Th» W«ofh«r UJ. WMiMr timM Ntkm Fiir (M*m M ph* ti THE PONTIAC PRESS Home Edition VOL. 128 NO. 296 ★ ★ ★ PONTIAC; MICHIGAN. WEDNESPAV, JANUARY 19, 1966 —66 PAGES UNITBD PRESS INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATED PRESS * 1(K- ** f ': Fifteen in Nursery Catch Tuberculosis^ DETROIT DB — Approximately 15 chUdren are hospitalized for tuberculosis contracted in a suburban nursery epidemic of the disease. ★ Sr ★ Discovery of the epidemic and Hs tracing to a nursery teacher as the TB source took place just before and after last Christmas time. Detroit and Wayne Connty health authorities disclosled details yesterday. The hospitalized children, in-eluding both boys and girls, are reporteid in good condition. Doc tors say th^ may recover fully With the situation describe Elect Woman India Premier Awesome Burdens Face Nehru Daughter NEW DEUm, India (i!V-Mrs. Indira Gandhi, daughter of the late Jawaharlal Nebru^ was elected today to be India’s next prime minister, the first woman in modern times to head the government of a major nation. India’s ruling Congress party automatically elevated Mrs. Gandhi to prime minister by electing her leader its major-ity faction in Parliament. Urns OB the shoulders of 4|-year<«ld widow feU the hn-mease problems of India wtth which her father had wrestled for 17 years lutil his death in 1N4 and whitt his soccesosr. Lai Bahadur Shastri, had at-' tacked vigorously mHU a heart attack used him Jaa. 11. Mrs. Gandhi went to her victory wearing a red rosebud pinned to her shawl, just as her father wore a red rose daily throughout the tumultuous years after independence in 1947. Mrs. Gandhi polled 355 votes to 169 for her only challenger, right-wing leader Morarji De-sai. CHEERING ERUPTS Cheering erupted in Parliament’s central hall when a party official, G.S. Pathak, announced the results of the secret ballot. * As the Nehru family once again took command in India, Mrs. Gandhi moved quickly to heal any damage done to party unity by tiie hectic political manenvering that followed Shastri’s death. “I want your blessing,” she told Desai as balloting began. The stem, 69-year-oId Desai replied: ’’Who Sm I to give you blessing? We need everybody’s biessing.” Victory for Mrs. Gandhi, who learned politics at her father’s side, not only resumed the Nehru era after Shastri’s 19-month (Continued on Page 2, Col. 6) MRS. INDIRA GANDHI Cut by Door Hurts Throat in Spill at County Courthouse In Today's Press Voting Rights U. 8., Dixie rest cases before Supreme Court — PAGE B-5. War Planners Urge stepped-up effort —especially if Re^ make peace overtures — PAGE A-5. Bids Received Pontiac State Bank ap-parmit low bidder on loan note sale — PAGE A-li. Area News .......... A4 Astrology .......... D4 Bridge ............. D4 Crossword Pnszle ... D>1S Comics ............ D-4 Editorials A-6 Food Section C-2—C-4, C4—C-9 Markets ......... D-7 Obituaries .. C-ll Sports .........i D-l—IM Hieateni .......... D4 TV-Radio Programs D-13 WilsoB, Earl .....D-U ’s Pages . .fr’l—B-4 A 15-year-old youth suffered a severe throat wound this afternoon when he crashed trough a plate glass door at the Oakland County Courthouse. * ★ * The boy, identified as Charies Thome, son of Mr. and Mrs. Tracy Thome of 675 W. Girard, Madison Heights, was rushed to Pontiac General Hospital by an Oakland County Sheriff’s Deputy. A hospital spokesman reported the hoy’s condition as fair. nte youth was reportedly running from juveniie authorities after invoivement in a Probate Court matter. ★ ★ ★ Emergency first aid was given at the scene of the accident by Mrs. Raymond W. Sten^ien, a clerk in the (bounty Clerk’s office, and Theodore Karla, a juvenile court official. FORMER NURSE Mrs. Stempien, a former nurse, lives at 8970 Charbane, Conunerce Township. ★ * ★ The boyovas scheduled to undergo surgery this afternoon according to a hospital spokesman. Car Kills Woman lying in City Street Oakland Highway Toll in ’66 A 32-year-oid Pontiac woman, Mrs. Ann Allen of 269 S. Jessie, was killed last night after apparently cpllapsing and falling into South Jessie Street near the intersection of (Cottage. Pontiac police said the victim was lying in the roadway when struck about 8 p.m. by an automobile driven by Lee W, Northern, 31, of 434 S. Saginaw. n ★ w A witness said Mrs. Allen rah from her home crying hysteri< cally and then collaps^ into the street idiortly tefore being stmek by the car. ★ ★ ★ Northern was released pcad' [tng further investigation. as in hand, the nursery is being permitted to continue its opera lions. CREDIT DOCTORS The vigilance of two unnamed family doctors was credited in large part with discovery of the epidemic and its being brought to a halt. Dr. Jehn J. Hanlon, Detroit and Wayne Connty health director, and Mrs. Marie Gaylord, operator of the preschool Hansel A Gretel Day Nursery in Garden City, disclosed the epidemic. Mrs. Gaylord said she and her staff and health authorities ‘‘worked together” in running down the caM. Shortly before Christmas Day, a family doctor found a lesion on a small girl’s leg. He reported to health authorities. ANOTHER GIRL A few days later, another girl was found apparently infected with TB. Her doctor also reported to health officials. AWARD REaPIENTS - Guest speaker Rev. Joseph Kubik of St. Mary’s College, Orchard Lake, is flanked by John E. Dowsett (left) and Ted McCullough, who garnered the top honors last night at the Waterford EmIIic PrMi Plwl* Township Jaycees’ annual Bosses’ Night banquet. Dowsett was named outstanding young man of 1965, while McCullough was selected boss of the year. * Sentencing Set Feb. to in Fatal Area Stabbing Youth, 17,'Could Get Any Number of Years in Prison—Up to Life ALAN ROSS PEARSON Seventeen-year-old Alan Ross Pearson Jr. today was found guilty of second degree murder in the fatal stabbing of a Waterford Township ybuth last summer. He was convicted by an Oakland County Circuit Court jury of killing Jeffrey Talbot, 17, of 2045 Watkins Lake. Pearson, of 1127 Alhl, Waterford Township had been charged with first-degree murder. He will be sentenced Feb. 10 at 9 a.m. by Judge James S. Thorburn. JEFFREY TALBOT Investigation brought out that both girls had attended Hansel & Gretei Nursery. All 57 nursery children received tests for TB. Most responded in the “negative” no j^ection. Ultimately, the source was found. It was a woman teacher at the nursery. BEUEVED CURED She once had had ’TB and thought herseif cured. Tbe teacher, Uke tte children, is nnder medical care. The children were taken to May bury Sanatorium in Detroit, an institution for victims of tuberculosis. All are in generally good condition,” Dr. Hanlon said. We think they’ll come along aU right. I’m very optimistic.” Dr. Hanlon identified the nursery outbreak as an epidemic. He called it a “very, very localized epidemic.” “It's a phenomenon that seems to be occurring with increasing frequency in the country,” he said. By Waterford Jaycees Young Man of Year Selected John E. Dowsett, 34-year-old director of court services of Oakland County Juvenile Court, walked off with top honors last night at the Waterford Township Jaycees’ 12th annual Bosses Night banquet. ★ * ', R . ' Dowsett of 3757 Embarcadero was named the township’s outstanding young man of 1965 before an audience of more than 60 persons at Fortino’s Steak House. Ted McCullough, 33, of 3569 Brookdale was named boss-of-the-year. Featured speaker for t h e event was Rev. Joseph Kubik, a faculty member of St. Mary’s College, Orchard Lake. Dowsett and McCullough were selected by a panel of three judges on the basis of leader- Winter 'Zeroes In' on Area Old Man Winter means business. He said he is plunging temperatures to 10 above Iran Envoy Is Asked ^ to Leave Lebanon winds at 6 to 14 miles per hour will continue. ★ ★ ★ Twelve was today’s low in downtown Pontiac prior to 8 a.m. The mercury registered 25 at 2 p.m. and as low ;as zero in nearby BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) — areas tonight. Iranian Ambassador Ali Fotouhi! ★ * ★ was declared persona non grata by the Lebanese government today and asked to leave the country. - The reason for the expulsion appeared to be the government’s displeasure at attacking President Gamal Abdel Nasser of the United Arab Republic. * But cheer up. Tomorrow will be generally fair and somewhat warmer, the high climbing to 22 to 32. A chance of snow flurries and falling temperatures is tbe outlook for Friday. Westerly ship, contribution to the community and business progress. ★ * ★ Pearson could be sentenced to any number of years in prison, up to a maximum oi l life. I The jury of seven men and five women returned the verdict at 11.15 am., a little more than two hours after- resuming deliberations this morn-ing. The jury was sent home for the day yesterday when they were unable to reach a decision Draft Officials in Washington To View Manpower, College Deferments The judges were Dr. Don 0. after nearly three hours. Tatroe, superintendent of Waterford Township Schools; Dr. John Naz Of Pontiac General Hos-l^tal and Rev. F. J. Delaney of Our Lady of the Lakes Catholic Church. As he left the courtroom, Pearson told newsmen, “I have butterflies in my stomach. “It was what I had ex- 3 CHILDREN Dowsett, father of three children, has held his current position for approximately one year. He was hired as a juvenile court probation officer in 1956. He works directly under James W. Hunt, director of children’s services. WASHINGTON (API - College deferments and manpower problems top the agenda for a meeting here today of Midwestern and Eastern state draft directors with national Selective Service officials. ★ w * “The purpose of the meeting is to discuss potential additional pected,” said Pearson. “I had _ _____ ________ hoped for manslaughter but it goyrees of m^power to replen-jus didn t work out that way ” jj,e pool of men classified as 28 Die in Formosa Fire TAIPEI, Formosa (AP) — Twenty-eight persons died today in a fire that swept a six-story building in downtown Taipei. Twenty others suffered burns and injuries. Most of the dead were found in a dance hall, whifch occupies part of the northwesterly I building Dowsett is a member of the Michigan Juvenile Court Officers’ Association, National Council of Crime and Delinquency, Michigan Welfare League, Our Lady of the Lakes Catholic Church, church men’s club, Our Lady of the Lakes Christian Community Development Board and Knights of Columbus. * * h McCullough, still active in the Jaycee chapter and a past president, is the 0 w n e r of McCullough Realty, 5460 M59. He is District 10 vice president in charge of 10 Jaycee chapters. The award is given annually to^ the man who has done the most loF the Jaycees in the past year. He said that he had told the deputy sheriff with him that the jury would bring in the second-degree conviction. RETURNED TO JAIL Pearson was returned to the Oakland County Jail to await sentencing. During the interim, the probation department will prepare a pre-sentencing report for Thorburn. The case went to the jury at 1:30 p.m. yesterday after closing arguments by Ass’t. Prosecutor Bernard P. Paige and defense counsel Clarence Smith. Thorburn instructed the jury on the law, pointing out they could return one of four verdicts: guilty of first or second degree murder, or manslaughter, or innocent. Late yesterday afternoon the jury returned to, the courtroom to inquire about the distinction between second-degree murder and manslaughter. Pearson contended he acted in self-defense during the June 27 incident. pool 1-A and available for induction,” a Selective Service spokesman said. He added: “The possibility of a return to consideration of class standing and testing for alleged deferment will surely be discussed.” During three days of testimony, conflicting statements were presented. Prosecution witnesses testified Pearson jumped from a car to confront young Talbot just prior to tbe fatal fight near Talbot’s house. The defense, meantime, has offered testimony claiming Pearson was pulled from the car hr whlek he~aad--*-com.-= panion arrived at the scene. The fight, according to t r i a 1 testimony, resulted from hard feelings between Pearson and Talbot over a girl both had dated. Under present selective service policies, the 2.2 million students holding college deferments only are required to be doing satisfactory work as fulltime students at a properly accredited college or university. ★ * a The spokesman said no decision had been reached in the proposed reinstatement of the Korean war system of college deferments, ordered abolished by President John F. Kennedy in 1962. CLASS STANDING That system required local draft boards to take into consideration a student’s class standing and his score on the Selective Service college qualification test. Under those rules, a freshman had to be in the upper three-fourths of his class to be considered doing satisfactory work, a sophomore in the upper two-thirds and a junior in the upper half. ★ * ★ Expected to attend or be represented at today’s meeting are the state selective service directors of Connecticut, Maine, lai Massachusetts, New Wamp-shk«^, New York, New Jersey, Rhode Island, Vermont, Pennsylvania, West Virginia, Kentucky, Maryland, Ohio, Virginia, Minnesota, Iowa, Missouri, Illinois, Indiana. Michigan and the District of Columbia. $35,000 Blaze Hits Home A fjre of undetermined origin Damage from the fire, which yesterday caused an estimated apparently started near an in-$35,000 damage to a West terior incinerator, was estimat-Bloomfield Township home. |ed at $30,000 to the house and it * * i$5.000 to the contents. Firemen from six area depart-1 ★ ★ w ments extinguished the blaze in' Mrs. Kantzler and three chil-the Dr. George Kantzler home,:^''®"- who were home when the ,• .r,. fire started shortly before 1 T6 Bloomfield Glens. p.m., were uninjured. ^ The fire was confined to the ICE PALACE — Underneath this shimmering tower of ice, according to its maker, lie an upside4own garbage can and 25 Christnjaa trees. Ernest A. May, a Pontiac Mo^ Division employe, .fashioned the mountain of icicles with PwitlK ernt PMI* round-the-clock use of a garden hose at his residence at 740 Parkwood. The garbage can served as base for the structure, and trees were piled on as the ice grew. family room, furnace room and part of another room, although there also was extensive smoke damage In ether areas. West Bloomfield Township firemen were Assisted by those r 0 m Bloomfield Township,. Farmington, Franklin, Walled Lake and Commerce Township. I I ■i*. ^ A—2 I'HE PONTIAC PRESS, >VEDNESDAY. JANUARY 19, 1966 Cong Begins Truce Afte SAIGON. South Viet Nam (AP)—The clock brought the Viet Cong tonight into their self-proclainwd four-day truce for the lunar new year* after they had staged a series (rf attacks, the bloodiest at a camp for 2,000 Vietnamese refugees. ' ' ★ ♦ ★ American armed forces remained on full alert. It was still unclear whether the Communist truce offer—advatised as effec- tive at 11 p.m. — covered U.S. and other allied troops, w * ★ t IWrty - three persons were killed and 54 wounded as the guerrillas swept down before dawn on the sleeping camp on , the outskirts of Tam Ky, a provincial capital 350 miles northeast of Saigon. Many of the victims were women and children. U.S. advisers said the raiders set fire to thatched huts, execut- ed whole families on the spot, mangled the bodies and kidnaped nine men. They left behind leaflets denouncing U.S. operations as a “dirty war aggression against the people Viet Nam.” As to the Viet Cong ceas^ire, one intelligence source sa^ hard information had been reived that American GIs wcpd not be included. However, a U< U.S. Is Taking Stock of Viet Peace Efforts By JOHN M. HIGHTOWER AP Special Correspondent WASHINGTON - The United States is surveying foreign governments which have joined in the Vietnamese peace offensive to see what, if anything, they have heard from North Viet Nam and whether they expect response The survey is being made this week in preparation for an assessment by President Johnson and his top advisers of the resultant prospects of the worldwide diplomatic campaign which the President launched three weeks ago. A key issue in the policy re- view will be whether and when the United States should resume bombing North Viet Nam. Motel Holdup leU On this question it is understood that opinion among the President’s advisers is divided, .with military leaders advocating an early return to air strikes against targets in the north and some civilian authtu/ ities favoring indefinite coni nation of the pause in the bo|! ing. * ★ ★ Hie policy review pi will be held next w( some radical change uatioD. . SURVEY RESUL^ By that time /Uie results of the survey shield all be in. The truce m fighting whieh is schedule^ for the Vietnam- Ci r** •*®6day— ilIinnlT mCIG tomorromhrongh Sunday, Sal- IVIVI tim^wlll also be over. A sa.e,n,an -ped « ^ from a holdup man in a Bloom-|gj.g /prepared to respond to field Township motel early this pWidgnt Johnson’s recent call morning and summoned police,'fo/a reduction in hostilities or who apprehended a suspect min-1 whether they will follow the holi-utes later. flay lull with widespread offen- Bloomfield Township police sive operations in South Viet said they would seek an armra Nam. robbery warrant against Rolfind; Secretary of State Dean Rusk Raid on ’The allied cease-fire is to gp into effect at 12 noon ’Thursday and end at 6 p.m. Sunday. This, was a reversal of the Yuletide situation, when the Viet Cong proclaimed a l^hour truce and the allied side held off for 30 hours. The U.S. spdkesman said American military operations already under way, will continue until noon Thur^ay and these possibly will include air raids in .A South Viet Nam. If American troops run into trouble, air strikes certainly will be called in, he said. “We’re not going to relax just bkause some guy said he’s going to cease firing, especially when the other guy has proved unreliable in the past,” he said. * ♦ , ★ The lunar new year, called Tet, is the most sacred holiday on the Vietnamese calendar—a festive binge that has led annually to a lull in the war. Noting intelligence reports that Americans would find no |afety during the Communist, cease-fire-and the fact that the Communist offer did not mention U.S. or other aUied troops, the spokesman said; “We’ve said we’d stop shooting at noon tomorrow. That’s what we’ll do. We’ll just have to see what will happen Uien.” Aussie Leader Plans to Retire Treasury Minister Is Expected Successor Birmingham Area News School Board to Meet, Work on Bond Proposal /'AKiDE-DD A A..ot,oii„ / ADA 6 0 8 r d of cducatlon has sched-CANBERRA, Austraha (AP)i^j^ ^ special meeting Tuesday — Prime Minister Sir Robert|„jg|,{ begin work on drafting I Menzies, the senior government a bond issue proposal BLOOMFIELD HILLS — The Bloomfield Township firm noted funds from the 1964 bond issue just aren’t going far enough be- School trustees recently were ing to have to think in terms of at least |8 millfon,” Schools Supt. Eugene Johnson said. Architects have indicated the needed amount could well go to $10 million. . ★ W it Board members are consider- CONG SUSPECT CAPTURED - A blindfolded Viet Cong suspect rides with Vietnamese infantrymen on an armored personnel carrier after he was flushed from a swamp during government forces attack in Vinh Binh province in the Mekong Delta Monday. The operation by the Vietnamese 9th Infant^ / Division netted 48 VC dead and 14 captured. De Gaulle Regime Shaken D. Lewis, 20, of 461 Going. Sylvan Lake Patroman David DeGroot stopped Lewis jit the suspect was walking Mrth on Telegraph minutes after the holdup at the Hoiida^nn, 1801 S. Telegraph. and roving Ambassador W. Av-lerell Harriman, one of Johnson’s chief emissaries to foreign governments during the peace offensive, are due here tonight or tomorrow from the Far East. Rusk and Vice President Hu- French Admit Arab Scandal Collusion chief in the British C 0 m-monwealth, announced today he is retiring after 16 years in office. Menzies, 71, did not disclose ^ .whether he, also ‘ 'intends to give up his seat in Parliament. MENZIES Treasury Minister Harold Holt is expected to succeed him ing a bond proposition for the I as head of the Liberal-Country'June school ballot, party coalition. „ PINITDOWN Son of a country storekeeper | »it jg time for us to get down and grandson of a Scottish min- to business, pull it together and er, Menzies gave up a lucrative pin it down,” Johnson said, law practice to enter state poli- m u u a tics in 1928. . Th' it it * ^ P’™' in ii*® new school dis- When he entered the federal ^‘®‘ administration building at Parliament the next year, «« Andover, across from the Prime Minister Joseph A. Lyons n'8" *® selected him as attorney gener-[ Michigan State University con-al. When Lyons died in 1939,|sultants told the board in Octo-Menzies succeeded him and ledjber that it should step up the Australia into World War D at current building program, fi- cause of increased construction C(»tS. He also noted the needs in warned that funds will be needed terms of student capacity are soon for classrooms to house a “tremendously higher” than an-skyrocketing enrollment. iticipated. “If we do It right, we’re go- BIRMINGHAM-Modem math will be explained to parents at the Berkshire Junior High PTA meeting at 8 p.m. tomorrow at the school. The program, conducted by Thomas Horan, “mathematics department chairman, will feature a film entitled “Math for Tomorrow” produced by the National Education Association. * * * ^ogrammed instraction as it relates to modem math will be discussed. threatened the political futnre known as the SDECE (Society of some of his cabinet minis- Ug Documentation Exterieure et ters and closest advisers. Contre-Espionage), reported di itrry Filler of Gateway, Ohio,:to Washington earlier, con-whh was staying ?t the motel, ferred with Soviet Premier told police he was awakened by Alexai N. Kosygin when they a knockion the d^ior of his room|^rg|.g India last week for the about 4 a.m. Ifuneral of Prime Minister Lai Assuming that the man at the, Bahadur Shastri door was a porter. Filler said Th^ Soviet Union holds a he let him in; ; position in U.S. hopes for STOLE W/^LET | and eventual settlement in Hie hol^p man, armed with; Viet Nam. PARIS (UPI) - President C3iarles de Gaulle’s government today admitted “complicity” of French secret agents in the kidnaping and probably assassina-| bertH. Humphrey, who returned Ition of Moroccan opposition leader Mehdi Ben Barka. Ijacquiert, and putting the or-HITS NEW PITCH A communique issued after move came as the day s ■ regular cabinet session ® The cabinet announced it was I ectly to Premier Georges Pom-replacing the head of the na-^ut was semiautonomous called the (^t. M abducUor “a . ®la»«or for a government clean- criminal enterprise mounted I up of the three-month-old case and the Monday night death of a 25-cali^r pistol stole Filler’s empty n^allet, according to police. Filler said he was able to escape and run to the motel office while the robber was rummaging through bedclothes looking for cash. Despite Moscow attacks on American policy, administration officials believe that the Soviet government would like to see the war ended before it gets bigger and more dangerous. They also believe Soviet influence is increasing in Hanoi as Soviet from the start from abroad and which had the benefit of certain complicity by agents of the special services or of French police officers.” The kidnaping brought a new crisis in France’s relations with the Arab nations. The scandal also shook de Gaulle’s new government and | Britain’s side. He resigned in 1941 when he lost the support of two independents who had helped to nanced by a $7.6-million bond issue approved in June 1964. With enrollment jumping from 6,700 to 7,617 this year, the dis- The gun and wallet were found!military and economic aid in behind a house near the motel. Icrease. Identity of Tot Still Unknown key witness Georges Figon rose ‘'^jf^sHver-haired. keep him in power. A month |trict might weU reach iu peak later the United Australia party of 12,000 to 15,000 students within lost an election to Labor and next.five years, the experts Menzies became leader of thel^,of[,ed. oppositiwi.^ * ^ PUGHT EMPHASIZED Menzies started his current Plight of the district was em record term in office in 1949 phasized again in December by when his newly organized Liber- architects at Tarapata-MacMar al party beat out Labor and hon Associates, checked its plans to nationalize Charles MacMahon of the KATHLEEN NORRIS to a new pitch. Two Paris police officers and a long-time counter-espionage agent already were IM-I hind bars for complicity in the affair.,. 6-foot-2 prime minister is a skilled orator and a booster of close ties with Britain. The Weather Savings Bond Interest Rates to Be 4!A Pet. ... , , _ _ , ,1 French sources said the Ben Likely to Be Buriedigg,.|^| incident was mounted by Moroccan government officials to get rid of a dangerous rival. as 'Little Boy Blue' Elect Mrs. Gandhi Next India Premier Area Welder 'in the Chips' for Cooking Popular Writer Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY —• Variable cloudiness with scattered light snow flurries ending by this evening. Highs today 18 to 21. Mostly fair and colder tonight, lows zero to 19 above locally and as low as 15 below in interior sections. ’Thursday: generally fair and slightly warmer, highs 22 to 3f. Westerly winds 6 to 14 miles today. Friday’s outlook: colder with a chance of snow flurries. Tadty la PotHk LowMt t*mp«r«tur< prtcMIng I a.m, 12 S tJn.i Wind VekKlty S Diractlon; NoHhwMl Sun Mts Wadnndayat J:3l p.m. St/h rlMs Thuriddv it 7:57 i.m. Moon irtt Widnndiv it 3:22 p n AAoon rliM Ttiuridiy it 7:31 i.m. TuMdiy IR Pwitiic (n ricirdM dwmtiwn) mp3i '...... t» iLowMt limpirituri . .... ....... 12 }M*in tempiriturf 15.5 Weittwr: Mottly «unny, flurries WASHINGTON (AP) - The government soon will hike interest rates on U. S. savings bonds to the maximum allowable 4V« per cent but will not ask congressional approval to go socks, was found by a rabbit beyond that, sources indicated (Continued From Page One) MAMonir /TTDI\ Morocco has repeatedly denied interval, it also passed the na- MONROE (UPI) -- unless prgneh claims, but the af-ition’s leadership to'the second someone can identify him, a 3- strained rela-'^e^^ation of Indian poUUcians. year-old boy will be buried in between the two nations. | Until today, India has been this southern Michigan town ★ a a governed by the early free- later this we6k known only as I The scandal centered on dom fighters who waged “little boy blue.’* iFigon’ alleged suicide. He was| Mohandas K. Gandhi’s “peace- ‘ a a a ja former criminal believed to' ful resistance” campaign to institute International, Walter ’The boy, clad in a blueibe a key figure in the kidnap-j win independence from Brl- Igadoway and his wife will leave ..n j-j. quilted ,ki jacket, r«l ehlrt, P>"8 » '<»■ T "“I® “ dW ^ ■* 'ed with reserve the official re- - ™ SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Kathleen Norris, one of America’s most popular women writers, has died at 85 after writing nearly 100 novels for “people with simple needs and mo- A West Bloomfield Township | welder who knows his way w a a around a kitchen has won a , , , . , .i. trip to Las Vegas for himself [ *’^''® and his wife. „ . . . , 'modem writers, said Mrs. Regional wmnerm the Men siNorris, reminiscing about her National CMking Champion^ipip^iific writings rewnUy. sponsored by the Potato Chip| g„„ering black corduroy pants and blue TuMRiy*! Twnpiriltin CMr* Alpena 26 2t Jacksonville 59 39 DrrwTrwr TRNiRtrRlurM Or. Rapidi 24 4 Kansas City 34 11 t a.m. 17 1) a.m. V Houoht^ 20 II Los Angeles M 44 7 a.m 17 12 m. , 23 Lansing 11 3 Miami Beach 71 56 • I.m. 1( 1 p.m. 24 Marquatta 24 ti MHweukee 16 5 t a.m. II 2 p.m 25 Pelliton 24 )• New Orleefit 46 41 IS a.m. . 31 Traverse C.» 21 9 New York 3t 30 Albuquerque 37 27 Omaha 23 6 HlfMftt Md Ltww Ttmi»tr«t$9rtt Atlanta 42 23 P^oenix 51 TMa Daw M N Yaan Blsmarch 23 3 Pittsburgh 24 14 M )R 1107 -♦ In If40 Boston 3t 24 St. Louli 22 11 Chicago U to Salt Lake C. 37 11 Ona Yaar Afs la Paallac C)i>cinn«li 23 U 57 41 Hlfhet* tamparatura 24 Denver 45 15 S. S. Marie 23 12 Lawatl Wmparalure « Detroit 20 14 Seattle 32 Mean tamparatura 15 Duluth 17 -2 Tampa 61 41 Waattier: Light mum, windy Pori Worth 31 30 Washington 37 34 today. The government now pays 3% per cent interest on the $49 billion outstanding in series “E” and “H” bonds. Secretary of the Treasury Henry H. Fowler announced yesterday that President Johnson had ordered the interest boost at “the earliest possible date.” Fowler said the higher rates will help maintain the bond sales. 'it ' it it Under law, the government cannot raise the interest rate beyond 4V« per cent without congressional approval. NO INDICATION In a New Ywk speech, Fowler gave no in4ication of how large an increase is being consider^. He said only that the nation was again at a point “where rates available on a variety of alternative forms of savings have moved beyond the rate paid on U. S. savings bonds.” But federal officials here, while unwilling to spell out details of what the White House hunter in an outhouse on an abandoned farm near here ~An autopsy revealed the lad had been beaten to death. Authorities said their best clue collapsed today. A label inside the boy’s shirt was found to be that of a brand carried by three discount chains with stores throughout the nation. port that Figon shot himself just before police forced their way into his apartment to arrest him. PROMINENT REMINDERS Several newspapers carried prominent reminders of the highly suspect “suicide” of Alexander Stavitsky, a swindler in the mid-1930s which wrecked the careers of several members of parliament and the cab- Detective Sgt. Patrick Lyons ***®i brought down the gov- of the Michigan State Police Said laboratory tests on the boy’s clothing failed to disclose anything of help in the investigation. ’The Federal Bureau of Investigation assigned an agent to help local authorities in the investigation. No one has claimed the boy. Ms description; brown hair, 35 inches tall, 25 pounds with that sturdy, well-fed look. POUCE THEORY Police theorize no one has claimed the boy because those who know him may be his murderer, or murderers. They believe either the parents sle\y the boy or they are dead themselves. Shortly after the body was has ordered, indicated that an| discovered last Saturday by a NATIONAL WEATHER — Rain mixed with snow is forecast for the Tennessee Valley tonight, and a band of snow will stretch from ttie northern Rochies to the central Plains, also in the Lakes area. Rain is expected in most of the Gulf states. Temperatures .will moderate in the Lakes area and centra) Mississippi Valley. interest rate rise to 4V5i per cent is in the offing. it it it They noted that ordinary commercial savings accounts and payments to bthlding and loan associations, new yield at least 4V« per cent. hunter, police sent out a nationwide alert for an identification of lad. A color photograph of the boy’s clothing and its description have b^ distributed to other law enforceihent agencies, sp far to no avail. ernment of Premier Camille Chautemps. The press was asking very bluntly why police had net been able to find Figon, who had been sought for more than two months, when he fre-qientiy met journalists and was even photographed in front of police headquarters. Some newspapers emphasized statements by leading witnesses implicating top police ^officials in the kidnap plot. ★ ♦ ★ De Gaulle ordered authorities to press the investigation of the Ben Barka kidnaping and met yesterday with a leading judge and Premier Georges Poropi' dou. Observers believed they discussed the growing proportions of the Ben Barka scandal. - ★ * w Figon’s death came at a critical point In the slow-moving kidnap investigation. Figon had declared in press interviews that he had been present while Ben Barka was tortured |i)y a Moroccan government official at a country villa Outside Paris. Mrs. Gandhi was part of that movement but played only a minor role. However, the survivors of her father’s generation, notably Congress party President Kumaraswami Kamaraj, crushed most opposition to Mrs. Gandhi and thus will continue to have a say — perhaps a strong say — in national affairs. 2ND WOMAN PREMIER Mrs. Gandhi is^ the 29th century’s second woman prime minister. ★ ★ ★ Flamingo Hotel. While there, Sadoway of M12 Alderley and three o|teer regional winners will comj^te for national honors in a cookoff. ’The national champ will receive $1,000, with the other winners receiving $750, $400 and $200 for their efforts. it * it Sadoway, an estimator for Progressive Welder and Machine Co. of Pontiac, entered the contest last September with The other was Mrs. Siri-bis recipe for potato chip pan-mavo Bandaranaike of Ceylon,jcakes. He was named state the tiny island nation of 10 mil-jehampion two weeks ago. lion people off the southern tip Some 179,000 recipes were re-of India. Elected in 1960, she'portedly entered in the contest, was defeated in elections earlyjwhich called for a main dish last year. [prepared from potato chips. Heights home of her son. Dr. Frank Norris, with her family gathered around her. ★ ft- ★ Her first qovel, “Mother,” was published in 1911. President Hieodore Roosevelt was so moved by it that he climbed three flights of stairs to the Noc-ris apartment just to shake the author’s hand. From that year until'her last novel, “Through a Glass Darkly,” she produced nearly two books a year, 58 magazine serials and uncounted newspaper and magazine articles. NOVELS POURED OUT A critic once wrote that, her novels “poured from her typewriter as sawdust pours from a sawmill.” State Doctors Polled on Merger LANSING (AP) - A House committee is asking the state’s 10,000 medical doctors and 2,000 osteopaths for their opinion on the amalgamation of the two professions. w # ♦ * The state affairs committee, which now is considering a Senate-approved bill to establish an osteopathic authority, is mailing a questionnaire to the me(l-ical men. It asks; “--Do you believe amalgama-tiort of allopathy (a system of meiiicine that makes use of all remedkis found to be of value) and osteopathy would be in the best interest of the people of the state? STATE SUPPORT EYED —“Should the state give support to an osteopathic school? —“Do you believe both MDs and DOs, on the basis of Individual qualifications, should be considered eligible for staff consideration by the governing boards of public-supported hospitals?” The answers to the questionnaire, said Chairman John Fits-gerai^ D-Detroit, will be taken into account when the committee makes up its mind on the bill which is designed to make it easier for a proposed osteopathic college in Pontiac to get federal funds. .it * * The Senate passed the measure, sponsor^ by Majority Leader Raynumd Dzendzal,. D-Detroit, last October. * * * Hie 10^nember authorlty^ a|L pointed by the gevernort'irould legally bs aUe to jtonsUiict or acquire a college,^ operate, manage and staff it and set tuitions. stay: THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 19, 1966 A—8 Last 3 Days! Sale of Stereo and M(ono LP Records ★ Western & Country ' 'A: Popular Records 'A: Classic Music ★ Show Tunes ★ Children's Songs 'k Rock 'n Roll Albums A’ Plus Many Others ‘ —Tour Choice Maybe you miised out last week, so Simms ^ repeating this sale of records — you're sure to find the music you like in this group of over 2,000 remaining records. Boy all you watjt for yourself or gift giving — nb limits. Thurs., Fri. and Sat. — last 3 days. SIMMS,™, Simms, 98 N. Saginaw St. 20% OFF 'Timex’ Watches 114 ModBis, Men’s, Ladies’ Timex Watchesj fHM’.iiMitMf #tn(i liwviir,, j Itatkar ' tk*,. LMM'tTlautMimill Iseeselwi^ lUaewsme. '■M>tTkMxttUS#M14l I U«m>TImi|IIJS#W4M CmiHu, I nM ' qrlMfeCMl. LmSm* SHrtUwSMS #lfl4t I tImiM siu, wMrptMl, I IMNMritra,. LaeM'Tin«t1MI#imi I ekr«M «M.i njMwi, LmRm’ it tlLM #11441, |M we, waNfpiwI, I Bl leWer ttrs,. I W Mee’CaveNea $II.N #*an,ipaiia« a eaM,aea#e 11 kaai. V U«ei' CaeatiM II1JI #ilMI, saM gt aaMi laaHMr II kaae. el ueat’ CavaNaa titJl #tini.ccw m cau, ajrlaa li earekaa#. Si LaSiea’ CavaMaa tll.N #l4Mt I ahaaca- ^ M afela aaea. aa# | 4 V .lraaa.4 Laeat’Tiawi SII.M #liei, teM kltBerih Ftacieaw SIMMS.™., Killed Parents Gives No Motive for Pennsylvania Deaths '' WHITEHALL, Wis. (AP) - A 15-year-old boy, jailed after a minor traffic accident Tuesday night, blurted out to authorities he h^ killed his parents. Slender, dark-haired Jerry Lee Sanderson of Slippery Rock, Pa., gave no motive. Sheriff Eugene Bijold said. The body of his father, Heiny Sanderson, 54, was found Tuesday outside the family’s burned farmhouse. Another body, believed to be that of the boy’s mpther, Dorothy, 44, was found in the rubble. Bijold said the youth admitted shooting his parents to officers while he was being questioned after his car had skidded into a snowbank along U western Wisconsin highway. FORMAL CHARGES Bijold said the Sanderson youth was being held for Butler County, Pa., authorities, who planned to fly here today with a warrant containing formal charges. The teen-ager was the only prisoner in the small, brick jail in this rural community 850 miles from Slippery Rock. ★ ★ ir Thie body of the elder Sanderson, a daily farmer, was found in a shallow, snow-filled ditch a few yards from the family’s home on the outskirts of Slippery Rock, about 50 miles north of Pittsburgh. He had been shot four times, twice in the head, Butler County Coroner Clinton Atwell said. Bijold quoted the boy as saying be had killed his parents with a sihgle-shot 22-caliber rifle. A rifle of that type was found in the trunk of the car the youth was driving, the sheriff said. The boy was one of two children of the Sandersons. His sister, Sandra Joyce, is a student nurse at a hospital in New Castle, Pa. Authorities said the youth attended Slippery Rock High School and was manager of its football team. Appliance Buyers, Ollie Fretter Says, “Don't Miss This Sale 8 > 2 fHiowtrf.fl ■ IS Cubic Ft. N0R6E CHEST ■ FREEZER ho* bafk«t«, food dl- ■ vidor, intorior light and lock ■ ... floor domo toducod to $1M> ■ Full foctery worronty.____ 5 All-Chonnol IS” PORTABLE S TELEVISION sultcoto stylo . . . 2 full fo^ory wononty. Only J 1SS.S0 _______________________ ■ 14 Cubic ft. WESTmONOUSE RE- ■ FRIDERATOR slightly croto-B morrod, automatic dofrest with oxtra largo bottom froocor... B now just ^2S ■ 30* Doluxo ELECTRIC RANOE, S fully automatic ovon with deck 2 and timer, new SIfS ■ Fully DolOxo NOROE automatic ■ WASHER, 2-spood with suds- • sovor ...................SfSS 5 Dduxo WHIRLPOOL OAS DRYER, ■ has 4 cydos, now just I1IS.SS S Automatic Portable pnono-~ ■ GRAPH, with 4-spood changer. 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SIMIIS Pits Moiiy In Hour Purse with IR-Storo Worshoose ClooroRcs Look below for Simms purso-sover spocials for Thursday. Hand picked specials our manogors havo chosen to givo you special savings on. So com* in and shop around, you aro sure to find many moro unodvertised bargains, too. ,We resorvo tho right to limit quantitios and all pricss sub|ect to stock on hand. Clearance Bahy Wear 197 / S2.9S VoliiNe ^ -set., MoinFl^of i O I R -e boW i*'’" \n»u >a»e4 \l’Vle» i9T JuU 37 \eh only- dork Of«y- Bose" Men’s Felt Hats Iyou Match ’em] Shoe Clearance 19? Hodg.-podg. of ikalSJ, boon dren ond grown-upl. You ttiotch up 0 poir-1 Sosement 1 99 Jud 32 left. hats. S m»n', drti$ ffif 6% to 7H, Bosement /ww'’* V.et' ol dr*"’ YOU' cbo"-«- got' YarilCooas 22’ Choo*. colo'^ eluded. tAoioF'o*” Sow* Cotton « Ladies’ Anklets 7:i" combed cotton roll top onH«., „,.gb, ol4.9cvolu«vSirei8to I0V4 Moin Floof t»***v 1 00 rtd pullover style with ‘'•offcolor. 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Breman drafted and delivered at the committee’s Monday night meeting « statement oil his views on the lawsuit directed at him and members of the Farmington Township Board. He also crUicited activities of Mrs. Bernard By, a Wood Creek Farms resident who said she was “very surprised” to be included in Brennan’s references to the lawsuit The suit, filed Friday by attorney Wendell Browirin behalf Raymond Felix, 29039 Bram wine, seeks an Oakland C^ty Circuit Court injunction ;imch would prohibit township officials from campaigning for/incorporation or using public funds for support or study of Ae matter. ★ h 7 it Petitions signe(0)y more than 400 township residents seeking an incorporation election were filed with the Oakland County clerk in November. AS CONSULTANT The Township Board subsequently appointed the 12-mem-ber study committee and hired Donald Oakes of Grand Rapids as a consultant on the proposed conversion to city status. Brennan, who also is the township attorney, said the suit alleges he pMd the 1509 fee hdd fas eaerow by the county la cennectioa with the incorporation petitiens that he had been by the township. “As, a matter ol fact/I have been reimbursed,” B re n n a n said. “There is no secret about it and the only reasdn my check was used in the first instance *as (that) the petitions were filed on a Monday morning before the Township Hall opened for business. it it it OUj6fficial PT,A Speaker [endters of Avondale’s Stone ementary School PTA will about the role of the public school as a center fcH* community activities at their 8 p.m meeting tomorrow. ★ * ★ David Dou^ierty of the Mott Center for (Community Affairs at Oakland University will speak on the “Cmmunlty School Cwicept” and explain how such a program can be started in the Avondale School District. ★ ★ ★ Grace Sayers, reading consultant, will s p e a k on the parents’ part in improving a cHlld’s reading ability. "We will meet Mr. Brown’s lawsuit in court, but suffice it to say that the attorney general has ruled that public funds may properly be used to educate Qie electorate with res|>ect4o matters of public concern.” QUESTIONS MOTIVES Beyond the lawsuit, Brennan questioned the motives of persons he said were attempting to prevent the public from obtaining all facts on incorporation. He said townahip officials had hoped points both against and in favor of fateorporation would be aired at the commit tee’s public meetinp. “Specifically, It has come to my attention that Mrs. Peggy By, a constant critic of the township administration, has been contacting citizens of Wood Creek vill^e udio signed the incorporation petition,” be said A ★ ★ “These contacts at the least instituted deliberate harassment and at the worst an attempt to intimidate these people in tee exercise oi their legal rights.” Mrs. By, 2933 Millbrook, today denied any connection with tee lawsuit and said she knew nothing of it until Monday night. She skid she had contacted some of the signers of the petltloo and had determined teat just fonr of those living in Wood Creek Farms wme registered voters. Mrs. By noted there had been “sonte cifusion as to who the circulator was” and that she discovered it was Brennan. Signers were contacted, she said, because “I definitely feel that the people in the village who did sign tee petitions have every right to come to tee' (study committee) meetings to present their views.” SEEKING RULING Village President Norman Kreider is seeking an are specifications so that bids on the sewer line installation can be taken next month. PdNTIAe NttU OPTICAL CENTEH •SM IVMilWt >M liM Ipl-ltK DR. PIOLIP HILAIRE nuudmum enrollment.” Smith said about three acres of an elementary site should be designated for buildings, parking lots, service drives and landscaping, with tee rest reserved near the center of each school area so most of the students can walk less than Itk miles to school and not be dependent on bus transportation for school activities. SIZE OF SITES In planning the size of the Bites, Smith recommends an ultimate maximum of 540 to 600 elementary piqiils per school, 18 to 20 classrooms, unless tee site adjoins a public park. In this case, the facilities in the park could reduce, the acreage to six. ULTIMATE NEED Smith sees a total of eight junior high schools and four senior high schools as the ultimate need. Smite also hopes to encourage city use of school sites for rocreatiOB programs hy outright sale of two to five acres to the city whenever appropriate BM legal, exchai^ of property, lease of appropriate acreage to the city aud some written agreement which states which agency is responsible for supervision, II-ability and care of facilities. It is also suggested that the A junior high site is to contain 20 acres plus one acre for each 110 pui^ of projected enrollment. The senior high site is to contato a minimum of 30 acres plus an additional acre for each 100 pupils of projected eoroHment. Five acres of a junior high site and 10 of the senior high site 8 h 0 u 1 d be designated for buildings, parking lots, stovloe drives and landscaping with the 2-Day Program Set for Area Teachers MILFORD -- Teachers in the Huron Valley School District will spend tomorrow and Friday completing student records and attending in-service toaining progranu. Students will not attend classes either day. Dr. Philip Hilaire, Oakland County Schools reading con-snltant, heads the list of speakers for the elemeutary teadhers’program. Hilaire tomorrow morning will discuss the four methods (torrentiy beh% used to teach reading. rest for playgrounds * * ' A * I Also scheduled to speak are The policy suggests that thei Irene Wisner and Mrs. Marjorie Junior high schools contain 750|Bourns, Huron Valley elemen-students pm* building, which'tary teachefs who have been on would require about 28 acres of leave for six weeks to partici-land. If the school adjoins a pate in a remedial reading proj- menta^ school sites are to fol-I^ayground area of each ele-|public park, acreage c^d be ect at the Oakland Schools of- One Week Only! FINE SHOES BUILT ON AUTHENTIC U. S. NAVY LASTS Important-tbeae lasts are AUTHENTIC, not “navy type,” not “navy atyla.^ You get the same line shape and ease of fit specified by the Navy, nua supers fine Goodyear wait construction, supple laathw uppers, oak-bend leather solea, apUt eowMde lining, flexible fibre insoles. Bbdk or iroMi. jg I IdMTTHlIHttolMlMllU I: XXX X X X Mn i: XXXXXX X X X X MmUemiphmm erdtrt pnmpUr ^ 682-1010 ! |D XXXXXX XX XX X X li XXXXXXX XXX IKB XXXXXXX X XX tow, where possible, standardsi®**>tery ^slte be divided into recommended by tte National Kverai areas for different ac- Up to new, the district has Council on Schoqlhouse Con-ltivitito. stiuction which recommends a minimum site of lo acres phis an additional acre Jor each lOOtsites are to be located at oriofland. reduced to II acres. fice. The senior high school should * ^ * Secondary schoolteachers will use the two days to com- contain 1,500 to 1,800 students in grades 10 through 12 in each The junior am] senior h i g h building, requiring 45 to 41 acres ftlete student records for the irst semester. i Bonds zzr I aw- Aal. SmImW a. dkitrf 80^ teOBte AM Sit htCOM't. AM IwaltMM In.. THE PONTIAC MALL ,r< ^Keep Fighting Until Peace Sealed^ TUB PONTOC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 19, 1966 ^ '' '' ■ ■ A“6 Step Up War, Planners Urge 8AIG<»), South Viet (AP) - High-level U.S. planners in Viet Nam say 6ie United St^es and South VM Nam must stq> iq> flw war, not deescalate it, if die Communists are to be brou|^ to the conference table and a favorable peace woriced out, hl^ty reliable sources reported today. Top-level thinking is that in the unlikdy event Hanoi and the Viet Coog ask for an armistice allied pressure should be stepped up ratlwr than eased The bombings against Nortb Viet Nam should be resumed and intensified, it is argued. Fighting should not end before the conclusion of peace talks. ★ * ★ These views, which ai^iear at variance with President Johnson’s current peace offensive, have been transmitted to Washington. What response has been made, if any, is not known. The messages to Washington stressed that any peace could easily be lost unless the agreement contains guarantees that can and would be enforced. Otherwise, the American planners say, a Com^ munlst take-over is clewly possible. INaUDE SUGGESTION Other warnings to Washington include a • suggestion that no peace treaty be sought that would force North Vietnamese President Ho Chi hOnh to admit defeat, even by implication. This, top planners feel, could result in Ho’s ovothrow by a more aggressive, more Pddng-oriented faction whidi would renew the war. ★ ★ ★ It is understood that some planners have urged the Johnson administration to draw up a politically realistic list of objectives expected from any peace conference. Another suggestion was to set' a tight time limit for peace talks so they would not drag on endlessly vfolle the Communists Nam continued to put on pressure hi the country^e where they now have a better grip than the South Vietnanoese government. ULUliATE RESPONSDnUTV Some top U.S. planners in Viet Nam also warn against entrusting ultimate supervision of the peace to the Intematimial Ccmtrol Cportunity has becn^aHcized by the pubtie *and former members, I, as a member, would like to make a few statements on its behalf. # ★ ★ ★ There may have been some mistakes made by the conunission, as any other organization will make, but I sincerely believe there is no duplication of services to the poor. It is not the purpose of the commission to give handouts to the poor but to help them to help themselves, train them for better paying jobs, etc. Issues he Jsrottghtup at the commission meetings are mailed a week in advance for study. I have spoken for and against some things being discussed at meetings. I represent the I^tin American community and , sometimes it seems ray people are not getting jobs, but before, one of them is hired I want to be sure he is qualified. ★ 'dr ★ I believe the commission, which has Democrats, Republicans, Independents, whites, Negroes, a Latin American, poor, well-to-do, executives and labor, does the best it can. I believe the staff and Mr. James Mc-Neeley are doing a good job and if we can get the cooperation from the public we can have a Great Society. TOM CHAVEZ JR. ECONOMIC OPPORTUNITY COMMISSION MEMBER Hunters Come Oose to Reader’s Home ______________________ Some hunter shot our English Beagle and didn’t have the ' decency to help or try to find the owner. Hunters come so close WT 1 m* to our house that they broke a window in our car. That shot (tOP WaSTI L (tIVGTI Knual |iniPcouWhavehitachiWoranadult.I’mafraidtogooutekte tT 1/ ValTVll -1- —y mit to play. These hunters should go to Viet Nam. RUTH RHODES CLARKSTON —A Woman Scorned! % David Lawrence Soys: WASHINGTON - The three television networks didn’t give the Republican spokesmen “equal time” for their “State of the U n i 0 n’’ message. The President was g r a n t e d an hour, and the Republicans only a h a 1 f-hour. Mr. Johnson had prime t i m e — 9 p.m. LAWRENCE — on all three networks simultaneously. 'The Columbia Broadcasting system gave the Republican i»*esentation from 10:30 to 11:00 p.m., while the National Broadcasting Co. and the American Broadcasting Co. showed it from 11:30 p.m. to midnight. This period is usually called “the late show.” The time for delivery of the President’s “State of the Union” mesMge was well publicized in advance, not only in news reports bnt in announcements on the air and in print. There was, on the other hand, considerable fumbling about giving advance n o t i c e to the public as to when the Republican program v/ould be heard. ★ ★ ★ Many millions of viewers and listeners had, therefore, gone to bed when “the other side” of the argument was broadcast. QUARTER OF AN HOUR Also, only a quarter of an hour was made available to the Senate Republican leader, Everett Dirksen, and another quarter of an hour to the House Republican leader, Gerald Ford. So the two Republican spokesmen had to condense their remarks. They tried to do too much in too llttj|^ time, and their comments, therefore, were not as comprehensive as they would have been had there been more broadcast time. While the two brief speeches had in them some good arguments, the effort as a whole was not as effective as it might have been if 9 different concept of an opposition party’s duty and responsibility had been recog-niz^ by the party strategists. ■k -k it It isn’t the obligation of a mincu'ity party to present alternatives in specific form or to construct a rival program. The chief need is to tell the people wdiat’s actually going on so that th^ may learn what is the true state of the union.. REAL DEnCTT The Republican {vesentation might well have included, fer instance, flgures from the speech made in the Senate on Monday by Sen. John J. Williams of Delaware, who declared that President Johnson is hiding the true deficit in next year’s national budget until after this year’s congressional elections, and a d <1 ^ d I5aI real deficit would be $9.2 billion instead of the $1.8 billion predicted by Mr. Johnson. Om of the biggest scandab of aip — the manner in which liational elections are con- trolled today — got only a little attention. Ford said: “Ways must be found to eliminate vote fraud, curb the cost of political campaigns, and expand the right to vote.” ★ ★ ★ Plenty of evidence of the political use of federal f u n d s intended to fight poverty or to help education has been uncovered. Ihe Republicans might have portrayed the nature of the irregularities prevalent, but they didn’t. Rep. F(vd did touch briefly on one of these aspects as follows: “We must liberate the war on poverty fr«n waste, controversy, and the bad odor of political bossism.” k k k But 4iuch vague statements on abuses — without giving some concrete examples — could hardly have made much impression, and certainly not on people half-asleep during broadcasts 'made near midnight. (CmiyrlgM itM. N«w Ywk HaraM Trlbaaa lya(]srwrite. noble effort to fight back ———----------------------------------- against the shocking fact that ntillions of us now living will cenhract^and/or die of cancer. Steve Allen,- Nan Wynn (who beat cancer) and otiier stars kept the conventionem-s steamed up and ready to go back to their home states determined to teave no door nn-rapped. Their chairman saw to it that there was never any letdown In Volunteers Services for Recreation Project What form of recreation or enjoyment could the citizens of Pontiac enjoy that would equal a sports arena that would benefit all ages? Most of my life has been connected with sports, both in the professional and amateur fields, and I have seen tlw great enjoyment the public has received from a building such as thb. I volunteer my services in any way to be pf help to those in authority for such a project. PAUL PARKS 273 MARION ‘Parents Are Proud of the Boys in Viet Nam’ In regard to the letter from Angie, 15-year-old, parents who have sons and friends in Viet Nam are proud of them and so is everyone who wants to keep our country free. Aren’t you? Just be glad it’s not you over there giving your blood, sweat, and possibly your life to keep our wonderful country frM. LINDA, 16-YEAR-OLD Reviewing Other Editorial Rages Fellow We Know.. The Decatur Herald A fellow we know is depending their zeal, no erosion of their upon Santa Claus to take care of enthusiasm ★ ★ ★ He’s a trim, strong-jawed, good-looking, big (6 feet 2^ inches) guy. You may have heard of him. His name is ■peck. Gregory Peck. DROPS CAREER his need for bourban renewal. Jet-Age Blues Life Magazine U.S. tourists who snap at their wives in Singapore, busi- Peck bee dropped hie cereer rfTn for a while to ^ evervthina ^ Brussels - take heart, w- « ♦ ♦ w. 'Die g 0 V e r n m e n t has just hes got to his job as national ^ study by the Federal Aviatiwi Authority proves what jet-age travelers have known all along. Any flight that takes us throu^ more than four time zones short-dreuits our internal clocks got to his job crusade chairman of ACS. His schednle would kill a horse. Just shaldag JuumIs and posing for pictures with the workers covild be a fall-time Job. “If people listen* to me be- for three to seven (toys, cause I’m in the movies, then ^ * * .... u some of what I have to say on , study sMt sclentist-sulv the subject of cancer is bound 1®***^*? to get across,” he is qpoted. ^ile. Ewh ^s wir^ k,kk like an astronaut and the results “I’ve been invdved in this fe^to a ewnputer. work for about 10 years. I’ve The tests so far conflm toat lost members of my family and “Ij I*®''* themostats that some of my friends through down just aftw the hour cancer. Who hasn’t? I was a normally retire (stay up al friend of Gary Cooper and and you feel chilly about Humphrey Bogart 2 a.m.). Another clock pumps adrenal secretions into our ALL FLAGS FLYING systems before we normally “F was with Bogart a couple wake up. When thesd metabdic of days before he died. He was clocks start going off over a jddng — as you’d expect — and Pjftrtsian lundi or at the theater he went down with all the flags in London, the traveler ends up flying. seriously disccHhbobulatqd. Mok serions than discomfort is the havoc raised with mental processes. After the flights, none of the Ph.D.’s vdio flew for the FAA conld add np simple columns of figures that had been child’s play for them a day earlier. Their reactions were less than a third as slurp as nwmal. The findings to date are hardly comforting to companies that make a iwactice of Jetting a vice president in from the home o^e to make a vital declsian on the spot. k k k If the problem increases in pn^rtion to speed, think of the passengers cm the supersonic jet transp<»1s due in the 1970s. Perluq>s we need a pill. An Incentive! The Indianapolis Star We have to tip our hat to William E. Constable, 35-year-old Bloomington man who has been selected as a member of Phi Beta Kappa, America’s oldest scholastic society. Tlw AwecUrtwl PrMi It tntttM mclutivtiy to ttw me for rtpubll-catlM el all local news prlntod in wit newtpapar at wtll at aU AP ntwt dltpatohat. Ttw Pantiae Prast It dtlivtrtd by earriar for SO oantt a weak; whara mallad In Onkinnd, Oanataa, Liw> IngaMn, Macomb, LaetiN' and Wathfonaw Xountlat Itte tw.00 a yaari eliaWlwrt In MkMgtn and all ettwr placet In Wt Unlfod Sfofoa 03LOO a year. All mall iub> acrtptlona payaMa In advance. Paataga baa baan pMd at tlw Sad data rafo a* PaMla& Mldiigtn. Manabar af ABC Five years ago Constable, a full-time employe at a Bloomington limestone quarry, decided that his life was only a “vegetable” existence. So he enrolled in Indiana University to broaden his horizons. During his 5-year university career be managed to support his wife and three children. He also compiled a cumulative grade average of 3.95 out of a possible “A” average of 4. He has received the Ford P. Hall prize in government, an I. U. Foundation grant and a Molt scholarship. This year he was among I. U. students awarded “Little SOO” 8chola^ ships. ★ ★ ★ Constable’s attitude shows how a man can mature in his outlook. He says he had never intended to go to college and that his main thought in hi^ school was “to do as little as possible and get out.” Now he says he looks back on hours spent in front of a television set as a “vegetable existence.” , We hope Constable’s \ example stirs others who perhaps think they are too old to start, to abandon vegetable existences for the world of living men. Act Your Age * The Door County (Wis.) Advocate ")■ I I A lot of women umld act their age if.they could rpgem-, her what U was. i THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. JANUARY 19, 1966 A—7 Nurse 'Pocahontas' a Charmer to Woundecl Yanks SAIGON, South Viet Nun (AP) r- Some of the men shot whUa in the jungles and paddies of the Viet Nam wv wind up in a U.S. hospital bed being treated by a real American — a real early American. “I ought to be treating American soldiers,” says Anne Yazd, 8. “I am an American, the first American. I am a Navajo Indian.” ★ ★ * The petite, copper-skinned nurse is at the Third Field Hospital, which gets some of the toughest wound cases from the war theater. Her ward 13, which is regarded as lucky, deals with thwacic surgery. These are wounds of the ch^, which require a lot of care. "Pocahontas? She’s*number one.” That’s what every man in his cot voted — fw Anne. About 5 foot 3, Anne brings a GI what he needs when he’s feeling low... a beaming smile, dimples and bright, white teeth, and above all good ears, instead of a clacking tongue. To get her to talk about herself is like digging cobalt with a toothpick. ♦ ★ * But, about her patients, she’ll rattle on. She’s one of 25 Army nurses in the hospital on the edge of Saigon. They do eight hour shifts, mostly. But by and large they are caught in the escalation of war, and its peab and valleys. ALL OR NOTHING Some days we^just get almost more than we can handle,” she says. ‘‘It’s sometimes men after a time? ‘‘Oh, no,” says Aiine. ‘“rhey are not just cases. We get to know each other so well. When all or noting but we do the besti She’s Army enough to say quickly in dealing With wounded aign manager fw former Vice President Richard M. Nixon. IN COURT TODAY Hinman, 59, an attorney, goes into court today for arraignment proceedings on a charge of solicitation to commit murder. Hinman denied the allegations, tot admitted that he dislikes (hotiner. Chotiner, who has law offices in Beverly Hills, was reported on his way home from a honeymoon trip to the Orient. * * * Deputy Dist. Atty. Richaid W. Hecht said Hinman had asked an unidentified cellmate last month to kill his ex-wife, Marcia, 27, who lives in Beaumont, Calif. Hecht also said Hinman allegedly offered magazine salesman Leonard Amabile $500 to shoot Chotiner, and that Amabile then told authorities of the alleged offer. $2M AFTERWARD Hecht said Hinman gave Amabile $240, promising to pay $260 alien Chotiner was killed. ★ ★ ★ Hecht said Amabiie next called Mrs. Hinman, who called (totiner’s associate, George Magit, who called pdice. Hecht said sherfif’s deputies asked Amabile to go akmg with to alleged plot, and that his last two cMiversations with Hiik man — last FViday and Monday — were tape-recorded. The plan, Hecht said, was for Amabile to kill Chotiner at his home in nearby Newport Beach. DUE TO RETURN V Monday, Hecht said, Amabile told Hinman he was unable to find Cbotiner. Iboi Hinman was arrested because Chotiner and his bride were scheduled to return soon. "We didn’t want to take a chance on anything happening once the C^otiners returned,” Hecht explained. Hinman was arrested, in his home at Malibu by sheriffs deputies. The y arrest warrant charged him with five counts of solicitation of a person for the purpose of murder. Hinman and his wife were appeal by Hinman. SpHng fiesiiiQl Tulip’s tried them all, but Rose Lotion Vel is for her, and for you, whatever your name. So gentle it won't harm a rose,yet ^ase is cut beautifully.That "push-pml” cap is so handy, too. Are you for sparkling clean dishes? Just try Vel and you’ll turn, too. ROSE LOTION VEL PENNErS MIRACLE MILE STORE HOURS 9:30 A.M. to 9:00 P.M. A~ 8 THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY. JANUARY 1«. 1966 'H "I'—ye.';»PL*t ’p* Sky's ^Limit for Saleswoman KTho ever wtot tl at through ANH ARBOR (AP)—Just for first giri who ever fun, Colleen Harrington jumpslit. out of speeding ai^Ianes. And to earn a Uving. she sells CoUeen dpte her sky diving * Srolip of jumpers based •nie dert-hslred Miss Marring-.00, a . (yoor Uvonl. dent, adopted both her unusual pursuits last year. She began parachuting froipS planA as a hobby last Mdy. Since then, she has junqted 55 times as a sky diver. / SALESWOMAN / Miss Harrington Ing ls a ^ ber of the Parachute Club ci America. "It’s the peo|rie you meet that make it such fun,” she said. “There’s a great feeling of spif' it and camaraderie.” wmt- most of it and says she can bum the rest.” •k it * The initial three-hour i lesson whidi includes a firsi jump and equipment rental, runs to (30. CoU^ now pays only the standard rate of (7 per jump. Jump rates vary, though, depending on altitude. She has developed a rather calm attitude alxmt this business of string blittiely into space. ‘QUITE ROUTINE’ the plane he pulls on a static line.” ON WEEKENDS On weekends she trades her _____ a y^^smart^>ffice attire for aome^ T^ie Ri^^umpJB “really q^ dealership in Ann Arbor lastlPO>™ls boots and other items Markethog Institute for a| All this equipment is fairly Manufacturers are working oh I a new electrical gadget — an 1 electric window washer for month,” she said. ‘‘I was the expensive, but Colleen bought poised exit, and as you leave home use. I Colleen said. “The jump master assists you,” she said. ‘‘You make a World Wide-Michigan*s Largest Furniture Chain* Celebrates the Grand Opening of the 19th Gigantic Location with a Spectacular 'GRAND OPENING SALE ((. ,y:i SPECIAL PRICES GOOD AT ALL WORLD WIDE STORES INSTANT CREDIT-NO MONEY DOWN WORLD WIDE )WK,WP«>‘ NOMEFURNISHINQSI Fabulous Grand Oiiening Values In Eveiy Store! ■ UVMO ■OOM MROAMS " Midini, cJtiaJ mi ywritlJ Iwritw l> dl —iM ■ Mhi Willi li^rnW Imm cMhiM. Sm w W RIB. Hwjr, tm «l a40iidl Colonial afylod sofa and chair radueod tO.r............$12S I Contomporary styl> I ing - walnut trim ■ finish..........$139 1 Sofa and matching chair in traditional . styling..........$149 Bsautiful prints In provincial styling..,,..,, $189 WORLD WIDE'S *5,000,DD0'” [ATEWIDE INVENTORY REDUCTION! am VALun m biprooms i £■ Omm jroiir fnoriW >t)rl« ■JUmIiIi (rMlMs lwt»MllcH«i...JI •! |Mt • WNm •( lUlr oriflMl ^icnl Sinfl*, OmW* aad iriH«d«Mun In lU |iwf. WESTINQHOUSEAND SUNBEAM APPLIANCES at DISCOUNT PRICES!! 4 Pioea modom bod-room in a walnut finish.......$109 .■ Traditional stylod 4-B pioco onsamblo $149 WmamBi 4 Pioco Colonial Bedroom in rnawio finish ....... $119 I Suitoan $099 HANOMIXEIIS......... O WoottaghoDteEltefrlo $095 CAN OPENERS......... Sf 2-SLICE $099 Electric TOASTERS W | Doluxo Stoa* and $4 4 99 SPRAY IRONS......... II Beautiful Provincial m\ Badroms as low as......$169 r “We sati s guarantee faction with y our purchase for a po riod of 30 days c ifter delivery. If you ore' not sofis .fied by e’xchonge. repoi r or adjustment, we will refu nd your money w ithin 10 days afte r receiving your J written request.’’ (TV 9X12 UNOLEUM RUGS SoMbt tram AsMrtod Colors i and PaltRms 7 PIECE DINErri SET ^®f4lj .S'?* laautiM Bmnsa-tana finisk taMa and I matehing chaira......... POLE LAMPS, ILII;’’'"*" FLOOR TO CEILING 1$ PlfCfs; •PONliOUiillOlB V ' I i'v:: WWW Colleen returned to Michigan about a year ago from San Francisco where she had gone after graduation from high school. She did secretarial work there. ‘‘I loved San Francisco,” she said, “but I’m not that crazy about office work. I like to get out and meet people and I guess this id what attracted me to sales. WWW “After all, if you can become |» good salesman, ttiere’s no 11m- -t in what you can do.” WAREHOUSE CLEAN-SWEEP CLEARANCE Quality appliance$ by America's fop makers r. Refrigerators, freezers, ranges, washers, dryers . . . appliances of all sizes and models ... some floor samples, some one - of - a -kind, some crote-morred ... oil at tremendous savings during our giant clearance sale! Shop now! **°w ft At Smaller appliances that sare you work and time CLEARANCE CLEARANCE Buy black-and-white or Color TV at low prices Vacuum cleaners, floor polishers, humidifiers, gas water heaters, dir conditioners... from such fo- ' mous makers os Hoover, Eureka, Shetland, Air King, RCA Whirlpool, Quaker and many morel A terrific opportunity to save! Choose from portable, console or table model TV's . . . some with Contemporary, some with Provincial, some with Colonial styling. Many screen sizes. RCA Victor, Admiral, Motorola, Phiico and Zenith plus other famous makes! CLEARANCE Phonos, stereos, radios at big price reductions Admiral, Bioupunkt, Columbia, Motorola, RCA Victor, Panasonic, Phiico, Zenith and many others contribute to our big stock of quality music makers! Shop early for the best selection of radios, phonos, or stereos to please you. OPEN EVERY NIGHT TO 9 Drayton optn Sun. noon to 6 FEDERAL'S DOWNTOWN AND DRAYTON PUINS MICHAEL MARE8CA Scientist Wounds 3, Kills Self UPTON, N. Y. (UPI) - A nuclear engineer, shirtleas and 'covered with lipatick-like warpaint, gunned down three fellow Bcientiats, shot at a fourth -and fatally wounded himself yesterday at the Atomic Energy Commission’s Broc^ven national laboratory. Police said Michael Maresca, M, had been regarded as “very quiet and a friendly person,” but only a day earlier had complained be was “being followed : and spied upon.” A doctor at the lab advised Um to see a psychiatrist. ' The three co-workers wounded by Mareaca’s shotgun blasts ;were reported in satisfactory ; condition. After firing a stray shot at a ' fourth scientist, Maresca ran to his car, and killed himself by ruing with the barrel of the gun in his mouth. FATHER OF THREE Police said Maresca, a father of three, was interested in space work and had applied for the National Space Agency’s astronaut program. Officers s^ there was nO. ' Indicatioa the iDcident hi-vohred a security violation at . the ated# NSCMch facilityl, ' bat the fHl hnnaediately be-' gaa an Investigation. Maresca carried die automatic shotgun, was sbiitless and had lipstick daubed grotesquely about bis forehead and chhet when he arrived in subfreezing weather at the research facility on Long Island, about 65 miles east of New York. He first entered a large lab where James Powell, 33, a nuclear engiimr, sat by a desk. Without a "word, police said, Maresca fired a blast, striking Powell in the chest. RAN TO OFFICE Maresca then ran to an office where he shot Martin Zucker, a physicist, in the hip and hand. Then, in another laboratory, Leif HJame, a visiting physicist from Sweden, was shot in the back. Police said Maresca shot at Rassell ^ti, a chemist, throngh aaotber lab door bnt missed him. All of the men were considered Maresca’s friends, officers said. Last Saturday, the Mar-escas spent a sodal evening with Powell and bis wife. “It is believed by all concerned,” a police statement said “that the subject became de-aranged and mentally unbalanced. Tehy fqel that security Js not involved. 9AD nj^USIONS «“Since the subject applied for the space program, he had been having illusions of people following him around and spying on him.” When a supervisor learned of Maresca’s complaints on Monday, he sent the man to the lab doctor, Dr. Robert A. Love. Love said he advised Maresca to seek psy<^atric help, but the scientist appeared in good hiimor and did not mention that he believed he was being followed. — , Man's Body Found in Railroad Boxcar MONROE (AP) - The body I of an unidentified man, about] 60, was found in a railroad bof-; car Tuesday. An autopsy was ordered. TWe body in the boxcar, that of a niiite man, was dressed in work clothes. There were no signs of violence. London Cartoonist Dies LONDON, Ont. (AP) - Cyrus i Leslie (Cy) Edy, 82, London’s! first newspaper cartoonist, died I Monday, ^y was a reporter fori the London Fr^ Press and be-canae its first cartoonist. | THE l^QNTJAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. JANUARY 19, 1966 A—9 Out they go! Famous brands! Floor samples! One-ot-a-kinds! SSBSaSSSSSSfifiSSS88BfiSiEiii9f s6855iS6QSSS!9i91i95!!*BS*il lEBfiSSSBEGSfiSfifiBiEEEiifiiEi %B66!S65598!9ii9i99!*iS5ff!' g JOIN SEALY'S 1966 SLEEP PARADE! Deep tufted comfort Deep quilted, extra firm Smooth button-free top Reg. 39.95 ^ mattress or box spring EACH 33 Rag. 49.95 mattress or box spring EACH $ 38 Reg. 59.95 mattress or box spring EACH $ 44 i Twin or full size mattress with heavy-duty woven stripes cover, hundreds of pressure tested steel coils for better, lasting body support. Seal/s durable no-eag comtirudionl Savings priced! Twin or full firm innerspring mattreu to give excellent, healthy support-blissful sleeping comfort! Covered in expensive f^ic with Sealy prebuilt borders to prevent sagging. ‘ Finest quality print cover mattreu with pre-built borders for total edge-to-edge support, extra firm construction for maximum comfort all night long. Twin or full size. Save 15.95! tWS Aw-- . .. -iMi I ’ f Ms Family room special! New twin size studio lounger Smart sofa by day and large bed for 2 at night Ideal for family room because the cotton plaid cover is removable, washable! Full comfort mattreu, box spring on strong legs for sitting, sleeping. Matching bolsters..4.44 ee. 49 88 NO MONEY DOWN Just the right heightfor sitting, filled with urethane foam for real comfort while sleeping. Opens with fingertip ease to sleep 2. Covered in leatherlike vinelle. 8 decorator cobrs. 69 88 NO MONEY DOWN Seven-pc. corner sectional sleeps two, seats a crowd Early American 2-pc. set is beautiful yet durable New in sectionals! Two 6' long urethane foam lounges with five removable bolsters for added sitting comfort, convenbnee. Covered |n strong supported vinyl. A perfect group for your home. $ 88 NO MONEY DOWN Traditional Colonial designi Modern day comforti Our low pricel A comfortable sofa bed that opens to sleep two easily, plus matching rocker. Both covered in authentic print. Solid hardrock maple! $ 88 NO MONEY DOWN OPEN EVERY NIGHT TO 9 Monday through Saturday *oy No Money OOVfH SALE! Don't reupholster - replace! Contemporary dinette chairs 7.88 Styled to give you a decorator look . . . padded to give true comforti Priced low to buy in complete setsi Covered in practical, durable, wipe-clean vinyl. Black/white with chrome frame, beige with bronzetone frame. SALE! $109 Colonial 5-pc. dinette set of solid hardrock maple $ 88 The 42" round mar-resistant table extends with ane leaf to seat 6 or 8> is surrounded by four extra size mate's chairs. .-. just one of the many fine Colonial pieces in our stocki Yours now at big savings of $211 DOWNTOWN PONTIAC 91 N. Saginaw Street , .1 ji. A—10 THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 1^, 1966 Turn His Life Into a Living 'Hal' Remarks That Moke the Boss 'Boyle' By HAL BOYLE NEW YORK (AP) - Remarks that the boss gets tired of hearing; “No mattw how we figure it, chief, it looks like we’re in for another red-ink [Grouchy himself. I’ll tell youjer runs out of ideas—as long asipaid him the money you lost t0| later.’’ ♦ ★ A You may rule the roost at the office, but don’t try your bullying tactics on me, Horace Smithers. I’m your wife, not your hired slave.” A delegation from the sixth you’ve got any/’ jhim last week at gin rununy— “I’d send him a get-well card, and besides that, he says his ^ but tlw last time I did, he did.” [year pin has turned green.” BLOOD PRESSURE floor w^ts to see you, sir, It’s^jj^yg gj y,g Christmas party something about the water cool-|jggj year, he just passed out er—broke again.” ★ ★ ★ JUST PUTTERS “The only thing higher than his tax bracket is his |)lood pressure " ^______________ “Instead of passing out a “You may be company president, Mr. Smithers, but please PUTTERS <‘Xhe mayor is waiting to see remember that ’“On H>e golf course he putts, you, sir. I tiwnk he wants 4hej_ as chairman of At the office he just putters.” Ifirm to make a big contribution ‘ j j the board I have “ After looking over your X to the local charity campaign- a woman \^o BOYLE the final say.” |rays, Mr. Smithers, I think just to get it off to a ‘ ^ ^ ^ I don’t mind laughing at his what’s wrong with you is that start.” ^ your ulcer is getting an ulcer.”! “He’s having a blue Monday... “Pretend you didn’t see hitn,'since his wife caught him out . After a year and a day, hom-Alice. We can ride in the next Saturday night with his girli**^*!!® questron, he Rule Out Murder in Death 4 Years After Shooting BAKERSFIELD, Calif. (AP) - A man irnprisdned for shoot- elevator.” “They say his father-in-law was a self-made man.” TRAVEL FOLDERS jokes. The trouble is I never can tell them from his inspirational speeches.” “The union grievance committee wants to see you, sit. I believe it’s the same old complaint-no towels in the men’s room.” BOLD FRONT “I see Uiat our competitors are putting up a new |15-million plant. As a stockholder, Smithers, I’d like to know what we are putting up besides a bold dinner ring................... 296.00 232.00 Ladies’ nice 1.32 ct. pear shape dia. with 2 bag......__________1875.00 1100.00 Ladies’ .68 ct. Sol. set in plat._ 460.00 360.00 Ladies’ 1.05 ct; pear shape dia. with 2 baguettes ......1200.00 1000.00 Ladies’ 1.11 ct. pear shape soL.'.l100.00 900.00 Ladies’ eng. and dia. wed band set. 36/100—fine_________ 360.00 275.00 Ladies’ white gold 6 dia. wed. band____________________ 100.00 60.00 Ladies’ 6 dia. Anger ring_____ 880.00 249.00 Ladies’ 21 dia. w.g. wed. l^d... 220.00 150.00 Ladies’ 40 dia. dome 2.86 total ....1500.00 1200.00 MOUNTINGS Ladies’ yel. gold 4 dia. eng.186.00 115.00 Matching yel. gold wed. band_ 226.00 150.00 Ladies’ w.g. 12 dia. dinner_ 196.00 125.00 Beautiful dinner mtg. with 20 matching dia. baguettes .... 796.00 495.00 Ladies’ w.g. 4 dia. mtg. to set two stones------------ 120.00 89.00 Man’s white gold 6 dia. mtg.— 76.00 49.60 Close out of men’s solitarie mountings wduced 50% RINGS Ladies’ y.g. Gen. Sapph. ft c/pearl 135.00 89.50 Ladies’ y.g. black onyx dinner .... 17.60 11.00 Ladies’ y.g. 5 gen. garnet ring ....“55.00 32.')M Ladies’ w.g. cul. pearl ft 1 dia. .... 60.00 38.50 Men’s w.g. linde star sapph .... 95.00 65.00 Men’s y.g. bl. onyx initial ft dia. ...- 46.00 29.50 Boy’s y.g. Alexanderite ....— ..... 16.60 11.00 Man’s y.g. Moose lodge ring.... 23.60 10,00 These are only a few examples of outstanding ring values to be had—«lmost every ring is reduced at least one third. MEN'S WATCHES Man’s yel. automatic universal.. 110.00 Man’s yel. automatic universal.. 100.00 Man’s S.8. thin line famous make 49.96 Man’s s.s. waterproof Croton s.w. 43.95 Man’s 14K gold waterproof 77.00 76.50 29.95 27.50 65.00 Croton S.W.......................110.00 We have hundreds of styles and makes in ipost all famous 'makes reduced for clearance. Above and below are only a few examples. Come in snd judge for yourself. LADIES' WATCHES Ladies’ y.g. 17J Croton exp. brae. 49.96 33.00 Ladies’ s.& 17J Croton waterproof 66.00 ' 40.00 Ladies’ 14K y.g. Hamilton Cord w.w......................187.50 85.00 Ladies’ w.g. Hamilton brae. w.w. 69.60 49.50 Ladles’ 14K y.g. Universal w.w. 125.00 88.00 Ladies’ y.g.f. Universal w.w. — 95.00 65.00 Ladies’ Fam. make 32 dia. w.w. 276.00 195.00 Ladies’ Fam. make 20 dia. w.w. 802.50 195.00 Ladies’ Fam. make 22 dia. w.w. 2 carat dia. total weight--1000.00 650.00 Lad. Famous make 8 dia. w.w... 247.50 137.50 Lad. Famous make 10 dia. w.w. 187.60 95.00 WEDDING BANDS Ladies’ double and triple row diamond wedding rings .. 25% off 65.00 65.00 Man’s 5 dia. wide wed. ring —110.00- Man’s 4 dia. wide wed. jring96.00 Ladies’ y.g. 9 dia. wide wed. ring ------------- Ladies' w.g. 12 dia. wide wed. ring ..............165.00 Many ladies’ & men’s 1966 wide fMcy „ wed. bands................Reduced 83!4% 220.00 140.00 90.Q0 All soles final—no layaways. But charge all you wish. Ws esnnot gusrsntee svsry Item to bs in svsry stors, but all stores bav«..compsrabU vnluss. LADIES' JEWELRY sterling ft 14K c/pearl pendants -------50% off Closeout earring ft necklace sets-------50% off Closeout Bracelets ______________—......50% off Closeout earrings...........—"----------50% off Simulated pearls reduced ----------------33'/^% Large assortment of pierced earrings reduced —.......... ..33'/^% 14K gold and sterling Ladies’ jewelry reduced ...................25% Diamond pendants reduced ------------------ 33^% Diamond watch bracelets reduced.......—33 >4% Cultured pearls reduced .............25 to 60% Almost ovorything is spacioliy priesd, coma in and tea tho bargains. Close out of Girls' identification bracelets Reg. 7.50 L50 Whils thsy last MEN'S JEWELRY Men’s tie tacs ............ Reduced 33>/j% Men’s cuff links____________Reduced 33 >4% Men’s Key chains ___________Reduced 33 <4% Men’s Sets__________________Reduced 33>4% Above items set with diamonds_.Reduced 33 >4% Small pocket knives_________Reduced 33<4% Pocket ft Table Lighters____Reduced 33'4 % Our Center Table is full of items reduced Vi (50%) for immediate sole SILVER HOLLOWARE Reg. Sale Silver plate compotes---------- 6.50 3.50 Sterling candle sticks ------- 23.50 16.95 Sterling bud vase__________....j 15.95 11.95 Silver plate butter dish------ 10.96 7.96 Silver plate card tray ..—... 7.95 3.95 Silver plate casserole ...... 10.96 7.95 Silver plate chip ft dip------ 10.95 7.95 Silver plate Paul Revere bowls__Reduced 33 ‘4 % Pewter Paul Revere Bowls_______.Reduced 33*4%, Pewter Butter dishes __________Reduced 33'4% Sterling candelabras ________ 79.60 59.50 Most coffee ft tea services ....__Reduced 25% Odds ft Ends silver serving pieces____40% off SUinksH Steel at 16 W. Huron St store only Service for eight.............. 49.95 39.95 Service for eight_________—----- 44.95 29.95 Service for eight............ 79.95 59.95 Service for eight-------------- 10.65 39.95 Odds & Ends stainless serving pieces ....50% off Deep silver pastry server on crystal compote cake plate.........................7.50 value for 3.95 68 pc. Service for 12 in Wallace Sterling Silver...........Reg. 325.00—225.00 International Silverplate Service fop 12..............Reg, 192.00—135.00 International Silverplate Service for 8.................Reg. 115.00—88.00 All 1065 ladies’ and men’s watch bracelets 33% Off BIRMINGHAM 162 N. Woodward Ml 6-«95 Fridar Evwilaga 'W S Jewelers PONTUC 16 W. Huron FE 2-0294 FiWar Evmiag* *ttt t MIRACLE MILE 2203 S. TeUtrsph FE 2-6391 , Krtry Eueeles 'IM S WJ&i^A^uA if, J Art trAtt i t». iWA 7. ^—tr CLAGGED RIVER — Ice in the Illinois River puts up some stem resistance to this towboat loaded with coal heading for Chicago. An ice flow in Peoria Lake has caused to>rs b this area to siow down considerably. This tow spent more than six hours Uting through die ice. Arctic Air Prevalent Snow Clogging New Mexico By The Associated Prass Snow hobbled traffic in the mountains of New Mexico today and arctic air covered wide areas of the union. More snow fell from the Ohio Valley to the Great Lakes as a new odd wave blustered toward Mimtana , from northwestern Temperatures stayed bdow 20 above in most of the northern Plains, the Great Lakes region and the u{^ kflssissippi Valley. ★ ★ ★ Cloudcroft, in southeastern New Mexico, reported 11 inches of snow. Three inches of snow fdl during Tuesday night’s nidi hours and slowed traffic in Albuquerque. Snow measured 8 indies in mouidain areas. Snow covered other sections of New Mexico, with 3 inches at Las Vegas in the north; 5% inches at Santa Rosa in the east; 1 inch at Garisbad in the southeast and 3 inches at Belen in the central section. The snow spanning the Ohio Valley dumped an indi of new snow in Grand Rapkls and Muskegon, Mich., Tuesday Light snow flurried as far w^ as Illinois. Police in limtana east of the continental divide posted cold-wave and hazardous driving warnings as an icy air mass blew down from Cwada. Forecasters predicted -20 readings in the northern Rockies and the northern Montana plains. Temperatures in Wisconsin rose into the teens fr«n -15 ear' ly Tuesday in Greoi Bay, but snow that has blanket^ the state for days stayed on the ground. The depth measured 17 indies at Park Fails in tiie northwest and six inches at Madison in the south. The Deep South was cloud-covered and rainy with abovefreezing temperatures. Now humidify your home for more ieomfort with less heat Ooofnmioff Humidiflw Bbnridify ymw fcosas bsautiftiUy with tide ftmita»4*ylsd Caotoitor HumidMw. It has Ihs ildi look of wBlnit in a thick, taetmed vhurl Inieh that ia both wshaMa and zaar-raafatant. Inioy mon ooniibst with lass hast and piotset your homo and flwniahinga with this handaoma hmidiilar. a ■weaeialw ss la IS seWeae a day • SaWaiaSa HanMMat • Tee-Speed yse • SaleieeSe SSet OW ntHumWfkrtrmtki ISe ^tood filoeeeteept^y Sunnlr ^GoodHouMhNping* MUIMTKI Zif (MLT • WMar Laval Indicatar e SparaSm sad RaflS Sipaal U0Sa e "Arele^tli^ Maaharpa $ 69 95 consumer power .Ttlsphdnt 333-7812 , , ME-302-22 Exam Sft in Slaying MARSHALL JAP) - Frank Grandfors, 24, of Battle Creek is scheduled for examination to-^ day on a diarge of murder in connection with the fatal shooting Tuesday of Robert Augustine, 24, alM of Battle Oedc. State Police said Augustine was shot at the home of Granfon’ estranged wife. Nigeria Parties Back Regime; Executions Reported LAGOS, Nigeria (AP) - Nigeria’s . political parties are rallying to the new military government but up to SO offloere have been report^ executed in a power straggle witain tiie army. Reliable sources who rqxutad the executions said anumg the dead was a lieutenant colonel who had tried to assassinate the country’s new leader, Maj. Gen. Aguijd Ironsi., * a w There were other repents that some officers were diot on the Lagos golf course. A British res-idoit reported stumbling over an officer’s body in long grass at the side of a tree. The country’s feudhig political parties promised to ^ppoit Ir-onsi’s n^ittfy regime. Among them was the Northern People’s Congress party which with 12 Cabinet minhters dominated the government of Prime Minis- ter 3ir Abubakar Tafawa Bale-wa. Tafawa Balewa was kidnaped by military rebels who tried to stage a coup Saturday. The body of Finance Minister Fffirtus Okotie Eboh, who was kidnaped with him, was found with five others in a shallow grave 30 miles outside Lagos, a government source reported. There still was no wo^ on the fate of Tafawa Balewa. The Northern People’s Congress leader, Zanna Bukar Dip-charima, called on all Nigerians to rally round the new military regime. Come in and lake on a tiger ! 3rd place. 3rd place. 3rd place. 3rd place. 3rd place. Beginning to sound like another broken sales record? It is! You bet it is. For the sixth straight year, Pontiac is outselling all but two makes, and already some 244,000 buyers have given the ‘66 Pontiacs and Tempests their own personal car-of-the-year award. And we're on our way to surpassing last year's record sales of over 800.000 cars. Another great thing about it all is that so many Pontiac owners are trading in their present cars to help us get where we are. And that says quite a lot But enough about us. Let's talk about you. Have you tried a Wide-Track tiger lately? , Wide-Track Pontiac COME IN AND TAKE ON A TIOER AT YOUR PONTIAC OEAUERt-A GOOD PLACE TO SUY UNO CARS, TOa FONTIAC MOTOR DIVISION RETAIL STORE OENIRAL MOTORS CORPORATION •5 MT. CLMINS. PONTIAC IS. MICH. RUSS JOHNSON MOTOR SALES 19 (M-34) LAKI ORION. MKH. JACK W. HAUPT FONTIAC SALES, INC. N. MAIN STRUT, CLARKSTON, MICH, HOMER MIGHT MOTORS, INC. UO S. WASHINOTON, OXFORD, MICH. KEEGO SALES ond SERVICE, INC. SOtO'ORCHARD UKI RD. Kino HARROR, MICH. SHELTON FONTIAC-BUICK, INC. tss S. ROCHISTIR RD., ROCHUTIR. MICH. A—12 , ---^ THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY. JANUARY 19, 1966 Waferford Staff to Hear Educator Interaatk>nany known educator Sir Ronald Gould Eng' land will address staff members of Waterford Township Schools at StIS p.m. Jan. 27 at Pierce Junior IRgh School. The event is sponsored by the Waterford Education Association. GaaM, who also will visit Sarit Marie, Michigan State University and Flint next we4, h presideat of the Worid Confederation of Organisations of the Teaching Profession (WCOTP). Unanimously elected at the organizatifHi’s first meeting in 1952 in Copenhagen, Denmark Gould has served in his present capacity ever since. ■o ★ ★ The WCOTP assumes a role at the international level simi lar to that of national teachers associations. It promotes a continuing exchange of professional knowledge and organizational experience among its members, advancing the cause of education and the status of teachers. Thieves Set for Giant Game of Tiddlywinks MONTARA, CaUf. (UPI)-Au-thorities in the San Francisco peninsula community are trying to figure out why thieves stole seven manhole covers from the streets. The covers weigh 150 pounds arid cost $266 apiece. The theft was discovered yesterday. (AawrtliwnMit) A FAMILY AFFAIR Fidgetinx. noM-picking. a tormantinx rectal itM are often telltale signi (H Pin-Wonna...utly paraaitea that medical axpefta aay Imeat 1 out of ev«^ S parsoDa examined. Entire familiea may be viettma and not know it. To get rid of Pln-Wonna, they muit be kflled in the large inteatine where they live and multiply. Tbat'a exactly what Jayne’a P-W tableta do... and here’a how they do it: Firvt—a adentifie eaadng carriea the tableta into the boweu before they diaaol-ve. Then — Jayne'a modem, medically-approved Ingredient goea right to work—kilia PIn-Worma quickly and anally. Don’t taka ehancea with danger-oua, highly eontagioua Fln-Worma which infect entire lamiUea. Get genuine Jayne’a P-W Vermifuge ... amall, eaay-to-take tableta... apecial aiaea for children and adulta. Bids Are Received on Loan Note Sale Bids were received last night by the City Conunission on the s^ of $1.1 million in temporary loan notes for the city’s R44 urban renewal project. Four bids were submitted, with interest rates ranging from 2.96 to 3.20 per cent. Peatiac State Bank was tiie apparent low bidder. A reso-hi^ to approve the sale is to be presented at next week’s commission meeting. The loan notes were the fifth in the series of borrowings to finance R44 operatkins. In other business, a letter was received fn»n the M i c h i g a n State Highway Department in connection with the proposed M59 relocation project. FREEWAY WORK Bids for the freeway work are to be received Feb. 9., In their letter, state officials asked the city to certify that Police, Fire Pay Hike Due Despite continuing wage negotiations, the city will implement new pay schedules for police and firemen, effective with the Feb. 11 pay day, ac-owding to city officials. The new pay rates were adqited last fall by the City Commission from a study by the Michigan Municipal League. Nearly all of tiie city’s 750 employes received pay hikes diroai^ tiie MML pay plan. Most employes received 6ie new pay, retroactive to Aug. I, last montii. However, the new rates had not been implemented for police and firemen because their professional groups rejected tiie new pay schedules. Members of both the Pontiac Firefighters Association (PFA) and the Pontiac Poiice Officers Association (PPOA) voted to turn down the city’s pay plan. Instead, the PPOA and the PFA have commenced negotiations with the city for longevity pay and an added $49 per year over the hike in the new pay schedules. right-of-way for an M59 nm-off lane is available at the future MSI—East Boulevard interchange. Also last night, the Commission approved mAing a request to the state to permit the dty to demolidi thi^ substandard houses in the city. The houses are at 1149 Stan ley, 191 W. Wilson and 81S Ingle-w^. The buildingB are state-owned. LEASE FOR SPACE The commission approved a lease for office and lobby desk space at Pontiac Municipal Airport for Northern Flying Service at a total annual rent of $1,854. Two urban renewal contracts were ordered paid last night. The first was to DeAngelis Co. for $11,580 for tree planting in both projects. ★ -A ★ The second contract ordered paid was for $13,445 to Stanley B. Jones for site improvements in both urban renewal projects. 2 Assistant Prosecutors Resign Posts Two Oakland County assistant prosecutors today announced they have resigned to ent^ private practice. They are Bernard P. Paige, 2425 Avondale, Sylvan Lake, and WiUiam R. VanderKloot, 30015 Cheviot Hill. Franklin. Both 28, the pair joined the prosecutor’s s^ when S. Jerome Btousmi took office Jan. 1, 1985. VanderKloot will become associated with att^neys Janies Hartrlck and Louis Fairbrother with offices at 801 S. Adams, Birmingham, beginning Jan. 31. AAA Paige will leave his present position Monday to go with the Southfield legal firm of Lemberg and Gage in the Northland Towers. Senate Committee Reports Out Bill to Refinance 'Big Mac' LANSING (AP)—Rebuffed inisenators was toW in Washington Washington, the Senate took Monday there was no present steps Tuesday to refinance tbelpossibility of including the $100 million Mackinac Bridgejbridge in the interstate highway and reduce tolls. i system. The Senate Highway Committee reported out unanimously a bill, passed by the House last fall, that would refinance $99.8 million of the bonds still outstanding against the structure. Lower bond interest rates required by the bill would, thenetically, reduce tolls by $1.40 munediately. The chairman of the committee, however, cast doubts on the future of the bill, describing the recommendation for its passage more an expedient move than a real indication of its future on the floor of the Senate. A delegation of five state The Ull, introduced by Rep. Einar Erlandsen, D-Escanaba, last fall, would refinance the bridge with bonds backed by the full faith and credit of the state at a maximum average interest rate of 3y« per cent. Such an interest rate would be sufficiently lower than that on presmit revmiue bends fo allow the state to reduce the one-way passenger car tolls from $3.75 to $2.35 immediately. That was accwling to an analysis of the bill made when it was introduced last Septm-ber. Economic developments since, however, made the sale of bonds at that rate less likely. Ill - I. I I 11 I EARN MORE B« an IBM KEY PUNCH OPERATOR In a remarkably abort time you canbeeomea qualified Key Pundt Operator I.«aru le earn r high ealary in the interetiing field •r IBM data praeaming. Yen can keep yaur pretent job while allendinglhetpeeial ' 8-week night i^hoal pragrtni. Free Apliinde Teat Phone 333-7028 PONTIAC BUSINESS INSITTUTE 18 W. Lawrence Street renliac,lliaUgan BUY, SELL, TRADE - ■ - USE PONTAC PRESS WANT ADS. CHILDREN’S STARTER SKI OUTFITS Mint Jr. Ei|iiipAitiit ineluJtt... if HARDWOOD SKIS, matal tip aitol haal protac* tort, motal odgot, plastic bottoms, geld tone finish W CAOLE UFCTY RELEASE lINDINOS WUnALmit W VINYL CARRYING CASE R*g. $15.... .4-ft. Outfit... R#g.$17......4'6" Outfit... 13" R«g. $19.... .5-ft. Outfit... 15" Rgg. $21 . Outfit... 17" cwLiiiEin sn Boois ^ino quality, fuHy padded, gives good support and watwrth. Designed to fit Coble Bbidinge. ' Wlio ' now 6" : ; >P0RT - SPORT > GOODS nmoHS WHY IT PAYS TO SHOP AT KRESGE'S CttBtk miTw0§¥0l By fhh 00M0iit Hurry ^ThurSe FrI; Siif* Reg. Pad and Cover 76* 110HIH6TAW ' 15 X 54" ‘ 11 heights, No-'w*‘i ble construction. 1 3 Days Only-Reo- , WORiN'S BUSUtSi I Cost styles j pockets. Embossed snd ^sucker-look prints, checks, S-M-L-XL, Regular 39^-49* lb. 3DayXfeO-3^®™’l RnAiswwje "Dqwn" „ "Golden Fern Chair Seat and tockKiH rEPIACEMENTS 4/S»* leught In tikiontlty I Sovo You More Monayi Vanilla and diocolate coconut creams, choco--. I -V Iste chip, frosted fig fancies, sugar wafem, --------;„_jL tlmood windmill, shortbread, oatmeal, peanut, hC)M--------lemon, ^ke, gmger ^ps, uid many ^ other varwdes. Save From 7.55 to 4.221 LAMP SALE! TABLE LAMPS POLE LAMPS w 5^99 W rt w a oa in ai Reg. $1.00 Lastrous, Simulated pearl jewelry 1.3 strand //r Necklaces ........ Reg. 594 Earrings 9.88-70.88 Standard Set Reg. 4.37 eo. King Site Set Tall Table Lompst diina base, deep drum shades. Pearlescent white, green, brown, 4.44 Pole Lampst walnut/ brass* with brass* shades; white enamel, choice of Bristol glass, ambef plastic or brass-plated metal shades . . . BAA *JW Reg.5W,79li,andJ1 SCHOOL SOCRS Orion® Acrylic Crew 2 f Socks, 8-n..su Ih Pastel Hfothsrteees f-il >^ 30 x 30" |R.g.T«,37^.and77^ CAHHOH SECOHOS I^f , * 13Doys-R«-63^''l"i'-5 |fOLDlM6 Women's siacs M, L, XL With padded m- ^ ‘ K,le. White, bltfk. beige, red, blue, pink. I Reg. 79i and 59i Cotton PANTS iid POLOS Heavyweight Boxer L24 I Longies, 3-6x..... I Novelty Knit Polo A 24 i Shirh,3-8..........A I 3 Days Only—f^agular 39i nylon squark * Rich looking nylon crepe, generously cut, m M neatly hemmed. In an ■ « array of ccAon. • » i DOWNTOWN TEL-HURON DRAYTON ‘ 1 ROCHESTER BLOOMFIELD =ii-iii2a PONTIAC PONTIAC CENTER PLAINS 1 PLAZA ' MIRACLE MILE MALL< SHOP WITHOUT CASH - "CftARCS/T" AT KRESGE’S :tK., ioNTIAe yRESS, WEPyESl>AY. 1». jm A—18 ■f'.,'l; UVI ON NANDSOMI PURI wool SPORTCOATS •* f Add a fine wool sport* coot to your wardrobe at a most substantial saving. You'll find them in 2- ond ,3-but* ton regular, and 3-button natural shoulder Chdrter Club models. Herringbones, basket- ^(waves,"muted checks. 29» SAVE ON ZIP-OUT ORION PHMMED RAINCOATS Hondsome Dacron-polycster > cotton raincoats, tailored in split raglan models. Versatile zip-out liners of deep Orion acrylic pile, for all - weather wear. Choose from block or natural shades, and muted plaids. A good size range and a sizable saving at . . . SAVE ON wool MELTON IBtCHWARMERS i Warm wool melton benchwormers with luxurious deep pile Orion acrylic zip-out linings, and quilted sleeve liners. Styled'in a zipper fly front model with raglan shoulders, one upper flap pocket, two lower patch flap pockets. Burgundy, navy, bottle green. SAVE ON A BIO GROUP OF FAMOUS JOHNSON A MURPHY SHOES We took a very large group of these excellent shoes and reduced them substantially. Choose from wing tips, •« moc toes, ond slip-on styles; in black or brown smooth calf or groined leathers. 23" li ' /vVoNTGOME RV WARD Safe ladb SatvJwk 22—9 |mr. SAVI N6W CAROL BRINT RADDIO BRA 1 44 • Attffi sfirfM f« dHMM IrMH MW • Dmtm WM kmU shafM • MmAIm wm$hmU9 mmtl hm§ ImtHmg You’ll love the soft, light feel of these Carol Brent bras. K4a-chine washable bras that stay white and clean looking. In sixes A. B, C. 32 to 38. Save. NYLONS 2 PKG. SLIPS Thermo Umtorweor CAROL BRiNT NYLONS AT HUGI SAVINGS 33 • lalnlorcerf off heel e Ren reclefmf fer extra leaf wear e Rvellehfa In wewee’e elxae A real value on these seamless nylons with double strength at both heel and Joe. They last longer Wan ordinary nylons. Available in sizes 9 to 11. CAROL BRINT TAILORIO SUP SIT 2 e I fell mml I half Blip la each pk§, t CheeM lacjr er pimlm la each pk§. • Rath have clNNlaw pmmmh iasMa. You’ll love this bargain! 2 styles of slips at this amazing low price. Each pkg. has a full lacy trimmed slip and a plain half slip. Sizes S, M, L. SH|RT AND PANT IN TNI PUU LINOTH STYU 99 • CInalar kmHg haevf waifhf far extra • 100% cattaa laaht/ and ftajrs aaat O HathlM washahla In aMn'f- elxae Men you’ll love the warmth of these Brent full length garments. Perfect for winter sport sand work. Cuffs and ankles are double knit so they wont ride. Mens No Iron Slacks Brent stadium coats Save Big on WARDS Heirloom bedspread Beautifuy your bedroom with a'touch of Americana. Heirloom white or bleached white. 99 NOI NOTIViN TOUCH UP TIST PROVID 2 99 0 Mada af Oacran, caftan and fartral fabric e ChaMa aithar tha haft ar IfHImsa ctyfa e Ivy ctyllnf fa |M|Hilar calan Mom will love the easy care pf these pants, lust wash them and hang them up. They never need to be ironed. In black, brown, tan, and olive. SAVI ON ZIP-OUT PIU LINID COATS 11 e With a lip-avt pll» fiaar far axtra warmth e Ixfmrt taifarlaf and BimBk Rachate e In jraar chaka af 3 Smart new styling and expert tailoring make this a real value. Inverted box pleat down back, slash pockets. In black-olive plaid, midnight blue, elive-tan. 10 BIG DRAWCRS Ponderosa Pine For families with big storage needs. 10 drawers for toys, clothing, hobby equipment. Ready to finish. Save! 19 Buy 1st Nylon 64 Get 2nd Tire *2 Our most Riverside Buy the first tire at the regular no-trade price and get the second free. Whitewalls are $3 extra. Save now at Wards! 20 75 Him M.T. SSO.IS Guaranteed to start for 36 months. This heavy duty battery delivers up to 10% more power than original equipment. Start with Riverside. Scnrn on Great Disposal vPluos! Melamine Dinner Wards economy model is fMt and silent. End trips outside with a Signature disposal. B. Deluxe model .: ^ . $39.M C. Wards Best jam f39.00 19“ Sets for 8-45 pm. Table beauty that lasts for years. Its virtually unbreak able and stain resistant. Dish-will be replaced free of es cost if chipped or cracked. 10 Our Diy Stoemi Irwf. Senral 999 Sovol 3S PloM 1/4“ Drill S«l WT99 IS C«. ft. Pruamor Ugwiglit Modal •179 Senrol Slgnoturo Rofriforutor •189 IS C«. n. Words UprifM ProoMr •2Z9 18Cu.Ft. Froslloss Words Airiiiio Coosolo Sloroo Auto. Hf-Zof Sowing MacMoo •299 •les •ns Budget priced 3 way iron. 9 steam vents: fabric guide is keyed to heat sele'^tor. 'Vhite handle. Save today! Includes Vi” drill. 13 bits, 12 sanding discs, backing pad and paint mixer. Ideal for the woodworking hobbiest. This freezer features a Sid lb. capacity, porcelain interior and‘an interior ^'Tight. A real Wards value. Features big door storage and an egg basket. Full 17.6 sq. ft. of storage space. Baked on Epon enamel finish. No defrosting e y e r again! Holds 500 pounds of food. Door locks for added safety. See this value. All frostless top and vbottom. You never defrost again. 26.9 sq. ft. of space in refrigerator section, 156 lbs. cap. Large 44” styled cabinet. 4 big, balanced speakers. Has built in Stereo FM with signal light. Many styles. Makes fancy stitches automaticaly. Buttonholes, mends, dams and sews on imttons. Fancy stitches, too! STORE 9:30 to 9:00 P.M. HOURS: MONDAY thru SATURDAY Pontiac Mall PHONE 682-4940 Telegraph at Elizabeth Lake Rd. A if / THE PONTIAC PRESS - PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 19, 1966 B-1 Of Camp Fire Girls Council % . ■ Name Mrs. Floyd as President For the first time in over 12 years a woman has been elected to the presidency of the Pontiac Area Council ol Camp Fire Girls. , it it it Mrs. Earl Floyd who succeeds Hiram H. Smith received tbe gavel at the organization’s annual dinner meeting Tuesday evening. Other new officers named at Pontiac Northern High School yere Mrs. Edward Sharpe, first vice president; Mrs. Thomas Atkinson, second vice-president; Mn. Donald DeVoe, secretary and Dr. Ned Colburn, treasurer. BOARD MEMBERS New members of the board of directors are Mrs. Willie Ferguson, Mrs. Emery Hayes, Mrs. T. W. Jackson, Olin La-Barge, Richard Jarvis and Earl Floyd. ★ ★ ★ As representatives of the leaders’ association, Mrs. Gilbert Petz, Mrs. Cameron Clark, Mrs. John Fitzgerald and Mrs. Raymond Ballard will join the board. ★ * ★ 1 - meanr ef jramatlwitlon.— the four age levels of Camp Fire Girls presented a program, “Our Reason for Being.” w * # Ten-year leadership awards . went to Mrs. Ballard and Mrs. Albert Kreuger. Five-year and three-year awards were also given. Wagner received appreciation certificates for their work at day camp. •. ★ h * Checks for the Camp Oweki trust fund were presented by the Civitan Club of Pontiac and matched by a like amount from the Camp Fire Girls’ candy sale proceeds and the recent sale of Christmas trees. CERTIFICATES Mrs. Adolph Baxter, Mrs. Fitzgerald and Mrs. David Theodore Wiersema was master of ceremonies. ★ ★ ★ General chairman of the event was Mrs. Monroe Os- mun, assisted by Mrs. Hiram Smith and Mrs. David Warri-low. * ★ * The Pontiac Area Council of Camp Fire Girls is a member-agency of the Pontiac Area United Fund. PMliac Preu PiMiM Mrs. Earl Floyd, Andersonville Road, receives the president’s gavel from Hiram H. Smith, Edgefield Drive, as she becomes the first toornan president of Pontiac Area Council of Camp Fire Girls in over 12 years. Installation tpos held Tuesday evening during the annual meeting at Pontiac Northern High School. Let Husband Listen Read Scriptures to Him By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: We have been married seven months and our only quarrels have been over my husband’s refusal to take my part against his parents when they are in the wrong. We live in a one-room apartment with a pulklown bed. The church we at tend is m 1 to 6 p.m. ★ ★ ★ Students may register Feb. S through March 1 with classes beginning March 2. They will conclude with rehearsals and performances June 10, 11 and 1^. Adult classes meet for 90 minutes one evening a week, and younger students gather on Saturdays. A few scholarships are available. UCENSED SCHOOL ^ Wll-O-Way, licensed in 1949 ' as pr(tfessional training school in the theater by the Michigan State Board (rf Education, offers a variety of beginning and advanced courses for children, teen-agers and adults, ★ ★ * On request, private tutoring is arranged at the student’s convenience. Additional information regarding registration and scholar^ps may be learned during the open houke or by contacting Celia Merrill Turner at Will-O-Way. SEW SIMPLE By Eunice Farmer She Turns Red if All Is 'Rosy' DIMMITT, Tex. W - Mary Baldwin is allergic to roses. ;Sie doesn’t have to come in contact with them to be af-• fected by the allergy. Just passing down the hall in fi^nt ^ bf an open door where there’s a rose bouquet makes her ;fhce swell and turn red. ' Matters are a little difficult, ;;. eince Mary is director of nurs-service at Plains Memorial ^Hospital, where flowers, and ^4pspecially roses, are pretty m^ the order of the day. ^ Dear Eunice Fanner: A new pattern I am making has a panel in the center of the skirt which is cut on the bias. After carefully stitching the seams. PORTRAIT For Limitod Timo Way Brlow Normal Co§t 49^ I FREE If call Wilkin 4 days irxira 8wl0 Inicrval plint— • (hnlt ana after earli 6 ntonlka b coMumea and |»er»ona over 18 yean aURlilly aildlllonal • Mlnlmiim Afai 2 Monika KENDALE... 45 W. Huron St. PhcAographers Tata., Wad., Tkan. 12 la 1:20 p.ni. ' Fri. and Sal.i 9 to S Phon«t for Ap|toinlment, FE S-S260, FE 5-0322 THIS OFFER E$DS IN 15 DAYS engagement son of the Kenneth Bre-setts of Lake Orion, is announced by her parents, the Harold W. Wehners of Hatton Road, Pontiac Township. j PlumpChildi Less Active The Carl A. Boene-mans-jxf FourtbAvenue announce the engagement of their daughter Margaret Joan, to William Davis of Royal Oak, son of the late Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin Davis. BERKELEY, Calif. (UPD-Chubby youngsters take in less calories than their slimmer counterparts, according to a University of California study. But they show it more, says Dr. Ruth L. Huenemann, 1^-cause they get less exercise, of money to provide this infor-! and use up less of what they mation — and he challenges eat. y your intelligence and judgment The associate professor ^f inmaking your decision. public health on the Berkeley Let’s all adopt a resolution for, campus based her findings on the new year. Let’s recover our a four-year study of 950 stu-individual right of selection. We dents at Berkeley High School, have more choice in what we She noted obese girls had an buy than do any other people in average intake of 1,600 calo-the world. ries per day, while slimmer We should value this privilege girls averaged 2,100. For boys, and not just succumb to high-' the total was 2,400 for heavy flown phrases that try to tell us youngsters, and 3,000 for lean what we ought to be able to fig- ones, ure out for ourselves. WWW (For Mary Feeley’s “Make Every Dollar Count” booklet. Rev. Coburn Will Speak The Very Rev. John B. Coburn, Dean of .the Episcopal Theological School in C a m-bridge. Mass, will speak at the noon luncheon of the Episico-pal Churchwomen of Christ Church Cranbrook. Dean Coburn will discuss “Training for the Ministry” at the Jan. 25 meeting. w ★ ★ The morning portion of this meeting will be devoted to the third session of the book study conducted by Rev. Mr. Walter Neds of the Christ Church clergy staff. Further Redpctiniis! fill’s SEMI-ANNUAL SHOE SALES Pauli's Shoe Store, 35 N. Saginaw There were more than 1,720,-000 marriages in this nation last year. New York state led the nation with 138,004. the center panel hangs lower at the center and seems to drawl ^ ^h^ up at each seam. I tried not to stretch either seam when lipon^iag press.) up stitched it. She also learned that among girls, there is more obesity in the low economic groups— those living in census tracts with mean annual income less than $5,000 per household. Mrs. M. L.L. Dear Mrs. M. L. L.: I This b one time when we most forget “trying not to ! stretch” file seams beeanse of the bias construction. Instead of stitching this type of skirt from the hemline np to the waist, stitch from the waist down to fiK hem. It wfll be necessary to poll (he bias edge slightly as yon pin yonr seams together before stitching. This will make file center panel sU^tly longer, however, it can be cot off when hen)r ming. It is always a good idea to let any bias section haqg a few days before construction. Then, it won’t stretch anymwt. Once it has stretched, you never try to EASE this section into a shorter one. Don’t be discouraged, often you will have to re-do this seam to achieve perfection. Dear Eunice: How in the world do you stitch a nice corner? The neck edge and the corner at the hem at my Jackets always lodk thick and ronaded. Mrs. E. C. C. Dear Mrs. E. C. C.: The difficulty is try to ph^ your stitching at the coner. Your eye is not always accurate enough to f