The Weather Flurries, Colder THE PONTIAC PRESS ONE COLOR Home Edition VOL. 125 — NO. 15 ★ ★ ★ New Mexico Governor Puts Romney Hat in '68 Ring ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. OPi _ New Mexico Gov. David F. Cargo has thrown the hat of Michigan Gov. George Romney into the political ring as a Republican presidential candidate. rival, Romney said he sttU has not made a decision on Us plans for 1968 and many factors remain to be considered. Romney arrived in New Mexico yesterday on a Western states swing to speak at a Republican victory dinner in Albuquerque. Cat^ was asked about his earlier remarks at the news conference after Romney said a decisim still had not been made. Cargo, asked if he was backing Romney for the nomination, said he felt it was too early to say. “Re’s my kind of Republican. He’s ‘electable,’ ” Cargo said. tile tools and the resources of federal and local governments,” he said, “they need tiie help of state governments, private enterprise, voluntary associations, and the personal effort of respmisible Americans. “In addition, over-reliance on federal declslon-makiug has undercut die vitality of state and local governments In dealing with these urban problems.” steal Act to populate the West with free aqd independent farmers. Now it is time to apply that proven principle in our cities,” Romney said. At a news conference after his ar- “I say he’s a candidate, how’s that?” Cargo said. In his speech, Romney hit at the Democratic administration’s handling of prc^lems of urban areas. “Our urban areas today need not only CURRENT POUCIES “That’s where the current national administration and its policies have particularly failed,” Romney said. Romney said the direct involvement of state governments is needed in assisting large urban centers to resolve intergovernmental problems. “A century ago, Lincoln and our Republican party gave America the Home- After addressing a joint session of the Arizona Legislature and touring a housing project for the elderly near Mesa today, the Romney party is to fly to Detroit tonight, ending his week - long political tour. 45,000 U. S. Troops Try to Ring Cong WAR ZONE C, Vietnam (AP) - U.S. forces have unleashed the greatest ground-air assault of the Vietnam war. They hurled some 45,000 men into a vast encirclement of the Vietcong’s national headquarters and main base near the Cambodian border. The drive, ranging 50 to 75 miles northwest of Saigon, began yesterday with the first American combat parachute jump of the war, a drop of about 750 paratroopers into blocking positions behind the enemy lines and barely three miles from Cambodia. The lightning assaults of paratroops, helicopter-borne infantry and foot soldiers had most units in their a; areas within a matter of hours. IDLING TIME—Half-finished cars line the stilled Pontiac e i Motor Division’s final assembly plant. Assembly operations cause of a parts shortage caused by a strike at the Fisher were stopped and some S,000 worWs laid off yesterday be- B^y Plant at Mansfield, Ohio. Aufo Workers Await Strike End Some 8,300 local auto workers were still at home today, although leaders of the wildcat strike at -an Ohio Fisher Body plant were to issue a plea this a f t e r n 0 0 n to end the walkout which forced the layoff by city plants. Under orders from the president and executive board of the United Auto Workers to put down the rebellion, leaders of the striking local were to urge a return to work. were furloughed from assembly operations at the Fisher Body plant. out by the beginning of the afternoon However, even if the plea is answered at the Mansfield, Ohio, plant, it still may be a few days before local workers are called back, according to General Motors Corp. spokesmen. The orders to put down the strike came from UAW President Walter P. Reuther and his 26-member executive board in a showdown meeting at Detroit last night. Robert Hall, president of Mansfield Local 549, promis^ to follow the orders. Hall called a membership meeting and UAW executives said they anticipated an end to the seven-day wildcat walk- With 133,500 idled in 57 plants across the country, GM said it would get factories back in production as quickly as possible. Reuther and his board threatened to take over Local 549, whose 2,700 members in the key supplier plant refused telegraphed orders Tuesday to end the strike which now spans eight days. The Pontiac area workers affected are among more than half of General Motors 240,000 employes laid off because of the parts shortage created by the strike. . ★ * * Acceptable Plan Being Formed for Policing of N-Arms Treaty Assembly line operations at the two GM plants in Pontiac affected by the strike will resume normal schedules as soon as parts are received from the Mansfield plant according to a GM spokesman. NO IMMEDIATE CHANGE There will be no immediale change In current layoffs until then, the spokesman added. Some 5,000 area workers have been temporarily idled at the Pontiac Motor Division plant whilO an estimated 3,300 GENEVA (AP) — Britain’s disarmament minister said today that efforts are being made to work out a way of policing a treaty to stop the spread of nuclear weapons ttat would be acceptable to both the Soviet Union and West Germany. “A French veto over the arrangements we have in'mind simply would not apply,” Lord C]lhalfont told a news conference after today’s session of the 17-nation disarmament conference, which is trying to hammer out such a treaty. being discussed, but his remarks indicated that Euratcan safeguards would be combined with those of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) in which the Soviets participate. One difficulty in the negotiation is that the United States and Britain consider safeguards indispensable, while the Soviets do not seem to care whether there are any or not. In Today's Press Male Invasion Press reporter enters sanctum sanctorum of women — a beauty shop — PAGE B-1. Libel Judgment AP seeks reversal of $500,000 award to ex-general — PAGE C-7. Area News ..................A4 Astrology ................ 012 Bridge ..........^.........C-12 Crossword Pnzzle..........D-11 Comics .................. 012 Editorials................ A-6 Food Section ........C-lO-C-11 Markets .................. D-3 Obitaaries ................ D4 Sports ..................01-05 Theaters ................. D-2 TV-Radio Programs .......D-U Wilson, Eari...............D-U The West Germans want safeguards handled by the six-nation European Atomic Energy Association (Euratom) in which the French have a veto. The Soviets consider safeguards by Euratom ineffective. Chalfont told the disarmament conference earlier that there were no grounds for the claims of West Germany and other countries that the proposed treaty woidd deprive them of nuclear knowledge for peaceful industrial developments. Lord C!halfont said the Soviets had not excluded all participation by Euratom in the policing of peaceful nuclear development. He would not describe the compromise He insisted, however, that peaceful nuclear explosions should be covered by the treaty. “A device which moves a million tons of earth to dig a canal or create an oil deposit can just as well pulverize a city of one million people,” he said. “The only missing ingredient is the delivery system, which is easy to provide.” State Senate OKs Time Bii LANSING (iB—The Senate today passed a biU which would exempt Michig^ from a federal law requiring use of daylight having time for six nwnths of the year. ^The bill, sponsw^ by Sen. Basil Brown, D-Highland Park, passed, 24-11, witii no discussion, but was not given immediate effect. “I think this, of all the bills I’ve ever seen in the Legislature, should reflect the smitiments of each member’s district,” Waldron said. REDUCING TO FOUR Brown made a motion that it be given immediate effect, but withdrew his motion after Senate Majority Leader Emil Lockwood, R-St. Louis, urged such action wait until the bill retnmed from the House Speaker Robert WaWrem, R-Grosse Pointe, said be personally op-poased the time MU but would not ide House Republicans to vote against it The administrative unit of the Catholic Church in southeastern Michigan presently is operating a program for some 650 youngsters in Detroit in conjunction with the Total Action Against Poverty program, McNeely said. McNeely said the willingness of the archdiocese to help does not rule put the possibility that Pontiac schools might still conduct the program if differences can be resolved. Trains Block Morning Traffic Pontiac police this morning received at least four complaints that rush-hour traffic on West Huron and Wide ’Track had been held up for some 20 minutes by Grand Trunk Western Railroad trains. Traffic at one point was reportedly backed nearly onei mile west to Ottawa Drive. The Senate also passpd, 35-0, a measure reducing from five to four the number of Administrative Board members necessary for a quorum. However, the bill was amended to forbid deputies or representatives of the six Ad Board members from voting in their places. Tbe time measure, removing Michigan from the provisions of the federal Uniform Time Act requiring states to go c«i day^t saving time in April, was q>-posM by several Democrats in debate Sgt. Herbert C. Cooley said the reports came in about 8 a.m. Cooley said all four individuals declined to sign a formal complaint. Pontiac terminal trainmaster John D. Schilling could not be reached for comment. The clear skies over the wide combat zone were crisscrossed with helicopters, transports, jet fighters and observation planes, operating in what one officer called fantastic coordination. On the heels of the paratroops, helicopter-lifted soldiers fanned out in land-zones on the flanks, creating a bristling arc of y.S. firepower on the northern part of War Zone C in Tay Ninh Province, northwest of Saigon. Powerful columns of tanks, armored personnel carriers and infantry moved up from the south and around the flanks to complete a loose encirclement of the area where U.S. forces hoped to trap the political leadership of the Vietcong. dicated Vietcong resistance to the first assault was confined to sniper fire, booby traps and mines. The new drive, though launched yesterday, was not officially disclosed until today for security reasons. Three U.S. tank-bulldozers moving into the jungle had their tracks blown off by mines but U.S. officers said there were Initial reports from the battlefield in- no casualties. Some assault units reported a handful of casualties from snipers. From the air, the vast area was a fantastic scene of crisscrossing aircraft, billowing smoke from the ground, lush jungles dotted with colored parachutes and assault companies in olive drab uniforms hacking forward on tiie ground. Catholics Offer OCCEOHelpon City Head Start 'The Catholic Archdiocese of Detroit has offered to aid the Oakland County Commission on Economic Opportunity. (OCCEO) in launching a Pontiac Head Start program, James M. McNeely,, OCCEO executive director, said yesterday. Scheduled to begin last September, the program for 320 preschoolers has not yet begun due to a deadlock between the Pontiac Board of Education and OCCEO over relative rights and responsibilities. A month ago, the OCCEO voted to bypass the school system, which it termed “very uncooperative,” and launch the program itself. McNeely said yesterday the archdiocese has definitely indicated a willingness to become operating agent for the Head Start program. $300,000 NEED Total fuiriing of $300,000 would be LAUNCH OFFENSIVE — U. S. paratroopers fill the air as they parachute from planes today in America’s biggest offensive of the Vietnam war. Some 45,000 troops were deployed in a vast encirclement of the Vietcong’s national headquarters and main base near the Cambodian border. needed for a year-long Head Start program in Pontiac beginning in June, according to McNeely. “A federal grant of $240,000 will be sought and the remaining $60,000 must be in local funding,” he said. Death of Figure in JFK Plot' Rued NEW ORLEANS, La. OP) - Dist. Atty. Jim Garrison hinted today that freelance pilot Davis W. Ferrie carried to his grave some secrets. about President John F. Kennedy’s assassina-tion. Ferrie, 48, who described himself as a I psychologist and private J detective as well as a flyer, was found dead in his bed yesterday. Garrison, the 6-foot-6 gun - toting prosecutor, called the death “apparent suicide.” commission finished its work —■ has created an international sensation. “We felt that he was really now ready to talk candidly, to contribute to this important investigation,” said Garrison. “Now he’s gone and it will be much harder to make the connections between certain people. But I’m sure we’ll make them anyway. Up to Three Inches of Snow Forecast The coroner. Dr. Nicholas Chetta, said tests were not complete but death seemed due to a massive brain hemorrhage, with no sign of suicide except a City ordinance 1275 provides for up to $100 fine and 90 days in jail for railroad personnel convicted of obstructing crossings for more than five minutes at one time. * Stories, Page A-11; Picture, Page B-4 Ah additional one to three inches of light snow is predicted for late afternoon or early evening, according to the U. S. Weather Bureau. Temperatures reaching a high of 35 yesterday will dip from zero to 8 above tonight. Windy, curious, unsigned, undated note saying death was a “Sweet prospect.” Ferrie was oq the brink of producing information that could have been important, said Garrison, whose assassination probe — started long after the Warren to flurries is the forecast for tonight and tomorrow with temperatures reaching a high of 8 to 15. The outlook for Saturday is continued cold with a chance of snow flurries. Ten above was ti»e Ipw temperatdre In downtown Pmtiac preiceding 8 ajn. The mercury had edged to 20 by 2 p.m. 4 - A—2 Vi; " ■ . ■ C- v/ ■ '' THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 23. 1967 Last Week's Deaths in Vietnam Highest Since Fall of 1965 SAIGON (AP) - More American and Communist troops killed in battle in Vietnam last week than in any week since the bloody battle of the la Drang Valley in November 1965, tiie U.S. Command disclosed t^ay. U.S. headquarters said 172 Americans were killed and 802 were wounded, compared with 107 killed and 1,015 wounded the we^ before. A total of 2,029 the enemy were reported killed, nearly twice the 1,085 reported the previous week. ■nie largest number of American and Communist dead in the war so far was reported in the week of Nov. 14-20, 1965. There were 240 Americans killed 2,262 Commumsts, most of them in the bloody valley in the central highlands. TTie South Vietnamese command reported 110 of its men were killed last week and were missing, compared with 193 killed and 53 missing the week before. AliJED TOLL Casualties of other allied fwces also jumped, to 40 dead and 76 wounded. The week before nine dead and 33 wounded had been reported. The casualty figures reflected a sharp increase in fighting across &e country, and particularly in the central coastal lowlands where South Korean and U.S. forces fought hard battles. The casualty report raised the number of Americans killed In combat in the war to 7,525 by unofficial tabulation and the wounded to 43,536. ♦ ★ ★ The U.S. command has reported an increase of 2,000 in U.S. forces in Vietnam during the week, raising the total to 414,-000. Other allied and enemy strength was unchanged from the week before, the American command said. Four Arrested After School Is Broken Into four suspected burglars were roiided up by Oakland County shaiff’s deputies, state and Rochester police early today following a break-in at Avondale High Sdiool. Billy R. Slone, 21, and Jerome F. SulUvan, 21, both of Oetrdt, andMbinthers Ronald J. Ball, 22, of Itochester and Thomas D. Ball, io, of Highland Park, are held at the Oakland County JaU. Sheriff’s Sgt. Pan! Carpenter said the school, at 1435 W. ABbam, Avon Township, was snrronnded abont 4:15 a.m. after a report of a in progress. Slone was found hiding behind a bush near a broken window at the rear of the school and Ronald Ball was captured inside the building, deputies said. Sullivan, and Thomas Ball were found ina car parked nearby. Investigators said Avondale Teachers Credit Union checks totaling some $4,860 were found in Slcme’s possession. New Car Sales Still in Slump 10-Day Period Drops 21.4 Pet. From '66 DETROIT (AP)-The nation’ auto makers report they sold 21.4 per cent fewer cars in the middle 10 days of this month than during the same period of 1966. And General Motors, Ford and Chrysler suffered a sales lapse in the Feb. 11-20 period from the first 10 days of the month. Only American Motors Corp. sold more cars in the middle of the month than during the first 01 month than during the first 10 days. * ★ ★ The industry slump, reported ednesday, came on the heels of a 20.6 per cent decline for the Feb. 1-10 period, compared with the same span last year. .. Preliminary figures showed new car sales totaled 162,688 in the Feb. 11-20 period, a decline of 44,247 cars from the 206,935 put in the hands of customers in the comparable period last year. ★ ★ ★ American Motors, which two days ago slashed prices of its Rambler American series by $154 to $234, said its dealers delivered 4,621 autos in the Feb. 11-20^ span. This was compared with 4,425 in the first 10 days of the month, but it fell short of the 6,344 sold in Feb. 11-20 of 1966. General Motors Corp., which has laid off workers because of a seven-day strike at its Mansfield, Ohio, plant, announced sales of 83,497 passenger cars. That total was down from the 105,757 for the same period last year. ★ * * Chrysler Corp. reported a, 13 per cent decline, falling to 29,-462 cars from 34,008 in 1966. Ford Motor Co. said its sales were down to 45,108 from the 60,826 of last year. Every 10-day period thus far in 1967 has run behind corresponding days of 1966. Last year, sales totals were second only the record tallies of 1965. The Weather 5 Are Charged in Break-Ins Three Attended OU, Two Are Ex-Students Three Oakland University shi-(tents and two f(Hmer students at the university face burglary and larceny charges following their arrests this week. Derrick Jacewicz, 18, of Mt. Clemens; Michael Giordano, 23, of 3951 Bernet, Milford Town-and Bernard Cohen, 19, of Detroit were apprehended by Oakland County sheriff's deputies. Jacewicz and Giordano face preliminary examination on charges of breaking and entering Will Rogers Elementary School, 2600 Dexter, Pontiac Township. Detective Alphonse Anderson said some $500 worth of musical instruments and typewriters taken from the school were recovered following apprehension of the two suspects. ★ ★ ★ Cohen waived examination on a charge of larceny from building stemming from alleged entry into a building on the OU campus and theft from a cigarette madiine. ‘CAUGHT IN SCHOOL’ Joseph Nowaske, 18, of Detroit and Michael Kennedy, 20, of 171 Mohawk were arrested by Harper Woods police. Investigators in that city said the two are charged with breaking and entering. Police said they were caught inside a schodl building. Nowaske, Jacewicz and Cohen were OU students when arrested, detectives slid. Giordano and Kennedy were formerly enrolled at the university. BLOOMFIELD HILLS - A conflict between ihe Blomnfield and Avondale school diidricts over property will go to Oakland County Intermediate School Ms-trict officials for a ruling. At issue is a land^trade nol favored by Bloomfield. Last year, the district acquired a 29,5 - acre parcel southwest of 1-75 and South Boulevard for a school from a private owner. The area was in the Avondale district but became part of the tempt to finish the j(d> early. Bloomfield district under state gj^j^gtations were law. However, Avondale asked compensation for lost tax revenues and was offered about $3,000. ★ ' ★ ★ This offer was rejected and, instead, Avondale is asking for a 81.6-acre parcel nortti of 1-75 and west of Adams in Bloomfield Township as a trade. LEGAL COUNSEL Bloomfield district officials at Tuesday’s meeting did not ac-| Ceremony Held on Amendment WASHINGTON (AP) - President Johnson officiates today at the formal certification of the 25th Amendment to the Constitution ar change that takes two burdens from the Presl-dwt’smind. The amendment establishes means for dealing with presidential disability and for filling a vacancy in the office of vice president. Birmingham Area News School Districts' Dispufel Heads for County Ruling cept the (^er and both parties will send legal counsel before the county officials f(x a ded-sion. The board heard good imws for high school swimmers. &i-:'perintendent Eugene L. John-json reported contractors for the swimming pool at Andover High have given “high hopes” for completing the $763,470 structure in time for fall classes. He said Freeman-Dariing Co. of Detroit is breaking ground now and will moke every at- have the facility by November. Confab Nears for State GOP Oakland Seating Row Will Provide Spark Yank Chutist in 7-Hour' Combat Jump WAR ZONE C, Vietnam (AP) — The lumbering Hercules transport swept over the drop zone at 1,000 feet ak Pfc. Robert Hill plunged out the hatch for the Jjr|t (ambit; parachute jump of his 19-year<13 life. It took him seven hours to cover that 1,000 feet to the earth. He should get credit for two' combat jumps in one day. He made the second from a tree. ft actually became part of the Constitution Feb. 10, when the 38th state ratified the amendment. Today’s White House activi-es mostly are ceremonial. NO LONGER NEEDED Johnson, who twice has undergone major surgery while Presideht, no longer need make a private agreement with Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey about who should do what in case of presidential disability. Briefly, the amendment provides for the vice president to discharge powers and duties of the presidency if the president, or the vice president and a majority of the Cabinet or Other The paratrodwr from Kansas City, Mo., was slipstreaming down uneventfully with some 750 comrades when n vagrant wind carried him to the edge of the drop zone. He slipped into a wooded area where Uie trees rise to towering heights and first thing he knew he was snagged — dangling about 120 feet from the ground. OWN TECHNIQUE “I was scared for the first four hours. After that I was scareder,” he admitted after he finally made it to safety by us------ ing a technique hardly recom-|ducted. mended in jump school. |on ROLL CALL By JIM LONG When the Republican State Convention gets under way in Detroit tomorrow, it will be f delegates from Oakland Com that will give it some spark. The excitement in what is consddered a fairly routine con-Venfion will be provided by moderates and consowatives in the 19th Cmgressional District. Each faction is sending 57 delegates to die convention. The split developed at the 19tli District Convention in Walled Lake last month. i it .it ★ Only one of the slates can be seated. COMMITTEE JOB | It will be the job of the con-| vention credentials committee to decide which group will be recognized as the official body. The credentials committee will hear After four hours. Hill had been spotted by his sergeant, who yelled: “What the hell you doing up there? ‘We’ve been looking all over for you.” Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY - Windy with occasional snow His comrades tried to get a rope up to him. That didn’t work. 'They couldn’t climb the tree and lower a rope either. A helicopter tried to drop a “penetrator,” which is a seat attacked to a l(»ig cable. The wind from the fntor blades al-most*“3isIo2(ged Hill aM fhe ch(^r was ordered away for body by law, writ. Congresa that the president is disabled. | PULLS RIPCORD Finally, he pulled the ripcord on his reserve chute. Another isionai snow . . . , . • flurries and cold today. High 22 to 26. Light snow, windy and; YoU rG I ttV if GO the reserve chute colder tonight. Low 0 to 8 above and locally lower in interior ' and It...................... sections. Friday: windy, colder and occasional snow flurries. Saturday’s outlook: continued cold with a chance of snow flurries. Winds becoming southwesterly 10 to 20 miles and gusty today, shifting to northwesterly 12 to 25 miles tonight. but P1.K.A.H. WtdiMidiy In Pontiac Sun Mta Thursday at i:l6 Sun rises Friday at 7:17 a Moon sots Friday at 7:U Moon rlsoO Thursday at 83 i. 79 61 ■■ J • HOMESTEAD, Fla. (AP) The party invitation didn’t say RS.V.P.-itsaidP.L.K.A.H. The housewife who received the invitation said she finally learned the legend meant: ‘Please leave kids at home.” _____ filled, billowing out^long- side the tree and tugging at IDII. “jump, jump!” shouted Hill’s buddies on the ground. He released his regular chute and did, swinging wildly like a pendulum beneath the reserve chute that was just enough to break his fall. Hill hit the ground with a bone-rattling jar, but was unhurt. * What Lent Means to Me NATIONAL WEATHER — Snow and snow flurries are liHrecast tonight in the Northeast, the Tennessee Vailey, the Upper Great Lakes and tiie northern Rockies. Rain is pre-dicied along the nortbem Pacific Coast It will be colder in the rtVim east of the Mississippi. « H (EDITOR’S NOTE - This is the 13th in a series of articles through Lent written by prominent Pontiac area citizensj By DR. ROBERT R. ’TURPIN Pontiac School Board There are lessons to be learned from tiie story of the last days in the life of Jesiis and of Ifis great single to prepare Ifimself for the ordeal of crucifixion. We can conclude that an individual can do virtually anything if. he is first able to ipahe the necessary mental) and spiritual preparatiem and we can reason that, if the greatest d men must pause to summon up inner resources and reaffirm strength of {nirpose, how rnuch mire impinmnt is it that we, as ordinary mortals, pause for some serious soul-seardiing. To me, the Lenten season is ^time for analyzing ourseSves, for clarifjdng in our m£ds the kind of person we realiy want to become and a time for reevaluating our goals. The extmit to wfairih we are able to make this preparation will detomine whether w not we can become what we want to become or achieve what we will to adiieve. SIMMS M Floor TOP QUALITT-TOP LABELS and ARTISTS A top midwest record distributor went out of, business and sold Simms all his promotional records ... those are brand new, top quality top label records. But the labels^havo those words 'not to be sold' (we didn't find out 'til after we got the records) these ore the records that top disc jockeys play free on radio. So, if you don't mind a f^ words on a label but like top quality labels ond artists this is for you. Come s“ come save at Simms. • Country Music • Jazz • Rock’n Roll • Show Tunes • Pop • Classic • Dance fi3 iDRi: I Ki Simms, 98 N. Saginaw St. OnNationallrU buiisl iMS I y! I night on the validity of each group, and will announce its decision e a r 1 y the following day befiwe the convention be- | gins at Cobo Hall. The intra-party struggle came I about when members of the con-1 servative element elected dele-1 gates'to the state convention by | a one-vote margin. ★ ★ ★ Moderates protested that the I convention was imprqierly con-1 DRU6S&(toSI€TICS«lSIIAMS KRAkY DAZE Prices for Today-Friday and Saturday! Special^ Best Buy _Savii resolve Seltzer TaMete 39c pock of 9 VICKS Formula 44 : Cough Syrup $1.98 0/1$ 1 127 S'/z-ounces M New HALO Hair Spray GILLETTE Razor and Right Guard They claim the meeting was I adjourned before their request | for a roil call votq was taken. When district chairman I Christian Powell left the meet- | ing, the moderates stayed on [ and elected tiieir own slate of | delegates. During the weekend conven-1 tion, chairmen in both the 18th I and 19th Congressicmal Districts I of Oakland County will be I elecisiL-.____ ★ ★ * Powell has announced that he will seek reelection. Opposing him will be John Cartwright bf West Bloomfield Township. LONE CANDIDATE In the 18th District, Jack Gibbs of Troy, one-time leader of the county GOP, is the only candidate for chairman. If elected, Gibbs would re-Idace Charles Lyle who is resigning from the post. The 18tb District is sending 110 delegates to the convention. Delegates frenn the two districts will caucus at the Statler Hotel. $1.48 sizo f in reg. or extra hol 10 double- VUOi f edge blades ^ 1 ;W-SWEET Sweetener $1-99 pack of 1000 Famous VICKS Vapo-Bub 9T> ► $1.49 value t 6V2 ounces. : EVENING IN PARIS I Bath Oil ^ $3.50 value for dry skin. noxzeim $1-35 value. SB SBiiJ 1 . X iO ounces. If SUBEBTO VO-S Creme Rmse ► $1.75 value. _ 15 ounces. |P S. BRYTEN Toothpaste 89c size. White or fluoride. baby POWDER 36«|H-5Trj EBUSH, ROLLERS I , anS Teiiser Brush 1 $1.79-set has 18 roll-, ers and piei plus brush. WI^ODBURY tMnk-Oei L 99c glycerine HUDNOT Poly Cof^ I,?—"*’ »»»r„t-59viSS979 PRESCRIPTIONS Filled at SIMMS P/ Our phormocist fills your prescription exody os your doctar order* and at the LOWEST P PRICE the law allows... for proof bring your next prescription in for SIMMS service P -ond iowvr price. Simms Bros.“98 H. Saginaw St.-Downtown Pontiac THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 1967 A—-3 you Qolta be nutstft run Prices fills UiW...butWlj6 ^MS was Sane? Groove We're nubs/ Long Sleeve Crew Neck Collegiate Sweatshirts Men's 100% cotton collegiate sweatshirts with U. of “V /€ ty M or MSU emblem In a variety of colors. American made H * m and first quality, sizjss S to XL —Basement ™ Tubular Chrome Shoe Tree Caddy Shapes, stores and freshens 8 pair of ladies' shoes. Complete with freshening pellets. Polished tubular chrome. —2nd Floor »91 Carton of CIGARETTES A Cin, of Matches $3.25 value, you choice of regular, king or filter cigarettes 060 plus a carton of book matches — 1,000 htes. Plus sales tax. Limit .I deal. Tobacco—Main Floor DON’T MISS THESE SPECIAL VALUES! First ttuality American Made Men’s Jackets 499 Sinintf Price Just P'ob% cotton outer shell, iipellant ond stain resistant, with quilted e-ivi vrt bottom. Sizes S to XL Men’s Zip Front Sweatshirts ‘OSIER’ Heat^ Duty Electric ^fei^fic Massager p48.95 List 33*5: M Motor , driven hand massager precision crafted for heavy duty massage service. Soothing, re- ' , ''"''"a- massage at the fingertips. Oster Scientific Hand Massager Suspended motor action, $34.95 list price .... ^ o « -MainFloo; ® , Genuine TEHSOR Brand 5li-lntensity Lamps Model JHOO IHux 398 Tensor Diox model 1800 lor many uses in the homi JilcTond shop. Fpr hobbies, bedroom reoding e Don't confuse withXpheoper imports. This is genuir 2-Way Tensor Lamp I 5200 Diox with 1 posilion 6 69< ‘GENERAL ELECTRIC’ Poitable Radid-Phonograplt i '7'^ WithMEE Brass Floor Rack ^Pinthelop20orfliponfherodiofor , S».w .p » IMS T,. , —2nd Floor ^ ^Men’s Popular Styled Corduroy Pants Simms Price Just |00 First qualify and Americon made corduroy pants in olive color. Sizes 28 to 30 only. ^ Western Styled Sta-Pressed Pants ' Slight Irregulars of regular $5.95 ^ values. Sizes 26-27-28-31-32 199 •msBaioinont 1 ‘OSIER’ Motor Driven Electric [iDog Clipper $29.95 List 19»5 ,l|Ciip your dog yourself orid s(^ Model 95-01 motor driven dog clij^ ^ ^'f>er with me^umblade for general clipping. Dog brush ond instruetioni. _W| " Extra-Wide Angle Viewing With 8x40 Binoculars Reg. $39.95 19«» I Save Vi on Zeiss typo binoculars t B with coated prisms, extra power, extra Mwide angle. Fast center focusing, gwith case. Camerat-Main Floor .22 Long^artridges Box of 50 68 e mi'TtMiar-22 long cartridges In boxes , of 50. Fresh loods.. Um# S ' hGal. Plastic Garbage Gan Complete with cover. Limit 2. Mastic 6xB-Ft. Heavy Duty - JiS- i Shower Curtain 44* At Simms Just LjHeovy duty plastic shower ^floral prints. Just wipe clean. Zip Pillow Protectors , Pillow protectors In floral , ,, prints ond solid colors. FuU (« i.wy -« #"■ DRITZ’ Electric Scissors 577 r... ,L , , , fingers offer cutting fobrj Guts the whole pattern in fraction of the time. Just press the butti First Time Ever-Famous Brand 12-Inch All-Channel TV I 1 CFUHiyVHF^ ■ Mear Tube Guarantee d A full 75 square inches of ewing area-and whata magnificent < _^cture. liu" aluminized picture '’“b* , r'Xl9TbTo"v$/bZ'or.>tseanymap^ to carry about, only 19 lbs. Uniy _Main Floor < credit card. American Made ’TAYLOR’ ifumiguide Thermometer Simms Price 288 Tells room temperotuns and ralotfva ' humidity. 3'/j Inches sqodr»-os JshownV Model 5546 for desk or wall, Taylor Indoor-Outdoor Thermometer Read outdoor temperature from Indoors. Installs Aoo 2nd Floor 3** i Girls’ Hooded ^ Ski Jackets Value 399 I Worm ski jackets with zipper front m and orlon pile trims. Reversible and (J washable. Sizes 7 to 14. — Mairt Floor Ingraham 40-Hour Wind-Up_ Alarm Clock, $2.98 List 1«9 7 Smart, practical styling with easy ^ ' to read numerals and clear raised styrene crystal. Plain dial and fac- ^ tory guarantee. BiHmore Pocket Watch Westioghouse Steam ’0 Spriokle hElectric Iron L Simms 1 Price T Just I2»»; m 'n sprinkle iron that u! 1 plain top water and sprinkles ing. Handy fobric guide lor oil d -2nd Floor Featherweitlil Shetland Sweeper Vac Simms Price JModel 851, slim ‘>‘9 Tnr.l« * f ci«sns rugs or ixstd surface flooring. away bag. Hangs in closet. 4 Ladies' Nylon Stretch Ski Slacks Volues to $12.88, "“'‘'ine was^ able nylon stretch slocks with side Ct CF 4 ripper. Choice of white, yellow ^ f or blue. Sizes 8 to 16. Ladios' Blouses ■ First quality blouses with roll I sleeves in check, ploids or P""’^ I O ^ r values to $2.89. Fast color. Sizes ■ 2 For ‘ to 36 only. Main Floor f ^Fedtro Electric Shaver Automobile ‘ tCcnverter 477; $6.9t7 Value gFedtro auto, shaver i___ sr lets you shave in your cor, boat or anywhere. Works on all electric shavers except Ronson. — Main Floor 82-Pc. Dinnerware Set Taylor-Smith-Taylor $.34.95 Value 17«* Complete service for 12 plus 2- I----————'extra cups, vegetable bowls , platter, sugarut are fed grain, hay, corn, oats and a soybean mixture, Howe said. CLEAN He said goats udll chew on paper if it is clean and wiU eat leaves off trees, but they won’t touch paper that has dropped to the ground. The hlstoiy of MSU’s herd goes back about 30 years, when 3-year-old Karlen Lutz discovered she was allergic to cow’s milk. She couldn’t digest prope^y and often was quite ill. ’The Lutzes bought a goat, and nursed Karlen back to health cm its milk. - * ★ * When it came time to have the goat Ix«d, a friend told the Lufres that the Sandburgs had a hmti. They wrote to the Sandburgs, a frimidship developed between the two families and, using goats fitun the Sanffeurg’s herd, the Lutzes eventual^ began a herd of their own. SOLDTOMSU In 1963, the Uitzes sold 18 registered Toggenburg goats to MSU for research on genetics and nutrition. Among Lansing-area children, those goato have a god reputa-ticm -- they produce some of the cutest young for MSU’s annual “Baby Ani^ Day” in the spring, said Howe. includes the options others charge extra for! The essential "extras” you havo to add to the price of nearly any other compact tractor are standard equipment on a Bolens Husky One PBICE INCLUDES all-gear transmission, and differential, six forward ... . . speeds, power-take-off drive, fenders, ^t cushion and many others. When you buy a Bolens Husky, you buy a fuUy-equipped unit One price, includes everything. A Bolens Husky is built from the ground up to give you a complete and convenient systmn for year ’round yard care. A Hu^y powers over twenty-five different lawn and garden attachmenta, offers greater all-around performance, more time-saving convenience toturro than any other compact tractor you can buy. Let us prove itl Before you buy. try a Bolens Husky first. l%en compkrel PRICED AT ONLY . »555«o KING BROS. PONTIAC RD. ot OPDYKE PONTIAC, MICH. Telephone: FE 4-7662 ond PE 4-0734 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 1967 A—« UNDER FIRE — Hugh M. Hefner, editor and publisher of Playbity magazine, shown here in a 1962 photo with cover girl Cynt^a Maddox, was the target of former Oklahoma gubernatorial candidate A1 Kavanaugh yesterday. Kavanaugh, veteran antismut campaigner, said in Oklahoma City he plans to file complaints against Hefner and make an effort to bring him to trial in Oklahoma. Wisconsin U. Stands Firm Against Protesters MADISON, Wis (AP) - The Uhiversity of Wisconsin has vowed to “go through a B«** eley” to keep its campus (q>eh to everyone de^te 17 arrets in protest against job interviews by a firm making napalm fcr Vietnam. ★ ★ ★ Robben W. Fleming, chancellor of the Madisim campus who was barricaded in an office for three hours by die protesters, wrote a personal check for $1,-260 that bailed the demonstrators out of jail. But he refused to yield Wednesday night to de-maiids that representatives of the Dow Chemical Corp., target of the protest, be evicM frm the university. * A ★ The demonstrators threatened to continue the protests. “We stand at the brink of a Berkeley," Fleming said, but he added the university would not sway from its policy that no one would be denied access to campus facilities because ^'a clash over beliefs. ‘WON’T BACK AWAY’ “There’s no prospect of backing away from this historic principle. We’re willing to through a Berkeley for that principle. We’ll go through that tragedy,” he said. He referred to mass protests in toe past that disrupted the UmverA^ of California at Ber- keley. Arrah today fw 16 studoits and a Madison mother arrested on charges of disinderly conduct in the demonstrations against Dow. ★ ★ * Fleming said he was furnishing bail because he believed the university should settle its disputes without police actionu He said he would recommend toe charges be dropped, but sidd toe final decision belonged to the director of toe engin^ ing school placement sorice, James Marks, who had sum-mimed police. Eleven demonstrators Were carried out by police when they staged a sit-in in toe office where D6w planned to conduct interviews. Six others were arrested what toey torew toem-seWes under police cars and paddy wagais ttyii% to cart the first group away. Fleming and other university personnel wo-e trapped in an administration idfice by demonstrators packing a hallway after word of the arrests spread. Leaders of the group said toey wanted to trade the release of their friends for that of Fleming and others in the office. During the three-hour blockade, Fleming conferred wito several of the leaders who insisted they had a right to block toe recruiting of companies. They argued it was Immoral for Dow Chemical and other firms to support the Vietnam war effort. Be Someone Special lEItNEA SECRETARY with SpeeAwiiUna ABC SHORTHAND SO EASY ★ NATURAL ★ ACCURATE EARN MORE ★ DAY OR EVENING CUSSES FREE NATIONWIDE PUCEMENT SERVICE XEW CLASS BEGINS MARCH 13 PONTUC BUSINESS INSTITUTE 18 W. Lawrence St. FE 3-7028 Its Corner Saginaw and Huron FE 4-2511 Shop Monday, Thursday, Friday and Saturday Til 9 P.M. at Waites Taffette Triumph at‘7 Here are panties that really fit. Made of Vanity Fair's superb quality nylon tricot, it's cut for comfortable coverage in the sleekest minimum panties. Choose from briefs, flair legs, lace trims, in assorted colors. Sizes 4 to 8. to $400 Lingerie . .. Second Floor See the triangles of tricot set in at the sides? They give this crisp, non-cling Taffette slip a marvelous kind of flex and fit, so smooth and supple it really breathes with you. Born to be worn, with knits, skimmy shapes, touchy textures, Taffette is indispensable these days! Also: flies in and out of the suds, dries itself to a smooth fresh flutter, and never, never loses its beautiful figure. Sizes-30 to 40. Lingeri* ... Second Floor ikSyk' 100% Carefree Nylon Jersey Lovely water color print. Button-down step-in, soft shirred neckline. Machine or hand washable. Drips dry. Shed wrinkles, packs tiny, travels neatly. Choose from blue, pink ok green in sizes 10 to 18 and H’A to 24’/i. Charge Yours. $1500 garland linen-look and lace combine in a great Garland outfit for Spring. The ding-shaped sweater gives cotton an open crochet texture. The skirt takes the tropic linen-look to town, sporting a superbig belt. Both come in colors that sizzle, blue, orange, yellow, and navy. Sizes 5 to 15 and 34 to 40. Crochet Knit Skirt $300 $900 SporUMMir... Third FI It's a Great Century ! Swing through Spring in Century's A-shaped dacron