sheikhdoms and developed sW 1958 under British tutelage. Its minister of civil aviation, Hussain All Bayoomi, is secretary general at the Unit- ed Nati(»al party, whijch has Saudi Arabian ba^i^: \ Afghanistan, an^ V ezuela, the mepbers of tnh n sion, all vofed last June 15 for a committee resolution terming the federation “an unrepresentative regime.” But in a weekend declaration they said they are prepared to visit any place and “meet with any rejwesenta-tives of the people who might wish to address it.” ★ ★ ★ The most vociferous OMwsi-tion to the federation, the Frcnt for the Liberation of Occupied South Yemen, has announc^ it will boycott the mission and that a wave of terrorism timed for the mission’s visit will bring tte federation to its knees, w' iW\ \ ^ A FTJiSY spokesnian promised that the mis^on itself would not be attacked. But messages have come to the United NatiMis stating ttiat it is unwelcome in Aden and that its security cannot be guaranteed. SUPPORTliro BY U.A.R. FLOSY is supported by the United Arab Republic and some other Arab countries. Its aim is absorption of Aden by neighboring Yemen, where the U.A.R. has aVesttmated 50,000 troops backing the Yemeni repubtic against Saudi-supported royalist counterrevolution^es. Britain is pledged to withdraw lier troops from Aden and make no defense treaty with the fed-eratipn when shelves the terr^ tory ihdependWe some t^me in 1968. She has suggested that a' U.N. presence should be there after that. WWW Some diplomats at the U-N. doubt that the organization could take on another such peace-keeping operation since iti already is heavily in debt for the ones it has h»l. A four-mile walk daily has been j^escribed as a minimum i health by Dr. Paul Dudley White, noted heart specialist. AT FRETTER'S, SMART SHOPPERS GET CONSISTENTLY LOWER PRICES 1 23” beauliful Zenith Walnut JUA Console TV. 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MARCH 20, 1967 B—11 FINE ART OF SURVIVAL - A student at the Fairchild Air Force Base near Spokane, Wash., practices the art of survival in watery surroundings at the school located on the base. During the 18-day survival AP Wlrtphtls course, students learn how to evade the enemy, resist brainwashing and interrogation, •and how to escape. A large part of the training is classified. Final Exam Is SVz Days Long Survival School Tests Airmen By BURL OSBORNE . SPOKANE, Wash., (AP) -There’s a school near here where the final exam is 5% days long, and a passing grade could mean the difference between life and death. The course: Survival. It’s tough. But so are the problems faced by any airman coming down in a mountain wilderness, desert, or enemy-held Jungles of Vietnam. More than 5,000 airmen, most of them combat crewmen, have gone through the Air Force Survival School since it moved to Fairchild Air Force Base from Stead AFB, Nevada, a year ago. NO PRIVILEGE from 22 to 54. Rank has no privilege. Airman or colonel, each Ihe students range in age must spoid U^li^s in classroom lectures and practical survival training before the 5^ay trek in the northeastern Washington wilderness to put to the test what they have been taught. Since getting out a damaged plane often is the first problem, airmen are taught how to make a parachute landing on land or water. Then they learn to live off the land, and get practical Irstruction in the military “code of conduct.’’ During the 18-day course, they learn how to evade the enemy, resist brainwashing and interrogation, and how to escape. A large part of the training is classified. The key to survival is improvisation. ANY ENVIRONMENT Airman-students learn to find and recognize food, plant or animal, in almost any environment. They learn to find water in the desert, and how to keep warm in the arctic. They learn to improvise a tepee in the wilderness, an igloo in the arctic, a hammock in the jungle, a hole in the sand in the desert. If they need a tool, they make it. ’The tools are the para- chute, the survival kit and what the environment provides. Students learn first aid and how to recognize herbs and other material with medicinal value. For exatiiple, eating a piece of charcoal can relieve diarrhea. Each airman gets 12 hours instiuction in unarmed hand-to-hand combat before he undertakes the cross-country trek through the mountain training area north of here. * ★ ★ ’The school’s conunander. Col. Chester H. Bohard, says its purpose is to teach airmen “to survive and return to his organization under any climatic condi-■■ ’The Air Force calls this ihe “global survival concept.’’ There are other schools for specialized training. $10001 Beneficial Add a little green to the holiday scene! Call Beneficial for holiday cash—to do your shopping, to pay your bills, to enjoy the holidays! You. pick the terms ... you pick the payments ... at Beneficial, where you get that BIG O.K. for cash fast! Call up and see! BENEFICIAL FINANCE SYSTEM • 1700 OFFICES COAST-TO-COAST Loans up to $1000 on your signature, furniture or auto PONTIAC —(2 Offices) Beneficial Finance Co. of Detroit • 10 N. Saginaw...............................334-9595 Beneficial Finance Co. of Waterford • 477 Elizabeth Lake Rd.......................334-4513 OPEN EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT —PHONE FOR HOURS Births ’The following is a list of recent Pontiac area births as recorded at the Oakland County Clerk’s Office (by name of father): Herbert J. Edgar, 20 West Chicago William 0. Johnson, 12 Murphy William M. Remley, 172 Hickory La Kenneth L. Shore, 340 4th Miles J. Wallace Jr., 1416 Avondale Buddy L. White, 57 West Beverly Bobble G. White, 30 Myra John W. Woodman, 23t Draper Michael C. Boerner, Union LeKe Willie L. Duncan, 58 Wall Cisero Northern, 281 West Wilson Cisero Northern, 201 West Wilson Woods Proctor, Birmingham Lloyd J. Dally, Birmingham James M. Justen, Birmingham Paul H. Trevarrow, Rochester Richard C. Tuck, Troy Richard L. O'Connor, Birmingham Edward A. BylskI, Farmington Ronald R. G^eon, Birmingham Robert L. Lewis, Auburn Heights Steyenson V. Balebon Jr., 412 South Arnold Shields, Union Lake James 0. Little, 43 Roselown Albert L. Ballard, Ortonville Gerald D. Clark,.,Rochester Gordon V. Glynn, Orchard Lake Keith 0. Roettger, 1166 Cherrylawn Arthur J. Baldwin, Union Lake Allen R. Devidson, 125 Hickory Lane Jimmy Gardner, 430 Harvey Wendell L. Parton, Utica Bernard S. Soltis, Union Lake Rex R. Forton, 245 Preston Douglas F. Hainemann, Union Lake Semmy R. Sheehy, Auburn Heights David J. Torok, iil South Edith Donald M. Burnia, 050 Elira Richard J. Ouerden, Lake Orion Arnold D. Farenick, Drayton Plains . Stephen J. GabrieL Rochester Robert C. Hodges, Utica Thomas F. Johnson, 110 Rea Michael 0. Mennc, Goodrich Robert P. Rebhan, 5328 MIkewood William A. Whitmore, Lake Or' -Ro" - ■ '----- Rodger L. Franz, Jr., 116 Wasf A it Gomaz, 221 South Ai 1, Drayton Plains Karmit A. Patton, 223 West Fairmount Barry J. Peel, Birmingham Jamas E. Teats, 741 Kenilworth Eddie J. Bonds, 470 Colorado RonaldlN. Bourdon Sr., 3983 Baldwin Harold U. Carman, 262 Osmun Frank f. Carper, Lake Orion Barry B. Church, 755 Irwindale J George E. Coulter $7>, Auburn Heights Frtndt D. Ortvyeln, 620 Beiboe , Hurbert Sizemore, 2025 Windy Hill Columbus Amerson Jr., 205 Proipai Thomas L. 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Not Just Smoked 69 lb "SUPIR-RlftHT” BOSTON STYLE BUTT « ^ Pork Roast...................49‘ -SUPER-RI6HT”—Cut from etiten Style euttt _ ^ Pork Steaks..................59* TOP eUALITY, eOVERNMENT INSPECTED ^ _ Fresh Fryers LB^S9c FRYERS 35 “SUPER-RISHr’ eUALITY _ _ Smoked Picnics_____________45* -SUPER-RICHT'' COUNTRY-STYLI m 1 ai Thick-Sliced Bacon V* CAP'N JOHN'S . A Fish Sticks...............™ 49* FINE FOR BAKING Idaho POTATOES 10“79 FEATURE VALUE—AAP BRAND f A&P GRADE "A" CRUSHED ^ Half & Half 39* QT. CTN. Pineapple 3‘Sf 79* JANE PARKER—5 VARIETIES A&P BRAND—5 FLAVORS—6 CT. Instant Breakfast ANN PAGE SPAGHETTI OR Elbow Macaroni NET WT. 8-OZ. CTN. 1-LB. PKG. 55' 21' Heorth Rye Brend IVi-LB. LOAF 29’ JANE PARKER Hot Cross Buns.... »*• 39* SAVE 16c—JANE PARKER APPLE PIE l-LB. 8-OZ. SIZE 39* Marvel Ice Cream CHOICE OF 5 FLAVORS 59 Save 30o—Mellowmood MICRO MESH, SHEERS OR STRETCH NYLONS 2 PAIRS 39 IN BOX ■ A&P BRAND, FRUIT SALE FRUIT COCKTAIL APRICOT HALVES BARTLEn PEARS CLING PEACHES 5 99* AliP LieHT, CHUNK STYLE Tuna Fish.... SULTANA RRAND Salad Dressing... 25* 39* OURKEE’S CHEESE CAKE OR mET WT wvoz.' 2Q< Pie Mixes flavors VkS- WHITE lEAUTY . _ _ Shortening....3 59* AAP 6RA0E -A” ALL 6REEN, CUT NET WT A A Asoaragus......29* NUTLET IRANO—eUARTERS _ Margarine....5 89* AliP BRAND, FROZEN SLICED STRAWBERMES 4'^99* AAP BRAND _ Whipping Cream., erw! 29* Win up to *1,000'p-A&P'Awards & Surprize Party SOME OF LAST WEEK'S WINNERS Mrs. David Bing, St. Joseph. Toni Sanglier, Flint...... G. Hpler, Warren.......... Mrs. Anna Sabel, Detroit. Thomas Partoin, Flint...... , Diana Stratton, Plymouth.. John Lingo, Pontiac...... Lecora Ryder, Detroit'..... Lee Scott, Detroit...,............ Dorothy VonMinden, Inkster........ 50 HO PURCHASB NICSSSARV-Adulli Only-SImply pick u •• ypur local AAP Paad Start ar r.quail .ama by .and Miepa to P.Q. BeK 3SI, Oatroit, Michi,an 48232. Rita C. Hailar, Gaylard $500 WINNER $50 WINNER B—12 tHE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, MARCH 20, 1967 OtE COLOR Tailor Ecstatic Over finest Wool Suit in the World RACKACHE& nyctfiM secohdaiyto TENllilil kidney imiyayion rmmwMi KiAacy or Bladder Irrlta. By EDDIE GILMORE Iwwld,'' said Mor Michael L. LONDON (AP) — ’‘This is the Hall “and it wasn’t made fw a most expensive suit' fa ^elTaiay. _________________, Racism/Poverty Issues Are Forgotten by Liberals By WHITNEY M. YOUNG, Jr. 1 port to domstic programs Never has this country had so ^ liberals, many liberals. All around me, Despite foreign policy differ as I travel or at meetings, ev- ences with President Johnson, “It cost 405 pounds, What’s it made of, gold? v, . “No, Wt it’s m^ of thd let finest wool obtaihabto. At that; wai it contains cashmere. About 20 per cent of the admixture is cashmere.” You mean tiie cashmere ran up the price? “Oh, IK). Ihe cashmere was added to r^uce the price. ★ ★ ★ Tf this suit were made entirely of this extraordinary wool, it would have cost 500 pounds or $1,400.” Who bou^t it? 'An Indian gentleman wfaoireacb this degree of perfection lives in Lmidoi. I’m not at Jber- jg found in such small quantities ty to reveal to tame but he is, ^ letus8«r,,substantialtobuilt,he ^ wanted a light, easy-fitting, ex- erywhere I go,jno one can conre away from a I meet people who loudly de-I Clare, “I’m a I liberal, but.. But what? I Surely with so liberals I around, there I should be ■ question of get-YOUNG ting more and better antipoverty programs, ban on housing discrintoation, and other programs. But it seems that what some of these people are liberal about is Vietnam. Start talking to about the role of housing discrimination In the creation of ghettos, and yon wind up getting a lecture on how we should get out of Vietnam. ’There is definitely room for differing opiidons about the war in Vietnam, but that is no excuse for the way some liberals seem to be abandoning their pr& vious concern for the very serious problems of racism and poverty right here at home. ★ ★ ★ Many “conservatives” also have strong feelings about Vietnam. Some of them want an even more “hawkish” approach, with more bombing and stepped-up offensive, but s t i 11 find time to call for cutbacks in domestic programs and for a slowdown in the war on poverty. CRUCIAL POINT Why can’t liberals also keep up the fight for their traditional beliefs as well as saying what they think about Vietnam? This point is very crucial at this moment because unless they help to deal with the hard problems now facing us, the momentum may go out of the drive for equal rights. It is ironic that many individuals who are ‘ of as being quite conservative actually give more sup- reading of his civil rights message to Congress without being moved. It is an eloquent document, showing the desperate needs of Negro citizens, and the crying need for ending discrimination in housing. He pointed to the veil of myths which mislead many people info thinking that open housing sbmehow threatens them, and rightly said that these myths must be dispelled by churches, civic organizations, {Hiblic officials, human relations groups, labor unions, and private industry actively working to support open housing. CALL TO ACTION And some of tiiese are t h e same groups now bursting with liberals arguing the merits or the demerits of the Vietnam conflict. The President’s message Is a call to action to these peo-pie. Liberals are going to have to roll up their sleeves and do the hard work needed to make the American people aware of the crisis our nation is in. Complaining is a favorite time of all of us, but it doesn’t get people the apartments, homes, jobs, and education they need and are currently denied because of their color. Progress only comes from the determined effort of people working for it. And the need was never greater than it is now. ■k lot of people who were once active in tiie civil rights movement will have to reaffirm their beliefs by becoming involved again. They were distracted by Vietnam, by the lack of excitement without the marches and demonstrations, and by the fear of the hard work tiiat is now needed,— the slow, time consuming job of tutoring ghetto pupils or training people for jobs. Vief Fighting Takes Lives of 19 Americans WASHINGTON (AP) - The Pentagon has identified 16 Army men and three Marines killed in Vietnam. An Air Force man was listed as missing in action. Killed in action; ARMY ARKANSAS — Spec. 4 Lonnii E. Pirk- suit.’ Hall, who cut the suit himself, is a director of «»e of Lmidon’s most exclusive tailortog establishments, Donaldson, WilUains and G. Ward. ‘Let me tell you about this glfflious cloth,” he said. “Feel it. It’s so fine, so very light, like a gentle breeze in hi^ summer. Of the world’s entire wool crop of last year, this suit represents the finest selection.” How much did the cloth cost a yard? “It cost 100 pounds — $280 — a yard,” he explained, “and we charged the customer another 100 pounds to m^e it up. It took a long time to collect this wool, a tong time to spin it into yam, a long time to weave it into cloth, and a long time to it into a suit." yards a year cab be made,’ Hall added. COLORADO — Pfe. Jirry L. Ba - Pfe. ......... B..., en CUV. . 4AAINE — Spec. 4 Edwprd S. ** Pfe. Franclt B. Con- Biy City) Pfe- UMimA.Ma|or, MINNESOTA — Pfc. Boyd O. OariMr# •t Paul. MISSOURI — Pfc. Silvan R. Wlfhart, Kaniai City. — W YORK - ind Lf. , The cloth — exclusive to Belgian wool merchant — was made in England from yam spun by another British firm. Because of its softness great care had to be taken in cutting it and stitching it. INSURANCE TAKEN OUT "Ibis is the first time that insurance was taken out on single suit in the making,” said the tailor. “We insured it against fire, theft and damage.” It isn’t even a three-piece suit •k ★ ★ “The customer only wanted a jacket and trousers,” said Hall. “You know, I can’t stop talking about this wool. Wool of the extreme fineness necessary to ‘From last year’s entire Australian wool cn^ oidy one bale of this stuff was ix^iKed-England It fetdied three tinus the world record price,” Almost lovingly the tailor strok^ the cloth and said: “You know. It’s so soft he may have a hbll of a time keeping tiiose trousers i»essed.” reldxtliE comfort bjr eurblnc Irritat- MARCH-OF-PROGRESS SPECIAL! New HAMMOND Spinet Organ with 4-Semester Course! New idea from Hammond . . . J-100 Spinet Organ PLUS a complete music course that includes everything you and your teacher need! Put them together and you'll discover that playing the organ is easier than you'd ever dreamed! The J-100 has incredible variety: rich organ tones, orchestral voices . and.lively sounds such as banjo and guitar! Lowest Price €ver for a Full- _ Size Hammond Spinet. And the A K Complete Course Is Included! f Saubli, York. UTAH — Pfc. Randolph B. Ward, Ogden. VIRGINIA — Spec. 4 Andrew T. INDIANA - Lance CpI. Sfeve lloom, Elkhart. OREGON — Lance CpI, William H. foho. Bend. Changed from missing to lead, hostile: ARKANSAS - Pfe. Freddie L. Friar, OFFER ENDS MARCH 31! You receive Hammond’s 4-$eme$ter N Course Including 100 sheets of favorite music, guidebooks, keyboard guides and memory aids with your Hammond Organ purchase I GRINNELL'S, Pontiac Moll, 682-0422 Downtown Pontiac, 27 S. Saginaw St., FE 3-7168 Use Your Charge, 4-Pay Plan (90days same as cash) or Budget Terms Dira, noitoostile; GEORGIA — Gunners Mate 3.C. Waller Missing, nonhostile: ARMY 1st Lt. Ronald L. Johnston Sgt. I.C. James F. Lytal Pfc. Russel L. Brown Pfc. Bruce A. Graining Ceramic Tile Bargains For floor, wall, crystaline, Wat 69c Now Ceramic Wall Tile 4Vax4y4 39' VINYL ASBESTOS TILE 9x91/16 Am First U Quality ■■Each and Up SPECIAL SALE ON ARMSTRONG TESSERA VINYL CORLON dory 095 . 3 Patterns Only Pre-Finished 4x8x MOXbAY, MARCH 20, 1967 It’s a Pleasure to Shop and Save at FOOD TOWN f PEOPLE'S SUPER MARKETS V FOOD MARKETS ^land Road 11208 Baldwin^Ave., | 8215 Cooley Lake Rd. | sm ^ ^ ^ | «5 L | AUUM ST. | m ORCHARD UUAVL ^ FRIENDLY SERVICE • LOW PRICES EVERYDAY • PUIS GOLD DEU STAM EASnR SHOPPING FOOD TOWN f PEOPLE'S SUPER MARKETS V FOOD MARKETS JISDOHichland Road 1 1280 Baldwin Ave. I 8215 Cooley Lake Rd. I sh. «.,< I 1 2M AUBURM I 45$ E. PIKE SI. I 700AUIURHST. I Ut ORCHARD LAKE AVL 1 I -- I — -= I l| WE WILL CLOSE 12-3 GOOD FRIDAY AND ALL DAY EASTER SUNDAY A TradiHoml HYGRADE WEST VIRGINIA RAMS 79i We Always Reserve the Right to Limit Quantities of Merchandise PES8HKE SLICED ARMOUR STAR CANNED HAMPS %Gidloii U(0N MSML „{ M '^sr KIEIY 19* M W IIHA18ESW BEEF LIVER LB^V Popps or Peters ^ SLICED AQC BCLCGNA ..19 T^ljceri / Pineapple SAIIiORN % FAVORITE PEAS MEL-O-CRUST |||fH|f[ BREAD IP m mu. Loaf MATCHES I0« NAPKINS 1 10^/ HEINZ TOMATO SOUP P lO'/e-Oz. Can Yvo»iij» L. from Robort e. MeCbiro BovtrW A. from Edword 0. Saw CarttjL fim Ronald R. ailST^ Oaraldlna E. from John E. Rarkar Emma Tho Kregor Co. e—8 THE PONTIAC PRESS*. MONDAY, MARCH 20, 1967 'Retired' March Back on Set ByBOBmOMAS AP Movie>Televisioa Writer HOLLYWOOD - It is a pleasure to report that retirement rumors about Fredric March have been exag-w-gerated. By whom? Fredric March. Last June, the two-time Oscar-winner “Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde,’-1 9 3 1, “B e s t| Years of Our Lives,’’ 1946 — declared in this space that he’d had it with the acting business. He had just endured a harrowing location for “Hombre,” and he opined that he was ready to “hang up my hat. Now the 69-year-old March and his wife, Florence Eldridge, are back in Hollywood to star in a CBS Playhouse drama for fall release, “Do Not Go Gentle Into the Good Ni^t. “The title comes from Dylan ■raOMAS Thomas’ poem about the approaching death of his fate,” March explained. “George Schaefer (the TV, pi-pducer-di-rector) sent us the i^ript, anil Flwence was enthused about it. had to accept her judgment, because she also, read and OJ-diused over ‘Skin of Our Teeth’ and ‘L«Jg Day’s Journey Into Night,’ which we did on the stage.” “The subject o fthe play (an original by Loring M^el) is concerns all of us; geriatrics,” added Miss Eldridge. “Everyone has older relatives about whom it must be whether to place them in a home or institution.” March indicated he haai’t (piite gotten the h^ of it. “I’m still trying to leai^ hoW to live,” he admite. Wlut he enjoys most is rt^cating ht hi? Milford, Conn., dcres aiu traveling, es-peciaUy, to Greece, pf whidi h and his wife are inordhiatel fond. As of now, a return to a movie or a play seems to hold no charm for him. ★ ★ ★ Although they will finish the CBS drama a few days before the April 10 Oscarcast, Marchs do not plan to stay over to attend the awards. Tlie actw In the play, March enacts a retired carpenter who is sent by his children to live in an institution for the elderly. He is a cantankerous soul who is soothed by another resident, played by Miss Eldridge. In the end he decides to go back to his own house to finish out his days. As for his own retirement. has allowed his Academjr membership to lapse. “I wasn’t' seeing dhough of he pictures,” he explained, 'pnd, I didn’t feel it was ri^ for ihe to vote 'if I hadn’t seen them all.” March bears the distincHim of being the only two-time winner to score’ his-fictees ovw a long period of time — 15 years apart. His first Oscar was also the occasion of the only tie in Academy history; that dei strated how the academy could be manipulated in those early Dem Pushing for Band to Toot Congress' Horn Mfertfiillieltt — _ SarvMI Short stock, On* PoHio of liOOA.M. SouioB* and Coffoo. Vlf;;;* to 11:30 COME IM AND TRY OUR STEAK SPECIAL, Strvtd Daily EllmowRESTAURMT 929 W. HURON ST., PONTIAC OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK Including Sunday 5 A.M. to 8 P.M., Fridays 5 A.M. to 9 P.M. By DICK WEST United Press International WASHINGTON - Rep. 'VWl-liam Jennings Bryan Dorn, D-was quoted recently as saying thatCon-^ „ should ^ have its own marching band. He told Roll] Call, a Capitol Hill weekly, that the organization of a band, and drill unit] within the Capi-|tol police fwce I might help im-I prove the cong age.” I According to Roll Call, Dom ‘envisioned a ceremony comparable to the chan^g ot the guard at Buckingham Palace in England.” Well, gosh and gee whiz! j jThat’s about the best idea I’ve heard in a long time. I get all misty-eyed just thinking about and depots, while the band plays a medley of “Anchors Aweigh,” “Faraway Places With (Strange Sounding Names” and “Around the World in 80 Days.” ★ h ★ And when a congressman is unseated, as happened recently ^ to Adam Clayton Powell, the band could be on hand to cere-monialize his departure. “I Shall Return” might be the I appropriate tune. Sales Warning DETROIT (AP)-The Detroit Board of Education has issued warning that no book sales-en represent Detroit public schools. The board took the action after receiving anumber of complaints from home owners that salesmen have represented themselves as school employes. mw at 7:00 airi 9:15 Sil £"KE!V( AND!/ nMMidmiiiH aiiDimiiiiiiiiiiicuii HURON SPAGHETTI All Yea Cm Icrt INCLUDES: Salad, Bread, Butter, Coffee MONDAY SPECIAL ONLY JOE’S FAMOUS SFAGHEni HOUSE f 1039 W. Huron-FE 2-0434 Optn ’til 3 A.M. Doors Opon ItM P.M. Short SuMopts 1:10 P.M. j Footuro ItU F.M. Only iMaxwnSydaw as/esiu I I^orothy McGuire a* Mary Charlton Heaton I JoAit, the Baptiat John Wayne the Centurion JMUWN8l.-ADMlT8tlAI I have always felt that Congress was a little short on ceremony, and such rituals as it has are lacking in pageantry. A LONG WAY A band would go a loilg way toward bridging the pomp-and-circumstance gap. Dorn’s proposal, however, will not find easy going. Being by nature meek and diffident men, his may feel that having their own band would be putting on airs. I recall a few years ago someone introduced a bill to probide House members with their own flag. NO SALUTES But when they ran it up on; the House floor, nobody would' salute it. ’Then there is the matter of the Capitol’s weak west wall. Architect J. George Stewart has warned that strong vibra-| tions, like maybe a sonic boom,j make the wall collapse, and topple the Capitol dome, j Until such time as the west K wall is either replaced or re^i, paired, it might be wise to put I a mute on the sousaphone. | WOULD BE GLORIOUS Ah, but it would be glorious if the band could be formed. There are so many occasions where a little band music would be appropriate. A ceremony comparable to the changing of the guard at Buckingham Palace could be arranged when the cops on the night shift come on duty. And that would only be the starter. ★ ★ ★ Take each fall, immediately after adjournment, when senators and representatives take off on junkets to various parts of the earth. The band could give them a proper send-off. ’TRAVEL MEDLEY I can see them now, marching off to the airports, docks PROTECT YOUR FAMILY AND HOME.......... Modern Woodmen’s low-cost Mortgage Insurance MIRACLE MILE! ;^£)i>j-rjA\C I BLUE SH so. TELECRAPH AT SO. LAKE Rl 1 MILE W. 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WASHER FEATURES: ■ Big 15 pound capacity for family-size loads. ■ Choice of water levels, wash cycles and water temperatures —one just right for every fabric. ■ New Cooling Shower Rinse prevents wrinkles in permanent press fabrics. ■ Full 2 Year Warranty' on all parts with a special 5 Year Warranty on the washer transmission. Exclusive Twin Air Stream drying system, dries clothes quickly but gently ■ Four cycles and four temperatures including a. special cool-down period for wrinkle-free core of permanent press fabrics ■ Automatic Dry Control. Set it and forget it. Dryer stops automatically when clothes are "just right" dry ■ Full 2-year warranty on all parts with a special 5-year warranty on the drum as- sembly. Telephone 333-7812 ©) consumers Power 28 West Lawrence St., Pontiac TUh ANNUAL Factory-Authorized HOO Savings! Stereo Consoles by FISHER. mm>, m Celebrating our Continuing Growth ^nd Progress with Speeial Purchases from our Leading Quality Manufacturers! The "Metropolitan" with 90-Watt Peak Power! Save Here is an exciting opportunity to discover the superlative per- formance and fine furniture design of Fisher stereo radio-phonographs! "The Metropolitan" has 6 speakers in two 3-way systems, fine Dual 4-speed changer with Pickering niagnetic cartridge and diamond stylus, wide-range AM plus distortion-free stereo FM. Contemporary walnut cabinet. Reg.749.50 649“ GRiNNELL'S, Pontioc Moll, 682-04Z2 Downtown Pontiac, 27 S. Sdginow St., FE 3r7i68 Your Charge, 4-Poy Plan (90 doys some.os cash) or Budget terms THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, MARCH 20, 1967 C—9 MARKETS The following are top prices covering I sales of locdiy pt)wn produce growers and sold by in wholesale package lots Qdotat 'ns are fumi^ed by the Detroit Bureau of Markets as of Friday. Produce eauiTS Api^s, DellclOUi, bu — Apples; Delicloi/b, Red, bu. .. Trading Fairly Active Marf Backs Away From Highs Apples, Northern Spy, b Apples, Steele Red, b ' Apples, - - '*^v^(?Itablm ■■ NEW YORK (AP)^The stock market early thi% afternoon backed away irregularly from 1967 highs posted toward the end of last week. Tradinig was fairly active. R.C.A. and other color television set manufacturers were weak on news that R.C.A. was cutting back color-TV production and laying off 2,900 wrark- Celery, Root, dz. Horseradish, pk. b Leeks, dz. bch. .. Onions, dry, SO-lb. I Parsley, root ..; Parsnips, Vk bu.v Parsnips, Ceho Potatles, 50 lbs. .. _ Pessimism pver the labor con ® tract negotiations in the aut » industry, even though they don’ ^ begin until July, generated s of an auto strike. Hie market was slightly high-*r at the start but the popular averages showed losses by no«i. Gainers held the edge over losers throughout the morning but the margin was gradually cut back to a very thin one. AVERAGES OFF The Associated Press average of 60 stocks at noon was off .3 at 323.5 with industrials off .6, rails up .1 and utilities off .5. The Dow Jones industrial erage at noon was off 2.18 at 867.59. RCA fell about 2 points as col-(H* televisions gave ground. Zen- and Magnavox dripped about a point each. High-priced IBM dropped a dozen points. Jones & Laugh-lin lost 2. Prices were irregularly higher 6n the American Stock Exchange. Trading was active. Xtra Inc. rose nearly 3 and Me-nasco more than a point. Soss Manufacturing added 2. Verni-tron was a 2-point loser and AMK Co. droppk about 1%. Bananas accounted last year for about $65 million of Ecuador’s total exports of some $135 million. Squash, Acorn, bu. Squash, Buttercup, bi Squash, Butternut, bi Squash, Delicious, bu. Squash, Hubbard, bu. Poultry and Eggs DITROIT POULTRY DETROIT (API -pound for No. 1 live po type 20-22) roasters I The New York Stock Exchange NEW Y( Exchange YORK (AP) - New York Indians Charge U.S. Meddling Parliament Opposition Is Promised a Report Despite Slowdown Job Figures Strong NEW DELHI, India (AP) -The United States was accused in the Indian Parliament today of trying to influence India’s national election iast month, of attempting to undermine a local youth organization and of aiding (he defection of Stalin’s daughter Svetlana to the West. Foreign Minister M.C. Cbagla quieted the shouting opposition members temporarily with promise to give a detailed statement Tuesday* on Miss Stalina’i flight from New Delhi to Rome March 7 after she sought asylum at the U. S. Embassy. * * ★ But he and Finance Minister Morarji Desai were then subjected to a series of questions about the activities of the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency in India’s use of the U.S. Embassy’s huge rupee fund, acquired through the sale of food grains to India. George Fernandes, a Socialist who defeated pro-American S.K. Patil in the Bombay parliamentary race, referred to disclo-in the U. S. press that CIA funds had been given to various U. S. and international organizations. One of the groups named was the International Youth Center in New Delhi, “Is the government aware of these disclosures?’’ Fernandes By JOHN CUNN^i'F AP Business Analyst NEW YORK - The present economic slowdown is very clearly shown by a half-dozen indicators. Curiously, though, the nation’s em-l ployment f i g-ures show little I change at all.^ They remain strong. At 3.7 per] cent, the jobless! ratio in Febru-’ ary remained CUNNIFF steady for the third month in a icw, dispelling some of the feeling that it sank that low in the first place merely because the nation was everproducing, ' ★ * * This interpretation no longer seems to have weight. It now seems that the rate of unem- ployed during the past year, lowi Aside fron^ this major prob-as it was, really didn’t give an hem, th^ outlook for the immedi-adequate measure of the intense late future seems to be good demand for workers. The evidence seems to indicate Uiat even mwe works's could have been employed if they had the proper skills. But, since these jobs went unfilled, the demand was Channeled into overtime hours instead. CUSHION Hiis overtime still averages more than three hours a month manufacturing but is now dropping. Its existence, however, is still a cushion against layoffs. Hours are cut before jobs are eliminated. The most serious blemish on the sparkling job figures is the rate of nonwhite ' ’' 7 1 per cent compared to 3.3 per cent for whites. This is a xeri-ous, persistent problem, with consequences throughout society. 'Pro-Mao Troops Killed More Than 200 Farmers HONG KONG (AP) - More than 200 farmers in Wei An, in Fukien Province, were killed when pro-Mao Tse-tung troops opened fire on anti-Maoists, the anti-Communist New Life Evening Post reported today. ★ ★ -R Quoting arrivals from Foochow, the capital of Fukien, the paper said the anti-Maoist farmers stormed a commune in Wei An to steal grain. ______ I ‘NO niiiprT F'lMAiumur’ I ^ NO DIRECT FINANONG t^oop brutality,- • Chagla replied it was but that “such activities are not normally capable of verification.” Chagla added he understands the CIA “had not directly financed any Indian organization. It is reported to have given money to foundations which have been financing organizations in India. The organizations have been innocently receiving the aid not aware of its CIA origination.” Desai, a former officer in the International Youth Center, said he had asked the organizations to return any money they had received from groups that had been financially assisted by the CIA. A member of the pro-Moscow Communist party, Indrajit Gupta, charged that CIA money and embassy funds had been used to “defeat 44 progressive candidates during the elections.” News in Brief Waterford Township Police are investigating a break-in reported yesterday at Super Chief Drive-In, 1715 N. Telegraph, in which $56 was stolen. Earl Simpkins of 3880 Anoka, Waterford Township, reported to township police yesterday the larceny of three guns, ammunition, a knife and shooting glasses — total value of $400 —during a break-in of his home. Erwin A. Carroll of 1630 Grubb, Highland Township, told Oakland County sheriff’s deputies yesterday that a chain saw valued at $225 was stolen from his truck. 'Plot' Suspect Awaiting Bill of Information paper said, farmer^ in Wpi An refused to go to the fields for iring planting. The newspaper report could not be confirmed by other sources here. The Hong Kong Star reported Communist gunboat had captured 40 anti-Maoists trying to flee from Canton to Hong Kong in a boat. The English-language newspaper said the information came from wall posters in Canton. The pro-Mao New China News g e n c y claimed widespread support for a Maoist order for the Chinese army to intervene in China’s industry. NEW ORLEANS, La. (41 -Clay L. Shaw, destined for trial on a charge of conspiring to as-assinate President John F. Kennedy, rested in a hospital bed today awainting word on bill of information that was expected to be filed against him. ★ ★ ★ Dist.'Atty. Jini Garrison, who contends a conspiracy in New Orleans led to the murder of Kennedy in Dallas, *T^x., indicated he would file the 1)ill this Week. •fr R * The bill is but a technical step in the legal procedure toward bringing Shaw to trial. No trial date has been set for Shaw, 54, a decorated World War II Army major and retired business leader. Shaw entered Southern Baptist Hospital here Saturday. His attorneys said ‘ was solely “for rest and relaxation.” PRELIMINARY HEARING Garrison’s case against Shaw came out last week in the preliminary hearing, when a dope addict and an insurance salesman placed Shaw with Lee Harvey Oswald weeks before the ' president’s death. ’The order was issued Sunday, accompanied by hints it was designed to oust anti-Maoists entrenched in the nation’s major industries. The army was ordered earlier to take a similar role on farms to help sow the spring crop. The Communist agency said Sunday’s order drew “a sincere and enthusiastic response” from major industrial cities and ‘jubilant” reaction from army units throughout the country. The agency named six cities, all of which it announced earlier were under Maoist control, which it said reacted favorably to the order. They were Shanghai, Taiyuan, Harbin, Kuei-yang, Tsinan and Isingtao. also, despite the slowing of, the productlw pace. In fact, tflWe is some slight evidence of even more pressure on employers to find workws. The National Industrial Conference Board’s help - wanted advertising index, a sensitive measure which dropped in January, has now begun to climb again. MEASURES ADS This index measures the volume of classified job advertisements in 52 major newspapers across the country and is considered to accurately measure business conditions. Comments the board, a nonprofit, independent, largely business - supported organization: “Gains in the index have usually been followed by dips in the unemployment rate; declines in the index have been followed by increases in unemployment.” * * * This lends weight to the belief that employers, in personnel matters anyway, are looking beyond this slowdown W the eventual upturn. That is, somewhat in the manner of the stock market, they are discounting f^'e present and betting on the future. The fact is that the great majority of analysts today mix their forecasts of a near term slowdown or adjustment with a glowing forecast for the latter part of the year. PLATEAU? There seems to be, in other words, a feeling that the adjustment will simply be the penalty to pay for the next advaneg. Some even feel the slowdown is the plateau where forces are regrouped for the next big economic expansion. This applies to both employer and worker. There is increasing evidence that companies are stockpiling workers for this expansion. Campus recruiters are said to be especially active and competitive for this year’s graduating classes. Fisher Body Mon Gets New Post The appointment of John Schachinger Jr. as manufacturing manager in charge of metal and trim fabricating operations for Fisher Body was announced today by Kenneth N. Scott, general manager of Fisher Body Division and a vice president of General Motors Corp. The appointment is effective April 1. ★ ★ ★ Schachinger, of 4086 Nearbrook, Bloomfield Township, was previously chief engineer for body engineering. He joihed Fisher Body in 1939 as a welding methods engineer. There is evidence also of intense executive maneuvering, which the statistics don’t reveal at all. This restlessness is shown in the bulging files of executive recruiters. Feeling the market is in their favor, many executives reportedly are quite willing to change jobs for a good price. Some evidence of this demand is supplied by activities at this week’s annual convention of the Institute of Electronics and Electrical Engineers. JOB RESUMES Some 73,000 scientists and engineers are expected to attend the convention, ostensibly to exchange ideas and learn of new products. But many will have their job resumes with them. Realizing this, a personnel recruiter expects to process by electronic computer the job desires of 1,800 engineers and scientists. No cost. • ' ★ ★ ★ To serve 103 prospective employers the recruiter has reserved 130 hotel rooms simply for interviews. All fees will be paid by the employer. In4. Rails Util. Stocks _.6 -i-.i -.5 . 457.6 1 85.8 154.2 323.2 ,. 458.2 185.7 154.7 323.8 .. 446.9 1 83.6 1 53.5 318.0 ,. 446.0 178.8 153.......... ,. 497.9 196.3 159. ? 213.9 1 Treasury Position WASHINGTON (AP)-TB» cqth pnltlon .1 the Treasury compared with- Withdrawals Fiscal ... 11B.9M,758,401.34 [-Total Debt- , 333,445,477,111.18 ----.... —. .... — „ -^x distribution. xr—Ex rights, xw—without warrants. ww-WIth warrants. wd-When dls-trllwtid. wl—When Issued, nd—Next da -■ellvery. vl-ln bankruptcy or receivership or Bankruptcy -------- .„.,.,rdd by such com- fn—Foreign Issue sublect to In- Monday's 1st Dlvldai^ ^igatw^^ Rale riotf RtM al REDUCED Blossmim Hydratn m ,3-31 4 Successful ^Investing By ROGER E. SPEAR Q) “I am 50 years old, single, and wish to bniid income for retirement during the next 12 years. I have $2,000 in E bonds, $5,000 in savings. Peoples Gas Light & Coke, Columbia Gas, Ford and PepsiCola General Bottlers. What changes do you suggest?” H.R. A) Your holdings are suitable for income and moderate appreciation, but they are not in all suited for longterm growth, which should be your objective. Hold Peoples Gas which serves Chicago and some of its suburbs. This company has long and Consistent record of rising earnings and dividends. * believe it will ultimately work Deposit’s for you. Switeh your ..... other stock holdings Into areas w,733,727^4oi.« whicli appear to have greater 323,t2»,7»2;«4.48 potential for enhancing your capital at retirement. As replacements, I suggest General Telephone & Eiectromes, Warner-Lambert and Green Giant. Q) “We are a young family with two small children. It is possible that my may transfer me to another area at any time. Do you think we should buy a home with a small down payment and invest the bulk of our $18,000 savings in growth stocks, or buy a house, outright? Our town has 3,000 pop-uiation.” N.S. A) I wonder if it is necessary I your circumstances to buy a house at all, which in a small town might be difficult to resell without loss. Even if you could, get out even, you would probably lave to pay a reasonable com-- which could make your tenure rather costly if you transferred within a year or two. I suggest you rent a place, if possible, invest half your savings in growth stocks and leave the balance in the bank. Roger Spear’s 48-page Guide tQ Successfui Investing is available to readers. For your copy send $1.60 to Roger E. Spear, in care of The Pontiac Press, Box 1618, Grand Central Station, New York, N.Y, 10017. (Copyright, 1967) Area Man Gets Ad Firm Post A Bloomfield Township man, John Henry Wilson Jr., has been named manager of the Detroit office of Batten, Barton, Dur-stine and Osborn, Inc., an international advertising agency. WILSON Wilson of 2657 Lamplighter, succeeds Robert E. Anderstei of 1680 Hillwood, Bloomfield Hills, who is retiring. Anderson, a vice president and member of the board of directors, will remain on the board until the year’s end. He Will also maintain an office at BBDO-Detroit until then. R ' * ★ Wilson, a vice president, was account supervisor for Dodge passenger car advertising and director of field activities of the 26 (national advertising associations. 1 C—10 THE royriAC press. Monday, march ; Allergies and You - 13 Insect Bites Dangerous By Alkrgy Foundatioii of America (Distributed by Nl^A Spec^ial Services) Usually insect bite fatalities are so rare that* they rate an article on the front page. Even so, there are enough incidents of humans dying from Insect bites that insect venom must be (Xmsidered among the hazardous causes (tf allergy. Even poisonous s n a k e s are not as dahgei^ous. Their bites take an average of 14 lives a year. At least 30 Americans a year are killed by insect stings. There is no estimate of the number who come through a critical Illness. When stung, there are three chemical forces set in motion: • The venom of bees and their kindred is imisonous for all to the degree that an overwhelming attack by many insects with a multitude of bites bites Is very serious and can be fatal • As an allei^c agent, a single bite can so upset the biochemesby of a person with a susceptibility that the same result occurs. • There is the normal reaction from a bite that almost all experience: pain, swelling and redness in the area of the bite. ■k -k * Actually, pe. comfortabla living room, 5-pe. dinetta, and 10«pc. colonial badroom! NOPAYAAENTSU^TILJUNE PLUS COLOR TV AT NO ADDED COST! NO PAYMENTS UNTIL JUNE AT... iCXno Kmart DIXIE RTOEfflAPH MDURSi SpuN|M.1iltP.M. taiNtir.IIt.IPJI. NOMt furnishings WDRLD YHDE JUVENILE FURNITURE DEPARTMENT Famous hamas lika Cosco, Stericlini^' Evan-Flo, Lull-o-Bya, many more, Cribs, II Evan-Flo, Lull-o-Bya, many more, Ci I Mattrsssas, Sferiiizars, Didpers, S^ll THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY. MARCH 20, 1967 D-1 'Gase Considered Closed/ Says President Resignations Turned In by Three Illinois Coaches GHAMPAHIN, ID. (AP) -D-linois’ three scmdal-lnvolved coaches reluctantly resipied Siinday, 24 hours after the ension fit>m , the conference. The action iw footbaU Coach Pete Elliott, basketbaD Coach Harry Ckanbes and assistant Howie Braim ended a three-month ordeal stonming from a $20,000 athletiC/jiluidi fund. idty pr^oit, who revealed the ea^tence of the fund to the Big Ten and fought to the end to save file ](4>s si ipit _ doubles’ event Saturday dur- DitrSt*"*'*** MMMstliw ing the Pontiac Motor Tour-nament at Huron Bowl, but he |n. finished with a 300 game. Rolls 300 Game By Tht AtMcliM Prtts Tournaimnh NCAA Eailwn Regional Champlonililp tti Carolina 96, Boston Collagt » implonship jinia Tech 6< Pershing. Rips Flint Central by 90-66 Score Will Robinson Feted Before Tilt; Simpson Scores 43 Points EAST LANSING (AP) - Will Robinson, a man two generations removed from slavery, relaxed today and savor^ a couple of honors any basketball coach would be proud to hold. His Detroit Pershing team won the state Class A basketball title with an awesome 90-66 victory over gutty Flint Central Saturday night, a few hours after the Michigan High School Coaches Association named Robinson Coach-of-the-Year. “It was one of the most barrasing things I’ve ever done in my life,” he said. “I don’t have any excuse. I should be hiding somewhere.” Tiger Manager Mayo Smith said, “Really and truly, I don’ know why he did it. He was completely blank. I’m just glad it happened in an exhibition game. If this had been the regular season, I don’t know...” Joe Sparma started for Detroit and had control problems, especially with his curve. Boston jumped on him for three runs in the first, two of them' coming on a single by Thomas. Detroit got one back in the second on an error, two walks and an infield out. The Tigers got another in the top of the fourth on a homer by Ray ,Oyler. SCORE TWO Boston scored two runs in the fourth on a walk and three singles, all off Wickersham. Detroit picked up one rui the fifth on an error, a walk, an infield out and a single by Jim Northrop. ‘‘This has to be the highlight of my career,” said Robinson, a veteran of 24 years in Detroit Public Schools and the first Ne-to be selected top coach by the association. “Remember gentlemen,” he told fellow coaches and officials CHAMPS CLAIM NET—Detroit Pershing players Gran-at the award banquet, “I’m just ville Cook (40) and Ralph Simpson (14) are held by team-two generations removed from mates as they take down the net after winning the state slavery.” Pershing’s Doughboys, ranked fourth in the final Associated . )1I, ended the season with a 21-1 record; the lone loss a one-point defeat at the hands of arch-rival Detroit Northwestern in the Detroit City League championship game. Pershing upset Northwestern in the tournament on its way to the title. Rtglonil _____.jlomhip Houston 63, Southern Methodist 75 fraew'i, 2b 1 0 1 Kansas 70, Louisville 6 Western Regional UCLA 80, University ot Pacific 64 Consolallon Texas Western 69, Wyoming 6 Mtchck, 3b 1 0 0 Nrthrp, cl 5 1 2 Southern Illinois 71, Marquette 56 tist 65 Central Washington Brown, ph 1 0 WcKrhm, p 1 0 Oyler, ss 2 1 lorris Harvey liar Collega Toumem IhamplonMlp i 56, San Jacinto, Pasa- Cameron, Okla. 91 !, Burlington, Iowa 8. Nashville Business 47, Raytown, Mo., 39 Consolation Wayland Baptist, Plalnvlew, Tex. Totals 37 7 15 E—Lehrer, Andrews, Santiago, d Wert. LO»-DETROIT Class A basketball title Saturday night in Jenison Field-house. Simpson poured in 43 points during the 90^6 conquest oi^: Flint Central. The Doughboys, w!Lh Ralph Simpson scoring a record 43 points and 6-foot-8 center Spencer Haywood controlling the backboards with 17 rebounds, wore down Flint’s Indians in the final five minutes of play for their first state title. It was the first title for a Detroit public school since Detroit Northern won in 1930. Detroit teams did not play in the tournament from 1931 to 1961. Simpson, a junior guard playing his first year of high school ball, was fantastic, hitting 21 of 36 floor shots (58 per cfent) in surpassing the old tournament single game scoring mark of 42 points set by Ernie Thompson of Saginaw High in 1962. DET.PERSHING 0 3-4 3 R IP H R ER BB to Cook Lockard 2-2 2 Washgton 24.35 90 Totals 2 Flint Central Pniilnh out -Fouls - Attendance - Pershing - 12,618. Menominee ’5' Really Flying EAST LANSING - Menominee High may have set a style in flying to the Class state high school basektball championship. The Maroons from the treme western Upper Peninsula flew to the state capital Friday for the windup of the 42nd annual schoolboy cage windup. The airplane trip, first ever for tournament, left Menominee well rested tor a couple of tough Bowler in Strong Finish When Manfred Hersacher overcomes a bad start In tournament bowling he does it with a giant stride. Hersacher of 7280 Pontiac Lake Road Saturday did something the best boilers in the Pontiac area haven’t accomplished this season at Huron Bowl; he rolled a'SM game. ★ ★ ★ ^ Competing in the doubles phase of the annual Pontiac Motor Tournament, Hersacher began his three-game series with a 128 game, then upped his pace to 169. He carries 160 and 143 averages bowling at Howe’s Lanes and OreWd Lanes. He put together 12 strikes in bis third nme to finish with a 597 aetnal series and the highest ^pibie at Huron this season. ^ The Maroons upended favored Lansing O’Rafferty on St. Patrick’s Day in the semifinals and then won the championship with a 63-59 victory over Willow Run Saturday night. PERFECT SEASON Mount Pleasant Sacred Heart and Flint St. Mkthew added undefeated basketball seasons to perfect 9-0 football seasons in sweeping to respective Class C od D championships. Sacred Hart, 26-0, outmanned Detroit All Saints 66-53 and St. Matthew contained Ewen’s 6-foot-9 Terry Conrad to win in Class D by a 75-67 score. Menominee was the only UP team to bring home a championship. Wakefield was eliminated 56-55 by Sacred Heart in the C semifinals and Ewen, tired from 71-65, four-overtime victory over Adrian Catholic Central in the D semis, wilted under St. Matthew’s fast break. Both Ewen and Wakefield drove more than 500 miles to Lansing. ('"'I \ Menominee, with Pat MillW.// pouring in 28 points, overcame a 35-31 halftime in nipping Willow Run. The losing Flyers played most of the second half without 5-foot-8 star shooting ace John Thomas, who nett^ 18 points and four personal fouls in the first half. Thomas was high for Williow Run with 22 points. Menominee held only a two-point lead in the final 11 seconds when Dave Haglund hit a pair of crucial free throws to seal the victory. Sacred Heart, with three players over 6-foot-5, held a 29-28 halftime edge over All Saints before breaking the game open in the second half. AU Saints, with four juniors and a sophomore in the starting lineupi couldn’t contain the Irish from Mid-Michigan as the game wore on and finaUy succumbed to the superior height advantage. Cage Champs Here is the All-Tournament team selected by The Associated Press following the 1967 Michigan High School Basketball championships: First Turn Ralph Simpson, Dot. Ptrshlng Tim Bograkos, Flint Cantral Pat Miller, Menominee Mike Hackett, Mount Pleasant Sacred Heart Second Team . Matt. Actually, the slow start In the doubles was a bowled his singles event first and hit 620 actual. it it it The 300 is his first sanctioned one, having a 1 viously. Hersacher has been bowling nine years, , __________ . TENSION EASES—Emotion that built up during three weeks.of tournament play was released in a good cry by Menominee High School coach Robert Kii^iak shortly eftn* he end the team received the trophy for winning the Class B state basketbaU cham-pioiffihip Saturday at East Lansing. Krysiak buried his head on the shoulder of BiU KeUy. No. 44 is Dewey Bellisle. player at right is Patrick MiUer. Totnli 21 11-16 63 FqyW out—Minor, nunerson. Totol fouls-Monomlneo 15; Willow Run CLASS C OBT, ALL SAINTS, MT. FU. SAC. H. OFT G ^ i 1. Mt". ' % ;u!; I 2 0-0 4 Simons 4 Sf"ll 3 04) 6 Volsin 0 1-1 1 r 2 2-3 6 Murphy 0 0-0 0 0 0-0 0 McQuald 0 04) 0 s 23 7-10 53 Totils 15 16-21 66 SaerM "Haart . ..if ll I* fcS Fouled out-nonO. Total fouls-AII Saints 19, Sacred Heart Attendance~12,41S. Sain Rotheaux a I u-x X oOTon _ ^ Cannon 0 1-1 i Man 10 7-14 61 TMait iiw-an WM 1116 It 3B-47 m ». Matthew »II a IMI Fouled out — None. Total fault - Ewfn 16, St. MaHlww Attendance — 12,22 D—2 6f^Scores Climax Women's Pin Finale THE PONTIAC PRESS. AIONDAY, MARCH 20, 1967 SERVICE CENTERS SUNDAYS,^--^^ DAILY 2-5 P.M i I )PM. M ONTGOMERY WARD HIRI'S WHAT Wl DOI • Install new linings • Install fluid • Check seals, master cylinder • Bleed'brakes • Adjust and lubricate hand brake • Road test car for safety e Check wheel bearings, fluid lines STANDARD HEAVY DUTY 14“ 19“ SELF ADJUSTING $3 MORE Most Cars FRONTIND ALIGNMENT AIR CONDITIONING i$3 EXTRA BRAKE ADJUSTMENT MaMt Card LUBRICATION SPECIM. INSTALUD n“ Ford, Chav., Plymouth • Custom cootad staal • Machonicolly saolad taomt guard against mufflar laakaga • Install'ad by axparts LIT WARPS SIMONIZE WAX YOUR CAR 5** STANDARD SHOCKS INSTALLED EACH IN PAIRS Sr«rdls Robwilt OVER 670 ENGINE MODELS AVAIUBLE A» Low As 100% Ramanufacturad Rivarsida anginas run lika naw, sava costly ra-pair bills. Buy now and sava now. Big outbursts in the singles and team events over the weekend at 300 Bowl brought to a climax one of the more noteworthy Pontiac Woman’s Bowling Association c.ity tournaments. Not only did a new leader ap-^r in the team event Saturday, the top five places ch^ed. Then Sunday Pontiac’s Shirley Grusnick emerged as the singles champion with sparkling 703 total, surpassing the previous leader by 34 pins. 0 was highlighted by a record-settinf 137S winning doubles score. Although no duos chall^ed the all-time high score set by Mable Wilson and her daughter Carol Carter, both from Pontiac, earlier in the tourney, new second and third-place teams developed Sunday. * ★ ★ The Waterford - Lake Orion pair of HUda Hicks and Jean Bigler grabbed the runner-up 1260; and third place The 34tb annual P W B A went to Wilma Cerre and Bon- Rolls 702 in ABC Dad's Turn in Spotlight MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP) Les Zikes Sr., of Chicago, father of one of the world’s greatest amateur bowlers, came into his ovra Sunday when he fired a 702 series to take first place in the regular singles division of the American Bowling Congress Tournament. :es parlayed 20 strikes and only one open frame into games of 210, 237 and 255 as he unseat- Ailing Matson Sets Record COLLEGE STATION, Tex. Wl — Randy Matson’s hand too sore to throw the shot Saturday, but the Texas A&M weight star broke the National Collegiate. Athletic Association discus record witii a toss of 200 feet 744 inches. The worid’s shot put record-holder at 70 feet 7V« inches had to forego the shot in a triangular meet with Rice and Louisiana State because of strained ligaments in the back of his hand. The world recmrd in the dis-cns is 213 feet 11% inches. The American record is 210 feet I ed Ed Malek of Gardner, 111., who led the singles for a single day with a 697 total. Les Zikes Jr., of Palatine, 111., is a three-time ABC champion. He has won numerous international titles, including the 1963 World All-Events and the 1964 I n t e r-American All-Events crown. TAUGHT SON . His father, who taught Les Jr., to bowl, has never achieved national tenpin fame Les &*., has bowled seven times in the ABC without a significant score. Zikes, 56, manages a Chicago bowling center. His first place singles score was the best series of the 16-day-old tournament until Ron Randle of St. Louis popped in a 258-225-233-716 series on the final team squad of the day. Randle had 21 strikes to Zikes’ 20. ★ ★ * Despite Randle’s big contribution, the Golden Eagle team St. Louis totaled only 2,890 and failed to crack the top 10 standings. If Les Sr., remains unbeaten when the ABC ends May 7* he will receive an automatic berth on the U.S. team which competes in the world tournament next July in Malmo, Sweden. nie Coan, Pontiac entries, udio hitl244 handicap. _ tng a title Saturday held in 1962 was the Sport Center ’Dreqdiies team. Captained by SMrley Burpee, the Pcmtiac women rolled a 3015 total during the final team squad of this year’s touniament. This was 20 pins better than the 2995 figure posted by Selma’s, capt^ad by Wanda Siple, on the preceding squad. Three other teams on the two squada also bettered the 2938 winning total of last yiear and leading mark this season until Saturday. Pat Donner of Waterfcvd Township retained first place in the Actual All events division. / TTie championship trophijes and prize monies—R140 in the team event,r$100 in doubles. |70 in singles — will be presented at the PWBA Open Meetmg April 16 in the Elks Lodge. The final standings: PWBA CITY TOURNAMINT PlMl StandUlB* Turn Evml nm Tottf ..Sport Ctnter Trophiu, Pontiac 3015 2. Solma't, Pontiac . Auburn Lanai Guttar Balli, 5. Tha C.O.P.S., Pontiac ■ Huntoon's, Pontiac aarb'i Fiva, Wat. Townihip Tha Joyful FIva, Pontiac AAabla Wllion Carol Cartar, Pontiac Hilda Hickv Watarford Jaan BIglar, Laka Orion 3. Wilma Carla Bonnia Ctiin, Pontiac Nancy Barbar, Wat. Townil Audraa Shook. Pontiac Batty Tbtta Loll Taylor, Pontiac Mariana Millar, Utica Mary, Hilllkar, ■ ' Shirlay Gruinlck, Pontiac Son|a Johnion, Rochaitar Mariana Robinson, Wallad Laka Linda Yatas, Watarford Nancy Jarrall, Pontiac — ...........h Handicap — Carol Car- tar, Pontiac, im High Taam Actual Sark Pontiac, 2593. High Team Handicap Gama—Schram's Auto Parts, Pontiac, 1094. High Doublat Handicap Gama — Jac-uallna Haxar, Datrolt, and Virginia M" ir. Union Caka, 405. Hiah sinniat Handicap Gama — Ain Milford, 274. n Aciual Gama — Pag Cartar, Po 245 (also high actual sarlas, OK h Tournament Gama Handicap Cartar, Pontiac, 270 (also hH HONOR FOR COACH-Veteran Utica football coach Barney Swinehart (left), who was inducted into the (loaches Hall of Fame in Michigan, receives his certificate between halves of the Class A high school basketball championship game at East Lansing Satur- day from E. Dale Kennedy, executive secretary of the Michigan Education Association. Swinehart, now director of finance for Utipa (Community Schools, coached the Utica football squad from 1942-60. Pontiac Boys' Club Wins State Crown The Pontiac Boys’ Club Junlw basketball team reigns as state chamiMons after winning three games on its home court Friday and Saturday. Hie local quintet upended Ypsilanti, 34-20, . in the title game, holding the losers to no field goals in the final quarter. Roosevelt Washington played a fine game rebounding and led the scoring with 10 points. * ★ w Mike Johnston also was instrumental in rebounding, helping the smaller host cagers to offset their lack of size throughout the tournament. Spearheading the champions’ efforts was diminutive Oscar Ramirez, who won the outstanding player award in the tournament. He scored 17 points in the final half as Pontiac upset Royal Oak’s Soutii Oakland Boys Club, 32-28, in the first game; and he dropped in 16 markers in 36-30 semifinal vict(H7 over Highland Park. ★ ★ ★ Coach Stephen Moore and the champions will journey to Detroit’s BlfXHner Building Thursday for the state Intermediate Tournament. Pontiac finished second there last season. Hockey Title Won by Detroit Team © © © © © © © © © 0 © (") © Pontiac Moll TELEGRAPH ROAD CORNER ELIZABETH LAKE ROAD HOUGHTON (AP)-The Burton Title juidor hockey squad from Detroit sewed up first place in the National Juvenile Hockey Tournament at Houghton Sunday by defeating Wilmette, Illinois, 4-1. 'The Detroit team has defeated all the other teams competing in the round robin tourney. It scored victories over Saint Paul, I; Eagle River, Wis., 10-2; Hancock,. Mich., 6-2; an Marquette, Mich., 4-0. Stock Drivers Cloud Picture Southeastern '500' Taken by Pearson BRISTOL, Tenn. (AP) -There were those who thought the Southeastern 500 would provide a clue to the outcome of the 1967 Grand Naticinal stock car racing championship. They couldn’t have been mor* wrong. The hard-fought, 250-mile race over the half-mile Bristol International Speedway indicated only that 1967 could well be the most competitive year in stock car racing history. ★ ★ * David Pearson was the winner, but unlike last year’s race which he clearly dominated until a broken timing chain cost him victory 20 laps from the end, this year’s race was a free-for-all. SOUTHEAST '500' RESULTS 1— David Pearion, Spartanburg, S.C., 1907 Oodga, SS.290. 2— Cala Yarborough, Charlotta. N.C., 1967 Ford, 53,050. 3— Dartt Oloringar, Charlotta. 1967 Ford, S-DIck Hutcharion, Charlotte, District at Flint Local Swim Teams Trail Rochester placed fourth and Pontiac fifth Saturday in the Northeast District Michigan YMCA Swimming Meet team totals at Durham Pool in Flint. Rochester’s Bruce Feather-stone turned in one of the performance’s of the day as he streaked to a district record 2:04.6 in taking the 200 • yard freestyle. * ★ ★ Flint led the six-team outing with 867% points. Saginaw was second with 597. Pontiac swimmers placed third in the midget and junior divisions and fifth in the prep class. Rochester wound up fourth in the prep division and placed fifth in the other two classes. TEAM SWIM TOTALS I a67>/i; 2. Spginaw 597i 3. Bay 4. RKhester 390; S. Pontlat itlac-Rochaater MMgil Divisl ley Relay - f Wdbtter, Jeff Dauw, . Pontiac (Francia Urn Dauw, John Francia Wabater, 50 Freaityla — Chrli Jacquai, Rochoi-ir, 27.1. too Fraaatyla — Paul Karat, Rochat- 200 Fraeatyla — Bruct Fealharttona, tochaster, 2:04.6 (Naw District Record). 50 Braaststroko — Bob Couturo, Rp- TI6ERS Now on Sale by Mail TICKETS FOR ANY GAME AT TIGER STADIUM 'IVlstrt iht TJamt of lk$ Qumo is 3un OPENING DAY Tuasday, April 18th»»Tigart vo. 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S. currency) let Ticket Department, Tiger Stadium, Oatreit, Mich„ 418216 THE POyTTAC PRESS. AIONDAY, MARCH 20, 1967 D-^ Cincinnati Pitcher Looks Sharp Mraves Lose Two Catchers in Short Game By The Anociated Press Rl^Ui^er Sanuhy EUi^ alldwed 1 Block South of Montcalm The Above Coupon Is Good on Any (Limited Offer) Bump and Paint Service Is Our Specialty HOURS: Mon. end Tliiin. I A.M.-I F.M. Tuao., WeE,, Fri. I A.M.-I F.M. * ClouEAllOeySaturEay OLOSMOBILE Pontiac FE 2-8101 coodAyear QUALITY CAR CARE VALUES BRING YOUR CAR TO THE EXPERTS Rust-Proofing Special! $Q95 FeicrittcatpoUitt V OB ytu cu Protect your car from winter's ravages. Trained, expert operators will apply Sure-Sealing Compounds to save ■your car’s appearance. Ask about our complets rust-proofing offetl JUMCff SERVICE SPECIAL! Brake & Front-End Offer kegularly S9.9S $ A 95 i'S, „ Now Only... Adjust brakes, add brake fluid and test Repack front wheel beatings. Align front-end. correct camber, caster and toe-in. Balance both front wheeli. Rotate all four wheela. . ...ON ALL SERVICE WORK-TAKE UP TO 12 MONTHS TO PAY Complete Brake Reline EASY BUDGET TERMS $125 Pay as little as... j, pca w»k We teline front & rear brakes, rebuild hydraulic system including wheel & master cyls., machine all drums, flush brake lines & replace fluid, new front grease seals & shoe return springs, clean-inspect & repack front wheel beaiinge. FREE AUTO SAFETY CHECK JUST call for appointment...no OBLIGATION! Spring Tune-Up Time SI'fifi «WIC7l.U.l»l.'|ll8l8Wt«. ’'KW lcyl.nlolM.U.Ii,ip.rt8 U M6$i«ctlwtw>lMb.n,>lr.cwi8ltli EASY BUDGET TERMS! Clean and space plugs; reset timing & points;-adjust carburetor & choke; clean fuel bowl, air filter & battery; check ignition wires, condenser', distributor cap, starter, regulator, generator, fan belt, cylinder comp,, battery. PRICE-BREAK SPECIAl, PRICE-BREAK SPECIAL 20-Gal. Trash Can Rubber Floor Mat $J44 Exclusivs $219 Limil two to a customer at Limit two to a customer at this price. No rust, no rot. thi, price. Dbluxt quBlUy, Lock-Lid handles. Ribbed door-to-door style. Created construction. Grey, black lid. design. Six beautiful colors. GOOD/lrEAR SiRVICE STORE 1370 Wide Track Drive THE PONTiAC PliKSS. MONDAY. MARCH 20, 1967 D—6 Pontiac Area Deaths LeRdy Aiken 0. E. Pursley Funeral Home, Pontiae. Former Pontiac resident Le-' ® Michael , roy Aiken, 63, of North Miami , ® daughter, Sandra Beach, Fla., died yestefdav ® His body is at Lithgows sistets. neral Home, North hfiami Beach, Fla. Mr. Aiken, a painter while he lived here, was vice president 0 fthe Overhead Door Corp. of Miami. Surviving are his wife, Thel-ma; his mother, Mrs. Katheryn Aiken of Miami Shores, Fla.; i and a sister. J. Glenn Donaldson Former Pontiac resident J. Glenn Donaldson, 63, of Denver, Colo., died yesterday. Mr. Donaldson, an attorney, was a founder of the Donaldso, Hoffman and Goldstein law firm in Denver. He was Colwado State Inheritance commissioner and chairman of ttie War Labor Board for nonferrous metals industry. Surviving are his wife,, Frances; a son, Thomas of Denver; two daughters, Mrs. Charles Gorsline of Deliver and Mrs. Alain Fiquet of Paris, France; a brother, William W., Pontiac’s postmaster; and a sister. Memorials may be sent to Dr. Ernest Cotton, Asthma Fund, "*"• , . „ . iColorado Medical Center, Surviving are ms wife. Mane Denver, Colo. C.; two sons, Ray 01ms of Pon-j / tiac and Robert Boston of Cham- Mrs. Dovld Millikerf paign. 111.; and a daughter. Mrs. ' Kenneth Day of Wausau, Wis. 1 CAREER — Service for Mrs. Also surviving are three broth-(Bertha) Miluken, 86, ers and sisters. Including Mrs. F'air wil)/" be 2 p.m. Clarence Gunther and J o h nM^r Brothers Fu-Boston, both of Pontiac, and Home^/Burial will be in six grandchildren. Cemetery. (jigd yesterday. Carl E. Boston Service for Carl E. Boston, *7, of 52 Thorpe will be 1:30 p.m. Wednesday at Donelson-Johns Funeral Home, with burial in Perry Mount Park Cemetery. Mr. Boston died yesterday. He was a retired GMC Truck & Coach Division inspector and was a member of Elks Lodge Refused to Leave Auto Car, Teens Towed to Jail 4 From County on GOP Unit Elected to Statewide Pdlicy-Making Body A Waterfiird Toiynship police-1 lor \the car, be informed the I man held the trump card last; driver and five passengers he i night % a group of Pontiac' was going to impound the ve- : youths fho refused to leave hide. ! nati,„a u their cm after thev failed to Oakland County members of produce in automobde reuistra i ^^elps contacted a service sta-j^e Republican State Central tTon certlicate ^ ^ youths i Committee were elected to four Patro^n Glenn Pbelos had ^ executive committee stoSW veSonSne^^^^ the^Pofwns of the party’s states CaSlike Road to the been i wide policy-making body at iU forlt&nXsnledh^^^ ''®- for exceeding the speed Imut. , instructed the driv-1 cently. When he discovered no one |er to tow both the youths andj * * ♦ had a registration certificate | their car to Oakland County Jail.' Richard Sanderson of Clawson -------------------- ! ^gg elected chairman of t h e j TWO GOT OUT A I Two of the passengers got out Uvfir 3/IK] Sto Pn the car before it reached the UVCI JIUIUII jgi, The others were booked on p Ij ■ /'■i. disorderly person charges. rrOfn liOrnB in Lity Pleading not guuty to the YOUTH FUND-William K. Hanger (left), Pontiac chief of police, accepts a $1,000 donation from the Pontiac Optimist Club to the police department Youth Benefit Fund from Steve Tzineff, Optimist president. Sgt. Herbert C. Cooley (right), an Optimist Club member, said the fund, implemented last week, will be devoted exclusively to promoting the welfare of deserving and needy Pontiac area youths in an effort to preyent delinquency. Officials Fear Effect Actress Sisters More than $200 in cash was stolen from a Pontiac man’s home, it was reported to city police early today. Chester B. Thomas, 50, of 543 S. Sanford told investigators he discovered the money was missing from a dresser drawer when he returned home to find several roqms ransacked. misdemeanor charge at their arraignments before Waterford Township Justice Kenneth Hempstead this morning were Jimmie Cabil Jr., 17, of 180 Prospect; Ronnie Williams, 18, of 432 S. Paddock; Her-shal E. Owens, 17, of 240 Harrison; and Robert L. Calhoun, 18, of 21 Edmund. campaign policy committee. Sanderson, a statistical engineer for General Motors Truck and Coach Division, is chairman of the Issues and Research Com-npttee in Oakland County. Mrs. John Pfister, 2840 Buckingham, Birmingham, was elected vice chairman of the Committee on Party Organization and Mrs. James Carey, 2691 Binbrooke, Troy, serving her second state central term, is .secretary of the executive committee. In the county’s 19th District, Dale A. Feet, 4260 South Shore, Mrs. William Grigg Service for Mrs. William (Sadie) Grigg, 84, of 54 Senec^ will be 2 p.m. tomorrow at the iWessels Funeral Home, Pleasant Ridge. Buria> will be ■ ■ “ itefy. in Oakview Cemet Oak. Mrs. Grigg died Saturday. Royal Mrs. , ______ A retired teacher, she was a mertiber of the Trinity Methodist Church, the WCTU, and the Lapeer County Retired Teachers Association. Surviving are three daughters, Mrs. Carl Gustin of Fern-dale, Mrs. Melville Rutherford Clyde. P. Hardiman Mrs. Percy Husted of La-A grsTveside service for Clyde hve grandchildren; and P. Hardiman, 73, of 423 Highla grcat-Rrandchildren. vyirt be held at 10 a.m. tomor- ^ l,... , , row at the Oak Hill Cemetery. “'Hard Rumph His body is at the Frank Car-i WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWN-ruthers Funeral Home^ |SHIP - Mrs. Hillard (Ethel R.) Mr. Hardiman died Saturday. 72 of 1575 Naylor died former employe of yesterday. Her boriv k at Hnn- of Romney Tax Plan Again Rivals They will appear before E Hempstead for trial at 0:30 a.m. Waterford Township, former Police said the burglar appar- April 11. Bond was set at $50 Oakland County GOP chairman, ently heated some food on a for each suspect. , was elected chairman of t h e stove while in the house. There * ★ * jWays and Means Committee, was no sign of forcible entry. Oh, yes. The towing bill was ■ ^ certified public account- they said. Vie for British Honor qs Well as U.S. Oscar Gov. Romney’s proposed tax meeting hosted by Hazel Park plan will compound the fiscal officials Saturday that passage woes of already struggling city ,, governments, according to rep- ® income tax would | resentatives of 11 South Oak- chances of local! LONDON (AP) - Vanessa to levy a tax on I and Lynn Redgrave, already income. i rivals for Hollywood’s Oscar, The Romney plan Includes l^®®" nominated for the income levies of 2'/-! per cent Academy Award to on individuals, 5 per cent on year‘’1tefr"ch?ef rival'f^ corporations and 8 per cent ^ Michigan’s Junior Miss. Kath- of Royal Oak and Mrs. Ger- land municipalities, f They further predicted at a yesterday. Her body is at Hun-toon Funeral Home, Pontiac. Surviving besides her husband are three sons, Duaine of California, James of Oregon and Merle of Pontiac, and two daughters, Mrs, Eileen Medlen School Chiefs to Talk Money $25. Michigan's Junior Miss Loses Out to Arkansan 'The National Junior Miss title 1 world was won by Rosemary Dun-j place.’ is still a wonderful away of Little Rock, Ark., over He was a . . GMC Truck and Coach Division and was a member of he Pentecostal Church of God. Surviving are his wife, Grace; nine sons; six daughters, all of Pontiac; two sisters; and two brothers. of Waterford Township and Mrs State Board of Education. Abraham Kbssen P«h"»fP»"Uac „ „. I UlArm I c L I i Allan Thomas, chairman Service for Abraham Klassen, nerman J. ocnelp lof the State School Finance 60, of 3571 Watkins Lake, Water-1 hoLLY — Service for Her-'^^“*^^’ PoHing school ad-ford Township, will be 5 p.m. j man J. Schelp 75 of 212 Michi "iiiii®H'3l°'’s for the official sur-Wednesday at Florin Funeral gan will be 2 p.m’ tomorrow at ''®^ Home, Benton Harbor, with,the Dryer Funeral Home, with burial there in Crystal Springs] burial in Lakeside Cemetery. Cemetery. | Mr. Schelp died Saturday, He School superintendents from Oakland County systems will meet tomorrow to discuss Iheir districts’ financial problems with a representative of the 'I’he study deals with problems and status of finance and or- of financial institutions. In turn, the assembled mayors, commissioners, managers and finance directors almost unanimously supported a “piggyback” levy of 1 per cent, to be collected by the state and returned to local units. Mr. Rlassen died ye.sterday. i was retired from Grinnell Broth-^ganization under provisions of u„ --------------------r .u_ ou--------- „ . Michigan statutes. * * ★ The meeting will be held at 1:30 p.m. in the offices of Oakland Schools. He was an employe of the City ers Piano Factory, of Sylvan Lake. His body will Surviving are his wife. Mar-beat the Lewis E. Wint Funeral ion; two daughters, Mrs Wil Home, Clarkston, until 10 p.m. liam Free of Flint and Mrs. :Melvin Caryl of Holly; a broth- vSurviving are his wife, Selma ;er; -six.sisters; and four .grand-G.; four brothers and four sis-:children. fers; two grandchildren; and __________________________ • three great-grandchildren. Jessie H. Stirn Service for Jessie H. Stirn, 82, of 299 Clifford will be 7:30 p.m. 10 in 0 r r 0 w at the Huntoon Funeral Home. Burial will be in Forest Cemetery, Toledo, Ohio. Mr. Stirn died yesterday. He was formerly a construction carpenter. Surviving is a daughter, Mrs. Wilma Garvin of Pontiac. Mrs. Grace Chester PONTIAC TOWNSHIP -Mrs. Ctcace ChesW, 27, of 3164 Hen-Xydale died today. Her body is Soods Worth $1,350 Is Stolen in Waterford Twp. Burglars escaped with about $1,350, mostly cash, after breaking into a safe at Dixie Dairy, 49 N. Telegraph, Waterford Township, yesterday morning. Township police said the intruders gained entry to the buijdii^through a window. The safe is located in an office adjacent to the dairy counter. A watch, two wallets and checks worth about $200 also were reported missing at first, but later recovered. OCC Assistant to Head Group Walter J. Fightmaster, director of community services at Oakland Community College, has been elected president of the Detroit , Society for Programmed Instruction (DSPI). ★ * ★ Fightmaster will move yp from the DSPI vice presidency April 15. The organization draws its membership from sons with educational re.sp< bilities in business, industry and educational institutions which implement the use of programmed instruction. Backing for the piggyback plan was apparently sparked by two widely held feelings: • Property owners, corporations and small business will get some form of tax relief under the Romney proposal — municipalities will not. • State government is already handing out “mandates” for local units — a 56-hour limit on firemen’s workweek without providing for revenues needed by cities to underwrite the changes. STATE LAW State law will require South Oakland communities to adhere to the firemen’s work limit by July 1 of this year. Pontiac was placed on the 56-hour schedule in 1964 by a special city vote. The uniform city income tax — 1 per cent on residents and V? per cent on nonresident workers — has been advanced by the Pontiac Finance Study Committee as a solution to the city’s financial “crisis.” is Elizabeth Taylor. * * i It is the first time sisters have competed for the British award in the 20 years of its existence and the first time in 25 years that sisters have been rivals for the Oscar. In 1942, Joan Fontaine won it from her sister, Olivia de Havilland and touched off a feud that has not died completely. The American Oscars will be presented April 10. The British awards will be presented London April 25. ★ * * Vanessa, 30, was nominated for both awards for her per- formance in the movie “Morgan.” Lynn, 23, was nominated for both awards for her per- formance in “(ieorgy Girl.” VIRGINIA WOOLF’ Miss Taylor was nominated for both prizes for her performance in “Who’s Afraid of Virgin-■ i Woolf?” * * * The fourth nominee for the best British actress award is Julie Christie, last year’s winner for “Darling.” She was named this time for “Doctor Zhivago” and “Fahrenheit 451.” ie Fliss'of 24625 W. 10 Mile Road, Southfield, received a $500 scholarship for being one of the? finalists. America’s new Junior Miss gets a $10,000 college scholarship and a trip to New York with her title. She is the daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Forest Dunaway and works as a speech therapist. She was crowned by outgoing junior miss Diane Wilkins of Wauwatosan, Wis. The runner.s-up are: First — Susan Virnis of Wells, ant is employed by the S, S. Kresge Co. * it * The chairman of the executive committee is Howard Payne of Redford Township in the Wayne County portion of the 19th Congressional District. Boy Struck by Car Is Listed as Fair A 12-year-old Pontiac boy, struck by a car near his homo Friday, remains in the intensive The committee reached the decision six weqks ago, supporting an income proposal by a 5(()-2vote. Members voiced even then, however, concern that a state levy on income would have adverse • effect on passage of an income measure in Pontiac. Minn., who received a ! scholarship; Second — Barbara Specht of New Braunfels, Tex., $4,000; Third — Julie Fleece of Hono- a lulu, $2,000; Fourth — Sharon Ginn of f Plainfield, Ind., $2,000. ........i Other finalists, receiving $500 I _ Teen-agers'^ today are oftenl®®^®*®*'®*’'P® Margaret 3:35 p.m. His condition was de- criticized for “getting too in-iOtiesney of Portland, Ore., Ann] scribed as serious Friday. care unit of Pontiac General Hospital. * * -k Kevin L. Prater, son of Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Prater of E. Pike, is now listed in fair condition with injuries received when he was hit at East Pike and Paddock about terested and too involved,” but America’s new Junior Miss is proud of her generation because “we want to put the right foot forward and step in and do all we can to help out.” Miss Dunaway believes that “as long as people can get together from foreign countries and from the United States . . ., and talk thjpgs out, then the Jackson of Fayetteville, N. C.,i Susan Courtney of Mount Pros- Driver of the car, Frederick pect. 111., Barbara Lias of Wex- c. Berden, 41, of 9H4 Tebeau, ford,. Pa.; Jennifer McFadden Pontiac Township, told police of Enterprise, Ala. and Carol the boy ran suddenly from the Fagan of Phoenix, Ariz. I curb in front of him. Flier Builds WW I Plane $500 Stolen ' Ceiling Up Items valued at more than: $.500 were stolen from a Pontiac home while the occupants were on vacation, city police were told Saturday. AccidenI Reporting Law Is Changed RHINE BECK, N.Y. (JV-Richard King, a 34-year-old schoolteacher and private pilot who has logged about 500 hours in the air, has realized his boyhood dream of building a World War I plane. Starting with a French-designed, castor oil-lubricated, 80-horsepower LfeRhone engine, he worked nearly three years to I produce a Sopwith Scout fighter iplane. I He spent a year in prepara-i tion, teaching himself welding riand the fundamentals of air-, plane construction. Soviet Major Gives Nixon Poor 'Marx' MOSCOW (AP)-A Red army major in Soviet central Asia told Richard M. Nixon today that instead of traveling around inquiring into political conditions, he should stay home and read Karl Marx. I ‘You should get a textbook of | Marxism and you’ll find it has! everything you need to know,”' the major, a member of an army theater group, said in a goodmatifred meeting at the airport in Samarkand. Nixon, U.S. vice president under President Dwight D. Ei-| senhower, flew back to Moscow I today from Samarkand, the Medieval capital of Asian empires. Nixon has been in the Soviet Union for four days as part of aiMxtensiOe tour to study politi-&F conditions. Soviet leaders refused to meet him, but in West European countries he conferred with premiers and other leaders. Expert Guidance Without Obligation from I r jT; WINTER DISCOUNT SAVE 10% Whether you need assistance in selecting a family memorial, or advice on cemetery requirements, take advantage of our experience. No obligation. We’ll counsel you, assist you in every way. And, we specialize in fully guaranteed Barre Guild Monuments, today. COMPLETE INDOOR DISPLAY FOR YOUR SHOPPING CONVENIENCE Memorials for Over 72 Years INCH MEMORIALS, INC. 864 N. Perry FE 5<6931 Carl (W. D, Secretary of State James M. Hare an-Jos,eph Jackson, 66, of 20|l nounced today that several changes have Evelyn told police the stolen, .j, been made in the state’s financial respon-items included a wedding ringji sibility reporting law on accidents to make set, a radio, bracelets watches. Investigators said they found no sign of forcible entry. Aide Will Work on Reading List Robert L. Fichtenau director, of English for Oakland Schools, j has been appbinted to serve onl a reading list revision com-i mittee of the National Council of I Teachers of English. The committee will revise the “High Interest-Easy Reading Book List” of the council, a professional organization of about 110,000 members and subscribers. It easier for “responsible motorists” with Lability insurance. The revisions include a higher ceiling on properly damage and a new provision involving insurance coverage. No fmancial responsibility report is required now by the state if all vehicles involved in an accident are covered by liability insurance (public liability and property damage), Hare said. Another major provision raised property damage limits from $100 to $200, to coincide with higher costs of auto repair. ★ w * Hare said that persons involved in acci-j dents have to report the accident to the De-I partment of State only if: • There is more than $200 damage to (1) your own vehicle, (2) to the other vehicle or vehicles in the accident, or (3) to any property belonging to others. • Someone has been killed or injured. • If Sny of the vehicles in the accident are not covered by liability insurance at the time of the accident. MUST BE SUBMITTED I “If any of these provisions are true,” said ? Hare, “all vehicle owners or; drivers must submit the accident report, Form FIL43, I furnished by the Michigan Department of d State. “This has nothing to do with accident reports compiled by the police or insurance companies,” Hare said. “They will continue to handle their own accident reports.” ★ * * Financial responsibility reporting forms are available at local police or sheriff’s offices; insurance companies handling lia-bUity insurance, branch offices of the Michigan Department of State; or the Department of State ML’ NEW 7-FT. VACUUM CLEANER HUSE Braided Cloth, Ml RubiMr ExchongaabU with Your Old R*-Uio-ablo Hot* Ends Regular 7.N S395 Comm in or Fr*» Delivery PARTS and SERVICE ON ALL CLEANERS ^oial Bags, Hoiad. Bruabes, Belto, AttaebmenU, Etc. Rebuilt by Cnrt’a ApplianceatUsini Our OwnPartt” Our Service lo Veterans Is Exemplary ... Veterans of our armed forces have definite provisions in their behalf. The proc^ures of military honors and courtesy, should be provided. We of the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home have high respect for every person who has served in our armed forces. We aid in the filing of necessary miUtary lepers. We conduct with care and dignity, the military funeral — an honor due everyone in our armed forces. CPkoae federal 4.4511 (Patkituf On Our ^remitei. CURT’S APPLIANCES Taetory AuthoriMed White Dealer 6484 WILLIAMS UKE ROAD OR 4-1101 855 WEST HURON ST. PONTIAC THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, MARCH 20, 1967 Couple Recalls Old Farm Days GARDEN GROVE. Iowa <1?^, Mr. ai^d Mrs. Newton Coffey, looking back on 70 years of I ‘marriage, find life on a farm to-| day vastly different than when they wed in 1897. Today 91-year-old Coffey still raises vegetables and has an orchard, while his wife, 88, raises house plants and culti-j vates large flower gardens in] summer. • In the early years, Mrs. Coffey recalls, she made all the clothes for her 10 children, baked six loaves of bread every other day, made soap, cold-packed meat, canned fruit and vegetables, churned butter and washed clothes on a rough washboard. Coffey walked behind plows and cultivators, made hay, milked cows, butchered hogs and cattle and spent long hours in the field. A PART-TIME JOB :,s£kih:. Hungry Bear Begs Sweets for Supper LEAVENWORTH, Wash, m-Mrs. Penelope 'Ells, who works at the Squirrel Cage Restaurant west of here, has one customer who eats and then ambles off without paying. He is George, a wild bear which she has been feeding for the past seven years. • ★ ★ * Coming down from the nearby mountains for his customary handout, George stands on his hind legs begging for his favorite tidbits. At first, he ate mostly candy bars but now eats almost anything, she reports. He has a special fondness for fruit juices, ice cream and peanut butter. 'Grades Unaffected by Car Ownership' URBANDALE, Iowa (AP) - | Car ownership by high school | ■tudents does not affect grades, research by David W. Teigland, an Iowa educator, reveals. Teigland, a former driver education teacher and now principal of Urbandale Junior High , School, studied local high school j Btudents in a research project for Drake University’s College of Education. * To isolate the effect of regu-* ^ lar driving, he matched drivers and nondrivers on the basis of ‘ age, sex, intelligence test scores ; and average grades received in ; the ninth grade. Checking their ' final grade averages when they; finished school, Teigland found no significant difference between the driving and nondriv“ ing groups. Junk Car Owner Has Big Problem i GOLDEN, Colo. (AP)—Dan f Mosely has a dilemma. He has t been ordered by the county 2»h-|' ing department to get rid of a f yard full of, junk cars he has ’ collected. He tried burning them, but * was told that, due to air pollu- ' tion, he must stop the practice. I J He tried hauling them to the { dumping ground only to be told:' by officials there was no room. [ ^ The zoning department still;' Insists Mosely must dispose of ; the ancient vehicles. ' Men Wanted Now To Train As Accident Investigators OPPORTUNITY FAST PRESS "SoS: *“'• Servic. mtrtlal. MotjOr ScOOt S&aajrS--- ssr-............................... fo" e? " ?hen« s 1 Boots-Accessorfes ...97 tanks',Airplanes........................99 Property to be zoned R-M Multiple Wanted COfS-TrUCkS ......101 Junk Cors-Trucks..101-A l5*N,"^fe.'Vr;.rc.'lwp1 Used Aufo-Truck Parts ...102 oeklend County, Mich. 1 NeW Odd Used TfUCks.103 )Y ^S^WniS ... ASSISTANT MANAGER 332 Hdp Woiit»4 Hamk IWTICHBOARO OPERATOR, TUES-day Ihreugh Sun for (uburtonl KSTa to “i p”,TArt“'ter Tri: i'^irr««sEs^ THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, MARCH 20, 1967 7 iMp Wflnttd FMial* NIGHTS VoiTs. cIiss'lIc'.' ReL WAITRESS WANTED. CHINA CITY A N FOR GENERAL OFFICE ixparlanca prafarrad, parent position, salary opan. Con-Mrs. Kopar, Camara Mart, S5 tamFr**™^" \oUNG LADY OVER 23 DESIRING learn real astata and to Sri«t Hrip, WMR.Nfi> MfWaaM Iteoi Estot* NEED 491 Salt Houtes 49 Soil Hootes AETNA LIFE INSURANCE CO. Career opportunity tor exec analysis/ busli or Sun. Call I Wanted; gook to work e "ninas, 12 noon 'to 8 km. ( 5 WANTED, FULL TIME WE ARE LOOKING FOR ONE Secretaty ^0 Is aisle to take dictation I bMCuaf."'' l^ntvd M. or F. accouWant. full time. , ----"■/^lose books, prepare stal Franks Restaurant, Keego H WAITRESS, CURB AND DINING Clerk-Typist RoichesteX McGraw. 651-S47I. BANKTELLER Waifresses for Invoicing and shipping. “*NS SICKINGER CO. S. Telegraph, Pontiac Curb waitresses tor both day and night shifts, tree blue cross and life Insurance, uniforms and meals furnished. Top wages and tips, va-l cations and paid holidays. Apply j In person only. TED'S I WOODWARD AT SQUARE LK RD.' come. 624-1»72. __________ WOMAN FOR GENERAL OFFICE woff. Typing required. ShorthanC WNTingt esrw 3-BEOROOM HOME 2-nt In the Clarfcston T. I have aoM pur-e and they want to X I pay up to IW,500| „ May llwough August, MI-3412. Aft. P 3-BEOROOM HOME I ROCHES- I large tril-evfl. room, modern bullt.iiT krttiv I den, red carpeted OR 4-2222 < irt^ord .......... ... -r nent, Mr. Capoccld, 35M5244. NEW PRODUCT - NONCOMPETI-tive. 1st, sbowlng-s In Mich. Full or part tinte — Distributors, Managers. Apply Wally Post, Holiday J. C. Hoyden Rcoltor I ROOMS, I12S a MONTH, UTIL- _ ,ic-X I. 6»^-1364. llsrtngs, equities bought boat ' 10735 HlghlafHl Rdl. (M59) S LAKE DUPLEX/ BEACH, "lock. Workino couole ore-682-5788. Division of Sperry Rand Corp. 15 MILE AND CROOKS F TROY, MICHIGAN Immediate opening for qualified personnel in the following clerical fields- » SECRETARIES diversified and challenging positions requiring high school diploma, good typing and shorthand skills,^ with a minimum of 2 years stenographic experience. Must be pleasant, neat and have the ability to work well with people. MALE e COMPUTER 0PEMT0R-2nd or 3rd shift will operate solid state 90 computer with tape. Tabulating experience required. • TAB MACHINE OPERATORS for thirOhift, experience as data processing maCnine operators. Liberal employee benefits including insuronce, pension, and educationol assistance programs. Coll 549-5715 for an appointment, 8:15 am. to 5 pm. n Equal Opportunity Employar TRAINEES Experi^iced Not Nec^sary have good oHthmefic'^aptSud*e ^*ne be capable of meeting \, public APPLY IN PERSON \ , COMMUNITY I NATIONAL V WANTED - REAL ESTATE SALES- LAWYERS Real Estate Cb. PROPERTY OWNERS LOVELY 4 ROOMS, Rent Htouse^ Unfurnished 40 2 BEDROOMS, CHILD WELCOME, Reagan Real Eetata, 33241154. Work Wanted Mole ‘ 11 CARPENTER. ALL KINDS. Oakland County. Contact o flea If you are interested in i 689-0610 I BEDROOMS, FULL BASEMENT. 3-yr. old home. 3885 Oueensbury, 4 mi. north of Walton Blvd„ out Joslyn. Must have good ------------ -------^ 3-ROOM HOUSE AND I a specialty. REALTY. 6 _ MY CLIENT IS A SCHOOLTEACH- 3- BEOROOM, GARAGE. BASEMENT - Ottawa Hills, Pontiac. 549-8367. 4- ROOM MODERN HOUSE AND GA-rage. Couple only. No pets. I Cass Lake Road. We I '0 CLARKSTON area - NEW 3 BED- experiencep painting and fixtures Installed. Morn. 338-3520. - WE 3-4 'BUD'' ,dr'i^''*JSito| G-l- OR FHA NO MONEY DOWN IV room with — This 2-story Ranch or tri-level shell on your 101 > in exterior complete. basemeiiL^'gas FLATTLEY REALTY ™«I, icr«.ea rear lawn. Gl lust 620 Commerce Rd. Call 363.6981 dIlwn'^Blufcto,ln1?7S;./^15.l‘'"*‘' P'O'^EER HIGHLAHDS, 3~BE5. ^own^pl. toslngco^^ ^c^gaeage. Wardan Roalty pssr see t^s^brand new ............ Pontiac.. .,333-71571 no .ml* •'•ee- Call OR 3-8021 weekdays 2 to 6 pm A quality Ross Hom<»._____' lU 335-1190 4-BEDROOM, BRICK __ C^TT dose to schools, bus at door to _L J J l lK. 7 '?'tm"i'IS;W. WILSON 2 up, 1/2. ii.room home with 7 room, gas ,.T. taths hardwiod t i car ga- 1 ment, fenced yard. No r 11,500 DOWN . STRUBLE MOBILE HOME M put you In WE 3-4200, 356-9121, 353-2898______ FREE RENTA acr'with on* bSwm* down!j *6,9M, $80 per month. i :-tt®anTho/“waleF'l8W FISHER BODY . . . 5-room| ?VeJJ.'* PHced°af sTern'e"^ M^ch^awntoi^ w®a*ter I home tor BANK i MINOR REPAIRS. NEED CASH? loving out of state? Need ca; settle debts? Need cash to NICHOLIE-HUDSON t building an equity for tt sr home later on. This 2-be n with basement and garar to MIXED AREA, 5 ROOMS, NO CHIL- BLOOD DONORS urgently needed RH Positive ATNTING, wall WASHING, ......... day washing, free estimates. OR . 3.6^2: Ask tor — vS, liifScia.™ ~ J ty? We will buy your home for occupancy. 2 bedroom-F?*!'. *o?»X..r..C»H Nick, Backa-I 3 ). required 332-1706. 49 Ml. Clemens St. FE 5-1201, Iter 6 p.m. FE 2-3370 r, Detroit 3 hri. A-neg., B-neg„ AB-neg. Rey O'Nell Realty, Inc. 3520 Pontiac Lake Road OR 4-2222 or FE 5-4684 PROPERTY WANTED E 3-4200, 356-9121, 353-2898_ w6sT side - 6-ROOM BRICK, gas heat, garage, basement. $150 mo. 673-6339. Near General Hosp. _ I Rent Rooms 42 I- CLARK WTER FE 84025 costs. ACT NOWI MILO STRUBLE FE 2-6936 n Highland (M59) jWEST SUB - See tl WEST SUBURBAN. WATERFORD 1 LARGE ROOM FOR 2 MEN CAPABLE Wlb£ 5-day week b8 1 City bus trans DOUBLE ROOM ' beds, T slnoie. dean 14 Poplar. LAKE ESTATES. -Comfortable 'oor 2-bedroom brick ranch home,! ardwood floors, plastered walls, INORTH^ 2 fireplaces, full bt IrIve. ®$Y6m‘’lond ( SOMETHING NICE ; On Airport Rood, a sharp 3-bed-room home with a full basement, '■ ou *STmliy m ttirough- 1 c..„ avallabla CYTOTECHNOLOGIST S QUICK CASH FOR YOUR HOME,!_________________________________ Equity^ or, Land ContracJ^ Call |' ^RpOM.^FOR ^ GENTLE ' tached garage, nice lo Terms. i .■o.juu. i.,m 1,500 DOWN $15,000 RENT BEAT- WE BUILD - 0 s^perv^se^^growing ^d - SMALL FARM OR WOODS WITH^TTR^CTIVE ROOM, DAY WORK-’ -"d or small lake for hunt club I -C' Some privileges, near Fisher. te BIN Jennings, 37411 Grand No drinkers. 335-3874. _ er, Farmington or call 476-5900. CLEAN SLEEPING ROOM “FOR t 2-bedroom 1 Wisner' YORK basement, gas heit. To see the ^E BUY model call B. C. HIITER, REAL- °R 4-0363 TOR, 3792 Elli. Lake Rd. FE _.lI!3_Di|de HwY^^^ 2-0179, after 8 p.m, 682 ' CLARK REAL ESTATE R OTHER. FOR QuICK ACTION! FOR~ GENERAL MANAGER, HANOyI ^ONE IN m\ HOME, man for large apartment building. ...i-ocatec Hiiier Rd. area. 6»2-l87l^ _ ---- ■ Credit Advisors ___LARGE SLEEPING ROOM f. Pontiac Press Box 32. Orlol. Rd. FE QARKSTQN ’ -SOTirTbrick HALL SOUTH SIDE Completely redecorated ^bedroom k,—Features warm gas heat e kitchen and dining area, ■ ms and screens, , large utility CARETAKER TO q| PART TIME-FULL T E WATKINS , Quality Products, 163 Oakland Ave, il RAWLEIGH BUSINESS AVAIL-able in DIST. IN PONTIAC. Ex- 1 perience unnecessary. Above average earnings. Write Rawleigh Dept. MCC-690-240, Freeport, III. or SE"" OR WRITE GERALD ROSE, 6 FOURTH, PONTIAC, ^ WAfERFORD DRIVE-IN THEATRE S <-7*IALLI ROOM FOR WORKING PROFESSIONAL ^ th 1'/2 baths, garagi _________ a of an acre of lam sy to buy on FHA. Terms Aval ie through York. SLEEPING ROOM. DAY WORKER. YORK attached garage, Wi L--------- family size kitchen, 12x19 family room with fireplace on i— floor. This home Is 2 years Ohiy $25,500, terms to suit. Call lungalow.^Features alum, awnings, s' room™ B^argain priced ,at''only"$i Val-U-Way 345 Oakland FE 4-3531 ir FE 8- SLEEPING ROOM, ADULTS ONLY. < WE TRADE OR 4-036: Drayton Plain; SAGAMORE MOTEL, SINGLE OC-- pancy, $35 per week. ' !, TV, telephone. 789 ; SLEEPING ROOMS, FOR MEN, 1 Rooms With Boord Crestbrook MODEL OPEN daily 1-6 ----.1, family roorr 'age priced at only .... ........ ......1 pay back your Investment. The potential h— unlimited. The vacant land _________ be worth the asking prica of only $37,500, terms available. Call tor more information. This will not THESEUS AND 4 BEDROOM Colonials. Trl-Leveli Quad-Levels-Bi-Levels. Duplication prices from $24,900. 90 per cent financing available. Lakeland Hwy, Just pt ■ ■■ On Dixie A BEAUTIFUL ROOMS. EXCELLENT 'i meals. Lunches packed. FE 5-7959. nVATiVt 'lovely HOME NEAR TEL-Hl’ ot. Located Ir itreets, curb, ind city wal 0 Crescent L gutter, sidewalks , Drive out M59 e Road turn right: 3-8021 or FE 4-0591. Telegraph. OR ted living room, and bedro parate dining room, IVii b II basement, 1-car garage, 1 . SPECIAL OF THE WEEK tached garage, F*amily*slYl#*k Lotus Lake Privileges, wil Id to qualified Gl with no m AND BOARD, GIROUX id meals. 335-1679. RETURNS. REAS. RATES. EXP. KEYS - NACKERMAN. ‘■^me or ours. $4 up. FI FE 2-3171.__________ ^r60M BASEMENT APARTMENT ^ you to 01 Short Fo Air ^lad EnginM & Parts BRIGGS STRATTON - TECUMSEH Kflyr _ Wisconsin ^ " Lawn Boy . kingYros. Cement Work BASEMENT FLOORS, DRIVEWAYS, , ■ Bldg. Items Painting ond Decorating inn's Tax Service, I Rd., next to F Cement and Block Wark Guinn's Construction Co. Eves. FE 5-9122 PAINTING AND DECORATING 25 years exp '--* “■ * — EXCELLENT ' Moving and Trucking DIAMOND M Ken'tompklns*'°'^*°* Pointing and Decoroting 23 Ores^jnng^ailo^ng M.q..vy, vvv ,e. Saginaw.__________^ BEDROOM WITH LAKE PftlV-lleges. $35 week. $75 deposit. Also 3 room apt. Inquire at 208 Rent Office Space k floors, plastered v HOWELL Town & Country, Inc. Hinhiand Branch Office PHONE: 313-685-1585 YORK HAYDEN 7E BUY * WB TRADE IR 4-0363 OR 4-0363 4713 Dixie Hwy., Drayton Plains IDEAL LOCATION 2 ROOMS_ and BATH, $25 ca,ir'33B- week, $75 deposit, < jm suites, for April ----------- ', carpeted, panelled, alr-con--sd and ample perking. lKdD'S of PONTIAC FE 5-929V ROOMS AND BATH, NO CHIL- ?^£EJ^7,____ Arci^cturnl Ornwing ALTERATIONS ALL TYPES, KNI t dresses, leather coats OR 3-7193. Driver's School Piano Tuning Rent Bu^ness Property 47-A COMMER^L STORES, 1300 SQ. ft. each to\lease. 3444 Highland Rd., near Elizabeth Lk. Rd. 743-5210, Flint, \ 5,000 sq’uare ftT TOM REAGAN REAL ESTATE I. Opdyke______ - 2 car garage, alum, sic $15,200 plus lot. 3 bedroom brick trl-level, IW bi ' car garage, loads of closet SHIP-SHAPE this 2-, could ba 3-bedroom inch, near Waterford High, has !en newly decoratM and fairly larkles, basementless, ^easy-clean all MY 2-2821 or F I LEVEL. Beautiful t jom home. Family ro lent. Garage. $18,500 90'x125' site. On paved r._.. to shopping and all schools, n — $64.16 mo. storage. $17,75L TRADES ACCEPTED J. C. HAYDEN Realtor 363-6604 10735 Highland Rd. ( $11,500 - SI_________ plus taxes and insurance — ten trade yours on. HAGSTROM REAL- 0 W. HURON, OR EVES. 6820635. Gaylords' Inc. RAINTING AND PA Orvel Gidcumb, ( ______Ai^olt Paving > DRIVEWAY SPECIALISTS. FREE Plastering Service A-l PLASTERING r^T? W*'j 16,800 Sq. Ft. \ Downtown Pontiac\ j;: 3 ROOMS, MAIN FLOOR, PRIVATE Auto Repair JIM AND RUSS , Auto Repair Automatic Transmisili Specialist Any 6-cyl. angina . . . 1 8H:yl. rebunt... $26 Eov6stroughing M8.S GUTTER do, COMPLETE eavestroughing serVice tree esfl-mates. 673-6866^__\ : Wanted Children to Board 28 T RELIABLE LICENSED day, Fourly------- " Rentol Equipment Wanted Household Goods 29 WALLPAPER STEAMERS RUG CLEANER-POWER SAWS 952 Joslyn FE 4-6105 , PIECE OR HOUSEFUL; PIANOS. 1. C. LIppard. FE 5-7932, Fencing . Pontiac, 682-1 ) little f. lustments. Fluid a 126 Main St. Floor Sanding L. BILLS SR., NEW AND „ .......-^j-shinglIng, --------------- R. Price. FE 4-1024?\ I R P QUALffY ROOFING. NEWAND RE-5089 Dixie jr buy it. I AUCTION Bonded _____________ ___ . Reasonable. 682-7514.\, SPECIALIZE IN HOT TAR R^i preferred. 673-8I156. ROOMS AND BATH, MODERN, r.-gu- ROOMS AND BATH, . Inquire 273 Bald- ROOMS AND BATH. 55 WIL-llams. Nq drinking; dep. FE 4-6433. BEDROOM, PRIVATE BATH, TlV-dining, kitchenette. FE 5-9BSI. 1 ROOMS, PRIVATE I SiODERN 1-BEDROOM, UTILITIES - Adults. 10003 Dixie, 625-2546. MODERN bath, la -block sh adults. ROOM, CERAMIC oom,^ no pets, 1 Madison Court,: EAST SIDE larp 3-bedroom home located ne Murphy Park. Gas heat, tile bal Loads of cupboard space, alui HERRINGTON HILLS, BY OWNER. — 3-bedroom brick garage, paneled TUCKER V FE 4- non.Tmeitj^^^^^ Oakland FE 4-3531 INCOME 60 FEET of OAKLAND COI MERCIAL — 2-FAMILY — $1 PER MONTH INCOME - YC PAY ONLY SlOO PER MONTH WILL PAY FOR ITSELF AN., LEAVE SOME MONEY OVER FOR YOU TO BANK. DOWN F' MENT ON LAND CONTRACT. WRIGHT REALTY CO. B2 Oakland Ave. FE 2 tract. Asking $6,500 f - $650 down at S65 pe Bedroom, bath, kitche ST. JOE AREA — Attractive Tto-story home, full basement, auto, heat, VACANT, Immediate pos- imw VACANT -- 3^ badroonw — ^on medlata possession. Only $400 ry„ 674-3997 after 5 Sale Houses 3-BEDROOM RANCH, CARPETED, FHA HOMES Deal direct with maaagemer Droker, 0 down to vets. J DAN EDMONDS, MALTOR = HA PROPERTY MANAGEMENT 6244811 PONTIAC KNOLLS — Lovely soaclous all-brick ranch, 3 bed-ns^ located at 618 Linda Vista ROOM COmI Buy L... RECREATION _________ PLETE, comes with this vacant 3-bedroom ranch, full basement, euto, heat. IMMEDIATE POSSESSION. No monay down — lo- _down.J82^372.____ 3 BEDROOMS ' 2 acres, carpeted living roo ^IRST IN VALUE I. Price. FE 2-1036. Basement Waterproofing Floor Tiling bath, laundry ............ shopjtog.^^marrled Wonted Miscellaneous 301 pimTl-^eYT^t^ND- -------- —_ utilities turn. No children c 1 CALL, THAT'S ALL! CASH FORl FE 8>3476 before 3 p.m. ____________________ antiques. forjjj»ure^^ end, ^ rag^.j GIROUX RENTING $78 Mo. ! part basement with gas e. This 2 bedroom bunga-■■ ' living room. ilth eating sapee, ______ m and 1 up, attached age. Priced for quick : ' Waterford •BEDROOM LAKEFRONT, NEEDS' $10 Deposit GEORGE IRWIN, REALTOR MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE ......- FE 3-7883 LIVE ON THE LAKE — bedrooms a... 2 bedrooms, Vk bath ui siding, finished basami Brick & Block Service BRICK, BLOCK, STONE, CEMENT work, fireplaces specialty, 335-4470 OUALltY MASONRY, BRICK V¥. -------------------fireplaces, l-year guarantee. 682-7833. Bmiding Modernization Sand-Gravel-Dirt ................ /. TRUCKING. SAND, STONE,'COPPER, BRASS; RADfATOSS 1L* a® m]Im°°9T97 'pnV'Ik — - --------L_fclk. dirt. 628-. »;;q^^generetor8, C. ^ - 2~KOmS^ AND BATH, UflUmES j ■BEDROOM, BASEMENT,' 'GA-' 338-49W, WILL ACCEPT ALL APPLICA- --1 TIONS FROM ANY WORKERS, WIDOWS OR DIVORCEES. ;arpetlng, 2 fireplaces,' !Va-car garage with 145' 6. $32,900, with 10 per SERVICE IS OUR BUSINESS WATERFORD REALTY ) Dixie Hwy. 673-1272 .. Listing Service Tree Trimming Service "DALBY & SONS" including mobile homes.! STUMP, TREE, SNOW REMOVAL _______fe 5-3005 - fireplace wood MAINTENANCE FOR PLUMBING and heating. 24 hr. service. Gas (jurners. QIaud . Days FE 5-7553 E 2-CAR GARAGES, 20'x20', $875. WE are local builders and build any size. Cement wor(c. Free estimates.! ______________________ Trucking InconiB Tox ScrvicB . light hauling and moving of kind. Reas. FE 5-7643.___! OR 3- rnished, mature lady o ».0 a mo. and de~«** ■ Cottage, 338-1315. GILFORD REALTY E TO 290 KENNETT JLAZENBY WE BUILD CUSTOM HOMES • your lot or ours. A 8. H Sale MA M50I or OR 3-0363._____________________ Wanted to Rent 32 'LE WITH PETS DESIRE I Ped’y-Bullt Garage’co. OR 3- Jonitorinl Service l light moving, fRASH hauled' furnished Needed ImmedU CARPENTRY AND REMODELING Midwest Builders. 674-2498._______ COMPLETE REMODELiNlT" Service Quality work since 1945 D M JANITORIAL SERVICE LIGHT HAULING, ^8-1760________________________________ ■___________ ;liGHT and HEAVY TRUCKING, outlyjng Pontiac. Have ref. Reply iO Norton Street. 4-H REAL ESTATE ■rooms and bath. N6"'CHrL- WATERFORD - Near Waterford' dren, no pets. Slater Apts. See ui/ih ‘).KdkWrA/xr«% ra.«,-K caretaktr, A-1 Arcadia Ct., REAL VALUE REALTY For Immediate Action Coll FE 5-3676 626-9575 MANAGER'S A! _id 2-bedroo~ " « available s FIRST IN VALUE OF FINE HOMES WESTOWN REALTY FE 8-2763 afternc I^J-7327 BUILD ilOW BEDROOMS - FULL BASEMENT! 1'i BATHS — 17' LIVING ROOM SEPARATE dining-pantry YOUNG-BILT HOMES REALLY MEANS BETTER-BUILT Russell Young, 334-3830 - EM 3- Londsenping Additions—recreation roo attic rooms — aluminum s windows — siding and tr additions, recreation rooms. A-l INTERIOR AND EXTERIOR, attic, basement, recreation room, kitchtn and bathrooms my specialty. State license^ Reas. 682-0648. Please call after 5 p.m.______ iARPENTRY, R^C ROOMS, KITCH- s. Phil Kile, 852- CARPENTRY, NEW AND REPAIR. Free estimates. 335-9981. Interior finish, kitchens, paneling. 40 years experience — ■-I COMPLETE LANDSCAPING -j' specializing in broken concrete, I retaining walls. J. H. •j^awr^Sm-M-izarpr^a ‘-?°°^.Hoysi'.<^ARAG^ rcbrs.: IGHT and heavy TRUCKING,; 33^6372 af%r 5. j Stove. Garbage dis^sal^ Adults -ont-end toading” Te** 2%603'Shore Living Quarters 33 DSr?fs'& Son^ Trucks to Rent Pickups IVj-Ton Stake Meving^nnd Storage A MOVING - 852-3999 PIANO EXPERTS Jessie. FE 4-4664, Pontiac Farm and Industrial Tractor Go. 825 S. WOODWARD e 4-0461 FE 4-1442 Open Dally Including Sunday YOUNG WORKING GIRL TRYING Water Softeners } BEDROOM, 2-CAR Wonted Real Estate 1 TO 50 HOMES, LOTS, ACREAGE PAR- utilities including etedricity. Car- 5844 Dixit Hwy. hTo^chif^-enf^no ^°^*’|0R 3-0455__-4-.., -------------------------------^ room HOUSE. RARAfiF. 9 IDTS.! p!t o located 0 ROOM hou^TITara^eTImall 1 LAKE FRONT INCOME Widow must sell her property on Elkhorn Lake which Includes 3 2-■ lly modern homes with The present monthly DELUXE UPPER 3 ROOM, CE- : full t 7 S. Holcomb, Clarkston, $110. OR > YOUR GANG TOGETHER, . Unturn. except f ditloning, baloony overlooking lake on US-10 and M-15, adulte only, no pels. 625-2451. CELS, FARMS, BUSINESS PROP-' ERTIES, AND LAND CONTRACTS WARREN STOUT, Realtqi i 150 N. Opdyke Rd. FE 5-816$ Urgently needier Immediate Salci ' OfAl CASH 48 HOURS LAND CbNTRACTS-HOMES WRIGHT .382 Oakland Ava____FE 2-9141 HAVE CLIENT lNTEREStED~IN I -—Contact ■■ Panonally. Kamp- NEWLY REDECORATED, CLEAN, - children or pets, married cou-l 651-3742 after 4. Rochester. ■I ^ I purchasing Tn “"iSfi Hurm Straat FE 4-0921 LAKE OAKLAND MANOR APTS. 3610 W. Walton Blvd. M 3-7700. BEDROOMS ROY LAZENBY, REALTOR 4626 Vy. WALTON-pR 4-0301 bedroom, rental income Is week, month, or an otter. SCHOOL'S OUT This 3-bedroom ri E ST. peted. Bedrooms have o THJtEE BEOROO^MS^^aved^road -THREE-BEDROOM RANCH-Norih Orion area. $27,500. I trading tor small farm Melson Building Co. kInNETh'^g!^ ttEMPSTEAD, RItr. FE 4-6284-185 Elizabeth Lake Rd. $450 DOWN NEW 3-BEDROOM RANCHES ILL VACANT — CIVILIAN AND Gl, $0 down, 2, 3 end 4 bedrooms. We trade. Art Daniels, NEW 4-BEDROOM COLONIAL - A 31000 Ford. 537-7500, 5! BUNNIES hopping and so st h. Basement has Monday throi batfrSj^ f after 4*^p[m/ 673-6102 and an) jon lake privileged LOT — II heat* casts'll? JS4xlW'j < NORTH END Large corner lot with sh nicely landscaped, 5-ro< ranch, built 1958. 2'/3-ca. full basement with recreation room and bar, 2 bedrooms, fireplace In living roofTT, oak floors.. Thtrnr»« pane picture windows with awnings, covered patio. Immediate dos- CLARENCE C. RIDGEWAY REALTOR 228 W. Walton 33^40e6 Multiple Listing Service HAGSTROM, Realtor i Multiple Listing Service "----- OR 4-0358 EM 3-5477 .COMMERCIAL STORE -and house In Walled L district. 36J6703. NEW FINANCING 10% DOWN Will move you Into your new "BEAUTV-RITE" home at HUNTOON SHORES 682-0435 THREE ONE (1) ^ ED ROO/ WEST SIDE, INDIAN VILLAGE. 1 k——^ ---------.—. -—peted, Frlgi- dalre appliances. _________, ______ spacious recreation room. Adults only, no pets, Mlanager, FE 2- : RANCH, ft., plus 2 Blacktop ! iHACKETT R^EALTY - 7750 COOL- basemenl. II. py ij II. pamlly room h finest oT wanlut paneling and aiaie loyer, z large oedrooms, extra large kitchen. Sunken living >y owner. OR 3-1795. GOODRICH lor a Util* elbow room? sea this 4-bedroom quaC 10 acres of rolling land, roe kitchen with bullt-lr i-l»ar, IS'KlS* heating arei laundry, 2-car garagi today — $32,900. Bank CARRIGAN QUALITY HOMES, WESTRIDGE OF WATERFORD 9 Models mTs! Shores West ... on Airport.Rd., 1’/4 i opan dally and Sunday, z lo to Our Lady of Lakai Church, open Sunday, 2 to 6. Webster IVj baths and only $18,000. Terms. C. A. WEBSTER, REALTOR 12-2291___________________628-2515 Val-U-Way NEAR BALDWIN Like new 3 bedroom ho" large 15 ft. living room, lenfly arranged kite-- nged kitchen and dining ilenty of cupboards, spa-ty room and storage NEAR MURPHY PARI^ 3 bedroom brick froi paved street. Full t finished - e 3-3165 or 629-0415. Ray O'Neil, Realtor 1520 Pontiac Lake Rd. OR 4-2222 s. Move In for 8! R. J. (DICK) VALUET REALTOR FE 4-3531 345 Oakland Ave. Open 9-7 ---- ------------- FE 4-6687 s FE 5-9766 or F D-HI THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY. MABCH 20> 1967 49|Sol« IfooMt IRWIN 'SCHRAM O'NEIL WEST SIDE FOUR BEDROOMS lirg* dining tni kWchen, sun porch. Full ment. Two-c«r gang*. Prica 113, 500. Gl tarnw. ^ ” MO. _ L BUILDING SITE w_____ ron Casa Lake, beautiful lO-xISO-, with fn ‘ ■ grape vines, shrubs i We also hava sevaral other choice 1 lots. I Ted McCullough Sr„ Realtor PHONE 682-2211 5143 Cass-EIlzabefh Road OPEN DAILY 9-9 ___ Frushour HURRY ... TO THE PHONE - call US on this sharp 3.bedroom ranch, located In the Northern Hw School area with many features you ere sure to enloy. it can be yours without obtaining new mortgage, with only S2700 down, I8f par mo., you can take over the existing mortgage. Hurry It won't last Tong at $12,900. Why not tra« In your 2 bedrooms or more? SMALL ORCHARD Eves. EM 3»9937 or EM 3-7546 with pleas-u.. — ima > mat acreage that you have been looking epproxlmafely, 2I» true trees to make your Investment truly profitable. There Is a fruit stand with water, electric and walk-ln cooler alao a lovely brick ranch home with a fireplace ISyS* wn?i?S!!LM wttK watorMd electric, other outbuildings and ideally located on a SieoKtop road. 139,900. JACK FRUSHOUR, Realtor mo Wllllenu Lake Rd. ML 674-2245 TED'S McCullough realty MO Highland Rd. (M99) MLS ALL THE ACTION LINE S7e.2239 DORRIS custom built brick renc %ie™rwaterlord IF YOU'RE rich DON'T READ THIS ADI Because you would not be Interested In the large beautifully landscaped and Ins and separata riWng’ snchar. Lots of extras I PONTIAC, CLARKSTON, WOLVER-, outside balcony from ine Lake areas. Lots $»5, $10 — _ wlth^ thermopma_ ‘ ' ... ■■— ”"■■■ Moch" BroLTMTim^'pE' 4-V?09'!'° sprinkling system. -ancher with m___________________ ras'-‘plus 2-car garage. Excellent at $29,900 and ------- ‘— MODEL HOMES lAL, TRI-LE.. Lake Oakland -------- lacktof ________ attached -ga-ra-ge:- ' ' - , CLARKSTON STARTER HOME ------- Sharp as a tack describes this •*""•' w dapper little ! this DEMAND baths,--tol|- ba«!SlTt' W stool and sliding glass " ‘ Anchor fenced backyai TbWNSEND LAKE .Si$lock & Kent, Inc. <30$ Pontiac State Bank Bldg. t-9294___________________33*9295 GRAYLING AREA :ent down — 1 per o P.O. Box <91, K. _____________ dy covered back porch chor fenced backyard. $11 'OUR BEDROOMS. Popt side location, family homa /'’’iTRADE ,—. . nent OPEth. SAT. B SUN. 1 oom| daily by appointment. ,950, FHA le supret... ______________ _____ jnd 3 bedrooms up. Brand new cerpetir-In spacious living room arid dli ng room. Beautifully modernln kitchen and Bato, full basemen., gas heat and gafage. $a900, FHA ter— DORRIS 5. SON, REALTORS SERVICE ' new home ror you. charge) call for mora tails. BATEMAN REALTOR-MLS FE 8-7161 327 S. Telegraph Rd. UNION LAKE ROCHESTER EM 34171 OL1-8518 Rd. 730 Riiort Pro|wrty - 5! CLARKSTON, PONTIAC ARE, 100' X W lots $2495, $25 me Boat, fish, swim Near 1-75 e> prassway. Open Sundays. Bloc Bros. <23-1333, FE 4-4509,_ Lo^Acreoge 5-50 ACRES, frontage. Fowl /brewer real estate 724 Riker Bldg. fe BSiai <9 ACRES, HOUSE AND BARN. •----- County — lust off paved ----- Jnly $<,900. Cash. Frontier Real Estate Co. 330 Pine, Lapeer, Michigan. Phone <44-4791.________ KITCHEN TO LEASE - PONTIAC Lake Inn — no phone calls. M59 on Pontiac ' * Standlsh. 5-bedroom I reas. 335-9073. HORSE FARM 50 ACRES ■- " 5 miles , n 12 stall hto nan mile of track. 9 . Modern 2-bedroom I with Pines, m and garage. $<0,000. Terms, C. PANGUS INC., REALTY OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK <30 M-15 Ortlon' CALL COLLECT NA 7-2015 SbIb Bmlwwi ffyrty 57 200 FT. FRONTAGE ON WALTON Blvd., 300 ft. deep.--------- zoned commercial,_____,. .. ... der block bpIWIng. Prica Is only $34,000 with financing Call Mr. Moss at O'Nel Inc. for particular 343-4049. I Realty, Across From Mall 202 It. frontage on Elizabeth Lp Road, plus frontage on 2 oth streets. Total land area 53,335 i removed.WIII divide. Terms. ArmBtt Inc., Realtors - J. Huron St. 330044 Office Open Evenings I, Sundays 1- PARTRIDGE "IS THE BIRD TO SEE" GROCERY With SDM bwr 0 wine Carryout. Located ih Trey, Area starting to develop big. Price Includes Real Estate. $25,000 plus Inventory In Brighton. You will delight In owning this little gold mine. Machines net you $175 a month and this busy tavern Is yours tor $10r 000 down. PARTRIDGE REAL ESTATE 1050 W. Huron, FE 4-3501 OPEN NITELY 'TIL 9:00 SEND FOR FREE CATALOG PARTRIDGE "IS THE BIRD TO SEE" TRADE Beautiful 100 acral right In the path of progress. Bound to be subdivided before long. Excellent opportunity tor capital gains Investment. Will trade tor Oakland Coun- Rolllng, wooded, fast flowing stream. Lots of county road frontage. Just minutes north of Clarks-ton. Only <15,000 down. _ PARTRIDGE REAL ESTATE 1050 W. HURON, FE 4-3511 OPEN NITELY 'TIL 9:00 SEND FOR FREE CATALOG Sole Houiehold Goodi EXPECT TO PAY 3 ROOMS FURNITURE Brand new 1967 styles NICE RANGE-REFRIGERATOR $367 52.50 PER WEEK LITTLE JOE'S Bargain House Baldwin at Walton, FE 29M2 >f Free Parking Sat. *HI 4 EZ Tarms EY STYLE SOFA, 1 BASSINETTE, 2 MONWS 6l6, :E 1-0904 IT Mr. Adai retrigerafor, 540; stove couch, 525; desk, $15; dinette, 525; piano; t C. Lippard, 55t N “■ 3 Rooms Furniture BRAND NEW ' $288 $2.50 Weekly PEARSON'S FURNITURE 210 E. Pika FE 4-7511 --------------- 4-PIECE BEOI SINGER ZIG ZAGGER cabinet, makes blind hems, tonholes, etc. No extras buy. Pay account balance U.20 or 537.42 total cash pric Call CERTIFIED SEWING / SINGER ZIG ZA6 Sawing machine. M*"'' automatic "Dial I RUAAMAGE SALE - 294 BALDWIN -.m.-5 p.m. FE 4-5842. - RENf-pf “ ate. Rapossad. Pay off $53 CASH or PAYMENTS OF $6 PER MO. Guarantaad UNIVERSAL CO. FE 4-0905 SAVE MONEY Hava your old furnituro raupholstared. Hundreds oi end eolera. Free est. Ft _______«”$^« RICHMAN CENTER,___________ UPRIGHT PIANO, $75. WILL DB-...— -efrlgeretor, 595. Drop-ltd 5. QR 3-07'“ ■ bVd^! UPRIGHT FREEZER, PAID---------- Will sacrifice, 5275. Exc. cond. FE 5-0992. USED REFRIGERATOR Coter TVs Sweet's Radio end Appiier 32 W. Huren , WYMAN'S USED BARGAIN STORE At bur II W, Pike Store Only STOCK reduction SALE 9 per cent oH on. all fumitu SELLING OUT -'is these good buys. Fur-tfrigerator $25, clothing 1, dishes, ate. Stop, leak. $ Resale Shop, 1350 BaM- If-yourself tools. Jackson Equlp- snowblede. 335- SPRED-SATIN PAINTS. WARWICK Supply. 2471 Orchard Uke. 4» EASON'S CLiARANCi rt»" ptftld* b(“"« «« "xIkW* partici* t WANTED TO BUY Ltadtd glass lamps or glass lamp shadei, FE 4-Wl, Know Hand ^oi^MacMnery 68 W' VAN TRAILERS, CAN BE USED on tht rood or ideal for ‘ |lvd. Supply 333‘7ni 500 LORRAINB CRANE FOR SALE, ON BRAND NEW - ON YOUR TRUCK campmatesi and 2 maddni truck campars. ScH contain in' and marine tollat. ALSO - We carry Franklin, Cree, Fan and Monitor travel trailers, at sale prices, some trill be heated Sat, and Sun.-thru February. LY TRAVEL COACH INC. Rd, Holly, IPpSp^KC%p»3s^'’kBrvlca ' .*et SuPPIIe»-«l2.«aoi or 4224lt2T POODLE CLIPPING. BY AFPOINT- POODLE CLIPPING AND SHAM-_ poo, very reas., by appt. FE 5-4W5. registered TOY FOX TERRIER REGISTERED TOY FOX TERRIER pups, S35. FE 5.yyw. Musical Goods 71 -I ; AT GALLAGHER'S ST. PATRICK DAY SALE Buy your piano or ogran — now saving up to Free lessons. 5:30 p. 1710 So, Telegraph FE 4 SILVER POODLE STUD SERVICE, miniature. MA 4-2M3._________________ tiny toy poodle puppies, “'•’'•es and: slivers, 7 weeks, let _______ $45. 574-2125. WHITE SPAYED CAT. $10. OR 4-0642 after 4 A CONSOLE PIANO $399 GALLAGHER'S 1710 So. Telegraph FE 4-05M Open Eves., 'til ♦ p.m. — Sat., 5:30 p.m. tARITONE UKES. $21 AND $25. All Mahogany. STORY & CLARK ORGANS MORRIS^MUSIC 14 S. Telegraph Rd.^ ___ FE 2-0557 Cherry leslie organ speak- er, model 251. Call bet. 3 p.m. 674-1947, alt. 3 p.m. 335-0187. fi^ amplifier with tremolo, exc. condition. FE 2-4995. aULBRANStN AAAHOGANT^ON- OR 3-7394. il price $550 .V icritice. HAMMOND^SPmEl^^ $av'e-$ave-$ave BETTERLY MUSIC CO. Ml 6-8002 WHITE STANDARD POODLE, $50. I DOUBLE AUCTION Wed., March 22, 7 p.m. Assets of University Bldrs. sr University Motors, e have been chosen to dispose of by auction, the fine a-*-of these 2 above firms. ainti office equipment; gun scope; testers; pumps; new and motor; hand tools; air 8f TIZZY By Kate Osann Pre-Spring Sola 1 only dirxir PartcwooiC $4995. t COMPLETE LINE OF " “I 5 DECORS. WE “. DEAAOS AT ‘ SEE C BOOTH TRUCK COVERS Mi JOHNSON'S 517 E. Walton 5 44H10____________FE 4-5853 CENTURY YELLOWSTONE WHEEL CAMPER 12' WIDE HAVE 4 ______ ___________ GIANT SAVINGS. WE WILL NOT BE KNOWINGLY UN^--------- FREE DELIVERY Ut MILES. FREE SETl AVAILABLE PARKING. PAEKWOCip —^ 1966 MODELS, ONLY 3 LEFT HW MALLARD, sleeps 5 19' SAGE, Sleeps 8 21' CENTURY STACHLER TRAILER Hwy. OR 3-1454 HOWLAND SALES AND RENTALS, "’-'-.up campers and covers. Reese PICKUP TRUCK CAMPERS Over 30 Different models On display at all timet BILL COLLER Camping Supplies On M-21, Lapeer, Mich. Tiret-Aute-Tratk TIRES. 4 PLY 7: ENGINE OVERHAULS, 4 CYCLIN' der, $95; 8-cyllnder, $135. Guaranteed—terms. John Hicks Sunoco, Troy, 489-9892.________________ THIS WEEK SPECIAL, CUSTOM paint lob, $85. Free pickup and delivery service, satisfaction guaranteed. Excel Paint and Bump, Ortonville. 334-2529. __________ Motorcycin 9S BSA 650 SCRAMBLERe WORK ne’r?farf;l’i: 3091 W. Huron 9rs; floor polishers; j blower; sinks; furn„^^, windows; automotive furnace; doors 10'6" cabcover T& R CAMF-...... 80 Auburn Rd.___________852-3334 PIONEER CAMPER SALES 1955 HONDA 150 CC, EXCELLENT condition, crash helmet i ' goggles, $325. 482-7328 after BARTH TRAILERS! & CAMPERS TRAVEL QUEEN CAMPERS MERIT FIBERGLASS COVERS (8"-27"-35" covers) ALSO OVERLAND 8. COLEMAN 1945 HONDA 90, LIKE NEW, L mileage. $215. FE 2-5941 1954 HONDA 140 C SPORTCRAFT WELDED TUBULAR FRAME PICKUP SLEEPERS AND COVERS I to attend this fine auction,! AUCTIONLAND I Upright ^nos priced to sell. Smith Moving Co. 10 S. Jessie. FE 4-4844. Dsed chord organs, 2 man-1 ---------------------.... ual, oil walnut with tench, OIOJeveRY FRIDAY . 7:30 P./ month. Smiley Bros., Music Co. EVERY SATURDAY ... 7:30 P.l 119 No. Spglnaw, FE 44721. ^ jEVERY SUNDAY . 2:00 P.l "USED PIANOS AND ORGANS j ,°rF’v7rv'^ll,,Ty,"o" Uprights from $49.00; Grands from $149.00; Organs from $249. Grinnell's Downtown 27 S. Saginaw Homo of^he Pontiac^Hammond TRAVEL TRAILERS YOUR DEALER FOR Laytor. Corsnir Robin Hood 20 NEW AND USED TRAILERS IN STOCK NEW SERVICE DEPT. Ellsworth Trailer Soles r-day‘«77 cixla Hwy. 625-4< INSTRUMENTS JACK HAGAN MUSIC 449 Elizabeth Lake Rd. 332-0500 1192 Cooley Lake JRd^__?‘3:55M:2 LARGE BLACK WALNUT, SATURDAY MARCH 25-10 A.M McaimgJjBrm and Homa Boat, house-trailer, relics" Stan Perkins, Auctioneer 313-435-9400 - Swarti Creek WOLVERINE truck ^ CAMPERS telescoping, bumpers, I a d i racks. Lowry Camper Sales S. Hospital Rd., Union Laki Plants-Trees-Shrubs 81-A Sporting Good* 1 EACH - 357 MAG " high celling for h EVAN'S EQUIPMENT 4507 Dixie Hwy. 525- BUY _ SELL - TRADE IV Guns-720 ....... ' l-YEAR-OLD PINTO GELDING. ~ •• broke. 525-5358, or 573-8542. ARABIAN, WELSH, POA STUD service. KenLo. 427-3792, eve: " 4-7551 6uns, 8 NEW CLASSES ................... In March lor lessons. Nursery ._ duties — Klentner Riding Acad-emy — EM 3-0009. SMALL PALAMINO HORSE AND western saddle, $175. Pinto pony, $50. Call alter 4 p.m. 525-2555. WANTED GENTLE RIDING HORSE BOWS AND ARROWS—3344349' GENE'S ARCHERY-714 W. HURON GET A JIGER. ONE OF THE BEST deals. Dbmo or new. On hand, no waiting. 5|i-5440. After 4^ 592-2787. SELL, TRADE. BURR-eii, S. Telegraph.________ Ski-Doo Polaris Sno-Troveler •s low as $595 LARGE SELECTION OP GUNS AND EQUIPMENT Young Corn Fed Beef VifOr whole. State Inspected. *451^ Hay—Grain—Feed 84 2000 BALES ALFALFA BROME. Good quality no rain. 40 cents and 45 cents, 797-4446 6 ml. N. of Ox-' * mi. W. 3645 Brc ' ' ' )OD HORSE I _ deliver. 627-3221 . WILL DELIVER, I ke Rd. FE 4-0358. HOUR C ■ Service, lumping >lications being taken at )alle St. Hr*. 9-5. ) & J MOBILE HOME SERVICE IUYFA^K pen T n> V — / oay$ a Weak MIDLAND TRAILER SALES 338-0772 : SCRAMBLER, AUTHORIZED DEALER NORTON 750CC Atlas NORTON 750CC Scrambler MATCHLESS SOOcc single DUCATI 5-speed Scrambler DUCATI 350CC Sabring MOTO GUKl I2SCC Scrambler MOTO GUZZI International 4-day trials Over 200 cycles on display Low down payment — easy terms. ANDERSON SALES 8, SERVICE 1445 5. Telegraph — I — Accessories 97 USED BOATS 18' Badger. 120 h.p. Mercrulser. 14 camper top. G^Hey, V-bu^nks,^tan- Complete .....$3,595 LAKE AND SEA MARINA MANY OTHERS oodward at South Blvd. FE 4-9587 BSA MOTORCYCLES 1947 LIghtenIng's, Hornet's, Spit tire Mark Ill's, Victors and nev Slarlire 250's. terms — Immediate dellve^. • service Honda—Triumph—2-cycle CLOSE-OUT SALE UP TO 50 PER CENT OFF « 1944 Yamahas. 250 Big Bears; MILES. $270. HOT HONDASI I Scramblers', Super Hawk's, Super 90's, 160's; 50's and SUZUKI CYCLES, 50CC-250CC. RUPP Mlnibikes as low as $139.95. T ' M59 to W. Highland. Right Hickory Ridge Rd. to Demode Left and follow signs to DAWSON'S SALES AT TIPSICO LAKE. Phone MAIn 9-2179. TRIUMPH TIGERS I! Bonneville's, TR-4's, Daytona ^mp 500's, and Tiger Cubs, Fee- then get tory trained mechanics. “She’s not home . . . thank goodness!’’ Haw andjliod Cars 194S BUICK LASABRB 2 GMC TRUCKS and Campers Keego Soles and Service 1942 CADILLAC 2-OOOR HARDTOP, $1095 at MIKE SAVOIE Birmingham, Ml 4- JEEPS GALORE New and Used Authorized Dealer '44 Jeep, 4-wheel drive, full metal cab, hydraulic snow blade. Reasonable. '47 Jeep, denoo., V$ cab, heavy-duty all. the way. Snow blade, full price, $2,388. '64 Jeep pickup, A-1, $1,795. Complete parts. Service and Equlp----* Give US a fry before you buy. Grimaldi Cor Co. SPECIAL $1875 FULL PRICE New 1967 Jeep Universal ROSE RAMBLER-JEEP Wreckers Heavy Duty One Ton New and Used Trucks 103 19M^FORD PICKUP, 52,000 ACTUAL Kessier-Hahn Chryslar-Plymouth - Clarkston - MA 5-2435 Auto Insurance Marina 104 QUALITY AUTOMOBILE RISK INSURANCE AND LOW COST AUTO INS. Budget Payments BRUMMETT AGENCY racle Mile________FE 4-0589 1959 CHEVROLET STEP — ■•■“E SAVOIE CHEVROLET, lham. Ml 4-2735__________ PRIVATE GROUND SCHOOL CLASS starting March 28. ADI Inc. Pontiac Airport. Wa feel we can offer you the best tralnliig and facilities. Sign up howl OR l-l>441. Wnnt^ Cnrs-Trucks^__ Alobomo Buyer Gel "A BETTER DEAL" at: John McAuliffe Ford 430 Oakland Ave. FE 5-4 DOWNEY Oldsmobile Used Cars TOP DOLLAR FOR CLEAN USED CARS 3400 Elizabeth Lake Rood 334-5967 338-0331 EXTRA EXTRA Dollors Po d FOR THAT EXTRA Shorp Cor Boots —JLccessories A.F.G. 40 HORSE POW Averill AUTO SALES 10'X45' 2-BEDROOM, MUST SI $1450. 338-8450. ,________ 10X50 1943 DETROITER, $700 DO take over payments. 473-5930. HELP! i;6" CABIN CRUISER, 50 HORSE tiacs, 22' OWENS CABIN CRUISER, GOOD 12'X60' - IMMEDIATE POSSESION condition, $2,000. OR --------------------,"-e. 673-4232. ^ ------------ It AND 2nd CUTTING ’ Gun and Sports Center 15210 Holly Rd. Holly, ME Open Dally and Sunday: SKI DOG'S GUNS-CAMPERS CRUISE-OUT, INC. 43 Walton Dally 9-4 p.m. FE 8-4402 Sand-Grnvel-OIrt_________ 76 CINDERS OR SLAG FOR DRIVE-way or parking lots. OR 4-1454. IrYSTAL TRUCKING - SAN D, gravel, black dirt, del., 474-3347. _ L. AND A. TRUCKING, TOP SOIL, black dirt, sandstone, gravel, grad- Ing. 425-3074.________ PONTIAC LAKE BUILDERS SUP-ply. Sand, gravel,, fill dirt. OR •<-1534. _______ AUSS LEMON DUMP Tf 1 CENTS BALE, Farm Produce 86 AM LOOKING FOR A FARMER organic fruit and vegetables. No D.D.T. or any spray on It. P“ tiac Press B^ 11. _____ 87 Form Equipment FORD 8N TRACTOR. e, FE 4-4862 or FE 2-7275. Wood-Coni-Cuke-Fuei 425-5243 after 4 weekdays.'ai Sat. 8, Sun. _____ CVHITE BIRCH DELIVERED, 818~A JOHN DEERE AND NEW IDEA ts galore. Your Homellte chain dealer. DAVIS MACHINERY ^Ortonvllle._NA_7-3292^ DEERE PLOW, F-Y26, ____________MA 4>26^2. Pets—Hunting Dogs 7 10 BLACK POODLES, NO GIA micks, 823 to $5a Kan-Lo, N 7-3792. ___________ 1o“black miniature poodle ■ FE 4-1442 MALL CUB WITH POWER E - OFF-LIGHTS-HYDRAULIC. Il PAINT. PRICE ONLY $895. COME IN AND SAV KING BROS. .... I. Pontiac Rd. at Opdyke I AAASSEY-FERGUSON blowers, blades, tire chains, garden tractors. Pony carti, 'S!irso^" Lawn & Garden . 6670 Dixie Hwy^_________673-0330 Ta DACHSHUND PUPS, ; WINTER CLEARANCE USED TRACTORS, LOADERS, TRENCHERS, BLADES, PLOWS I' HOUSETRAILER HOOKED UP, ready to live In park, $1,275. 451 S. Telegraph Rd., Pontiac. Call 3»22«.____________________ 160 PEERLESS, i6''X44', EXC. CON-■■■■ 334-0061.__________ 0 REGAL, .. ..... . issume payments. 682-4530. 3~10'X50' LIBERTY MOBILE AMERICA'S FINEST SELECTION OF NEW AND A-1 USED MOBILE HOMES NOW AT TOWN & COUNTRY MOBILE HOMES . PRICE are all favor when ybu bi le Midwest's Largest M Exclusively showing a BY OWNER, AVAILABLE APRIL ’• 1946 Parkwood, 12'x52', carpet-2 bedrooms. Gas heat, partly I. on suburban Pontiac lot ~'- TRAILERS. ALSO GOOD DISCOUNTS ON NEW TRACTORS AND IMPLEMENTS. Pontiac Farm and Industrial Tractor Co. 825 S. WOODWARD ALL BREED GROOMING NOW WE ARE TWO 0 BETTER SERVE Complete Profes! Travel Trailers AKC BRITTANY PUPPIES, PER-manant shots, wormed, will hunt this fall. Also 3-yr. Brittany, chll--—'----------■ 424-1314. AkC BEAgLE BOOGEY STUD service. FE 8-3171. _____ AkC miniature POODLE PUP, Akc MINIATURE AND TOY POO-dle: POPP^B.^. illvar, black, white. BOXER, MALE, FAWN, champion stock, $100. 852-4244. AKC TOY POODLES, “BLACK BOB HUTCHINSON, INC. 4301 Dixie Hwy. (U.S. 10) Drayton Plains, Mich. OR 3-Open Dally 'til 9 p.m. Sat, and Sun. 5 p.m. Open Dally Including Sunday 1965 14' self-contained 1945 CENTURY, 24-FOOT, 1967 FROLIC TRAVEL TRAILERS, 14 TRUCK CAMPERS, O'-l Now on display Stop In and see them today. M- pet shop.......M wiLLiAMs J^'^ol’son Trailer Sales FE ^4433. Easter Brnniyj ' Williams Lake Rd. OR 3-5981 ----... ■ A 3-0542._________ Slond, cocker-brittany pup, good with children, reas. 428-1853. tOLLIE PuViis" AKC, SABLE, full white collar — shots, wormed, guaranteBd. Utica, 731-8257. Dachshund puppies, paper tralnid, MA 4-14IS. -tr -i AIRSTREAM LIGHTWEIGHT TRAVEL TRAILS'** Since 1932. Guaranteed See, them and get a _____ rion\ at Warner Tralltr Salesa ......“'J?!'--------- parts, accessories FOR ANY pickup 10 HIGHLAND RB.-PONTIAC DETROITER - KROFF wide, 2 or 3 bedrooms, as low MANSFIELD AUTO SALES $1,500. OR 3-4179. 1967 Boats on Display PONTIAC'S ONLY mercury-mercruiser dealer Cruise-Out, Inc. Dally 9-7 p.m. SI B -FE a-440a “ALL-FAMILY' BOAT SHOW PINTER'S FREE silver Line; Duo; Chrysle Johnson and Chrysler mole YOUNG'S, 4030 Dixie Hwy, OR FIBERGLASS HYDRO BOAT Wl' 14 horse Scott Atwater motor, ml. per hr., $250. Call 682-7162 a G L AS pWiTsT E U R Y-M I R R 6~: RAF t-Grumman - Kayot - Evinrude -Pamco. DAWSON'S SALES AT TIPSICO LAKE Phone 629-2179. 1965 For^ci F-lOO V2-Ton With 6 cyl. stick shift, now only- , $1395 BEATTIE "Your FORD DEALER Since 1930" On Dixie In Waterford et tl« teuble^stopllght Foreign Cars and ^carpeting dio^_tripIe^aii 338-2106 after >64 VW 9-PASSENGER Dl cellent condition, $1,295. Kessler-H'd Chrysler-PIymoutti On Dixie - Clarkston — MA 5-263S t. Fleetside. Good condition. 1 1966 VW, 7 MONTHS OLD, EXC. condition. Only $1550. Call collect. 627-3142.________________________________ >62 FORD STATION WAGON, Al tomatic, ve, radio, heater, lde< second car at $595. Kessler-Hahn Chrysler-Plymouth ih Dixie - Clarkston — MA 5-2435 Kessier-Hahn LET, Birmingham, A 96^JEEP PICKUP, DARK BLUE, Kessier-Hahn i4 CHEVROLET 4 CHEVY TRACTOR, TILT-CAB ,---- angina, ----------- *--- and 2-speed Out-State Market We have Immediate need for sha.,. cars! Now shipping to Oklahoma, California, Taxas and parts wast. Top dollar paid! Shop us last, and get tha best deal herall Gale McAnnally's AUTO SALES 1304 Baldwin FE 8-4525 Across from Pontiac Stata Bank 1964 FORD '/2-TON pickup, 1965 Chevy pickup, 1962 Ford ’/.-to all have long boxes for campers. LUCKY AUTO 1940 W. Wide Track D—9 m 106|Ntw and Um4 j^ DOOR 1945 CHEVELLE CONVERTIBLI with 4-spMd transmission, $1,495. MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET,. Blr- ull power; $11 :hevrolet. LATE MODEL CADILLACS ON HAND AT ALL TIMES lEROME 19'45 CHEVROLET STATION VIM- MIKE 'LkWIE"cHEVROLETf On M24 In Lake Orion MY 2-2411 Now Is the Time to Save On a Newer Model MATTHEWS-HARGREAVES 631 Oakland Avenue FE 44547 57 CHEVY, 4 DOOR, $150. te appraciatad. No monty LUCKY AUTO 1940 W. widt Track FE 4-1004 or FE 1-7154 1957 CHEVY 2-Door 1965 CHEVROLET BEL AIR 1 door, I cylinder, automatic, powtr steering, $1495 at MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET, ------------------- ■■ 195$ CHEVY, FLOOR SHIFT. FE 1958 CHEVY 2 DOOR HARDTOP. 8 automatic. Full prica $79.00. A4ARVEL MOTORS. 251 Oakland 105 r seat covers, top sacrilica for $475. Call 150, $350 OR 11^, EX L 4 AUSTIN-HEALEY, 3,000. After 5 VOLKSWAGEN^ RADIO, HEAT- 1963 CHEVROLET IMPALA 4-DOOR hardtop, automatic, power and ah conditioned, $1,195 at MIKE Si VOIE CHEVROLET, BirmInghar VW CENTER 60 To Choose From -All Models--All Colors-—All Reconditioned— Autobahn 1944 BISCAYNE, transmission, 4-dOu condition, $1,095. 4< 1745 S. Telegraph th-o( Miracle Mile New and Used Core BEEN BANKRUPT? NEED A Call FE 8-4080 aik fc “ BANKRUPT? CREDIT PROBLEMS? We Can Finance You- Just Call FE lurphy at 5-4101 DON'S USED CARS Small Ad—Big Lot STOP HERE LAST M&M MOTOR SALEF I JEEP UNIVERSAL, < Kessier-Hahn On Dixie — Clarkston - SPECIAL PRICES For extra clean cars VanWelt Auto Sales - OR 3- 332-2915 24 HOURS Authorized Service Center For your Heating Nteds B 6c I Mobile Home Service 963 LaSALLE FE 2-2915 available In . a erhage - light wOlght _______ ______ OXFORD TRAILER SALES . -------- ... 4 Star Park, ra erhage. Also see the tamo ht wolght Winnebago Trailer. SEE OUR SPECIAL VALUES Today. Deluxe and custom deluxe manufactured homes. Elcona, Hill-crest, Namco, Crestwood. A ' ej^^$3995 easy terms. Never WATERFORD MOBILE HOMES 4333 Highland Rtf. 473-3400 Across from Pontiac Airport We would like to buy late model GM Cars or will accept trade-downs. Stop by today. FISCHER BUICK 544 S. WOODWARD 647-5600 IVROLET ’4 TON PICK-cylinder '$1395 at MIKE CHEVROLET, Blrmlng- 1 New. $1795. RADE-FE 4-8462.-32. AA 5-5071.___________ 1963 BUICK ELECTRA 21^ automatic, radio, heater, $88 down and $49.95 per month. "It only takes a minute" to Get "A BETTER DEAL" at John McAuliffe Ford Q Oakland Ave._________FE 5-4101 I C K INVICTA, CLEAN, ipe, $545. FE 8-6488. te owner, 474-2713. 1943 BUICK LESABRE 4-DOOR /mobiles, Northland Skis, Use harrIngton^boat works "Your Evinrutft Dealer" 5. Teleoraph_______FE 2-8033 LIKE NEW 13' SEA KING BOAT 335-0503. NOW ON DISPLAY 1947 Mercury outboards and Silva Line boats. Get Ready for Spring Now KAR'S boats & MOTORS LAKE ORION, MY 3-1600 Open dally 9-5 P.M., Sun. 9-1 P.M. TERRIFIC SAVINGS ON 1M4 boats and motors. Now on display 1947 Johnson motors, boats and supplies. Tony's Marine Service. 2695 Orchard Lakt Rd. Syl- 1967 CMC i-Ton Pickup Heater, defrosters, backup lights, seat belts, 2-speed wipers, washers, padded dash and visor, traffic hazard lights, directional signals, inside rear-view mirror. $1828 including all taxes PONTIAC'S ONLY EXCLUSIVE TRUCK DEALER GMC Factory Branch Oakland at Cass FE 5-9485 1964 BUICK LeSabre 4-door hardtop, V8, automatic, power steering, brakes, radio, -- whitewalls. Only ^ $1495 Call FE 2-1215 A DEMACHER 1963 CHEVY 2-Door Ith V8, automatic, radio, hta mitawalls. Now Only — $1095 Crissman Chevrcilet (On Top of South Hill) :*i«8ter ______________OL 1- 3 CHEVV BEL AIR, V-8, 1 OWN-r, low mile*. 333-7542, RIggit $975. LI 4-4742. I CHEVROLET IMPALA SUPER Kessier-Hahn 1965 CHEVROLET feekly payments of $1 HAROLD TURNER EW 1944 CHEVY II SUPER sport, 327 with 4 ip^, only $2195. VAN CAMP CHEVY INC. Milford, MU 4-1025. 1966 CHEVROLET IMPALA 2-DOOR hardtop, power and air conditioning — $2,395 at MIKE SAVOIE CHEV-ROLET, Birmingham, Ml 4-2735. CAMP CHEVY, Mlltord. A ble, exc. condition, t 1967 Chevy Custom Sport Pickup with Via lutomatiCe power tteerlng, brakes, buckets, white-walls, 1/2-ton Fleetside. Only 1400 miles. $ave! HOMER RIGHT Motors Inc. MONZA 2 DOOR WITH )64 CORVAIR MONZA, BURGUNDY 4-speed, whitewalls, A-1 shape, $750. MY MIKE SAVOIE Birmingham's New CHEVROLET DEALER 1104 S. Woodward Ml 4-2735 1944 CHEVROLET BEL AIR 4-DOOR lUtomatlc, $1,095 at MIKE SA-E CHEVROLET, Birmingham, NEW 1964 CHEVY CAPRICE AIR conditioning, full power, full price $2495. VAN CAMP CHEVY INC. Milford, MU 4-1025 _____________________ 1964 CHEVY 4-DOOR, 4-CYLINDER, - 2-4493. 1964 OR 1965 CHEVELLE -------------- — 964 CHEVROLET IMPALA 2-DOOR hardtop, $1,395 at MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET, Birmingham, — ‘ thatching trim, $1,395. Kessier-Hahn Chryslar-Plymouth On Dixie - Clarkston - MA ^2435 " 1964 CHEVY Impala door hardtop, power steering rakes, automatic Only — $1495 HAUPT PONTIAC 944 CHEVY IMPALA . heater, whitewalls, one c to find kind!I $1395. R. ER CHEVY-OLDS, Inc. ROLET Birmingham. Ml 4-2735 1965 CORVAIR MONZA, 140 HORSE-I., 482-4477. 1965 CHEVY Impala Hardtop, 2-door, V8, automatic, ----- -.---..... _ $1795 Crissman Chevrolet (On Top of South Hill) Rochester •' 1945 CHEVY IMPALA SS HARD- Only $1,41 Id $53.41 p< Get "A BETTER DEAL" at; John McAuliffe Ford 430 Oakland Ave. FE 5-4101 Crissman Chevrolet_______________________________________ (On Top ot South HIM) '45 CORVAIR, BIGGEST ENG. $1,008 Rochester OL 1-7000 Grimaldi Cars 900 Oaklandl SHORT ON DOWN PAYMENT Drive a new or used car from Keego Pontiac Sales. Call Mr. Caly at 402-7300._______________ 960 CHRYSLER 2-DOOR, HARD-top, clean . . , $195. Seva Auto. FE 5-3278.___________________ and matching Inttrlor, $1395 BIRMINGHAM CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 840 S. woodward Ml 7-W14 1963 IMPERIAL 2-door hardtop, radio and healer, automatic, (ull powir, factory air, white with a black top and matching Interior. Only. $1395 BIRMINGHAM CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH - ------- 7-3214 KESSLER'S Transportation Specials 1941 FORD 2-door Hardtop . 1940 CHEVY Auto. ...... 1961 RAMBLER Wagon .... $297 1961 DODGE 2-door hardtop ... $397 1943 COMET Auto........ $497 1961 PONTIAC 2-door Hardtop $797 1960 FALCON Auto....... $197 1957 CHEVY 2-door Hardtop .. $147 1957 GMC Pickup........ $147 1955 CHEVY Pickup ..... $147 1961 CHEVY Impala ..... $397 1942 OLDS Convartibla . $497 BUY HERE-PAY HERE MANY MORE TO CHOOSE FROM WE HANDLE AND ARRANGE ALL FINANCING CALL MR. DAN AT FE 8-4071 Capitol Auto SWING INTO SPRING SALE 'BIRMINGHAM TRADES' 1966 BUICK SKYLARK "Top dollar paId" GLENN'S FOR "CLEAN" USED CARS 952 W. Huron St. 4-1797 luBk Cori-Trucla _ . 101-* , 2 AND 3 JUNK CARS-TRUCKS, free tow anytime. FE 2-'"" JUNK CARS AND TRUCKS, FREE Used Aiifo-Truck Ports 102 "speciALsr Convert Your Engine TO HI PERFORMANCE btet” Merc^u^® oSttea'rds*"3.9“to ., ,«LL US FOR INFORMATION Merc-Crulser authorized ALL MAKES. TERMS_______537-111 "ORD 35^390 ENGINE AND OTH-ers. 327 Chevy Bell housing, — misc. tripowers-slickt. H8,m Sales, OR 3-5200. Newj^ 103 1952 FORD UTILITY TRUCK Full price at MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET, Birmingham, 4-2735. ..........X ... SKI-DOO'S Snow i;ravaltrs Lain \ Cliff Dreyer's Gun and Sports Center 15210 Holly Rd. ME 4-67 Optn Dally and tundayi Autobahn SPRING PICKUP SPECIALS 1944 CHEVY W-lon Fleetside. Radio, custom box, axcallent condition. Only $1,195. i 164 FORD 1/i-ton, Styleslda. V8, radio, custom cab. Ilka new, $1,245. 1945 CHeVy 1/5-ton Fleetside, cus- n Fleetside. Radio, ’■T"" Autobahn Authorizad VW bealtr '/> mile north of Mirada Mila 15 $. Telegraph FE 8-45 $2288 1966 BUICK (DEMO) fSabrt convertible. Automatic, idio, healer, power steering, iwer brakes, dark green with $2488 1965 BUICK ELECTRA $2188 $3288 $1688 1965 BUICK ELECTRA "225" I Convertible. DarlV greti $2388 1965 BUICK wildcat 4-Door Hardtop, malic, radio, haatar, full Only 21,000 actual miles. 1963 BUICK SKYLARK 2-Door Hardtop. Automatic, radio, heater, powar ttaarlng, 8-cyllndar, while with black vinyl top, air conditioning. $1288 1963 BUICK Electra 4-Door. AutomitICg St. Part Special. $1288 545 S. Woodward -DOUBLE CHECK--USED CARS- D—10 Ntw wd 1^ 106 1M0 DOOM 4400R. STICK SHIFT. S-cvU ent«wMr> «nd to only S295. ; Kessler-Hahn Chrydcr-Plymouth On Dteto - asrtctlon - AAA 5-M35 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, MARCH 20, 1967 6 Nmt md Usod Cm IN Nmv aad Us«d Cm Niw and Uwd Cwri 1>«2 FORD ►PASSENGER, WAGON, WSJ T4IRD_LANDDEAU 1-OOOR VS, sutpnwric, rsdio, ................—------------ ------ ----Ino, brakos, sir conditi utic buy for only SS8 iMARMAOUKE By Anderson and Leeming New and Used Cm Get "A BETTER DEAL" at: John McAuliffe Ford ) Oakland Ave. FE 5-410’ « FORD FARILANE 4-DOOR, EX- 1959 FORD S«.M Relioble Motors ' Oakland FE M742 ’ t»S» FORD GALAXIE VS, BEAUTI-ful . ■ . $l4i. Sava Auto, FE S-3S7S. 1MI FORD 2 DOOR, S AUTOIMATIC S335 at MIKE SAVOIE CHEVRO-; LET, Blrmlnflltam. Ml 4-T735. IM1 FORD WAGON FULL PRICE of only S199. MARVEL MOTORS. 251 Oakland Ava. FE S-a079. 1962 Ford Goloxie 500 Hardtop 2 door, with VS, automatic, power ataering, real nica second car at “’'$795 BEATTIE "Your FORD DEALER Since 1930" On Dixie In Watorford at the double stopllg"' OR 3-1291 Pretty Ponies 1965 & 1966 MUSTANGS SEVERAL USED MUSTANGS TO CHOOSE FROM CONVERTIBLES HARDTOPS 2 PLUS 2's FULL EQUIPMENT Priced From $1295 ' As Low As $49 Down And $49 Per Month HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. 4M S. WOODWARD AVE, BIRMINGHAM___Ml 4-750( 1942 FORD WAGON. 3S3-5517 f wllb a^bM nvion tool I Its and the sanoGwaiby i ibeel, you can'rflnd a ' ••••• wwl < Get >‘A BETTER DEAL" at; John A(lcAuliffe Ford - - - i Aye, ' 19«2 FALCON 2-DOOR. AUTOMATIC, RADIO, HEATER, LLS. FULL I9S5 FORD GALAXIE SOS LTI - hardloo, VS, automattc, liaater, power steering, bri Htul forest green with t CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Parks at HAROLD TURNER FORD, Ml 4-7500. New tires. 33S-2152 after 7, CHEVY-OLDS, I RAD"EMACHEi?*?HE . ___ On US 10 at MIS, MA 5-5071. 1953 FORD HARDTOP, 2-DOOR, V automatic, sharpest one In tow Kessler-Hahn Chrysler-Plymouth On Dixie - Clarkston — MA 5-25: 1953 FORD GALAXY 500 2 DOOl *........... It MIKE SAVOIE V. at;- ' , 10 Qakll^ Ayj ~ 1 FE 5-4101 ' 1966 FORD lalaxto 500 hardtop. New car Warranty. Powagute^ autpmat-, Ic, radio, heater, whitewalls: Full price S199S, only S49 down and weekly payments of $14.92. HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. - 454 S. WOODWARD AVE. >5 BIRMINGHAM Ml 4-7500 ■■ 1955 MUSTANG GT HARDTOP, VS, automatic, radio, heater, decore group, spotless in and out! S1.SSS full price, $88 down, and $59.85 per month. 5-year or 50,000-mlle new-car warranty. "It only takes a minute" to Get "A BETTER DEAL" at: I; John McAuliffe Ford I FE 5-41011 1854 RAMBLER at MIKE SAt ; raNVERTIBLE, $7811 syOIE CHEVROLET,; 1954 RAS5BLER CLASSIC 4-DOOR, Kessler-Hahn Chryslar-Plymouth >n Dixie — Clarkston — MA 5.2535 955 AA^BASSADOR 4 DOOR, fully eqiupM Including factor Only $1595.00. VILLAGE R LER. 555 S. Woodward, BIr ham. Ml 5-3900. OAKLAND Chrysler - Plymouth condi DAY 1963 MERCURY r / \ Colony Park 9-Passenger. Aulo-matin. nnmmr stnering, excellent white. MON- ....$1095 1965 DODGE 2-Door Hardtop. V-8, power ------ stick shift, whitewalls, . 41545 1962 MERCURf 4-Door Sedan. V4|, automatic, r steering. Transportation ROSE RAMBLER-JEEP, 81 I, STANDARD SHIFT, 1954 FORD 2 DOOR V mmiBm mm ONE-STOP TRANSPORTATION CENTER VALU-RATED USED CARS 2-YEAR WARRANTY 1965 PONTIAC Catalina 4-Door Sedan ....$1995 Air Conditioning 1964 PONTIAC Catalina 2-Door Hardtop...$1495 Air Conditioning 1964 OLDS Visto Cruiser Wagon .........$1695 Red Finish, Matching Interior 1965 OLDS Starfire Convertible.........$2195 1964 OLDS '88' 4-Door Hardtop .........$1495 1966 OLDS Luxury Sedan ................$3295 1965 OLDS Delta '88' 4-Door Hardtop....$1995 Air Conditioning 1964 PONTIAC Grand Prix 2-Door Hardtop ...$1595 ..J4 FORD 5t. top. Rftdio. h J^ood ■ 1954 FALCON SPRINT CON-VERTIBLE. BUCK>=-r SEATS, AUTOA5ATIC, I DOWN. Assume w -....—........., automatic, >wer steering, brakes, spotless nditlon, $1,188 full price, iwn, $45.9 per month. : lie new car warranty. "It only takes a minute" to Get "A BETTER DEAL" at: John McAuliffe Ford 530 Oakland Ave._____FE 5-4101 1954 IfoRD GAI hardtop V8 auton $1,097 full price. $ LUCKY AUTO 1966 Ford LTD Hardtop 4 door, with radio, heah.., r-"-. steering, brakes, automatic, V8 390 engine, only— $2395 BEATTIE "Your FORD DEALER Since 1930" On Dixie In Waterford at the double stoplight OR 3-1291 LINCOLN CONTINENTAL, 1952, 4-"oor hardtop, full power, factory Ir, call nights or Sundays, 541-5855 0 COMET 2 DOOR WITH AU- “Don’t just stand there, folks . . . Call the police!” Nevtr and Used Can 106 Ne^md Used Cars 106 PONTIAC VENTURA. REA-sonable. D. 8, D. Motors. 573-7557, 1954 VW 2-DOOR. RADIO, HEATER, WHITEWALLS. FULL PRICE $945 ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Assume weekly payments of SS.5S. CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Parks at HAROLD TURNER FORD, Ml 4-7500. 1965 FORD Galaxle 2-Door Hardtop 352 engine. V-S, automatic. $ 565 withi® _ DELTA I light green, : ---- radio, whitewa warranty. FE 2-5070. difidn. 1952 Rambler. Transporta 1953 GRAND PRIX,- CLEAN, GOOD- We Make the Good Deals-Not Just Talk About Them! e full year of factory lefti Qnly- $1685 ...$995 1963 CHEVY ORivertible. . V-S,^ power steering, braku. R-* wlthawhnaSw. 1963 MERCURY Station Wagon, 9-Passanger. V automattc, power itaarlng i brakes, radio.' Only- Si 095 1965 PONTIAC 2-Door with a V-8, autotr...... power steering and brakes, blue Inside and outi Now Only $1995 brakes, and to Only— ^ 1962 CHEVY Corvair 4-Door with automatic, radio and whitawalls. Now Only $ 495 1963 CHEVY Impala 2-Door Hardtop. V-S, automatic, power steering * " air conditioning, AM-FM ri brasonic speakers. Fair or 450. Cail 334-1379. 1959 PLYMOUTH 9-passenger wagon. Radio, hea er, automatic, power. $275 BIRMINGHAM CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 850 S. Woodward “■ " XO^LYMOUTH WAGON 1963 PONTIAC CATALINA HARD-top, automatic, radio, heater, power steering, brakes, deep metallic burgundy finish, off-set with black "It only takes a minute" to Get "A BETTER DEAL" at: John McAuliffe Ford 530 Oakland Ave. FE 5-41 ----------AC BONNEVILLE COI vertible with .automatic transmi Sion and power, $1,195 at MIK SAVOIE CHEVROLET, BIrmin ham. Ml 4-2735- 635 S. Woodward Ave. Birmingham 647-5111 RUSS lOHNSON YOU SAVE Up to $901.26 ON THESE - 1967 DEMOS 1967 Grand Prix Coupe with an outstanding gold finish, black cordova top, whitewalls, automatic, radio, rear seat speakar, double power, tinted windshield. 1967 Bonneville 4-Door Hardtop with the signet gold fin walls, automatic, stereo tape, double po windows, power seat and vents. Air co 1967 Bonneville 1967 9-Passenger Executive Safari Wagon. Blue, black cordova lop, carpeted load area floor, power steering and brakes, luggage reck. ASK FOR RUSS OR KEN JOHNSON 1954 FALCON STATION WAGON with automatic transmission, $995 at MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET, Birmingham, Ml 4-2735. 1955 FALCON 2 DOOR, 5 CYL stick, radio, heater, whitewall' "" with red Interior ,$1095. f MACHER CHEVY-OLDS, In 10 at Ml 5, MA 5-5071. 1955 MUSTANG FASTBACK, I 1953 MERCURY MONTEREY HARDTOP, POWER, AUTOMATIC Transmission, radio, HEATER, WHITE-WALLS. FULL PRICE $895 ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Assume weekly payments of $8.55. CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Parks af HAROLD TURNER FORD, New and used cars must move fast in this dealer-| ship. That's why salespeople give you ac-| tion - and the best deal first. We don't wont to lose a sale, and we don't.' No haggling, no fuss, just lots of soles mode doing' forward manner. Can we help you today? 1955 FORD GALAXIE 500 HARI top, V8, automatic, radio, heate power steering, brakes, candy a "It only takes a minute" to Get "A BETTER DEAL" at; John McAuliffe Ford 630 Oakland Ave._______FE 5-4101 1965 FORD GALAXIE 500 2 hardtop e-cylInder, automatic, er steering, $1,495. MIKE SAV CHEVROLET, Birmingham, N 1965 COMET irdtop, 4-speed transmission, radio, heater, whitewalls. Full prici $1395 only $49 down and weekly payments of $10.92. HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. 454 S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM___Ml. 4-7501 1955 MONTCLAIR MERCURY, POW-— I—o.. gjjij steering, J*w^*l Kessler-Hahn Chrysler-Ptymoutti Ixle — Clarkston — MA 5-26: 1963 VALIANT 4-DOOR. AU-TOMATiCy RADIO HEATER, WHITEWALLS. FULL PRICE $795, ABSOLUT ELY NO DOWN. Assume weekly payments of $7.66. CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Parks at HAROLD TURNER FORD, 1. Troy, 879-0531. Prlv Kessler-Hahn Kessler-Hahn Chrysler-Plynfiouth • On Dixie — Clarkston - MA^2535 I PONTIAC TEMPEST 2-DOOR -Jith 4-spead transmission, $1,295. MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET, Blr-mingham. Ml 4-2735. 1964 BUICK WILDCAT 2-door hardtop, yllvar gray black top, full power. No peyment 724 OAKLAND AVE. FE 5-9436 THE HEART OF OUR BUSINESS IS THE SATISFACTION OF OUR CUSTOMERS I960 DODGE $ 95 "S8". Automatic, power ateKing and braktt, radia. irt Coupe, 4-speed, bucket seat; Id condition. 332-2159. 1964 PONTIAC Bonneville Brougham. Black with black vinyl top and matching in-tenor, only BOB BORST Lincoln-Mercury * 1962 T-BIRD Garage-kept conC No payment untl ASKING ONLY - 1964 FALCON May. $89 down. $1189‘ 1962 CHEVROLET yingham pous buy at K ‘ 1965 Mustang 2-Door Hardtop with VB, stick shift, radio, heatai red with white Interior ONy— $1695 BEATTIE "Your FORD DEALER Since 1930' On Dixie in Waterford at the double stoplight OR 3-1291 HAROLD TURNER NEW JN THE AREA? Kee^o Pontiac Sales. Call Mr. cfay Look at This BRAND NEW 1967 Mercury Two-Door Hardtop $2498 1967 Mercury '"$207r 1967 Cougar $2498 VERY SPECIAL BUYS Hillside Kessler-Hahn H 1954 PONTIAC CATALINA HARD-top 2-door, 3 to choose from, a" Ith equipment, take yoi Chrysler-Plymouth A BETTER DEAL" at: - Clarkston - MA 5-2535 John McAuliffc Ford 530 Oakland A 2-DOOR 43 954 PLYMOUTH CONVERTIBLE, baby blue with matching top and trim, even air conditioning, $1,295 Kessler-Hahn Chrysler-Plymouth 1954 LeMANS SPORT COUPE. ypeed, $900 FE 4-8851, after 5. 4 PONTIAC CATALINA, 4-DOOR, luto., double power, I owner, :onditln. $1200. FE 8-3738, 182-1438. ________ i4 TEMPEST LEMANS 2-DOOR Automatic. Tremen-9 down. Asking only $1189 1965 PONTIAC Convertible, power, Birmingham trade. Showroom condition. SB-down or your old car down. N payment until May. Asking only $1789 1960 CHEVY Wagon V8 automatic, tremendou 1963 PONTIAC Catalina Coupa. Automatic, i brakes. This to good value .... It sharpi Asking o $ 545; On Dixie — Clarkston - MUST SELL, V A 5-2535 i: LUCKY AUTO P0NTI4C RETAIl STORE 55 Mt. Clemens St. (AT WIDE TRACK) FE 3-7954 THE NEW AUDETTE PONTIAC , I^OW SERVING Troy -Pontlac—Birmingham Area 1850 Maple, across from Berz AIrpo 4 BONNEVILLE CONVERTIBLE. ''snve black. Sharp body. $1495. 8- . EXCELLENT 1965 PONTIAC Convertible Bonneville, with V-8, automatic, power steerln^,^ brakes. Only — HAUPT PONTIAC rakes, air conditioned. $149 isking only — $2497 SPARTAN DODGE 855 Oakland Ave. FE 8-4528 1966 MUSTANG "Fastback." Almost new. Beautiful red flnltl Automatic, power, radio, heater. A buy . 1966 IMPALA Wagon. Really loaded, power, lave a month wages on this one ................. 1966 PONTIAC Tempest Custom Wagon. V-B, automatic, powi steering and brakes. You won't believe 1300 mile 1966 BUICK Riviera Gran Sport. All power with factory a LINCOLN-MERCURY 1250 Oakland 333-7863 BIRMINGHAM Ml 4- 1965 FORD CORTINA 2-DOOR. ^ cylinder, standard transmission, radio, 30-35 MPG, and sharp. Full price, $595. ROSE RAMBLER SALES, 8145 Commerce Road, •LUCKY AUTO PONTIAC - RAMBLER On M24 - Orion - MY 3-6266 VERY REASONABLE '55 Falcon Like New 2 Door $1297 '54 Dodge Radio and Heater ----- '57 Porrtlac Wagon '54 to '58, 5 Convartlbles, Pontiac Cadillac, Plymouth $75 UP Plenty of others and tew trucks ECONO"'' ' ..... 1951 OLDS 88 2 DOOR HARDTOP, automatic power steering, brf'-radlo, heater, real good second 8495. RADEAAACHER CHE OLDS, Inc. On US 10 at MA 5-5071.____________________ 1952 OLDS SUPER 88 HOLIDAY hardtop, automatic radio, heater, power steering brakes, motor end transmission complete rebuilt and guaranteed by McAuliffe Ford -Mint condition all the way. $888 . ..--- ... . WOULD YOU BELIEVE? 40 CASH NEEDED-BANK RATES .159 Pontiac Catalina ......8199 1950 Pontiac Catalina --- 1950 Corvair coupe ... 1951 Ford V-8 2 dr. 1952 Ford V-8, 9 pasi 1951 Pontiac 9 pass. ......... 1955 Ford Pickup ...........$199 OPDYKE MOTORS 2230 Pontiac Rd. at Opdykt - FE 8- $1995 ■ BOB BORST Lincoln-Mercury 520 S. Woodward Birmingha __________545-4538_____ 955 PONTIAC CATALINA, 2-DOO $1,800. In front 4030 Dixie H« "It only takes a minute" to Get "A BETTER DEAL" at: . - _______ .... .......... John McAuliffe Ford lOMY CARS 2335 Dixie Hwy. 530 Oakland Ave. FE 5-4101 SHOP IN COMFORT IN OUR INDOOR SHOWROOM ..^3 OLDS F-es convertible b-cyllnder, automatic transmission, power steering, $1,095 at MIKE SA-V.9IE_CHEVR0LET, Birmingham, STAR AUTO SALES ... ..nance. Credit no pr All applications accepted. 1960 Pontiac ............... 1961 Comet .................. $297 1962 Falcon — 1963 Chevrolet 1962 Chevrolet i PONTIAC, BONNEVILLE, Kessler-Hahn Chrysler-Plymouth On Dixie — Clarkston - “* 65 TEMPEST, 5,700, $1950 _________MA 5-5834 60 RAMBLER WAGON ■ 'rose K, 1965 MERCURY Parklane Convertible........................ Only 17,000 actual mUas. Automatic, power ataarlng, p bucket leata. Hard to tall from a new one. 1966 PONTIAC Cotalina 9-Pass. Wagon ..................... Dark metallic green, automatic, power ataarlng, power b Really tharp. 1965 CADILLAC Coupe DeVille ............................. Special Eldorado paint, full leather Interior, lull power ditloning. Extra nice. 1964 BUICK One of Interior 1966 CADILLAC Convertible -to-flnd 9-Passanger Wagons. Light blue with custom 1964 TEMPEST GTO Hardtop ............................ Automatic, power ataarlng, power brakes, axcaptional 1964 CADILLAC Sedan DeVille.......................... Full power, air conditioned, one Bloomfield Hills o’ 1964 CADILLAC Convertible............................ A Real Sparkler. Red with white top and Interior, tires and original spare still new in the trunk. / $1995 Save $3395 $1795 $4395 $1495' $2395 $ave 1954 OLDSMOBILE DYNAMIC I il. $1300, 545.5555 after 5 1955 OLDS F-B5, A Double power, n $1,500 547-1545. LUCKY AUTO < NO ESTABLISHED CREDIT? Drive a new or used car froi Keago Pontiac Salas. Call Mr. Cli at 582-7300. Kessler-Hahn Chrysler-Plymouth - Clarkston MA 5-26 OLIVER BUICK 1966 OPEL Sport Coupe $1395 Heater and defrosters. 4-speed, whitewalls, red with red bucket seats. Now only OF BIRMINGHAM „ ^ Ask For Rich Kroll 1350 NORTH WOODWARD PHONE Ml 4-1930 1964 ELECTRA 4-Door Hardtop with power windows, power uatt, radio and whitawalls. Silver finish. ‘ $1895 1965 RIVIERA Sport Coupe with full factory equipment Including power steering end brakei, whitewalls, white with white buckets, radio. Only— $2595 1966 ELEGTRA 1966 ELECTRA Sport Coupe 4-Door Hardtop Puli factory equipmant, power steering end brakes, 6-wey power seat, dark orttn, black Bluemist with black vinyl top, matching blue Interior, full factory equipment with radio. vinyl topi . $3050 tinted glass and whitewall tires. Only— $2999 Ask for Hank Schlaefer or Vern Sheffield (Sales Mgr.) 196-210 Orchard Lake Ave. FE 2-9165 -I $AVE - $AVE - $AVE 9th BIRTHDAY SALE 4, TODAY'S cc'i on c; SPECIAL tSau^yra'aS’y toV*" ' M^iOaO i 1955 PONTIAC, Catalina 4 - Door fl' Sedan that has all the equipment for easy and economical driving, ^ save a lot today $1395 1955 FORD Cortina 4-Door. Beautiful white with rad leather bucket seats. Economy plus first class $1095 1955 CHEVROLET Impala ►Door Hardtop. 327 V-8 angina, power steering, power brakes, automatic, blue with Mack vinyl top. WOWI 81895 -I 1962 BUICK 4-Door Hardtop. Pow-^1^ er steering, power brakes, auto- '. $1095 1954 CHEVROLET Impala 9-Pas-sengar Station Wagon. Has rack on top, low mileage, 1 owner, has all the goodies, only one Ilka it $1595 1953 CORVAIR. Beautiful rad finish and most economical. Priced fo sell at only 8595 1952 PONTIAC Catalina Sedan. 35: Power brakes, power ataering, automatic transmission, 35,000 guaranteed actual miles and one - oww mi 1955 PONTIAC Bonnavllla Convertible. Low mileage, 1 owner and almost Ilka new. Wa call this one the black beauty. $2195 1955 PONTIAC, Catalina 3-door hardtop, power brakes and aleer-ing, automatic transmission. A 1954 PONTIAC Catalina Convartl-'8. ble with beautiful platinum finish M. and sparkling black top. Buy now !(l{ and save much $1595 s,l ■ 1955 PONTIAC 4-Door Sedan. It has a solid white finish. Want to save lots ol money? This to your chance $1395 1954 CHEVY Impala 5-Door. V4, power brakat and sitaring, automatic, radio, haatar. Look no further, fhli to If $1395 ssmmst 1953 BUICK Wildcat 2-Door Hardtop. Has a solid whit# finish with red leather Interior, bucket saatt, console. Let's go first claai now. ; $1495 1959 PONTIAC 5-Door Hardtop. Hera to wonderful transportation. Has power ttrakai and power ataarlng. Hera's your chance to really save $245 1951 BUICK Electro "225" 5-Door Hardtop. Full power. Let's go first clast In this llkt^ww dream-boat W9J 1954 CORVAIR Monza with auto-1 mafic transmission, radio and heater. This one li almost Ilka new Inside and out $995 1955 CORVAIR Monza, Corse Con-vartlbla. 4-spatd transmtoalon, radio and haatar. A rad and whita beauty ready to go. Priced $1385 1955 MUSTANG Hardtop. Baiutt-lul white fintoh, rad leather buckets. Only $1405 i 1953 CHEVROLET Impala 2-Door 1 Hardtop. Automatic frantmlsalon, ; V-8 angina, 39,000 actual miles and one ownar. Ilka new ., $1295 1955 PONTIAC Boniiavllla Hardtop. Factory air, blue with a vinyl top. Look No Mora .. $2995 1955 CHEVROLET Impala 2.Door Hardtop. Power brakaa and ataarlng, 327 V4 angina, automatic, new car warranty t2i9S ! 1955 PONTIAC, Catalina 2-door hardtop, power brakes and steering, automatic transmission, nice ' white finish, a company DEMO car 'I $2595 1954 BUICK Riviera. Haa a beautiful beige finish with gold laattwr bucket seats. Let's go real first class now $2095 CHEVROLET Impala 2-Ooor Hardtop. You buy and loto a Icct 890 Dick' Phillips-Tommy Thompson, Sales Mgr. PONTIAC-BUICK 651-5500 OPEN. MONDAY and THURSDAY TILL 9 P.M. 855 S. Rochester Rd., Vi Mile South of Downtown Rochester THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY. MARCH 20, 1967 D-11 -Television Programs— Pregiftimt fumithad by iitationt littad in this column ora subfact to chonga without netiea Choniwlti a-WJBK-TV, 4-WWJ-TV, 7-WXYZ-TV, 9-CklW-Ty, 50-WKBD-TV. 56-WTVS TONIGHT (R) Rerun •:00 (2) (4) News (7) Movie: “Invasion of the Animal People” (1960) John Carradlne, Robert Burton (R). (50) Supterman (R) (56) Frilly Giant •:15 (56) Science Is Fun <;30 (.2) (4) News (9) Twilight Zone (R) (50) Flintstones (R) (56) What’s New 7:06 (2) Truth or Consequences (4) George Pierrot (9) Movie: “The Black Scorpion” (1957) Richard Denning, Mara Corday (R). (50) McHale’s Navy (R) (^SO) Creative Person 7:30 (2) Gilligan’s Island (4) Monkees (7) Iron Horse (50) Honeymooners |R) (56) Let’s Up-Read 1:00 (2) Mr. Terrific (4) I Dream of Jeannie (50) Perry Mason (R) (56) Great Books 1:30 (2) LuciUe Ball (R) (4) Captain Nice (7) Rat Patrol (56) N. E. T. Journal #:00 (2) Andy Griffith (4) Perry Como (7) Felony Squad (9) Center Stage (50) Movie: “Action in the North Atlantic” (1943) Humphrey Bogart, Raymond Massey, Alan Hale (R). 0:30 (2) Family Affair (7) Peyton Place (56) French Chef 10:00 (2) Best of Mike Douglas (R) (4) Run for Your Life (7) Big Valley (9) Front Page Challenge (56) Folk Guitar 10:30 (9) Don Messer’s Jubilee (56) Cineposium 11:00 (2) (4) (7) (9) News 11:15 (50) Alfred Hitchcock (R) 11:30 (2) Movie: “S c a r a-mouche” (1952) Stewart Granger, Eleanor Parker. (4) Tonight (7) Movie: “Mr. Belvedere Rings tl (1951) CUfton Webb, Joanne Dru, Hugh Marlowe (R). (9) Movie: “Serena’ (1962) Patrick Holt (R). 1:00 (4) Beat the Champ (9) Window on the World 1:15 (7) News 1:30 (2) (4) News (7) Wanted-Dead or AUve (R) TV Features Captain Nice a Sot? CREATIVE PERSON, 7:00 p.m. (56) Program returns with pr^ile of London animator Richard Williams, who shows how he creates an animated TV commercial. CAPTAIN NICE, 8:30 p.m. (4) Bigtown gets sob-bering news: Captain Nice is found drunk in the ih'eet. N. E. T. JOURNAL, 8:30 p.m. (56) ”Homefront/1967” examines effect of war on home town America. I PERRY COMO, 9:00 p.m. (4) Perry’s guests include > Woody Allen and Connie Stevens. CENTER STAGE, 9:00 p.m. (9) Buddy Greco hosts singers Frankie Avalon and Susan Barrett. 'Romney Must Show His Stuff He's Highly Desirable for '68, Says Javits WASHINGTON (UPI) - Sen. Jacob Javits, R-N. Y., yesterday said Michigan Gov. (George Romney will “have to demonstrate his ability to last the course” if he wants the 1968 Republican presidential nomination. O’Brien, Uonel Barrymore, Lewis Stone (R) 8:45 (56) Engiish VI 9:00 (2) Merv Griffin (4) Living (9) Bonnie Prudden Show 9:10 (56) Come, Let’s Read 9:30 (9) People in Conflict (56) American History 9:55 (4) News (56) Let’s Speak Spanish II 10:00 (4) Reach for the Stars (9) National Schools (50) Yoga for Health 10:10 (56) Of Cabbages and Kings 10:25 (4) News 10:30 (2) Beverly Hillbillies (R) (4) Concentration (7) Virginia Graham TOMORROW MORNING (9) Ontario Schools (50) Peter Gunn (R) 10:35 (56) Children’s Hour 10:50 (56) We Speak Spanish I 11:00 (2) Andy Griffith (R) (4) Pat Boone (7) Supermarket Sweep (9) Mr. Dressup (50) Dickory Doc 11:05 (56) Let’s Read Spanish 11:25 (9) Tales of the River Bank 11:30 (2) Dick Van Dyke (4) Hollywood Squares' (7), Dating Game (9) Friendly Giant 11:45 (9) Chez Helene AFTERNOON Flaw Is Seen in Amendment 'Doctors Must Judge President's Disability' By Science Service CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. PhyMcians are needed on a panel to judge when a president is incapabie of performing his duties, the executive director of the American Association of Medical Clinics said here in ing a remedy for a “grievous and calamatous flaw” in the 25th Amendment to the Constitu- tion. Interviewed on the television show “Senate News Conference,” Javits said Romney was a “highly desirable” choice for progressive and Republican moderates to back for the 1968 nomination. Javits said he felt the best way to repair the GOP debacle of 1964 was for progressive and moderate factions in the GOP to consolidate behind a candidate. “The most likely one now seems to be Romney,” Javits said, “but he still has to demonstrate his ability to last the course.” Aiwwof to frsvteus Pu«l« (lb.) 10 Pasty nibUuTS 61 Maidowi 12 Army priest S3 Operatic ' -------- 541&iid ft (ooU.) Idtnd group _________ in Soutt Pidfle 14 BUckbird of SO Vigor (coU.) cuckoo family S8.‘-------- 15 Malarial fever (pj-) SO , U'Portent properties IS Eve’s son (Bib.) 82 Most suiUble 20 Feline animal 03 Cavalry sword 21 New-fashioned nnwM 23 Greek mounUin 25 Parts of candles 1 Wssion in 27 At Ott summit Texas 30 Tree 2 Surfeited 33 American 3 Steamship (at humorist (laW- 4 Japanese 1890) outcast 34 Sphere S Use of 35 Supply of goods someone’ 37Ro(rffiniat 39 Equip 40 Become cloyed -7 Prominent attachment 41 Hoarse noise in teacher ' 30 African snal sleep - 8 District 31 Depot (ah.) 43 Gaming cube 9 For fear that M-rvi— 10 Campus event 34 Bound with a (coll.) belt 11 Curved bone 30151 (Roman) 12 Friends (coll.) 38 Own 17 Recent 41 Bishopric 19 Greek goddess 42 Period of timo - of dawn 44 Dressed 22 Arena section 48 Angry 24 Pharmaceutical 47 European sditey salt 48 Dines 26 Sharp 49 Blunt end ---------" SO Apple ( ' 52 Primate 55 Receive 57 School gro 0:15 (2) On the Farm Scene 6:20 (2) News 6:30 (2) Sunrise Semester (4) Classroom (7) Wonders of the World 7:00 (2) Woodrow the Woodsman (4) Today (7) Morning Show 7:55 (9) Morgan’s Merry-Go-Round 8:00 (2) Captain Kangaroo (9) Romper Room 8:30 (7) Movie: “Three Wise Fools” (1946) Margaret Dr. Eldwin P. Jordan, writing in the Virginia Law Weekly of the University of Virginia, said the panel names of appointees could be sent to Congress by the president himself; luui uuun. ramu as the first of his presidential! 2:30 (2) House Party dutes. A small group of lawyers, political scientists and physicians should be included, he said. The mechanisms set up for dealing with presidential disabilities and vice presidential vacancy “are political in nature whereas circumstances can arise under which valid decisions can be reached only on the of medical judgments,' U.S. General Dies of Heart Attack Dr. Jordan said. SAIGON (UPI) — Brig. Gen. Alfred Judson Force Moody, assistant commander of the U.S. Army 1st Air Calvary Division, died yesterday of a heart attack a week after arriving in Vietnam, aides said today. He was 49. The general, military assistant to Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara for three years before coming, here, died at his quarters at the division headquarters at An Khe, 260 miles northeast of Saigon. 12:00 (2) News (4) Jeopardy (7) Everybody’s Talking (9) Take 30 12:25 (2) News 12:30 (2) Search for Tomorrow (4) Eye Guess (7) Donna Reed (R) (9) Communicate (50) Movie: “The Very Thought of You” (1944) Dennis Morgan, Eleanor Parker (R). 12:35 (36) Let’s Speak Spanish 12:45 (2) Guiding Light 12:50 (56) Come, Let’s Read 12:55 (4) News 1:00 (2) Love of Life (4) Match Game (7) Ben Casey (R) (9) Movie: “Lease of Life” (1954) Robert Donat, Kay Walsh (R). 1:10 (56) Children’s Hour 1:25 (2) News (4) Doctor’s House Call (56) Arts and Crafts 1:30 (2) As the World Turns (4) Let’s Make a Deal 1:55 (4) News (56) American History 2:00 (2) Password (4) Days of Our Lives (7) Newlywed Game '2:20 (56) Book Parade Other advice over the weekend for the Michigan governor came from Rep. Melvin Laird, R-Wis., chairman of the House Republican Conference. NATIONAL AFFAIRS His advice: Don’t get involved in national affairs yet. Laird said he believed Romney is still the leading candidate for the 1968 presidential nomination, but “he s h o n 1 d realize that two years is too long to keep up the momentum” of a campaign. Laird said Romney had made 1 serious mistake in trying to deal with such complex issues as the Vietnam war without adequate preparation. In Laird’s judgement, Romney set himself up unnecessarily for inevitable crossfire on Vietnam from dozens of reporters by taking his swing last month in Alaska and several western states. this time to familiarize himself tion writing is to use material on national and international is-1 with which you are familiar. Laird said. “Instead, he Elli, having spent many years “The governor could be using 2 3 4 6 7 9 10 11 12 13 14 18 19 20 41 a 2b 28 29 30 31 32 33 35 3^ r 38 39 40 Fm 42 43 46 47 48 49 50 K 53 54 55 bb 57 58 59 60 61 bz b3 20 Tests Begun on Data Buoy By Science Service WASfflNG’TON -y A toerun-ner of a worldwide weather and oceanographic buoy system that will report via satellite has begun a 36Klay test at sea near Bermuda. The “Sea-Robin” data buoy was set out on a 10,000-foot moor about 11 miles off the coast of Saint David’s Island by the General Electric Co.’s Mis-le and Space Division, build-rs of the buoy. ★ ★ For the test, command and control of the buoy is being conducted from a portable ground station on the island. In phase two, tests beginning about April 1, GE engineers plan to check out the satellite-oriented communications system that will be on later, operational buoys. Of the 300,(KX) Americans who died from cancer in 1966, about 95,000 victims could saved by early diagnosis and prompt treatment. Then Call 338-0333 DEBT CONSULTANTS of PONTIAC, Inc. Has a new office to serve you. 814 PONTIAC STATE BANK BLDG. BUY, SELL, TRADE - - - USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! Cas|h,for Any Purpose I first or ucond mortgago. Coniolidito billi, bring paymcnti up to data. Stop fortcloaurax. Leave your nama, addreu and phono number with our 24 hour operator. ESSAY ENTERPRISES, Inc. Tolsphono 1-UN 1-7400 IMPROVE YOUR HOME DEAL DIRECT Current Books tv- THE RIOT. By Frank Elli. I His first novel shows a re-Coward-McCann. $4-95. | markable writing skill, and the |The chief appeal of this novel result is a story filled with the is that it gives the reader a actuality of life. More impor-' running tension in a story saturated with extremely real atmosphere. Elli’s book is both graphic, and emotionally dynamic. tantly, he has created a seamy; side hero who is an authentic tragic figure. Miles A. Smith It is a fictional account of a two-day aimless and chaotic riot in an antiquated prison. They say the first rule of fic- Science Projects to Go on Display is overexposing himself before behind bars, knows the prison^ WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP — Science projects will be exhibited by seventh and eighth he is adequately prepared.” ' scene. George and Lyndo Snuggle Barberry's First Anniversary grade pupils at West Bloomfield Junior High School tomorrow and Wednesday. The fair will be open to the public from 7 to 9 p.m. Winners will enter their exr hibits in the regional fair March 31 at Bloomfield Hills Junior High School. Several examples dealing with the changeability of disease illustrate what could happen to a president in office. Dr. Jordan explained. He cited the case of leukemia. 'At the time diagnosis is made,” he said, “there is no disability — mental or physical — which would' interfere with conducting the d u t i e s of the presidency. But after a year and a half of a remaining three-year term the disease has prog-ip spite of treatment to a point at which the president is so fatigued that he is unable to perform more than half of the things he is supposed to do." (4) Doctors (7) Dream Girl (50) Love That Bob 2:45 (56) Let’s Talk Spanish 2:55 (7) News 3:00 (2) To Tell the Truth (4) Another World (7) General Hospital (50) Topper 3:25 (2) (9) News 3:30 (2) Edge of Night (4) You Don’t Say . (7) Nurses (9) Swingin’ Time (50) Johnny Ginger 4:06 (2) Secret Storm (4) Bozo (7) Dark Shadows (56) Choice: Challenge for Modem Women 4:30 (2) Mike Douglas (7) Where the Action Is (9) Fun House (56) Social Security in Action 4:45 (56) British Calendar 4:55 (4) Eliot’s Almanac 5:00 (4) ;George Pierrot (7) News, Weather, Sports (50) Alvin (56) Cineposium 5:30 (7) Network News (9) Cheyenne (R) (50) Little Rascals (56) What’s New 5:55 (4) Here’s Carol By EARL WILSON ! NEW YORK—George Hamilton and Lynda Bird Johnson helped Bill Reed celebrate the first anniversary of the new Barberry Room ... and there were many, many comments about Lynda’s attractiveness as she snuggled close to George on the banquette . . . “I’m writing, writing, writing,” she said, adding that she tries to work at the office. “We’ll willingly talk to the press. Ask me anything yon want to!” George said . . . “When yon getting married?” I responded ... “I didn’t mean that kind of questions!” he said ... George said his next picture’ll be “The Power.” I asked “Black, 'White or Yellow?” . . . “It refers,” said George, “to the Christian Scientists, of which I am one!” WILSON ★ ‘ Choral Program in Avon Twp. AVON TOWNSHIP - The Uni-, versity of Dubuque, Iowa, Concert Choir will sing at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at University Presbyterian Church. “A man in a bathing suit with a hat on tried to take my clothes off without removing his hat!” I Anna Lee was telling it to Jean Hale—about the riot at thej City Squire and Capitol Theater neighborhood when 400 people! in swim suits ganged over from the theater to the hotel and midnight party in the swimming pool above Broadway. ‘They had their clothes off, why shouldn’t they take mine off?” said Miss Lee, mother of three daughters, known best for her “A Date With Judy” TV show. “Except I said to him, ‘You can at least take your hat off when you try to take my dress off!’ ” Well, Miss Hale, herself a young mother, from Darien, Conn., and Utah, said “I wanted to be an actress and I wind np with a lot of monsters!” She wasn’t talking about the producers of the picture, “In Like Flint,” at the Capitol, but the hangers-on. The 30-voice choir, directed by Jack Boyd, assistant professor of music at the University of Dubuque, will present a program entitled “Four Centuries of German Choral Music.” Service for MD — Ra(dio Programs— WJIK760) WXYZd 270) CKLW(800) WWJ(950) WCAR(1130) WPONQ 460) \NJBK(1500) WHFI-FM(94.7) i:H-WJR, News, Sporti WWJ, News, Sports WXYZ, Newscope CKLW...........—. WJBK, Music, Sports WCAR, News, Joe eacerelle WPON, News. Sports TilS-WWJj. Income Ti WJRTNewe, Sports, WPQN, News, Johnny WHFi, Dinner Concert lilS-WXYZ, Joey Reynolds, TUESDAY MORNINO CKLW, News, B WXYZ, Msrc Avery News, WCAR, News, Sande WHFI, Uncle Jay CKLW, Joe Van WWJ, News, Neighbor 1t:IB-WJR, News, Good WXYZ, Fat Murphy N TUESDAY AFTERNODN WWJ, Review! News: A WPON, News, Bi THE MIDNIGHT EARL . . . Juliet Prowse was coached for the dances in'the Las Vegas edition of “Sweet Charity” ,^it Caesar’s Palace by featured dancer Eddie Gasper Of the llrOadway cast. Now he flies to Vegas weekends to see* her and she has flown here to see him.| And some folks are saying they’re on the Merge Verge. 1 Connie Francis’ fiance, Mike Capanegro, the lawyer, gave her an alligator skin be brought back from a safari. Now she can make her own wallets . . . Gina Lollobrigida’s ex-husband, Mike Skofie, who’s marrying opera singer Ute con Aichbichier, is pretty happy she’s changed her name to Ute de Vargas. Avoids confusion. TODAY’S BEST LAUGH: A Hollywood producer sent his' mother a Picasso and a Ferrari and called to see if they’d arrived. “One of them came,” she said. “Which one?” he asked. ‘fTo tdl the truth,” she said, “—I don’t know.” WISH I’D SAID THAT: Larry Gore’s income tax report: “I owe so much to Washington that I feel like a foreign country.” REMEMBERED QUOTE: “Old age is the time when you find yourself giving good advice instead of setting a bad HIGHLAND PARK (AP) Services were held Sunday for Dr. Mary Catherine Magee, a former Sanilac County health officer, who died Friday in Detroit’s Ford Hospital. Dr. Magee, GO, was with the New York City Health Department from 1948 to 1963. In 1963 .she moved to Sanilac County and was the health officer there for two years before retiring. ^ AR, Ney$, I hart 1 IFI, NtwA En BK, Ntwi, SI WJBK, 1:W-WWJ, News, Neighbor Elliot Field CKLW, News, D WPON, News, Peli Uadd WXYZ, Dava Prlnea SiW-WCAR, Nawt, Bacarallt WJBK, Naws^MusIc 1 L’S PEARLSi Among the other things money can’t buy is Whkt It used to. \ j The “Score ’Three Points” comedy album has this quiz ques-| tion: “True or false—Lyndon Johnson wears George Hamilton’s old suits” . . . “False, Lyndon Johnson wears Lyndon Johnson’s old suits.” Hut’s earl, brother.; Specialize in URGE QUANTITY Tender, Fresh, Young, Plump CHICKENS Deep fried in fresh pure vegetable oil for the most de-Z lightful CHICKEN DINNER feast, ever . . . Buy it by the • BOX... the BUCKET ...the BARREL! ** for parties, picnics, meetings, social groups or dinner at home. DONUTS MADE AROUND THE CLOCK ^PecSi2 II l^i^lcsta, li "T .“1^ Open 7 Dayz-S A.M. to 12 Midni^^ 93 NORTH TELEGRAPH ■nwiEN TEL-HUROH Ann NNTUn lliu. CHICKEN-PHONE 83S-2444 DONUTS-PHONE S38-0181 D—12 THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, MARCH 20, 1967 SHE’S GOT TIGER BY THE ... UH ... — There are two tigers and four paws here, but at the moment the picture was taken, Opal hid most of her sister, Ethel, because she was sitting on top of her. The two bengal tigers were bom 11 months ago at the Swope Park Zoo in Kansas City, Mo. Food Waste Is High as Nations Starve ROME (ff) - Half the; food produced in India is wasted by rats, rot, birds and insects, the U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization reports. It estimates the world average loss of food to pests is at least 20 per cent. The wastage Is'greatest in regions ot Asia, AMca and Latin Amraica where hunger already b the worst. Even at 20 per cent the loss means this: where there should be wiough food for five persons to eat, one will starve. Or, if the available food is divided equally, all five will be undernourished. When the loss reaches 50 per cent the results become starkly tragic. An FAO survey In the Congo showed 20 par cent of Its important sorghum crop was destroyed by insects each year in storage. Total postharvest food losses throughout Africa were estimated at 30 per cent. FAO said 55 million persons could be fed for a year with the grain lost in Africa annually to rats, the quelea birds, beetles, moths, weevils and other insects. In much of Latin America the food wastage is equally severe. In Brazil, where 300,000 children below the age of 2 die each year from malnutrition, food wastage is estimated by FAO as 40 per cent ot everything produced. Argentina figures her losses of wheat in storage at 8ft0 million pounds a year and her over-all annual food wastage at a value of $350 million. Hawaii, the longest state in the U.S., is composed of more than 20 islands, reefs and -TO- :wfKc 108 N. SAGINAW - FE 3-1114 EUREKA Floor Polisher Lets you do floors os often os you should, os easily os you hoped someday you could. • Big oversize brushes clean wider path. • Special rug dolly lets you shampoo rugs, too, without harsh scrubbing or matting. • Automatic Toe Touch Handle release — automatic switch. FREE EHREKA ‘Time Seear Eit” With PHtchase of an EUREKA VACUUM CLEARER or POLISHER ,• It Ot CONCaiTRATED RUO A UPHOLSTERY t OEANER MaUt aw iAGaLCleaiMr..Reg. Price .9$ • ft Oi. CONCB4TRATED11U9 A CARPET aE^ER Make* ever 1 OoL Ckaner.....L......Reg.lPriee I.Tf It Oc. CONCEHTRATED CAR INTERIOR I ai^ER Mokei evW " Brack, Bloom, Voss, East Lansing Flora'” ", K»r3:"ra«“' A.'^BurWirt?.^" Donald L. Wlllen, 995 Joanne G. WIHon, Hunti..,,- CaJKiL'"r«elZi^“.., Owen P. Smith, Utica am Shelton, 2447 Jamel Randy L. Gatehouse, Flint L. Steele, Waterford B- D*s8row'’Holl ' HIT Locka antf Jnlon Lake' Wa^teWord and Geraldina Plains and Austa P. „ Richard Martin, Mt d, Clarkston Llrjda L. Miracle, Clarkstm W. Jordtn, )79 W. Strathmore lane L. Martin, Rochester Eric A. Thomson, Lake Ohio and Rtverly E. Haitlnoi, Milford B. Amerson, 92 Elm Roger O. Sharp, Farr Maxie M. Morgan, Livonia A. VaSln", 25*o"$»vereWr*‘’ Phyleatus J.' v'anWagoni sherry L. Pehiman, Fenton Charles F. Lamoreaux, Allison, Ft. Banning, Ga. ' Admas, Troy -------------r, Holly and Joslah B. Tilton Norma B. Holder, 1919 Elsie Roy E. Taylor, 100 Roblnwoe Ann M. Smith, 209 Perkdale Thomas G. Sura, Lake Orion and Janyce L Schwabland, Lake Orion William E. McCormick, Troy & Susan J. Larson, Royal Oak OarW L. Shank, Auburn Heights and Mary E. Turner, Auburn Heights RirK^rWets^n.'^nTjJ'Liil M^anrW' Kenneth R. Tracy, Clarkston and Sharon M. Serdyn, S4 S. Avery Robert G. Young, Milford and Shirley A. Cole, South Lyon Jas L. RIchman, Keego Harbor and Susan L. McFarland, Ferndale Mark P. Wagner, Union Lake and Roberta J. Albrignt, Union Lake Robert J. Barrett Jr., Union Lake and Ellen M. Hall, Milford Terry G. 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But SMiate Democratic leader Mike Mansfield is already mi record i^ainst ottti potential eler ment ^ an 'agreement; West German purchase of $500 million in U.S. Treasury notes as a means of offsetting U.S. troop “That is hardly a solution to the fundamental question which is raised by the continued dispropoijtiMiate deployment of a UnitC^ Stati^ |niiitai|y establishment nf six divisions plus dependents many hundreds of thousands of Americans — in Europe two decades after the end of World War H,” he said. Mansfield has offered a reso- iution in the Senate favoring a troop cutback. ^ s-poWer nIegowators The three-power negotiators — John J. McCloy ftu the United States, Minister of State George Thomson for Britain and Ambassador George Duckwitz for West Germany — said in Decembpr that combat potential of the North Atlantic Treaty Organizations must stay intact because Communist military potential is unchanged. ★ ★ ★ The question is whether the United States will accept the $500-millton bond offer and what West Germany will do to offset Britain’s spending for about 55,-000 men |n Europe. ■A * ★ ' ' The British have already rejected a West German offer to makp purchases of $87 million in Britain. The British contend their yearly cost is $2M million. Look your Sunday best this Corner Saginaw and Huron FE 4-2511 Shop Monday, Thursday, Friday and Saturday Til 9 P.M. ® look for’67 **Seaminghj” fitted: hugging lines end at the waist then i go on in fuller measure. That's just half the beauty of this demi-lit coat who.se tailoring-for-the-petite proves that you and Shagnioor arc perfectionists. 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Third Floor vicl^ vdBihn Junior Easter Dresses In Vicky Vaughn's look-Ogoin shift of Dacron® dotted SWISS. Thp boby-bib has buttons, tiny tucks, Ond lace which repeat on the long sleeves. Choose from blue or yellow in sizes 5 to 13. Charge It. $12 Dresses... Third Floor Pure Silk Sheath Pure and simple.,. and oh, so versatile. The full lined sleeveless sheath loomed of imported Duoppion silk with easily accessorized jewel neckline, self-belt to wear or not. Choose from Navy, Pink, or Block in sizes 10 to 20 and 141/2 to 22'/2. Dresses ... Third Floor $14 Fashion Accessories for Easter from Waite' ^ Hansen Gloves $250 $9 Beautiful Hansen gloves to go with your Easter costume. Cottons, leathers and nylons. All in lovely Spring shades. Gloves... Street Floor Easter Jewelry *1 •. »T5 To complement your Easter dress or suit. Choose from a wide assortment of pins, earrings, necklaces and beads. Jewelry... Sfreqt Floor Phoenix Fashion Hosiery M.35-n.50-n.65 Makeufour legs shine with fashion beauty on Easier Day. Selec losbion shades to complement your costume. Hosiery... Street Floor mu j]Afl 3Wiil « THE PONTIAC PRESS 48 West Huron Sto^t Pontiac, ^ilichigan 48(S6 MONDAY, MARCH 2 howau H. TtmoMjf, It PresidcBt wul PuljUiber Bxeeotlve Vlct B«cretu]r tod Adncttatof UxtA Advertlilng Mtaaiw It Seems to Me Statistics on Traffic Deaths Reveal Encouraging Facts Are traffic conditions really as ' 1935..'............15.9 “bad” as we’re led to believe? To 194^.............. some extent, the problem is a mat- .............. ter of sheer mathematics. The traffic Increase is simply overwhelming eveh These “vital statistics” simply in-though the percentage goes down. dicate that our increase in highway ^ ^ ^ deaths is'due to the enormous in- Our National Safety Council un- crease in traffic. Per car ^d per mile, earths some interesting and illu- we’re progressing. We’re weighted minating facts. In 1935, we had down by total statistics. 13.7 fatalities for every 10,000 jfs almost impossible for us to vehicles. In 1945, that dropped to understand the enormous growth in 9.1, then down to 6.1 in 1955, and comprehen- ’"SlTL^nitely. The actual death figures are It sounds encouraging. certainly dejiressing, but compara- The same ten-year periods show tively, we Seem to be improving, the following deaths per 100,000,- ★ ★ ★ 000 vehicle miles: Allah be praised for small favors. Red Attraction Inside sources say the average ^ Russian is all agog over something that’s about to happen. The five-day week is coining. It’s actually on the way. Tjt ★ ★ At least Ivan has been so advised and he’s placing more faith in this announcement than he has in the last two dozen “promises” that vanished in thin air. Of course, this particular millennium hasn’t actually arrived, but it’s one of the big attractions the Head Red has tossed over the Kremlin walls. Of course, the five-day week would provide a “weekend.” ★ ★ ★ And would you believe it—there’s no Russian word for “weekend.” It’s that unknown. Wail of Discontent . There’s a tiny but amusing wail of discontent crossing the Country. Several newspapers have carried letters complaining about the amount of space given the Kennedy clan. But some may want more. Who knows? ★ ★ ★ One lady writer in a mid-western publication asked plaintively: “Can’t ypp silly newspapers bunch all the Kennedy Stuff and run it Tuesday — or Thursday — so we can skip it easily?” Lady, that’s impossible. Millions may want more. ★ ★ ★ It’s our job to print what happens and let you choose yourself. Personally, I think the Jackie Kennedy bit has been badly overdone and I’ll wager Jackie thinks so, too. I think she’s a swell gal. Bobby and Teddy are in public office and are vocal and newsworthy. And that’s where it rests. Damage Investigation .... Senator Birch E. Bayh, Democrat from Indiana, plans a personal trip this year with a group of jnyesti-gators to try and evaluate how much r damage has been done to this Nation by the Warren Supreme Court. ^ ★ ★ ★ Law enforcement has rocked aijid reeled under the many “findings” that favor the criminals, the Communists and their ilk. Agencies enforcing the statiltes have had confessions brushed aside and life has been made rougher, tougher and meaner for policemen, deputies and law upholders. ★ ★ ★ Many people fear a further decline of criminal justice and this trip is one “Washington tour” that the Nation vlpfil receive with three loud cheers and a standing ovation. And in Conclusion Jottings from the well-thumbed notebook of y o u r peripatetic reporter: Guess I’ll have to rent my TV set next fall......; . . . . “To Tell the Truth,” “I’ve Got a Secret,” “What’s My Line” and a couple more favorites are going down the drain. Oh, > well, the baseball season will open soon and there’ll be a lot of night games................Europe is plan- ning a grand soimd signal fpr the blind. When the lights turn green for pedestrians, a beeping sound will notify the blind it’s time to cross. ★ ★ ★ Gabriella Farinon, shown here, is the top feminine TV announcer in Italy. Someone’s overlooking a good bet by not putting her in a regular show. . . A Stanford University r e -searcher is currently working on a computer Voice of the People: ‘Police Officers Strive for Safer Place to Live* As the wife of a polifijB Officer, \I wish people would stop trying to fmd fault with our officers, The majority of them are clean, honest-living men trying h> make a better, safer place for us to live. At times we send them to work wondming if they’ll be back. HOPING FOR BETTER Discusses Organizing New Area High School I attended a meeting regarding the organizing of Mott Senior lUgh in tiie fall of 1967. Assuming these 415 sqiho-mores will be able to get any subject offered at the other high schools, I’m concerned about the time and hazards of being bussed all over. , These students can’t possibly have the advanbges offered otiier students at be existing schools in sevNi moms at Mason this year and an incompKte school in 1968-69. This leaves only one year of high school on par witii the others. We in the Mott area are on par tax-wise with the other school areas. A CONCERNED PARENT Disagrees With Recent Editorial on UFOs What A Time For Such A Caller! i your editorial “New Rash of UFO’s,” Michigan “favored” only because local sightings are the ones most frequently publicized in area papers. As of December 1, 1966, only 93.9 per cent of the cases were explained« You suggest that if UFOs are indeed extraterrestrial, they would have made contact a long time ago. That seems unlikely considering the fact that armed fighters have been sent up to intercept UFOs in many cases. TOM OSTRANDER UNION LAKE David Lawrence Says: Comments on Letter Comparing Incidents Liberals Ignore Union Victims WASHINGTON - To engage in street demonstrations and otherwise to express dissent is supposed to be a right of the individual this case is for the purpose of union solidarity. Congress was not talking about this kind of coercion; it was talking about the kind of coercion associated with lead pipes.” power to expel a member for this form of dissent and deprive him of his job altogeth- In reply to a letter comparing two recent incidents, how could the writer put these two incidents in the same category? The rascals at the school gave up meekly. They were not armed with a loaded gun and didn’t drive up to 125 m.p.h. to escape. Let’s quit protecting the criminals simply because they happen to be of the same “nationality” as one of uS. FOREST CUMMINGS 153 N. ROSELAWN If the Supreme Court should rule that fines may be imposed as a means of discipline when a worker refuses to participate in a strike, labor unions next may assert their This is analogous to the authority exercised in the Soviet Union, where the Communist organization, whenever it pleases, designates the jobs for which only a member of the Communist party may be hired. ^Lefs Encourage Return of Roadside Artists' A few years ago artists and some of their works could be found along the roadsides and passersby were welcome to stop and browse or even purchase, if they wished. Could we stimulate our local artists to bring this about again? HOPEFUL Ntwipaptr Syndicatti ties organizations has initiated any “marches” or picketing to protest the action of a union which seeks to punish a member because he doesn’t believe in the strike weapon and wishes to continue to work. Even the Department of Justice, in an argument just made before the Supreme Court of the United States by the solicitor general, Thur-good Marshall, contends that unions must be recognized virtually as a form of govern- Bob Considine Says: Nuts Appear in Season for Assassination Probe Coiuiueut ou Problems iu Poutiac Towusbip Pontiac Township trustee Walter Smith is a fine one to talk about progress and farsightedness. For years he has owned and rented to indigent families temporary war housing on Bald Mountain Road. While Pontiac Township supervisor Leonard Terry was fighting to close the dump on Bald Mountain, Smith appeared in a “show cau%” hearing in Detroit Federal District Court as a supporting witness for dump operator Charles MacRae. Apparently, Smith has only complicated Terry’s job. C. J. CLEVELAND PON'DAC TOWNSHIP NEW YORK - There should be no scarcity of New Orleans pralines during the Easter season. All the nuts s e e m to have assembled there for ment and that they have the Jim Garrison’s right to use “coercion” to en- “solution” of force their will. In the current case, wUch arose in Wisconsin between the autoworkers’ union and the management of an Altis-Chalmers plant, the union did not expel the employes who refused to strike but instead imposed a fine. When the present case was ruled upon by the U. S. Court of Appeals in the Seventh Circuit, the decision of the National Labor Relations Board in sustaining the union’s position was at first upheld. the Kennedy As of the (Xily known parties to Gar-rison’s Wonder how Time will treat the retraction. Best guess; With stony silence. Both men have denied that this dialogue ever took place, denied that this dialogue ever took place. The two met and shook hands several days later when the new attorney general was sworn in. It’s time the people of the United States took notice that this s(H:alled democratic government of the Uitited States is becoming more like Hitler’s Third Reich. We no longer have freedom of speech for if we say something against the American government we are considered Communists. I am not a Communist. I am a true American and feel that if something is not done about our present form of government people of the United States will never be able to stand up and say, “I am a true American.’’ A CONCERNED AMERICAN con- CONSIDINE Early the other morning, in the shrouded hours of Arlington NatiMial Cemetery, they made up part of the little Question and Answer spiracy” do not seein to be mourning party that moved persons who could conspire well enough to gain entrance to the gents’ room at Grand Central. Is Lowell Thomas Sr., the explorer and news commentator deceased? It seemed to me he died in 1966, but my friends think he is still alive. ^ W. F. V. the casket of John Fitzgerald Kennedytoits permanent crypt. REPLY Your friends are right. Garrison’s “mystery” witness, wie P e r r y Raymond S80, war n mystery indeed. The mystery is that he was bronght to the staid. After a rehearing, however, this decision was reversed, and the fines were found to be a violation of the federal law. He has been under psychiatric care for seven years, he said on cross-examination. Rebuked... Sf. Louis Post-Dispatch that will be able to sjiell words fed into it by voice alohe. I’ll enjoy seeing it work on these: enough, through, plough, laugh, dough, bough. ................Remem- ber when they couldn’t get phonograph record to play back the letter “s”? It couldn’t say “specie” to save its life and they still have trouble with “s” today. ★ ★ ★ Arnold Forster, General Counsel, International Council Anti-Defamation League of B’nai B’rith says broadcasters are lending their airwaves to bigots, kooks and extremists just to attract an audience. His organization is increasingly concerned ..............U.S. Tobacco people are currently picking up some $50 million In England because of Great Britain’s refusal to touch, tobacco grown In Rhodesia............Dept. of Cheers and Jeers: the C’s—^Pontiac merchants who kept their walks clean this winter: the J’s—Pontiac merchants who failed miserably. ■—Harold A. Fitzgerald DISCIPLINARY MEASURE Solicitor General Marshall, in arguing the case for the labor board, said a few days ago to the Supreme Coilrt that the union had a right to impose a fine as a disciplinary measure and that this did not take away the employe’s job rights. Marshall added: “Jhere is a right to sifCak up, and to join the union. In return, a member takes on the liability of union gov- Marina Oswald, the assassin’s widow who has since remarried, says she never heard her husband mention the people he is s u p p o s e d to have conspired with in New Or- “The coercion that exists in Verbal Orchids Wright W. Feneley of 35 E. Howard; 89th birthday. Mr. and Mrs. Elisha C. Hubble of 36 Bennett; 54th wedding anniversary. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Treece of Milford; 64th wedding anniversary. Mirijoii Noorian of 532 Orchard Lake |^ve., 92nd birthday. Mrs. Elsie Piddingiop of 1225W. Silver Bell; 82nd birhtday. Anon V. Dennis NO SHRINKING VIOLET It will be remembered that Oswald, who s o m e h o w escaped being imbedded in a praline during his New Or; leans days, was not a shrinking violet. He told her all about trying to kiU Gen. Ed Walker with a sneak shot in the dark. A screwball who was picked up in New Orleans with a shotgun during the Garrison hearing e X p 1 a i n e d to police “I canie to make headlines.” So, I’m beginning to think, did Garrison. The French election returns have left the Gaullists with a one-seat parliamentary majority; and that may be lost when Tahiti is heard from. Especially in view of the role of the Communists, this, was a clear rebuff to Gen. de Gaulle’s claimed position as the embodiment of the French nation. The voting surely reflected a reacticHi against his authoritarian style, and concern about his indifference to the Common Market. To some degree it may also have asserted a European viewpoint against his nationalism. The victory, however, was won by a loose alliance agreed on little more than the desirability of a Gaul-list defeat. the polls, the Communists have long been denied political influence in France commensurate with their numbers. The General’s rebuff may be heartening to |he British and to France’s Common Market parmers for whom he has made so much trouble. There may be quiet rejoicing in the State, Department, too. Yet it is difficult to see how London, Bonn or Washington can find advantage in it—unless the General decides to “follow the election returns” and moderate his rigidities. Self-Help Aid Newsday Time magazine produces a story pprporting to be the guts of the meeting on Feb. 6, last, between President Johnson And Sen. Robert Kennedy. Excerpt: “Finally, the President told Kennedy, T never want to hear yonr views on Viet-i “Bobby, for his pm, is said ‘ le nesidei 84th birthday. to have called the Pi-esident a S.O.B. and to have told him at one point: T don’t have to sit here and take that—.’ ” We’re Waiting for a leak that will tell us So the rebuke may not be effective. Lecanuet’s centrists actually may decide to bolster the Gaullists. In any case, de Gaulle can hog-tie the National Assembly. Under the constitutim of the Fifth Republic he even can di^olve it and rule by per-mal decree. ! ! may sele no need for ich hardmess, however, because the success of his opponents depended on the pw-ticipation of the Communists. President Johnson has asked Congress to approve a $1.5 billion increase in aid to Latin America over the next five years supplementing the $1 billion invested apnualty by the United States since the Alliance for Progress was created in 1961. This additional money is intended to help the 20 nations of Latin America to he^ themselves, and that is the way our aid funds ought ito be spent. s what ” T ” means. Despite tltoir sttyp^ «t Tile President also has\ made public the text of a draft resolution, hopefully to congressional approval, supporting the concept of a Latin ^.Amariean ConmMH Market Mwitar of AK. Conditions in United States Cause Concern Reviewing Other Editorial Pages and the channeling of United States aid through the Inter-American Development Bank. These actions will most certainly strengthen the President’s hapd when he meets with other presidents of the Western Hemisphere at Punta del Este, Uruguay, April 12-14. Significantly, it was at Pnnta del Este that the Alliance for Progress came into being. The added mmey still will not solve the vast problems of population growth and poverty in Latin America. But the proposal underlines the preference of this country for self-help rather than subsidies. Similarly, a Latin American Common Market, if approved, should be consider^ only a step, rather than an end in itself. What id needed, and what must come, is a Hemisphei^ Common Market, including the United States and the Dominion of Canada. Let that final step come soon! PONTIAC PRESS M4K£ m Pilflfj} PONTIC, MICHIGAN. MONDAY, .AfARCII 20, 1967 A4/SS Ruppel in a Whirl of Parties By SIGNE KARLSTROM On April 15 at 2 p.m. in Kirk In The Hills, Thomas H. Risk Jr.iwill claim as his bride Pamela Charlotte Ruppel, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Richard 0. Ruppel of Bloomfield Hills. Thomas is the son of Mrs. Thomas H. Risk of Birmingham and the late Mr. Risk * * * Recently, Pam was honored at a luncheon and kitchen shower with Mrs. John R. Phelps and Mra Ernest Ristau as joint hostesses in Mrs. Phelps’ home on Walnut Lake Road. Last Thursday, there was a morning coffee, recipe and pantry shower in the home of Mrs. Robert F. Conner. Wednesday, Mrs. Arthur Merrigan will give a luncheon and kitchen shower in her home at Orchard Lake. * ★ * On April 5, Mrs. Charles Brook and Mrs. George Jaaksi are honoring Pam at a luncheon. Two cousins of Pam’s, Mrs. LeRoy Hocking and Mrs. Robert Trumbo of Utica, will give the “spinster dinner” on April 12. Mrs. Risk will be hostess at the Orchard Lake Country Club for the rehearsal dinner on the 14th. WORD FROM SON Dr. and Mrs. Donald Young have received word that their son. Captain Donald Young, will go to Bangkok. His assignment has been in Vietnam, working with a team of doctors at the hospital there, teaching the civilian people. Besides Captain Young there is a doctor from Seattle, Washington and one from England. Sorority Hears Two Reports Mrs. Calvin Warner, parliamentarian of Alpha Alpha chapter. Epsilon Sigma Alpha sorority, reported on by-laws at a recent meeting in the Baybrook Drive home of Mrs. Elmer 0. Johnson. Mrs. Bert Anselmi reported on a preferential reception slated for April 11 in her home on Deer Run Road. ★ ★ ★ The “Jewel Pin Dinner” will be held at Topinka’s Country House on May 11. Receiving the pins will be Mi^dames; Ernest Mallery, LaMae White and Robert Kraud. Michigan State University seniors, Kathleen Louise Bird and Richard Thomas Williams, exchanged vows Saturday in the Clarkston Methodist' Church. Their parents are the Reginald R.^irds of InMpendence Township and Mr. and Mrs., ' Edward T. Williams of Royal Oak. . B-1 Let Burden of Truth Be Guilty One's Medic Says ‘Don’t Tell’ By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: Your answer to “DON’T KNOW,” as to whether to tell her fiance about a previ-0 u s i n d i s- ^, > ere tion was ^hisleading. You, sahj^ “If he asks, the t^lth^< wise keep qhh he may ne\ Pontiac Press Photo by Edward R. Noble For intimate little dinner parties signs for Ford dealerships. Exquisite here in her Franklin home, Janet Heideman in a dark velvet sheath, Miss Hei'deman plans details with as much care as she applies her “functional beauty" logic in uses in her presentations of interior de- wardrobe as well as work. She Designs Auto Showrooms By JEANNE NELSON That young woman holding all the aces in her hand is Janet Heideman, Ford Motor Company’s answer to a rapidly changing consumer atmosphere. As a showroom designer, she is “dealer’s choice” in the high stakes ^ame of automobile mer- , chandising. The position of dealership interior designer for Ford Division is a company innovation that began with her employment about two years ago. The need arose from ever-increasing requests of private dealers for help in establishing more attractive and functional surroundings. The company was also establishing more of its own and leased-out facilities. * ★ ★ That a woman should be chosen for this high powered job is yet another sign of changing trends within the automotive world. Leaders in the field have come to grips with the fact that the distaff side is the real economic force in today’s purchasing. Under Janet’s skilled fingers, out go the old carnival-like looks of yesterday’s showrooms. The new is serenely contemporary. Starting with dealer-approved basic blueprints, the talented Miss Heideman formulates a flexible rough layout. But this is just the beginning of each of the 30 or more job assignments she completes in a year’s time. Geographical research is a must. (; “What works well on the West Coast often is unrealistic for a another locale,” she says. And adds, ‘"This is also true of customs and attitudes and must necessarily be a prime MRS. R. T. WILLIAMS factor in the design interpretation.” Although she’s a firm believer in facilities having their own identities, she does stipulate that they must relate to the general community and geographical characteristics. After she has made final selections on floor coverings, furniture, lighting fixtures, construction materials, electrical outlet placements and display elevations, all must be recorded with alternatives in a written presentation. Finished sketches of the whole facility are included. This part of the job is done in her Dearborn office. Towards the completion of the remodeling, she makes a trip to the location to check final details. She confides that “this is one 0? the “fringe benefits” in her job—an opportunity to jet here and there on a liberal expense account.” But this University of Michigan’s College of Architecture and Design graduate hasn’t limited herself to just dealer showrooms. Recently, she designed and colaborated in the. writing of a dealer’s hand'book and has worked on the symbolic sign soon to be used at all dealerships. Area Couple Speaks Vows in Clarkston The Clarkston Methodist Church was the setting for evening vows spoken by Kathleen Louise Bird and Richard Thomas Williams on Saturday. Wearing a gown of ivory silk faille with Empire waist and Chapel train, the bride carried a bouquet of Stephanotis and a white orchid. A mantilla of Alen-con lace completed her costume. Lynn Ellsworth of Clarkston was maid of honor for the daughter of the Reginald R. Birds of Allen Road, Independence Township. ■ Attendants were Mrs. Richard Danielson of Coldwater and Mrs. David Haviland of East Lansing. Anne Birtsas was flower girl. Michael Maas of Royal Oak served as best man for the son of the Edward Williamses of Royal Oak with ushers Reginald 0. Bird of New York City and George Moeller of Grand Rapids. The newlyweds left for a honeymoon in New York City after a church reception immediately following the ceremony. They will graduate f j o m Michigan State University in ' June. During her college days, Janet designed homecoming floats and booklets and has done a number of booths for the Travel Show. After graduation she worked at Knoll' Associates Design Studios in Birmingham and was involved in the new design of the main Bank of the Commonwealth. Sleek is the only word to describe both the girl and her wardrobe. A trained eye has guided her thinking on clothes so that the basic timeless styles she chooses are fashion right wherever she goes and whatever she does. But with the artist’s sensitivity she creates unusual touches with a scarf or piece of jewelry whose contrived placement illuminates the overall look. Whatever spare time is left from her job and dating (she’ll say no more on the seriousness of this,), is spent sailing, swimming, working at Bloomfield Art Association and Cranbrook Academy of Art on oils, water-colors and weaving. If that’s not enough, she also makes most of her own clothes. And, as an active member in the Oakland County Young Republican group, she campaigns with the best of them along with designing the hand out materials. May I quote i [(’ a t h e r John * Egan, an eminent pre-marital counselor, ' had this to say on the subjecf\ “Neither partner has the right to burden the other with guilty knowledge. To do so is cowardly, as it attempts to share a burden that belongs to the ‘guilty’ one alone, and could lead to an. unhappy distrust that might spoil the marriage. Better that each should pre- . sume, in charity, that each enters marriage with a clean slate.” Call this self-delusion if yOu will, biit I have been assured by other sources that it is more conducive to good mental health than to “tell all.’* AN M.D. IN SAN RAFAEL ★ ★ ★ DEAR ABBY; I think I can improve on your answer to the girl who had a boy in her past named Bernie and was marry- Newlyweds Honeymoon in Bermuda honeymooning in Bermuda are the newlywed Thomas Glenn Suras (Janyce Lynne Schwab-land of Lake Orion). The couple was wed Saturday evening in a candlelight service in the First Presbyterian Church, Ann Arbor. Matron of honor for her sister was Mrs. Joan Rae Fink. Attendants were Mrs. Michael Sura of Mt. Pleasant and Linda Koch of Warren. Michael G. Sura was h i s brother’s best man. Ushers were Werner Zanier, James Downey, Richard Sawicki, James McGowan and Carl McCahill. WATTEAU TRAIN The bride wore a floor length gown with W.aMeau train in ivory silk satin with Alencon lace appliques. The bodice had a modified Empire waistline with re-embroidered Alencon lace encircling it. Her flowers were a white gardenia cascade. * * ★ Parents of the bridal couple are Dr. and Mrs. John C. Schwabland of Ann Arbor and the Eugene Suras of Absequami Trail, Orion Township. A reception in the Washtenaw Country Club, Ypsilanti, followed the rite. Ibe newlyweds are graduates of Michigan State University and Western Michigan University respectively. ing a boy named Ernie. If Ernie asks her what went on between her and Bernie she should tell him it’s none of his business. And if he gets tough about it, she should tell him to get lost. Any man who would insist on knowing a lady’s past would be a devil to live wiRi. EXPERIENCED DEAR ABBY: You should have told DON’T KNOW who was afraid her fiance would ask her some embarrassing questions about her past to answer in this way: “Don’t ask me any questions and I won’t ask you any, 0. K.?” BEEN THERE \dEAR ABBY: If you let a per^ go ahead and think something that isn’t true, isn’t that tjie same as lying! I don’t agree wiUKvou that the girl shouldn’t tell T^er boyfriend everything about hfer past because he thinks she’s a^ice” girl, and she really isn’t as.^nice as he thinks she is. After all, even if- she made only one mistake, she’s riot pure anymore, and she should have to pay for it. HIGH MORALS DEAR ABBY: If you want it straight from the horse’s mouth, (“jack-ass” would be more like it), here it is: Don’t tell your future husband anything. I made the mistake of answering all his questions and now I am the sorriest woman on earth. Oh, he did me a favor and married me anyway, but he has never let me forget it for a minute. If I had it to do all over again I wouldn’t have been so honest. TALKED TOO MUCH Final Session Wednesday will be the last YWCA Ladies Day Out program of the winter term. Any interested woman may attend. At noon there will be a cooperative luncheon and display of projects from classes. DEAR ABBY: Please tell “DON’T KNOW” that you heard from a girl who DOES KNOW, and she wants to give her some good advice. If you HAVE TO tell your boyfriend, go ahead and tell him. But don’t give him any names. KNOWS PLENTY DEAR ABBY: About the Ernie and Bernie question, or “to tell or not to tell: ” Take it from a man. I pumped the answers from my wife about the other men in her life, and although we have been married for nearly 20 years, it still bothers me, and I am sorry now that she ever “ told me. POMPANO BEACH Calendar TUESDAY Fashionette Club of Pontiac, 7 p.m., Adah Shelly Library. Crowning of queen. | FYances Willard union, i \Women’g Christian Tern- , ■ * perance Union, 7 p.m., home of Mrs. l«Roy Sha- 3 ft fer MxSouth Paddock 3-' Street. Rev. Lola Marian ^ . will speakX Oakland oWict Nurses Association, 7>30 p.m,, William BeaumomxHospi- i tal. Panel on “Conunping Patient Care.” Parfici-< pants are Adele Welsh; ■, Helen Millen and June \ Mock. ' Oakland County Dental Hygienists’ Society, 7:30 f p.m., Michigan Bell Telephone Company, Northland. Election and workshop. WEDNESDAY Woman’s World Series, 10 a.m.. The Pontiac Mall. “Your Growing Glory” by Donnell Thomas, hair stylist. The Thomas Glenn Suras (Janyce Lynne Schwabland) were wed Saturday evening in a candlelight service in the First Presbyterian Church, Ann Arbor. Their parents are Dr. and Mrs. John C. Schwtbland of Ann Arbor and the Eugene Suras of Orion Township. MRS. T. G. SURA 39! Genuine MOSAIC TILE Very Easy to Install . . . They are 1 2"xl 2" Sheets! Genuine CERAMIC t;le The Only Permanent Floor! 49 VINYL RUBBER TILE 9 xO" VINYL ASBESTOS TILE 9'x9 ' ;i; SOLID VINYL TILE .. ll f !;! MICA , . With hold Fleck . .. 39®s*i Ff.| : PLASTIC WALL ■TILE New Styrofoam CEILING TILE ACROSS From The MALL 2255 ELIZABETH LAKE RD. FRONT DOOR PARKING FE 4-5216 Open Mon., Thurs., Fri. 9 to 9 Tues., Wed., Sat. 9 to 6 siovd ma mu B—4 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY. MARCIt 20. 1967 By Member of Automotive Big 3, UAW DETROIT (AP) -At least one Of the automotive Big Three re-\ portedly has begun a joint preliminary study with the United A^ Workers on the costs of a gu^nteed annual income whiclARi written into new contracts this ed that neither it nor the com;- In addition, Wy dem^h^ed pany be named for the time *------------------------------* being. year. Neither the union nor the company would confirm or deny the report, but it came from a usually reliable source in a po-which\Rie union says must be sition to know. The source ask- . \ INSUMlfeE PROTECTION NSURANCE FIRE INSUl AUTO mSURANCE\ Sof* Drivart... Cancallad OTHER FORMS Sicknat* and Accidant... Bonds Boats ... Hospitalization IITH ANNUAL Choice of Sparkling Finishes! "STARLITE" 4-DRUM SET Sat includes; 514" x 14" snore drum, 14" x 22" ^oc boss drum, 9" x 13" tom tom, 16" x 16" floor tom, 1 cymbal holder, tom holder, hi-hot pedol, ^ \ 7 cymbol stond, sticks ond brushes. Sole Speciol! iNGO SET ■ TUNEABLE BONGOS Superbly-constructed,j bongo set in pearl finishes. ■ranches. WO 5-3600. Convenient Accts 18” Union officials, however, confirm preliminary joint studies are under way at General Motors and Ford on demands of UAW skilled tradesmen three months before actual negotiations begin. Douglas Fraser, UAW Chrysler director and codirector of the Skilled Trades Department, said he had asked for similar discussions with Chrysler Corp. ON RECORD UAW President Walter P. Reu-ther is on record as saying he will sign no new contract in 1967 that does not embody a plan under which a workman will know at the beginning of a year what I his income will be for that year, I any layoffs not withstanding. This has raised the specter of strike, and at least one industry source concluded: “Mr. Reuther appears to be suffering his triennial delusions.” Contract have spanned three years since 1955. The union concedes it has ho firm, fixed plan as of the mo-^ , but says it is testing sev- alternatives in computers. It aTi^o insists “the gap is small we are to where we want t Under \supplemental unemployment cmipensation paid-by the compani^on top of regular state unemploment compensation, it is possibih for a laid-off workman to draw\p to 62 per cent of his normal\take-home pay for as much as a^ll year. FIGHT OFF DEMAl The companies have foug! Reuther’s demands for a anteed annual wage” 1955, and have given no indication they would not chance a strike to kill off this time what is now termed “a guaranteed annual income." Early this year Reuther talked of “salaries instead of wages,” but switched to “guaranteed annual income,” pointing out salaried workers are subject to layoff without pay. ★ ★ * Reuther also has said that contracts replacing those which run out Sept. 5 at GM, Ford and Chrysler must contain substantial pay increase and equal pay for Canadian workers. On top of this, delegates reresenting some 200,000 UAW skilled tradesmen set up some costly demands of their own at an Atlantic City convention last week, and Reuther promised to work for their inclusion. UNES Oti’ DEMARCATION The tradesmen want lines of demarcation spelled out for skilletF classifications, with no one required to "perform any work outside his specialty. They also want oompulsorf overtime abolished and the right to strike when any company farms to an outside contractor work in the plants which UAW memers feel should be to them. no tampering” with a cost-of-living escalator which has added 16 cents hourly to pay since 1964. While lagging sales and growing inventories of 1967 models a V e resulted in production worker layoffs, the union says many skilled tradesmen are working six-day weeks on tools and dies for 1968 models and on maintenance and other chores that do not necessairly decline with production. PROMISES CHEERED Reuther’s promises /' , cheered lustily^ by the skilled, anqong whom the union conced-preconvention unrest. ■fhe UAW tried and failed summer to win year-ahead re-qiening of contracts to gain the skilled at least a 50-cent hourly increase immediately. Some delegates carried placards demanding either $1 an hour or 25 per cent raises in new contracts. Reuther, however, tied himself to no fixed sum. * * * Companies are cognizant of the tradesmen’s unrest. Ken Bannon, Foril Depi^t-ment director, and llednard Woodcock, UAW vice president and GM chieftain, confirmed they have sat in on joint committees studying skilled trades problems. A, Ford spoke: said any details discussed were by agreement with .the union confidential. * * * Joint prenegotiating study committees also were set up in 1964. Their jobs, both the uniMi and company said, were to sift out facts. REDFORD (AP)-An 11-year-old boy died Sunday in a fire that heavily damag^ his parents home in Redford Township Police said the youtii. Dennis R. Clarke, son of Mr. and Blaze Kills Boy in Red ford Twp. Harry Clarke, died when flames burst into his upstairs bedroom. * * The boy’s parents and two other children, Bonnie, 13, and Don- A Professional School of Business since 1896 * Associate in Accounting * Associate in Commerce * .Associate in Secretarial Science Pontiiu; Business Institute Save 00 Foshioo Soots Repriced in time for Easter! Hurry and choose your spring coat, repriced for great savings, from our collection of many styles, luxurious fabrics, fashion colors-sizes for all! IR88 22>S PENNEY'S MIRACLE MILE STORE HOURS: 9:30 A.M. to 9 P.M. CHARGE IT! _THE PONTIAC PRESS. ^lOXDAY, MARCH 20, Gifts and ■Visitors Surround Girl, 2, Rescued From Well AMBASSADOR DIES - William R. Rivkin, 47, U.S. ambassador to Senegal and Gambia, died Saturday of a heart attack in Senegal, the State Department said. Rivkin, from Muscatine, Iowa, had served previously as ambassador to Luxembourg. Jackie Not Set for Book Furor Thought It Would Be Disregarded—Author NEW YORK (UPI) - Mrs. John F. Kennedy at first believed the book, “The Death of a President,” would be disregarded by the American public, bound in black and set aside,to j collect dust on dark library shelves. * ★ * She had little*inkling the book she commissioned to tell the story of her husband’s assassination and the turmoil of governmental change would create an international furor. When the tumult erupted, I author William Manchester said yesterday, “Unbelievable charges were made, un- I forgivcable words spoken and i treasured friendships rup- i tured.” Manchester said Mrs. Kenne-i dy and others attempted “to| surpress vital facts” contained j in the controversial book. His accusations appear in an article in the current is.sue of Look magazine entitled “William Manchester’s Own Story.” It will appear on newsstands to-piorrow. The book was serialized in Look. He also accused the former first lady of inciting Sen. Robert F. Kennedy into a “tiger- “TT" COLOR TV SPECIALS LIMITED QUANTITY BARGAIN SPECIALS NONE SOLD BEFORE 7 P.M. TODAY-MONDAY a $449.95 GE COLOReAB** M ConioUtt*. 267 $q. in. | ■ ssM^li"$277| AH Complala ■ $439PACKARD-BELU8” 1 $3081 aswMaJ ,&.."vs.r^*bZ3| PORTABLE COLOR TV) 18” 1 ll•nl« not «oW today v I Comb. AM-FM, FM- '.vf I TV-STEBEOAFPUANCES ii597jstr“ $2591 ALL INCLUDE FREE 90-DAY SERVICE Admirol Portabl. TV l8t». UHF/ViHF. 42 »q. $199.95 Norg. 30" AA tl«ctric rang*. Fully 91 MM ootomotic ■ *■! $139 GE 9" battpry CAA | or^ plug-in TV. 2 $189.95 RCA Victor AA portabl. TV. 267 .q. 9|llll in. 4 only ■ $199.95 Philco Con- *4 sola W. 282 sq. in. ^|y|| Admiral 14" portabl. 3Tfi TV. UHF/VHF. 3 only | y $114.95 RCA Vi^r ca|A 12" portabl. TV. $119.95 Zonith 15" SAA portabl. TV t.tt. UHF. *1|H 3 poiv. yn. m«).l«... • "w UHF.4only ■ $149.95 Motorola got f|A Sl«r«o comb. with^Ai^ . ▼ | UU $169.95 Hotpoint S||0 outomotic wa»h*r. 1 $119.95 Rop.r 30" SfiA got rang*. 1 Sunday only $199.95 W«Knghom. St.ioo comb, with AM- * 4 A A m $109.95 PhilcowrinoK m *81 $199.88 Zonith Con-•olotto TV. 282 >q. in. UHf;VHF.Ju«t.l... . »13T $139.95 Admiral 18" portabla TV. UHF/VHF. Q to mII at.............. *83 SUNBEAM ELEC. FRY PAN and covo^ Complololy '*10’* $4*9 DORMEYER FOOD MIXER 10 poworfol 2 ■$298«T $4* *10** *44** *14** *10** FREE DELIVERY and SERVICE WHIRLPOOL QEN. ELECTRIC TAPERECCRDER Solid Stoto, intlani n Eo^ ond^lajr^ck. 8i “l5*i* AUTOMATIC DISHWASHER «333 PHILCO COLOR TV IS HIGHLAND’S COMPLETE PRICE FOR THIS NEW 196T BIG SCREEN «124 88 INCLUDING FREE DELIVERY, SET-UP AND 90-DAY SERVICE CONTRACT Free delivery and service FREE 10-LB. EASTER HAM WITH THIS WHIRLPOOL 39” EVE-LEVEL GAS RAHGE $209^*^ : INSTALLATION :i:. 5 DAY FREE HOME TRIAL • Giant 267 tq. in. picture area! Almost as large as biggest Color screen made! • "Rare-Earth" phosphorus tube for more brilliant colors. • All channel UHF/VHF tuning. ^79 ADMIRAL 14-INCH UHF/VHF PORTABLE 11 •p’n.T. j:rnVsV.Tp*:.Vp*^.'L",;-.'J::; Luggog* typ* handl*. Aptnma. UHF/VHF. $g988 FREE 5-DAY HOME TRIAL ON COLOR TV FREE TRIAL “’'^66 14CU.FT. $198 $497'™? *199“ *138“ *168 SPECIAL SAVINGS ON THESE BIG FAMILY SIZE PHILCOS FROM HIGHLAND! PHILCO *158 PHILCO 12 tva *179 NO MONEY DOWN • 3 YEARS TO PAY PONTUC MALL SHOFPIIIC CEimR ft" A : S b-. '.mi ::4(# Wji,;. • - » Q. i- ^ ^ ■ THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY^ MARCH 20. 1967 C-8 She Mak^s Her Debut Today, Oiji The Daily Comic Pages of The Pontiac Press. ik..~ J I e: r ROBIN MALONE Beautiful, auburn-hdired and 30-she radiates charm and humor through an air of competence and poise, for she as a gal with a purpose. u/nAUtfuetu oif^.i^e^7fUAfZ>,sAA id* tAtc CdiUAtL iOUC' THE PONTIAC PRESS For Home Delivery Dial 332-8181 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY. MARCH 20. 1967 MARKETS f!ie following are top prices covering sales of locally grown produce by growers and sold by in wholesale package lots Quotatnns are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets as of Friday. Produce Apples, Delicious, bu....... Apples, Delicious, Red, bu, .. Apples, McIntosh, bu......... Appes, Jonathan, bu.......... Apples, Northern Spy, bu. ... Apples, Steele Red, bu....... Apples, Cider, fgal.......... VEGETABLES NEW YORK (APi-Ihe stock market rose in fairly active ‘-ading at the inning today. Most changes were fractional. ★ ★ ★ Gainers outnumbered losers by about two-toK)ne. ★ R * Opening prices included: Boeing, up % at 82%; ^terry Rand, up % at 34%; Anaconda, up Va at 85%; Allied Chemical, Carrots, topped, bu.................. 2.00 Celery, Root, dz.................. ’ “ “------............................. i, dry, SGIb! 'baa !! ^ ^'' ’! ”' i i siso Squash, Buttercup, bu. .. Squash, Butternut, bu. .. Squash, Delicious, bu. ... Squash, Hubbard, bu. .... Turnips. Topped ......... KRfi, Poultry and Eggs DETROIT POULTRY DETROIT (API—Prices peld per pound ir No. 1 live poultry: Roasters hnvy 26-27! broilers and fryers W a large 37-60; large 3S’/2-3Si mediurn Exchange—Butter steady; wholesale buy- 90 B 65; 89 C 62%. Eggs steady to firm; wholesale buying prices unchanged to 1 higher; 75 per cent or better Grade A whites 35; mixed 33'/fi; mediums 31'A; standards *■" checks 26. CHICAGO POULTRY CHICAGO (AP) - (USDA) -poultry: wholesale buying prices changed; roasters 25-26Vi; special White Rock fryers 20-21. Livestock Most Changes F<;^ctional ! ^ Stock Marf Rises at Opening up % at 40V6; and American Tobacco, up % at 35%. Also; Bethlehem, off % at 37%; Ford, off % at 50%; International Nickel, off % at 87; Amer-can Cyanamid, off % at 34%; and American Airline, off % at 91%. Santa Fe was off % at 29% on 13,000 shares. Singer opened unchanged at 56% on 12,000 shares. On Friday Uie Associated Press average of 60 stocks rose 1.0 to 323.8. R R R Prices on the American Stock Exchange generally higher, Zapata off-shore rose nearly 2. Up fractionally were Microdot, Oak Electro - Netics, Creole Petroleum and Arkansas-Louisiana Gas. Syntax lost more than a point. The New York Stock Exchange ~A— 5 46^ M 25^ 22V4 22 AdMillis .40b S9 29H 29 29'/% — */ AIMedStr 1.32 1 25V% 25'/^ 25'/% .. 41 40'/4 40 40 - 7 25'/% 25 25'/4 + 27 267% 26% 26% - 5 61% 61% 81%.. I 92% S AmCrySufl'l AmCyan 1.25 FPw lift 38 37% 376i 37% + 79 8IVx 81% 81% -HI 13 52'/. 52% 52% — '■ 6 19 19 19 .... 125 36Vj 36% 36% - 21 38% 38% 38% -H % 12 33% —• .......... GtWSug 1.60a GreenGnt .80 Greyhound 1 . 19% 1 |-53% i AmNGa> 1.80 AOptIc 1.35b Am Photoepy 20 18 5-17% 17% .. 2 66% 46% 66% + 26 10 9% 9% .. 20 38% 38Vj 38Vj .. - Cattle ers to make* mark(J''?ML'Tun °mol5 cows these active fully steady utility com^18j^19.00; canner and cutter cow Vealers 25 not enough to make a market test. Sheep 25 not enough for market test. CHICAGO LIVESTOCK CHICAGO (AP)—(USDA)-Hogs 5,500; butchers steady; most 1-2 200-220 lb ft.M-l9.50; 52 head at 19.75; mixed 1-3 190-260 lbs 18.50-19.25; ^3 260-280 lbs 17.75-18.50; mixed 1-3 350-600 lb sows Cattle 3,500; calves none; slaughter steers stea^ to 25 higher; prime 1,150-1,350 lb 25.7W6.25; high choice and prime 1 25.00-25.75; choice 9041,250 lbs 26.00-25.00; couple loads high choice 1 and prime 900-1,050 lb si,-—*-' 26.2^26.50; choice 800-1,050 Sheep 200; small supply ter lambs steady; several prime 106-122 lb wooled s 22.00-22.50. Anken Chem Armco StI 3 Armour 1.60 ArmsCk 1.20a Atchison 1.60 32% 32% -Hl% American Stock Exch. BrazilLtPw 1 Brit Pet .55e Campbl Chib ; Can So Pet Cdn Javelin Cinerama i Creole 2.60 Data Cont EquityCp .1 Fargo Oils Felmont Oil FlyTjjier .20s I.) High Low Last Chg. 8 36% 35% 35% _ % I 33% 32% 33% + % 6 39% 38% 39 V, + i 3% 3 3% .. i 2% 2% 2% -H 3 35 36% 36% - I) 10% ,10% 10% .. 1 9 7-16 9 7-16 9 7-16 - .. 6 1I-16 6 9-16 6 11-16-H3-I6 CaroPLt 1.34 •16f Cert-teed .80 Champ S 2.20 Ches Ohio 6 ChlMII StP 1 ChPneu 1.80b Chi Rl Pac Gulf Am Cp Hycon Mfg Kaiser Jnd McCrory wt MeadJohn, .48 RIC Group Scurry Rain SIgnafOIIA 1 65 36% 35% 36% ^ 12 9% 9% 9% ... B7-16B5-16 8 7-16-HJ-16 2% 2% — _ 10% 11% -fl 2 13% 13% 13% + 165 732 12 10% 11% +m ...... 13% 13% ■ • 10% 10% I 41' - 27 29 % 291 8 5% H. .............. 23 63% 63 63% -H% 4 5% 5% 5% 12 1% 1 1 16 1% 1% 1% 144 25 24'/4 24% ..... 33 28 27% 27% — % 45 12'/4i'11% 1H% —r SynfexCp .60 137 93% 92% 92% Technicol .60 13 12 11% 11% UnControl .20 316 7 6% 7 Copyrighted by The Associated Pres ClevEIIII 1.68 CocaCola 2.10 Colg Palm 1 CollInRad .60 CBS 1.60b Col Gas 1.64 Col PIct .83t ComlCHe I.SO ComSolv 1.20 Comw Ed 2 Comsat ConEdls 1.80 ConElecInd 1 ConFood 1.40 ConNGas 1.60 ConPow 1.90b Cont A Stocks of Local Interest Figures after decimal points are eighths OVER THE COUNTER STOCKS Quotations from the NASD are representative inter-dealer prices of approximately 11 a.m. Inter-dealer markets change throughout the day. Prices ’ -It Include retail markup, markdown Bid Asked AMT Corp. .................... 3. ■ “ ' Associated Truck ............ 8.. Braun Engineering ...........17... . Citizens Utilities Class A ...23.2 23.5 Detrex Chemical ..............21.6 2* ' Diamond Crystal ..............17.7 1 Frank's Nursery ..............12.6 1 Kelly Services ...............24.6 2 Mohawk Rubber Co...............23.6 2 Monroe Auto Equipment ........19.0 1 North Central Airlines Units ...10.0 1 Safran Printing ........„.....16.0 1 Scripto ................•..... 6.1 ... Wyandotte Chemical ......31.2 31.6 MUTUAL FUNDS Affiliated ^und ............. ......... Chemical Fund ..............17.72 19.37 Commonwealth Stock 10.79 11.“ Dreyfus .................. 16.20 15. Keystone Income K-1 .........9.16 10. Keystone' Growth K-2 .......- 6.87 7.. Mass. Investors Growth .....12.16 13.29 Mass. Investors Trust ......16.60 18.16 Putnam Growth ..............12.73 13.91 ------ -1 Electronics .......10.20 11.“ n Fund .............13.76 16. ............18.77 20.60 D0W-40NES AVERAGES STOCKS 30 industrials . .. ....................... 235.20-H0.60 15 Utilities ................ 136.97-H0.32 65 Stocks ................... 310.76-H0.29 BONDS 60 Bonds ..........,.......... 83.09-H0.(» 10 Higher grade rails ----- 10 Second grade . 86.13-H0.01 .. . . ........... ............ 86.22-0.01 10 Industrials ................. 88.81-H0.22 0 Public utilities .. : BOND AVERAGES lad by The Associated Press 20 10 10 10 10 Ralls Hid. Util. Fgn. L. Yd Noon FrI. 72.6 95.6 83.6 91.9 Prev. Day 72.6 95.3 83.6 91.9 r A^. 77 J 96.7 1? ?o;? ’81:5 86.2 92.0 88.3 30 85% 85 85% -H = 12 17% 17% 17% -H ; 6 56% 56% 56% — ' 17 36% 36% 36% + ' 2 56% 54% 543/4 ... 10 36% 36'/« 36% - ' 1 54% 56% 56% — I 136 29% 29'% 29% ... 6 83% 83% 83% + ' 83 603/4 40'/4 60'%—'; GrumAIr Grum Air wi GulfMO 2.60a GulfStaUt .80 HollySug 1^ Ideal Cem 1 ln?a*nd *s"t? i InsNoAm 2.40 InterlkSt 1.80 JohnMan 2i20 JohnsnJ 1.40a JonLogan .80 Kaiser , Kennecoii z KernCLd 2.60 ■' r Me 1.40 ibClk 2.20 6'% 6'% 6% 28'% 28'% 28'%-------- 36% 36% 36% -H % 18'% 18'% 18'% — '- 26% 253/4 26% -H ' 23% 23% 23% + = 60% 603% eo3% - ' 26'% 26 26 — ' 96'/' 96'/4 96% — LOFGIs 2.80a >ews Theat meS Cem 1 >neSGa 1.12 LongIsLt 1.08 Lorn lard 2.50 LTV .50 Lucky Str .80 Lukens StI 1 22 383% 38SS 383% + : 1 17% 17% 17% — ' 1 62% 62'/4 62% + ' 3 69 69 69 - ' 31 50 69'% 69'% —1 7 353% 35% 35'% + ' 5 21% 21 21% -f ' 8 32% 32% 32% — ’ 99 42 413% 41'% _ : 16 32% 32% 32% -H 41 48% 48 .48'% + ' 1 38'% 38'% 38'% - -1 98'% 98'% ?8'% -H '% 6 293% 293% 293% + % 36 803% 80% 80'% + % 17 73'% 73t% 73'% + % 12 27% 27 27% + 6 363% 387,^ 363% + 11 27'/4 27'/4 27'/4 ... 12 52% Mack Tr MacyRH 1 Mad Fd_1.9^ 1.20 Cont Can 1.90 Corn Pd 1.70 CorGW 2.50a CoxBdeas .50 CrouseHd .80 CrowCol 1.87t Crown Cork CrownZe 2.20 , Cruc StI 1.20 Cudahy Co OaycoCp 1.60 Deere 1.80a Delta Air 1 DenRGW 1.10 DetEdis 1.40 .... .... ...-% 69 63'% 62% 62% — '% 38 34% 34'% 34'% - '% 14 48% 473% 47'% - 6 51'% 51'% 513%— 19 29% 29% 29% -H 8 44% 64% 44% -H 1 30'% 30Vz 30'% - 8 105 104'% 105 + , 4 45% 45% 61% — 15 79% 79 79 —% 22 693% 69'% 69'% -HI" 62 58'% 58'% 58'% + 7 31'% 31'% 31'% -H 3 49% 49% 69% - -- 2 3573/4 357% 357% -1% x22 50'% 50 50V» -HI" 1 26% 26% 24% + 18 ' 49% 69% 69% -H 37 50'% 50% 50% + 12 67'/4 67'/4 67'% - 6 25'% 25 25'% - 69 9 9 9 + 31 133% 13'% 133% -H 16 23'% 23% 23% + —D— 19 22% 22'% 22% + 3 28'% 28% 283% + 24 74 74 74 - 4 128'% 128 128'% -H 10 19% 19'% 19% + 14 38 373/4 373/4 19 67'% 663% 67'% -H1% 12 75'% 75'% 75'% ... 6 30'% 30% 30% -H Duke Pw 1.20 7 153'% 153 153'% -H '% 1 31% 31% 31% . 21 133% 13% 13'/a + —E— 23 104'% 103% 106'% -H 1 122'% 122'% 122'% + 26 16S 166'% 166'% ... 19 27 26'% 26'% + 9 72 713% 71'/, — 17 33% 33% 33% ... EthylCorp .6 EvansPd .601 Eversharp .'edders .60 FedDStr 1.70 Fed Mog 1.80 Feme Cj ^1.20 FIrestne 1.60 63 293% 29'% 29V% — 13 22'% 22 22% ... —F-^ 8 H77% 1771% 177V4 -21 23'% 23% 23% + 18 62'% 4 2 .15% 15% 15% -!7 60% 60 60% -H 11 36 33'%(36'% ... 2 30'% 301% 30'% 15 56% 56% 56'% — 6 65% 65% 65% + 17 26% 26% 26%-26 22'% 21% 21% — 1 46'% 66'% 66'% -H 2 73% 733% 73T/, 16 38 38 38 + 12 16'% 16'% 16'% ... ________ - -- 93 50% 69% 69% — ForeDaIr .50 150 25'% 26% 25 + Cp .7: Fair .1 FreenSul l'.25 FruehCp 1.70 Gam Sko 1.30 G Accept 1.20 GenAnllF .60 Gen CIg 1.20 > 67'% 67'% — 32'% 33 - 7 25% 25 25% + 2 2l'% 233% 233% + 63 251% 25 25 + 60 92'/z 92 92'/4 — I 72% 72 72 I 32% 32'% 32% - >• GenMIlls 1.50 iGen Mot .85g GanPrec 1.50 GPubSvc .38g G PubUt 1.50 GTel El 1.28 - n Tire .80 — Pacific 1b . .... _______________ Gerber Pd 1 1 27 27 27 .. GeftyOII .log 17 56 55% 56 -H Gillette 1.20 17 69% 69'% 69% - GIm Aid .70 87 12% 12% 12'% -H Goodrich 2.60 6 65% 65% 65'% .. Goodyr 1.35 22 653% 65% 65% + GraceCo 1.30 66 53 53 53 .. Granites 1.60 6 26% 26% 36%^ --------... - 23% 23% 23% -H Rohr Cp .80 RoyCCola .72 RoyDut 1.79e RyderSys .60 33% 33'% 33% + % 31 22'% 22'% 22'% .... 29 513% 51% 51% + % 3 35'% 35'/4 35'% . . 1 771/4 77'% 77'% — I 17 27 26% 26% — 1 —H— 8 453% 45% 65% — 1 3 393/4 39'/j 39% .... 5 51 50% 51 + 1 52 SO 69'% 69% .... 8 65 66% 66%—11 8 61'% 61'% 61% + I 17 13% 12'/* 13'% + 1 6 50 69'% 50 + \ 2 261% 26'% 26'% + 1 6 61% 613% 41% + 1 2 3 86'% 86'% 86'% -H 1 20 63% 623% 42% -1 sRsroiP j W/2 2 9 53V# 53H 53^ + % 14 28% 28% + 4 5V4 5'/% SVi + 2 32»/4 32'/4 32'/4 + 10 I6V4 16H 16^ ... 18 47 46^ 46% + 10 36% 36% + tnctair 2.40 ngerCo 2.20 mitfiK 1.80a .52g _____alf 1.25 South Co 1.02 SouNGas 1.30 outhPac 1.50 louth Ry 2.80 ipartan Ind Jparry Rand Square D .70 StdBrand i:30 Std Kolls .50 StOltCal 2.50b tdOiilnd 1.90 tdOllNJ .80g >tdOilOh 2.40 kt Packaging ktaley 1.35 Texaco 2.60a 50 77 TexETrn 1.0: ----Sul .60 ----Inst .60 TexPLd .35g 17 42% 62 62%- 13 61'% 61% 61%-12 30'% 30 30'% + —K— 8 106'% 103'% 103'% + 6 62% 62% 62'% -H 4 50 50 50 - - 15 23% 23% 23% + '% —L— 43 30% 29'% 30'% S ?7% 17% 17% -H 1 20% 19'% 20% + ) 28'% 273% 28'% -H 1.59t —M- r .25g MartinMar MayDStr ‘Aa^tag^l.ou^ McKess 1.80 Melv Sh 1.60 MerckC 1.40a MGM 1b MidSoUtil .76 MlnerCh 1.30 MlnnAAM 1.30 Mo Kan Jex > MobiiOlt 1.80 Mohasco 1 8 54'/a ^ 46 38V4 ^'/a 14 713/4 7m . „ 1 2|V4 29% 29% + \U 23'% .... . 36'% 353% 35'% + Uniroyal 1.21 UnltAlrLIn 1 US Steal 2.40 Uplohn 1.W VanadCp 1.60 Varian 163 23'% 23'% S 5 35 r 45'% 45% l 34%-44'% -H 56 +1 ^ ' 7lk% + ' Nat BIsc 2 Nat Can .SOb NatCash 1.20 NatDairy 1.40 Nat DIst 1.80 Nat Fuel 1.60 1 32% 32% 32% + 1 3I'% 31'% 31'% ■■■ 9 36% 36% 36% + 23 104'% 103'/z 103'% ... 9 25% 25% 25% + —N— 25 81 BO'/i 81 -HI 4 49'% 49'% 49'% + 43 30'% 30'% 30'% -H 15 953% 95 953% + 26 33% 33'% 33%-H ■>8 43% 42'% 43'% — I 29% 29% 29% -H i 10% 10% 10% ... Nat steel 2.50 29 46'% 46% 27 47'% 47'% 47% + 9 47'% 47'% 67'% — 6 55'% 55'% S5'% - 10 33% 33% 33%— 20 50% 69'% 69’/^-10 38% 38% 38%... 29 55'% 56'% 55'% -H 10 55% 55% 55% - 16 59'% 58% 59 - 2 11% 11% 11% . 166 187% 185% 185% -H1'% 7 81% 81% 81% - 26 10'% 10'% 10'% 22 56% 56 -R— 56'% + 28 27'% 26% 26% .. 6 29'% 29'% 29'% - 38 35% 35% 35% -H Indians Charge U.S. Meddling Parliament Opposition Is Promised a Report 1 16% 16% 16% -H 60 60 + 65% 653% - 20'/s 203% 56'% 56% - .. . 73 73 162 S6'% 56'% 56% 68 50% 50% 50% 1- < 2 39'% 39'/. 39'% .... 16 60'% 60 60 .... 10 28'% 273% 28'% + \ 16 35% 35'% 35'% - 1 67 32% 32'% 32% - ', 13 51'% 51% 51'% + 1 52 23% 23'% 23'% + > *36'% I 22'% 2 I 22% .. . 353% 353% 353% 36 23% 23 23'% 77 60% 60 60 13 52'% 52% 52%-% 290 66'% 63'% 66 -H " 5 66'% 66'% 66'% + 36 13% 13'% 13'% — - 36% 36% 36% NEW DELHI, India (AP) The United States was accused in the Indian Parliament today of trying to influence India’s ■■ ■ election last month, of attempting to undermine a local y()uth organization and of aiding the defection of Stalin’s daughter Svetlana to the West. Foreign Minister M.C. Chagla quieted the shouting opposition members temporarily with promise to give a detailed statement Tuesday on Miss Stalina’: flight from New Delhi to Rome March 7 after she sought a lum at the U. .S. Embassy. R R R But he and Finance Minister Morarji Desai were then sub-' jected to a series of questions about ,the activities of the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency in India’s use of the U.S. Embassy’s huge rupee fund, acquired through the sale of food grains to India. George Fernandes, a Socialist who defeated pro-American S.K. Patil in the Bombay parliamentary .race, referred to disclosures in the U. S. press that CIA funds had been given to various S. and international organizations. One of the groups named was l the International Youth Center in New Delhi. “Is the government aware of these disclosures?’’ Fernandes -% 78 60'% 60 17 46 46 40 T 32 46% 46% 46%,- 43 52% 52 52% + 7 58'/^ 58'^ 5I'/4 .. 30 32 31% 31% .. 6 54'/k 53% 53% .. —T— , 22 29'/4 29 29 - 51 103% 103'/4 103% .... 58 126% 125 126% +3 7 17% 17% 17% .... 23 68 67% 67% — \ 13 45% 45% 45% .. —U— 63 18 17V# 17V# + 82 58 57% 57% + 9 26% 26'/i 26% + 7 49'/^ 49% 49'/*- 26 41% 41'/4 41% .. 3 67 66'/4 66'/4 - 9 4m 4VM 41'^ .. 25 79% 78% 78% - 27 911/4 90'/^ 90% + 49 10'/4 10% lO'/i .. 18 32 31% 31% .. 16 24% 23V# 24V4 + 4 26’/4 25% 25% — 12 68 67% 67% - 52 19 18% 18V# + 2 3m 34»% 34%- WashWat 1,16 WestnAirL 1 WnBanc 1.10 74 45'% 44% 44% - i 13 17 16% 16'/a — ' 6 58'% 58'/4 58% ... —V— 4 37% 37’/a 37% .. 83 351% 34'/4 34% + 108 36 35Va 36 + 23 45V2 45'% 45% + ■ —w— 40 23 22V# 23 + 57 48»/4 47V# 48 - 1 22% 22% 22% + 13 53% 53 53 + ' - 20 ^V# 29% 29% - % 20 %2% 42'/4 ..... •' 88 57Vo 57% 42'/4 42% + , w. ..vx, 88 57% Cp 1.60 WlisonCo l'.70. 155 T6% «% ^ +2*' ----------------------30'/4 30 30 - »/ 23% 23% 23% WinnDix .. .. .. 39% 39'/2 -L —X—Y—Z— - pi 60 272 270 270 - ngstSht 1.80 20 31% 31% 31%- Sales figures are unofficial. Unless otherwise noted, rates < ends In the foregoing table are Isbursements based on the last quarterly * semiannual declaration. Special or Ktra dividends or payments not nated as regular are Identified i following footnotes, a—Also extra or extras. I. c—Liquidating r paid In 1967 Paid last year. plus stock dividend, e—PaL ________ _____ f — Payable In ste^k during 1967, estimated cash value on ex*divTdenr' " distribution date, o—Declared or far this year, h—Declared or pa stock dividend or split up. k—t__________ or paid this year, an accumulative Issue with dividends in arrears, n—New Issue, p—Paid this year, dividend omitted, deferred or no action taken at last dividend -----ig. r-Declared ' dividend, t—Pi during lividend cld-Called. x-Ex di .. .. bankruptcy or receivership being reorganized under the Bankruptcy A^8 „ —..-1*1— assumed ------------------- . Rails Util. Stocks .457.1 .......B4.9 154.1 ..447.9 185.1 154.2 . .447.8 179.6 TS5.0 . 495.0 194.1 159.2 . . . 537.9 213.9 170.5 369. ...388.0 143.9 130.2 269. .. 523.3 194.5 178.2 358.. . 451.4 149.3 162.6 308.0 Treasury Position on qf th« TrcaiutV compBrtd with cc-Bsponding data a year ago. March 14, 1M7 March 14,19 * $ S,382,0M,279.34 $ 2,814,824,035. Deposits Fiscal Year July 1— ’'",704,954,475.55 82,425,798,637. Is Fiscal Year— , . . . .-,444,044,987.01 99,297,475,061. ixi—Total Debt ......................... _333,493Jt7t,810.59 324,006,255,706.90 Assets— ct to statutory limit. Friday's 1st DIvidands Declared Despite Slowdown Job Figures Strong ByJOHNCUNNIFF 4P BosiaetM Analyst NEW YORK - The present teonomic slowdown clearly shown by a half-dozra Indicators. Curiously, though, the nation’s employment f i g-j ures show little change at all. They remain] strong. At 3.7 pVil cent, the jobless! ratio in Febni-1 ry remained CUNNIFF steady for the third month in a icw, dispelling some of the feeling that it sank that low in the first place merely because the nation was everproducing. R R R This interpretation no longer seems to have weight. It now seems that the rate of unem- ployed during the past year, low 1 Aside from this major prob-as lit fas, reMlyAdHln’t |iye an hem, the outlook Mr the; imnwdi-adequate measw’e ht the intense late ' ' demand for wcxkers. The evidence seems to indi- cate that even mwe workers could have been employed if they had the pn^r skills. But, since these jobs went unfilled, the demand was channeled into overtime hours instead. CUSHION This overtime still averages more than three hours a numth in manufacturing but is now dropping. Its existence, however, is still a cushion against layoffs. Hours are cut before jobs are eliminated. The most serious blemish on the sparkling job figures is the rate of nonwhite joblessness — 7 1 per cent compared to 3.3 per cent f(M- whites. This is a serious, persistent problem, with consequences throughout society- Pro-Mao Troops Killed More Than 200 Farmers ‘PJO DIRECT FINANCING’ Chagla replied it was but that ‘such activities are not normally capable of verification.” Chagla added he understands the CIA “had not directly financed any Indian organization. It is reported to have given money to foundations which have been financing organizations in India. The organizations have been innocently receiving the aid not aware of its CIA origination.” R R R Desai, a former officer in the International Youth Center, said he had asked the organizations to return any pioney they had received from groups that had been financially assisted by the CIA. A member of the pro-Moscow Communist party, Indrajit Gupta, charged that C!IA money and embassy funds had'been used to ‘defeat 44 progressive candidates during the elections.” ‘VAGUE ALLEGA-nONS’ “These are very vague allegations,” Chagla replied. “I will not go by wild reports made here or in the press. If you bring specific reports I will go into them, but I can make this declaration: The government will not permit any foreign money from any foreign source to subvert our elections of any of‘our organizations. The government will keep a very vigilant and careful watch over money coming from the outside and organizations receiving them.” HONG KONG (AP) - More than 200 farmers in Wei An, in Fukien Province, were killed when pro-Mao Tse-tung troops opened fire on anti-Maoists, the anti-Communist New Life Evening Post reported today. ^ R R R Quoting arrivals from Foochow, the capital of Fukien, the paper said the anti-Maoist farmers stormed a commune in Wei An to steal grain. R R R In protest against “the Communist troop brutality,” paper said, farmers in Wei An refused to go to the fields f(x siting planting. The newspaper report could hot be confirmed by other sources here. The Hong Kong Star reported Communist gunboat had captured 40 anti-Maoists trying to flee from Canton to Hong Kong in a boat. The English-language newspaper said the information came from wall posters in Canton. The pro-Mao New China News Agency claimed widespread support for a Maoist order for for| Chagla s announced he would make a statement on Miss Stalina’s case, a member of the pro-Peking Communist faction, A.K. Gopalan, demanded that U. S. Second Secretary Robert Rayle, who escorted her to Rome, be declared persona non grata and asked to leave India because of alleged links with the CIA. Chagla said his government took the matter up with the embassy and “it was categorically denied that he is a CIA agent. They said he was an important member of the embassy staff.” News in Brief Waterford Township Police are investigating a break-in reported yesterday at Super (Thief Drive-In, 1715 N. Telegraph, in which $56 was stolen. Earl Simpkins of 3880 Anoka, Waterford Township, reported to township police yesterday the larceny of three guns, tion, a knife and shooting - total value of $400 —during a break-in of his home. Erwin A. Carroll^ of 1630 Grubb, Highland Township, told Oakland County sheriff’s deputies yesterday that a chain saw valued at $225 was stolen from his truck. 'Plot' Suspect Awaiting Bill of Information NEW ORLEANS, La. IJFi -Clay L. Shaw, destined for trial on a charge of conspiring to as-President John Kennedy, rested in a hospital bed today awainting word on bill of information that was expected to be filed against him. , R R R Dist. Atty. Jim Garrison, who contends a conspiracy in New Orleans led to the murder of Kennedy in Dallas, Tex., indicated he would file the bill this week. ☆ R R The bill is but a technical step in the legal procedure toward bringing Shaw to trial. No trial date has been set for Shaw, 54, a decorated World War II Army major and retired leader. Shaw entered Southern Baptist Hospital here Saturday. His attorneys said ' was solely “for rest and relaxation.” PRELIMINARY HfARING Garrison’s case against Shaw came out last week in the preliminary hearing, when a dope addict and an insurance salesman placed Shaw with Lee Harvey Oswald weeks before the president’s death. the Chinese army to intervene in China’s industry. R R R The order was issued Sunday, accompanied by hints it was designed to oust anti-Maoists entrenched in the nation’s major industries. The army was ordered earlier to take a similar role on farms to help sow the spring erop. The Communist agency said Sunday’s order drew “a sincere and enthusiastic response” from major industrial cities ‘jubilant” reaction from army units throughout the country. The agency named six cities, all of which it announced earlier were under Maoist control, which it said reacted favorably the order. They were Shansi, Taiyuan, Harbin, Kuei-yang, Tsinan and Isingtao. future sbahs> to be good also, despite^ tne slowing of the productive pace. In fact, there is some slight evidence of even more pressure on employers to find workers. The National Industrial Conference Board’s help-wanted advertising index, a sensitive measure which dropped in January, has now begun to climb again. MEASURES ADS This index measures the volume of classified job advertisements in 52 major newspapers across the counfoy and is considered to accurately measure business conditions! Comments the board, a nonprofit, independent, largely business - supported organiza-Gains in the index have usually been followed by dips in the unemployment rate; declines in the index have been followed by increases in unemployment.” R R R ' This lends weight to the belief that employers, in personnel matters anyway, are looking beyond this slowdown to the eventual upturn. That is, somewhat in the manner of the stock market, they are discounting fi'c present and betting on the future. The fact is that the p'eat majority of analysts today mix their forecasts of a near term slowdown or adjustment with a glowing forecast for the latter part of the year. PLATEAU? There seems to be, in other words, a feeling that the adjustment will simply be the penalty to pay for the next advance. Some even feel the slowdown is the plateau where forces are regrouped for the next big economic expansion. ThiS^ ^applies to both employer and worker. There is increasing evidence that companies are stockpiling workers for this expansion. Campus recruiters are said to be especially active and competitive for this year’s g ing classes. Fisher Body Man Gets New Post Thd’, appointment of John Schachinger Jr. as manufacturing manager in charge of tpetal and trim fabricating operations for Fisher Body was announced today by Kenneth N. Scott, general manager of Fisher Body Division and a vice president of General Motors Corp. The appointment is effective April 1. R R R Schachinger, of 4086 Nearbrook, Bloomfield Toirniship, was previously chief engineer for body engineering. He joined Fisher Body in 1939 as a welding methods f Successfuhinvesfing Bananas accounted last year ^ million of Ecuador’s total exports of some $135 'million. By ROGER E. SPEAR Q) “I am 50 years old, single, and wish to build income for retirement during the next 12 years. I have $2,000 in E bonds, $5,000 in savings, Peoples Gas Light & Coke, Columbia Gas, Ford and PepsiCola General Bottlers. What changes do you suggest?” H.R. A) Your holdings are suitable for income and moderate appreciation, but they are not in all instances best suited for longterm growth, which should be your objective. , Hold Peoples Gas which serves Chicago and some of its suburbs. This company has a long and consistent record of risiijig earnings and dividends. ' believe it will ultimately work out well for you. Switch your other stock holdings into areas which appear to have greater potential for enhancing your . at retirement. As re-placenumta, I suggest General Telephone & Electronics, War-ne^Lambert and Green Giant. ■it R R Q) “We are a young family with two small children. It is There is evidence also of intense executive maneuvering, which the statistics don’t reveal at all. This restlessness is shown in the bulging files of ex- < ecutive recruiters. Feeling the market is in their favor, many executives reportedly are quite willing to change jobs for a good price. Some evidence of this demand is supplied by activities at this week’s annual convention of the Institute of Electronics and Electrical Engineers. JOB RESUMES Some 73,000 scientists and engineers are expected to attend the convention, ostensibly to exchange ideas and learn of new products. But many will have their job resumes with them. Realizing this, a personnel recruiter expects to process by electronic computer the job desires of 1,800 engineers and scientists. No cost. R R R To serve 103 prospective employers the recruiter has reserved 130 hotel rooms simply for interviews. All fees will be paid by the employer. fiossible that my company may transfer me to nnother area at any time. Do you think we should buy a home with a small down payment and invest the bulk of our $18,000 savings in growth stocks, or buy a house outright? Our town has 3,000 population.” N.S. A) I wonder if it is necessary in your circumstances to buy a house at all, which in a small town might ^ difficult to resell without loss. Even if you could get out even, you would probably lave to pay a reasonable commission — which could make your tenure rather costly if you were transferred within a year or two. I suggest you rent a place, if possible, invest half your savings in growth stocks and leave the balance in the bank. Roger Spear’s 48-page Guide to Successful Investing is available to readers. For your copy send $1.00 to Roger E. Spear, in care of The Pontiac IVess, Box 1618, Grand Central Station, New York, N.Y. 10017. (Copyright, 1967) V Area Man Gets Ad Firm Post( A Bloomfield Township man, John Henry Wilson Jr., has been named manager of the Detroit office of Batten, Barton, Dur-stine and Osborn, Inc., an international advertising agency. WILSON ANDERSON Wilson of 2657 Lampli^ter, succeeds Robert E. Anderson of 1680 Hillwood, Bloomfield HiUs, who is retiring. Anderson, a vice president and member of the board of ^rectcffs, will remain on the board until the year’s end. He will also maint^ an office at BBDO-Detroit UD> til then. R R R Wilson, a vice president, was account supervi^r for Dodge passenger car advertising am director of field activities of the 26 national advertising associations.