10 ONE COLOr. I* Pontiac Proti, Wodnotday, Novombor 27 WEDNESDAY WEDNESDAY MORNING 5:4$ (2) On the Farm Scene $;55 (2) C-News (2) C Semester Sunrise 5:30 (2) C - Wally Flowler Show '' (4) Classroom , t ^}f:45 (7) C-Bat Fink 7:0# (2)^P — Woodrow the Woodsman (4) C -Today (7) C — Morning Show 7:20 (9) Warm-Up 10:25 (4) C — News 10:30 (2) R - Beverly HiUbillies (4) C — Concentration (7) C-DickCavett 10:35 (56) Reason and Read 10:55 (56) Spanish Lesson 11:00 (2) R C - Andy of Mayberry (4) C — Personality (9) Ontario Schools (50) C — Jack La Lanne 11:15 (56) Misterogers (*4) C — Carol Duvall (56) Science Is Discovery 1:30 (2) C - As the World Turns (4) C — Let’s Make a Deal (7) C — Funny Y ou Should Ask 1:55 (7) C - Children’s Doctor 2:00 (2) C —■ Divorce Court (4) C — Days of Our Lives (7) C Newlywed Game 2:15 (56) American History 11:30 (2) R-Dick Van Dyke (4)C — Hollywood 2:30 (2) C — Guiding Light Squares (9) Take Thirty (50) R C - Kimba 11:45 (56) TV Kindergarten WEmESDAY AFTERNOON 7:30 (9) C—Bonnie Prudden 12:00 (2) C—News, Weather, Sports 8:00 (2) C - Captain Kangaroo (9) Morgan’s Merry-Go-Round 8:05 (9) Mr. Dressup 8:30 (7) R C - Movie: j “Trapeze” (1956) Burt (4) C — Jeopardy (7) R —Bewitched (9) Lunch with Bozo (50) C — Alvin 12:15 (56) Friendly Giant 12:25 (2) C - Fashions Lancaster, Tony (Xutis, « i. i 1 (2) C - Search for (7) C — Dating Game (50) R — Make Room for Daddy 3:00 (2) C — Secret Storm (4) C — Another World (7) C — General Hospital (9) R — Real McCoys (50) R — Topper (56) Auto MiKhanics 3:3® (2) C-Mge of Night (4) C —You Don’t Say (7) C — One Ufe to Live (9) Lively Spot (50) C — Captain Detroit (56) Memo To Teachers (62) R — Ann Sothem Show Gina Lollobrigida (9) R C — Friendly Giant (56) TV High School 8:45 (9) Chez Helene 0:00 (2) C-Merv Griffin Bishop James A. Pike guests. (4) C — Steve Allen Tiger Pitcher Denny McLain guests. (9) C — Bozo Tomorrow (4) C - News, Weather. C - House Party ^>orts (7) C — Treasure Isle (9) Bill Kennedy’s Hollywood (50) R - Movie: “Brother Rat” ( 19 3 8 ) 4:25 (2) C — News Priscilla Lane, Wayne Morris (4) C — Donald O’Ckinnor (7) C — Dark Shadows (56) Busy Knitter (62) R - Robin Hood (56) Animal Trackers 12:45 (56) Spanish Lesson p : 1 5 (56) Sc ience Is 12:55 (4) c — News I Discovery I 9:30 (56) Listen and Say ^ 9:50 (56) Spanish Lesson 10:00 (4) C—Snap Judgment (9) Ontario Schools 10:10 (56) Of Cabbages and Kings 4:30 (2) C - Mike Douglas (7) R C — Movie: “Mr. Hobbs Takes a Vacation” (Part 2) (9) C — Magic Shoppe (50) R — Little Rascals (56) TV Kindergarten (62) C — Rae Deane, Bugs Bunny and Friends 1:00 (2) C — Love of Life (4) C — Match Game (7) C — Dream House (9) R — Movie: “Big Jim McLain” (1952) John 5:00 (9) R C - Batman Wayne, Nancy Olson 1:05 (56) Art Lesson 1:25 (2) C —News (50) R — Munsters (56) Misterogers 5:30 (4) C—George Pierrot — “Honolulu to Tahiti” (9) R C-Gilllgan’s Island (50) R —Superman (56) Friendly Giant (62) R — Leave It to Beaver 5:45 (56) Animal Trackers WEDNESDAY NIGHT 0:00 (2) (4) (7) C -News, Weather, Sports (9) C - What’s My Line? (50) R C — Flintstmies (56) What’s New (62) R C — Hey, Landlord 6:30 (2) C kite News —Cron- Huntley, (4) C — News Brinkley (9) C - I Spy (50) R — McHale’s Navy (56) TV High School (62) R C — Movie : Lullaby of Boradway” / r " (1951)'Doris Day, Nelson, S.Z. SakaU Gene 7:00 (2) R C - Truth or Consequences News, Weather, (4) C -Sports (7) C — News — Reynolds (50) R — I Love Lucy (56) Who Is — Illustration of concepts of Oscar Nicmeyer, architect who aided designing of United Nations Building in New York and new city of Brasilia, Brazil. 7:30 (2) C - Daktari - A young native dismisses Dr. Tracy’s warnings and takes risks to , p r o v e himself a warrior. (4) C~ Virginian — A recluse and the Virginian become guardians of a frightened, speechless young girl in a remote mountain region. (7) C —• Here Come the Brides — The brides deny the men any and all affection when the loggers fight Stempel’s guards over rights to a roadway. (9) R — Movie: “Chicken Ever Sunday” (1949) Dan The Pontiac Prott, Wednesday, November 77 Dailey, Celeste Holm, Natalie Wood. (50) C— Password (56) Invitation to Art 8:00 (50) Pro Hockey: Detroit at Philadelphia (56) Rainbow Quest 8:30 (2) C — Good Guys -An elderly Greek looking for a job and a com-petitior building a restaurant across t h e street are Bert’s headaches. (7) C “ Peyton Place ~ Betty handles the funeral arrangements with finesse until Hanna takes her to task. (62) R — Movie: “The Accident’ * (French, 1963) Georges Riviere 8:55 (56) Manager’s Memo 0:00 (2) C — Beverly Hillbillies — The family journeys to Hooterville for Thanksgiving with the folks. (4) C — (Special) Bob Hope — Bob presents a special in honor of the University of Southern California, taped Monday at the Los Angeles Sports Arena. (Format pending settlement of musicians’ strike) (7) R C — Movie: “Bikini Beach” (1964) Frankie Avalon, Annette Funicello, Keenan Wynn, Don Rickies, Martha Hyer. (56) Your Dollar’s Worth — The profitable and competitive American toy industry is surveyed. 9:30 (2) C — Green Acres — An attractive lady agricultural consultant sparks a scramble among Hooterville bachelors. (9) C — Show of the Week 10:00 (2) C — Jonathan Winters — Guests include Kate Smith, the Cowsills and comics Paul Lynde, Alice Ghostley and Cliff Arquette. (4) C — Outsider — Ross battles to save a young criminal facing execution for a murder he didn’t commit. (56) CPT — Guests include Dick Gregory. Feature is “The Wall of Dignity.” 10:30 (9) C - 20 Million Questions (50) C — News, Weather, Sports (62) Star Performance 11:00 (2) (4) (7) (9) C -News, Weather, Sports (50) C — Les Crane (6) R — Movie; “Striptease Murder; (English. 1963) John Hewer, Ann Lynn, Jean Muir 11:30 (2) R —Movie: “Baby, the Rain Must Fall*’ (1964) Steve McQueen, Lee Remick (4) C — Johnny Carson — Peter Lawford begins a three-day stint as host. Jerry Lewis and Jack WEDNESDAY Lemmon are scheduled guests, (7) C— Joey Bishop — Sammy Davis Jr. in first of two appearances as host (9) R — Movie: “Stakeout on Dope Street” (1958) Abby Dalton, Yale Wes-ler, Jonathan Haze 4 12 midnight (50) A — Movie; “Air Force’’ (1943) John Garfield, Arthur Kennedy, G i)g Young, Faye Emerson r 1:00 (4) Beat the Champ (7) R — Untouchables (9) C — Perry’s Probe 1:30 (2) R — Qobie Gillis 2:00 (2) R — Highway Patrol (7) News 2:30 (2) News. Weather 1/ The OALEN • Z4513W Superb Danish Modern styled compact console in genuine oil finished Walnut veneers and select hardwood solids with Scandia styled base. VHP and UHF illuminated Dials. giant handcrafted DIAG. 295 sq. in. rectangular picture COLOR TV Priced From 499.5 HANDCRAFTED for unrivaled dependability NEW ZENITH 2-YEAR COLOR PICTURE TUBE WARRANTY Sensational Value and Quality in a Compact Console HOD’S TV-RADIO SERVICE 770 Orchard Lake Ave* Open Friday ''til 9 FE 5-6112 Nixon to Tap Romney, , .ONECpR LockwoocTyays ICADILLAC (UPI) - State Senate Republicans are certain Gov. George Romney soon will resign to join the administration of President-el^t Richard M. Nixon. “We feel more sure than ever before that he will be offered a meaningful position . . a cabinet post,” declared Sen. Emil Lockwood of St. Louis, the Senate majority leader. Lockwood, who served as Nixon’s Michigan campaign manager, commented at a news conference last night following a two and one-half hour closed-door meeting with Romney at the GOP Senate caucus. Romney, 61, governor of Michigan since 1963, continued to insist publicly that he has not been offered a cabinet job yet. The governor told reporters he had “no knowledge’’ about reports he would be Nixon’s secretary of com- merce, or secretary of housing and urban development. Lockwood also disclosed that he was offered a sub-cabinet post in the incoming administration but turned it down. Lockwood said Michigan Republican leaders have compiled a list of more than 100 persons from the state for possible service in the Nixon administration. On the national scene. Sen. Edward W. Brooke, R-Mass., said he had discussed a cabinet post with Nixon today but had turned it down. * ★ * Ron Ziegler, Nixon’s press spokesman, later said that New York’s Republican governor. Nelson A. Rockefeller, also told Nixon at a secret meeting yesterday that “he did not desire a position in the administration” rh9 wiath^r r THE f .pontiSg press Home Edition PONTIAC, MICHIGAN. WEDNP.SDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 1908 VOL. m — -NO. 253 it ic ir ie ASSOCIATED PRESS UNITED PRESS INTERNATIOKAI. —32 PAGES , .rl '.I lOe TOPS GOAL — Charles Woodhead (right), chairfoan of advance gifts, receives the Pontiac Area United Fund annual drag race trophy from campaign chairman Alger V. Conner. Woodhead’s division obtained 99.5 per cent, or $117,749, of its $118,324 goal, according to the final totals reported Monday afternoon. At yesterday’s final report luncheon, Woodhead announc^ a newly received $1,000 pledge, putting his division over 100 per cent. PAUF Sets Record but Misses Its Goal S. Vief Ends Talks Boycott *100,000 Living-Cosf Jump Big WASHINGTON (AP) - Living costs jumped six-tenths of one ,per cent in October for the biggest monthly rise in eight years and increasing 1968’s sharpest rate of price hikes in 17 years, the government said today. Clothing and transport^on costs were up nine-tenths of one per eent each, food and housing up four-tenths each and medical care rose seven-tenths. More money was raised this year than ever before in Pontiac Area United Fund, history, although only 94.6 per cent of the goal was reached by yesterday’s final report luncheon. Contributions totaled $1,069,150, about 3.8 per cent more than the amount raised I last year. The goal* was $1,130,000. ' y ★ ★ ★ Alger V. Conner, campai^ chairman, told about 250 persons at the Elks Lodge luncheon, “we have raised more money than any other PAUF campaign during the past 20 years. Each of us can take pride in this accomplishment. Although we cannot claim total victory, we can claim a victory over last year. ★ * * “I appeal to all those in our community who have not contributed to our cause for 55 agencies to send your contribution into the UF office. •Tlie needs of our agencies and the services they provide pec^le are very real and villal,’’ he added. MORE CASH EXPECTED Some money is still expected to come in. Final reports given at the luncheon were official totals as of Monday afternoon. Charles Woodhead, chairman of the advance gifts, reported obtaining $117, ,749 or 99.5 per cent of the $118,324 goal. He then produced a $1,000 check at the luncheon which put his division over 100 per cent. ★ ★ ★ Ted Pearson Jr., chairman o f manufacturing division, reported $38,518.53 or 94.4 per cent of his $40,780 goal. Mrs. Jack Ross, chairman of the community division, reported $19,422 or 73.3 per cent of her $26,476 goal. Vice chairman Ben M. Wilton, reporting for Earl Maxwell, chairman of the GM division, announced $728,345 or 97.6 per cent of the $745,800 goal and vice chairman Joseph Middleton, reporting for Ralph T. Norvell, chairman of the commercial division said $156,285 or 90.4 per cent of the $172,802 goal had been reached. FINANCIAL SUCCESS Frederick J. Poole, president of the PAUF board of trustees, commented: “I would term this year’s campaign a financial success. However, I would like to alert all of you and the total community to the fact that we must become even more successful in our fund raising, or else suffer the results of restricted agency services. “Somehow we have to bring about'a reawakening of community conscience and spirit. In these times of plenty, it is inconceivable that campaign goals are not being met. * * * “The responsibility is ours to be year-round PAUF salesmen, educating the community to the necessary services of our agencies.’’ SAIGON UP) — President Nguyen Van Thieu said today a South Vietnamese delegation will go to the Paris peace talks within the next 10 days but he cautioned his nation not to expect peace to come soon. Thieu said Vice President Nguyen Cao Ky will go to Paris as over - all coordinator of the Saigon delegation, although he will not actually sit in on the negotiating sessions. Those who will are to be announced in a few days, Thieu said. He said Ky “is the man I rely on to lead the delegation to Paris, but he is not chief of the delegation.’’ Although Thieu said the talks would get under way “in the next few days ” Related Story, Page A-W U.S. officials in Washington don’t expect serious conferences until late December. Thieu, 12 hours after his government announced it had lifted its boycott of the Paris talks, declared: “Talks with the Communists do npt mean peace will be restored soon. They will fight while they are talking and talk while they are fighting.” Thieu said South Vietnam will show to its allies and the enemy “that we have plenty of good will.’’ He asserted that whether “aggression” ends “depends on Hanoi and their tool” — obvious reference to the National Liberation Front, political arm of the Vietcong. Thicu’s regime announced last night it had agreed to end its boycott of the Paris tplks in return for the right to head the bargaining on .South Vietnamese internal matters. In Paris, a National Liberation Front spokesman said the NLF would insist on going into the four-way talks “as an independent party on the same footing” as the United States, North Vietnam and the South Vietnamese. Slate Legislators May Get Raise LANSING (UPI) — Michigan’s lawmakers may become the second highest paid legislators in the nation if they receive the $18,000 in salaries and expenses recommended for them by the State Officers Compensation Commission yesterday. The eight-member commission also recommended that the governor be given a $25,000-a-year expense account to go with his $40,000-a-year salary. The lieutenant |[overnor would receive $3,000 in expenses in addition to his present $22,500 salary. * * it Legislative salaries for the 110 representatives and 38 senators, now divided between $12,500 in pay and $2,500 in unaccountable expenses, would be boosted to $15,000 in pay and a maximum of $3,000 or $20 per day, for food, lodging and mileage expenses during the legislative session. Unless lawmakers turn down the commission’s pay plan with a two-thirds vote prior to Feb. 1, 1969, it will automatically go into effect retroactive to Jan. 1. SECOND TO CALIFORNU Only lawmakers in California would receive higher salary and expenses. In a related development. Republican senators, ipeeting in caucus in Cadillac, reacted favorably yesterday to an offer made by Lansing trucking executive Howard Silber to donate a $300,000 two-story home for use as a governor’s mansion. 'The home is located in a picturesque section of southwest Lansing. EVERGREEN POLES—Riding high above the street in a snorkel, Robert T. Haine of the city electrical department prepares to wrap a garland around one of 34 lighting fixtures decorated for Christmas in Pontiac’s downtown business district. With the roping in place and lights strung across Saginaw from Oakland to Pike, the job of decorating for the holiday is nearly complete. The city’s official Christmas tree still has to be raised. Named to Fill Vacancy FBI Charges 9 in Gambling Net BUFFALO, NY. (IP) — A man described by the FBI as an “overlord of crime” and eight others were arrested on charges of engaging in illegal Cosa Nostra operations in western New York and Ontario, Canada. The FBI said much of the activity-including gambling, bookmaking, and loan-shark operations—was directed out of a small funeral home in nearby Niagara Falls. ★ ★ ★ Stefano Magaddino, 77, identified by the FBI as the head of the Cosa Nostra in western New York, was ordered by the FBI to appear for arraignment on charges of interstate racketeering. He was permitted to spend the night in his home in nearby Lewiston because of his age and chronic heart condition. THEY’LL FOLLOW HIM In the past, the FBI said, Magaddino has entered a hospital complaining of chest pains whenever anyone tried to question him about organized crime. This time, if necessary, federal authorities will follow him to the hospital and arraign him in his room, U. S. Attorney Andrew F. Phelan said. Among those arrested -were Mag-gadino’s son, Peter, 51, and Benjamin Nicoletti Sr., 56, who were held in the Erie County jail here in lieu of $100,000 bail each. Peter is president of the Magaddino Memorial Chapel, a funeral home in Niagara Falls which lists Stefano Magaddino among its officers. Happy Bird Day: Clerk-Elecf ToksS Post Cloudy, Warmer Thanksgiving Day will dawn with partly overcast skies and rising temperatures. The weatherman reports there’s a slim chance of occasional rain. The mercury will slide to a low of 26 to 30 tonight, then climb to a high of 40 to 45 tomorrow. it it it The outlook for Friday is colder with a chance of snow flurries. Precipitation probabilities in per cent are 10 today, 30 tonight and 40 tomorrow. Thirty was the low temperature in downtown Pontiac prior to 8 a.m. The 2 p.m. mercury reading was 41. County Clerk-elect Lynn D. Allen yesterday was appointed county clerk to fill the vacancy left by the apparent death of John D. Murphy. Allen, a Pontiac optometrist, takes over the job imme- | diately on the orders j of the Oakland County Circuit Court -bench. He will fill the vacancy until he is officially sworn in Jan. 1. Allen won the post of county clerk in the Nov. 5 election, defeating Shane I Murphy, the son of ' the late clerk. The ALLEN Renewal Program Is a Step Closer Pontiac city commissioners last night took an important step toward consideration of a new form of urban renewal called the Neighborhood Development Program (NDP) which could use federal funds to carry out extensive rehabilitation and renovation. The commissioners voted 6-1 to approve preparation of recommendations for an application for NDP. ★ ★ ★ Several commissioners spoke In favor of NDP as a vehicle for battling the problem of decaying and deteriorating housing and of nonconforming land uses which tend to aggravate neighborhood obsolescence. Only District 2 Commissioner Robert C. Irwin voted against the move. Irwin said the city has had one bad experience with urban renewal — the downtown project initiated seven years ago which has never reached its goal. COMMITMENT’.’ ^ “It woul(| seem to some that we are cpmmitting ourselves to another urban renewal program,” he said. IrWin said he is not necessarily against NDP but the city should consider it more fully, should pinpoint the areas which would be affected and the methods to be used before passing any resolution. An exact area for an NDP program has not yet been designated, but city planners expect that any such program would include the southwest section of the city where a large percentage of the housing is deteriorating. It’s also extremely likely that a pro-grarii wjmld include areas contiguous to the do\lBown area, partly to take advantage of construction to be undertaken and improvements to be made. The city can benefit most by including in the prqgram areas where money has been spent on public improvements. The federal government will spend $2 for every $1 spent on public improvements to carry out further improvements, which could include rehabilitation of existing buildings, removal of nonconforming uses and of substandard housing and construction of new housing on vacant tracts. ★ * * Director of Planning James L. Bates (Continued on Page A-2, Col. 5) elder Murphy is believed to have drowned in a boating accident on Lake Michigan last summer. His body has never been found. In his absence, Murphy’s duties have been performed by members of his .staff. Holiday Closings in Area Are Told Most Pontiac area stores and other businesses will be clo.sed tomorrow in observance of Thanksgiving. * ★ * Pontiac State Bank, Community National Bank, F'irst Federal Savings of Oakland and Capital Savings and Loan Association all will close at their regular time today and reopen Friday morning. ★ ★ * County and city offices also will be closed tomorrow. Pontiac's main post office lobby will be open for mail deposits, access to locked Lo.xes and purchase of stamps from machines. Mail will be picked up from deposit points on normal holiday schedules and processed for outgoing dispatch. There will be no regular window or delivery services. One Edition Thursday The Pontiac Press will publish a single, early edition tomorrow so that employes may spend the holiday with their families. Regular editions will resume F’riday. In Today's Press Area News Lazaros has gun permit revoked; Holly school-building study ordered — PAGE A-4. j Rat Control Federal kitty of $40 million unused — PAGE A-10. Waterford Schools 1 Operating millage need is ex- j plained - PAGE A-9. Area News .............. .A4,: Astrology ...........,...B4 Bridge .................B-4 Crossword Puzzle ......C-U Comics .................B4. Editorials .............A-C Markets ..................m Obituaries .............B-3 Picture Page ..........A*l# Sports ............C-1-4J-4 Theaters ..........,....B4 TV and Radio Programs . C-11 Vietnam War News .......A-2 Women’s Pages .......B-1, B*2 THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY. NOVEMBER 27. 1968 SAIGON (AP) —■ South Vietnamese police have arrested 85 Vietcong political workei's in Saigon during a two-week-old roundup to crush an emerging Communist political apparatus in the capital, a highly placed police source said today. The source said 15 of the 85 “Communist cadre’’ were women and that all of those airested had criminal pro-Com-munist records. Most of them were longtime residents of Saigon, he added. The roundup b n Nov. 11 and is still going on. 'The source said it began with the arrest of a senior Communist lieutenant who tipped off police to 16 Vietcong cells within the city. The citywide hunt also has netted 14 Chinese pistols, a number of mines, grenades and plastic explosives, the source reported. LOCAL CONTROL 'The South Vietnamese arm of North Vietnam’s Communist party is known to be creating a grass-roots government across South Vietnam, apparently in anticipation of an end to the Vietnam war. American intelligence confirms the quasi-government already exists throughout five provinces and in more than 1,000 villages and hamlets. Communist documents claim the existence of “liberation councils” in two of Saigon’s nine precincts, but U.S. officials say the councils exist only on paper. ★ ★ ★ Only scattered ground fighting was reported in South Vietnaqi today. . A U.S. Marine force that bad gone into the demilitarized zone for the first time since the bombing of North Vietnam baited Nov. 1 pulled out by nightfall yestehiay without offering a casualty in several hours of fighting, the U.S. Command said. VIET ESCAPE The headquarters said the North Vietnamese troops escaped from the Marines. The Leathernecks reported hearing screams of enemy soldiers ap- parently wounded by artillery and air-strikes, J)ut no bodies were found'-South Vietnamese fieadquarters Indicated that a reconnaissance force it had sent into the DMZ also pulled out by nightfall yesterday after a brief clash in which three Onemy soldiers were killed, l^he South Vietnamese reported a brief fight last night southwest of Gio Linh, about four miles below the DMZ. Three enemy soldiers were reported killed, one prisoner was captured,' and three government men were wounded. U.S. headquarters anaojmced that searches fOr tw<> U.S. jets shot down over North Vietnam Monday had ended without succesf. All four ^crewmen are listed as missing, but Radio Hanoi announced earlier that twd oL them were captured. ■A. U.S, spokesman Said one of the two planes was an unarmed Navy reconnaissance Vigilante and the other an Air Force F4 Phantom Rghter-bomber flying escort for an unarmed reconnaissance plane. Japan Boss Elected, to Seek Land Return TOKYO (AP) - Eisaku Sato won a third term as Japan’s prime minister today after pledging to gain the early return of Okinawa and the other Ryukyu Islands from the United States. He said after the election that he plans to form a new “action Cabinet,” possibly over the weekend. GOP Picks New County Leader James E. Defebaugh, an advertising account executive from Birmingham, was elected last night as chairman of the Oakland County Republican Committee. Defebaugh, 1396 Stanley, succeeds Joseph R. Farnham. Chairman of the county GOP since early 1966, Farnham did not seek reelection since he is being transferred to England by his employer, the Chrysler Corp. effective Sunday. ★ ★ * Organizational director for the party less than three months, Defebaugh was elected to the top post by the Republican executive qommittee. The only other name placed in nomination for chairman was that of Donald Brown of West Bloomfield Township, an attorney in Royal Oak. ACTIVE SINCE ’62 An executive with the Campbell Ewald Co. in Detroit, Defebaugh has been active in county GOP activities since 1962. PVior to his becoming organizational directw, be was director ^% return. And with Golden Passbook, you get both the highest possible interest earnings on bank savings programs in Detroit, plus short-term withdrawal flexibility. With the Golden Passbook you can withdraw youj latest interest earnings any time and, during the first 10 days of each interest quarter, you can get any money, without notice, that has been on deposit 90 days or more at the beginning of the interest quarter. You can add to your Golden Passbook account in amounts as smail as $50, at any time. And the^ passbook form serves as a handy record of your deposits and withdrav;a!s. Part two of the package deal is a real bonus. Your opening deposit of $500 or more m Golden Passbook automatically qualifies you for Check Free and Earn. So you can write checks, make deposits and receive a monthly statement—all lOO^'j free. Without any minimum checking balance. Stop in at a Common wealth office and open your Golden Passbook account. The 5S5 Golden Passbook—and 100% free checking. Yours at ttie Commonvrealth in one tidy package. B BANK OF THE COMMONWEALTH Stop in at one of these convenient locations: MEMBER FtOERAL DCfOSiT INSURANCE CORPORATiOi Twenty-Three Mile Road-Mound Road (Shelby Township) Woodward-Square Lake Road (Bloomfield Township) What will the English think of next? | >IOiVCI OF 0. S «.I00% NEUIllil SPIIIU DISIIUEOIMM CMW 90 PIOOF tOnOII S OIF tnt CO, UO . IMOdl. 0 I. I THE PONTIAC PRESS 4% West Huron Street Pontiac, Michigan 48058 WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 1968 cutiye Bd %dl Vice President City Acts on ‘Neighborhood’ Program By a 6-1 vote, the City Commission at its meeting last night took a forward step on the Federal Neighborhood Development Program (NDP) which would empower the City Administration to acquire and clear property for redevelopment and public improvement projects, the substandard residential area of southwest Pontiac rating high priority. NDP is a new, more flexible form of Urban Renewal. It was bom of the 1968 Housing Act passed by Congress last August. Under this program, the Federal government provides $2 for each municipal dollar for community betterment. Locally, the City’s share of the cost of these undertakings would come from the inflow of Capital Improvement funds amounting to $500,000 annually, with no additional levy on taxpayers. The NDP concept involving southwest Pontiac that would necessarily include acquisition of some residential property would admirably complement the rehabilitation and hous- ing renewal goals for the same area by Harambee, the all-Negro nonprofit corporation. Furthermore, it would effectively promote recentralization of the core city while countering the trend toward the decentralization that threatens its fiscal soundness. ★ ★ ★ Adequate provision is explicit in the Federal Act for equitable appraisal of and payment for property required for a NDP project, and indeed the residents of an affected area have a deciding voice, through an elected council, as to the acceptability of it. For clarification of many aspects of the NDP proposal and to allay any doubts engendered by recent distribution of misleading “scare” leaflets in the southwest area. Mayor William H. Taylor Jr. has called a public meeting at Trinity Baptist Church for 7:30 p.m. Dec. 5. The Press wholeheartedly endorses the Neighborhood Development Program and urges that it be pushed vigorously in many directions. 'Maybe If We Put It In A Great Big Box—' David Lawrence Says; Lodge Could Handle Viet Talks Dr. William A. Gordon A resident of Pontiac for 50 years and a practicing dentist for 37 of those years was lost to the communi-I ty with the death of I Dr. William A. I Gordon. He was 74. Born in the High-I land area. Dr. I Gordon became an I active participant in I the affairs of Pon-I tiac as he interested I himself in a variety * of civic, social and DR. GORDON fraternal spheres. He played a leading part in the formation of Oakland County Dental Association, and was a former president of the organization. Of quiet demeanor, Dr. Gor- don’s warm personality and devotion to community service had nonetheless attracted a wide circle of friends and professional acquaintances who knew him as an accomplished professional man and a sterling citizen. Among his less known activities was his deep interest in alcoholics and the effective efforts he pursued toward their rehabilitation. William Gordon well fulfilled his mortal mission and meets the fate that awaits all mankind as an exemplary testiqi^ial to high personal ideals and service to his fellows. His passing brings sorrow to all who were privileged to know him. Syndicated Column Early American News Feature This year marks the 200th anniversary of the syndicated newspaper column. The prototype, whose descendants have proliferated greatly in two centuries, was called “Journal of Occurrences” and was edited by Boston patriots for distribution throughout the colonies and in England. Colonial papers that ran it included the Bos- ton Evening Post, the New York Journal and the Pennsylvania Chronicle. Even back in 1768, columnists were viewing with alarm. The “Journal of Occurrences” dealt mainly with daily sufferings of the good people of Boston at the hands of the red-coated British baddies. Books Give Insight Into Three Crises By DAVID POLING Newspaper Enterprise Assn. During the fall month.s, this little gray squirrel has our apple tree picked clean. He likes the buds on the dogwood almost as much. No matter what kind of winter, he is ready. You may not be storing apples in the basement but you can grab three paperback books that speak directly to the problems of this winter and next spring. Responsible leadership within the church should be considering the alternatives to Vietnam, the crises in the cities and the universities if they are to make ameaningful contribution to the start of a new administration in Washington. William J. Fulbright may not be your favorite senator and his policies may not claim your support Yet his paperback, “The Arrogance of Power," has .some fresh things to say about international conflict and the American shaping of world affairs. He points out that, at the conclusion of the Napoleonic wars, a surprisingly lasting settlement was reached in 1815. France was at the mercy of England and Austria. Lord Castlereagh dictated terms that were magnanimous instead of vindictive, offering the French people the oppoi tu nity of participating in a re-cove^ that blessed Europe as weWfs the defeated followers of Napoleon. Reparations w}ore manageable. Occupation was limited to three years and there was no loss of territory. Castlereagh told an astonished continent that he had not come to the peace treaty in Vienna to collect trophies, “but to bring the world back to peaceful habits." * ★ ★ We are not in Vienna but Vietnam. And no matter how much the Vietcong may be hated, that emotion is no deeper than the sentiments of Europe toward Napoleon, who bloodied history for 25 years. The pursuit of “peaceful habits" will take all of the ingenuity and nerve we can generate. Another paperback to squirrel a w a V for this winter is “The Report of the National Advisory Commission on Civil Disorders " This is the TOfVpage study produced by the U. S. Riot Commission appointed by President Johnson on July 27, 1967. It mav be a year old hut the material is more relevant every day. For any person over the age of 14, this is easv, sad reading. You would think it was a dirty book the way some people in Congress have put it down, ignored it. even attacked it 1 don’t see how you can be a member of the 20th-century American society and not want to have tlie basic facts behind the urban uproar that put the torch to Detroit and the gasoline to Newark In an introduction., ncwsfia per columnist Tom Wicker sums up the thorny question: “What white Americans have never fully understood — but what the Negro can never forget—is that white society is deeply implicated in the ghetto. White institutions created it: white institutions maintain it and white society condones it.” “Crises at Columbia” Is the paperback produced by the Cox Commission Report. This careful study looks at the di.sturbances at Columbia University that .shook the university — and many other schools — in April and May of 1968. F’or those readers who are not satisfied with the uninformed conclusions that a few bearded pinkos, draft dodgers and part-time demonstrators were the sole cause of this prolonged riot, start reading What happened at Columbia can evolve anywhere else when an administration thinks it is running an academic warehouse instead of a university. When college leadership is more interested in government “research” contracts than teaching students in pursuit of higher education, we arc in trouble. The commission notes that Columbia, with the faint arrogance of a rich corporation, has the tendency to treat its own faculty as employes and its students as customers Keep all these book-s handv - the report is for snow, WASHINGTON — Language is sometimes the biggest barrier to the attainment of an understanding between negotiators in the field of diplomacy. This is doubtless one of t h e reasons why P r e s-ident-e 1 e’ c t Nixon has been giving LAWRENCE serious consideration to the appointment of Henry Cabot Lodge to head the American delegation in Paris which is expected during the next several months to confer repeatedly with representatives of North and South Vietnam in an effort to end the war. Lodge, who -is at present United States ambassador to West Germany, speaks French and other languages fluently. The importance of French in the Paris conferences lies in the fact that for many years both North and South Vietnam constituted a colony of France, and the people in the local governments as well as in the educated classes naturally adopted French as their second language. ★ ★ ★ The difficulty is not merely that diplomatic negotiations which have to be carried on through interpreters are cumbersome, but that translators do not convey the same impressions of sincerity and frankness, which a diplomat himself might give when he speaks a language that both sides understand. Lodge is also an experienced negotiator, including service as an envoy to Saigon. He was first named ambassador to South Vietnam by President Kennedy in 1963 and served for 11 months. SPECIAL MISSIONS Afterwards Lodge was a consultant to President Johnson on Vietnam and undertook special missions for him before returning to Saigon as ambassador in August 1965, where he remained for another 20 months. He then served as ambassador-at-large until his appointment to Bonn in April this year. Lodge’s principal experience in diplomacy was obtained while he was ambassador to the United Nations from January 1953 until 1960. ★ ' ★ ★ Nixon is reported to have been considering Lodge as a replacement for Avcrell Ilar-riman, but there is really no reason why the American delegation .should not be enlarged to include Harriman Verbal Orchids Mr. and Mrs. Floyd E. Wesp of 107 \V. Hundcll: 51st wedding anniversary. Mrs. A. M. Sherston of 99 .Stout; 86lh birthday. Mr. and Mrs. ( lilford H. McCormack of 16 Clayburn: .■i9th wedding anniversary. as well as Cyrus Vance, his deputy negotiator at Paris. ★ ★ ★ Both ■ have an intimate knowledge of what has happened thus far in the negotiations and could become invaluable advisers to Lodge if he were named chairman of the American delegation. ★ * Tlic selection of representatives for delicate international negotiations has little to do with politics. * * -k Just as Presidents Kennedy and Johnson called on Lodge, a prominent Republican, for diplomatic missions of special importance, so Nixon could retain the Democrats now heading the delegation at Paris if they were willing to serve. Bob Considine Says: Modern Flu Epidemics Mild Compared to Past NEW YORK - All set for the big Hong Kong flu epidemic? Flu buffs and medical handicappers assure us it will be here before Christ-m a s, having already departed Hong Kong aboard • sneezing, watery -eyed e a s t b ound travelers. The crown colony of CONSIDINE Hong Kong may not be deserving of having this new, influenza epidemic named for it. This particular outbreak of a recurrent curse of man and beast could have its source in some other clime. Flu is one of those rare ailments which bear geographically-oriented names, i.e. German Measles and Montezuma’s Revenge. This one could have generated itself in .Red China, or anywhere, really. There was a day, and not too many decades ago, when all influenza was solemnly believed to emanate only from Russia. Hippocrates described an influenza pandemic in Greece during the 5th century, B.C. but it was not until 1933 that the first influenza virus was isolated. FORECAST MILD A flu epidemic is not usually a mass killer. The best early predictions indicate that the Hong Kong flu will be generally mild except on those over 50 who are suffering from heart disease and respiratory troubles. But there have been epidemics in history of catastrophic dimensions. The Encyclopaedia Britannica compares the Spanish influenza epidemic of 1918 with the Black Death that struck Europe between 1347 and 1351 which may have killed 25 million about one-fourth of Europe's population. ★ * * 1 was a statistic — and survivor — of the Spanish flu epidemic ' that struck the world 50 years ago at just about this time. Some 548,000 Americans died of it in a relative short period. But other countries suffered even more calamitous tolls. About 4 per cent of India’s population — around 12.5 million — succumbed to it. Throughout the world, that one epidemic killed at least 20 million, a figure incomprehensible to modern man unless he thinks in terms of a thermonuclear holocaust. NO WONDER DRUGS There were not any wonder drugs in our bathroom medicine chest in the happy Irish-Italian ghetto where we lived in 1918. Matter of fact, there wasn’t any bathroom. But my mother came up with a remedy for the scourge that was going through Washington like the grim reaper’s scythe. She ordered her brood of five to stay in bed, suck oranges and take an occasional laxative called Cas-carets. We made it, only to receive some bad news. The epidemic passed away, but school reopened. Can’t win ’em all. Voice of the People: Waterford School Issues Discussed by Readers It is essential that we give the millage proposal in Waterford a “yes” vote. We must maintain a good school system. We must be competitive for good teachers. The two-year rejquest is a logical approach to the tax problem. It is evident some new method to obtain taxes is necessary to maintain good education in Michigan. It is unfair to expect the schools and the teachers to operate with reduced funds till this takes place. The children belong in school full-time with a complete curriculum and a well-paid, satisfied teacher. D. M. LEMAUX 488 SHOREVIEW Concerning the Waterford Township School millage proposal, it seems Mr. Poole put his finger on the crux of the matter when he said, “it is hard to change people’s minds when they are already taxed to the hilt." Look at your latest tax receipt and note what percentage of ypur total tax bill goes for education in one way or another, and then tell me there shouldn’t be a more equitable way to finance our educational system, or a complete about-face in administering the funds we already have. ★ * ★ Does our school system serve the academic needs for which our schools were originally established, or have they disintegrated into a superannuated athletic club? To some this increase would scarcely be noticed, but what about the average struggling John Doe with a growing family to support and a 28-30-year mortgage to pay oft? Vote “no” on this proposal and thereby force the powers that be to find a better way. ARTHUR F. SASSER 289 S. HOSPITAL, UNION LAKE The Waterford millage election is December 7. I urge all voters who want their children to have an adequate high school education to be there and vote “yes.” Children Who roam the streets are not necessarily those of working mothers. If the millage is voted down, that will allow some of the children to “roam the streets” one hour more than last year.^ 'There are few people in our township who are too poor to afford this. Some of us say “we can’t afford,” but most of us mean that “we will not afford” to do these things. Many feel their children Ayill do well enough with a high school diploma, but for today and tomorrow this is not the case. ★ ★ ★ In reference to any who moved here for lower taxes, I feel they failed to consider that 30 years dgo there were no high schools here. They fail to consider that this was and is a young township with many things to contemplate, such as water, «ewage and high schobls. These people suggest moving to a township with lower taxes. Would they believe that some of us may have to move to a township with higher taxes to assuk our children and our future leaders of an adequate background to achieve the high standards we need to teach our future generations? MRS. JACK SAYLOR 2137 Crane, Drayton Plains Question aiul Answer What will the millage election in Waterford cost? What woidd it have cost if it had been on the ballot in the November election? E. E. REPLY Mr. Giddis of Waterford Board of Education says the special election will cost between $1,800 and '$2,000. He has no dollar figure for cost of including it on the ballot for a regular election, but it would be very expensive, because the whole setup would have to be revised. Waterford school boundaries are not the same as political boundaries; four townships are involved in Waterford schools, and two areas of Waterford are included in township schools outside Waterford. You can see the problem this would create, Question and Answer Who holds the record for the longest field goal in the National Football League? A. N. REPLY Bert Rechichar, with 56 yards in the Baltimore Colts-Chicago Bears game on Sept. ,27, 1953, according to Lyle Smith with the Detroit Lions. Reviewing Other Editorial Pages Reading and Writing Tulsa Tribune A nationwide, four - year study by experts has confirmed the worst fears of most parents: There are severe short-comings in the teaching of English in the nation’s high schools. The National Council of Teachers of English and the University of Illinois made intensive studies of 15 8 representative high schools in 45 states and discovered that the two areas of greatest weakness are reading and writing. Some highlights from the study of 1,600 classrooms: There is little direct instruction in writing despite the fact that 16 per cent of class time is devoted to composition. Only 13 per cent of student papers examined by observers showed signs of any thorough rewriting and only 17 per cent- showed any evidence that teachers help ^ludents with organiz^ation of ideas, critical thinking, and clear communication. Reading programs are inadequate, uncoordinated, and almost nonexistent. Most programs seemed lacking in purpose, organization, and impact. The nonacademic, noncollege, slow-learning student is neglected. ★ * ★ Few teachers show themselves capable of effectively leading class discussion. Barely a fifth of the time is used in discussion and questioning. The emphasis is on recitation and rote response. Language is the least well taught of all elements of the English curriculum. A ma-. jority of schools concentrate on mechanical drill and error-based instruction, with effective communication being subordinated to grammatical accuracy in classroom presentation. ★ ★ ★ Those who made the survey stressed the need for quality leadership from the principal and chairman of each English department and the need for a small cadre of “master teachers” in each school. employed on a merit pay system. English teachers nationally average 150 students each — 50 more than the recommended maximum of 100. * * * When we cheat boys and girls of the ability to read and write well, we limit their ability to communicate effectively and to reach their potential. No Trick . . . San Francisco Chronicle It’s no trick to meet expenses nowadays — the toughest job is to avoid them. THE PONTIAC EKESS. \VKlJMvSl)A \ . NOV EM HER 27, lltcs '^W Transplant Today in Maryland City Man to Get New Cornea By LOIS FRIEDLAND Tony Dni gets a new eye today. And if all goes well, he will get another new one next year. He ' undergoes ' a cornea transplant in Maryland today. Tony — as he is called by all his custonners — has owned a shoe repair shop at 156 Auburn since shortly after coming to Pontiac in 1932. He recalls having trouble seeing ' since shortly after he was born in Italy. He was first told that he needed glasses when he .took a physical exam to enter the United Stj^tes and become a citizen. ★ * ★ In 1939 a doctor recommended Chevy Chase, Md., a specialist in the cornea transplant field, who said he would perform the operation. we* Tony left his wife, Katherine, at home at 601 E. Pike yesterday to go to Maryland for the operation. His shop will be closed through Jan. IS while his eye heals. His only comments before going: “Thank for me all the people that donated corneas to make my kind of operation possible.” but no one could tell me exactly why my eyes were bad. 1 just knew that the corneas kept' bul^g. TOLD OF TRANSPLANTS i “I first heard about transplants last year from Dr. Robert J. Netzel in town. He said I would lose my sight otherwise,” said Tony. Tony explained he was then sent to a Dr. Henderson in Ann Arbor who said that it could be too late for a transplant since Tony’s cornea would have to be rebuilt before the doctor could transplant a cornea to his eye. * ★ ★ ★ * His cornea is being donated He sent Tony to a Dr. King in by the Lions Club Eye Bank. CHRISTMAS CLEARING HOUSE OPENS November 11 thru December 13 9:00 to 4:00 Those giving Christmas gratuities, please clear all applications or names thru the Clearing House office to avoid duplication. Phone 332-3443 Address: 29 W. Lawrence Christmas Committee Lower Level Another service of the United Fund I contacts. This was long beforS * most pCtqile had ever head of Pr... Ph,.. them, explained Tony, leaning DniS^d^ transplant - Pontiac shoemaker Tony fZ S shaS^.\“ s Scls who is going blind, will receive another transplant in the other eye next year if this one proves successful. “I went from doctor to doctor pupil and white. He wears glasses over the contacts. Soviet Youth Starts Military Training at 10 MOSCOW (AP) - Military training in the Soviet Union now starts at the age of 10. Schoolboys throughout the country are organized into squads, detachments and batta-| lions. Under adult commanders, they practice drill, firing, the use of gas nnasks, other military skills and rendering medical! aid. I The program introduced by the Kremlin leadership is being' widened this year. i ' Soviet children front '10 to IV belong to the Pioneer organization, which provides group activities and Communist indoctrination. DRAFT AGE LOWERED Older boys get more sophisticated military training the last two years before being drafted at 18. The Kremlin decreed this in 1967, also reducing the draft age one year. The defense minister. Marshal Andrei Gredhko, explained that the Soviet Union was ' ing all steps necessary strengthen its defenses.” The boys’ training units, even for the youngest, have their political commissars alongside the military commanders, parallelling the Soviet armed forces. They also have their military newspapers and political infor-i mation classes. I From the start boys are told! how they should think and in-! stilled with patriotic feelings, j HEROIC LESSONS One of their tasks as “young armymen,” the term used here,; is to visit sights'associated with Soviet Revolutionary and World War 11 heroes. They are alsoi introduced to servicemen and veterans, who tell them about! great deeds done for the moth-j erland. I On military holidays, of which; there are many, the boys’ units | are inspected as they drill and march. Each has its own bugler and drummer. The “young ar-niymen” wear their red Pioneer scarfs in lieu of a uniform, andi the officers have insignia of| stars like those, of the regular; branches of the service. Competitions are held on the' regiwial, provincial and repuhl-i ic levels to pick out the detachments which excel in militarylike excercises. A final in June! produces the winner for tlie countrv. 5’ * 6' S.lOO Alumim PORCH AWNING noI 'h“^79„ COMPLITIir IN&TAUi FOLDING Alumium Awningt STATIONARY AWNINGS SUPER SIVINGS SAVE BIG in all departments LET US CONVERT YOUR OPEN PATIO INTO A MUCH|r NEEDED EXTRA ROOM. We enclose it with Glass, Awning-type, or Slider Windows. Free Estimate, We match roofing and brick work on your house. NO MONEY DOWN / NO PAYMENTS’til SPRING ’ Aluminum SIDING and TRIM IS by far your best buy I, and DOWNSPOUTS OPEN MON.-FRf, 9-8 P.M. | SAT. 9-6 P.M.|SUN. 12-6 P.M. 26400 W. Eight Mil* Rd. g Don Auten K Eisl Side I Pontiac ■ PR 1-8810 I FE,5-9452| AV 5-3595 | noy.i oak EL 7-2700 I 531-4605 , ^ Petoskey 347-8462 FURNITURE Modern Traditional Colonial Also Custom Fitted Drapery AUTEN 6605 Dixit* Hwy. furniture 625-2022 GRAND PRIX WINDSHIELD WASHER ANTI-FREEZE GAS LINE ANTI-FREEZE S 99( REG. 234 FOR CMUtmu- gifts MIRACLE MILE Phon. 338-8066-Pont,oc PACKAGE LIQUOR DEALER PONTIAC MALL WATERFORD PLAZA 5076 Highland NORTH HILL CENTER TEL HURON CENTER Shop Early...This Christmas! For Your Shopping Convenience We Willi Be Open All Day THANKSGIVING 9 a.m. To 4 p.m. BOX OF 25 CHRISTMAS CARDS FOI HIMI HAI KARATE SET FOR HEtl Desert Flower Set On* daslgn to a box. 12 assorted dssigns to choose from. 4 ounce bottle of Cologne plus soap. Handsomely gift packaged. 2 oz. Hand and Body Lotion, 4 oz. Dusting Powder, 2 oz. Toilet Water. Large Selection of TOYS and GAMES FOR EVERY GIRL OR BOY! HASBRO PIE FACE GAME WESTCLOX LUMINOUS BIG BEN ALARM ELECTRA AUTOMATIC TAPE RECORDER POLAROID ... BIG SWINGER CAMERA ANACIN m TABLETS i B BOTTLE of 100 M- Qhour^ 1 \ 1 Rtuer . 1 uiauiti* Hunris p 1 99^ 1: - For fast, longer-lasting = . [lu.j:-.:. relief from cold miseries. = ^ PERTUSSIN COUGH FORMULA 3.5 OZ. SIZE DIAL DEODORANT 7 0Z. FAMILY SIZE Stops perspiration odor. For the whole family. A—8 __u_____ J-Jl-Ci J'UiMlAU ■Fit.K jigs SimiUHET 1249 BALDWIN AVE. JUST ONE BLOCK OFF COLUMOIA AVL THB HOME OF . . . UPER SAVINGS! Tender Leaf TEA BAGS Dolly Madison Bathroom TISSUE T-BONE fl®* Michigan Grade One Club Franks Ring Bologna Polish Sausage Red Hots All At ^Ib. Juicy USDA Choice SIRLOIN .99* Tempting USDA Choice PORTERHOUSE Petunia T Flavors to Choose From CAT FOOD Vets meat-liver>chicken DOG FOOD Schaefer’s Big “C” Miracle Whip Salad DRESSING Your Choice of Robin Hood-Pillsbury-Gold Medal FLOUR or Mich. Beet Sugar5.^ ir RADISHES Pkg. Crisp Green Onions CODFISH STICKS 19' 8-Oz. Pkg. fnowf fOOOS 1 OVa-Oz. Can Emperor GRAPES Lb. Bear Lake STRAWBERRIES French Fried POTATOES 9' 9-Oz. Pkg. lO-Oz. Pkg. WAFFLES or QC kg. 9 Effective l\lov, 29 thru Dec. 4 - Closed Thanksgiving SEFA’S SUPER MARKET Where you will find several meat cutters to wait on you to get the cuts of meats that you desire from our US Choice heef meat department at the most reasonable prices. Nine Mills for Operating Costs THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 27, J968 A—» Waterford School Need Cited is the (EDlTOR^S ROTE - This is the third of five articles in which Waterford f ownship School Suj^f pr^ Don 0. Tatroe answers frequent^ asked questions dh the, tiiae-tnUl tax issue to be voted On Dec. 7.) Qnestioii: What operaUng tax wUch the voters will be reac-ti]« on 1^.77 Answer: Hie district will be seeking authority to levy up to 9 mills in additional property taxes for two years for the purpose of financing t/h e operating costs of the dist Qi Why are the funds needed? A: Funds from this levy are needed to offer the children of the community a reasonably adequate educational program. They will be used to allow full-day sessions to continue for elementary school children and to return junior and senior high school children to f u 11 - d a y Mott High School can then become accredited by the time of its first graduating class next year. Our other two high schools will be sure to keep iheir accreditation. We can \ncrease the staff of the learning improvement center modestly and offer remedial reading help to all primary gride children who need it. MAINTENANCE, SALARIES reduced schedule of this year in another year because of the continu^/rise iiy our operating costs. Q: When would the tax have to be paid? A: The tax will not have to be paid until February 1970. This gives the voters an opportunity to increase their escrow accounts or to try to prepare savings knowing that the tax would not be paid until more than a year from now. Q: What would the funds be used for? A: Principally to restore teachers and other personnel which we did not employ in the current year, to make up for reductions in textbook and equipment purchases. The maintenance personnel reductions also would be eliminated. ★ ★ ★ Beyond this, the funds would be used to employ" the ditional personnel required because of the added students for next year, to meet demands we face in collective bargaining with all of the school! district employes, and to provide the added r e m e d personnel to help children primary grades who need assistance. Aren’t teachers Waterford well-paid? most of them make $8,000 a year? after-hours meetings and many teachers are furthering their educatiffli at night so that they will become even bfetter teachers. Teachers must acquire 15 graduate hours of college credit at their own expense during the first five years of their teaching to satisfy requirements for a permanent teaching certificate. Reasonably attractive salaries are in the community’s best self-interest. any degree of accuracy as to what the situation will be with respect to salaries and financ^. The citizens committee, when it made its recommendation, asked that the school board create a citizens committee to attempt to achieve some measure of tax reform in Michigan so some of the burden of school |upport could be lifted from property taxes and so the COMPEmriVF RATP inequities which exist between LOMPETITIVE RATE valuation districts like We need teachers and we Waterford and its riche, must pay the competitive going neighbors might be narrowed rate for teachers as we do for through some reform, other services. If we wapt thei „„„ .. „ , services of a plumber of a doc-! tor, we must pay the going rate' for their services also, and its' A: Volunteers were accepted in our children’s interest to i^om the members of the keep Waterford a place where Citizens Advisory Committee teachers want to teach. und have already been ap- Q; Why I. the eperaShglS^.^ *“ nUlIhge prop^tal behig ^ for only a period of two years? -Junior Editors Quiz on Early Decision Faces Nixon on Money for Controversial SST WASHINGTON (Urt)—President-elect Richard M. Nixon will inherit one of aviation’s hottest controversies — the multibillion-dollar supersonic transport proj- A: It’s frankly very difficult to look beyond two years with education is attempting to have legislation introduced which would increase the exemptions far senior property taxpayers. ‘3 Dr. Jekyll Suitors, ifs..'" Mr. Hyde Husbands ce at least ' By HAL BOYLE I thought nothing of dancing the Public employees NEW YORK (AP) —There is| night away together. Now, if she Maintenance of our schools gg|gj.jgg j,gyg improved dra-|no institution that changes a can even get him out on the can be improved and there willjmatically as an outgrowth of be sufficient funds to meet the j the use of collective bargaining salary requirements for school gnd because of the salary im-personnel over the next twojprovements in the private sec-tor. Teachers have made Q: What will be the cost to | substantial gains on the salaries the taxpayer? A: Nine mills is . jthey formerly were paid. I times RANKS LOW ON SCALE man more than marriage. And, alas, not ’ always for the . better. Isn’t , t h a t true, la-; dies? As a matter of fact, one of each taxpayer’s state equalized j However, there is a difference sVs^ofThe valuation. If the state equalized among teachers schedules and jggg matrimoni- valuation is $6,000 the cost'Waterford ranks very low on'g] joumgy ^ would be $54 a year or 15 cents this competitive scale. We are women per day, if it is $9,000 it would not in a good competitive posi-be 22 cents per day. ^tion to recruit and keep quality * * * teachers. Generally speaking. It appears that not all of the.teachers can start higher, move nine mills would be needed in!to higher maximums and get the first year (the board of there faster in most other education has pledged to levy Oakland County School on the amoint required), and so Districts, the increase would actually be q. ^ j somethmg less than that m the y , are adequately paid? Q: What if the millage ques-| , _ , ^ Uon fails? A- at the . , decision, you should evaluate A- We would have to keep BOYLE dance floor at all, he gives her the old “once around the floor Mama and let’s go back to the table my feet hurt’’ routine. ' ★ ★ ★ During the courtship he loved to light her cigarettes for her and have her blow out the match. But what is his present attitude? He is trying to get her to give up smoking altogether— not for her health, but simply so he’ll be able to afford more ex- A crVcket^s upper WIW6S - enlarged QUESTION: How does a cricket chirp? A ★ ★ ANSWER: Many of us — including the young folks in the picture — agree that a cricket’s chirp is not music. But it is an agreeable sound which reminds us of home. It is only the male crickets which do the chirping, which they accompiish with a kind of bow and fiddie arrangement. A cricket has two pair of wings, upper and lower, which lie fiat on the back folded over each other. Each of the upper wings has a file, which is an enlarged vein with a row of points on it, and a scraper, a hard place on the wing with a set of raised edges. When he feels like singing, a cricket raises his upper wings so they cross over against each other and then rubs them together. A file on one of the wings will rub over a scraper on the other to produce the sound. Crickets, which are related to grasshoppers, are quite often kept as pets and are supposed to bring good luck. Their singing acts as a kind of thermometer, for the more the temperature rises, the faster the cricket chirps. (You cat! win flO cash plus AP’s handsome World Yearbook if your question, mailed on a postcard to Junior Editors in care of this newspaper, is selected for a prize.) Maori Population Soars how their husbands slowly but cigars, almost inevitably tranasform . wedding he told themselves from Dr. Jekylls to * worry, baby, I’m Mr. Hydes. marrymg you for your cook- And the trend seems to be ir- After the wedding he tells reversible in most cases. There Slurtily, How come I got is usually no turning back for a ^irl in all the 50 states husband on his road to mon- to burn Jel- sterdom. The wife is stuck with a surly brute forever. ★ ★ . He used to think that all her ENDLESS VARIATIONS j relatives were amusing but lov-Just how does marriage ac-jable oddballs. Now if one plans tually change A man? Well, of|to come for a visit, he threatens course, there are as many end-jto set a bear trap just inside the less variations to the common' front door. AUCKLAND, New Zealand. (AP) — The Maoris, New! Zealand’s native race, are' flourishing. They numbered only 45,549 at the beginning of the century, but 201,479 at the 1966 census. On most recent estimates there are now about 215,000 Maoris in the country’s total population of 2,750,000. The Maori rate of increase,! 3.8 per cent a year, is almost double that of other New Zealanders. Therr life expectancy is lengthening and infant mortality falling. The latest report of the Maori and Island Affairs Department says that the Maori life expectancy at birth has risen from 54 years in 1950-52 to 59.09 years for men and 61.37 years far women in 1960-62. So far, Nixon is not officially on record as either for or against the government’s program for the 2,000-mile-per-hqur airplane. But he will have to make a decision shortly after taking office .Jan. 20 In January, Boeing Co., builder of the plane, will present the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) with a new design for the 300-passenger plane. The design, a delta-shaped wing, re-! places the swing wing approved by the b’AA two years ago. ■k * -k Boeing announced last month it was scrapping the swing-wing, under which the SST’s wings would have swept back into a delta design for high speed flight and swung forward for more lift at lower speeds. The wing equipment made the plane plane too heavy, engineers concluded. ENORMOUS COST Maj. Gen. .J C. Maxwell, head of the F'AA's supeponic program, stated that the new Boeing design “is the best airplane I have seen” He predicted it would win FAA approval by February. The go-ahead for prototype construction is a key step for the SST. The cost, which includes construction of two pro-j totypes, is estimated at $1.5 billion at least. This would cover costs through flight testing which is scheduled for 1972 Once prototype construction begins, the government will have to commit lots of money to keep it going. This is where Nixon must act. k k k In his budget last year, President Johnson asked Congress for money to start the prototype program. But when Boeing ran into technical troubles, the program was delayed. This allowed President Johnson to postpone winning approval for the needed funds. NIXON DECISION If he decides to push the SST program, Nixon will have to ask Congress to approve about $300 million. But he is expected to face a rising tide of opposition from cost-conscious le^lators. Under the financial formula for building the SST, the government puts up most of the money. In the prototype phase alone, the government’s share is estimated at more than $951 million. Boeing and its airline customers pay the rest. . * * ★ If the plane is a success, the government would recoup its investment. But critics of the program argue that this is not the time for the government to spend money on financially risky ventures. Still another factor is the sonic boom generated by supersonic aircraft. Earlier this month, a report backed by the Interior Department claimed that by 1975, supersonic transports could be triggering up to 50 booms a day across the country, which would cause an estimated $80 million in damage. ★ ★ w Even if the boom is tamed, the critics argue that the plane itself, although developed mainly by the government, would aid only a small segment of the economy. SAM S WALTER Delicious Sausage Cirry Outi — 682-9811 Op*n Mon./ Thurs./ Fri. a ! pontVac mall MIAMI BAKE SHOPPE Mon., 'Thnn., FrL and Sat. 'tU 9 THE PONTIAC MALL next year. COSTS KEEP RISING If the voters were to turn this down continuously we would not even be able to operate at the . . , J , the total picture. Bear in mind frying or Its success m order 0 that the classroom teacher’s ,-----------------,---------- have the funds available reflectfP^" as there are husbands, ^qt hIS KIDS operate on the full programj,,, 3,,g3,„„ |butj^ are a few familiar ex-| * * * k k k prattle on about many chil- Most teachers spend many j^g^. g^g Idren they would have and how hours at home in preparing ^^^d. Now days go by and he '"“eh fun it would be to rear Ijessons and correcting papers, never listens to a thing she them. Let the kids act up a bit| They also attend numerous says. He can’t even hear her today and what does he say?j when the water isn’t running. “You punish them—they’re I TEACHERS’ SALARY COMPARISONS, OAKLAND COUNTY, 1968-69 There was a time when he yours. I vowed he’d swim the deepest ^ Min. Max. Min. Max. 1. Oak Park 7,100 11,200 7,650 12,300 2. Ferndale 7,000 11,200 7,625 12,200 3. Lamphere 6,930 11,295 7,416 12,086 4. Madison 6,925 11,175 7,625 12,150 5. Royal Oak 6,950; 11,000 7,350 12,100 6. Berkley 6,900 11,316 7,590 12,213 7. Birmingham 6,900 11,050 7,425 12,550 8. Rochester 6,900 11,025 7,375 12,150 9. Avondale 6,900 10,868 7,860 12,148 10. West Bloomfield 6,900 11,050 7,435 12,000 11. Clawson 6,900 10,800 7,400 12,000 12. Troy 6,875 11,069 7,494 12,065 13. Southfield 6,870 10,580 7,317 12,293 14. Walled Lake 6,850 10,796 7,330 12,104 15. Pontiac 6,850 11,097 7,398 ■ 12,604 16. Lake Orion 6,850 10,886 7,350 11,927 17. Bloomfield Hills 6,850 10,850 7,500 12,400 18. Clarenceville 6,850 10,900 7,350 11,900 19. Farmington 6,800 11,100 7..350 12,550 20. Hazel Park 6,800 10,960 7,750 11,117 21. Clarkston 6,780 10,625 7,420 11,620 22. Oxford 6,750 10,613 ‘ 7,250 11,521 23. Holly 6,700 9,368 7,150 10,500 24. Novi 6,700 10,295 7,100 10,915 25. Waterford 6,700 10,500 7,100 11,500 Waterford Ranks 23-25th 24th 24-25th 22nd 26. • Brandon 6,640 10,620 7,040 11,020 27. South Lyon 6,400 9,300 7,000 10,400 Huron Valley — No Contract High 7,100 11,316 7,860 12,550 Average 6,835 10,798 7,394 11,864 Low 6,400 9,300 7,000 10,400 sea or climb the highest mountain for her. Today if she asks him to bring something up from the basement he whimpers, “What, and risk spending two weeks in the hospital with a her- Only yesterday it seems he’d take her anywhere at the drop of a hat. Now if she meekly hints that an evening out together wouldn’t do either of them any harm, he barks, “What did I buy you a color tetevision set for if you never want to stay home?’’ As her suitor he proclaimed his willingness to carry out her slightest wish. As her husband he’ll spend a whole evening figuring out ways to duck his duty of carrying out the garbage. HE’S NO DANCER ............... jr;;dgrng around picking up Fondly she remembers the!clothes from the very floors he dear dead past when they'has walked on. Ere the merry wedding bells | pealed, he often assured her hej could kiss the very ground she walked on. Since the bells! she has spent years' GENTLEMEN: Your Fori-rtal Wear Needs For The Holi* day Season Will be Quickly and Stylishly Fulfilled With a Rental From Harwood. /U^ RANDOirH -V jHttnunnh 908 W. HURON al TELEGRAPH, PONTIAC FE 2-2300 PROGRESS REPORT To Better Serve Our Customers Moving To and From PONTIAC, MICHIGAN STEVENS HAS ADDED A THIRD IN NEW WAREHOUSE SPACE AT STEVENS MOVING-STORAGE Phone 681-0600 3565 Elizabeth Lake Rd. Pontiac, Michigan Offices and Warehouses Saginaw - Bay City - Pontiac - Ann Arbor Soo - Warren - Midland - Oscoda - Lansing Schenley Reserve. Elegant to look at in its stunning holiday decanter. Elegantly gift-wrapped in pebbled white carton with tri-color stripes. And elegant to taste, because it's so ultra-smooth. Give it to friends and relatives on your list. I The Elegant Gift. 86 PHOOF • BUNDID WHISKY • iiX GIUI»I KEUTRIL SPHIITS • ©SCHUHEY 01ST11LE«S C0..I.T. THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 1968 $40-Million Rat Kitty Unspent WASHINGTON (AP) - A year alter a chastised Congress authorized $40 million for fat control, not a single dollar has been spent. The Public Health Service hopes it will soon get Bureau of the Budget approval to start shipping perhaps $15 million to some of the 47 units of local government which have applied for rat money. * * ★ But even If approval comes, the money wwi’t directly exter-! minate a single rat. Instead It will finance projects designed to teach slum dwellers how to store garbage, get rid of rat harborages and so forth. “There’s not enough money to get rid of the rat population of the whole country,” said a Public Health Service spokesman. “This is a means of instructing local residents.” All 47 applicants won’t get financing. IbEST GET FUNDS I “'Hiere’s only enough to give' to the best of the lot," said a sp(4;esman. “We’ve already pretty ipuch ranked the applications.” The agency declines to say who is in line for the grants, but Baltimore and Phlladeli^iia—confident ' t h ^ y will get money—have already begun to publicize projects. Residents of rat-infested neighborhoods would be employed under some proposals. Most projects would work through neighborhood groups and normally city health depart- ments would be heavily Involved. ★ ★ * The congressional rat contrn-. versy popped into the public eye July 20, 1967, when the House narrowly rejected a $40-milUon, two-year plan submitted by the Johnson administration to eradicate rats in slums. Derisive comments of some House members opposed to the bill drew angry replies from President Johnson and administration officials. Rep. James A. Haley, D-Ffei., for example, had d: “Why not just some cats and turn them loose Ml the street.” FINAL APPROVAL On Nov. 21, 1967, Congress gave final approval to a cmn-promlse $598-million health aid bill to whidi had been added $40 million to fight rats. But while the authoiizatiMi bill passed, CMigress never voted the $20 milliMi to run the fiscal 1968 portion of the ^ogram. It did finally approve $20 million for use in fiscal 1969, the budget year that began last July 1. Use of even this much has been held up pending Budget Bureau decisions on how much spending money government i^encies actaially will get In li^t of Congress’ edict that over-all federal outlays be slashed $80 billion. The Public Health Service now expects about $15 million be available for the rat program. Saigon Accord on Talks Hailed But LBJ Sees Hard Bargaining, Fighting SAN ANTONIO, Tex. (AP) -President Johnson, in Texas for the Thanksgiving holiday, says “both hard bargaining and hard fighting” lie ahead in the Vietnam war despite Saigon’s agreement to join expanded peace talks. Johnson, however, welcomed Saigon’s agreement to end Its boycott of the talks and said it opened “a new and hopeful phase” In efforts to end the Vietnam war. ★ ★ ★ The President flew to his ranch ’Tuesday with daughter Lynda Robb and her one-jnonth-old daughter, Lucinda. He arrived shortly after the Joint announcement from Saigon and Washington of South Vietnam’s agreement to joui peace talks. LADYBIRD RESTS UP Mrs. Johnson was already ati| the ranch. She was resting up! after her 6,000-mile “farewell to[ America” journey that ended inlf_ California Monday with dedica-^ tion of the newly created Na- -tional Redwoods Park. Due to arrive soon was the, Johnson’s other daughter, Luci, U, and grandson Lyn, returtiing from a Hawaii rei^on with Air- p man l.C. Patrick J. Nugent ★ ★ ★ % Nugent returned to duty In I?'; Vietnam where both he and||| Lynda’s husband, Marine Capt T Charles S. Robb, will spend Thanksgiving. The Johnsons have spent ev-i ery Thanksgiving in Texas, din-i|s ing on the traditional tui key and' !> all the trimmings, since theyj v entered the White House k PATTERN UNCHANGED They decided not to cnange the pattern, even though this is their last such holiday in the White House and Johnson had been expected to enter the hospital for a check of an intestinal Miners Wife, 16 Children Hope White House aides said the checkup was routine and that Johnson could even wait until after he left office to have it done. HEW Gives Grant GRAND RAPIDS - A grant of $86,622 has been approved by the Health, Education and Welfare Department for Pine Rest Christian Hospital ence pledged his organization’s KNOTTSVILLE, W. Va. (AP) - When Juanita Mayle makes pumpkin pies for her family’s Thanksgiving dinner she makes 15 at a time. She’s jiot making any today. Juanita’s husband, Hartzell Mayle, 51, is one of 78 miners trapped since last Wednesday in the burning Mountaineer Coal Co. No. 9 mine. She is among those who believe he will be found alive. “I’ve been with him ever since he’s been down there,” she said, her brown eyes reddened by tears. “And you know what? He’s worried about us. Tbat’s the kind of man he is.” 16 CHILDREN Mr. and Mrs. Mayle have 16 children. Their ages range from the twins, Cindy Sue and Linda Lou, who are 4, to Siana, who is 25. TTiere are eight girls and eight boys. ★ * * “I have a wonderful family,” the 46-year-old woman said, managing a faint smile. “We are lucky to be as well off as we are.” The Mayles moved to their 56-acre Taylor County farm four years ago when “we didn’t know the difference between a cucumber and a pepper,” she said. They learned fast enough and now raise chickens, pigs and com. Since the explosion, a friend started a drive to keep the Mayles in groceries, but it takes a lot to feed 16 children. “I make four gallons of vegetable soup and it’s gone in a day,” she said, adding that the family also goes through six pounds of spaghetti at one sitting and two turkeys at another. Her life hasn’t been the same since the explosion. “I’ve been raised in a mining camp, and I know about all this,” she said. “I sleep on the couch each night in case the telephone rings to say he’s out of the mine. FAITH IN LIFE “What really hurts is the kids. The other day I came back from the mine and the twins asked me: ‘Did they let you see Daddy, Mom?’ I just br(4ce down and cried. “I just know he’ll come out of that mine,” she said, glancing around the room at her children. “Someone’s eyes will be opened when he does and they’ll see I’ve been right all along. “When he first got trapped down there, the twins wouldn’t eat until he got back. But I cMivinced them he’s coming back and they’re eating okay now. “I’ve had too many things happen to me — too many things,” she said sadly. “He’s got to come back.” She looked again at her 16 children, some of whom were playing outside. “We have a wonderful, close family,” she said. “That means more to me than anything else. I just thank God for what I’ve got and pray my husband will come back to U. S. to Move N-Warheads? Spies in NATO tAay Have Sites Detailed WASHINGTON (AP) - The United States is cob moving its nuclear weapons, warheads in Western Europe to new hiding places for fear spies have pinpointed their present location for the Soviet Union. Officials say they can’t be sure how much Russia knows, but they became concerned after a top German officer was found shot to death and a Turkish diplomat was arrested. MINER’S FAMILY — Mrs. Juanita Mayle, wife of miner Hartzell Mayle and the mother of 16 children, believes her husband is alive and will be safely returned to his family. Mayle has been trapped for a week in the burning Mountaineer Coal Co. No. 9 mine. Mrs. Mayle’s friends have organized a drive to provide food for her large family. Mrs. Mayle and several of her children are shown above, outside their Grafton, W. Va., home. SCIC Head Urges Protest Sfep-Up SWAN QUARTER,- N.C. (AP) — The Rev. Ralph David Abernathy, drawn and tired and describing himself as suffering from a virus, urged Hyde County Negroes ’Tuesday night to intensify their protests against a school desegregation plan. The president of the Southern Christian Leadership Cmifer- Orphans Seek Way fo Stay Together LODI, N. J. (ffl — Four orphaned brothers will spend Thanksgiving together with friends while the oldest, 16-year-old Bruce W^tbrook, tries to find a way to keep his family under one roof. A fire destroyed their trailer Memorial Fund and Sheltered Workshop of full support of continued demon- LANSING (AP) — Establish-Grand Rapids, which will con-istrations and told his audience ment of the John B. Dieter tribute another $28,874. The of about 500: 'memorial fund, honoring the money is to be used to expand ai “What we have to do is stand late director of the State Health building serving mentally ill,up and tell the pharoahs of and retarded persons and to North Carolina we are sick and home Monday, and Bruce has been living with a friend’s family. His l>rothers, Keith, 13, Brian, 12, and James, 10, have been living with another family. * -k -k Bruce vowed Tuesday to find a five- or six-room apartment for himself and his brothers and their grandmother, 78-year-old Mrs. Mary Broderick of New York City, who has been looking after them daily since their father, Robert Westbrook, died augment other services. N. Oakland Unit of Cancer Group Elects Officers Dr. G. S. Buchanan of 15318 Riviera Shores, HoUy, became president of the North Oakland Unit of the Michigan Cancer Foundation at a recent annual meeting. Others elected to office include William G. Wright, director of special education for Pontiac Schools, first vice president; Mrs. Thomas Seavey Sr., volunteer activities chairman for the North Oakland Unit, second Vice president; Mrs. Sol Newhouse of 40 Mohawk as secretary; and Mrs. Philip L. Francis of 130 Miller, Rochester, treasurer. ★ ★ * Dr. Melvin L. Reed, assistant director of the Darling Memwial Center, Clinical Cancer Research Department of the Michigan Cancer Foundation, a United Fund organization, was guest speaker. Awards of appreciation were presented for outstanding volunteer participation. tired of being left out of the mainstream of things and are not going to take it any longer.” Awards have been presepted by the Academy of Motion Pictures Arts and Sciences every year since the 1927-28 season. Department’s division of services for the mentally retarded, has been announced. TTie fund is to provide an annual achievement award “for outstanding service and-or contributions to the field of mental retardation in Michigan.” Deiter, who had been with the department since 1964. died in a swimming accident at Acapulco this fall. However, it is doubtful that the law will permit the youth to live with his brothers under such an arrangement. H< under the age required to be Oct. 22. Their mother died in their guardian, and it is ques-1963. tionable how much income he “They are my brothers and i can provide. they are going to stay with me,” Bruce says. ★ * * He said he will discuss the family’s future with representative of the Children’s Bureau of the Bergen County Welfare office. It’s feared the Soviets may possess technical data phisticated nuclear weapons and North Atlantic Treaty Organization war plans. Interrogation of Nihat Imre, Turkish senior administrative official at supreme headquarters of the allied powers in is hoped to reveal how much Russia knows. He is being questioned in Ankara, Turkey. TOP NATO AIDES Imgre was arrested Oct. 6 and charged with espionage. Three days later German Rear Adm. I Hermann Luedke was found shot to death in a hunting area. He had just retired as NATO deputy chief of logsitics and supply planning. ‘Lue^e could have had access to physical inventories, location of bases,” said a senior U.S. official. The United States has about 7,200 tactical nuclear weapons stored in Europe including bat-^jtlefield missiles, artillery and I jet fighter-bomber ammunition. Warheads are stored separated in strategic locations and would be mated with the weapons if >|iand when needed. —-------------- Man on Bond in Gaming Case DETROIT m — A 49-year-old Dearborn man, who was ar-by FBI agents in a recent gambling raid, was arraigned Tuesday in Federal Court in Detroit and released on $2,500 personal bond. Paul H. Stoddard, special agent in charge of the Etetroit office of the FBI, said John Matigian was arrested and charged with using an interstate facility to promote, manage, establish and carry gambling enterprise. He was also charged with crossing a state line for gambling purposes. AP WlrdplMM TO HEAD COLLEGE — Dr. S. I. Hayakawa ai^ars at a press conference yesterday shwtly after being named, acting president of San Francisco State College. He re|dacM Robert Smith, who resigned amid student protests. Hayakawa, 62, is a professor of English and a noted semanticist. President Resigns at Troubled SF State LOS ANGELES (AP) ,-::^on,” Reagan said, Smith’s re- Blaming pressures front-'tfhs-tees, faculty, militant Istudents and “political forces,” Robert R. Smith abruptly ended his six-month term as president of embattled San Francisco State College. Gov. Ronald Reagan and other trustees of California’s 19-campus college system mously accepted Smith’s nation Tue^ay and named EYof S. I. Hayakawa, internationally sknown semanticist, as acting president. k k k Reagan, college leaders i Hayakawa expressed dou that the overnight change presidents would be enough to pacify protesting students and bring the campus back to normal soon. “Hayakawa will go out faster than Smith)” Prof. Nathan Hare, Negro coordinator of the Sar Francisco State black studies program, said in San Francisco. FOCAL POINT “I can say without hesita- signation “was not requested.” Black and ethnic studies programs and other demands from campus minority, group students have been the focal point of demonstraticms, a student strike and intermittent violence that kept San Francisco State’s classes closed for most of the past three weeks. k k k The campus has 18,000 students and about 1,100 faculty members. One demand calls for reinstatement of Black Panther George Murray, a part-time English instructor susp^ed by the college system’s chancellor, Glen S. Dumke, early this month. Murray is being investigated by campus officials for reported remarks in speeches, such as urging Negro students to carry guns on campus. MONEY UMTTA’nWIS Smith also cited “deaperate limitations in financial resources” as one reason but his request to return to work as an education professor. New Strike in New York MSU Will Join Grape Boycott EAST LANSING (AP)-Mich-igan State University decided Tuesday to halt purchase of California table grapes—sid)ject of a long-fought dispute between growers and pickers. “We have been buying them,’ said Robert Herron, manager of the MSU food stores. “But as of today (Tuesday) we just cided we wouldn’t buy any more.” * ★ Board of Trustees Chairman Don Stevens, who works with the AFLrCIO, said earlier in the week that he “unequivocally’ supported a boycott of California table grapes and would recommend the university to stop buying the grapes if the matter came before the board. Herron said “no one had ever said, anything utitil last week” about MSU grape purchases, but several telephone calls and “furor” over the matter led him to his decision to stop the purchases indefinitely. Smith said one reason for his resignation was “inaUUty to reconcile effectively the conflicts between the trustees and chancellor, the faculty groups on campus, the militant student groups and political forces of the state.” ★ * ★ Smith had agreed to discussion of the issues during campuswide convocations ndiich superseded daises, although trustees had ordered normal campus routine resumed following a shutdown Nov. 18-20. Hayakawa ordered the convocations ended Tuesday night. But he said he didn’t know if classes would resume as planned Monday. TAKES HARD LINE Hare said Hayakawa “takes the hard line. We’ll be ready for him.” Reagan said he “very regretfully” accepted Smith’s resignation. k k k Earlier Reagan and State School Supt. Max Rafferty told newsmen they wanted “professional agitators” removed from the campus; Reagan mentioned the Students for a Democratic Society when asked who scxne of the agitators were. Commuters Limited NEW YORK M — A new! The line said 15 engineers strike today beset the harried showed up for work at 8:10 commuters o£ the Long Island‘out of the 102 scheduled to be on Rail Road. \ hand. A complete shutdown of the Settlement of the train men’s line by a train men’s strike the wildcat strike Tuesday night last two days was apparently brought short-lived sighs of ended with a settlement last relief from 90,000 regular corn-night, but today most of the muters and an average of 80,000 engineers didn’t show up forj single fares daily, harried by work. i bumper-to-bumper auto travel An LIRR spokesman said, j into and out of the city and “Unfortunately, the traveling! getting to work via overcrowded public is faced with the fact buses and subways, that very few trains will be in' * * i operation, and it appears thatj Agreement to end the tie-up service at best will b e by the 1,00 trainmen, members CANCER CONTROL — John Madole (right), president of the North Oakland Unit of the Michigan Cancer Foundation congratulates Dr. G. S. Buchanan, who succeeded him. The transfer of officers took place at a recent annual meeting. minimal.” ★ ★ ★ He said the railroad was going into U. S. District Court in Brooklyn in an effort to halt the “illegal” action. He added that he could give no reason for [the work stoppage. The 350 engineers, member of about $300,000 yearly the Brotherhood of Locomotive overtime pay because of a Engineers, have been called to,timetable change, had been a mass membership meeting j unauthorized by union leaders, this morning, the LIRR The schedule change, the spokesman reported. jLIRR said, which is the first in of Local 517, Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen, was worked out during a federal court hearing into contempt charges against the local’s president, Harold J. Pryor. Pryor had contended that the walkout, over anticipated loss bf 20 years, was designed to provide better service for commuters improved utilization of present equipment, and savings in operating costs. ★ ★ ★ An LIRR spokesman said the agreement was identical to one that Pryor had rejected last Saturday. ★ ★ ★ According to the spokesman, the agreement stipulated: TTiat the line would add one full train crew tp replace one that was to hhve been eliminate under the new timetable. • That ticket collectors who had refused to pick work assignments in accordance with seniority would be given another chance, with the railroad withdrawing the arbitrary assignments it had made after the “pick” refusals. ★ ★ ★ • 'That an assurance of the foregoing would be provided in writing. In a letter from management to the union. AP Wlriphote LONG WAY TO WORK — Traffic was congested yesterday on the Belt Parkway on Long Island at 5:30 a.m. as thousands of workers who normally would use the Long Island Rail Road to commute were forced by a strike by trainmen to use their cars to get to work. An engineers’ strike today created the same traffic snarls. THE PONTIAC J*KESS. WEDNESDAY. yOVEMBEli 27, 1968 FIRST IS Discoumim.. FIRST IN FASHION! FIRST IN VALUE! THANKSGIVING DAY! 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PONTIAC, MICHIGAN Convenienfly Local-ed Between Shirley and Sanford Streets on the North Side of Auburn Avenue PLENTY OF FREE PARKING PontiK Prtsi Photo by Ron Untomihror There’s not too much difference between an Petrakis of Bloomfield Township who originated '■ evening gown of 1959 and one of 1968. Mts. John the St. Joseph Mercy Hospital group, is modeling > Pridmore, Onagon Trail (left), shows the dress she her newly purchased gown. This year’s dance will ! wore at the first Boosters’ Club dance. Mrs. John be held Dec. 7 at the Shenandoah Country Club. Dr. John Pridmore, staff member of St. Joseph Mercy Hospital, is chairman of this year’s semi-formal dinner dance of the Boosters’ Club. It is the second time he has served in this capacity. He holds a notice for the event which this year will honor the past presidents. Can Be 7he Apple of His Eye' if You Turn to Kitchen Aids By YOLANDA BENAVIDES Apples, mayonnaise and a little of olive oil; that’s what beautiful gab are made of, according to the experts. Sounds more like h recipe, but that’s the way it went Tuesday at Walled Lake Junior fligh School as a trio of beauties from Alvin’s erf Phntiac whipped up ingredients for,the look of a < ■ Narrated by petite Georgian, Nancy Miller, former model and instructor at Patricia Steven’s, the hour-and-a-half asseipbly given morning and afternoon was strictly a ‘girls only’ affair. CODE Coordinated by faculty and students, the program was formulated in response to the need for a proper dress code pleasing to everyone. • ★ * * “In hopes of finding such a code, the student council and instructors worked together last year on what they considered proper dress,’’ said counselor Jan Salsbury, “but it failed in getting response.’’ ★ ★ * “You can’t teach something simply by putting down rules,’’ concluded Mrs. Salsbury, “So we turned to a fashion show applicable to all shapes, occasions and even one’s pocketbook.” ★ ★ * 'Thus, Tuesday’s adventure in beauty with comment from Mrs. Miller, and Betty McDonald, fashion coordinator and assbtant manager for an Alvin’s branch. For hints mi the new ‘healthy’ look, Betty Riley, a former cosmetic expert for Estee louder, concluded the trio. ★ ★ ★ From tips on poise, which brought a qutet rumble as the crowded gynmasium of stumpy females shifted legs, and straighted backs, to make-up trends and fashion coordination, the do’s and don’ts on good appearance seemed well taken. ★ ★ ★ Included among the treasure of beauty tricks were: • Apples are a good substitute for chocolate bar munchers who need to diet and they’re much better for one’s complexion. • A dab of mayonnaise before !sham-pooing conditions the hair (but don’t forget to rinse, please). • You might try some olive oil as a night base for skin protection. ★ ★ * In hopes the fairer sex of the student body will adopt the ‘beauty habit’ yesterday’s programs were filmed for future use by the home economics department. ★ * * As I shifted my legs to thfe side, rose gentiy and softly walked out the gym, I couldn’t help feeling qp more need be said. Parents Getting 'Bad DeaT With Cards Against Them Teach Respect in the Home, Reports Winner By ELIZABETH L. POST Of The Emily Post Institute Because her letter is so concerned with the behavior of teenagers, I think that Mrs. A. will enjoy a copy of “Emily Post’s Book of Etiquette for Young People’’ more than Emily Post’s “Etiquette,” and I am happy to send her one for her excellent letter. ★ ★ ★ Dear Mrs. Post: As the mother of three teenage children (ages 13, 14 and 15) and the wife of a high school teacher, I am deeply distressed at the lack of respect our young people show for our flag and their conduct during the National Anthem. * * * During a recent family discussion, my husband mentioned that everyone should stand at attention when the National Anthem is played. Our children are all band members and they stated that it is never done, that at football games people walk about tending to whatever they are doing. * * * Many people blame the schools for problems of this nature but good manners and respect are difficult to teach young people when the home life sets a poor example. . * ★ ★ I have always tried to teach our children that manners, respect, and kihdness began with each other in the family and are carried with us in our daily activities. ★ ★ ★ Thank you for your thoughts on this matter. Perhaps some of your readers have comments to make also. — Mrs. M. A. ★ ★ * Dear Mrs. A.: I too am distressed at the lack of patriotism shown today. It seems at times that all many people can do is criticize our country rather than recognize and appreciate its virtues. As you indicate in your letter, a part of this is lack of respect, and that lack has been fostered by too many parents who have abdicated their responsibiUties by not demanding a fair amount of i t themselves. ★ * * Your approach . is entirely correct. Courtesy, consideration, respect and obedience must be taught at home. When they are, the young people who grow up aware of these qualities have little trouble in abiding by them in the outside world. While schools can do much to teach good manners, and a good attitude, it is truly the job of parents — by discipline and example. ★ ★ ★ In regard to, the National Anthem, your children are wrong in saying that no one pays attention to it. I cannot speak for high school games as I have not attended one in some time, but at college games and all professional sports, the Anthem is played and the spectators rise and remain quiet until it is over. 1 By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: When we go to visit the son and his wife, they are always playing cards. No matter what time of day or evening, it’s cards, cards, cards. “PWl up a chair and watch,’ ’they say. Booster Club Sets 10th Annual Dinner-Dance Nine years ago, the Boosters Club of St. Joseph Mercy Hospital held its first dinner dance to raise money for “the little extras” needed in the hospital that were impossible with a limited budget. On Dec. 7, the group will have its tenth semi-formal affair for the same purpose. They have contributed over $36,000 in the interval, money that has been used to beautify the emergency area, the fathers’ waiting room and the cafeteria. In the past several years, the money earned has helped purchase equipment. Mrs. John Petrakis, who organized the group, was its first president. All 10 past presidents will be honored this year by the Sisters of Mercy. * * ★ In addition to staff physicians and their wives, the women’s auxiliary and hospital employes, various events of the Boosters have involved civic leaders, dentists, phartnacists, attorneys, American Red Cross volunteers and assorted friends of all the groups. Their present project is to raise enough money to furnish a medical library in the new building complex, scheduled for completion within the next three years. COMMITTEE Dr. John Pridmore, chairman of this year’s dance, is being assisted by Mesdames: Petrakis, Meyer Simon and James Hannan. Others are Doctors: James Henderson, Eugene K e e f f e , Thomas Sansone, John Ylvisaker, Clare Johnson and Raymond Gagliardi. Concluding the lists are Doctors: Edward MePhee, Reinhold Schmieding, Mark Krane, Dale Drew, Kurt Baier, James Quinn, Robert Wessels and Bernard Stremler. Now Abby, I don’t go to anybody’s house to watch them play cards. I feel insulted. I say they should play out their hands and quit, as we stay only half an hour. My husband says they should go on playing. What do you say? PUZZLED DEAR PUZZLED: If you stay only half an hour, I would say your card-crazy son and his wife are rude. Perhaps your son should have been introduced to a different kind of “hand” when he was younger. ★ * ★ DEAR ABBY: I have what most women think they want — a husband who does everything for me. He decides on where we should go and what we should do. He and a decorator did our house. He and his secretary pick out any gifts we have to send. TTiey even select our Christmas cards. (He has yet to ask me how I like them.) * ★ ♦ He disciplines the children, and tells them what HE thinks. He never asks what THEY think. They love him, but they rebel in their own way by takhtg it out on me and the whole neighborhood. When I tell my husband our children have no friends, he says, “Nobody needs friends. They just have to be rich to get along in this world.” Well, at least the children have a way of releasing their feelings, but as for me, I feel absolutely - USELESS DEAR USELESS: You don’t say how long this has been going on, but I would guess it started the day you said, “I do.” You only complain — you don’t ask for a solution, which would indicate that you are resigned to your unhappy, “useless” life. I’m sorry for you, but sorrier for your children,. They cannot “love” this tyrant, but only fear him. And kids who fear their fathers make miserable fathers themselves. DEAR ABBY: If I were to tell you that I am a young, unknown actress who became involved with a movie producer (divorced) it would sound like a made-up letter, but it happens to be the truth. I am 23 and he is about 50. We’ve seen a lot of each other since we met four months ago, but he never promised marriage. ★ * ♦ I just found out I’m pregnant. When I gave my producer friend the news, he said I shouldn’t try to hang it on HIM, because five years ago he had the operation men have to make themselves sterile, and his doctor will back him up. Abby, it’s GOT to be him because I haven’t been with anybody else. I need to know this: Does that operation men have ever fail? I KNOW he’s the father, but how can I prove it? How about a blood test? IN A FIX ★ ★ * DEAR IN: A blood test will only rule out who the father ISNT. And yes, “that operation” (it’s called a “vasectomy”) CAN fail if it has not been properly done. But if your producer friend wants to know for certain if he is still able to “produce,” a return visit to his doctor for a sperm test will provide proof. Julie Given Practical Gifts at Her First Bridal Shower NEW YORK (AP) - Julie Nixon, who has been asking all her friends for practical wedding gifts, received a pile of kitphen utensils, mops, brooms and drip-dry lingerie at her first bridal shower. Julie, a 20-year-(^d brunette with sparkling eyes, greeted with delight her friends’ attempts to put the practical gifts in original packages. Mrs. Dwight Eisenhower, the former first lady and grandmother of Julie’s Barefooted Pat Hart, 22, of Clayton, Mich., listens to transistor radio aboard the liner Fair Sea in Southampton, England, where immigration authorities refused to let her land on the gpunds she didn’t have enough money to support herself. She later wbn her fight to land after her parents wired her $300. She had.faced the prospect of being sent back to Australia on the Fair Sea which had brought her to Southampton. Pat had been working in Australia as a nurse. fiance, David, sent a houseplant witb bright red flowers and a shiny copper cooking utensil hanging from every branch. PRACTICAL MODEL Linda Labarre, a bridesmaid, from Glen Rock, N.J., constructed a model “bride” out of a garbage pail, a broom a mop, a dustpan, a brand new sheet and other household items. “Julie had asked me for a mop” Unda said, “and I told her she would get one, but not what she expected. She was really surprised.” * ★ * Linda said Julie plans to do all her own housework at the couple’s spacious new apartment in Northamptqh, Mass. Both husband and wife will attend classes at nearby Amherst and Smith colleges next semester. ★ ★ * But not all the presents at the shower, held last weekend in the East Side apartment of Mrs. Elmer H. Bobst, were so domestic. ■k -k * Julie received an i entire outfit by Emilio Pucci, the superchic Italian designer. And Mrs. Helen Clay Frick, daughter of the late Henry Clay Frick of the Frick Collection, gave the bride a black tray inlaid with gold pictures of all 36 men who have been elected President, including David’s grandfather and Julie’s father. “The lingerie created a sensation,” said Linda, “but I’ll tell you that none of it was see-through.” ★ * ♦ The shower was followed by a formal dinner dance at the Waldorf Towers apartment of Mrs. Edwin I. Hilson, widow of the investment banker. No further prewedding festivities are planned for the immediate future, but Linda predicted at least one more shower before the Dec. 22 wedding. Writing Contest for Michiganders Feb. 15. 1969, is the deadline for entries in the 13th annual one-act play contest sponsored by the Community Theatre Association of Michigan. Cash prizes of $50, $25 and $10 are offered as first, second and third awards. Any resident of the state is eligible. Winners will be selected by a committee of judges and will be announced during the observance of Michigan Week. Presentations of awards will be made at the 1969 Spring Convention of the Association, to be held in Southgate, May 24. Interested persoijs may contact Mrs. Fred. Golden of 6795 Rldcett Road, Brighton, for further Information. 2 THE PONTIAC I’HK.SS. VVEUNESDAY. NOVEMBER 27, 1968_ Heirloom Veil Is Worn by Miss Russell Newlyweds, the William Dudley Steinhilbers, are honeymooning in New York City following their marriage Saturday in White Lake Presbyterian Church. For the early evening rite, the bride, the formeji^ Sheila Sue Russell, chose a gown of ivory velvet and peau de soie. Pearl-trimmed cut lace bands accented the neckline and Camelot sleeves. ; Capping her ensemble was an "heirloom Belgian lace veil of the Steinhilber family, floor length and scattered with seed : pearls. She carried a colonial bouquet of ivory and red roses centered with a corsage. ★ ★ * Joseph Waling and Joyce Mumock were honor attendants.' The bride’s sister, Kelly, served as flower girl. ★ ★ ♦ Parents of the couple are Mr. and Mrs. E. Eugene Russell of Highland and Mr. and Mrs.i Dudley D. Steinhilber of Driftwood Drive. Commerce Town-' ship. I ■ A reception in the Pontiac ?!ity Club followed the rite. MRS. W. D, STEINHILBER Case No. H-524 Wed Saturday in White Lake Presbyterian Church were Sheila Sue Russell and William Dudley Steinhilber. Their parents are the E. Eugene Russells of Highland and the Dudley D. Steinhilbers of Driftwood Drive, Commerce Township. wOld? By JOSEPHINE LOWMAN Family health is one of tl most impmtant jobs a womrni must manage. The pediatrician and the school remind her that the children are due for their physical chrekups. The dentist I reminds her that he should be I visited twice a year. There is no one, however, to remind ber that adult members of the family should also have physical examinations periodically. Many people coast along for years without seeing a doctor. Doctors are considered by most to be important only for treatment of disease. Many people I seem unaware of their valuable ' role in the prevention of illness. Talk to Your Children By DR. GEX)RGE W. CRANE |guilty of idle silences than of happy, well adjusted teen-ager Flatter Figure With Accessories ■ When shopping for accessories it is generally a good rule that small items, soft c Park Free FE«.2g7;8 Edyth Stengon, otmot; , len she feceived heri Bachelw of Divinity degree from the Austin Presbyterian Theological Semihary in July,! 1967, she was the third woman' to do so. ■ I ★ ★ ★ I She takes the pulpit at least ^ once a month and, in addition,! oversees the worship a n d^ church school committees and! visits the iU and new comers. [ PRECISION WATCH REPAIR NEISNER'S 'Woteh Repair 42 N. Soginaw FE 8-3593 EJ Mann, Manager }A»6->TmTfyrmTmTmT)hfmTnrTrrmT6TE CONNOLLY'S - Crodit stay Be A rranged 'A>TVnOVM0/ JIVIIIM S Jmel i OF THE WEEK! The ultimata for her giftl Ttiia luih green In emaraldt4n controsi vritb the fiery white aparkle of diamonds — In a magnificent cluster ring. The effect Is tremendous — simple but beautiful. * It will be loved ond cherished by the one who receives this ring. $2,500 JIVIIIM io00099tOt'oQtt9t9tatltat9a99t090ttt0 9tOP DOWNTOWN PONTIAC ■mar of Huron and Saginaw Stt. f E 2-0294 Christmas cards, designed by the American Artists Group Inc., reflect many moods. There is 'a popular movement to yesteryear with cards depicting nostalgic scenes. There are bold cards that proclaim the spirit of today. There are religious cards which have never lost their appeal. And there are cards that simply show a beautiful painting or drawing. The industry estimates "that over 4 billion,-200 million cards are sold each year. Record Album by Sixfen Ehrling Wins Award An international jury of music critics has selected an album conducted by Sixten Ehrling as one of the 26 outstanding recordings of 1968. Ehrling led the Stockholm Radio Orchestra in music by Franz Berwald. The awards were announced in the current edition of High Fidelity magazine. Ehrling also recorded works a three-week series of guest be Berwald with the London conducting engagements. Symphony in an album that will eluding performances with the be released next month. Cologne Orchestra and the He is currently in Europe for| Stockholm Radio Orhehestra. Kitekw CoApet ” _Sq.Yd. Installed Reg. »12’= Sq. Yd. Save •2*’ a Square' Yd. 6-Pattern Designs and Tweed.s Stop in and See for Yourself McCANDLESS 1 N. Perry St. FE 4-2531 Cobbie Boots Right In Step With This Fashionable Cold Weather Boot In Leather Blaek or Brown for Only Our Customers Park Free In The Downtown Parking Mall PAULI’S SHOES 35 N. Saginaw Downtown Pontiac PLEASE... Don't delay in placing your call for Gresham Professional Dry-cleaning of your Draperies and Slipcovers. Beautify your homo for the holidays and cqll todayl A Pleasure to Wear! o OMEGA 0tht William J. Emerson to proceed with steps leading to the purchase of the computer and related equip-m«it. Total estimated cost of the purchase is $1 millim. ★ ★ ★ In other action yesterday the board approved the transfer of 220 acres from the Hurrni Valley School District to the Walled Lake School District. The move will make the eastran boundary of Huron Valley a straigdit line. Dominick Marotta, 196 7 Commeerce, Milford Township, petitioned the board for tte of transfer. He owns 35 acres and holds an option to buy 80 acres of the property. Presently his Son, Aptlumy, is attending school in the Wahed Lake district on a tuition basis. EAST OF MILFORD The pr<^)erty is located about four miles east of Milford Village and its assessed valuation is $92,000. Marotta is the oidy rerident property owner on the land. TIT The board granted a total of $62,754 to the Troy Board of Educati(xi to pay for the renovation of three existing Special education rooms for the mentally handicapped. A meeting was set for 6:30 p.m. Dec. 3 with representatives of local boards for a report (»t the Oakland Schools budget for 1968-69 md its financial status. The meeting is combined with a dinner at the Red Fox Restaurant, on Telegraph near Maple. NEW MEETING TIME The board changed i t meeting time from 7:30 p.m. to 4 p.m. in the future. Last year the board made the change in reverse as a convenience for the public to attend, but there was no Increase in attendance. The board meeting scheduled for Dec. 24 was canceled, and the next regular meeting will be 4 p.m. Dec. 31. NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING ..No,lc I, heresy.,,ven..o,^^pg Won't Run Again GRAND RAPIDS (ffl — The chairman of both the Democratic and Republican party organizations in Kent County have announced they won’t run for reelection when the party executive committees name new chairmen next month. Leaving their posts will be county Republican Chairman Hilary F. Snell and his Democratic counterpart. Dr. Donald L. Herman. '"state of MICHIGAN—In th« Probat* Court for tiM County of Oakland-^uvanll* Division. . In tho matter of th# petition concernino Brenda Gall McLauchlln, minor. TO: Clair McLauchlln, father of NEW PROGRAM- Activity began al- p™" most immediately yesterday at the opening' the adjacent home to Pontiac State Hospital of the new Jay Shop Inc. Pausing diming the for the program. Patients at the hospital will open house are (from left) Ronald Robbins, learn and practice hand skills and trades at Jay Shop program administrator, and Guv the .site. The adiacent home will be a half- and Paul Spadafore. The Spadafores sold way house operation. The program is a proj- the former store building at 203 Oakland and ect aided by area Jaycees. Deaths in Pontiac^ Nearby Areas Clarence E. Fortney Service for Clarence E Fortney, 71, of 308 Clifford will be 2:30 p.m. Friday in St. Trinity Lutheran Church with burial in White Chape' Memorial Cemetery, Troy, by Spaiks-Griffin Funrd Home. Mr. Fortney, a retired employe of GMC Truck & Coach Division, was a member of St. Trinity Church. Surviving are his wife, Anna’ his daughter, Mrs. Richard Deason of Madison Heights; two sons, Hillman A. and Ralph C. both of Pontiac; 1 grandchildren; two great grandchildren; two sisters; and a brother. The family suggests any memorials be made to St. Trinity Church. Mrs. Thelma I. Haines Service for Mrs. Thelma I. Haines, 54, of 19 JoseiAine will be 8:30 p.m. Friday at the Coats Funeral Home, Waterford Township. Burial will be in the cemetery at Lake City. Mrs. Haines died yesterday. Mrs. Clarence Anderson AVON TOWNSHIP - Mrs. Clarence (Evelyn) Anderson, 45, of 2926 Hillendale died this morning. Her body is at the William R. Potere Funeral Home, Rochester. Sandra L. Buzan BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP -Service for Sandra L. Buzan, 14, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Leroy R. Buzan, 3(»7 Betsy Ross, will be 1 p.m. Friday at First Methodist Church, Birmingham. Burial will be in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery by Price Funeral Home, Troy. Sandra, a ninth grade student at East Hills Junior High School, died yesterday. She was a member of the Junior Choir at First Methodist Church and East Hills Schftol choir. Surviving are her parents; two brothers, Christopher R. and Randall D., both at home; and grandparents Mr. and Mrs. George J. Curran of Independence, Mo., and Mr. and Mrs. Aura J. Buxan of Kansas City, Mo. Memorials may be made to the Michigan Cancer Foundation or East Hills Junior High School library, Bloomfield Hills. Edward J. Easier HOLLY — Service for former resident Edward J. Easier, 40, of Midland will be 2 p.m. Friday at Dryer Funeral Home, Holly. Burial will be i n Greenwood Cemetery, Vernon. Mr. Easier died Monday. He was a self-employed painter and carpenter. Surviving are two daughters, Cynthia and Sandra of Clarkston; and three sisters, including Mrs. Kathryn Berg-gren of Holly. Pfc. Donald P. Evans OXFORD TOWNSHIP-Serv-ice for Pfc. Donald P. Evans. 27, of 1375 Indian Lake wili be 10 a.m. Saturday at Bossardet Funeral Home, Oxford. Burial will be in Oxford Cemetery. Pfc. Evans died Nov. 19 ini Vietnam, near Da Nang. He wasi an apprentice electrician for thei Jarrett Electric Co. before hei entered the Army, where hen served with Co. D, 5th Battery, 7th Cavalry Air Mobile Unit. Surviving are his wife, Shar- 1, and two brothers. Charles Godfrey ROSE TOWNSHIP - Service for Charles Godfrey, 82, of 948 Munger will be 11 a.nu Friday at Dryer Funeral Home, Holly. Burial will be in Rose Center Cemetery, Rose Township. Mr. Go^y died Sunday. J. Sterling Kemp LAKE ORION - Miltary service for J. Sterling Kemp, 91, of 41 Smith Court will be 11 am. Friday atFlumerfel Funeral Home, Oxford, with burial in Ridgelawn Cemetery, Oxford. The service will be performed by menobers of Charlton Polan Post 233 of the American Legion, located in Lake Orion. Mr. Kemp died yesterday. He was a member of the Civilian Guard at Fort Custer near Battle Creek. Surviving are three daughters, Mrs. Dorothy Ericson of Chicago, HI., Mrs. Marybeth Kahn of New York aty, N.Y. and Mrs. PrisciUa Schaar of Lake Orion; a son, J. S. Kemp Jr. of Fairfield, Conn.; nine grandchildren; and three great-grandchildren. Mrs. William Krell TROY — Service for Mrs. William (Anna C.) KreU, 84, of 101 E. Square Lake will be p.m. Friday at St. Augustine Lutheran Church, Troy. Burial will be in Mount Avon Cemetery, Rochester, by William R. Potere Funeral Homej Rochester. Mrs. Krell yesterday. Surviving are three sons, Karl of Visallia, Calif., Henry of Troy and William of Madison Heights, and a grandson. Mrs. Alice K. Morgan GROVELAND TOWNSHIP -Service for Mrs. Alice K. Morgan, 81, of 906 W. Glass will be 2:30 p.m. Friday at C. F. Sherman Funeral Home, Ortonville, with burial i n Lakeview Cemetery, Clarkston. Mrs. Morgan died yesterday. She was a member of New Hope Bible Church, Clarkston. Surviving are five sons, Clark of Clarkston. Les of Mio and Jerome. Stanley and George Jr., all of Ortonville; two daughters, Mrs. Mary Hine of Davisburg and Mrs. Inez Pethick of Ortonville; three brothers, including William Perry of Oxford and Joe Perry of darkston; four sisters, including Lillian AvenaU of Oxford and Carrie Andrews of Lake Orion; 25 grandchildren; and 40 great-grandchildren. Ervin H. Parker AVON TOWNSHIP — Private service for Ervin H. Parker, 68, of 2725 Simpson was to be held today at the Lewis E. Wint Funeral Home, Clarkston, with crematiMi following at White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy. Mrs. Parker, a retired pipe fitter for the Fisher Body plant, died Monday. Surviving are a daughter, Mrs. David Morris of Troy; son. Jack of Clarkston; seven grandchildren; and three greatgrandchildren. Alexander J. Sulecki ORTONVILLE — Requiem Mass for Alexander J. Sulecki, 66, of 94 Church will be 10 a.m. Friday at St. Anne’s Catholic Church, Ortonville. Burial will be in Ortonville Cemetery by the C. F. Sherman Funeral Home. Rosary will be said at 8:30 p.m. tomorrow at the funeral home. Mr. Sulecki died yesterday. He was a member of St. Anne’s Church and was retired from Ex-Cell-0 Corp. Surviving are his wife, Pauline; two sons, Tom of Ortonville and James of Redford Township; a daughter, Mrs. Kathleen Russell of Livonia; six sisters. Including Mrs. Irene Johnson of Lapeer; and 11 grandchildren. Police Action Pontiac police officers and Oakland County sheriff’s deputies investigated 79 reported incidents and made six arrests the past 24 hours. A breakdown of causes for police action; Vandalisms—6 Burglaries—9 Larcenies—10 Auto thefts—2 Bicycle thefts—2 Disorderly persons—4 Assaults-^ Shopliftings—1 Unarmed robberies—1 Obscene phone calls—1 Bad checks—2 Traffice offenses—22 Property damage accidents—12 Injury accidents^ Area Man Named to PR Exec Post at Michigan Bell Michigan Bell Telephone Co. directors have elected a Bloomfield Township man, Lloyd J. Haynes, director of urban affairs, to the post of vice president-public relations. ★ * * W. Calvin Patterson, who formerly handled public relations functions, will continue as vice president-revenues and public affairs. ★ * * Changes are effective Sunday. Haynes of 228 N. Williams-bury started his Michigan Bell career at Saginaw in the commercial department and at one lime was manager in Bay City. ★ * ★ Patterson of 6155 E. Surrey, Bloomfield Township, joined Michigan Bell advertising department in 1927. He has been a director since 1952. Director Elected PITTSBURGH (J) - Joseph Stem Jr., a director and former president and board chairman of the U. S. Shoe Corp. in Cincinnati, has been elected to the board of Lamb Communications of Toledo, Ohio. Lamb operates television systems in a number of Ohio and Michigan communities and owns WICU-TV, Erie, Pa. Army Contract WARREN UFI - Cwitinental Motors of Muskegon Tliesday was awarded a $2,4(XI,000 contract to build 224 engine assemblies for M60 tanks for the U. S. Army tank Automotive Command in Warren. Case No. 68-11-6 camber 17, IW*, af 7 Lot No. 587, Huron Gardens Subdivision lection 25, T3N, R»E, Waterford Town hip, Oakland County, Michigan. lovember,22, 1268 ARTHUR J. SALLEY, ir 27, December 9, 1968 DOWNTOWN PONTIAC Offers FREE PARKINC OH THE PONTIAC MUNICIPAL LOT (CORNER SAGINAW and HURON) Furnished by the Following Merchants: ARTHUR’S 48 N. Saginaw St. OSMUN’S MEN’S WEAR 51 N. Saginaw St. BOBETTE SHOP 16 N. Saginaw St. GOOD HOUSEKEEPING SHOP 51 W. Huron St. CONN’S CLOTHES 73 N. Saginaw THE PONTIAC PRESS 48 W. Huron St. cHARGt iT ^ora FRANK’S NURSERY ^ « OPEN THANKSGIVING DAY TILL 5 P.M. SHOP TILL 10 P.M. NOV. 29 UNTIL CHRISTMAS pared “OLD MAN WINTER’ ^ 16" ELECTRIC SNOW THROWER Modal LD.I& STRUTS INSTANTLY EVEN IN THE COLDEST WEATHER 17-inch SNO-BLITZ SNOW THROWER mss CLEANS OFF EVEN PORCHES AND STEFS ^ * nail irin 2-tP., 2-cydi miM * DnI knit hr iml ns ft steps * Wide-ngh 188* SMW-tkrew netrsl Model 51603 ITORQ 21" SNOW HOUND SNOW THROWER HANDLE XvVbVW * Pawerftl a'/i-RJ*. 4-q^li wiitemed e«tin lift-sff power handle fits E other Tore tools * Adjestable front skids, big winter-grip tires #40114 Power Handle altM....$ 89.9S * Self-propelled, throws a ton if saow a nionte #31218 28“ Snow Boond alon..$110.81 NO-SLIP Ice Carpet BIG 12 R. X 2 Ft. JUST LAY IT DOWN FOR INSTANT SAFETY Ley it down on porch, steps, walk, before ice and snow hit. Ends ice chopping, tiresome show shoveljng. Umumrni^aAMK'S NURSERY iAKSgessililMild 5919 HIGHLAND RD. (M-59) at AIRPORT RD. 3150 Grand River, Farmington — 6575 Telegraph at Maple 14 Mile at Crooks Rd. ’3.98 a- B—4 rHB PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBEIl 27> 1968 NORTH 27 A9863 ¥ AQ92 ♦ AJ ♦ K109 WEST EAST AAKJ52 AQIO ¥KJ7 ¥10863 ♦ 754 4KQ9832 4^53 *Z SOUTH (D) A74 ¥54 ♦ 106 ♦ AQJ8764 North-South vulneraWe West North East South 3 A 5 4^ Pass Pass Pass Opening lead—4 K Bridge f ricks^ From Jacobys partner for your mistakes.!played a heart. You discard lApart from the fact that youridummy’s spade. East either 'hand was a trifle too weak for|must unguard his hearts or a vulnerable three-club bid, make your diamond 10 a win-your play fell short of the optimum. You should have made your contract.” j' : -k -k / -k Marriage Licenses . C. McKnIoM, 270 Osmun a Joyce A. Brovm, 3» Whlrtomore. Terry M. Bargy< Farmington a Sharon M. Murphy, Ciawion. Larry $. Well, Birmingham and Lin . Frimkcl, Birmingham. E tar men agree that the Commw nists could succeed in taking Quemoy only if the United States remained completely disinterested. With this thought in mind, the digging goes on and on in Que- Other Americans believe that Quemoy could withstand con- (Adv«rtlMm«nl) Don't Neglect Slipping FALSE TEETH Do f«l— teeth drop. eUp or wobble, when yen teJk. eet, Uugh or »«!»? Don't be ennored end emberreMcd by inch hendloepe. PA8THCTH, en •Ikallne (non-neul) powder to sinln-kile on your pUtec. keepe felaa teeth moee flnniy »et. OItcs confident feel-tnc ot eecurlty end edded comtort. No rummw. KOOew toste nr feoltn*. tiiWB is60D mm B—6 THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, NOVJBMBER 27, 1968 Get in line and the fun and SANTA 11 and the Make the Santa Scene with Lucrece Beale's newest 17-part mind-blowing Christmas serial! There's excitement and high adventure in each action-packed installment starting Friday, November 29th. Don't miss it. THE PONTIAC PRESS For Home Delivery Dial 332-8181 lAC VliKSS VVEDXESDAV, NOVEMBER 27. 19t58 B—7 ^ Legal Action Is Possibility 37 Candidates File No Report |; MARKETS following are top prices c^ering sales of locally grown pKduce by growers and sold by tiiam In wholesale package lots. Qlotatiofis are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets as of Tuesday. i Produce 5 FRUITS AM>I«> Cortland, Du. .... Allies, Dellelous, Golden, I AWlat, Delicious, Red, bu. Apples, Jonathan, bu..... A^ies, McIntosh, bu. ... Apples, Northern Spy, bi Apple Cider, 4-gal. rase ... pSrs, Bose, % bu......... • VEGETABLES sAts, Topped, bu................$2.50 Cdbbage, Curly, bu...............2."' c*bage,/Red, bu. ................ 2. cAbage, Sprouts, bu.............. l, cabbage. Standard Variety, bu....2. carrots, Cello-Pak, 2 di.........2. carrots, topped, bu..............2. cauliflower, dz. ................ 2. celery. Root, Vi bu..............3. Fennel,, di. . • ..........•. 2. Harseradlsh, pk. bskt........... 4.: Kohlrabi, dz. bchs...............2. Leaks, harges when they are judged rijnwrlssi 07 5^ commission was told byip^^^g^ ’ Luargis wnen uity aie juageu 71.841,701,527.03! j The final straw came with the William Powell of 1964 Devonshire, Bloomfield - Township told Pontiac police 'w '‘‘'w'/r-'i yesterday that someone stole ' z Vi items valued at more than $300, including electronic equipment, tools and a jacket, from his car while it was parked in a lot in the 1000 block of Arlene. Ritters Farm Market, 3225 W. Huron St. Open Thanksgiving day. Hand picked apples—Macs, ’’ johnnies, Delicious and North-rj'ern Spies; winter potatoes, !; squash; new crop raw peanuts, pecans, walnuts, mixed nuts, all As kinds, Christmas trees, balsam grave blankets, cedar roping; Hlgrocerles, beer, wine, liquor. ,’':|0pen 7 days, 681-0144, -adv. OOW-JONES AVERAGES Sylvan lake Gets Land-Fill Use OK reasonable and custom- ...........hen they fall within accepted by the n,,, prevailing range" of such "charges and services in the physician's geographical area resignation commission last night of the beard's final member, l.loyd W’. Burnes, who was on the board 33 years. j The commission, by resolu-1 agreement uon, thaij^ked, Burnes for his e service and “unselfish devo-s tion.” The fact is, the board hasn’t e done much of anything for "a t great many years,” said \Vi Business Notes Thomas Bateman, president of Bateman Realty Co., will speak at the National Meeting of the Society of Exchange Counselors i n Fort Lauderdale, Continuation of s which will allow Sylvan Lake si residents to use P o n t i a c ’ s ti sanitary land-fill site on W'est Kennett was approved by the d Pontiac City Commission last g night. Iren. It was learned that board!Fla., in early December. ')« The agreement also allows meetings were so sporadic thatj r r r the Sylvan Lake government to few can remember the last one He will duscuss “interstate ““I use the site but excludes private or what happened there since exchanging can solve clients’ M.4 commercial collectors. memljers .stopped k e e p i n g real estate problems” He also 792| Officials said it was a con-minutes of the meetings more will attend a Special workshop 79.o|tinuation of a long-standing years ago than anyone cares to preceding the Fort Lauderdale 78.4 agreement. guess. ' meeting in Jamaica. B—8 THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 2^ 4968 Britons Responding to Campaign to Save Historic Regiment LONDON (UPI) — An ex-|Britons want to save the| prime minister, a duchess, a Argylls. TTie duchess hopes general and assorted otherl Americans will want to as well. British Weekly Calls Apollo Goal Foolish I The Argylls — pronounced like “our guiles” — are not geometric knitting patterns, as Webster’s dictionary would explain, but an army regiment entwined in British history. LONDON (AP) - President John F. Kennedy set a “foolish goal in spite of the opposition of his science advisers in 1961” when he decided to go ahead with the Apollo project to put a man on the moon, the Economist says. The British weekly’s view on the U.S. space program turned up this week in a survey of comments about America aboard. ★ * * The Economist said; “One trouble with a goal is reaching It. Especially if the goal is arbitrary, like becoming Miss World or landing a man on the moon, there is just no logical next " step.” The Economist said the National Aeronautics and Space Administration must share the blame with Kennedy now that it stands on the “doorstep of success in its efforts to get two men on the moon before the end of 1969. “NASA, instead of insisting that the (budget) cuts be spread equitably, has fought hard to prevent practically anything at all being taken from Project Apollo. As a result, disproportionate reductions have had to be made in everything else.” Hugh Jenkins, a Labor member of Parliament, had these views after a ttip to the United States: “You can say anything you like in America. The only thing is that you must not do anything about it. This comes fairly naturally to most Americans for they don't know what to do anyway. They are a great people in many ways—a people most kind, helpful and generous. But a people without faith and without active political beliefs.” The Argyll and Sutherland Highlanders formed the famous thin red line that withstood the Russian charge at Balaclava in 1854. They were at the Indian Mutiny, the Boer War. The Germans called them t he ladies from hell” when they came over the trenches in kilts with bagpipes wailing in World War I. ★ ★ * From El Alamein in World War II, they went to Korea, Borneo, Cyrpus and last year to Aden. They hold 16 Victoria Crosses, the highest award for gallantry. DISBANDING But this year the ax fell. The Defense Ministry announced the disbandment of the famous Scottish regiment by 1972 in the cutback of Britain’s armed forces for reasons of economy. Altogether nine regiments are to disappear as Britain withdraws from east of Suez. Public sentiment for the regiment was hot, however, taken Into account. His Quest Is Unquenchable This Michiganite Has the Spirit Sir Alec Douglas-Home, the last Conservative party prime minister and a l^otsman to boot, has promised the regiment will be saved if Conservatives can knock the Labor party from government in time. ★ ★ ★ Gen. Sir Gordon Macmillian, head of the Clan Macmillian and colonel of the regiment, organizing a petition to presented to Parliament. 756,000 SIGNATURES So far 756,000 signatures have been collected toward a target of one million j>eneath these words: “I support the petition to Parliament which showeth that the Scottish regiments general and the Argyll and Sutherland Highlanders particular have an outstanding record in recruiting military skill and have rendered notable service to this nation over many generations Wherefore your petitioners pray that your house should resolve that none of the regiments should be disbanded at this time when the army is in urgent need for more recruits! ” Margaret, duchess of Argyll, one of the most ardent campaigners, hopes Americans and other nationalities will add their signatures. ★ ★ ★ “If they know about Argylls at all, they’ll know they are worth saving,” she said. By DICK WEST WASHINGTON (UPI) - Of necessity, perhaps, we live in a pragnoatic age. The merits Idealism is not dead. It is alive and living in Michigan. I made this discovery a few days ago when I was in Michigan arousing an audience of newspaper editors to a comatose condition with one of my fiery orations. NATIVE OF STATE At a party given to celebrate the end of my address, I met a native of the state who had dedicated his life to an Idealistic quest in the true spirit of Camelot. ★ ★ ★ He was searching, he said, for the perfect martini. something o f pragmatist myself, I didn’t immediately realize I was in the presence fo a genuine visionary. ★ ★ ★ “Where have you been looking for it?” I inquired, just to be polite. HIS QUEST “My search has taken me over hills, over dales and along dusty trails,” he replied. “I have climbed rocks and crossed hills from the redwood forests to the Gulf Steam waters.” “That’s a long way to go for a drink,” I said. ★ * ★ “You don’t understand,” he said. “It isn’t the drink, it’s the idea of perfection that I seek.” * ★ ★ “I admire your devotion,” I said, admiring his devotion, “but aren’t you being a little quixotic? Aren’t you only tilting with bartenders? How do you know that what you are seeking really exists?” ULTIMATE PLEASURE “I know it because I feel it in my heart. Somewhere out there,” he said, waving a hand in the general direction of Pocatello, Idaho, “is a bar that forms from me at 48 Upper Grosvenor Street, London, W. 1, “The Labor government wants to disband the Argylls for reasons of economy. The argument against it is that they could cut down each regiment but not take away their identity because it helps recruiting and patriotism. IT’S SENTIMENTAL It’s sentimental but also practical. People join a regiment because perhaps their fathers had been in it or it’s got traditions. They don’t want to join a nameless army.” The British Army depends entirely on recruits because the draft no longer exists. Officers are worried about the falling recruiting figures, which could produce a manpower crisis. ★ ★ ★ But recruiting figures for the Argylls went up last year after the regiment went to Aden. Their darling commanding officer, Lt. Col. Colin (Mad Mitch) Mitchell, led them to recapture the Crater district from nationalists. With a touch of drama that caught public imagination, he ordered the regimental piper to play stirring marches on the bagpipes. ★ ★ ★ If the press and public liked Mitchell, other authorities did not. They thought h i m outspolon. Labor member of Parliament Tom Dalyell later publicly questioned his discipl^e. They can get the petition Aden got its independence. is capable of mixing the perfect martini. “Some day it will all come together — the right gin and the right vermouth blended in the right proportions at the right temperature, humidity and barometric pressure. And I want to be there when it happens.” ★ ★ ★ Tt sounds like an impossible dream,” I said. “Maybe so,” he said, “but this is my quest: To follow that bar, no matter how hopeless, no matter how far.” BETTER WORLD “Suppose you never find it? Won’t your quest then appear foolhardy?” “You will know when I’m laid to my rest that the world will be better by far because one man strove with his last ounce of courage to reach t h e unreachable bar.” Pedestrian Dies CHARLOTTE OP) - Istvan Toth, 79, of rural Charlotte died Tuesday of injuries received Sunday night when struck by an auto while he walked along U. S. 27 just north of Charlotte. \ TIOMMIOOIOR,- fSJ MATINEE TOMORROWi THANKSGIVING DAY DOORS OPEN 1:30 P.M. tOmSSION $1.» - CHILDBEM Me /ZZ13KEEGO 1 NEVER, A DULL I „„ MOMENr It A Half-Hour Laugh Fasti flHFi n nvFi^ o BIG V1dontmTssi"I Jrd WEEK NOW! HURON ssm Winner of 3 Academy Awards! niCHAHO VANESSA FRANCO DAVID LIONEL ^ TECHNIC0L0R'P«IWISI0N*FR0M WARNER BR0S.-SEVEN ARTS 1 IM.-TUES.-THURS.-FRI. at 7:30 Only PRICES Th(| Engaeament Only Adults flllUllO childr.n Und.r 12 1.00 The regiment came home andldefined desk Job, M itchellldisgraceful decMon made fay heard it was to be axed. Faced resigned from the army and thousands of paper ugersv.Ap with the offer of a vaguely [called the disbandment “a| Whitehall.” __________\ This is the madnessThe panic.The search for answers 20th Century-Fox presents P THE 1 BOSTON STRANGLER The people and events depicted are based on fact' IbnyCurtis HenryFbnda G®orgeJtenne^ -------------------------a—, FRWK 1REIIDR' HNimu mum i w^msm EXPRESS «tk ORIVEIM THEATER - FEMOOO SOUTH TELEGRAPH AT SO. UKE RO.l MILE W. WOODWARD CHILDREN UNDER 12 FREE ^UNT EASTWOOD Jurras ^ liSTras ^ HEATEH5 DRIVE IN THEAnR; FE MSOO oreiCE OPEN 6:30 lEHIMWAYOW^^^ i love Child' Grows Up ^ What young people think are the top records of the week as compiled for AP Newsfeatures: 1— Love Child ..................Diana Ross and Supremes 2— Those Were the Days ....................Mary Hopkins 3— Magic Carpet Ride .. .....................Steppenwolf 4— Hey, Jude ....................................Beatles 5— Who’s Making Love .....................Johnny Taylor 6— Chewy Chewy .............................Ohio Express j 7— Bang-Shang-a-Lang ............................Archies 8— Hold Me Tight ...........................Johnny Nash 9— White Room .....................................Cream 10— Sweet Blindness ......................Fifth Dimension 11— Elenore ......................................Turtles 12— Little Arrows .............................Leapy Lee 13— Abraham, Martin and John ........................Dion 14— Cinnamon .......................................Derek 15— Both Sides Now .........................Judy Collins 16— Wichita Lineman .......................Glen Campbell 17— Hi-Heel Sneakers ......................Jose Feliciano 18— Fire ...................................Arthur Brown 19— Over You ................ Gary Puckett and Union Gap 20— 1 Love How You Love Me Bobby Vinton 12 NORTH SAGINAW IN DOWNTOWN PONTIAC MATINEES DAILY 0PENII:4S«.M. Show Starts 12:00 Noon Continuous—334-4436 YOU /MUST BE 18 - PROOF IS REQUIRED WHATtAVSEI HIMSWE TO BEUEVETHAT All WOMEN UiS WERE BAD? LIVE A LIHLE BEHER ... Put in a modern new kitchen, build an attractive fence, landscape your grounds, build a garage, add a family room. Add beauty, comfort, convenience and value to your home . . . making an investment in '"better living."' WITH A FIRST FEDERAL HOME IMPROVEMENT LOAN Find out how much tho improvomonts you wont will cost. Any builder or lumberyard con tell you. First Federal lends up to $5,000.00 for improvomonts . . . gives you up to 8 years to pay. Visit any one of our ten convenient offices and outline your needs. Your application is approved quickly ... you get the money to start work promptly ... you enjoy your investment in better living 761 W. HURON STREET ★ PONTIAC ★ CLARKSTON DRAYTON ★ ROCHESTER ★ LAKE ORION ★ WALLED LAKE ★ MILFORD ★ WATERFORD ★ UNION UKE O. J. Simpson Selected Top Gridder Undefeated Season First Goal of Heisman Winner LOS ANGELES — Football star 0. Ji Simpson of the Southern California Trojan football team, the landslide winner of the 1968 Heisman Trophy, today reaffirmed that his immediate goal is Simple: * ★ ★ He hopes to close his colle^ career on an unbeatei t^am. That means, of course, beating Notre Dame here Saturday to wind up the regular season with an unblemished 10-game record, and then dispose of Ohio State in the Rose Bowl New Year’s Day. Commenting on Notre Dame, 0. J. observed, ‘/We know they are big and rough. But we won’t be sitting’ around.” OSU NOT ON MIND Simpson indicated he hadn’t gone into the Ohio State matter yet. But it was obvious this soft voiced young man has given professional football several thoughts. ★ ★ ★ A preference where he may play? “I would like to live in California so I would like to play on a California team,” he replied. “I also prefer the NFL so that would mean the Rams or 49ers. “If it weren’t California, my second choice would be New York, Chicago or Dallas.” Sore Shoulder Halts Munson; Eagles Winless Detroit Lions quarterback Bill Munson won’t have to worry about getting banged around Thursday before he goes home to enjoy his Thanksgiving Day dinner. * * ★ The sore-shouldered signal caller will be on the sidelines while rookie Greg Ljuidry, the Lions first-round draft choice from Massachusetts, runs the team as the Lions go after their first win since Oct. 13 when they meet the winless Philadelphia Eagles for the annual holiday game. NOT READY The four-day interval between last Sunday’s game with the New Orleans Saints and Thursday’s game just wasn’t enough time for Munson to get his ailing shoulder and sore neck back in shape, according to coach Joe Schmidt. * * * So Landry, who has played in only one full game and briefly in another, will get a chance to. show his stuff against what appears to be the weakest team in the National Football League this year. The Lions may not be stepping high with their 3-6-2 mark but it’s a lot brighter than the 9-11 record sported by the Eagles. PLAYED OPENER Landry got his first chance in the first game of the season, the 59-13 drubbing at the hands of the Dallas Cowboys. His only other chance was briefly in Chicago. In 33 pass attempts, the rookie has completed 16 times for 272 yards and two scoring throws. He ran the ball four times for 17 yards and one TD. ★ ★ ★ Another star, Mel Farr, the halfback who puts the bite in the Lions’ attack, was to undergo surgery on his knee today and will be out for the remainder of the season. Halfback Mike Campbell was activated by the club Tuesday to fill the vacancy. Campbell, 23, from Lenoir Rhyne College, N.C. was drafted by the St. Louis Cardinals in 1967 and joined the Lions taxi squad this year. THE PONTIAC PRESS s/m/y WEDNKSDA^^ NON'EMBER 27. 1DH8 ( 1 By the Associated Press The New York Jets hope to enjoy a championship dessert after their Thanksgiving Day feast of turkey and all the trimmings. The Jet players, along with their families, will be at Shea Stadium for their holiday feast and will be watching the Houston Oilers battle the Kansas ty Chiefs at Kansas City on television. * ★ ★ Needless to say, they will be rooting for the Chiefs since a Kansas City Victory will clinch the Eastern Division title in the American Football League for the .lets. The Jets assured themselves of at least a tie for the title by beating San Diego last Sunday and can win by Big 10 Coaches Seek NIT Berth PASS THE BUCKET - Purdue acting CHICAGO — TVo radical basketball football coach Bob DeMoss holds thd changes will be proposed by Big Ten old Oaken Bucket yesterday after recoaches to athletic directors at the con- ceiving it from Indiana mentor John ference winter meetings in Chicago next Pon(. Purdue won the trophy Saturday, month. 38-35 * ★ * Some coaches, who met Sunday in Chicago, want the Big Ten basketball runnerup to accept a bid to the postseason National Invitation Tournament in New York City. They also want the 1-and-1 free throw situation eliminated as it is currently under internatiwial Olympic rules. Johnny Orr, Michigan’s new coach, proposed a post-season bid to the Big Ten’s second place team. Globe Trotter Willie CHICAGO (iP) — Outfielder Willie Horton of the Detroit Tigers has joined another major league baseball star, pitcher Fergy Jenkins of the Chicago Cubs, on the Harlem Globetrotters basketball team. “It’s something so new that I haven’t been able to consider it yet,” said Com-missioijer Bill Reed. “I’m sure the athletic directors would have the same reaction. The Big Ten never has gone overboard for post-season competition but we’ve always been a strong supporter of basketball.” Both will appear at the Chicago Stadium Friday night and will play with the Trotters as often as their schedules permit. Horton this week has been treated for hemorrhoids at Ford Hospital in Detroil, but will be able to play in the Trotter show Friday night. Giants Seeking Fans' Advice NEW YORK M - The New York football Giants are taking a fan survey to determine whether they should move from Yankee Stadium, it was disclosed Tuesday night. “If it ever became possible to take better care of more of our friends by moving to a larger, more modern stadium, should we do it?” asked Wellington Mara, president of the National Football League club, in a letter to season-ticket holdep. “If so, how far could we move and still not be too far away?” The fans were asked to check their preference for Yankee Stadium, Queens, nearby New Jersey, nearby Westchester and upper Westchester. “We want to find out if we should move or not,” Mara said. “If our fans say we should stay where we are, we won’t have to think of any other place. It not, we’ll have to explore other possibilities.” Simpsons was reminded that the Los Angeles Rams recently declared they were interested in drafting three fine players rather than one great one. * ★ ★ Some one noted that in Simpson the Rams would indeed get three great players but O.J. himself said, “I don’t believe everything I hear.” Simpson was asked about t h e Philadelphia Ealges, winless, who may get first draft crack at him, particularly after his winning college years. 0. J. said he would not be concerned with the won-lost record of a team but again, quite frankly, he confessed, “I don’t think I’d like Philadelphia as a place to live in.” ★ * ★ Would his Heisman selection add more pressure for the Notre Dame and Ohio State games? “No, I think all the guys on the team will just have to work harder,” he answered, adding, “the Heisman Trophy isn’t going to win any games for us.” * * * As he has throughout his two years at Southern Cal, Simpson credits his teammates with his success. 'They contributed to this trophy as much as 1 did and I take it as a team award,” he said. Landry Gets QB Call for Lions Chiefs Can Supply Dessert tor NY Jets defeating Miami this Sunday even if Houston upsets the Chiefs. 4 ON THURSDAY Houston at Kansas City is one of four pro games listed for Thursday. Buffalo is at Oakland, also in the AFL with Philadelphia at Detroit and Washington at Dallas in two National League encounters. All four will be nationally televised in NBC and CBS double-headers. The Houston at Kansas City starts at 1:30 p.m., EST, on NBC, followed by the Buffalo at Oakland contest at 4 p.m., EST. The Philadelphia at Detroit clash at 12:15 p.m. EST is the first of the NFL doubleheader on the CBS-TV network. The Washington at Dallas game follows at 6 p.m,, EST. ★ * * Kansas City and Oakland are tied for the lead in the AFL Western Division at 9-2 and both are favored to beat Houston and Buffalo, respectively. Kansas City beat Houston 26-21 in September and aims to repeat. Houston pins its slim hopes of tying the Jets on the throwing of quarterback Pete Beathard. In contrast, the Buffalo-Oakland game shapes up as a romp for Oakland. ★ * * Dallas, 9-2, can virtually wrap up the Capitol Division title in the NFL’s Eastern Conference with a victory over Washington, 4-7. Nine games on Sunday wind up this Weeks’s pro schedule. In the NFL, Pittsburgh, Green Bay at San Francisco, Los Angeles at Mirmesota, New York at Atlanta is at Baltimore, St. Louis at Cleveland and Chicago at New Orleans. Miami is at New York, Cincinnati at Boston and San Diego at Denver in the NFL. BEST COLLEGIATE GRIDDER - Halfback 0 J Simpson of the University of Southern California tells newsmen his favorite football signal is “the blast play -- straight ahead. Martin Wins on Knockout nothing fancy,’’ He appeared before a news conference yesterday after being named Heisman Trophy winner. 'The award goes to the best college football player of the year. 'Blue' Ninth Round for Alvin Lewis DETROIT iJPi — Veteran Leotis Martin of Philadelphia floored hometown favorite Alvin “Blue” Lewis of Detroit three times in the ninth round, knocking him out at the 1:33 mark. Martin survived a first-round knockdown to rally and win his 27th pro fight in 32 starts. Martin weighed 200 pounds, Lewis 215. Martin was floored by Lewis’ first punch of the fight — a roundhou.se right to the jaw. But the more experienced Martin rallied and relied on a steady left plus his experience to take command midway through the bout. Martin lost the eighth round when he was penalized for low punches. That only seemed to infuriate him. Shortly after the ninth round started. Martin caught I^ewis along the ropes and put him down with three solid rights. I^wis sagged to the canvas and .strugged up at the four count. Martui threw a j/aft-right combination, sending him down for the second time — this time face forward. He hammered Lewis with three quick lefts which left I^ewis looking up at the ring lights while the crowd of 5,030 shouted in dismay. ARMSTRONG ARMSTRONG Montreal Goalie Doesn't Go West MONTREAL (41 — Goalie Gump Worsley of the Montreal Canadiens of the National Hockey League has left the team, it was disclosed Tuesday night. Sam PoUock, general manager of the Canadiens, said Worsley left the club in Chicago and was returning to Montreal by train. The Canadiens were flying to Los Angeles for a Wednesday night game there against the Kings. “Worsley is a nervous individual.” Pollock said. “He’s not a good air traveller.” Tony Esposito was, called up from Houston of the Central League to serve as Montreal’s backup goalie to Rogation Vachon. MSU Frosh Scores 35 EAST LANSING (41 — Freshman Ralph Simpson, a product of Detroit Pershing, scored 35 points Tuesday night in a losing cause as the Michigan State University freshmen basketball team fell to the varsity 123-78. The 6-foot-4 guard topped all scorers. High for the varsity was senior center Tom Lick of Gaylord with 20 points. Sports Bonus Thursday Tlie annual pre-.season basketball, swimming and wrestling section is coming your way tomorrow complete with prep and college schedules and prep league rnundup.s,. NO MONEY DOWN! S.SOxIS Blaokwall Tubtlatt RatrttNs Plui l5o Ei. Til Ptr Tir* anO Twa RalraaOabla Tlrti In Trada 36-MONTH QUALITY , AND , ROAD HAZARD GUARANTEE , SAFE, STRONG 4 Ply Nylon Cord Body I a HAVE SAFETY SPIKE METAL STUDS INSTALLED FDR ICE BREAKER TRACTIDN! ANY SIZE LISTED 2 for S26~ 6.95x14 7.35x14 7.75x14 7.35x15 7.75x15 Hlackwall Tuhelen Retread 2 for *28®* 8.25x14 8.55x14 8.15x15 8.45x15 WHITEWALLS $1.00 PER TIRI ^ FREE MOUNTING ORIGINAL EQUIPMENT WHEELS $^88 with _ Snow Tire Purchase AREMCO TIRE CO. 4520 HIGHLAND RD. ^ DAILY 8-8 674-3157 or 674-3158 C—2 THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 1968 8ASKET8AIL scones MICHIGAN HIGH SCHOOL BASKETBALL By tim Aisociatd Pms Royal Oak St. Mary 47, Utica St. Lawrence 37 Shepherd W, Carson City-Crystal 61 St. Johns 73, Ovid-Elsie 66 St. Clair Shores Lakeview 78, Warren NHL Standings Phiiadetphia . tin [srj;,* “ Tuesday's Results es scheduled. Today's Gaines Detroit at Philadelphia Thursday's Camas lAonfreal at Oakland New Haven 72, Aloonac 54 Warren Woods 58, Center Line 4i Warren Cousino 77, Lamphera 60 AAount Clemens St. Mary 49, ( Lina St. Clement 44” Romeo 73, Marysville 40 St. Clair Shores St. Gertrude 68, Detroit St. Philip S7 Heart'''63 '’“evllle Sacr Benzie Central 76, Manistee Catholic 69 Lakewood 73, Maple Valley 33 Lowell 76, Ionia 63 Detroit Sorvlte 70, Harper Woods Dame 67 (overtime) Saginaw Arthur Hill Tech 75, Casevllle 29 Shepherd 88, Carson City 61 Sebewalng 73, Lakers 66 Kingston 68, Carsonville 52 Mlinngton 98, Passar 43 Bessemer 69, Maple (WIs.) 53 Iron Mountain 66, Negaunee 61 KIngstc 1 is 'ca?°rrTt'' ” 7. Dollar Bay 63 p’alnesdale 70 Ontonagon I aa rnitjcaucie White Pine MtCHIGAN COLLEGE BASKETBALL DetroH Tech 67, St. Clair of Windsor, Ont.. 44 Hillsdale 89, Spring Arbor 86 Laka Superior state College 79, Mackinac College " Michigan ! Gogebic Communit 123, MSU Frosh Former Houston Player Uses Strong Persuasion GOING DOWN — Heavyweight Leotis Martin (left) of Philadelphia drops Alvin (Blue) Lewis of Detroit witii a left hook in the ninth round last night. Lewis was counted out on his third trip to the canvas in the round. Martin rebounded after being floored in round one. HOUSTON (AP) - Former Houston football player Charles Lockhart was arrested Tuesday after he allegedly pulled a pistol on General Manager Don Klos-terma.1 in a dispute over money, police said. Lockhart, 25, was charged with serious threat to take a life and carrying a pistol Peace Justice Hugo A. Touchy set bond at $1,600. Klosterman, 38, said the incident occurred in his American Football League office. ‘There were no shots fired, he said. I Klosterman said Lockhart, free agent, suffered a Moulder I injury during training camp and jwas releas^ after the injury had healed. MAKES CLAIM Lockhart, a 6-foot, 180-pound split end, claimed he had not recovered sufficiently to play. Lockhart told police the club owed him $13,000. Tom Williams, 40, a team scout, subdued Lockbarj and grabbed the automatic pistol, Klosterman said. Klosterman said Lockhart entered hl« offfce and asked ‘Where’s my money.’ ” “I can’t write you a check,’ Klosterman said he told Lockhart. A ★ * The general manager said Lockhart then pulled the gun, “fUl^ied the hammer and lunged at me. ’There was live anununition in the chamber.” “Tom wrestled the gun away from him and held him until the police arrived,” Klosterman said. Lockhart said Williams jumped and said “ ‘Man, don’t do that. Give me the ^n.’ ” “Then I handed it over to him,” Lockhart said. San Diego Defeated, 134-120 Hairston,Walker Lead Pistons NBA Standings BALTIMORE (AP) — Happy|the Atlanta Hawks in the night-Hairston and Jim Walker com-cap of the Civic Center double-bined for 61 points as the De- header 102-99. troit Pistons beat off two San ★ * ★ '^»’o scored only 134-120 NaUi^nal Basketball As-L^ ^laUon victory Tuesday nig^ 21 in the next two -me Baltimore Bullets defeatedl away from San Diego. ^ ON THE BENCH 11 Walker took over most of the I play-making duties as Dave I Bing, the NBA’s No. 3 scorer, p spent 16 minutes on the bench || during the rout. Tony Mackfsc* Dally Dovbla: (8-1) PaM $175.30 3m-J|9W Cbiming Trol; 1 MHO; Dlllola'a Kay 13.20 6.80 loyal Dugan 4.40 Star Chief C. 3r. Gilded Eblls OuliMlIa: (1-8) Paid $28.50 6tl>-$1108 Cend. Troll 1 Milo: Rent-A-Truck Min. 24 nenflis 1969 Chevy Fleetside Windsor Raceway Rookie Elvin Hayes, the league’s leading scorer, tallied 34 points. The Rockets rallied from a 14-point deficit to pull within 47- Herbert Johnston ___ ____ Lady Dillard S. 3.30 " -tor: (1-,, Paid $49.28 Klanco 3,764i total handia $268,485 WEDNESDAY ENTRIES 1$t-$808 Claiming Pace: 1 Mile; Westfield Express The Court Loch Dean Chet Lynn Tlllle Widower Kirk Billy Lauderdale Wayside Gentles Victory J08 Claiming Pace; 1 Mile: Shadydala Sprite U.S.G. Thermafiber POUR TYPE INSULATION Efficient, nomical, 3' Eco- thick covers 30 sq. ft. 99c BAG Cush and Carry JOHN R. LUMBER UNION LAKE 7940 COOLEY LK. RD. 3 Blocks East Of Union Lake Road 44 in the second period and rallied again early in the third quarter to pull within 71-65. Aft-• that, it was no contest. ★ ★ ★ Hairston finished with 31 points while Walker had 30. Elsewhere in the NBA, Philadelphia fought off host Phoenix 126-119 and Seattle nipped visiting Chicago 99-98. The New York Knickerbockers came from 10 points behind in the closing minutes to a 104-100 victory over the Los Angeles Lakers. In the American Basketball Association, Denver beat Dallas 115-109, Oakland tripped New Orleans 120-108 and Minnesota defeated Kentucky 119-108. Former Princeton star Bill ELECTRONICS Kelly Tops NFL Rushes Toward 2 Titles NEW YORK (AP) - Leroy Kelly of Cleveland already has the National Football League rushing title just about wrapped up and he is closing in on the scoring crown. Wit^i three games to go, Kelly has 1,017 yards rushing and 14 touchdowns for 84 points leave him only four points behind Mike Clark of Dallas, the scoring leader. Don Meredith of Dallas remains the leading passer in the weekly individual statistics from the NFL. Meredith’s lead is based on his 57.6 percentage of completion, 18 touchdown passes, 3.9 percentage of interceptions, 3.9 percentage of interceptions and 8.30 average gain. Clifton McNeil of San Francisco still is outdistancing the field in pass receptions with 57 for touchdowns. 'period to overcome the Hawks. In the rushing race, Kelly is Earl Monroe finished with 29 275 yards in front of his closest and Loughery 27 for the Bullets.! active challenger, Ken Willard t of San Francisco who has 742 yards. Gale Sayers of Chicago is second with 856 but he is out for the year due to knee-surgery. LEADING ground GAINERS Avf. AH. Y8rdi 0*111 TD* yards and Bradley, along with Phil Jack-j son and Walt Frazier, spurred; the Knicks to victory in the last! five minutes. Bradley and Jackson each hit seven points and Frazier had four with nu-, merous assists in overcoming a 94-84 deficit. * * * Frazier and Jackson certainly got together with Bradley as Bradley and Jackson each hit seven points and Frazier four; with numerous assists in a 204 tear that overcame a 94-84 deficit in the final five minutes. Bradley, who finished with 15 points, and Frazier, who had 21, also helped the Knicks back from an earlier 64-48 deficit as they dealt the Western Division leading Lakers only their second loss in the last 12 games. Wilt Chamberlain had 23 points and 27 reboimds for Los Angeles. STILL WINNING Baltimore, winning for the 12th time in 14 starts for a IVi game lead in the Kast, relied on g j jji Kevin Loughery’s 13 points and j Leroy Ellis’ eight in the final RENT-A-CAR Only ?T9 per Your Choice . . . CMEVELLE - CAMARO CHEVY II - TEMPEST ImnuxUatr 0*(iMrr V.B. AutoiAotk t SNO-CAPS 4 FULL PLY 2'.*19’S 1 FAST MOUNTING | Barnes Totals Johnson Wins State College Scoring Title By the Associated Press Ron Johnson, the record-breaking senior halfback from the University of Michigan, ran away with the final tally of state football scoring leaders, j Johnson, who has set many records this season, including Big Ten point and rushing marks, collected 116 points on i 19 touchdowns and a two-point ; conversion to pace the Wolverines to their fin^ 8-2 record. Alma had the top won-lost record in the state, finishing 8-0. Ferris State followed with 7-0-1,' then came Eastern Michigan and Michigan with 8-2 marks. I Northwood Institute was the! state’s doormat, failing to win or tie in eight decisions and allowing 381 points to be scored! by opponents while only countering with 51 points. j Finn 1968 Mlchlgaii Football Scoring j T FO PAT Tololi Johnson, Michigan 19 0 2 116 I Willard, S.F. . . 177 742 4.2 5 WoodashIcK, PMI. . 148 666 4.5 2 Hack, PIH........... 129 629 4.9 2 Perkin’s, DalL . 143 620 4.3 3 Farr, Del........... 128 597 4.7 3 Anderson, G.B. . . .134 595 4.4 5 Crenshaw, St. L. . 148 560 3.8 3 LEADING PASSERS AH. Com. Yds. TDs Galll 1, Dali. . 255 147 2,116 18 8.30 Nelson, Clov.... 223 118 1,741 17 Brodie, S.F......313 180 Z343 18 Munson, Det......245 140 1,812 12 Berry, Atl...... 114 44 1,223 7 1 Shiner, Pitt.... 223 117 1,474 1 4 LEADING PASS RECEIVERS 1120 Touts 49M-40 1S4 29 27 24 30-120 37 31 33 3S-134 in Dtego, Adelman; De-n Diego 30, Detroit 34. Williams, St.U. Taylor, Wash. Rentzei, DaM. Abramowicz, N. Warfield, Clev. leading scorers see cars .., 300 of the world's newest and best! Domestic, imports, sport and recreational... specialty cars, too. ^ SEE STARS ... Organist Denny McLain < t Vocalist Mickey Lolich • Arnold Palmer • Ventriloquist Jimmy Nelson • The Dodge Fever Girl • Miss America • Miss American Teen-Ager • Willie Horton • Byron Nelson • Jesse Owens •Billy Welu •AIKaline • “Dyno” Don Nicholson • Bobby Unser* Dan Gurney • Sharron Moran • Comedian-Singer Paul Lennon • Bob Durant and his orchestra... andahostof othersi SEE THEM ALL AT THE 53rd DETRCJiT AUTO SHOW "America’s Greatest Auto Show” starling Sat, Nov. 30, at Cobo Hall—Nina excHing days. I 300 BOWL Presents Detroit All-Star Bowler BILLY G FREE BOWLING INSTRUCTIONS Every Tuesday, 11:30 A.M.-3:30 P.M. Every Other Friday 1 P.M.-6 P.M. GARRY and LARRY CRAKE, Proprietors 100 S. GASS UKE ROAD lly G 682-6300 PONTIACy MICH. AUTO CENTERS RETREAD SNOW TIRES ^ WHITEWALLS |88 36-MONTH GUARANTEED BATTERY I4SS Exchange Fits mo$t • Fords • Chevys • Plymoutht • Pontlocs LIFETIME GUARANTEED MUFFLERS For most American mode cars and pick-up trucks INSTALLED FREE Federal's muffler guarantee This mufflar guarantaad against rustoutt, blowauts (avarything axcapt-obusa) for the Ufa of tha car, and will ba replaced FREE with charge only for clamps and hangers if needed. Guarantee valid to original purchouer only. Hurry and savel FRONT END ALIGNMENT Here's what we do: • Set caster • Set camber • Center steering • Adjust toe in BRAKE JOB 30,000 MILE GUARANTEE HERE'S WHAT WE DO: 27 88 • Ch«ck wh««r cylmd«ri • Ch«k motUr cylindtr • Turn oil 4 drums • Chock whool boorlngs • Chock grooso toolt • Inttoll fluid, blood ond odjuBf brokoB adju*f«r $4 mor« • Intpocf all fluid linos 2 BIG LOCATIONS •'1910 Widetrack Drive, Pontiac^ Open Mon. thru Sat. 9 a.m. to 6 p.rri. 5272 pixie Hwy., Drayton Plains Open Mon.-Fri. 9 to 9, Sat. 9 to 6 THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, XOVEMBER 27, I9fi8 C—3 Unbeatable DEALS On New *68 PLYMOUTHS See Four F riendly Dealer TOWNS COUNTRY CHRYSLER 1001 Main St. Rochester, Mich. 651-6220 i Front Lone Star Grid Feud on Thanksgiving Day Inrr [d!dn¥ irniow |[, By John Carter Do you know if. thooroticolly |< pouiblo for a toam to got o 99-•’ yord penalty in footballl... How |4 eon a toam got a penalty of that I’',many yards? ... lot's suppose a I team has the ball on its own one-Inch lino ... Its passer, who eon. I coally throw a long pass, hooves the boll the length of the field I----His receiver gets all the woy ■ down field but just os he's ready I to catch the boll on the other I • team's 1-yord line, he's pushed ' I by a defender . . . The officlots I • call pass interference which gives ' I the pasting team possession of * the boll at the spot of the penalty I . . . Thus, the other team is pen- I olized 99 yards on one ploy! > * * . lU know a football team I can be penalized five yards if the . referee discovert two players on I the same team hove the tame I numbers on their uniforms? . . . I , I been playing big league baseball I every year since 1900, they hove NEVER won a World Serietl . . . I That seems hard to believe, but . you can look it up and see that I It's true. ^ I bet you didn't knew . .. i I select th« quality of the tiie we ' sell you., W« offer you visible Iquplily^----------- •• I rs of selling By FLETCHER SPEARS said Michigan defensive tackle Dan Parks in offering his appraisal of Ohio State quarterback Rex Kern. Parks is a former standout performer at Birmingham Brother Rice. He’s one of those individuals who played one position in high school and found himself shifted to a new one after reaching college. At Brother Rice, Parks, now a 6-4, 240-pOunder, was a fullback, and a good'------------------------- one. When he reached; Michigan, coaches sized nationally in total offense withj Houston in net yardage, with 2,177 yards — 2,100 through the j explosive Gilbert the ringleader. — and has fired 14 The 180-pound senior has rolled touchdown passes. up 1,047 rushing yards for his Texas relies on a bruising*' ground game, second only to ■ him up quickly and found that his big frame would fit into the defensive line. Dan’s a sophomore and he’s one of several big linemen who had trouble with Kern and the Ohio State Buckeyes Saturday (OSU won 50-14). The win carried with it the Big Ten title and a trip to the Rose Bowl. ★ ★ * ‘Well, 8-2 isn’t so bad,” said Parks of the Wolverines season. I just wish We could have done better today (Saturday). We just had such poor field position, all day long.” LIKES IT About playing tackle. Pleasant Outcome for MCJC Quintet Plante Shines in Comeback consecutive 1,000 - plus Gale Pleasant poured-in 37 points last night to lead Michi-Christian Junior College come-from-behind, 78-70, victory over Detroit Bible College. ★ * ' * ' It was the second win three starts for the MCJC cagers. Detroit Bible grabbed a 38-32 halftime lead, but Michigan j Christian rallied behind the [shooting of Pleasant, Mike Reminder (16) and Ron Eu- “ banks (11). “I like it,” says Parks. Do you miss being a ball-carrier? ‘‘Well, I couldn’t play fullback! anyway, at least in the Big Ten,! Bud Pressley tallied 33 points and this has worked out fine.” juud Ron Johnson 15 for Detroit. ANOTHER SWITCH Another former outstanding By the Associated Press Texas’ rampaging Longhwns me step away from the Cotton Bowl, will be stepping carefully Thursday when they run into Edd Hargett and the angry Aggies of Texas A&M in the 75th renewal of a bristUng Lone Star feud. The natiionally televised game, which tops a card of four major college Thanksgiving Day match-ups, will either make or break Texas’ bid for a share of the Southwest Conference title and its first Cotton Bowl appearance since 1963. ,ked ^gun anew at 39 for Jacques jLiberty Bowl berth opposite Longhorns, 7-1-1, go into the the maskorf marvel whni........... annual season finale against A&M trailing Arkansas by one half game in the SWC stretch race *" Plante, lured out of a three-! „ , . ^ . to.,™ ...itui Tulsa, humiliated by Houston COMPLETE SEASON HaM » tile ™ « "“'‘end. tries to pick The Razorbacks, b e a t e n Blues’ goaltending combination, “P P'^^es against winless earlier by Texas, have com- turned in his third shutout of Wichita State and Louisiana pleted their season. A loss or tie the young NHL season lastMexico against the Aggies will relegate weekend, pacing St. Louis to a in a night game. Texas to the runner-up spot,^six-point edge over second place Virginia Tech, a rugged with the likely consolation of a Los Angeles in the West. defensive outfit bulwarked by Sugar Bowl trip. The former Montreal ace is P''^backer Mike Wiger, takes a Hargett, the Aggies’jthe league shutout leader, ac-'’^^ord into its 64th meeting quarterback wizard, tripped up cording to weekly figures Keydots. VMI has won Texas 10-7 last year with a 70-ireleased Monday, and he and just one of nine starts, but Tech yard touchdown pass to Bob Hall have combined for the best "■on't be taking anything for Long. The victory put A&M into goals-against average, a granted. HOLD BULGE The Longhorns hold a commanding 51-18-5 bulge in the series, which began in 1894. They took 10 in a row from A&M before bowing in last year's Turkey Day thriller at College Station. Virginia Tech, which has c ATT, T / u Straight victorics hasiaftgj. a ^ The nationally sixth ranked begun anew at 39 for Jacques Liberty Bowl berth oni Plante, the masked marvel j takes on arch rival guards the nets for St. Louis jyj^j -Naqonal Hockey League Westj Division leaders. ' ^ RENT A CAR Only J35O Per Day Minimum 6 days Call for details SHELTON Pontiac-Buick-Opel 855 Rochester Rd. Rochester 651-5500 area athlete found himself making the switch to the line when he enrolled at Michigan State University. ■k * He’s Craig Wycinsky, who like Parks, was a fullback at North Farmington, Now a €-2, 225-pounder, Craig made the switch to offensive tackle for the Spartans and played first string all season. BIG SEASON Ex-Bloomfield Hills Andover halfback Dick Kraatz was the workhorse among ball-carriers at Hillsdale College this fall. ★ ★ Dick toted the ball 136 times for 606 yards, and Dick was the No. 2 man in the pass receiving department with 11 catches for 249 yards and two touchdowns. Rich King cought mdife, 20 — but for only 200 yards. THERE’S MORE There’s more for Kraatz, too. He led the team in punt returns — nine for 73 yarts — ranked second to kicker Chet Marcol in scoring with 30 points. ★ ★ * Marcol, who did his kicking ati Imlay City, collected six field! goals and made 20-of-20 in the! PAT department for 38 mark-j Coach George Elias of Lake Orion gave up cigarettes and put on 15 pounds. Asked by a photographer to send out a good shooter during a picture-taking .session, George replied, ' don’t have any.” He was smiling when he said it. George looking for big things from the tail Dragons this year. The team is ted by 6-8 Gary Mize. Loss Pinned on Troy Grand Blanc downed Troy in wrestling Monday night, 31-19. Dale Bennett posted the lone pin for Troy with his work in the 165-pound class. It was the season opener for Troy. another Thanksgiving Srtyour bourbon standards high Hiram Whlker^ Ten High Discover why so many people enjoy Ten High, a true Bourbon of acknowledged character and quality. Sip it slow and easy. Let >our taste discover the pleasure tins exceptional Bourbon brings — at such a welcome price! }'()//r bi sl bourbon biuj $087 $^09 Gallon 4 86 Proof— the "cotton Bowl for the first sparkling 2.00 mark. Plante has Then Gobblers drubbed the IG SELL SNOWMOBILE.S. lOBOCiGANS, ICE SKATES? a 1.83 yield per-game and Hall Keydets 7.0 12 in 1966 . . . and CLASSIFIED AD — TO time in 26 years. Texas A&M, 3-6, isn't going^ 2.24 average, bowling this year and doesn’t, figure to corral the Longhorns’ Full House backfield of Chris Gilbert, Steve Worster, Ted Koy| and James Street. But thei Steers can expect an argument from Hargett any time he gets' his hands on the ball. The A&M senior ranks eighth I 1966 , bowed 12-10 last year. PI,ACE YOURS, CALL 3,32-8181. f mtH tc Sliim 3342 Auburn Rd. Auburn Haights OPEN: Daily 8-6 We'll Be Closed Thursday 8-9 Thanksgiving ________Sunday 1-5 852-2709 hutingSALE REMEMBER LAST WINTER? be ready for this one [UlllDDi (WINTER SPECIAL)^ 24-HR. SERVICE FURNACES-BOILERS '‘Completely Installed" $479 ^ ^ NO MONiT DOWN S Y*$. TO fAT <ife preserves or buoyant vests,j numbers of steelhead, salmon, to use buoyant cushions, the| and walleyes to move as far board said, upstream as the Croton Dam. NEW PROGRAM Kenneth Christensen, t h c, department’s fish habitat development speciali.st, notes: i “This project is the first under our new program of| removing barriers to open suitable stretches of rivers and thus provide additional fish spawning habitat plus expanded angling opportunities” at 248 pounds. It is the new leader in The Pontiac Press Deer Contest. Farnsworth, who is 64 and retired from Pontiac Motors, said he “lives to hunt deer.” During his 35 seasons of chasing whitetails he has taken 20 bucks. The one from Grand Island is the largest. KNEE DEEP “Six of us were riding in the back of a pickiq) truck when we spotted the track crossing the road,” he related. “The snow was about knee deep. “I started on the track and jumped the buck (it was lying down) about a quarter of a mile off the road.” He dropped the buck with the first shot from his 304)6 and finished it with a second. It took four men to get the deer out of the woods. This completed a highly successful hunting season. Early in September Farnsworth a 250-pound bear in an orchard near Miner’s Castle. The Press contest is open to residents of Oakland County. Weight is the only determining factor. The deer must be weighed o n state-approved scales and a weight slip containing the signature of the hunter, a witness and person operating the scales must be brought to The Press sports department. The deer must be seen by a member of The Press staff. PRESSURE POINT Hunting pressure has switched to Southern Michigan and is expected to be extremely heavy during the Thanksgiving weekend. Lack of snpw will keep the kill down, but ^)lenty of deer should be taken. Hunters were active in thei Milford, Holly, Oxford and Hadley areas last weekend. At least 20 antlerless deer were reported to the Pontiac district office of the DNR. Several bucks were taken from farms near Hadley. Saturday is the final day of the deer season. Goose hunting also closes the same day. Trapping has opened i n Southern Michigan and the muskrat population is reported to be good. Fishing on inland lakes is at standstill, but perch 10-12 inches are being caught from Wallace MANISTEE (AP)-The president of a packing firm has defended his company’s purchases of surplus coho salmon as an effort to “do a service for the state of Michigan.” Marvin Blaclroort, president of Blackport racking Co. Grand Rapids, told some 200 persons Monday night at a hearing by a joint Senate-House conservation committee that his firm bid a high of 15.6 cents a pound to obtain the fish. Blackport, whose firm purchased the surplus salmon from the State Craiservation Department at Manistee, said that commercial fishermen and Manistee residents could have obtained the fish for 10 cents a pound. But, he said, neither private individuals nor the commercial fishermen showed up at the times the surplus fish were sold. He said his firm bought about 1.6 million pounds of Coho salmon this year. * ★ * The hearing was held to determine public viewpoints on rules regarding the Coho salmon. A number of witnesses Cut between Bay Port and Caseville on Saginaw Bay. Some rabbit hunters are out and report fair success in the Surged liberalization of restric-Holly and Bald M o u n t a i n tions against snagging Ckiho recreation areas. 'salmon in rivers. Only in Zone 3 Grouse Season Ready Sunday Grouse hunters have found pat populations rather sparse this year. But they’ll have a final chance to shoot the woodlands targets when the’ winter grouse season opens in Southern Michigan Sunday. The month-long winter season affords generally good hunting if temperatutes average in the 30s and 40s and little snow blankets the ground. Bioli^ts report a slight decline in grouse populations in the southern half of Lower Michigan. But field men report that the grouse is slowly extending its range into areas where it had been only a rare visitor. BRIEF RESPITE The grouse season opened in Zone 3 (»i Oct. 21 and closed Nov. M when whitetailed deer became legal. The winter season closes Dec. 31. One advantage of wintertime gunning is that foliage is off the trees. Any grouse flushed woodlands can be flushed again and again, and the lack of leafy vegetation sometimes gives hunters an opei\ shot at the birds flying through the woods. But grouse often stick to extremely heavy cover, hiding in tamarack swamps or brushy windfalls, and are extremely difficult to shoot if flushed. George Ammann, a biologist with the Department of Natural Resources, says most game areas and forest lands in the northern sections of Zone 3 support grouse. However, due to a shrinking rouse populatiMi, he expects success to be sli^tly lower than in previous years. Part of the reason for the ex-teisipn of ^e grouse range, he says, is because fewer farm(!rs are grazing cattle in woodlands. This has permitted dense stands of underbrush to grow in t|ie forests, he says, fwoviding food and cover for the birds. Arizona in Sun Bowl EL PASO, Tex. (AP) — The Sun Bowl selectiwi committee named the University o f Arizona Tuesday to play Auburn | in the Dec. 28 Sun Bowl football | game in El Paso. ' RENT-A-GAR only $4 day plus (e pur mHu nin. 1 4ayt 1969 Chevy II MIX WITH CORBYS Bltmltd Whiskay—M Fraaf-4S.<% Crain Nautral Splllts-^as. BarcUy A Co., LM, Poerla, Move on these Dura Ion Super Highway from S & H Tire Centers! S/ofe Ski Resort Breaching of the dam will be done a.s gradual as possible so that silt and sand accumulated behind the structure will not hc' carried great distances downstream by rushing waters. Solunar Tables Site of Setting The schedule of .Solunar Pe-i riods, as printed below, has! Race Standards been taken from John Alden yr.,,!’'-;" BoyNE errv ,ap, b.,™' Ihunting in good cover during he.se times, if you wi.sh to find .jt,^ ^ ^^jg^'^lish a standard! the best sport that each day hasm^e for races this winter, to standard Time Rccrcation skiers then will A "’'pm attempt to beat the time and rod’av ^1""' *5'2o’ ^”*00 llie three champions from each FrlaHv" “ 6 '? 00 7 11 3rea wj|i compete in national sulid’fv'"' 7 :!s B 7" ] So a “ championships at Lake Tahoe, Monday. Jin 9 10 SCO 7 35 Ncv , in March. Competition' wed’J’Adnv 4 « 10 5 00 I'' to starts in late December. Death Notices THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 19 C—5 November 19, 5 p.m. Thursday. (Suggested ) Indian Lake Road, visiting hours 3 to 5 and 7 to Lake (Jion; aje 27; bdoved 9.) R?lph Evanl. Fu will be held Saturday, November 30, at 10 a.m. at the Bossardet Funeral Home, ^ ; in FORTNEY, CLARENCE November 26, 1968 ; 308 ( ford Street; age 71; belo husband of Anna Forte . Deason, Hilman A. and Ralph e. Fortney; dea ' ' Mrs. Fred Dahl Larson and Her also survived by 11 g r a n d c h i Idre Chapel Cemetery. M "I lie in state at tl 7 to 9.) The fai its memorial ons may be made to Josephine; age 54. Fun service will be held Fri^ November 29, at 8:30 p.m. at Lake City, Michigan. Mrs. Haines will Ue in state at the Death Notices Seeks Dem Post (AP) - James failed in his bid November 29, at 2:30 p.m. at the C. F. Sherman Funeral PARKER, ERVI 2725 Avon Township; r 26, 1968 ; 94 Church age 66; f Pauline r of Mrs, om an( ay, Mrs Mrs i by 11 grandchild Recitation of the Rosary be Thursday, at 8:30 p.m. at the C. F. Sherman Funeral be Friday, November 29 at i am. at the St. Anne’ SPECIAL NOTICE CLOSING TIMES for PONTIAC PRESS DAY AY, NOV. 29 t 12 f 12 A 12 M . 27 . 27 27 Transient 5 P.M. Nov. 29 Contract 2 P.M. Nov. 29 Display 12 M. Nov. 27 SATURDAY, N0V.30 REAL ESTATE HOME “SIS” 50 Men Wanted KELLY LABOR 5 P.M., Tuesday, Nov. 26 DEATH NOTICES For Friday, Nov. 29 9 A.M., Nov. 29 THANK YOU FOR YOUR COOPERATION THE PONTIAC PRESS e replies at 1 [■e in the C-1, C-15, C-17, C-18, C-21, C-24, C-49. A PART-TIME JOB • ATTENTION RETIREES GENERAL Factory Work EXCELLENT FRINGE BENEFITS. APPLY IN PERSON, ARTCO INC., 201 E. DRAH- ilips MACHINE OPERATORS AND TRAINEES CHRISTMAS HELP CAREER OPPORTUNITY QUALITY CONTROL •MEDIUM SIZED 651-4^7 Refrigeration MECHANIC PLUMBER lourneyman Romeo, Mich. OUTDOOR WORK WOMEN ‘p’eW6'’rv'‘S Minor Repairs $625 ALTERATION LADY .. "_!1________. - Audit Clerks Every Day Pay Day ^"fhVsrijaKrrFier"^- BEAUTICIAN WANTED BARMA,D^WANTED, 707 Ba. 3S7 ESsk I ’WMm ®"a?/a ^33^61,0; ^ BAR WAITRESS, 1» or over, niqhl',. ^PonLL -EAUTICIAN, Production Workers Experience Not Necessary Fisher Body Division 900 BALDWIN AVE. PONTIAC, MICH. AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER Immediate Openings TURRET LATHE OPERATORS ENGINE LATHE OPERATORS SET-UP MEN - WELDERS JOURNEYMEN OR EQUIVALENT DAY OR NIGHT SHIFTS STEADY VARIED WORK New Hudson Corp. insurance furnished, reti Th- Wwnrkinr, ^ent UOd full beOefitS. Sv. , q.,„anq, .a„ .. . v. „ /Tho^e aveninj Mr. Coe, 8 a.m. to 4i30 p.m, ! TJX ^ CMC' '’’o’v""' ! MU3. be'^il^hhlYanv .hi,i nTPT CHRISTMAS HELP ■................7. ' : k2E§:E55kF RAILROAD SWITCHMEN mum height 5'6 '. train. Rate $3.48 per hour C3T Friday, Nov. 29 GRAND TRUNK Vv’ESTERN RAILROAD Help Waiitad Fwiialt Practical Nurses ' Hdp^ Wantad Female 7 ^ H^p^nte^ Female WAITRESS, EVENING WORK, full| WAITRESSES or part time. Apply 4 fo 8 p.m.i Roeco's 5171 Dixie H I g h w e y I W Drayton Plains._______| 7 j OR WOMAN. We SALESMAN, N money, write you year*ol? IcKal c ipa'nTO fo*? Senior citizen welcome to live Ir cleslred. 847-5143. Oak. Woodward, Royal *” ernoloyment, hour?* ne«_ __ pm-11:30 p.m. any evening, oS'aMltJis^and5 e'r*i".’?*c'Sl -__________ Personnel Dept., Pontiac General WAITRESS, FULL TIME, nights, Seminole at W. Huron. WILL YOU WORK? Just fired 2 women earning $ SALARY PER WEEK, w wouldn't work. If you will call ?742 be^een 9 A M.-2 PM. w6man”1with own t ’ll. Ext. r TIME, 28 hr. week, position ne voice. Apply bet ) p.m. CallFEJ-7144. _ fenced. C3„ Bl^lngham, . Secretary SANDERS!: 515 a diijy, n e Rd. I Orchard and WAITRESSES COUNTER GIRLS HOSTESS CASHIER 1. Apply I ■ HOWARD JOHNSONS TELEGRAPH AT MAPLE RD. BIRMINGHAM Salespeople REAL ESTATE Beautiful Spacious OFFICE Your Own Business Cards YOUR OWN DESK YOUR OWN PHONE LIBERAL COMMISSIONS Call Mr. Hackett HACKETT REALTY 363-7700 363-6703 363-5477 Eoiployment Agewcies SECRETARY 21 to 30, axparlance ““efered with shorthand and **'“ B. IPS m-mo.________________ SWITCHBOARD ils last growing company mplately train the girl with sire to learn. $260 and f--- i^s. Kay Roy, 334-2471. Shelling , 27. 1968 lyanted Real Ertute 36[Apartmeli*s, Urfaraielifd^^ I- 2-BEOROOAIL HEW. NEAR Mall -^Carprted.^^^llanw.^lr ^a^d roSn. Adults, no pets. From 4140! Aport^^ 40 2-bedrooms — 2 b^hs $177 IMMEDIATE OCCUP/WCY Separate Bldgs, tor families will MILLION Dollars has been made available to us fo purchase end assume Jand ■ cts, mortgages V boy 2 3-ROOM APARTMENTS, Inqulrs at YOUNG GIRL VITH bookkeeping experience to do payroll. $4800 to start. IPS 334-4975.________________ Instructions-Schoolis homes, lots or acreage c We will give you cash for yo equih'. Our appraiser Is awaltl your call at 674-2236 —McCullough realty cperlencejSNO Highland Rd. (M-S») Wh Increase j Open 9-e I BEDROOM LOWER, WES' stove, refrigarator, garage. Included, J200 per month. Side, j i431 UNIVERSITY DRIVE. 3 room I apartment y'“- ’month,'^ includins 1 BEDROOM, UTILITIES PAID, prefer couple, no pets. Security dep.. $32 weekly, call 082-1215. I BEDROOM, Lake Orion area, attention WOLVERINE SCHOOL Mich. Oldest Trade School Approved Under Gl Bill DAY-NIGHT SCHOOL 14(10 W. FORT, DETROIT WO 3-0092 ALL CASH For /homes anyplace In Oaklan County. Money l.h 24 hours. YORK 3-ROOM LAKE HOME, no pets, baby —'* —......... '•*" 3-2073 p cooking, male. Call oi FARM HOUSE, MODERN, oil h.., attached garage, between Oxford Ollonville. MA Q-MOO after $ nm iNTAL SERVicf" lanaioriwy relfapie t • n n a n t e Michigan, CR O^aiii: LAKEFRON'r~HOME on WaftlS; ■ ke In Waferforti Twp., gas hM? c. beach, $175, 074-1M9. iOERN fii^ } OR 4 BEO^m' -ake PrlVIleBa^ClarkSton are?“ Trade tor lynaihave you 027-M25, 027-3e», 353-0:^ SEASONED COLONIAL, Troy,~52M . mnnth C h^dragniS on 14 acr." ^Children welcome! SMoVT'ieaw.'oMjg WE TRADE FE $-7170 1702 S. Ta'egrapn cel lent location, $125, i — 3-7400 or EM 3-0282. AMERICAN HERITAGE APARTMENTS Accepting applications for JAMS SQUARE S H O P P I N 005 AdamsSTfirmIngham 6 men Tor saies posuinn wirn larav i INCOME TAX A SYNDICATE BLOOMFIELD MANOR Clarkston area. OtS^IM^-------- wk , OR’s-osiy ol Rent Houses, Unfurnished 40 BACHELtbF, PRIVATE Chnance ana ,---------------------- lav., opposite General Hospital, fe e 2 BEDROOM, GAS HEAT, built In ---------------- - tireplaae, Ponfiac Lake front, with LOVELY ROOM option to buy. $180 per ‘ Security deposit. 073-9220.____ .. 3 BEDROOM HOME In exc. W. side _ lira Every Doy Poy Doy "•TterurArrF7er"i & “'iHi I e 7 Hi It's a Woman's WorM CLARKSTON CORNERS " »” A^MrANDMAMS ^WENtSV, 35 YEASr | ..... .................... ru '""TAlfoNmr* “'“fews”' I/SSS Hi JOHNSON'S 2 FAMILY HOME locatW at Rent Office S Pontiac Press Want Ads For Action HOWARD JOHNSONS $4,500 TO $18,000 GENERAL OFFICE RAY PAYS M i S GUTTER CO. Christmas Time HUDSON'S Sales - Waitresses Maids - Stock Boys . HUDSON'S OTFICE Dressmulungj, Tailoring 17 ^ nTJ ime'^nd F"' “''24^ S^nl^g ,‘'„lhn*.ir COAJS.^.^^SUITS, ^ YllOii s^HooroRADs HomeS ,"r"" r 'i"M'!r;'r Pharmacist' Full Time «c_400 TO cjarT lO DAYS ONLY ? ALL CASH IN 24 HRS. dWe accept 30 day listings | AJa^m^M_^-1 674-4101 ' OPEN Sundays E CO. Hair Stylists... Help! , toll 444-5170 or stop by th« BERNARD HAIR STYLISTS Hudson's Pontiac Mall RAY ... =5JL™’»T,J > TO share ex- ccillkio Should Yol $6,500 TO START "'sra RAY SEMINOLE HILLS NURSING HOME Announces the Following Vacancies: LICENSED PRACTICAL NURSES FOR HEAD NURSE POSITIONS • ALSO NURSES' AIDES MAINTENANCE MEN Experienced i '^^''m^FTNA^icrcT^'''*'-Real Estate Salesman : ^rS^d PLASTERER $8,000 TO START — RECEPTIONIST - “"'J , DaTosLIN 437-1478 All shifts. Ideal ts. Ideal working time and HIGHER THAN AVERAGE FOR INFORMATION OR APPLICATION CALL 338-7151 - Extensicn 301 YOU HAVE A NEED FOR EXTRA MONEY NOW THAT CHRISTMAS TIME IS NEAR? WHY NOT WORK PART-TIME FOR US AS A SALESPERSON, CATALOG CLERK, CAFETERIA HELP OR IN THE STOCK ROOM. MOST OF OUR OPENINGS REQUIRE EVENING OR WEEKEND HOURS OF EMPLOYYMENT IMMEDIATE EMPLOYEE DISCOUNT APPLY NOW PERSONNEL DEPT. MONTGOMERY WARD THE PONTIAC MALL l@yB3B»!2S Trucks to Rent to 50 t Fe’'?94"44° F^dl^^e'Pl'cliup*'''’'”-yAvc 1 ^ Fre« home pickup ........ ...."fHifftiT THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDXESDAV. NOVEMBER 27. 1 J9 Salt Ihratet 49 CARNIVAL By Dick Turner Si C—7 'iP?a=s SNYDER, . -"| bedrooms iKINNEY & For Your Equity ‘“‘TlATTLEY'REALTY _ 363-6703 _335,8ii6_ keaoan pay “* » a’sss s vr^DT^ :i..™.^.»yal-U-Way rjit!' In?;!; Cf M r»,Tnn Building Co. si.^ arro Giles awsE £ I IfsibvZ^ |2 ACRES "i NORTH ......... ..o.?ZS,'L,,... WARDEN / CHRISTMAS I bas.- AT LAKE ORION ' «»'-y day' Th " on l^a^r^I'^I frame' b^o^. ' ' GIROUX YORK REAL ESTATE g^Y WE TRA 'r^ '' '°' P'* r!rl l Cloude McOrui ""' ‘"toNo'ir, ; PHONE: 682-2211 | ffi»i"grrat': frur,y,hn Realtor 6 OR -----MLS .V _ ^scMamw-,strub; Hfni^nNr^n^ iANolloW wVvE - WE TRADE SCHRAM STRUBLe" ,*"mad: List With SCHRAM ihriuM And Call the^Van Lauinger zmM= Wisner School District K. L. TEMPLETON, Reall ’“rERWRTAREr Ana tail rne van ' UTLTol.'i?N ANNETT Neslled on an o.lra . large loT MEW 3 BEOROOM- HOMES RENTING $78 Mo. .... ... $10 Deposit s’t«s“ra CrzJW ^EDRooM^HOM°E^ ' irrepiice"® ItTa^chld'^''? ™r?! Anderson''and' GMford ■ I wa'T'To- wair caI"p?t.'‘’°Natu;'a'l, COOLEY LAKE FRONT | I A’rBi!0DES,REAlT0R j COSWAY RAY S^yrHAM: gHg'gg:i^iYk....R - --A,s.i. Bo^r ---:- 1“-""'’IS mmmm wmms aAa realtors RITE ' fm A AlTG buildi CLARKSTON RIDGE ESTATES - GT?.'rmr«oi,*s'do':n r. CLARKSTON ESTATES ITATE '’?HSS £aH.E%Sa!a' OFF DIXIE NEAR 1-75 2'/2 DRAYTON PLAINS HOME LET OUR YEARS sSFHH 2536 Dixie Hwy.-Multiple Listing Service-674-0324 SYLVAN MANOR °rn%’ncA' 'I^u'crAYvV A'mJ^f.“a-,nl;Nb^l,re.Y’;dr^Z- OXBOW LAKE After 8 P.M. Call SILVER LAKE ESTATES nTn7 tGYaT."'’';Tk '. THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 1968 iSsse 71 A GALLAGHER MUSIC CO. "p m 1710 S. TELEGRAPH FE 4-0566 EXTRA°'shS?J Averill's AUTO SALES 300 ?SSi HERE LAST M&M 1 gild Uied Cara lOA Dollars Paid Bu'ck ConvertlW. .... Car CALL FE 8-9661 ced from $695 AVIMOi LJMLUKC . .,.,TS AN ACCESSORIES .ymidJJXmSOSup KING BROS. ONLY SNO-SPORT 5™^^: 4N.VIRS4RV KING SWISS COLONY ~ ” T.HH J. Uncle Charlie's E R S ANC 1 YELLOWSTONE "“"TSP=" MOTOR HOMES STACHLER TRAILER NG EQUIPMENT "WE SERVICE WHAT WE SELL" mgTaIb’&Tervice "'’"MrCOLSN „ 1-A BLACK DIRT [1., Cliff Dreyer's Gun and Sports C( AUniON" nssm LOOK AT THIS BUICK 544 S. WOODWARD 647-5600 , s’^srioTo'"" i«lpP I TOP $ PAID mAvYoNTLAINr "'"■[P «"d ‘msi^m-sMf :“S,ora r„rr'z,i ^sk for Bob Bums. Pf °"m60, 2 Bedroom, |^5 WILSON CRISSMAN i^nirCiijTiks—Wf.4 TAYLOR CHEVY-OLDS WALLED LAKE 6244501 ”103 s ag;.. ALL l._.. JW ON DISPLAY! Holly Travel Coach Inc. "^86 Ellsworth Trailer Sales Motorcycle Sale Suburban Olds 860 S. WOODWARD ___Ml 7-5111__ Jerome CADILLAC CO" "-^iW-cWac^^ FLEETWOOD Mi Srr»M’''£TS Hi wn.’’'77*5 No?.^ “'"'ISfsSut, INC, ””!d?€' SKI DOO 1 OF THE LEADERS Mobile Homes as-aii" 1967 Camaro $1995 ' LlSg’vw"”^ merry rilSsI QK?P » Bob Borst ' FE 5-4iof 3-2030 Lincoln-Mercury Sales ‘ FOR^lCKUPTTiYh«l4rive.| “ -.. » ’ i^Y'^fY^brMnrmr^ TOWN & COUNTRY . CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH ji044 josiyn Foreign Cars I*'' 1965 CHRYSLER "»«> NEWPORT $1395 PINTER'S IrL ' BiRMi^HAM rilarT’ir’ ' ^cJc£w"irl.n^."w85'M^ HOO Motor, . . .Jerry Davidson BoicN Land CHEVROLET CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 64 2 7^2“^ '“''^ 1969 STARCRAET TRAVEL TRAILERS LAWf'tKb r ceSISouriNC, Se« th« new }969 Apache Car iiTon^M "TOP DOLLAR PAID" GLENN'S r FE 4-1006’^° or'^ ^''"fE 3 79S4 „^r''cC THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDKESDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 1968 BILL HAHN ^ Chrysler - Plymouth - Rambler - Jeep TODAY'S SPECIALS -i968 Chevelle 2-4por, hardtop.............. $995 1965 CHRYSLER 300, 2-dr. HT $1495 164 GTO 2-door^ coupe . .. .^.$995 V-8,^ automate, power steering, power { convertible .....$895 this cor is in ideal con. New 1969 License Plates With All New and Used Cars Sold this Week MERRY OLDS "TfeoSCH"’ GO! HAUPT PONTIAC Spartan Dodge SELLS FOR LESS PONTIAC ..... $995 Suburban Olds 1964 FORD FLANNERY Motors, Inc. MO DEAL MERRY oIdSMOBILE ro^hester'',j5(’ichigan Now available m BEST FE 2-8101 » F““ lucky“auto MIL( chrysler-plymouth FINE TRADE-INS ON NEW 1969s 1966 MERCURY Monterey 1967 MERCURY Montclair »„5 1965 MUSTANG Hardtop $1295 1965 CHEVELLE Malibu 1968 VOLKSWAGEN Fostback 1965 PONTIAC 1967 MERCURY lO-PASSENGER HILLSIDE l^INCOLN-MERCURV 1250 Oakland "333-7863 MUST MAKE ROOM WHILE UNDER CONSTRUCTION SEE THE GOOD GUYS WITH THE HARD HATS 1964 CHEVY Bel-Air Wagon $1095 1968 FIREBIRD Convertible $2495 1967 PONTIAC $2295 1967 PONTIAC Catalina 4 Door SPSS'S ’$2095 1968 CHEVY $2795 1967 CHEVY Copric. Sport Sedon $2295 1966 CHEVY Impala Sport Coupe $1795 1967 CHEVY Impalo Sport Coup. $2195 1968 CHEVY $2895 1967 PONTIAC Catalina Convertible ”""$2095 1967 CAMARO Sport Coupe $2295 1967 PONTIAC Catalina Sport Sedan miwm $2295 muisimm Oakland County's Largest Volume Chevrolet Dealer FE 4-4547 631 OAKLAND Widest Selection of 'OK' Used Cars in Oakland County THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEI3NESDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 1968 C—11 OulS Annrarte PitvioiN hinl* — out 36 Flower part 37 Reserved 38 Violent misdoinK 40 Repair 41 Restaiprant 42 Disencundwr 43 Age - 48Dwke7 ' Ccomb.form) (discover) 9 Baseball term . 12 ThomM— Edison ______ 13SiouM , Betray (2 Indidln words) 14 Before 51 External 15 36 Narrow* 16SltU SfficXeed ^S«^39aiS 5 Because vehicle 6 Willow genus 35 Archetype 17 Beast burden 18 All (comb, form) 20 Arthurian town 6j|ikewi^not lOConstellat 60 Eactual items 11 Try out 61 Fall In drops 19_____ stone (ah.) 10 Constellation 41 Like a tail 44 Highways 46 Surpass pronoun ;> 24 Worm 25 Monk's title 28 Hardy heroine 80 Doctrines 34 Very, very 1 In drops 62 Driving breath command 21 Willow ®3 . 23 Legal point 64 Individuals 25 Spume DOWN 26 Regulation t 27 Solar disk IPant (var.) aauery 2 Gmus of true 29 Greek portico 62 Mountain olives 31 Box lake 3 Level 32 Priests of 53 Great Lake 54 Corded fabrio 57 Bird’s craw 47 Chant 48 Cry of bacchanals 49 Musical instrument 50Lohd8 Farmer Jack Gift Chek* Week of 11/27 to 12/3 TOPS GOAL — Charles Woodhead (right), chairman of advance gifts, receives the Pontiac Area United Fund annual drag race trophy from campaign chairman Alger V. Conner. Woodhead’s division obtained 99.5 per cent, or $117,749, of its $118,324 goal, according to the final totals reported Monday afternoon. At yesterday’s final report lunchwn, Woodhead announced a newly received $1,000 pledge, putting his division over 100 per cent. PAUF Sets Record but Misses Its Goal Bandits Sweep Casino LYON, France (AP) — Four armed bandits swept into the casino at suburban Charbonniers-les-Baines today and grabbed $27,400 from gamblers and the cash box. Their faces masked by helmets used by skiers, the gunmen forced gamblers and croupiers to lie on the gaming tables while they scooped up the money. More money was raised this year than ever before in Pontiac Area United Fund bistory, although only 94.6 per cent of the goal was reached by yesterday’s final report luncheon. Contributions totaled $1,069,150, about 3.8 per cent more than the amount rais- Alger V. Conner, campaign chairman, told about 250 persons at the Elks Lodge luncheon, “we have raised more money than any other PAUF campaign during the past 20 years. Each of us can take pride in this accomplishment. Although we cannot claim total victory, we can claim a victory over last year. ★ ★ ★ “1 appeal to all those in our community who have not contributed to our cause for 55 agencies to send your contribution into the UF office. 'The needs of our agencies and the services they provide people are very real and vifel,’’ he added.‘ MORE CASH EXPECTED Some money is still expected to come in. Final reports given at the luncheon were ■ official totals as of Monday afternoon. Charles Woodhead, chairman of the advance gifts reported obtaining $117,749 or 99.5 per cent of the $118,324 goal. He then produced a $1,000 check at the luncheon which put his division over 100 per cent. ★ * ★ Ted Pearson Jr., chairman o f manufacturing division, reported $38,518.53 or 94.4 per cent of his $40,780 goal. Mrs. Jack Ross, chairman of the community division, reported $19,422 or 73.3 per cent of her $26,476 goal. Vice chairman Ben M. Wilton,, reporting for Earl Maxwell, chairman of the GM division, announced $728,345 or or 90.4 per cent of that $172,802 goal had vice chairman Joseph Middleton, reporting for Ralph T. Norvell, chairman of the commercial division said $156,285 or 90.4 per cent of the $172,802 goal had been reached. FINANCIAL SUCCESS PYederick J. Poole, president of the PAUF board of trustees, commented; "I would term this year’s campaign a financial success. However, I would like to alert alt of you and the total community to the fact that we must become even more successful in our fund raising, or else suffer the results of restricted agency services. “Somehow we have to bring about a reawakening of community conscience and spirit. In these times of plenty, it is inconceivable that campaign goals are not being met. ★ * * ★ "The responsibility is ours to be year-round PAUF salesmen, educating the community to the necessary services of our agencies.” ONEW Nixon to Tap Romney, ays CADILLAC (UPI) ^ State Senate Republicans are certain Gov, George Romney soon will resign to join the administration of President-elect Richard M. Nixon. “We feel more sure than ever before that he will be offered a meaningful position . . a cabinet post,” declared Sen. Emil Lockwood of St. Louis, the Senate majority leader. LockwOod, who served as Nixon’s Michigan campaign manager, commented at a news conference last night following a two and one-half hour closed-door meeting with Romney at the GOP Senate caucus. Romney, 61, governor of Michigan since 1963, continued to insist publicly that he has not been offered a cabinet job yet. The governor told reporters he had “no knowledge” about reports he would be Nixon’s secretary of com- merce, or secretary of housing and urban development.” POST TURNED DOWN Lockwood also disclosed that he was offered a, sub-cabinet, post in the incoming administration but turned it down. ' Lockwood said Michigan Republican leaders have compiled a list of more than 100 persons from the state for possible service in the Nixon administration. In matters of business, the caucus accepted Romney’s recommendations that no new or expanded programs be approved without a corresponding increase in tax funds to pay for them. Lockwood told newsmen this could spell defeat for state aid to parochial schools unless present programs are “drastically cut” to provide funds. Th0 W0oth0r V.«. WMfiMr Surwiu Porwsur Warmer, Siowpra Possible rpiTT? X XXXli PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 1908 <-v«L. w^ra'ass ■<***'*,■ ,«,n,i‘isssig,8tss,om. -sa pages w S. V/ef Ends Talks Boycott SAIGON m — President Nguyen Van Thieu said today a South Vietnamese delegation will go to the Paris peace talks within the next 10 days but he cautioned his nation not to expect peace to come soon. Thieu said Vice President Nguyen Cao Ky will go to Paris as overall coordinator of the Saigon delegation, although he will not actually sit in on the negotiating sessions. Those who will are to be announced in a few days, Thieu said. He said Ky “is the man I rely on to lead the delegation to Paris, but he is not chief of the delegation.” Although Thieu said the talks would get under way “in thei next few days” Related Story, Page A-10 U.S. officials in Washington don’t expect serious conferences until late December. Thieu, 12 hours after his government announced it had lifted its boycott of the Paris talks, declared; “Talks with the Communists do not mean peace will be restored soon. They will fight while they are talking and talk while they are fighting.” Thieu said South Vietnam wilt show to its allies and the enemy “that we have plenty of good will.” He asserted that whether “aggression” ends “depends on Hanoi and their tool” — obvious reference to the National Liberation Front, political arm of the Vietcong. Thicu's regime announced last night it had agreed to end its boycott of the Paris talks in return for the right to head the bargaining on South Vietnamese internal matters. * * ★ In Paris, a National Liberation P'ront spokesman said the NLF would insist on going into the four-way talks “as an independent party on the same footing” as the United States, North Vietnam and the South Vietnamese. State Legislators Moy Get Raise LANSING (UPI) - Michigan’s lawmakers may become the second highest paid legislators in the nation if they receive the $18,600 in salaries arid expenses recommended for them by the State Officers Compensation Commission yesterday. The eight-member commission also recommended that the governor be given a $25,000-a-year expense account to go with his $40,000-a-year salary. The lieutenant governor would receive $3,000 in expenses in addition to his present $22,500 salary.. *• * * Legislative salaries for the 110 representatives and 38 senators, now divided between $12,500 in apy and $2,500 in unaccountable expenses, would be shoosted to $15,000 in pay and a maximum of $3,000 or $20 per day, for food, lodging and mileage expenses during the legislative session. Unless lawmakers turn down the commission’s pay plan with a two-thirds vote prior to Feb. 1, 1969, it will automatically go into effect retroactive to Jan. 1. SECOND TO CALIFORNIA Only lawmakers in California would receive higher salary and expenses. In a related development. Republican senators, meeting in caucus in Cadillac, reacted favorably yesterday to an offer made by Lansing trucking execuuve Howard Silber to donate a $300,000 two-story home for use as a governor’s mansion. The home is located in a picturesque section of southwest Lansing. EVERGREEN POLES—Riding high above the street in a snorkel, Robert T. Maine of the city electrical department prepares to wrap a garland around one of 34 lighting fixtures decorated for Christmas in Pontiac’s downtown business district. With the roping in place and lights strung across Saginaw from Oakland to Pike, the job of decorating for the holiday is nearly complete. The city’s official Christmas tree still has to be raised. Named to Fill Vacancy FBI Charges 9 in Gambling Net BUFFALO, N. Y. UP) - A man described by the FBI as an “overlord of crime” and eight others were arrested on charges of engaging in illegal Co.sa Nostra operations in western New York and Ontario, Canada. The FBI said much of the activity-including gambling, bookmaking, and loan-shark operations—was directed out of a smalt funeral home in nearby Niagara Falls. * ★ * Stefano Magaddino, 77, identified by the FBI as the head of the Cosa Nostra in western New York, was ordered by the FBI to appear for arraignment on charges of interstate racketeering. He was permitted to spend the night in his home in nearby Lewiston because of his age and chronic heart condition. THEY’LL FOLLOW HIM In the past, the FBI said, Magaddino has entered a hospital complaining of chest pains whenever anyone tried to question him about organized crime. This time, if necessary, federal authorities will follow him to the hospital and arraign him in his room, U. S. Attorney Andrew F. Phelan said, i Among those arrested were Mag-gadino’s son, Peter, 51, and Benjamin Nicoletti Sr., 56, who were held in the Erie County jail here in lieu of $100,000 bail each. Peter is president of the Magaddino Memorial Chapel, a funeral home in Niagara Falls which lists Stefano Magaddino among its officers. Happy Bird Day: Clerk-Elecf Takes Post cloudy, Warmer Thanksgiving Day will dawn with partly overcast skies and rising temperatures. The weatherman reports there’s a slim chance of occasional rain. The mercury will slide to a low of 26 to 30 tonight, then climb to a high of 40 to 45 tomorrow. ★ ★ The outlook for Friday^ colder with a chance of snow flurri^. Precipitation probabilities in per cent are 10 today, 30 tonight and 40 tomorrow. *■ * * 'Thirty was the low temperature in downtown Pontiac prior to’fl a.m. Thb 12;30 p.m. mercury reading was 38. County Clerk-elect Lynn D. Allen yesterday was appointed county clerk to fill the vacancy left by the apparent death of John D. Murphy. Allen, a Pontiac optometrist, takes over the job imme-diately on the orders of the Oakland County Circuit Court _ bench. He will fill : the vacancy until he ^ is officially sworn ; in Jan. 1. Allen won the post of county clerk in the Nov. 5 election, defeating Shane Murphy, the son of I the late clerk. The elder Murphy is believed to have drowned in a boating accident on Lake Michigan last summer. His body has never been found. * * * In his ab.sence, Murphy's duties have been performed by members of-his staff. Holiday Closings in Area Are Told ALLEN Renewal Program Is a Step Closer Pontiac city commissioners last night took an important step toward consideration of a new form of urban renewal called the Neighborhood Development Program .(NPD) which could use federal funds to carry out extensive rehabilitiation and renovation. Jhe commissioners voted 6-1 to approve preparation of recommendations for an application for NPD. * ★ * Several commissioners spoke in -favor ! of NPD as a vehicle for battling the problem of decaying and deteriorating housing and of nonednforming land uses which tend to aggravate neighborhood obsole.scence. Only District 2 Commissioner Robert C, Irwin voted against the move. Irwin said the city has had one bad experience with urban renewal — the downtown project initiated seven years ago which has never reached its goal. COMMITMENT? ' “It would seem to some that we are committing ourselves to another urban renewal program,” he said. Irwin said he is not necessarily (igainst NDP but the city should consider It more fully, should pinpoint the ai’eas which would be affected and the methods to be used before passing any resolution. An exact area for an NDP program has not yet been designated, but city planners expect that any such program would include the southwest section of the city where a large percentage of the housing is deteriorating. It’s also extremely likely that a program would include areas contiguous to the downtown area, partly to take advantage of construction to be undertaken and improvements to be made. The city can benefit most by including in the program areas where money has been spent on public improvements. The federal government will spend $2 for every $1 spent on public improvements to carry out further improvements, which could include rehabilitation of existing buildings, removal of nonconforming uses and of substandard housing and construction of new housing on vacant tracts. ★ ★ Director of Planning James L. Bates (Continued on Page A-2, Col. 5) Most Pontiac area stores and other businesses will be closed tomorrow in observance of TTianksgiving. ★ * A Pontiac State Bank, Community National Bbnk, First Federal Savings of Oakland and Capital Savings and Loan Association all will close at their regular time today and reopen Friday morning. County and city offices also will -be closed tomorrow. Pontiac's main post office lobby will be open for mail deposits, access to locked boxes and purchase of stamps ■ from machines. Mail will be picked up from deposit points on normal holiday schedules and processed for outgoing dispatch. There will be bo regular window or delivery services. One Edition Thursday The Pontiac Press will publish a single, early edition tomorrow so that employes may spend the holiday with their families. Regular editions will resume Friday. In Today's Press Area News Lazaros has gun permit revoked; Holly school-building study ordered — PAGE A-4. Rat Control Federal kitty of $40 million unused — PAGE A-IO, Waterford Schools Operating millagc need is explained — PAGE A-9, Area News ............... A-4 Astrology ................B-4 Bridge . ,............... B-4 Crossword Puzzle ........C-U Comics . . ...............B-4 Editorials ...............A-« Markets ............. Obituaries ........... ,B-3 Picture Page .... .......‘.A-W Sports .............. ’Ibeaters ............... B-8 TV and Radio Programs . C-tl Vietnam War News .........A-2 Women’s Pages .......B-1, B-2 mi yjAo iwiiii THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. NOVEMBER 27, 1968 85- l(C Political Workers Arrested in Saigon / SAIGON (AP) — '^uth Vietnamese police have arrested 85 Vietcong political workers in Saigofr during a tWp-week-old roundup to crush an emerging Communist political apparatus in the capital, a highly placed police source said today. The source said 15 of the 85 “Communist cadre” were women and that all of those arrested had criminal pro-Com-munist records. Most of them were longtime residents of Saigon, he added. * ★ * The roundup began Nov. 11 and is still going on. The source said it began with the arrest of a senior Communist lieutenant who tipped off police to 16 Vietcong cells within the city. The citywide hunt also has netted 14 Chinese pistols, a number of mines, grenades and plastic explosives, the source reported. LOCAL CONTROL The South Vietnamese arm of Ncrtii Vietnam’s Communist party is known to be creating a grass-roots government across South Vietnam, apf>arently in anticipation of an end to the Vietnam war. American intelligence confirms the quasi-government already exists throughout five provinces and in more than 1,000 villages and hamlets. Com-.munist documents claim the existence of “liberation councils” in two of Saigon’s nine precincts, but y.S. officials say the councils exist only on paper. * * * Only scattered ground fighting was reported in South Vietnam today. A U.S. Marine force that had gone into the demilitarized zone for the first time since the bombing of North Vietnam halted Nov. 1 pulled out by nightfall yesterday without suffering a casualty in several hours of fighting, the U.S. Com-niand said. VIET ESCAPE The headquarters Said the North VieL namese troops escaped from the Marines. The Leathernecks reported hearing screams of enemy soldiers ap- parently wounded by artillery and air strikes, but no bodies were found. South/ Vietnamese Headquarters indicated that a recoiumissance force it had sent into the DMZ also pulled out by nightfall yesterday after a brief clash in Which three enemy soldiers were killed. The South Vietnamese reported a brief fight last night southwest of Gio Linh, about four it^es below the DMZ. Three enemy soldiery were reported killed, one prisoner was captured, and three government men were wounded. U.S. Headquarters announced that searches for two U.S. jets shot dqwn over North Vietnam Monday had ended without success. All four crewmen are listed as missing, but Radio Hanoi announced earlier that two of them were captured. A. U.S. spokesman said (me of the two planes was an unarmed Navy reconnaissance Vigilante and the other an Air Force F4 Phantom fighter^bomber flying escort for an unarmed reconnaissance plane. Japan Boss Elected, to Seek Land Return TOKYO (AP) — Eisaku Sato won a third term as Japan’s prime minister today after pledging to gain the early return of Okinawa and the other Ryukyu Islands from the United States. He said after the election that he plans to form a new “action Cabinet,” possibly over the weekend. GOP Picks New County Leader James E. Defebaugh, an advertising account executive from Birmingham, was elected last night as chairman of the Oakland County Republican Committee. Defebaugh, 1396 Stanley, succeeds Joseph R. Farnham. Chairman of the county GOP since early 1966, Farnham did not seek reelection since he is being transferred to England by his employer, the Chrysler Corp. effective Sunday. ★ * ★ Organizational director for the party less than three months, Defebaugh was elected to the top post by the Republican executive committee. The only other name placed in nomination for chairman was that of Donald Brown of West Bloomfield Township, an attorney in Royal Oak. ACTIVE SINCE ’62 An executive with the Campbell Ewald Co. in Detroit, Defebaugh has been active in county GOP activities since 1%2. PYior to his becoming organizational director, he was director of the 65th Legislative District Republican Organization. Other officers elected by the executive committee were; • Vice Chaiman Mrs. Z. A. Reader. 28984 Wellington, Farminton, who has been secretary of executive committee and the 19th Congressional District Committee. She is also the first vice president of the Oakland County Republican Womans Clubs. '• Secretary Mrs. James Carey, 2691 Binbrooke, Troy, a member of the Republican State Central Committee. • Treasurer Gary W. Duncan, 9274 Big Lake, Springfield Township. In beating back his strongest opposition since taking office in 1964, the 67-year-old Sato captured 249 votes—21 more than he needed—to retain the presidency of his conservative Liberal Democratic party and with it the premiership. ★ ★ ★ His nearest rivals in the voting at a party convention were former Foreign Minister Takeo Miki, with 107 votes, and former party Secretary General Shigesaburo Maeo, who received 95. One of the 454 votes cast went to former Foreign Minister Aiichiro Fujiyama and two were invalid. BUSINESSMEN PLEASED Japanese business leaders expressed their pleasure at Sato’s reelection and urged him to unify the party for new assaults on problems of national security, student unrest and the rising cost of living. Sato told his post election news conference Japan’s top problems are Okinawa, which he wants returned to Japan after more than a quarter of a century of U.S. control, and national security. But he said Japan does not necessarily need nuclear weapons to be on a par with other major nations. The party opposition to Sato, including 83 “young Turks” seeking a new look for the administration, had hoped to prevent the prime minister from receiving a majority on the first ballot. Had tbait happened, they would have combined their votes in support of Miki, but they did not have the strength to prevent a first-ballot victory. Miki, howdver, showed surprising strength, and this could give him an edge for the premiership in 1970. NIXON TIE CHARGED Leftist opposition leaders immediately charged that Sato would join U.S. President-elect Richard M. Nixon in turning Japan into an anticommunist base in Asia. Socialist Secretary-General S a b u r o Eda predicted Sato would be forced out before bis term ends because of collaboration with Nixon, and Democratic Socialist party Chairman E i i c h i Nishimura warned the prime minister not to yield to pressure from Nixon. 1 “ The Weather Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Partly cloudy and a little colder today, high 38 to 43. Mostly cloudy and a little colder tonight, low 25 to 30. Cloudy Thursday with a chance of occasional rain and slightly warmer, high 40 to 45. Friday outlook: chance of snow flurries and colder. Northwest to north winds 8 to 15 miles per hour, becoming northeasterly 10 to 20 miles tonight. Probabilities of precipitation: 10 per cent today, 30 per cent tonight, 40 per cent Thursday. Hospital Budget Tops $12 Million STANLEY L. SOWERWINE Scout Executive Named for Area Pontiac city commissioners last night received a $12,362,098 proposed budget for operation of Pontiac General Hospital next year. The budget calls for the same room rates that have been in effect this year. ★ ★ ★ Commissioners set a public hearing Dec. 17 on the balanced budget and it likely will be approved at that time. The hospital’s board of trustees approved the budget last week but final approval is up to the commission. ' Income from patients is expected to reach $12,095,895 and other income, from operation of the cafeteria and other miscellaneous items, will add administrator Harold B. Euler said. He said the new emergency room and physical therapy buildbg will be in operation shortly after the beginning of the year. Plans also call for construction of a new 85-bed facility for patients requiring mental health and extended care. Clinton Valley Council, Boy Scouts of America, will have a new Scout executive as of Jan. 13. Stanley L, Sowerwine of Eau Claire, Wis., has been named the council’s top professional scouter. He will (iirect the activities of about 12,000 Cub Scouts, Boy Scouts and explorers and 3,700 adult volunteer leaders. ★ ★ ★ He replaces Edward L. Leland, who retired Nov. 1 after almost 23 years as Scout executlveJ ’ Sowerwine is currently Scout executive of Chippewa Valley Council with headquarters in Eau Claire. GROWTH PREDICTED When announcing selection of Sowerwine, council President George R. De-Courcy said: “We are pleased to welcome Mr. Sowerwine and his family to the council. The next few years will see great growth in scouting here. We are sure Mr. Sowerwine’s leadership will aid the council in bringing scouting to every boy possible.” Sowerwine was active in scouting as a boy and became a professional Scouter in 1947 when he graduated from Indiana University. He started as a district executive in Elkhart, Ind., and moved to the Chicago Council, as a district executive, in 1950. In 1954 he went to Indianapolis as director of field service in that city’s council and later became assistant Scout executive. * ★ ★ He went to Eau Claire in 1959. During his tenure, the Chippewa Valley Council has financed and constructed a $75,000 Scout service center and made major improvements in its camping program. The council was cited tlmee times for “blue ribbon” growth in rural Scouting. Sowerwine and his wife, Barbara, have five children and a Japanese exchange student living with them during the current school year. * ★ The Clinton Valley Council area includes all of Oakland County except the southeastern corner, and' Macomb County north of 14 Mile Road. PROJECTED EXPENSES Projected expenses show $7,527,513 will be paid in salaries and wages. Fees for anesthesiology, radiology, laboratory and a variety of other tests and therapy will cost $1,122,355. * ★ ★ Euler, in a letter to the commission, said the hospital budget is based on expected occupancy rate of 93 per cent of the facility’s 392 beds. ★ ★ w Parking problems which have plagued the hospital for years will be resolved by parking lot constsuction, Euler said, the end of the year with completion of Students Quit Buildings MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP) - Students demanding reforms at mostly Negro Le-moyne-Owen College here gave up their occupation of three campus buildings yesterday, but set a Monday deadline for the school administration to respond to grievances. Meanwhile, the college said none of those involved in the seiz^ure of buildings that, began Monday afternoon will be punished. Diggers Plan to Expand Strike “No progress” was the report from negotiations yesterday in a strike which has halted work on the huge $28.5-million Clinton-Oakland Interceptor Sewer. The union now has announced it will enlarge its strike and will possibly hamper 0, least two other large projects in northern Oakland County. On strike is the statewide Union of Operating Engineers, Local 324, based in Detroit. The union had stopped work at jobs being performed by the Associated Underground Contracts. * ★ * Union Business Manager William J. Myers told The Press this morning the strike will now be extended to halt underground work at jobs contracted for by the Association of General Contractors. ★ ★ ★ In the Pontiac area, Myers said he expects to halt digging work at projects under way at St. Joseph’s Mercy Hospital and the Oakland Community College at Hamlin and Featherstone. LARGE EFFECT Altogether 35 or 40 large construction projects in the metropolitan Detroit area will be affected, Myers said. The strike began Oct. 1 and im- mediately shut down construction of the Clinton-Oakland sewer. County officials are becoming doubtful the time lost can be made up. ★ ★ ★ The strike concerns wages and fringe benefits, but appears to be hung up on the termination-date-of-contract issue. Myers said another meeting with mediators has been tentatively set next Wednesday in Detroit. New Program Is Step Closer (Continued From Page One) said NDP “well planned and executed can be of great benefit to the citizens and taxpayers of the city.” Bates said a preliminary report and recommendations would be available for City Commission review within three weeks. SUBSTANTIAL DIFFERENCES Bates indicated that NDP differs substantially from previous urban renewal programs. Differences include budgeting, length of time for approval and citizen involvement. He said the city would not likely spend any cash above what would normally be spent on public improvements whether NDP existed or not. ^ ★ ★ ★ He said a citizens district council would have to be actively involved in the planning of any development o r redevelopment in an NDP area, w ★ * District 1 Commissioner T. Warren Fowler Sr. said he would be in favor of NDP as long as it didn’t involve any total-clearance area. He said he was in favor of spot clearance and rehabilitation. * ★ ★ District 4 Commissioner Jack Douglas said he was in favor of NDP. “We can’t continually sit and dream and do nothing ... I think the NDP program is the sh(M-test, quickest way for a program.* ‘WOULD BE FOOUSH’ Mayor William H. Taylor Jr. said he thought the city would be foolish if it didn’t take advantage of NDP even though the city’s past experience with urban renewal had left him discouraged and disheartened. ★ ★ ★ Taylor said before the city gets into the program there will be citizen involvement. Taylor pointed out that the city can benefit a great deal from planned, completed or expected public improvement projects in the general area which will likely be considered for NDP. ★ ★ ★ This includes, he said, construction of Lincoln Elementary School, planned improvements to the Clinton River and Pontiac Creek, construction of a new Human Resources Center and construction of a new high school. Nasser Confers on Riots By United Press International President Gamal Abdel Nasser today summoned officials of Egypt’s only legal political party for urgent conferences in Cairo on what to do about the student rioting that has disrupted the nation for nearly a week. Birmingham Area Sale Proceeds Will Furnish Library Area BLOOMFIELl!) TOWNSHIP - The lower-level lecture room and foyer at the new township library, presently under construction at Lone Pine and Telegraph, will be completely furnished with the proceeds £r(xn the sale of a gift of land by Leslie H. Green of Turtle Lake Road. "nie $16,500 realized from the sale will be used to purchase seats, a display system, three film projectors and other audio-visual equipment for the lower level. ★ ★ ★ The library aqd all basic furnishings are being financed with a bond issue voted by township residents in 1966. A gift campaign is still under way for other furnishings and materials. Mrs. Donald Zorn, 1391 Cedar Bend, is coordinating the drive. BIRMINGHAM — For the second year in a row, the Grand Trunk Western Railroad will add extra trains during the holiday season for the convenience of Birmingham shoppers going to downtown Detroit. The “Shoppers’ Specials,” originating in Detroit and making round trips to Birmingham, will also pass through Royal Oak and Ferndale on the way. ★ ★ ★ They will be running Monday through Saturday, beginning Friday through Dec. 24. The mwning special will leave Detroit at 8:35 a.m. and arrive in Birmingham at 9:05. It will begin a Detroit run at 9:30 and arrive at Detroit’s Brush Street Station at 10:10 a.m. AFTERNOON SPECIAL The afternoon special will leave Detroit at 2:30 p.m. and will arrive in Birmingham at 3:10 p.m. The same train will depart again at 4:10, to arrive at Brush Street at 4:40 pjn. The shopper’s specials will augment GT's regular commuter service — three trains from Pontiac to Detroit in the morning, and three back to Pontiac in the later afternoon. BIRMINGHAM — An exhibition of recent paintings by artist Thomas Kneff will open at Birmingham Gallery, 1025 Haynes, Friday. ★ ★ ★ The paintings are scenic studies of the northern Michigan countryside, where Kneff has lived since completing several years of study at Arts and Crafts Art School in Detroit. * * * The exhibition will open to the public with a reception for the artist and preview from 6-9 p.m. Paintings will remain on exhibition through Dec. 28. IThe gallery is open 'Tuesday through Saturday from 9:'30 a.m. to 6 p.m. and Friday evenings until 9. BLOOMFIELD HILLS — Because of the Thanksgiving holiday, Cranbrook Institute of Science will offer special demonstrations in both the planetarium and atomarium Friday. The special planetarium demonstration of “Comets and Meteors” is scheduled for 2:30 p.m. Regular shows are Wednesdays at 4 p.m. and Saturdays and Sundays at 2:30 and 3:30 p.m. The special atomarium program will be at 3:30 p.m. Regular demonstrations are Sundays at 3:30 p.m. City Will Form Stadium Authority NATIONAL WEATHER .S of the country tonight with the ( will fee snow flurries in Montana owers arc fniciasl lor the..soullieastern quarter (ccptioM of Klorida and oullicrii (ieorgia. There II will he rokler Ihroughouf most of t)le nation. !i Pontiac's attempts to land the much-sought stadium expected to be built for the Detroit Tigers and Detroit Lions took another step last night. City commissioners, following a recommendation of Mayor''William H. Taylor Jr., last night approved moves which will lead to a high-powered five-mfmber stadium-building authority. * * * And Taylor indicated that State Rep. Arthur D. Law, D-Pontiac, who previously had been a backer of the State Fairgrounds as a stadium site, is now in Pontiac’s corner. Commissioners authorized preparing documentation, with outside professipnal Itt'lp, for the stadium authority. 'I’he documentation should be ready Dec. 17, Taylor .said The mayor indicated the city would in the meantime find persons of “outstanding stature and ability” to .serve as the authority board. ' The board expectedly will be composed of some of the most influential and prestigious persons in the city^nd may have to carry the brunt of city efforts to land the stadium. The mayor said Pontiac’s proposal for a stadium on a 164-acre site at M59 and 1-75 has been well-received but indicated that it is important for the city to put forth maximum effort. Although a number of cities have been vying for the stadium selection, insiders have predicted that only Detroit stands a real chance of being selected eventully for stadium construction. Political considerations are expected to play an important part in any decision. Detroit Mayor Jerome P. Cavanagh is working diligently for selection of downtown site adjacent to the Detroit River. * ★ * It is generally recognized that a stadium would have a tremendous economic effect on any area where it would be built. * * it In a letter to Alfred R. Glancy Jr., a prominent Detroit realtor, a director of Community National Bank, a member of the State Fiar Authority, and the biggest booster of the State Fairgrounds site. Law said Pontiac offers the most logical location for a stadium. “It is my belief that our community will donate the needed land for this project,” he said. To discuss this idea further. Law suggested in his ietter a meeting with Taylor, E. Eugene Russell who is president of the Pontiac Area Chamber of Commerce, State Rep. William Hampton, and Harold Fitzgerald, chairman of the board of The Pontiac Press. Law said he believes that the City of Detroit actually will gain if the State Fairgrounds is moved. He said the fairgrounds could serve a much better purpose as! location of a housing porject for several thousand families, possible development of Wayne State University, or as an industrial park that would provide employment for tens of thousands of workers. THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. NOVEMBER 27, 1968 Irwin Fails in Attempt to Change PAPClf ByBOBWISLER City Commissioner Robert C. Irwin, a critic of the Pontijjc Area Planning Council since its inceptioa/ last night/ asked city commissioners to phange the nature of the PAPC. ^ Irwin, of District 2, revived an old charge that the PAPC is another layer of government responsible to no one, and recommended three steps to 5" City ,i Affairs^': Building Bids Are Rejected 'Costs Too High for Land-Fill Structure' bring it more in control of the City Ccnnmission and the board of education, the two bodies which formed the PAPC. f * ★ ★ The recbmm endations, delivered in the fortn of a motion, got nowhere, as all other commissioners failed to second the motion and the subject dismissed without any discussion. The criticism comes at a time when principal figures in the PAPC are wondering what the future role of the PAPC Because of unexpectedly high construction costs, city commissioners last night rejected bids for an equipment and personnel building for the city’s planned new sanitary land-fill operation on Collier Road. ^hree bids were received ranging from $467,008 t o Related ^tories. Page 'if-3 should be and also WMidering just how effective organization can hope to be. DELAY ASKED At the last meeting of the PAPC board of governors, the members voted overwhelmingly in favor of a recommendation that the school board delay decision on location of the school district’s planned super high school. The governors asked a 45-day delay pending a decision by the City Commission as to whether biyiLii I'M Gire a 17-JEWEL WATCH '"Vantage" it would become involved in federal program necessary for location of the new high school in a central city site. * * /* The school board voted four days later to place the new high school on the site of the Pontiac State Hospital. Following that decision, ters were sent to all PAPC governors calling for a special meeting — to be attended by City Commission and school board members — to be held tonight. David J. Doherty Junk-Car Ordinance Approved $493,653. The city’s consulting engineering firm, Jones & Henry Ltd. had previously estimated the building would cost $360,000. * * ★ Officials said they would readvertise in an attempt to get lower bids. In other action, the commission; • Authorized Directo Public Works Joseph E. Neip-ling to act for the city at a Dec. 9 hearing before the county drain commissioner plement an improvement project for the Clinton River. • Approved the lowest of four bidders, F. J. Siller and Co., for construction of “sludge line” under the Clinton River and connecting the city’ two sewage treatment plants, one at East Boulevard and Featherstone, the other Auburn and Opdyke. TO AFFIRM SELECTION Neipling said that selection of an engineering firm for a study of the Clinton River from Dawson Mill Pond to the downtown area, will be firmed at the drain < missioner’s hearing. The studies expectedly will lead to engineering plans for realignment and improvement of the Clinton River, necessary step for improvement of the city’s southwest section. Recurring floods from the swollen river continually plague the area. ' Clyde Christian, city engineer, said the sludge line is necessary to allow further treatment or incineration of polluted material taken from the city’s sewer collection system. A present line, which crosses over the river freezes during the winter, he said, making transmissions impossible. The low bid was $24,360. City commissioners overruled a strong objection from fellow Commissioner Robert C. Irwin, District 2, last night in approving a new ordinance designed mostly to deal with junk cars. The commission has been debating points of the ordinance for the last few weeks. * ★ ★ The ordinance prohibits any person, firm or corporation from storing, wrecking o r dismantling wrecked, disabled or inoperable motor vehicles or trailers or salvage material for a continuous 30-day period without first obtaining a license from the city clerk. City officials said the ordinance would be useful in cracking down on persons who keep junk cars in their yards for long periods. CALLED TOO RESTRICTIVE Irwin contended that the ordinance was too restrictive, that if strictly enforced it would prohibit anyone from repairing their car in more than a 30-day period, prevent, antique car restorers from pursuing their hobby and prevent a “person from storing scrap lumber which he might want to use to build a doghouse or house.” Irwin said the ordinance is the wrong approach to the problem of junk cars in that it invites selective enforcement. ‘It depends on whose ox is getting gored,” he said, stating that persons in favor with the law enforcers probably wouldn’ be prosecuted for violations while those out of favor would be prosecuted. Irwin also contended that the ordinance will p r o m o t squabbling and situations where neighbor! would attempt to have the law enforced against persons they were feuding with. 'ORD|NG DISCUSSED Director of Law Sherwin M. Birnkrant said the ordinance could be enforced to the point where “those who wanted to be oppressive about it” could prosecute antique car buffs and persons repairing cars in their yards. He said the wOTding of the ordinance had to b e that it could include a variety of persons for whom the law is hot intended. “Every other method we’ve tried in coping with this problem has met with opposition in court, Birnkrant said. Birnkrant called the situation “failure in the language.” Violations of the ordinance are subject to the maximum regular city penalty of up to $100 fine, or up to 90 days in jail, or both. PAPC project director, said the!what the PAPC should do, Irwin meeting was called to discuss said. ’ ; bel’''”'1*™* OF RESOLUTION MEETING CANCELED j The meeting was canceled, jtion to the study of problems however, when it was submitted to it by the City! determined that a number of Commission or school board. | members had made previous ' * Given the PAPC thei pl^s for tonight. responsibility of reporting find- There was no immediate m-jings back to the body which dication whether the meeting' ubmitted the problem to it. will be held after the holiday * * and before its regularly, • Kept the PAPC from giving scheduled meeting Dec. 12. jany information to news media * * * I about its activities or recom- Irwin said the P A P C” s mendations until the city com-j decision to “interject itself to the school-site selection was evidence that its.members considered themselves another element of government. ★ ★ ★ He said this might have befen expected because of the original charge given to tlip PAPC by the commission and school board. Now is the time to eliminate any mistakes about mission or school board had “ample time” to study the problem and recommendation. • Made it manditory that at] least three-fourths of all PAPCj governors would have to be| residents of the city or school district. Some 86 billion , passengers! are transported by air annually. I JESOSh The WORD Men’s and Women’s^ Famous 17-JEWEL ‘VANTAGE’ Watches MEN’S Model filAQ!; 17-iewel watch with leather €5 I Cr V .hock ^ ^ WOMEN’S Model 17-jewel watch . _ . band. Water and shock watches. Calendars-Autos. —Nurses’-$15.95 to $39.! ! NEED HELP? USE A PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED AD. LOW IN COST. FAST IN ACTION. PHON'E 332-8181. Meeting Dates Are Changed City commissioners, in ticipation of impending holidays — and even perhaps in a holiday mood — last night changed three December City Commission meetings. The commission normally meets on Tuesdays at 8 p.m. The last two meetings in December under this schedule would fall on Dec. 24, Christmas Eve, and Dec. 31, New Year’s Eve. ★ ★ ★ The commission voted to change the meetings to Dec. 23, Monday, at 5 p.m., and Dec. 30, a Monday at 8 p.m. They also voted to cancel the meeting that would be held Dec. 10 because all seven com^ missioners will be attending the yearly meeting of the National Congress of Cities, which runs from Dec. 7-11 in New Orleans, La. “Look and see” CHRISTMAS SUGGESTIONS from Hudson’s Optical Department • Binoculars • Opera glasses • Sunglasses • Magnifiers • Spectacle Bands KC XJ ID S O 3Sr ’ s One of the many hats of Consumers Power COHTIHUm PROGRESS Down-Under at a Consumers Power regulator station, underground agents are at work. Agents of progre.ss. Adjusting tlie pipeline pressure to feed natural gas into your home, they are helping to make sure we meet your nced.s for gas, day in and day out. . ' Unciergrotmd and aboveground, Consumers Power people are working to give you efficient, safe service texlay and to provide for increasing service in the future. Our olderpipelines are continually cheeked and double-checked for safety. Within the next three years, we will clean, inspect and retest almost 525 miles of transmission pipelines. To meet growing demand, we are planning to increase our gas supplies by 70 percent in the neact live years. Last year alone. Consumers Power .spent .$40-milliori for new construction and improvemciit.s of natural gas facilities. Consumer.s Power people aic at work, to help you enjoy the gO(xi pas lile. Because at C onsumers Power, continuing progress is more than just a slogan. Consumers Power «I mship $200 Per Fire Alarm OXFORD — Village officials will bill Oxford Township at the rate of $200 a fire call despite township objections. The village Council last night set t)« rate despite a report from Manager Robert Smalley which included township objections to being charged for 50 per cent of the Village police dispatchers also serve as fire dispatchers. The 50 per cent is included in the $200 figure. * * ★ The council also voted to open negotiations with Addison Township over the use of a fire dispatcher. Oxford Police Department currently accepts Addison Township fire calls and has in the past charged $10 a month for the service. It was manager Smalley’s last meeting. On Monday he assumes duties as assistant city manager at Rochester. No successor has been yet named. CHARTER COMMISSION Before leaving Smallej/ advised council members to seek candidates for a charter comrnission to be elected Feb. 11 at the' same time residents vote on incorporation. TTie village proposes to incorporate itself and four square miles of township land into a city on that date. Only if the election passes would the charter commission members take office. * ★ ★ The annual Chamber of Commerce Christmas parade was announced for Saturday, and the village voted to assume the responsibility for maintaining a skating rink at Daniel Axford School. Informer Has Gun Permit Revoked 300 Teachers Attend Adventists' Confab HOLLY — Over 300 teachers are attending the Lake Union Quadrennial Intermediate and Secondary Teachers’ Convention at Adelphian Academy sponsored by the Seventh-day Adventists. The three-daiy conference which started Sunday has attracted Adventist schoolteachers from all over Michigan, Illinois, Indiana and Wisconsin. These states comprise the Lake Union Conference of Adventists’ schools. NEW CHAMF’ION - Carvn Everly. winner of the Ilol!y>Davi.sbiirg Junior Miss competition, accepts a victory bouquet frrnm "her predcccs.sor, Kathryn Sue MacKinscy, I . TROY — What was perhaps the shortest-lived gun permit in Oakland County history was revoked yesterday. The permit was withdrawn by the Oakland County Gun Board just four days after it had been issued to alleged Mafia member Peter Lazar os, who reportedly is providing Michigan State Police with information concerning payoffs to politicians in Oakland, Macomb and Wayne counties. Thomas G. Plunkett, chief assistant Oakland County prosecutor, said the permit was revoked at the request of State Police Director Frederick E. Davids. The request overruled State Police intelligence agents, who had requested that Lazaros be permitted to carry a gun for his own protection. MORE GUARDS EYED “Col. Davids said he is now prepared to send as many men as necessary to guard Lazaros so that it will not be necessary for him to have a weapon on his person,” Plunkett said. The chief assistant prosecutor added that Lazaros voluntarily surrendered the permit to State Police after they indicated they would increase the guard for him and his family. ★ ★ ★ Davids’ top aide, Lt. Col. Melvin Kaufman, said Lazaros’ past criminal record had nothing to do with the decision. He said Davids acted immediately upon learning Lazaros had been issued the permit. In othep fevents yesterday, it was reported that Lazaros is putting his home at 2410 Dalesford up for sale and that he may be considering a change in attorneys. RECENTLY FREED The 34-year-old Lazaros was freed recently from Jackson State Prison on the order of a U.S. District Court judge, who granted him a new trial on a 1962 conviction of fraud. Lazaros and three others were charged with arranging loans for nonexistent furniture and appliances and pocketing the money. ★ ★ * Days before he was released,, Lazaros wife Delores, 34, accused another reputed Mafia figure, Joseph Barbara Jr. of Warren, of extortion and rape. Barbara, 32, was subsequently charged with both offenses by the Oakland County Prosecutor’s Office, and last week was bound over to Circuit Court to stand trial on the extortion charge. He still faces a preliminary hearing on the rape charge. TWO FRAUD CHARGES Lazaros, in addition to standing trial on the 1962 case, still faces two charges of fraud brought against him by the Pratt-Thorburn grand jury in August 1967. Plunkett said the setting aside of tazaros’ convictiop and the ordering of a new trial removed the fraud conviction from his police record. Troy Police Chief Forrest Fisher, who approved the gun permit request, said the only thing now outstanding on Lazaros’ police record is “a misdemeanor several years ago.” Michigan law bars felons from receiving a gun permit for eight years after their conviction. Official Spurns Raise-for Now OXFORD — The bo^rd of education had the novel experiehce last night of offering its superintendent a pay raise of nearly $3,000 and having it refused — at least for the time being. Supt. Roger Oberg, offered a salary increase from his present $17,600 to $20,240 retroactive to July 1, deferred in favor of learning more about annuities available to administrators. He also promised to hire an assistant superintendent by the first of the year. ★ ★ ★ ’The board ratified the contract with custodians and bus drivers granting them nearly 30 cent an hour increase to scales of $2.76 to $3 and $2.70 to $3, respectively. Also ratified was the contract with teacher aides providing five to 15 cent increases for a pay scale of $1.55 to $1.75 an hour. Permission was given to the senior class to go to Bermuda in January for the annual senior trip. Students must poll themselves to learn if enough will be going to make the trip feasible. Oxford students have traditionally earned their own fares. The board also went on record as opposing the extended class days and class year reconunended by the State Department of Education. Considerable discussion was giveh the problem of class overloads. THE PONTIAC PRESS WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 1968 A—4 heaNsws Step Toward New Bond Issue Vote Holly School Study in Works HOLLY — The board of education has taken another step toVard a new bond issue for a building program for this overcrowded school district. The Ann Arbor architectural firm of Lane, Riebe and Weiland was recently appointed by the board to study possibilities for new schools and make cost estimates. 'The schools — particularly on the elementary level — have been extremely overcrowded due to an unexpectedly high increase in enrollment this fall. Schools Supt. Russell Haddon estimates there is a shortage of at least six classrooms. A $5,175,000 bond issue, for con- NEW LIFE — This 19th century residence at 325 S. Woodward, Birmingham once faced demolition. Now it serves as an office building for two shops, a photography studio and an interior design office. Victorian Home Revamped to Serve Five Businesses BIRMINGHAM — Two young entrepreneurs have made the city’s old Masonic Temple at 325 S. Woodward look anything but 100 years old. Tbe former residence, which served as the Masonic Temple for 35 years has been renovated by F. Noland Reynolds, a commercial photografrfier, and Mrs. Geraldine Patria, whose management firm owns the building. They reconstructed the 19th century refuge complete with its original Victorian splendor and charm. They began last March to put their idea of “doing something for the building and for Birmingham which we can all enjoy” to work. 'The landmark structure, which most recently housed a real estate firm, had deteriorated to a point where serious consideration was given to leveling the building. “It was our intention to preserve as much as possible the dignity and graciousness of the old house,” Mrs. Patria said. “It was almost impossible to begin without the original floor plans but we started by substituting imagination for any real plans, and the designing just progressed along,” she said. The actual reconstruction of the building in downtown Birmingham began during the summer. A brick porch in the front of the building was removed and the dining room windows were eliminated because they were out of scale with the rest of the house. Tbe wiginal house has been painted a cream color, while an addition at the rear is brown. Lamp posts,' a wrought iron fence and a ten-car parking plazq will be added outside. * * * The building houses Reynolds’ photograiJiic studio. Jack Bazell A.I.D. interior design, the Needlepoint Shop and the Little Old Wigmaker Shop. Radio Unit Members Give Up Thanksgiving to Help Save Lives Members of jthe Oa^d County React organization, a wizen? band radio group, will givfe/up their Thanksgiving holiday in hopes of saving lives. They will sp/4, and Occidental Vs. PACES MOTORS The firmer motors were paced by Chrysler which gained 14. General Motors and American Motors rose % Apiece. In the mixed electronics, Lit-n rose 14 and RCA V*. However, Westinghouse gave up 14. Sperry Rand and Scientific Data, meanwhile, held changed, Fairdtild Cam jumped IVs. Aiid National Cash Register 214. ★ ★ ★ Du Pont lost a point in the chemicals, with Eastman Kodak off %. Steel fell ■ Republic added 14. Bethlehem gained 14. At least 37 of 116 candidates for major offices in Oakland County face possible prosecution for failing to submit an accounting of campaign expenses Nov. 5 election. Those who teve not filed expense accounts to date include congressional, state representative, county, county supervisor and district judge candidates. The New York Stock Exchange RAWALPINDI, Pakist (AP) — Several hundred rioting students attacked the American Center in Peshawar today, leaving it a shambles, reliable sources reported. The mob reportedly stormed through the centef- housing the Information agency brary, breaking windows and destroying books and typewrit- The deadline for filing the reports was Monday. According to county election officials, violation of thd state election law could lead to two years in prison, a $1,000 fine or both. One Pakistani employe was badly cut about the face as he tried to pull down an iron grill over the front windows, one source said. About 1,000 students through the main street of Peshawar in an antigovernment demonstration. POLICE MOVE IN A group of several hundred turned down ..^a side street to the American Cenfter and began stoning it. Police moved in and arrested four persons, the director of the center, Donald Horan, said. The rest of the crowd continued to mill around. ★ * * The center was last attacked during the Ar^Israeli War June, 1967. Peshawar is also the site of a 37 Candidates File No Report dates seeking reelection. Rec-j campaign committee has not yet ords show in the 19th Ehstrietj submitted an accounting. Congressman Jack McDonald SPENT $2 020 and his campaign committees I ' . spent $11,271, while in the 18th District, Congressman William S. Broomfield spent $13,050. I at $2,020. His Democratic op- Neither of their Democratic McPherson has ponents have submitted expense "” '' reports, according to the county, ★ ★ * election office expense filings show that Expense accounts have been “"Sf’ Dohany, victorious in filed either by committees or treasurer, candidates for most all of the P^‘^ $2,277 in campaign nnnntv nffiz-oo funds, while James E. Seeterlm i, ^ !«*nd his committee spent nearly Lynn D. Allen, winner of the^^*’**^' countv clerk’s post, spent $672 ' Long-time drajn commissioner In 'the race for prosecutor Barry expended $1.- Richard D. Kuhn and his com-'®t0 to gain reelection, while bis HEAVY EXPENSES mittee spent about $r„50O in los- °PP"ne"t Democratic Robert M. As could be expected, some of ing to Thomas G. Plunkett. Only spent $395. the heaviest expenses were in-1 Plunkett’s personal expenses to-1 * * ★ curred by congressional candi-jtaling $160 have been filed. His’ following is an accounting reported by candidates or their committees for state representative: 60th District — Rep. I Clifford H. Smart, $ 1,684; ! William E. Todd; $142; 61st I District — Rep. Loren D. I Anderson, $5,637; Donald L. [Collier, ^4: 62nd District — Rep Arthur J Law. $3,234; Howard L. Dell, $2,062 ; 63rd : District — Rep. Donald E. Bishop, $2,717; Ronald S. Knowles, $1,797 ; 64th District --Rep. Raymond L. Baker, $943; 65th District — Rep. William T. Hampton. $181; Harry J . McGowan Jr , $6: 66th District Rep. Bill S. Huffman, $5,081. APPEALS COURT RACE Citing neighborhood op-,Angus Campbell. He identified! Expenditures reported by S. position, Pontiac city com-| himself as the executor of the!Jerome Bronson in his suc-missioners last night rejected a [estate of Frank Casper. cessful bid for a seat on the request for a transfer of a Classl Since Casper died. Campbell: Michigan Appeals Court totaled C liquor license to District 4. [said, he has been trying unsuc-j$7,395. His opponent, John F. District 4 Commissioner Jack cessfully to sell the Casper’s Foley, spent $10,969. airhac z.iahii°”“8las said his district isjbar license. He said the pro-j pontiac. Municipal Judge U.S. airbase Iwated about e^tigiready j^aded with bars, and Posed sale to Slaybaugh was the Cecil McCallum paid out $1,517 Commissioii Rejects Bar-License Transfer miles from the library. The base is to be closed next July after a 10-year agreement expires. 3rd STRAIGHT DAY Student demonstrations against President Mohammed Ayub Khan continued for the third straight day in Rawalpindi today, with roving gangs of youths stoning buses. Nearly 20,000 student marched through the capital Tuesday in the largest antigovernment demonstration since Ayub Khan seised \^wer 10 years ago. The government announced that schools ^nd col-!ges in the-ar«a-wetira remain losed indefinitely. ★ * ★ The schools were to have opened Tuesday after being closed for 18 days because of student riots in which at least three youths were killed. The government two weeks ago arrested former Foreign Minister Bhutto and a number of other leading political opponents, accusing them of responsibility for the riots. Since then antigonfernment demonstrations have sj(read across West Pakistan. the people in the area don’t want another one. He produced as evidence petitions from 144 signers objecting to the proposed transfer. District 7 Commissioner! ^ , James H. Marshall said he OH K^G/TIGlOriGS Business Federation Renames City Man Pontiac businessman, Francis F. Miller, has been reappointed district chairman of the National Federation of Independent Business, Inc. for the 13th year. Miller of 9889 Coledale, White Lake Township, is executive vice president and general manager of the Pontiac Credit Bureau, 333 N. Perry. * ♦ * As district chairman. Miller tabulates survey opinions of local owners and operators of a 11 businesses concerning legislation. He also advises congressmen and senators of the local viewpoints. WJONES AVERAGES last hope. Ill have m tell the;Qpg qj district heir the house he is living in iS|jQ(}geshipg decided in the elec-going to be forclosed,” he said, oy^g^ district judge ‘ONCE WORTH MORE’ jpost went to James R. Stelt who Campbell said the license at reported expenditures totaling * one time was worth $35,000 but^-2‘*2 v Restaurant owner F r a n k,he accepted Slaybaugh’s $12,000j * # * Slaybaugh had requested the'offer. In winning the district judge transfer of the bar license from Campbell said the estate;post in Waterford Township, the defunct Casper’s bar at 374j consists of the liquor license! Kenneth H, Hempstead spent Franklin Road to his business.land fixtures but the estate owes!$5,005. Frank’s Drive-in, at 22 W.'$g,000 in taxes to the federal' Bloomfield Township Ju.stice Montcalm. government and thousands of of the Peace Alice Gilbert won Slaybaugh indicated he would dollars in city taxes. one of two district judgeships in change the name of the ★ ★ ♦ theBi rmingham-Bloomfield restaurant to S 1 a y b a u g h ’ s| whatever would be left would;® $7,264. Carl Restaurant and Lounge and |go to Frapk’s heir, his brother, ^ change the nature of theijoe, who Campbell said is commissioner won business. ihopeless cripple, stricken by^^e other twst. He reported ex^ DEPARTMENTS APPROVED |arthritis, unable to walk to penses totaling $1,739. His request was approved by["'°''*^ city departments investigating' Are Named “'''•311131^6(1 Douglas in defeating t h e ^ ‘ transfer. Only Disitrict 2 Com-, missioner Rotert C: Irwin voted J for the transfer. d fo Archaic Unit for J0it MiSSillQ didn’t want any more bars inj the city anywhere, and District! The Pontiac C e rt SAN FRANCISCO (API -Black Panther Eldridge Cleaver has a date with his parole offi- Commissioner Wesley J. Wood, „®| e sjeer to be returned to prison,- but voiced general assent to this h^story^ friends gay he cannot be fo^^^ objection. Both have taken stand; against bars in general before. * * ★ Slaybaugh has been at- been almost as dead as its! j^is wife, Kathleen, said Tues-charges, but last night city;(jgy Qeayer should resist return commissioners gave it new lifej-‘by any means necessary.” by appointing a completely newj ^gs due to surrender to h’ive city officials were ap- the parole officer today. s,»,en,e„, came oar license, repeaieaiy asKuig comply' u.^iv ;zftpr irs «;iinrpmp repeatedly’turned him down. cording to CHy MLagerjoseph ^ denied a claim that the Slaybaugh said last night the'a wafren ^ ^ Joseph militant s parole had commission led him to believe ♦ # ★ revoked becau.se of his po- that since a new bar license r r . lilical beliefs, was out. a transfer of an ex-[ '''arreii .said, the p.^ROLED IN 1966 istfng license would be all right. ^.°"'’"’'®^“^”^bould initiate ac- (■ •,, , , atipmDted miir ® tion in the State legislature to ‘ onvicted of attcmpiea mur- IRWIN EXPLAINS STAND | i^jp tbe law and give proper Angeles in 1958, Irwin said' the commission'burial to the cemeteries board ^’leaver had bt>en paroled in certainly did imply to it.self. but was returned behind Slaybaugh in previous meetings Named to the new board were bars after a sh(X)t-out with po-that it would seriously consider City Manager Joseph A War- hce in which a man was killed transfer of a Class C license, ren. Finance Director Edward in the east bay area last April. Whether we like bars or we Gallagher, Deputy Director of| a- ★ * don’t like bars, it’s still a legal Law TTiomas Tucker. City Clerk A .Solano County judge ruled business,” he said. ;OIga Barkeley and Personnel that Cleaver was being held on Mrs. Robert Anderson of 59 Director Nicholas Santiwan. political grounds and ordered Hudson told the comtnission ONLY CITY COVERED his irelease, but this decision that bars in District 4 were \ a u u waK.jJvt’rturned by the Califor- creating nuisances. ‘ I really' feel our community can t stand . Marshall’s ruling much more. ’ The cemeteries board, which „ supposedly was created er.see the activities of the City s two cemeteries, is called ★ ★ ★ 350.10+2 o8| Qug serious casualty of IheFriends have been staging a 63 5t1“!‘*‘-reision is the present license |g ® annlies onlv to Pontiac and °“bside Cleaver’s house m holder’s brother and only lieir, nobodv^remembers why was Francisco, but he faded to fln-Lrt'fto 1 thp pnmn1i«i**?3‘j!the Sylvan Lake government to few- can remember the last one i» 4 f use the site but exclu4es private or what happened there since ^ jjcommercial collectors, members stopped keeping 143 0 317 2, Officials said it was a con- minutes of the meetings more 135 1 2w;i|tinuation of a long-standing year.k ago. than anyone cares to i36!5 wiiaKreejnent. 'guess. i Fla., in early December. He will duscuss “interstate exchanging cap solve clients’ real estate problems.” He also will attend a special workshop preceding the Fort Lauderdale meeting in Jamaica. . ■ >