• Pontiac Prots, Tuotday, Novombor 1 V, 1969 TUESDAY R - Rerun C — Color Tl KSDAY VIORMNC 5:50 (2) TV Chapef 5:55 (2) C-On the Farm Scene 6:00 (2)C — Sunrise Semester 6:25 (7) C — Five Minutes to Live By 6:30 (2) C—Woodrow the Woodsman (4) C — Classroom -‘"Changing Earth: Volcano” (7) C — TV College — “Pressures of Economic Change” 7:00 (4) C — Today—Guests include Jack Valenti, president of the l\!otion Picture Association of America, critic Judith Crist, author John Pewter, and Walter McNerney, chairman of the Presidential Task Force on Medicare. (7) C — Morning Show --Dr. Leroy Augenstein discusses “Why Are Flatworms So Smart 7:30 (2) C—News. Weather. Sports 7:55 (9) News 8:00 (2) C — Captain Kangaroo 8:05 (9) Mr. Dressup 8:30 (7) R C — Movie: “The Best of Everything” (1959) Hope Lange, Stephen Boyd (9) Friendly Giant 8:40 (56) R—Human Relations — “The Relationship Between Morale and Productivity” 8:45 (9) Chez Helene 9:00 (2) C - ( Special ) Blind Bird Veterans Day film for children (4) C — Dennis Wholey (9) C—Bozo 9:10 (56) Come, Let’s Read 9:30 (2) R C — Beverly Hillbillies ( 56) Singing, Listening, Doing 9:55 (4) C—Carol Duvall 10:00 (2) R C - Lucy Show (4) c—It Takes Two (9) C — Wizard of Oz (56) C — Seasame Street 10:25 (4) C—News 10:30 (2) C — Della Reese — The Four Freshmen. Big Mama Thornton and Woody Woodberry guest. (4) C—Concentration (7) R C - Movie: "The Mating Game” (1 9 5 9) Debbie Reynolds. Tony Randall (Part 2) " (9) C Remembrance 12: Day Service—Live cover- 12 age of ceremonies in Ottawa a honoring Canada’s war dead. L (50) C — Jack LaLanne 11:00 (4) C-Sale of the Century (50) C — Strange Paradise (56) R — Listen and Say 11:15 (9) C — Pinocchio (56) Misterogers 11:30 (2) C—Love of Life (4) C—Hollvwood Squares (7) C—Anniversary Game (50) C—Kimba I 11:45 (9) News > TCFsi)A^ \i ri:K\ni)\ l 12:00 (2)C — News, Weather. Sports (4) C—Jeopardy (7) R—Bewitched (9) Take 30 (50) C — Alvin 2 12:25 (2) C — Fashions 12:30 (2) ('-He Said, She Said (4) C — News. Weather. Sports (7) R C - That Girl (91 C—Tempo 9 (50) Galloping Gourmet :35 (56) Friendly Giant :55 (4) C—News (56) R — Singing. Listening, Doing ;00 (2)—C—Search fo^ Tomorrow (4) C — Letters to Laugh-In (7) C — Dream House (9) R C — Movie; “The War of the Worlds" (1953) Gene Barry, Ann Robinson (50) R — Movie: “Dawn Patrol” (1938) Errol F'lynn. David Niven :15 (56) Listen and Say :25 (4) C — News :30 (2) C—As the World Turns (4) C—You’re Putting Me On (7) C—Let’s Make a Deal (56) Science Is Searching :00 (2) C—Where the Heart Is (4) C—Days of Our Lives (7) C—Newlywed Game A proud Greek ft»herman (Frank Silvera) with emphyaemu i$ helped by Dr, Welby (Robert Young)^ center^ and Dr, Kiley (Jamea Brolin^ left) when he becomea ill trying to outdance everyone at an outing on **Marcua Welby, H.D.” at 10 p.m. Tueaday on Channel 7, (56) R—Advocates—Automobile insi^ance reform is debated.' 2:25 (2) C—News 2:30j2) C—Guiding Light (4) C--Doctors (7) C—Dating Game 3:00 (2) C Secret Storm (4i ('—Another World (7) C—Genera! Hospital (9) R—Candid Camera (62) R — Movie- “Nn Time for Tears” (British, 1957) Anna Neagie. George Baker (56) Modern Supervision — “Communication Is a Two-Way Street” 3:30 (2) C—Edge of Night (4) C—Bright Promises (7) C—One Life to Ltve (9) C—Magic Shoppe (50) C—Captain Detroit (56) Efficient Reading 4:00 (2) R C—Gomer Pyle (4) C — Steve Allen -Cliff Arquette and Kellie Greene guest. (7) C — Dark Shadows (9) C Bozo (56) RC Sesame Street 4:30 (2) C—Mike Douglas -Shirley Jones, Vidal Sassoon and Monti Rock guest. (7) R C ^ — Movie' "Ensign 't’ulver” (1964) (50) R — Little Rascals (62) C—Bugs Runny and Friends 5:00 (4) C—George Pierrot — “Australia Today” (9) R C — Flipper (50) R C — Lost in Space (56) R — Misterogers 5:30 (9) R C - Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea (56) R — Friendly (4iant (62) R — Leave If to Beaver 5:45 (56) Chimney Corner M i:si>AV NH.M I 6:00 (2) (4) (7) C — News. Weather, Sports (50) R C — Flintstones (56) R — Americans From Africa (62) R — Ozzie and Harriet 6:30 (2) C—News—Cronkite (4) C — News — Huntley, Brinkley (9) R — Dick Van Dyke — Bob fears he is no longer needed when his co-writers turn out a show without his help. (50) R — Munsters — The Munsters agree to sell their new home until they find out the new owners plan to tear it down. W'ith PhyUiH Diller at the switchboard^ the movie title could come true. Starring with her in **Boy, Did I Get a Wrfpng !\umberare (from left) Marjorie Lord, Bob Hope and Elbe Sommer. Channel 4 shows the movie at 9 tonight (Tuesflayh ir>(i) Basic Issues ot Man The question o f social change is probed, with the central figure being the chairman of tlu" board of a large cor poration. (62) C—Robin Seymour — The Marvellettes guest. 7:00 (2) C Truth or Consequences (4) Q News, Weather. Sports (7) C - News - Reynolds. Smith (9) R C — Movie: “The Bridges at Toko Ri“ (1954) (501 R — I Love Lucy (56) What’s New—A tour around a U. N. conference room where we find how engineers and interpreters cooperate. 7:30 (2) C Lancer — Jelly is talked into purchasing a strange -looking creature at a circus auction. (4) C — I Dream of Jeahnie ~ A Slightly mad interior decorator restyles Tony’s home and it takes all of Jeannie’s pow’er to save them from having to live with the results. (7) C — Mod Squad — The squad goes to college to probe the murder of a black student. (50) C — Beat the Clock Th« Pontiac Prost, Tuosday, Novombor 11, 1969 talking real estate operator tries to hide a famous actress. E 1 k c Sommer, Rhyliis Diller. Bob Hope. (9) C — What's My Line? (50) R — Perry Mason (56) (Special) Take to Black — gubiic affairs cultural program is a pilot from Wayne State University produced by blacks for blacks. (62) R ~ Movie: ‘ Follow That Horse” (British, 1961) 9:30 (2) C - Governor and J. J. — The governor’s press aide becomes more nervous about flying when the pilot has an argument with his girlfriend. (9) C Cesar’s World , (56) Conversations in Depth 10:00 (2) C — 60 Minutes — Segments examine clashes between Protestants and Catholics in Northern Ireland; and the Renton. Wasli.. controversy over sex education in its public school system. i7) C Marcus Welby -Man is stricken with emphysema but insists on entering a deep-diving competition. (9) C — McQueen — Antiquated laws and government red tape foil McQueen’s efforts to remove an abandoned car from an elderly couple's property. (50) C ~ News. Weather. Sports 10:30 I9i C ~ Man at the Center — The makeup of males and females is examined through the endocrine system. (50) R — Ben Casey — ONFnnim (56) Joyce Chen Cooks ■'Barbecued Spareribs” (62) C — Of Lands and Seas — Greece is toured. 8:00 (4) C — Debbie Reynolds — Secret agents trick Debbie into leading them to foreign defectors she is hiding. (50) R C - Hazel (56) C ~ CEN Special — Industry and Education: A Conflict of Interests? 8:30 (2) C — Red Skelton — Maurice Evans and Oliver guest. (4) C — Julia — Mother’s helpers and little boys tying knots try Julia’s patience. (7) Movie: “The Spy Killer” ( Premiere) Private investigator, formerly a top agent with the British Secret Service, gets caught up in a world of foreign entanglements and sinister political intrigue. Robert Horton. Jill St. John and Sebastian Cabot. (50) C - To Tell the Truth (56) Twin Circle Headline — Sex education i s discussed. (62) R — The Nelsons 9:00 (4) C — Movie: “Boy. Did I Get a Wrong Number” (1966) Fast- TUESDAY Embittered surgeon performs a lifesaving operation on his ex-wife. (62) R — Sea Hunt 11:00 (2) (4) (7) (9) C — News. Weather. Sports (62) R — Highway Patrol 11:30 (4) C — Johnny Carson — Eddie Albert, Jonathan Winters and Jaye P. Morgan guest. (7) C — Joey Bishop — Tony Bennett. Emmett Kelley and Odetta guest. (9) R — Movie: “The Hasty Heart ” (1949) Five wounded soldiers befriend a Scottish corporal with only three weeks left to live. Ronald Reagan. Patricia Neal. (50) C — Merv Griffin — Sen, Eugene McCarthy. D-Minn., Helen Hayes and spbrtswriter Elinore Kaine guest. (62) R ~ Movie: “Cash on Delivery” (British. 1956) 11:35 (2) R C — Movie: ‘‘Excuse My Dust” (1951) 1:00 (4) Beat the Champ (7) R — Texan (9) Viewpoint (50) R — Peter Gunn 1:06 (9) C — Perry’s Probe 1:30 (2i R-Naked City (4) (7) C — News. Weather 1:40 (7) C — Five Minutes to Live By 2:30 (2) C Weather — News 2:35 (2) TV Chapel -CAR GARAGE Above pr(ce includes oil of the fellowinp: 2 lorge aluminum windows d 22*foot ihoH or work bonch • 2r6 rafters • 16 O.C. studs • siding • Wind braces • Stool ovorbeod door o 6" box cornice o Cross-ties * Ilec. cond. ts 235 shingles • Double headers • Expa(Uton • Alum, insulotion • Golv. noils. INOLUOII ALL LAIOR AM MATMIAL • tUfLT TO MNTIAO OOM remodeling; FE 8-9584 . insT lANtEi n. WE BUILD WITHIN 75 MILES YIAR WRITm BBARAinil VIARttBMV Thf W«a^«r . I. wunur turUu ftrHM Colder THE Home Edition VOL. 127 PONTIAC PRESS PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 11. I960 ■ NO. 238 if 'k * ASSOCIATiD PRIM _lo pAOES A-ew. AOO w W w W uMiTvn HBBM iMTfteNATiONAL —4iO , 1 AVarJlia ' ' r Police Investigate Letter Bombs Rip 3 NY Buildings From Our Newi Wire* NEW YORK - Bombs exploded in three Manhattan skyscrapers early today, slightly Injuring one man and causing limlti^ damage. About six hours later United Press International received an unsiged special delivery letter saying, “During this week of antiwar protest, we set off explosions In offices of Chase Manhattan, Standard Oil and General Motors.’’ ’The letter, blaming “the giant corporations of America’’ for the world’s ills, was in the same literate, press release style ot similar letters sent to news agencies after a bomb exploded outside Army and draft offices in the Manhattan Moral biiilding last Sept. 19. Police said they were investigating the letter. , Telephone calls warning of the bombs were received at the RCA Building in Rockefeller Center, the international headquarters of the Chase Manhattan Bank in the Wall Street area, and the gleaming, new General Motors Corp. headquarters on Fifth Avenue. ★ * * Most maintenance workers were evaluated before the blasts. One person, a freight elevator operator in the GM building, was slightly injured when the blast plunged his car six stories down a shaft. The RCA building, a tourist mecca in Rockefeller Center, is the nation’s sixth tallest building, 70 stories. Chase Manhattan Is 60 stories and the GM building 50 stories. All three buildings were open today, although many offices were on a holiday schedule. The blast at the RCA Building caved in walls in offices occupied by Standard Oil Coi’s governmental relations operations, hurled desks into the halls and flung office equipment yards. Philip Kelly, chief of security for Rockefeller Center, said at least four calls saying a bomb had been planted were received before the explosion. The caller hung up each time after giving his message. At the General Motors Building, the blast ripped through a service elevator on the 19th floor. > At the Chase-Manhattan Bank Building, the explosion tore out several huge plate-glass windows. ’The blast occurred on the 16th floor, and Assistant Fire Chief Henry Jung said it causeu “extensive damage.’’ , The typewritten letter received by UPI at 7:30 a.m. read in part: “The Vietnam war is the most obvious evidence of the way the country’s power destroys the people. ’Die giant corporations of America have now spread themselves all over the world, forcing the entire foreign economies into total dependence on American money and American goods. DAMAGE FROM EXPLOSION-Thls is the result of a bomb explosion which occurred early this morning on the 20th floor of the country’s sixth largest skyscraper, the RCA Building in NW York. ’Two other explosions occurred at AP Wiraphata Uie same time—at the General Motors'BuUding* and the Chase Maiduttan Bank. One man was idightly injured, was isolated but heavy. Blast, Fire Hit Munitions Firm HANOVER, Mass. (AP) - An ex-plosion and fire ripped through a production building at a sprawling munitions plant here today, freeing an un-deteri^ed quantity of a riot control agent similar to tear gas. Fire officiah declared the blaze under control about an hour after it broke out and cancelled orders for an areawide Vets' Day Fetes Back Nixon Several firemen were overcome by the fumes, but their condition was not believed serious. Tbere were no reports of injuries as a direct result of the fire or explosion. SIMILAR TO ’lEAR GAS The agent was identified by a plant spokesman only as “CS.” ,Its effect is Similar to that of tear gas, he said. A brisk wind and light rain kept the fumes from collecting in the area in any great concentration, firemen said. Gas masks and resuscitators were ru^ed to the scene to aid the fire fighting efforts. The building was used in the production of cartridge launchers for the CS substance, the spokesman said. SENSED SOMETHING VmONG The initial explosion was thought to have ori^ated in the launcher assembly Fall May Leave Mild Days Behind Sunny days and mild temperatures may soon be over for fall. The weatherman predicts variable cloudinesa and cooler temperatures late tonight with b chance of showers toward It Is expected to be colder tomorrow with variable cloudiness accompanied by wind, and there is a chance ■ of 'brief showers or snow flurries. A chance of showers or flurries is expected for Thursday. temperatures are expected to drop to S9 to 40 tonight and reach W to 43 Low recording before 8 a.m. In downtown Pontiac was 43. ’Ihe mercury ragistmd Mat 3 p.m. WASHINGTON bf) - America honored all who have served in its armed forces today amid demonstrations of support for President Nixon’s Vietnam policy and preparations for protests gainst the U.S. course in that latest of conflicts. ’Those who back the adminbtration’s Vietnam position seized on Vetwans Pay to try to signify that there is in fact a “great, silent majority’’ just as Nixon said in a Nov. 3 speech. The date, which marked the end of fighting in World War I in 1918, was observed as Armistice Day until 1954; For the past 15 years it has been Veterans Day, a salute to American veterans of all wars. Veterans Day 1969 comes only a week and a' day after Nixon asked the nation for support on Vietnam and only two days before the start of a new round war protests which are to wind up with a mass rally in Washington Saturday. COUNTERDEMONSTRATTON Ardent supporters of the President hoped today’s activities would become a counterdemoilstration to the war protest. Civic, fraternal and veterans’ organizations came up with or announced support for ad hoc ^oups opposing moratoriums and other, “get out of Vietnam now" demonstrations. While they carHed on their programs today, NixtUi himself was headed.lor a veterans’ -hospital in the capital. His daughter, Mrs. DavM Eisenhower, followed his lead but chose a hospital in Northampton, Mass. w * * Placing of me traditional presidential wreath on the ’Tpmb of the Unknown Soldier in Arlington National Cemetery was assigned to David Packard, depu^ secretary HOUSEKSPINO OF PONTIAC 51W. HURON FE 4-1555 OPEN MON., THURS. ind FRl. TILL 8:30 WINDOW PROBLEMS? FROM THIS TO SOLID VINYL WINDOWS . / Vinyl Guaranteed No Sweat honii both intid* and out. Vinyl it guorantaad not to twoot, rot or no^ painting, and at on in-tulotor against boot and cold, vinyl it 7,680 tinwt mora oHI-ciont than tteolj 30 timat mora officiant than woodt 34,800 claan.bolh tidn from tho i STORM fKSS!? PER WINDOW Any Siic Except Picture Bcliveiy end Installation Extra Introducing VYCA-lum 38 SIDING The FIRST VINYL CLAD ALUMINUM SIDING Technologically Engineered for SEVERE CLIAAATE REGIONS Savara Climata Protaction The tramendout tantila ttrangth, tha flaxibility and tha rasitlanca to tavtra waathar axtramat makot tha tupor finish of Vyca-lum 30 Imparviout to climata changat. Cuts Dawn on Costly Rapairt Vyca-lum 38 can't crack or blittar, pool or chip. This suparstbugh finish is designud (or savara wanthar climates to withstand tha attacks of axttama haat and cold. At last ... a finish that can't waar out. Lowart Haating and Cooling Oparating Cotta tha parfa^ Insulating qualitlas of Vyca-lum 38 will koap your houta warmar in wintar and ceotar In tummar to cut haating and cooling cost. NO PAINTING ... EVER REPLACE OLD GUTTERS • NO JOINTS • NO SEAMS • NO LEAKS Wetch ewr medhine fefin yeur cenlieweus seemlf^i •uveitreugh with viftbl / •crylic finiih which niver v needA peinline will ne^ No Money Down EASY TERMS ^onstrmhoiiffix 1032 West Huron Street-Pontiac 2 BLOCKS WEST OF telegraph CALI HOW OAY or NieHT PHpNE 681-2500 ictmniatca In Pontine. • 5f nee 193/ fought back tears as he told pupils, of Martin County lUnji School about the will at a special a.ssembly Monday. BOOKRR T. BRAD.SIIAW JR Ex-Member of OU Troupe on TV's 'FBI' Booker T. Bradshaw Jr., formerly a member of the John Fernald Company of Oakland University’s Meadow Brook Theatre, will make Ills debut as a special agent on ‘"nte FBI” Sunday on Channel 7 at 8 p.m. * * * In tha teleplay entitled “The Sanctuary," Bradshaw and "FB!” series star Efrem Zim-balist Jr., conduct a manhunt In a black ghetto. Bradshaw will then appear throughout the season whenever hetsded in episodes which include a Los Angeles setting. 'The talented guitarist, singer and songwriter won high praise two years ago for his music and lyrics written especially for the Fernald Company’s production of “And People All Around.” ★ * * In addition to setting the drama to music, the Harvard University graduate led the ^rus, acctnnpahying himself oh tlm guitar and singing of the murner of three civil rights workers. KNOW IN EUROFB Though bom in Westminister, Conn., Bradshaw is more familiar among European audiences, especially British. Following graduation from the Royal' Academy of Dramatic Arts in London, he worked for the British Broadcasting Corp. where he did his own show, “Highball.” * it it Bradshaw, toured with the national company., of “In White America” In 1965. This past summer, as a member of Theatre West, Los Angeles, he and two others sang, read poetry and performed scenes from Broadway plays at city parks. “We know he loved It here," the elder Tyson said. * * it' ' The Marine private, who was too skinny to play high school football, called this small coastal town home after his father retired from a globe-trotting Army career. More than 1,000 persons sat silent as his parents read part of Stennis Backed on Draft Bill WASHINGTON (AP) - The Senate Armed Services Committee has put senators on notice that reform of the military draft this year will be limited to the President’s lottery proposal or there will be no reform at all. ★ * Chairman John C. Stennis, D-Miss., with the unanimous vote of his committee behind him, issued that notice Monday although he insisted several times it was no ultimatum. Stennis said he would meet with senators who want a sweeping, comprehensive overhaul of the Elective Service .system now, to try to persuade them to hold off reform amendments until next year. * A * He and the committee promised to hold extensive hearings draft reform proposals—including changes to deferments, conscientious objector status, methods of classification, and makeup of local draft boards— no later than Feb. 15. NO REACTION 'There was no immediate reac- »n to the move by the Senate’s Democratic leadership who have Insisted the draft should be reformed in one package and not one piece at a time. * ★ ♦ All members of the committe* jdedged to act to avoid amendments on the Senate flpor aimed at expanding the House-passed biU which calls for r|ndom se-lecUon of draft eligtoto young men from a pool cotoposed et men mostly 19-yearwild. the Marine's last letter home. It told of his, best friend’s death and his own deith premonition. ‘ALWAYS RIGHT’ “He was proud of the Marines and loved his school,” his father said. “He believed that what ever his country did was right.’ Young IVson left two $1,000 scholarships to be awarded to a boy and girl in the 1970 gradual ing class. w ★ ★ He also left $500 for the plaque, to be designed by the school’s art department, bearing Hale’s words. Optimists', Fete hr Teens Is Near ThD Pontiac Optimist Club will highlight “Youth Ap-prectoUon Week” this week with an awards luncheon tor area teen-agers at noon ’Thursday at the Pontiac Elks Club. 114 Orchard Lake. Youth Appreciation Week was Initiated by the Optimists Clubs to honor youths who meet their responsibilities at home, school, church and to their communities. Automobile makers forecast sales of 14 million units a year by 1980. Present sales are In excess of 9.3 million a year. Stale Businessmen Claim Air Fare Bia^ DETROII* (AP) - About 30 large nonautomotlva cDmpsnIei to Michigan have cotoplatoad to federal authorities that airiina fares for businessmen are discriminatory and oftert unfair. 'They said the businessmen, to effect, subsidize groups, such as families, who are allowed special plans. The protest was sent to the Civil Aeronautics Board, the Department of Transportation and to Michigan’s congressional delegation. The businessmen were represented by the Industrial TYavel Executives ol Michigan. EXTERIOR CAR WASH WITH JET WAX 1.25 ON REQUEST ONLY KUHN AUTO WASH 149 W. Huron SALES REPRESENTATIVE ’9,000 to ’18,000 TO REPRESENT AN INTERNATIONAL FINANCIAL FIRM EXPANDING INTO MICHIGAN AAARRIED. Age 20 to 53. Soles ability. Pleating personality. Neat appeoronco. Accustomed to active contact with the public. A AAAN OF INTEGRITY who wonts to live, work and raise hit family in Oakland' County and to associate himself with a company with "character and stability." STARTING INCOME up to $9,000. $14,000 obtainable in 5 years. $18,000 in 10 years. Higher ultimate income. $450 MILLION in assets. 72 years in business with d fine reputation jlor ad-yancing our career men. \' , "PEOPLE ARE JUDGED by the company they keep. Companies ore judged by the people they keep." INTERVIEWS will be neld m Flint Coll Mr. Vierbeiiig. 232-4182 SoveonDehoV ‘OwlyBiFds’ toNleiiiphisaiid GuK Coast Chies Also the only noiMtops to Memphis Only Delta offers you low-fare "Owly Bird" service to Memphis, New Orleans and Houston-You can save as much as $15 over regular Day Jetourist. Non-stop> Memphis is just 97 minutes away; And Delta has three non-stops there every day. Or, Delta can put you in New Orleans on ten jet services a day. Just over two hours on the mid-day non-stop. Also tolceyour choice of eight dioice services a day to Houston. One's on ideal end-of-the-doy non-etop with a delightful Delta dinner en route. Delta honors all major general-purpose credit cords. For reservations on the only non-stops to Memphis and the Gulf, coll Delta or see your Travel Agent. Leave Arrive Arrive Arrive Detroit Memphis Neyy Orleans Houston 8:00a — 10:30a ll!l3at 8K)0a 9:13a 11:19a IlilOa* 10;50a 11:27a NS — • l:15p 12:20p — 1:33p NS — 1:50p 4:12p NS 4:25pt 5:04pt 3:35p 5:37p 7:00p* 6:02p — 8:30pt — 6:23p 7:36p 9:48p* — 6:35p _ ■— 8:02p NS 9;30p 10:07p NS 11:36p* — 10:00p'OB' — 12:25at l:03at 12:20a'OB' 1:33a 3:53a* 4:03o fVla Atlanta, *Vla Memphis, NS-Noiv«top. 'OB'-'Owly Bird' Jetourist fares: ■■ ■- “ NewOrU Houston—Day $72; 'Owf ADELXA Dehais whenyou miEi^pNTIAC I’RESS, rnKSUAV, NOVKMHKR II, 19»9 M ■■ Meetings Slated on Housing Fears of Elderlyj Two _ upcoming meetln/gg The group iu no lonaer Pn-rmrnt fears of'eld^rlypoJd to The cSe newnounccd a meeting haa been set “""““"cedfor ft p.m. tomorrow at Frost at last night s City CommissionEiementary, 723 Cottage, meeting . " BalWiii to Carlisle; sanitary newer in Ypsilanti from Baidwin to Carlisle. / a** Homeownersaccording to Howard Association. president of the association. The code was adopted two The meeting was set up to weeks ago after considerablediscuss the problem of senior dispute and a m e h d m e n t s'.citizens and what financial Possible amendments'to the feet north of Ea.st Boulevard; Leading a campaign opposingburdens they might face to code will be studied, Stites said, curb, gutter and paving on the OTiginal code proposal wasbring property into compliance. The homeowners are not sup- Basswood from Bassett to ih. Pnhfiu« H----------------------- . .. . _... Crestwood, East Brooklyn from porting a petition drive "ow Baldwin to the railroad, West under way to call tor a vote on Brooklyn from Baldwin to rejection of the new code, he Stanley, Carlisle from Ypsilanti pointed out. Hopkins (also driveways), on * ■* * Price from Walton to Leheigh A second meeting among and from Ypsilanti from residents, groups and city of- ‘ — ~ ------ ficials has been called for 7:30 p.m. Thursday at City Hall, East Wide Track and East Pike. By ED BLUNDEN one aspect of the new auction * ★ ★ A group of auctioneers set up ordinance — they didn’t like the Petitioners hoping to call for Auctioneers' Cavil Is Stopped by Gavel Youth Admits Avoiding Draft • Set a public hearing for 8 p,m. Ndv. 25 on grading and graveling the alley west of Baldwin behind stores on Columbia. Cost was placed at 16,000 with the city’s part f4,S00. • Sent back to the planning commission a proposed rezoning for a parcel on the north * Mrs. Ruffatto was in charge of setting up the new school library last ye|r as a volunteer. The family eiijoys using their camper during vacations when they try to lee much of the country. They attend S t Patrick’s Church. THE ROGEA whites The Roger White Family came about five years ago and Includes lim, 12; Darrin, 8 Tammy, 7; and Audra, ! months, Kim is busy with school hetivlties, Darrin is a Cub Scoi4 and 'Tammy belwigs to the Blue Birds. White is « car salesman at John McAuiffe Ford in PonUac. He and fcis Wife enjoy motorcycle| and Kim likes to try her abfty in nearby fields under her father's supervi^on. White did some racing in the past, but now just attends the > The family’s main hobby is swimming and they have a large popl. THE JOSEPH FITZPATRICKS Pontiac was the former home of the Joseph Fitzpatrick family which includes Tim, 12; Terry, 8'A; and George, 4. Fitzpatrick is a driver for Truckaway Corpwation I n Pontiac. He’s an avid do-it-yourselfer and has done extensive paneling and building In his home. H« belongs to Masonic Lodge 510 in Pontiac. ★ ★ * ■ N Mrs. Fitzpatrick is a den mother for her son’s Cub Scout den which meets regularly in her basement. Ths boys have been working hard on a largo replica of a ship to be used at this month’s pack meeting. Mrs Fitzpatrick likes working in arts and crafts Including making Christmas decorations. She showed me some colorful butterflies she had made from telephone wire. She enjoys golf and also is taking a sewing course now. She belongs to the C^er of Eastern Star. The Fitzpatricks have a cabin near Lake City in the northern lower peninsula of Michigan where they spend most of their vacation time. They attend Faith Baptist Church. THE THOMAS KEENS From Detroit came Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Keen who have a son in California and a married daughter in Union Lake. They have two grandchildren. Keen works for Michigan Structural Concrete Corp. in Pontiac Township. His main Robert, 3. Koby, who does carpentry engineering in Walled Lake, is a reri-do-it-yourselfer at home. The garage, kitchen and bath have all received restyling at his hands. He and his wife en-bowllng in neighborhood leagues. hobby has been raising roses and he Is his neighbors’ main source of infcurlnaticm on roses. Mrs. Keen said she|Ud a lot of sewing and tailoring In the past As for Perkins, ho likes deer hunting with bow and arrow and fishing. The Perkins family belongs to St. Patrick’s Church. THE DONALD BALUNGALL Mr. and Mrs. Donald Ball-ingall came here two years ago Patrick’s Church where Mrs. Keen is a member of the Fifty-Up Club. THE FRED KOBYS The Fred Kobys moyed here from Detroit five years ago: The family Includes Mark and Klark, 6-year-old i d e n t i c a 1 from Perth, Australia which is twins, and Michael, 5 and Mrs. BallingaU’s home. Her Mrs. Koby sews draperies and othes. She attends the L&eland Beauty Schooji in Walled Lake on a part-time basis. The family attends the Methodist Church in Milford, THE CLARENCE BEERS Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Beers came from Pontiac. They have three children — Kevin, 4; Keith, 10; and Connie, 12. She’s active in 4-H work. Beers owns the Beers Disposal Service in Milford. He is a constable for White Lake Township and is very interested in community affairs. Basketball and playing on a' Waterford softball team are favorites of his. hu-sband was there as an ex change teacher when he met her. The family Includes Brett, 11 and Vanessa, 3 months. Ballingall Is a sixth-grade teacher at Oxbow Elementi^ School. Camping is a favorite form of relaxation and the family often takes trips with their tent trailer into the Smoky Mountains. This summer Ball-Ingall plans to hike about miles along the Applachain Trail. He enjoys watching football and baseball. The main sport in the Beers family, however, is bowling with everyone except little Kevin belonging to a league Kevin hopes to start in a year or two and- already can talk about the sport. The Beers are active in the Mandon Lake Community Church. THE SAMUEL JILESES Originally from New York City, the Samuel Jileses came here after two years in St. Clair Shores. Their children are April . . , , V .u 4 Gayi 8; Christopher Matthew, but has given up much of that. L. ' Heather, 7 months. . The - Keens belong to St. jjjgg jg a’general distributor for Holiday Magic Cosmetics He is also studying for his exam as a corporation stocks and bonds salesman. He and his parents recently purchased more than 300 acres near Houghton Lake which they plan to subdivide in the near future. . JUes enjoys fishing and hunting as hobbies. r jewelers in ^ PONTIAC SINCE 1924 EXPERT UJdkJL SERVICE FOR ALL NATIONALLY FAMOUS JEWELED MAKESl 'oif, (Xparl Mrvlca on all mak«» •» ;«pt Tinwx wolchoA Cortilied repair- Mrs. Ballingall hails from the western coast of Australia where the climate is very warm, so seeing a snowfall here was quite an experience for her. enjoys painting and ceramics as hobbies. She is interested in meeting other ex-Australians living in this area. The Ballingalls belong to the Highland Clyde Methodist Church where dad teaches a Sunday School Class. Next week Hill ’n’ Dale Village in Walled Lake. law Allows Plea of Nolo Contendere LANSING (UPI) — Gov. William G. Milllken yesterday si^ed Into law a bill which p^mlts persons to enter pleas of nolo contendere in criminal arraignments in lieu of guilty pleas. The nolo contendere plea .unlike the guilty plea cannot be introduced into subsequent civil actions. Also signed into law was a bill which transfers township ordinance violation jurisdiction from justice of the peace courts municipal courts. Justice courts have been outlawed since the first of the year. Mrs. Jlles, busy with the two little ones when I met her, told me that crocheting, sewing anerator at Fisher Body ih Livonia, is an avid do-it-yourselfer. He haa enlarged Hie garage and kitchen of his home, added fieldstone t o the front and is always busy wallpapering or something, says Confab Dec. 8 on Drug Abuse Need extra help for the next week or two? ►Everyone's calling for Manpower ^ "T While Glove Girls MANPffiWER' 131S Wide Treek Drive W. 332-8386 PentI LANSING (UPI) - Gov. William G. Milllken yesterday announced that a daylong conference on drug abuse will be held Dec. 8 at Michigan State University. Milllken who will be Introduced by former GoV. John B. Swalnson will kqynote the conference, which Is expected to he att^ ed by about 300 repreaoiWlves of conumunltles bualneas government universities and student groups. pMiiiK ereti PMi* /AMILY FUN - Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Beers and their thr& children, (from left) Keith 10, Connie 12, apd Kevin 4, perfectly •parUe in Hwlreyea on bowling night. Everyone in the y except Kevin belongt to a league, and he la planning to Decorating and sewing are joiiilwi aoon as ha’a old anough. Mrs. Perkins favorite hobbles, ___ .. . The Himalayan kingdom pt his wife, "she has ni any‘Mustang contends with more decorating ideas tor the house than Us share of demons, and her husband ekecutea them National Geographic Sofclety says. Some 416 evil spirits of land, sky, fire and water plague the Lo-bas, as the people call themselves. An intruder is in your home! To Rob... Assault... or Worsel Protect your loved ones with PREVENTORII Burglar/Fire Alfirm PREVENTOR II R cotta no a good TV i With crime nrtM on the Increase ... you nead protection! PREVEN-TOR II oners you Mfety • Creates an Invialbla ultratonic ahlald ... ellare toolprool pre- IVswnkir Spourily Ceidm CAUs SSMSM HIS DriM ai WtIM Ukt mmim WED. ONLY DOORBUSTERS On sale while they last <:;■ Budgat Volua host Mesh nylons. Beige. Suntan. 9-11 "-ed. 31^ leM anly 1 pn. 4I< 4-drawar chests geody - to • finish pine )5xl1x27K" 11.77 Boys' vinyl gloves Rayon pile lined In block vinyl. In S-AA-L-XL. Long-slaavad, cotton ' flannel, sizes S-M-L. Work Clothsi Shower curl, liners' 6x6' irreg. shower curtoin of clear vinyl. 3-qt. com pepper Electric with separate worming hose. Durable. 2 88 Boys' to $9 sweaters Coat and pull-over stylet. Foil shades. 8-20. S-XL. 3,97 1.17 Ereck shampee Normal, Dry, Oily formulas. Big 16 fl.-oz.size. 00^ Rubbing alcohol Feder0rs own 70% alcohol. 16 fl-oz. Reg. 194. ^ ^ Muitt-celer woven threw rugs 77% Reverses for extra wear. 19x33 " size. Girls' knit panties PuH knit panties. Elasticized. 4 to 14. 3 pre 97°P and grow Naturally, they would not otter more hair . . . now is the time to this no-risk trial unless the treat- do something about it before it s ment worked. However, if is im- too late. pos^We to help everyone, ^oesch Laboratory Consultants. The great majority ot supply you with treat- cases of excessive hair fall ment for 32 days, at their risk, and baldness are the begin- it they believe the treatment will ning and more fully de- help you. just send them the in- a formation listed below. All in- velofwd stages of male pat-answered confidenti-tern baldness and cannot be ^y mail and without obh-helped. gation. Adv. NO OBLIGATION COUPON To; 1-oesch Laboratory Consullanls, Inc. Box 66001, 3.311 West Main St. Houston, Texas 77006 I am submitting the following information with the understanding that it will he kept strictly confidential and that I am under no obligation whatsoever. I now have or have had the following conditions: Do you have dandruff?_________It it'dry?__^—or oily?------------ Does your forehead-become oily or greasy?----------------------- Does your scalp itch?----------------When?----------------- How long has your hair been thinning?_------------------^------ Do you still have any weak hair on lop of your head?----------- How long is it?__________Is it dry?---------Is it oily?.. Attach any other information you feel may be helpful. ADDRESS-CITY-— TYPEWRITERS ALL MAKES Easy Terms D}NiiHiSi|iiitwSl \ S. Viet Forces Suffer Heavy Casualties SAIGON (AP) — South Viet- Strike Force troops, and they nanicse forces have suffered form the buik of nearly 1,000 comparatively heavy losses In a reinforcement troops whp have week of fighting around the Bu been deployed around Bu Dop to Dop Special Forces camp 85 counter a sizeable North Viet-milcs north of Saigon, official namese buildup, sources reported today. “It’s a Vietnamese Army The sources said 15 allied sol- .show as far as the ground fighl-diers have been killed. 75 ing is concerned,’’ said one ‘wounded, three armored person- American officer. “We are nel carriers and four trucks working with them *'closely, destroyed and haif a dozen They own the entire area and so American helicopters shot they ought to be involved. Back down. in May we’d have gone in. Now * ★ * we are working with them. We A total of 60 North Viet- are up to our necks in Vletnami- namese troops were reported zation.’’ killed, but one officer said the * * * kill ratio — four enemy dead to Mobile Strike Force troops one South Vietnamese or U S. battled about 400 North Viet- .soldier — “is substantially on namese six miles south of Bu the bad side.’’ Dop for 61^ hours Monday night. “The casualties are heaw In the heavy exchange of fire, compared to the enemv losses,’’ 24 of the enemy were reported said another field officer. killed, while two ot the Viet-RKRPTI pn MPRrPiMARiKS ‘''ibesmen were killed BERE’T-LFD MERCENARIES wounded, sources said. Most of the allied casualties American helicopters from the have been Vietnamese tribes- jjf Cavalry Division sup-men, mercenaries paid and led mercenaries, and two by American Green Beret shot down and a third one troops. These are called Mobile j,y machine-gun fire. Two American crewmen were wounded. > A mile away, North Viet-I oDOW TO DOOST namese troops for the second time in four days attacked an American artillery base called OliiyCr JUl Jerri that was set up last week to support Bu Dop. The North Popular recording artist Jack Vietnamese pumped 30 rounds Jones will headline a Las Vegas of 12Qram and 82mm mortar Revue at Detroit’s 54th Auto shells mW the base, kilhltg-five Show, which opens at Cobo Hall Americans and wounding five. Saturday and runs through Nov. GROUND PROBE I 23. The North Vietnamese fol-j * * * lowed up with a small groundj Over 300 vehicles of all types, probe, but it “never really unincluding domestic and import folded,” said one officer. Noith passenger cars, recreational Vietnamese losses were not vehicles, campers and com- known. mercial vehicles, will be ex- Farther south, 67 miles north- hibited by the show’s sponsor, west of Saigon, a U.S. recon- the Detroit Auto D e a 1 e r s naissance plane sighted North Association. Vietnamese troops 10 miles * ★ * from the Cambodian border and Admission price is $1.75 for called in dive bombers. Troops I adults and 50 cents for children [from the 1st Cavalry moved Into under 12. Advance tickets are | the area after the bombing and available at J. L. Hudson, Sebrs found the bodies of 37 North and Grinnell’s stores and Cobo Vietnamese soldiers. There I Hall until the show’s opening. ! were no U.S. casualties. - OAKUND COMMUNITY COLLEGE ANNOUNCES PRE-APPRENTICE, APPRENTICE, EMPLOYEE-ln-TRAINING, and TECHNICAL PROGRAM OFFERINGS CLASSES BEGIN DECEMBER 1, 1969; REGISTER NOW! REGISTRATION INFORMATION: PUCE: WINTER TERM December 1,1969 To March 3,1970 Apprentice-Technical Center St. Frederick’s High School 70 Whittemore Street, Pontiac, Mich. Teleplgone 338-6101 or 642-6210 DATES: November 10 through December 1,1969 HOURS: 1-5 P.M. & 6-9 P.M. Mondays through Thursdays; 8:30 A.M.-5 P.M. Fridays TUITION: $9 Per Credit Hour for College District Hesidents $12 Per Credit Hour for Non-College District Residents APPRENTICE, EMPLOYEE-IN-TRAINING S TECHNICAL COURSES ORAFTING Shop Drawing I, II DioOo»ignl,ll,lll,IV Teel Doiign 1,11, III Stiuctural Blueprint Reading Pipe and Tube Isometric Basie Blueprint Reading MATHEMATICS Basic Mathematic's Introduction to Algebra ' Introduction to Geometry Geometry-Alge bra Plane T rigonometry Solid Trigonometry Compound Anglos Introduction to Calculus ELECTRICAL Basle Electricity DC EloctrkHy DC 1, II Electricity AC Ml Electrical Cede ElectronicI I Electricity AC (Non-Math) Electricity AC—Single Phase Electricity AC—Poly Phase Basic Electrical Blueprint Reading MACHINE TECHNOLOGY Machine Shop Thebry Mechanics 1,11,111, IV Basie AAaehine Shop Advanced Machine Shop Machinery Handbook Geers and Gearing Industrial Safety TECHNICAL Fluid Dynamics Use of the Framing Square Hydraulics Metallurgy Plumbing Cede Pneumatics Strength of Motorials Autometives I, II, III Diesel Engine Fundamentals Diesel Engine Laboratory Welding A/G Welding A1,A2 Welding G1,G2 Industrial Painting I, III BEFBIOEBATION Basic Refrigeration Intermediate Refrigeration Refrigeration Code Air Conditioning I Automotive Air Conditioning Corfimerciel Refrigeration Advanced Refrigeration Absorption Refrigeration PRE-APPRENTICE PROGRAMS OMigned to provide the education necessary tor participate sueeassffuily in apprentice or employee-in training programs 240-Hour Pre-Apprentice Program — Basi^ Blueprint Reading, Reading Comprehension, Introduction to Algebra, Basic Mathematics, Introduction to Geometry, Physical Science (Mechanics). ‘70-Hour Pre-Apprentice Program — A refresher program in mathematics, mechanics, blueprint reading, spatial relations, and diagnostic testing to aid the apprentice applicant. IN-PUNT TRAINING PROGRAMS Business and industry may Request spccml training programs or c<^n«s ft^r their employees. Classes can he arranged to bf taught at the firm’s plant thereby providing related instruction on on-the-job equipment SUPERVISION, MAINTENANCE & IN-SERVICE TRAINING COURSES Basie Steam Engineering Intermediate Steam Engineering Basic Human Relations and Personnel PreblemI Effective Supervision Presontation Techniques Introduction to Assessment Administration Fundamentals of Building Maintononea AAethods of Preparty Description Basic Arehitactural Maintenance Basic Moehanical/Elaetrical Maintenance I. II NOW-Seare la ^ OPEN EVF.BY NIGHT Monday through Saturday I TUESDAYand WEDNESDAY SPECIALS Choose from a wide selection of colors and styles, including woven, tufted and tailored. Most are machine washable. Ideal for any furniture style in your bedroom or guest room . . . also great for gifts. Dropary Department Colonial Swivel Rocker WITH AHRACTIVE MAPLE FINISHED WOOD trim Sit back and relax! Has tufted Reg. 98.9L pillow back and reversible zip-pered serofoam cushion over in-sulated no^ag springs. Cover is ^ M M durable green tweed. Savel ^ Olds Tornado... so Life-Like! 199 Sale Price A bright-colored beauty that any boy would enjoy owning. Made of durable metal with plastic windows and rubber tires. Friction powered. Save! Little Miss Hair Dryer Sale Price 4»» Scaled and atyled jurt for little girls. 3-poiition .adjustment. With puffy Automatic Blankets POLYESTER BLENG WITH TURN4ET DIAL Snugly 65% polyester, 35% rayon blanket is machine washable, dryable at a warm temperature. Top end bound with 6 inches of nylon. Avocado, gold, blue. ' Ref. 12.99 9®* 14.99 flill Bin, lingle eontrel.......... Uee Year Sears Revolving Chprga 11.99 1/2 PRICE CHMSTMAS TRIM SALE String qf 30 Indoor Midget Lights Choose clear light string or assortment of “Christmas” colored lights. Your Choice; * ” »•» Assorted Ornamont Sets 1.19 Teardrop Ornament;.. •. i. 590 1.99 Teapot Ornament......... • .\a 89o 2.59 Drum Ornament .••..••• a ^ 1aZ8 2.99 Teardrop Ornament ^1i4S 1.19 Tinsel Teardrop ^ ^ 1.49 Lemon Shape Omamoat • • * 414o 29c Nativity Scene . • « *. • . • • • $ • 18o 39c Small Slippers •••••••••• dsk l9o 59c Medium Slippers ••••••. eaeb 29o 79c Large Slippers .. ....... 89o Chrlitmot Trim Shop "nr sirClos^at ibinatl4n Factor Combinat Aluminum Dlior 1.1a. tUok main fraiqs is woven pile, weat stripped, keyed ee astura im-tsg fit. length UbM. Fiber inn MsRO’* sit frannis ettHar- “T.S Combination Alnndnum Door -| JlieMl ‘ iV*4m. main frasM bag heavy duly bayea seraeni ’ for perfMl Al, w sag, Flbrr |la*t t«rataln|. 32aB0”(i(^aiSit. BuHdhigMotiriatlt iDowutowii PcjUtiac • Phonii FE S-4i THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1969 The ^‘George” Boot IN STRIDE WITH TODAY'S OASUAL WEAR Overureior. Available furmost U.H. ears,' U'2 OFF! Teflon* Coated Cookware 247 2^4 347 Extra heavjweight aluminum cookware cooks fast and evenly. A breeae to clean with DuPont Teflon ■ coating. Buy all three! boy’s or Girl’s 20” Bike POSITIVE TWIST-DRIP 3-SPEED CONTROLS MIMI Clir«>me-plated high^rlso burs and quilled bucket seal for all the chic styling « girl or hoy could ask for. Dual-caliper brakes and chromeplated fenders. . ^ Great gift idea. Wi Spam Cwur IKAAK BOtBUCK ANU Ca Downtown Pontiac • Phone FE 5-4171 A—10 DNLCOUIR THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY. NOVEMBER 11, 1080 WE SELL NATIONALLY ADVERTISED MERCHANDISE at DISCOUNT PRICES! ^ mhl MRTY4IZE COFFEE w URN kf It* »wt*» *1 Own** m• parolvr* and flovsr. St|ii*l eOMPAM AT ttUfS %jn Aik for Nuffibw 3334IR nonsstoNAL HAIR DRYER Aik for Nomxor 44-10R $444 COMPARi AT $«.« AdtforNunib*r3U4 Brady !{« pNaident; Kathy Martin, vice president; Roxen Steehler, secretary; and Paula Buckley, treasurer. Grant Hood, English teacher, is sponsor. ★ ★ ★ Music will be supplied by “The World.” Tickets are $1.50 a couple or $1 A Drefis Code Survey was made recently. The results have been tabulated, and show the majority of students are diss,atisfied with the present dress code. ★ * * Most students also feel that girls should be allowed to wear slacks to school during the day. A majority also voted'in favor of no restrictions on boy’s hair length aiid felt beards, moustaches and sideburns should be allowed. St. Lawrence Gets Taste of Politics By ELAINE LEDWON Future politicians from St. Lawrence High are gaining political savior-faire — and hopefully a good government mark — attending Utica, Shelby Township and Sterling Heights municipal meetings. Required to attend one m«>eting, seniors taking government classes have been pleasantly surprised by the cordiality extended to them. First-quarter report cards are hovering over the heads of the student body. A marked bicrease in the number of studying students has been detected by faculty members. 8 at Milford Vie for Junior Miss ^y RICK HpLMAN The 1970|irratpn on one I) batter>-. No i HIRLINGER TRAVEL GENTER 11W. Lawnnee 9t, P.O. Box3071 .Millii||iii4805B Richly embellished. Norman duce HartneU does party clothes in to make. Order normal ready- hetter fit end are easier ®^8®jmuch you should lose, how long netter iij ana are easier ^ see jt ghould take you, and where to tackling issues like these, do tiTegrpod manber. The neckline tq-wear size ami aUow one week; they? lis the focal point. Jots of inter-for deUvery. SOMETHING !®om®«dn8 y'«'‘ problems After they? jjs the focal point. Jots But tackle them Uiey did. Ugt are decorative buttons and What one young person did notjtailored bow. The wrapped look know about poverty, another ug reaUy a deep Inverted pleat one did. If some individuals had below the waist; the closing is never witnessed a racial in-conventional, a center back zip-cident, two others had. per. ‘ Fabrics: linen, cotton, ★ ★ ★ shantung, raw silk, lightweight They surprised each other with their knowledge and awareness of their communities. They did have lomething to say and they knew what they were talking about. ______________________ Some issues they knew could ’code. Send $2. NEW: Pattern books by classi-ifuj danger of a rut,ioging « few pounds dial again fication: Ensembles; Afternoon‘is that you may get buried m lt.!You wffl be directed to another & Cocktail Dresses; Duchess of „ * * ^ v ^ rection in the booklet. Just keep Windsor y™ are constantly bored idiallng untU you reach your ★ ★ ★ I with life, then something is ideal weight. For each book $1.00 plus 25'amiss, either with your outlook! if you would like to have cents postage and handling.!or your situation.. If you have Josephine Lawman’s new “Dial Hard Cover Catalogue $10.00.|applied enthusias, self-inviest-A-Figure” send onq dollar and] Book 33 — collection of latest jment, imagination, energy and ygur printed name and ad-designs in all categories $1.00, understanding to your ex-1 dress with your request to' postpaid for each. NEW IDEA: jistence, and it didn’t help any,! Josephine Lowman in care ofi First time designers have pub- you are probably in a rut and it I The Pontiac Press, Dept. E-600,1 size, include name, address and fcrets. ^klets is time to do something about;P.O. Box 9, Pontiac, Mich. co„,i «9 0A nncinaM |1- 2, 3, 4 and 5-75 cents post- it. woolen or crepe. NS-298-1 is cut in Misses sizes 8-18. Size requires approximately 2% yards of 54” fabric. To order pattern NS-298-1; state _______________ ______________________________________ . .. However we must b d __________________________________ never be boiled down to specific Send orders for books and w**®" bedding about measures. It wa,s impossible to!tems to SPADEA, Box N, Dept.P®'? If*®- j ! IRPFI2III APA define exact measures for each px4. Milford, N.J. 0^8. Tel.: “'•yj® Booklet— dMt-your- Rgniember the old saying that, lIlllfclRwlaKIl M 201-995-2201. i®fzH~BusT“wAlT W^lenoth the grass on the other side of; »«•««• ■ ★ ★ ★ I • 32 23 34 This pre-cut, pre-perforated j » | Spadea Designer Pattern comes u n 21 3> in ready-to-wear sizes that pro-1 ILem nTm 0* s&ek i» wnu. cwnmunlty and it’s problems. However the delegates made It a part of their find policy to be committed to seek and-serve cMiununlty needs, whatever they be. Delegate walked in and out at will, but a parliamentarian and Hie firm and acute judgment of Pepper kept a few women from crusading and rab-blerousing. ' * * * The conference, as a whole, was a marvel of organization considering the scope of topics covered and the number of opinions and beliefs represented. It is han^ to imagine that their work and concern would hook to Tony't for BEAUTY BARGAINS MON., nm aitil WED. ONLY Plain Haircnt, Shampoo and StYlinx, 85.00 Permanent and Wave fJO.OO Complete C«iM.ieorOdl f., FES-7186 mSmSerneSkSSSS^^ GET BACK IN SHAPE WWi a Bek Vibrator COME IN AND CHECK OUR LOW PRICES ON RENTAL OR SALES PONRAOOHAIR RENfAfl Evorythlng Fort • W^N9 RfCEPTIONS • PAITIESOPAIIVSI2I 140 0aUiiriAN. Sorptmg Pontiae for 3§Yoar$ AUot • HOSPITAL BEDS • WHEELCHAIRS 334-4044 the fence.U8U8lly looks greener? Some persons are never, satisfied no matter how many! cqiportunities or blessings they' ■ BRAN buds* 00 YOU NOTICE PEOPLE WEARINO MEARINO AIDS? Tode/a eleetronte hearing aids •re M small that most people rarely notice them. But if you do noUee. It may Indicate that you’re •eereliy worried about your own A precise, simple electronic heerlng teat with the famous Neva your mind of thia oocrot fear losing ytmr hoaring. Earl H, GUupio ‘iSlwt mw U ictiMlIy I prablom you'vo boon trying to hi Thom’s no cost or obligation olthar way. So why not pneoution aooi ■ “ boptooBOdtomakothistost, If too nauits indieato you do nood 'hoaring ii wo’il bo mod to domonatrato soma romarkobfo 1 Boltoflo oTda thof tho hoaring totio this sonsIMo pmcoution soon? Drop In today or caU for on oppointmont fight In your own homo. Hearing Aid CtnUer | lari H. Olaapia, Cerflflod Hoaring Aid Avdlelogiaf 450 W. Huran na 334-7711 tooeeeeeeoueoeeeeoeeeeeftaa'nanna#' L450 W ••••••a J DRAPERY-SLIPCOVER BOLTS and BOLTS of Fabrics. In Solids - Prints - Sheers 20 Numbers in White Alone (AlUainchoiWide) ► OVER 5,000. YARDS Priced From $2.7510 $5.50 Yd. ByThoYardorCudomMado rf 0 All 20% to 40% Off ONE GROUP ’ $150 OfA-todO-YdrdBol**,-...................... I Yd. ONE GROUP * ^OOC Of S-to 30-Yd. Bohi.....................y yyd ONE GROUP , • ^Oc OM-to5-Yd.Boha............................HVyd. jipORamnanIt.......................... lyooeh All Tiers and Valances - Off 20 Odd Pairs Traverse Drapes - 14 Off 15 pdd Bedspreads * Vs Off tid\DraporiP9 Since 1941 f AND FRIDAY EVENINGS QaatltyCarppt m OPEN MONDAY 1666 SOUTH TELEGRAPH | / JwUgMhelOfdwrdUikaloadl I THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1969 MRS. WYCKOFF MRS. STEINBACH MRS. PHELPS MRS. WAGNER Four Girls Don Bridal Veils on Saturday Carolee J. Phelps chose a street length dress of lace over taffeta for her marriage Saturday to Ross A. Wyckoff. The couple exchanged wedding vows In Calvary Lutheran Church. A reception in the Italian-Amerlcan Club folllowed the candilelight rites. Mrs. Leonara K. Ferrell and Jamas Wils'li|.BIniitii»h«m CuMwurrt S400 DIkI* Highway n'mi........ 334*0981 The in-and-out carpet that solves all your ups-and-downs! Anew type indocr-oudoor carpet: Courtyard ly Evans Black There's fresh informalit); in this new carpet of 100% Creslan* acrylic fiber pile, perfectly dyed for color-fastness—and featuring a weatherproof backing to answer the need for a smart appearance indoors and out Courtyard is tough, too. Highly resistant to wear, abrasion and hard living. Its 3-level, random-sheaYed brick pattern takes to the great outdoors like a natural. Looks equally sophisticated all through your home, answering your special needs for beauty, long wear, color, and luxury. See it today in 10 extraordinary decorator colors from Golden Haze to Walnut caxpeui by(^m»treng 8.95 a square yard Cmliin* it • Cyuumld Uultmuk lar Kijrlk Ikw Mo//s \ Quality Carpet ^nd Draperies since 194i 1666 SOUTH TELEGRAPH Just South of Qrohard Lako M. FE 4-0518 THE PONTIAC PllESS, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1969 GEI YOUR HEATING OIL AT CHURCH S THIS YEAR All winter, I K this winter.. Turn On The Warm Just set your thermostat ...we do oH the rest! ■ Worry-free automatic oil deliveries ■ Convenient budget plans at no extra cost ■ Sunoco heating oils- none belter Especially since we have a special way of helping you keep the pleasant warmth of "Summertime" in your home all winter long. We do it with Sunoco Heating Oil, the best quality blended heating oil your money can buy .... and by giving the most dependable and trusted heating services in town. We'll automatically keep your tank filled, and help you to keep your budget in balance with easy-to-meet equal monthly payment plans. High Court Rejects Appeal of Protester j By BARRY SCHWEID I WASHINGTON (AP) - The Supreine Court has given tacit I approval for campus police to I arrest student demonstratorsi who raise a clamor on unlversi-jty property to protest the Vietnam war-. But because the court did not set forth Ita views with the rul-lof “free speech" claims raised ing Monday, the effect is likely by Zwlcker. to be limited. However, these deductions The court acted, by a 7-1 vote, are shaky, at best, because the in a case from Wisconsin where!high court has the pesky habit {a student claimed the state’s!of laying back and waiting for a disorderly conduct law was similar case that pirbsents the I I same issues In a sharper fash- NOTICC TO PONTIAC TOWNSHIP RESIDENTS Pontiac Townahip rotidoi^itt may uso tho Oakland County landfill on Bald AAountain Road. 1 Huber fo Speak to County AlP LUMBER & BUILDING SUPPLIES SINCE 1890 107 SQUIRREL RD. UL 2-4000 ‘\ WE WILL KEEP YOUR TANK FILLED 8 PREVENT CONDENSATION Sen Robert J. Huber, R-Troy, will address the American Independent party of Oakland County at a joint meeting of the 18th and 19th Congressional District organizations Friday. The meeting will be held at the Knights of Columbus Hall, Maybee and Sashabaw, Independence Township, at 8 p.m. The meeting is open to the public; being used to suppress his freedom of speech. The student, Robert K. Zwick-er, had held over his head, out-a University of Wisconsin placement office, a picture of a Vietnamese child seared with napalm. The university had turned the office over to the Dow Chemical Co., a napalm ih Car License Tags on Sale Saturday LANSING (UPI) -Automobile license plates for 1970 will go on sale Saturday but Secretary of State James M. Hare says car owners should check with their license branch office to see if that particular office will be open. Hare said individual branch offices will decide whether they will be open to sell licOnse plates to “early bird” buyers. Anatvsia generally haSj iyeW9 Mfini/Ww ^|shunned appeals by college pro-! testers. Last March, for exam- ple, it turned down a group of Biuefield, W.Va., state college manufacturer, to conduct placement Interviews. Zwicker was sentenced in Dane County Circuit Court in 1967 to a fine of $100 or 30 days in jail. NO PARTICULAR REASON The high court, in dismissing his appeal, did not state any particular reason. The only thing else the court said was that; “Mr. Justice (William 0.) Douglas is of the opinion that probable jurisdiction should be noted.” This meant that of the current eight justices, only Douglas felt Zwicker had made enough of an impression to warrant at least a hearing if not eventual'reversal of his conviction and invalidation of the state law. The abruptness with which the court acted may indicate there is little sympathy among most of the justices for the kind students who were disciplined a rock-throwing confrontation with police. And yet, the court also has edged into this field by championing the right of public school students in Iowa to wear black armbands to school in peaceful protest of the war. on Saturdays and Wadnatdays by applying for a card from tho PonJ| tiac Township Clork, 2060 Opdyko\ Road. Roy Wahl Pontiac Township Suporvlsiir BUYI SELL! TRADEI USB PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADSI 'W Just drop it! llJji 1'* 1 1 ' ' A smokeless, odorless gas incinerator gets rid of all burnable trasb indoors. Drop it!... the papers, garbage, burnable trash... drop all of it directly into a modern gas incinerator! With a smokeless, odorless gas incinerator in your basement, garage or uti lity room, you can forget that daily dash oiit into the rain and snow-no more polluting the air with smoke and odor from burning trakh. Anther nice featWe of the automatic gas< incinerator \ IS that It costs jlist pennies a day to operate. See your Gas Incinerator Dealer PiWIshed^tvC^^ ssisia LOSE TilOSE UNWANP POUNOpiD INCHES CALL 682-S04P ' drop by for your FHII TiWR jwt jpim 9t P . ^ ■ v" ' A g-mt poMiiAviy: L„ \ rUliSDA^Y, NQVEMBEH 11, >969 B~1 BLOOMFIELD MLR/lcl£ TELEGRAPH RD. AT SQUARE LAKE RD. WliD! WILD! SHOPPER SPECIALS! me SEWINC5 CHEST Whil^ Quantity La$t$I Moiro-dstign chott has 2 trays, ono with removablo dividsrs. Colors. Rp/f, 3,66 NOW 233 KRESGE^S MIRACLE MILE STORE ONLY PARKAS AND AUTO JACKETS Voluos 099 to 22.00 O REPEAT OF SEUOUT SPORTSWEAR • SWEATER Voluos to $12 • SUCKS Voluos to $14 • SHIFTS Voluos to $24 YOUR CHOICE g99 DOOR BUSTER SPECIAL DRESSES 2^ LADIES^ SEAMLESS HOSIERY Slightly Irregular Mesh or Plain Assorted Colors Sizes 9 to 11 6 pr. for I®® «• smnw nt WM o UMI tmniii ii-liiK t, ijlimvilUl ' ppps Telegraph and Square Lake Road Free Parking for 5,000 Cars In Our Well-Lighted Lot ARCADE ORDER PHOTO CHRISTMAS CARDS NOW! MIRACLE CAMERA SHOP “The Friendly Camera Shop Around The Cmmer'* Complete travel torvlee trith a mile Phone 332-8318 HANSEN TRAVEL Skip the Washday For All Your Washing and Cleaning Noodt Econ-O-Wash Alterations, Dressmaking, Restyling 30 Years Experience Phono 338-8528 SABRA’S Custom TaUoring ITS HERE! A MEAL ON A BUN! MCOBE DEU6HT HUAAAN HAIR WIGS with Scalp Parting WIGLAND A grilled ham and cheese served on a la^e onion roll. ^ ^ Cole slaw and kosher djil. Encore RESTAURAm' A SHOPPING CENTER WITHIN A SHOPPING CENTER Clearance Sale that were $85.00 to $100.00 Substontlql saving* right at lha height of the seawni An excellent selection of all sfoson suits to wear In faH and winter. 100% wool wbrsted fabrics. Choose Cdnv<|nl«nt Michigan • A ■ ,,:;r SPECIAL PURCHASE Misses' Orlon'^ acrylic Cardigans Cardigans to euddi* into when tomporaturos drop. All knit in 100% Oiion'>i acrylic in cobio •titch motifs. Buy thorn now and soVD. CheosD from postal pink, >SiM34^0. blu«, moiza or whit*. Siz«: ,J . . . I, GREAT GIFT ITEM! UUHES' SUEDE JACKET With leather trim. Warm pile, zip out lining. taupe or brown sizes 10-16 Reg.oo^ Now 49®® /C/\ SAVE 30.90 3-pc. STEREO FA^AM RADIO WITH 8 TRACK DECK •me t^gl^n^h^^ NOW ONLY phene lack. Has in $QQoo PUTS FOR TAPL WALNUT FINISH. PhonD 334-2585 A QuolHy Cempan, ef LTV, tins Ahee, Inc. Allied Buy the Receiver Now . Add the Changer Later The new Marants Model 25 eiereo compart receiver oonvertn quickly and eaeily into a epare?*avin|! rep-on! p!a>'er AM/FM receiver combination. Buy the receiver now and. whenever you're ready, jurt drop Dual in vour choice «f (varrard. Miracord. or Ihial record playere.. Filented Gyro-Touch tuning* on the front panel Variable-Overlap Drive** in the poaw ampUflef. Gome in today and nee the epare-eanns Marants Model 25 for yourself. Then let your etra make np your mifid. ^ a lOOMIKlD MINACti MILL PUNIIAC THE PONTIAC PBESS. TUESDAY. NOVEMBER 11, Deaths in Pontiac, Nearby Areas Paul C. Adams |p.m. tomopw in Donelson-j^r,^ Elonzo A. Krebiehl Johns Funeral Home. i ROCHESTER - Service for, Irs. ElonzO '.A. (Grace E.) Tucson, Ariz., will be at 11 a.m.Idled yesterday. He was a Krebiehl, 82, of 108 Southall tomorrow at Arizona Mortuary I member of the Holy Name, be 2 p.m. Thursday at Plxley Inc. Society and the Senior Citizens Memorial Chapel, Rochester,' Mr. Adamit, an employe of . Bowling League of his church, jwith burial in Mount Avon Service for former Pontiac; Mr. Martin, a retired Inspec-resldent Paul C. Adams, 54, ofjtor at Pontiac Motor Division,' yesterday. He Sunshine Dairy Co. and the surviving former owner of Adams Florist, ™ - „ * Pontiac, died Friday. Surviving are his mother, Mrs. Sena L. Adams; one son, Philip P. Adams; three sisters, Mrs. Patricia Pepper and Mrs. Phyllis Plouffe, both of Pontiac, and Mrs. LaVeme Harnack of Waterford Township; one brother, Bernard of Pontiac; and two grandchildren. Ammon A. Martin Service for Ammon A. Martin, 63, of 140 W. Cplgate will be 10 a m. Thursday at St. Michael’s Catholic Church with burial in Mount Hope Cemetery. The Rosary will be recited at 7 Henry Rudolph Report Denies PROA Coercion G ft M i ELLIS Since 1945 ns N. MgliMw CEMENT WORK • PATIOS GARAGES • ADDITIONS COMPLETe BUILDINO BBRVICa TERMS FE 2-1211 . hie wife ^Cemetery, Avon Township, five dauRhter.s ' Mrs. Krebiehl died yesterday. Mrs. Roger R i v a r d off Surviving are her husband; a Clarkston, Mrs. William Nelson «^«“8hter. Mrs, Janies Gibson, of High Point. N.C, Lindaiand a Martin at home and Mrs. Min- Rochester; three grandchM^^^^ nie Smith and Mrs. Christ Rep- seven great-grandchildren; and puhn, both of Pontiac; seven two great-great-grandchUdren, sisters, including Mrs. 10 Stone] of Troy and Mrs. Lois Martin and Mrs. Rowena RUey, both of| COMMERCE TOWNSHIP -Pontiac; and four brothers. Service for Henry Rudolph, 79, of 5734 Carroll Lake will be 11 Mrs. Paul J. Kaniut km. tomorrow m Elton Black ; r iFuneral Home, Union Lake, V-. n/Gr-C/GCr BLOOMFIELD HILLS -jwith burial in Commerce Ceme-Service for Mrs. Paul J. (Louise tery. Mr. Rudolph died Friday. He George i A report on the effect of the. However, Waterman qiies-Pontiac Police, Off leers tloned the role of the PPOA^ Association (PPOA) on Police claiming their threatened Trial Board proce^ings In a'walkout was intimidation, recent charge of brutality was | Answering questions raised by given to the City Commission; Waterman, Bimkrant reported GEORGE T. SHEFnELD City Civitans Set to Hear last night. The report was submitted by CSty Attorney Sherwin Bimkrant following complaints by Willaim Waterman, chief counsel for the Pontiac chapter of the National, Association for the Advancement of Colored, People (NAACP). that the PPOA not only had the authority to make its own investigation of the case, but was obliged to do so for any memlter of its bargaining unit. CITY’S ROLE NOTED He pointed out the city, as employer, plays no role In certification or decertification of any union. .Bimkrant also! indicated the city could take little action unless it was ap- PICASSO the liist 29 ol 347 gravures 1968 IRREGULARO DUE TO LACK OF FOOD * MILK IN YOUR DIET ■ P.) Kaniut, 62. of 31555 Fairfax will be 10 a.m. Thursday at (Xu-Lady Queen of Martyrs, Beverly Hills, with burial in Holy Sepulchre Cemetery, Southfield. Bible vigil will be 8 tomorrow night at the Vasu-Lynch Funeral Home. Mrs. Kaniut died Sunday. She was secretary of the Royal Oak Board of Education for 10 years, retiring in 1965. Surviving are two sons, Paul M. of Birmingham and Peter J. of Alpena; a daughter, Mrs.I Arthur Mellow of Phoenix, Ariz.; two sisters; a brothlr; her father. Perry L| was a retired barber. president-elect of C i v i t a n On (X:t. 14 Waterman charged the PPOA had used coercion ............... ................^ ! during the proceedings in "gg taking iform of a threatened walkout It place In that case the city any of the policemen involved u,e„ obtain a court inch 1'^®” suspended by the trial Bij„krant reported. board. I'’ The full powers of the Surviving is Gary, Ind. Mrs. son, Gary of InternaUonal, will speak^^bich began in July Iri front of tomorrow at the noon luncheon jbe Hayes Jones Community meeting of the Pont ac avlton cenjer. Two men were arrested Hans Stenersen jciub at the Elks Lodge, 114 the disturbance, Kenneth R. Orchard Lake. I Walker, 27, of 97 S. Jessie and two The board was hearing a case bodies, the Police Trial Board, and Human Relations Commission, made up of citizens, were employed, Bimkrant concluded. District 5 Commissioner Robert J. Jackson indicated he Mae) Stenersen. 89 of 378 Fer-'facilities supervisor for the'^S^tbol^rthelon^aVu^^^^^ I*e“ lncLr1eft®^‘‘a“"taint" ry will be 11 a.m. tomorrow in South Central Bell Telephone X J„iL L mrih»r Pursley-Gilbert Funeral Home Co.. will be Installed next Jhne for further with burial in Oak Hill C^e- when Clvitan International CHARGED ihvestigation died for lack of tery. . observes the 50th anniversary of. The brutality charge was suppor Service for Mrs.-Hans (Ida, Sheffield, Mississippi state|gjjck Shorter. 25, director of Greenwood grandchildren. Mrs. Stenersen died Sunday. Her husband survives. Mrs: Alvah M. Taber BLOOMFIELD ’TOWNSHIP -and 10Service for Mrs. Alvah M. (Madeline) Taber, 86, of 4000 Quarton will be at 8 p.m. today at Vasu-Lynch Funeral Home, Royal Oak, with burial in Wood-lawn Cemetery, Detroit, Mrs. Taber died Sunday. She was a member of the Oakland Hills Country Club., Surviving is a sister, Mrs. Helen Brandt of Califomia. its founding at Atlanta, Ga. brought against the two ar- District 6 Commissioner - - - resting policemen. Carl Yuill Wesley Wood voiced what was ... . X,. u J Maiuirs . the apparent consensus when he ; Heisamernberoftheb^rtandRaymond Hawks ^gsaid, “as far as I’m concerned, I of du-ectors of American Red * ---— Cross and the Jackson, Miss., Chamber of Commerce and is a chapter president of the Telephone Pioneers of America. ■This^arge was hdd to be ^ase is closed.’’ unfounded by the trial board, __________________ and also in a report by the, ^rr. . i Pontiac Human Relations! UetFOlt OttlCialS Commission Drive Starts to Aid Hard-Luck Family BOYNE CITY (UPI)-Friends and neighbors started a drive today to obtain' clothing and supplies for Mr. and Mrs. John Crandall and their five children, whose troubles keep mounting. The family lost all of their possessions in a fire that destroyed the family home Satur- Yesterday the father was Informed by the Howes Leather Co. that this is his last week of employment because the tannery operation is being closed. Remarkabh Naw Haaring Ha/pl 3HEARING1 I A I D S I N I • AUDI©77zazM Great New Behind-The-Ear Aid by MAIGOI E Automatic Volume Control Automatically softens loud sounds, prevents distortion, protects sensitive ears. E Forward Microphone Better localizatton of sounds means more natural hearing, better speech understanding. Teiephone Switch Shuts out room noises, helps you hear telephone conversation better. 0 m See Jt.., HEAR IT/ Today, at l\yi A1^/^ "Most Respected IVIMI04J Name in Hearing” 1012 W. HURON ST., PONTIAC—681-1811 Now 7 Convenient Locations to Serve You PONTIAC BIRMINGHAM 29 E. Cornell 31815 Southfield Phone 332-1225 Phone 644-2175 NAME ................ADDRESS.............. DIARBORN—GROSSE PTE—DETROIT—MAOISON HCTS. Send Secret Ear Informetien to: CITY.....................STAT^. . ........ State Senafe PaysF T ribute to Augenstein the late Dr. Leroy Augenstein, a scientist, politician and lay theologian who died Saturday when his private plane crashed near Charlotte. * ★ ★ ’The resolution passed in the Senate Monday called the 41- PR Group Forms in W. Michigan LANSIN6 (AP) — The State;groups throughout the state. Senate has paid the “highest know that citizens are now will-tribute’’ in the State of Michi-ilng and eager tof reform, but I Say 198 Absentee I Votes Not Tallied i DETROIT (AP) - Detroit elections officials acknowledged today that a total of 198 absentee ballots cast in the Nov. 4 I mayoral election were never ! counted. Ii Officials said the ballots were they are impatient and the repercussions will be great if we don’t act responsibly to make the needed changes now.” * X * Augenstein enclosed a four-page, single-spaced letter he previously sent legislators about not delivered to polling places in time. * ■*' “To my knowledge, nothing like this has ever happehed before in » Detroit election,” said John A. Smith, director of the city Electiffli Coimnlssion. 8mlth said the uncounted ballots coilld not possibly affect the oucome of any of the ballot is-^ sues. Smith said he feels the ballots are void, but said he would ask year-old Augenstine, chairman the ed reform package. He of the biophysics department at; asked school board members Michigan State University, a and superintendents to make ‘brilliant biophysicist who de- their feelings on education re-j city attorneys for an opinion on voted his life in attempting to form known, | the matter, bridge the gap between religion, science and politics.’’ Augenstein also was a member of the State Board of Education and was an aspiring U.S. Senate candidate. He was a Republican. Fuheral services were scheduled today. GRAND RAPIDS (AP) -| EMINENTLY CREATIVE Harold R. Walton, infonnation| resolution said manager for Siegler s Augenstein was one of the fp t J of Michigan’s eminent- S^y org^izJd western]y "’®1’ Michigan chapter of the Publicif«s!«" f compassion Relations Society of America, jpolitical awareness and moral Other officers include W. R. responsibility, all of which he Officer Reacts 'Prisoner Had a Gun' Cronenwett of Holton, vice president, and William W. Brenninghouse of Benton Harbor, secretary - treasurer. News Yesterday at the Capital Ey Ih* AuMlatid Ertu eOVERNOR Sought ftrimrs' , -----------......._ plan would ical control of schools. . . Said Veterans Day Is a time to remind urselves that "It all men, reoardless of ace, colof or creed, can die side by s de n war, they should ba able to live side by side In peace." ----need Plans for a Dec. $ con- on drug abuse at Michigan State ______ more flexibility Iw the federal govemmant In the eHocatlm of funds to the stale for highway construc-THE SENATE Rsssad a resolution of tribute to the lata Leroy AusMsteln, a m^ber erf the State Board oT Education who was killed I in a privsia plana crash last waakand I adlournad until Nov. II. Robert J. Newman endowed with abundance to and for his fellowmen.” Meanwhile, the State Board of Education has rescheduled its meeting from today and Wednesday until Nov. 18-19, due to his death. * ★ * A special presentation of a pioneering teaching method, de-jveloped by Dr. William F. Johntz of the Uni' fomia at Berkeley, also was cancelled by the board. No rescheduling date was sent. Meanwhile, a memo which Augenstein wrote Friday is being sent to presidents and school superintendents about the need for education reform. JUST BEFORE DEATH The accompanying note said he “prepared this memo to you the day before his death. Because he was so anxious for you to have it, I am taking the liberty of forwarding It to you.’’ It was signed by Clarice McMan-emey, secretary to Augenstein, ★ IV X ’ in the memo, Augenstein said ; “If the legislative session drags on for much more than another two or three weeks, then probably nothing will happen and we will miss a ftoldeh opportunity Prom talking to many.Xmany III Amj Outotowifiig iii Fvumd 1, A drdiealrd and wall trained Muff. 2. Servins aa S]S would-want to \>r aerved ounelvpt .3, Excellent farilitiei and equiimient. -1. Lentrully located. I’urkiniE for 7.S cur». 5. Servinit all faitlia. SPARKS-GRIFFIN 46 WilliamB Su FE 8-9288 FUNERAL HOME •n'h* Home of Thoughtful Servlco^ DE-rROIT (AP) - A Detroit policeman reacted quickly Monday to what he says was a threat of being shot by a prisoner and the man fainted.* Kenneth Sandelin, 23, Detroit, arrested after he was stopped in what police said was a stolen car, was held today for investigation of assault with intent: to commit murder. Patrolman John ^Lindstrom and his partner. Patrolman Billy Price, stopped Sandelin and arrested him. Sandelin was searched and handcuffed and placed in the back seat of the police car, Patrolman Llndstrom said. The other patrolman drove the stolen car to the police station. After leaving for the station with the prisoner. Patrolman Llndstrom heard Sandelin say: Turn around, cop.” Llndstrom said that when he turned around he was stiu-ing at a small pistol held by his prison-‘TUm the comer. J’m going to kill you,” Llndstrom quoted Sandelin as saying. At. that, Llndstrom hit the brakes and rolled out of the car, firing at the rear window as the cruiser rolled by. *• ★ ♦ . When Llndstrom reached the car after it stopped, the prisoner had fainted, poUce said. Officials said Sandelin apparently hid the pistol In his belt near'the small of his back, thus avoiding detection. ■ ★ A Detroit policeman died in a similar incident Oct. 25. A Detroit man and woman have been charged with murder and await trial in the shooting death of Patrolman Paul E. Begin. Humid-ilire'lliiiiiiilifiers help Charlej Wearer lick aaotherilry airpreUen r m :fi9' «jr otMartlmearpa." Chgrigy’g furnilurg frgm gwrping by Hggplng hit hwtt it raMitinMMM HumldKy l«wlt (30 tt 48%). And K hgl|Wd lUp wgllt front craekino and nducidglallc RnducggftiglMllg,lN. Body Is Found The body of Ammon Martin, 63, of 140 W. Colgate was found by a group of boys yesterday afternoon in a field at the weit end of West Sheffield near Stanley. According to police, Martin died of apparent aelf-Infilcted knife wounds. CALL TODAY: 338-9255 HAST HEATING A COOUNQ 580 Telefraph Read (•» Orchard Lake AvaJ HUNTOON FUNERAL HOME 79 Oaklaiifl Ave. Phone 33?-0189 Just South of Wide Track Member fSntional Seleeted Morticians ISrintneul’s 4-DRUM SET WITH 3 CYMBALS! Imported pearl outfit — Bass, Snare, Tom-Tom and Floor Tom-Tom. Each has separate tension lugs. 3 hand-hammered, qualify CYMBALS and many accessories included. Pontiac Mall 682-0422 Open Evenings til 9 p.m. 27 S. Saghow 333-7168 Men. ft Fri. Evtningt til 9 p.m. Charge, 4-Pay Plan (90 days same as cash) or Budget Plan. ’215 Oyster Blue or Silver Sparkle MUR LOCAL nLLlNC SKttICN. Very often you hear people sanctimoniously talking about “Houses of God." And they’re right! Because that’s just what these places are—houses. Buildings. And they are no more “holy" than the outside acts of the people who use them. In fact, it might be a lot better if we thought of our church or synagogue as a spiritual “filling station" —a place not sheltering us from the world, but giving us the fuel to go out into the world. This week, in your church or synagogue, don’t Just sit there. Think about how far you can go during the week on the spiritual fuel you're taking in. Could you right a wrong? Could you be strong enough to take a stand on a moral issue where the “popular" thing would be to rqmain silent? Could you do a si mple act of kindness with no hop* of return, for the rpost unloved person you know? This.week, don’t I6t your Faith idle. Step on tbe ps« mu Fubllghtd gg e public tbivlM In cbEptratlbn wllh Th# Advgrllglng Cpunell, REllilgn m AmgrIcEn I ^ and Tba Intbrnitlonsl NEwgptpar Advarlltlng IctautlvaE The Pontiiic Pre*s BUYI SELL! TRADEI USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADSI fe.!,. w;-r- j S'*' iir-'f" • ' ■/ ■ ^ - ■ ■ ■ , '■■■■■. ^: " ' ■' ' ' ' '' thtre Is So Much To Read ^‘^Ih evJry issue of , The Pontiac Press, if you are not a regular subscribe, you should be! "today there is more than a page of news about the young folks in our area schools. Read it on pages B-1 and B-2. A Special section is about getting your car ready for winter to avoid starting failures. Tips on slippery weather driving you yy^iil want to know. Look on pages 1-2-3 for the really important news of the World, Nation, the State, the County . . . and your own neighborhood. You get so much more news and other enjoyable features every day, you just must get The Pontiac Press;' ^ ] Remember, Tm Pam the Classified Ad-visor you call on 334-4981 to place your want ad. , .............................# -■ ■■ ' For Dally Homa Dellvo^ phono 332^-8181, v ^ ' V-\ - , fi , B—10^ THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY. NOVEMBER 11. Al Ttmpla, v*t»ran pilot One of th^ most unusMSl projepts financed/py the U.S. Agency for International Development (A.I.D.) is under way in Ethiopia. For 17 years, U.S. experts there have been helping organize a small fleet of aircraft to control Insects and plant diseases by aerial spraying. The operation began in 1952 when the United States provided planes, pilots, insecticides and advice to combat a major infestation of desert locusts. In later years the service was broadened to focus attention on plant diseases. A.I.D. has helped train Ethiopian technicians, pilots and mechanics to handle the program of aerial spraying. Supervisor of the training program is Al Temple, a colorful Texan who,has spent 14 years in Ethiopia and probably knows the ruggedicountry belier than anybo'dy elsp. Temple has crashed only once In Ethiopia. A vicious downdraft smashed his Cessna aircraft Into a mountain, but, with the help of natives, he survived. He also survived bullet wounds suffered while flying low over an Ethiopian cattle rustler who mistook the flier for the law and started shooting. Though wounded. Temple returned safely to his base. Together with the half-dozen experts whom he has trained, A.I.D.’s pilot repelled a major locust Infestation in 1968 and in the two previous years saved literally millions of dollars worth of cro^s from voracious army worms. ... .■TTTTTT” IpilHIIPI* At Humera airstrip Al Temple confers with World Bank officii ing that area of Ethiopia for a possible development I An active volcano In the Danikil Depression over which Temple flies. l||||li|i|llll))M|ll«lii|piypfWBpii|<|^ ” \ \ ' ' A locust I I desert Vegetation. Within minutes they will strip the trees and bushes of leaves. At the end of the day Al Temple talks with some of his student pilots on ^ r ttid laolatdd dlrifrip at Jajiga. V * TbliW«*k‘* THE PONTIAC rRESS, VuESPAV, NOVEMBER 11, 1969 B—II IMItual PUMPS come.In several types,, All of them represent Interesting Investment opportunities. May we tell you more about them? mespisisiisissipiMT Fimt op Michigan CoiiroBATioN MHHIM NIW.VMK ItOCK IXCHANOI 742 N. Woodward Blrtplngham~-647-1400 American Is Magnate in Thailand at Age 20 By T. JEFF WIIJ JAMS BANGKOK, Thailand (AP) -Like many American busliteas-men In Bangkok, William E. Uelnecke rises about 7r30, has e cup of coffee with his paper and kisses his wife gbpdby. What sets him apart soon becomes apparent. He drives off In his Jaguar XK-E. As he strides toward his office elevators, he slips into his custom-tailored jacket before entering a sls-room suite, ■k Inside these teak-panel offices a host of secretaries and employes chorus ‘‘Good morning Mr. Heinecke.” No one dares to smirk about his being younger than they are He has just turned 20, and his four main companies will gross $500,000 this year. That’s a conservative figure since his latest enterprise, soft-drink vending | Anyway, If I didn’t have such an expensive hobby, I probably wouldn’t work so hard,” he says. While still In high srrhool In Bangkok he worked for an English-language newspaper' vertising department. ‘‘Like all moving he branched out Intoi service It called. Is expected to janitor service. This idea came gross |50,000 this year, after he saw the poor condition , In ^e midst pf tols expanidon, of some friends' offices. Heinecke turned to long-time "I guess this Is what marie melf''i''nd K. J. Dolan, a 4#-year-old famous—or maybe notorious,” | expert in business management, he says. "1 used to work during I Together the two formed a hold- a coffeehouse expected to earn 115,000 this year, “W/e are expanding so qi^ickly it’s hard to project anything,” he complains Jn all seriousness. ‘‘Being BO young is probably my biggest problem. When 1 the day at my advertLsIng com-|>ng company, Inter-Asian Hold-|first started I couldn’t open my ■ ing and investment .... ----------------* .... direct the expansion lot of changes. No one was in-1offices. Friends would often young people, 1 felt I had great^pany and then in the evening l|ing and investment Co., Ltd. tojown checking account. When ideas and I wanted to make ajwould go around and help terested in listening to me, so I me washing a window or some- tentiai clients learn I am only 20 ]they take two steps backwards. Then he turned to another un-1 You know, at first they wouldn't them and now they consider us a threat.” ness, lunch, “because it makbs the client feel better.” Where to next? e e -w "Weil, we just went pu with some of our holdings will raise about $50,000 wl started on my own.” He grad-thing. It was a regular laugh-; touched field by opening four even let me in the American|might look into Indonesia.’^ W$4mM«y 9nNf tpDtIall i M POOD AttriJ i VIIQUOll tm ."ja. FISH DINNER • MhaNMn ^ ft m uated in 1967 His first move was to borrow $1,200 to buy advertising time on a radio station. “I bought In." art galleries. These are expect- Chamber of Commerce here. . led to gross $35,000 this year in “I used to take a lot of rib-! NO LAUGHING MATTER |oen| gales. Next year he startsjblng. But now when we step inj It’s no laughing matter now. I exporting. | the others begin to shake a lit-{ halfio'uT*bloc*ks”of adverUsfng lol'f-Asian Enterprises, as. the! Following up that success wasitle. We've taken business from! time for $5. Then I sold each spot on that, about 12, per half hour, for $5.1 was in business.” The station sharply increased rates without warning and Hein-ecke’s clients refused to agree an increase. In danger of going broke just when he was DINNER • Praneh Frias tv is ^ G aeolsUaw ^ : PONTIAC LAKE INN ;ilN Highland Road tmwi. SUU.I.«.1U. A » i.« XXlXXkX machines, is not yet in opera-^e fell back on his first love, auto racing, to raise DutiyJ? * Cocktails * Dinners w Entortainmont SaadarUfumr LAST WEEK "An>*»lng TuM.>Sat. icitMt for Vaoation NovoMbar 24-30 BaHy Laurel Trie tMBOoolaylako Rd. Union Uko V 363-9469 tion. COOLY CONFIDENT There’s no reason why 1 shouldn’t be grossing more than $1 million by the end of next year,” he says with cool confidence. ' The son of an American government amploye In Bangkok, Bill is one of the most startling business success stories in Asia •k ir k He keeps two suites In Bang kek’s most luxurious hotel for visiting clients, at a cost of $12,000 a year. “Well worth it,’ he says. He also competes In Aslan keeps cars In Bangkok, Hong Kong and Singapore and jets about to one or the other about every three months to race. T I do it for the relaxation.' Dustin Hoffman St.uts WEDNESDAY! BRIDGE AT REMAGEN’ [ PAMWBHB** color Sy OiLuxe ' ; nl$o hawusaL brooks II WM FlfiffTTHG nowii!i? money. NETTED NEARLY $10,000 He convinced sponsors to back him then in three separate car rallies. He drove from Vientiane, Laos, to Bangkok, then around Thailand, and finally from Singapore to Bangkok. These efforts netted nearly $10,000 and he was moving again. His advertising firm, called Inter-Asian Publicity Co., Ltd., grossed $2,000 the first month it operated. Now, in its second year, it is taking in $35,000 a Grand Prix races regularly. Ho month and just reaching the takeoff stage. It is the largest Bangkok-baM advertising firm, second only to two Inter-’national firms. With the advertising firm VXIumiIa- AmiCAN IMMIIf§ BOOKS, RECORDS, COMPLETE SEUCTION AFRO AMERICAN HISTORY AND MUSIC AFRO MOD CLOTHING FOR THE ENTIRE FAMILY SLAVE BELTS, IMPORTED EARRINGS AFRO NATURAL WIGS FROM 19.95 JUST ARRIVED ORIENTAL WICKER FURNITURE MON., TUES., THURS. 10-1 P.M.1 WED., FRi„ MT. 10-10 P.M. 492 S. SAQINAW ST 336-8620 EVERY Wednesday 49< 49'er DAY Dig info as many golden BUTTERMILK PANCAKES as you can oat for just Take Time Out Frpm Shopping ForA HeUtxing Pause At.., l-i . Codball toiinge . lo the Iftart of Inmhtowif Pontiac Shoulder Purses-er, Bags- • Now the ON Thing for Men By EARL WILSON Men — real men — are now wearing shoulder bags. Gifted composer-lyricist Leslie Bricusse, the London cockney, hai been, wearing a red-and-green model by GuccI slung around his right shoulda- and his wife Evle has given copies to Tony Newley, Bob Culp and Roger Moore. isse didn’t wear Us to the premiere ef ^Goodbye, Mr. Chips” at the Palace It clashed with bis dimier jacket — bat he aasared me seOa biVe to wear one to get into Toots Shor’s and oHier saloons. “By the way, don’t call it a purse,” he warned me^ a masculine glint in his eye. There at the party at favern-on-the-Green with the rain pelting down whilst Petula Clark and Natalie Wood and others were having fun, Bricusse said: “It’s sort of a tote bag. When I fly, which is most of the time, 1 carry little cameras, tape recorders, my passport, plane tickets and all that garbage in it. “Sammy Davis never had the neire to use his,” said Bricusse, who wrote the scolre for “Chips.” He then laughingly explained not allowing me to sep the inside of his shoulder bag. * . kt ■ ■ -k “My wife made me carry some of her cosnietics,” he said. '■One picture of that would have ruined my career.” ■ ★ , ' ★ THE MIDNIGHT EARL.. . . Gov. Rockefeller’s expected to $tep into the Metropolitan Opera l^r dispute very sooiv. . . The Paul McCartneys itfe due here for THianksglvlng (he may announce whether he’s alive.) . . . Las Vegas Caesars Palace, where some of the Mets are appearing, ordered hundreds of Met baseball caps to give away as souvenirs; what they received were Philadelphia Phttly caps. Tlje Pilgrims’ dinner at the Waldorf for Prince Philip had tight security — tighter than when LBJ, Nixon and Humphrey once shared a Wardorf dais . .. The Marty Ragawayi had a boy — his second, her third and their first. (Marty says It arrived so late “we thought It was coming by Long Island RaUroad”) , . . I James Cagney, almost unrecognized, was at Joe’s Pier S2 with some Martha’s Vineyard fishing buddies. ■k k k TODAY’S BEST LAUGH: Joan Rivers admits women stop caring abodt their looks after they marty: “My friend couldn’t unit to break her diet -- right after the ceremony she ate the whole wedding cake.” REMEMBERED QUOTE: “Since a politician never believes what he says, he is always astonished that other people do.”— Charles de Gaulle. EARL’S PEARLS: Manhattan poem: "Early to bed and I early to rise — and you just might find a parking space.” Fannie Flagg told of an ugly cousin who was anxious to get Imarried: “She used to pay a marriage counselor $10 a week to tip her off which couples were breaking up.” That’a earl, brottier. SUCCESS STORY-William E. Heinecke, who has just turned 20, is shown at work in his office in Bangkok, Thailand. Heinecke, son of an American government employe, will gross $500,000 from his four main com- panies this year. “There’s no reason why 1 shouldn’t be grossing more than $1 million by the end of next year,” he says with cool confidence. —--------. ;■ -- V"".. Enforcetnehf Is Up to Nixon Court's School Edict Hailed By WHITNEY M. YOUNG JR. Executive Director National Urban League Once again, Uie Supreme Court has spoken. In a unaid-mous ruling, it affirmed the un-constitutionality of school segregation. “The obligation of every school district is to terminate dual school systems at once,” the Court held. The key phrase is “at once.” That phrase is important because many thousands of black high school students are now in all-black schools studying ■ greatl moments in' American bis- YOUNG tory — including the Supreme Court’s decision to outlaw those same segregate schools, a decision made when those students wet's still infants. ‘The result was a slow, unsteady pattern of paper compll; ance, tokenistri and often outright defiance. ‘Die process was complicated by irresponsible poliUcal leaders who seemed to have visions of themselves as embattled Confederates defying the union. * . k- k Politics, as usual, played a part in encouraging illegal defi- wary Back in 1954, 17 Southern and border states and the District of Columbia had separate school systems for white and black pupils. But the court. In ordering an end to such segregation, said they should Integrate with “all deliberate speed.' Desegregation proceeded with more deliberateness than speed. Many school district resisted the court’s orders. Others waited for federal district courts — many wUh racist judges who I'were unwilling to act — to order them to desegregate. Still others waited for pressures from fed' eral authorities before comply' ling. lance of the court Federal authorities of stirring discontent cist voters, and the miseduca-tion of black children was seen a small price to pay for party harmony. ENDANGERED In recent years, federal pressure was stepped up and a greater measurO of integration was achieved. But this was endangered by the Nixon administration’s decision to allow school districts still defying the law ‘more time” to comply. k k k They’ve had 15 years. Why did they need more time? Black people wailed 15 years for the law of the land to be enforced. We've waited 350 years for black children to have the same rights as white children. But Southern districts who defied the law rated more sympathy than black people who wanted to abide by the law. were treated to the ugl\ FCR CUITOMER Bring Along All Your Frqsptofort • WOODWARD AVE. ATHVkMIURD* • 1I32IW.IMIUIRD. • 10N1 TELEflRAra NMrHrnuMriiU. the hipest court In the land that they ordered an end to racist soAbol systems "at once. Now it is up to the government to enforce the law. This be the big test of the Nixon administration’s devotion to the law and order” we hear so much about. k efore the decision was hand-down, the man responsible tor enforcing civil rights lawsj shocked the nation by saying “if ^ the court were to order instant integration, ■ n o t n g would change. There are just not enough bodies and people to enforce that kind of a decision.’’ Federal officials are sworn to uphold the Constitution. Refusal to enforce the court’s mandate is an Impeachable offense. It is absolutely Incredible for a gov-; ernment to bring about a constitutional crisis by defying the Supreme Court, so we must expect that the necessary “bodies and people” will be found to enforce the law. • ★ * ★ The President and his Justice Department officials have said they will enforce the pourt’s mandate. The diehard racists have to be shown that the laws of the land apply to all. k' k k Vigorous enforcement of the new ruling will end Southern school segregation by early next year. mm AT THE HEIGHT OF ITS SEASQNI. DECEMBER 27 TO JANUARY 10 $345.00 COMPLETE looludM: Non-ctop let * Fint cl«a hotti iMtb bi_ Swwi Shows Includins such as HAIR. HADRIAN VII, Two ssaslon ssminsr - many othsr SMras. $100 dtpotit holds your rsssrvation to Dae. B. HyjsW Immsdisttly; only 30 aceoptsd. Mall name, addrasi, phona, and chMk to: OAKLAND COMMUNITY COLLEGE COMMUNITY SERVICES Bloomflald Hills, 4S013 Call 642-6211 for mors Information, TONITE ‘'SWEET CHARITY” AT 1i99 i till STARTS WED. HURON STARTS WED. spectacle of federal attorneys! jfs been a long time coming, going to court in support of but now all the excuses for de-Mississippi school districts at-|{gy gre gone. tempting to avoid desegregation' ' _______ | of schools. j guurpjpug gpend the bright hot I TO COURT’S CREDIT desert* days in hiding. They It is to the chedit of Chief Jus-{come out at night to prey on tice Burger and the judges of anjlhing 'small that crawls. VANESSA REDGRAVE IS SIMPLY GREAT IN ‘THE LOVES OF ISADORA’l”-i’/F£ Msgssin. For Relaxed Dining WHU Bfich-io-School Shopping in THE PONTIAC MALL Invites You and Your Family Woi. i TlNm. Ivoilliill 4ll9 It 9 RM. &>iinrTettJk'r*O0ld9H,DeepFrUd COMPLETE CHICKEN DINNERS sanTi 95® CHOICI OF \ POTATOES OR VEOETA9LE DINNER SALAD OR DESSERT ROLLS AND RUHER COFFEE. TEA OR MILK VANESSA REDGRAVE THE mVES OF ISADOKA” ~ \.a!inliyl(>|iaiEiSfJ' I U.-- jamf:sh)x iv\ntx:henko -UASONROBARDS UT.-SUN. tiOMiM SLMVUD F.VURY WfONUSDAY AND THURSDAY NIGHTS ^ PONIIAC MAIL CAFEIfRIA ONLY 4:30 lo 8 p in. WW JASRb w GLMEU^ liKicte^ by KAREL REISZ - Prodixtd by ROBERTinj RAYMOND HAKIM B—18 THE rON'riAC PRESS. TMESUAV. NOVEMHER II. U»0I> Pueblo Jockeys for Time os 'Rescue^ Effort Forms (EDITOR’S NOTE - This is the seventh article iw o series on the USS Ptieblo written by a news team from the Associated' Press.) The Pueblo bobbed idly in the water wit|iin the circling PTs. Bucher tdld l.acy to take the con and went below to his stateroom. He made a hurried inspection, destroyed a few remaining papers, and remembered two other items he did not want to fall to the enemy. His pistols. By history’s strange customs of men and arms, a tactical military surrender somehow becomes-a matter of private ignominy if one yields his sidearms. Bucher rummaged in his gear, gathered up his personal 22-caliber and 38-caliber revolvers, handed them to a sailor and ordered him to throw them over the side. Hurrying back to the pitot house he noticed Law and Alvin Plucker, a quartermaster, burning publications and Nolte swinging a sledgehammer. He told Nolte not to destroy the radio transmitter: help might yet come and he wanted to be able to communicate. " * *; * Bucher also observed that both crypto safes were open,-their contents gone^ He considered the crypto gear the most sensitive material aboard. Steve Harris had reported that it had been destroyed, and Bucber wa.s relieved to see for himself that it was so. Back in the pilot house, he ordered the engines started again —at one-third speed—about four knots, scarcely enough to ripple the water. He put the nidder over five degrees and the Pueblo began a wide, lazy circle toward the wake of the SO-1, which was heading into the sun, shoreward. The time was approaching two o’clock. Bailey: “We are now being escorted into, probably Wonsan. Wonsan. Worisan.’’ MORE TIME NEEDED The ship continued its slow arc. The SO-1 pulled away, about 300 yards ahead. Bucher wanted as much time as possible to finish destroying classi- ‘ fied material. Earlier, running at full speed, he had maneu-vere«J the Pueblo 20 to 25 miles from land, thus was still a healthy distance from the 12-mile zone. Bailey: “Are you sending assistance? Are you sending assistance?” * ★ * Japan: “Word has gone to all authorities. COMNAVFOR.JA-PAN is requesting assistance. What key lists (of crypto material) do you have left? Please advise* if it appears your communication space will be entered." The PT boats kept their distance, for a time. Then one pulled along the Pueblo’s port side and its skipper motioned to Bucher to go faster. Bucher looked down at the PT over the wing of the bridge and shrugged. The Pueblo held her speed. IMPATIENCE SHOWN Impatient, the PT skipper again motioned to Bucher to speed up. Equally impatient, Bucher shouted a stream of untranslatable gibberish and waved his arms in crazy gestures. If the antics did not confuse the PT skipper, they at least seemed to satisfy him. lie pulled away, and he and the other PTs contented themselves with playing porpoise with the Pueblo, weaving arrogantly back and forth 30 yards in front of her bow. * ★ Bucher needed time. Time to destroy documents. Time to allow help to arrive. Time to see tor himself how far the destruction had progressed. Time to think. What would happen if the Pueblo stopped? Ju.st stopped? Bucher decided to try it once more. He rang up full slop and the engine room responded instantaneously., CANNON FIRED So did the North Koreans. The SO-1 wheeled in a spray ot foam, sped toward the Pueblo and opened up with its cannon. Ihe PTs raked the vessel with machineguns. A cannon shell split the hull like a can opener and exploded ip wthp laundry room. Another blasM thie main mast and slwwered the deck with debris. A third slammed through the starboard side into the passageway outside the officers’ staterooms where sailors were burning papers in blazing trashbas-kets and when it exploded a cry Went up. . w., * ★ Diune Hodges’s leg was gone and half his abdomen. Hot • shrapnel ripped open Steven Woelk’s pelvis and cut irtto his thigh and chest. BImxl pulsed from Bob Chicca’s thigh and Harry Crandell’s legs. Bits of red flesh splattered the bulkheads and the passageway and blood soaked the papers at the d(H>r of the -Sod Hut so they would not burn. Bucher ordered the ship underway at one-third speed. As she moved the firing stooped, except for occasional machine-gun bursts. He gave the con to Lacy and went below to check the damage, •HE’S DYING’ Corpsman Baldridge was ministering to Hodges and Woelk in the wardroom. Bucher examined both men and asked Baldridge if he were going to amputate what remained of Hodge’s leg. Baldridge shook his head. He told Bucher he needed morphine, and Bucher said to find Lt. Murphy, who was narcotics control officer, and get it. “B'or God’s sake help this man,’’ Bucher said, “he’s dying.” Baldridge knew as much. He gave both men drugs, elevated Ibeir legs, covered them . Bucher made his way through the mess of papers and gore and smoke to the W Hut. 'fhe door was locked. He pounded on it taiued sqiall wound in rectum. Do not intend fq,offer any resistance. po not know how long will be able to hold up circuit and do not know If communication spaces will be entered." ilapan: “Roger. Roger. We doing all we can. COMNAVK-ORJAPAN on hotline. Last 1 got was Air Force gonna help you with some aircraft but can’t really say as commander coordinating with 1 presume Korean force for some F105s but this is unofficial, but I think that’s what will happen. Keefi on the air as long as you can. We staying right with you.” * ★ * Bailey; “Roger. Will keep this (circuit) up until the last minute and sure could use some help now” Japan: “Roger. Roger. We still with you and doing all we can. Everyone really turning to, and figure by now Air Force got some birds winging vour way” BUSY DESTROYING Bailey: TSure hope so. We’re pretty busy with this destruction right now. Can’t see for the smoke." Japan: “Roger. Roger. Wish I could help more. All infoi’ma-tion yon passed being ■ sent to a me.ssage to Japan notifying them/that he would not be able/ to complete destruction? Bucher asked again if all the crypto was destroyed. Harris assured him it was, Bucher assumed ^he three large bags he had seen in the Sod Hut were by now at the bottom of the sea and did not bother to ask Harris if that were the case. He told Harris to go ahead and send the message. * * * ■ Japan; “Who I got that end of circuit? What status of classified material left to destroy?" Bailey: “We have the K2KW7, KW7 and some cards. The 3 and 14 left td smash. Think that just about it. Destruction of publications has been ineffective. Suspect several will be compromised." NARRATIVE DESTROYED At 1425 Tin> Harris went to his stateroom to check for classified material. He found none, returned to the pilot house and destroyed the narrative he had been keeping. Bucher likewise tossed his tape recorder over the side. Murphy went below to check his stateroorh and saw Ralph Reed there applying a battle and when it opened he saw the men sprawled amid the documents. Machinegun fire rattled against the hull. * * ★ “Get the hell off the deck and turn to with this destruction!" he shouted. The sight of the supine crewmen was not all that startled Bucher. He also saw three large bags—he assumed they were mattress covers—.jammed full of documents. It astonished hlin that there was that much classified material aboard. “Let’s get rid of this stuff,” he said to Lt. Harris. MEN DOING BEST The men were doing their best. Sledges and fire axes were flying. Trashbaskets blazed in the Sod Hut office and in the passageway, where the heat blistered and warped the bulkheads. Teams of men were stuffing into bags the papers scattered a foot deep on the passageway deck. The paners had been bagged once, but men emotied the bags when someone had the idea to pile all the papers on the deck and set fire to the whole passageway. But then someone else remembered that the fuel tanks were beneath the passageway. Lt. Harris ordered the napers bagged un again. At least one bag was tossed over the side. Peter Lanoenbere ran to the rail and dumped it even though he had been wounded slightly in the neck on a previous trip to the side with handfuls of equinment. ♦ * ♦ From his own observation and from what Harris told him, Bucher reckoned it would take another half hour to get everything destroyed, or nearly everything. _______ At 1^05 he' went) to the radio cnmnaT^tmentiand;'drafted a hur-Vnoeseap to Japan; THREE WOUNDED “Have been requested to follow into Wonsan. Have three wounded and one man with leg blown off. Have not used any weapons nor uncovered .50-caliber machineguns. Destroying all key lists and aS much electronic equipment as possible. How about some help? These gUys mean business. Have gus- area\ commander and they in •turn coordinating for whatever action gotta be taken. Sure process already being initiated for some immediate relief. COMNAVFORJAPAN got all info.” Bailey: “Roger your last and sure hope someone does something. We are helpless. Cannot do anything but wait.” Bucher headed back to the pilot house. Just before he entered he paused for a moment to contemplate his predicament, “Helpless ... cannot do anything but wait ...” BUCHER’S OUTBURST He clenched his fists and raised, his voice in the saltiest outburst of profanity he could muster. He drew back his foot and kicked a pipe fitting. Then he cursed again and kicked another pipe fitting. Then he went inside. Nolte was busy dismantling the radar and throwing the pieces over the side. Law was destroying gear in the chart room. * ★ * In the pilot hou.se were the quartermaster’s notebook, the deck log, the chronometer log, the.loran record book, position and contact logs and observation sheets. Murphy decided all these should be sept intact: they offered proof, in his mind, that the Pueblo had not intruded into the 12-mile zone and had been attacked on the high seas. Once again a PT shove alongside and its captain motioned angrily to Buchef to speed up. Bucher shouted another stream of gibberish, this time through a megaphone. He held the Pueblo steady as she went. INCH^ERATOR GOING How was the biirning pi-d-gressing? Bucher went 'hft td the stack, saw that the incinera-' tor was going with Schumacher and Hayes ripping pages from binders and feeding the fire. Bucher picked up a publication himself, tore it up and threw it in the incinerator, then returned to fhe bridge. The phone rang; It wai Lt. Harris. How close was the inevitable?/ Not much time left, Bucher told him. Could he Send, dressing to Bob Chicca’s wounded ieg. He went to the wardroom to check on Hodges. Hodges wjas conscious, resting easily, apparently in no pain. Baldridge was administering oxygen. He told Murphy he could feel no pulse. Murphy nodded. Above,, in the pilot house, Bucher watched the PT boat hoist a familiar semaphore; “heave to.” Bucher obeyed. The PT with the boarding party approached from the port bow. Bucher expected it to stop on the forward section where the well deck rail was low to the water. The boat continued aft. As it passed the Pueblo’s bridge, Bucher, in one final act of anger and frustration, snatched a coffee cup and flung it at the boat. It crashed against its deck. PREPARE FOR BOARDING “Prepare to receive the North Koreans aboard,” he said into the ship’s amplifier. Lacy asked the captain if he should caution the men to give only their names, rates and service numbers. Bucher said yes. Lacy broadcast the instructions. ★ * * Japan: “Can you give me a list of what you haven’t destroyed? Can you give me a list of what you haven’t destroyed?” Bailey: “Have been directed to come to all stop and being boarded. Being Boarded.” Japan: “Roger. Your last on way to COMNAVFORJAPAN. OFF THE AIR Bailey; “Got four men injured and one critically and going off the air now and destroying this gear.” Japan: “Can you continue transmitting? Can you continue transmitting?” Silence. It was 1432. * w ★ Taking stock, Bucher suddenly realized he was wearing nothing to identify himself as a naval officer, the captain of the ship. He raced below to his stateroom and grabbed his hat with gold braid on the visor. He also hurriedly wrapped his bleeding right leg with a pair of black Navy socks. Then he went topside to present himself to his captors. The PT pulled alongside the stern to port. It swerved too far out, however, to get a line to the Pueblo, and Bosun’s Mate Nor-bert Klepak, awaiting the line with deckhands Willie Bussell and Harry Lewis, sneered at the helmsman’s seamanship. MILITARY TO ‘RESCUE’ On the PT’s second approach the line hit the Pueblo’s deck. Wordlessly, Bussell slipped it over a metal bit. Late, but maybe not too late, the military began coming to the rescue. Or at least began planning to. * ★ * ' When Adm. Johnson’s headquarters called Okinawa, they also reached him in Tokyo where he had given the welcoming address of the annual Pacific Command Tropical Cyclone Conference at the' Sanno Hotel. He was called oh an unsecure phone so was briefed rather sketchily that the Pueblo was in trouble and was “probably gone.” He thought that meant she had been sunk. He asked if F'ifth Air Force had been notified and was toid yes but that search and rescue was not yet under way. 1355: About this time—it is not clear when because the time was not logged—Okinawa finally received Yokosuka’s call. The man who took it, Maj. Raymond Priest, was aided in approximating the time by the fact that he had had a 12:30 luncheon date with his wife and she had been exactly 20 minutes late. parti’al transcript When told there was a secure call. Priest left his office for the command center about a minute away. A partial transcript of the call reads: “This is Lt. Cmdr. Wilson. I have not understood. The fol-following message was received from the Pueblo ... two MIGs circling and three boats.” Wilson gave Priest her position. * ★ * “It was my initial belief that because no priority was provided in the message and no supplementary information, the contents of the message related to an exercise,” said Priest. But he turned it over to the Seventh Fleet liaison officer at Fifth Air Force Headquarters who in turn notified the Fifth’s command center and the assistant deputy chief of staff of the commander, Lt. Gen. Seth McKee. THE ALARM .SPREADS 1410: The National Military Command Center in Washington, already alerted, notified CINCPAC. • 1415: McKee’s staff reached him, and he went immediately to his command center two or three minutes away. He placed nearly simultaneous calls to the 18th Tactical Fighter \IVing on the island and to CINCPACAF in Hawaii to advise its commander, Gen. John D. Ryan, that he had ordered planes to go to Korea, to ’ refuel and strike.” * * * McKee recalled seven F105s from training flights and diverted six from training preparations. He ordered them armed with 20mm guns only, to expedite loading. McKee also contacted his division commander in South Ko^ rea, where he would have had alert aircraft ready instead of Okinawa had any been requested. CHANGES NECESSARY The seven Air Force fighters in South Korea, F4Cs, were configured for nuclear weapons. They would have had to have been reconfigured with conventional bomb racks. The nearest racks were in Japan. The soonest the F4Cs couW be over the target was estimated at three hours and 38 minutes. McKee also asked his deputy to determine the availability of-South Korean fighters, old F86s from the Korean war. Gen. Charles Bonesteel, U.N. commander, told McKee’s deputy not to contact the South K(h reans. “They are a pretty gung-ho butich of guys,” said a State Department official. “Once they began shooting, there’s no telling where they’d stop.” 1423: McNamara was notified in Washington, where it was just after midnight. 1430; The atomic carrier Enterprise, the world’s biggest warship, received a Pinnacle message “scattered buckshot” to all commands by the Navy although McKee knew she was in the area and had suggested CINCPACAF have her alerted to launch planes. The message the Enterprise finally got had been sent 39 minutes before. ENTERPRISE ALERTED The Enterprise, escorted by the nuclear frigate Truxtun, was steaming southeast at 27 knots four hours out pf Sasebo. She hadn’t, launched planes since before Christmas and was on her way to the Philippines for flight exercises before heading for combat duty on Yankee Station in the Gulf of Tonkin. The commander of the task group. Rear Adm. Horace Epes, had never heard of the Pueblo. ★ a * “The first thing 1 did was to send for a publication to find out what kind of ship she was." ' Then he asked ho* long it would take to get planes up after briefing pilots on weather and locating folders for the area. He was told 90 minutes. That meant it would take three hours to get aircraft over Wonsan, 510 miles away. The weather there was overcast, snow flurries, visibility seven miles. Not the best conditions for finding ships. ON 5-MINUTE ALERT The Enterprise had four F4CS on five-minute alert as standard operating procedure and another four on 30-mlnute alert. But besides briefing the pilots a decision would have to be made as to what armament to carry. They normally carried four Sparrow electronically guided missiles and four heat-seeking Sidewinder rockets,, neither designed for air-to-shlp combat. Any order to launch planes would have come normally from the Enterprise’s command, the Seventh Fleet. But it never came. ★ * -k 1432: The Pueblo radioed “.. .going off the air now .. .” 1439: An Army helicopter picked up Adm. Johnson to take him to Yokosuka. ★ ★ 1445: McKee finally got through to Gen. Ryan. It. took 20 minutes to calibrate the secure phone, place the call and locate Ryan who wasn’t in his office, it being evening in Honolulu. ADMIRAL BRIEFED 1510: Adm. Johnson arrived at his headquarters and was briefed. His headquarters had sent no orders to the Pugblo, something a critic of the affair was to call “dead wrong. Wouldn’t it have helped to be told at least what was being done to help? I pressed the Navy on this and they finally admitted, ‘yes, it would’.” But Johnson felt only two possible messages could have been sent, one that planes had been asked for and the other for Bucher to follow his orders. * A * “It would have been most Inadvisable for me or my staff to advise or instruct the commanding officer of a ship far away. The situation was very vague,” said the admiral. Later it would be argued that when Bucher radioed he had not. uncovered his guns or shot back, the Navy had implied consent for his action by telling him nothing. REACHES WHITE HOUSE 1515: Walt Rostow, President Johnson’s security adviser, reached the White House. 1611: The first F105s-two of them—took off from Okinawa bound for Osan, South Korea, 650 miles away, to refuel. They were to be on the ground there 20 minutes. Flying time from Osan to Wonsan was 28 minutes. * * ,* McKee thought his planes could handle some of the North Korean planes such as the MIG 17s. But against the MI G21s, it would be “nip and tUck.” And the 105s were not carrying air-to-air rockets because it would have taken too much time to mount their launching rails. They were flying into an area that had an air base only )25 miles from the site of the seizure with 85 MIG 17s and five MIG 21s. It was defended by 14 antiaircraft battwies of six guns and two SAM ground-to-air missile sites. FlOSt From Okinawa Won Only Pianos' Airborno And Worn- Too tsdo THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1989 B~~18 . . . but Late as Reds Board, Take Ship to Port “It w«i I homet'i neit," Giin. Whselw said liter. , 17d0: Adm. Sharp, who had been conferring with Gen. Wil> Ham Weatmoreland about the war In South Vietnam, arrived aboard his flagship, the carrier Kitty Hawk, after an hour’s flight from Da Nang and was told about the Pueblo. His chief of staff In Hawaii had been informing other commands of what was happening and was authorized to do whatever he thought advisable in his superior’s absence. Sharp thought the Pueblo was probably in port by then and that there was nothing he could do at the moment, Seventh Fleet already having ordered the Enterprise to head north. The admiral radioed the Joint Chiefs his evaluation of the situation. “I viewed it from this point on as one involving major forces in a confrontation that could result in a second Korean war.” 1735: The first F105s reached Osan. 1741: The sun Set at Wonsan. Darkness feU 12 minutes later. REDS STEP ABOARD The boarders stepped across a Uttle bit of sea between one of the P4s and the Pueblo. There were about a dozen of them dressed in dark green winter uniforms of the North Korean People’s Army. ’The enUsted men had automatic rifles, the officers pistols. Aa they walked across' the deck, Bucher presented himself aa the commanding officer. One of the North Koreans put a pistol to his head and ordered him to the pilot house. He went. Ber-ens was there, holding the mahogany wheel so tightly his knuckles were white. The North Koreans ordered him and the others there to the fantail, then caUed Berens back. He stayed at the helm, a guard on either side. A # The North Koreans rang up two-thirds speed. Bucher changed it back to one-third. He considered it was still his ship. He had not struck his flag. It was still flying. He was not sure whether the North Koreans would only search the Pueblo and leave. He had not resisted the boarding party—despite Navy Regulation 0730 forbidding search. If planes were actuallf winging his way, however, he had wanted his crew intact to overwhelm the boarders vhoi the planes arrived. And he did not want continuing gunfire to leave his ship helpless should he be able to Gee the scene. And there were his orders: no war. Slowly the Pueblo headed into HOW MANY ABOARD? By sign language the Neath Koreans asked Bucher -how many men were aboard. Eighty-three. The number surprised them. Below, executive officer Mu^ phy walked out of his head between his cabin and the captain’s stateroom. A North Korean guard came up, kicked him and shoved him up a ladder. He jabbed Mur^ two times in the back and marched him to the fantail. w ★ ★ ’The senior communications chid from the Sod Hut, Ralph Bouden, made one last attempt to throw a box of papers over the side. A North Korean officer stopped him. He marched Bouden back to the Sod Hut. Bouden put down the box. If only he had a match, he thought. Back on the fantail, the North Koreans were holding the, crew at bayonet point and poking them with rifle butts. They were tearing sheets into strips lot blindfolds. BOUND, IHJNDFCHDED Some of the Americans cursed. One or two tried to jerk away. But they were bound and blindfolded. Sit down! the Nprth Koreans ’The men did. - w ★ ♦ A coldi gusty wind blew ever the fantail. One guard stood on top of the Sod Htit, his machine gun trained down on the crew. There was a burst of bullets. The men squatted low. Nobody was htt. Another guard gloiwered at the crew from a few feet away. A torjiedo boat escorted a fevf yards abeam. BAYONET AT BAOf A guard shoved Bucher, then pressed a bayonet to .his back. The captain marched ahead of him into the radio shack. The transmitter was still on. Disconnect it, detninded a North Korean officer. The captain refused. !fte North Korean yanked out lie ant«ina jacks and a gqkrd ■hoved the skipper out the dm. At gunpoint, the guard marched him to the after .6(M:aUber machine gun. Take off the tarp, he ordered. , Lee'Roy Hayes peeked under , his bUndfoid and few the captain wrestling wiUi the canvas. Bucher said he couldn’t. A guard slammed his pistol into the captain’s neck. GUN TARP FROZEN The officer ordered one of the guards to try. He yanked, but the tarp was frozen. The Korean chipped at the ice. It took him half an hour to get the canvas qff. W,'' *' '★ 'f■ By now, 30 to 40 minutes had passed since the North Koreans had come aboard. They marched Bucher back to the pilot house. Berens was still at the helm, still at gunpoint. MEN ORDERED FORWARD Hiey ordered Bucher-to direct his crew forward from the fan-tail to the well deck. The captain glanced at thp bayonets and rifles trained at his men, then ordered them forward. Blindfolds were removed so the men could walk. Hayes noticed papers still burning in passageways, and he steeled over a bag full of pubUcatlons outside the Sod Hut. * * ★ In the engine room, Hagenson remembered the Santa Claus suit from the Christmas party for the orphans in Yokosuka. The last time he had seen it earlier in the day the suit was awash on the deck. Now, he thought, it would probably end up in a N(wth Kwean museum. Baldridge, the corpsman, had tom off his insignia before the North Koreans boarded. Now he was trying to show that he was a medic by pointing to Red Cross signs on his gear. SURGERY NEEDED The North Koreans let him join ^ wounded. He tried to help lifoeUc, but couldn’t. Then he tried to explain to the Koreans that Woelk needed surgery. They ignored him. ' ’Die soldiers ordered more speed. Bucher said the Pueblo was gdng as fast as she could. One-third speed was hardly top, and Bucher knew it. But he was stOl hoping the Air Force would arrive. • WWW If so he would grab the mike and tell 'the men to attempt to reg^ control of the ship. Then the Koreans ordered all-stop. Below decks, the guards saw to it that en^emen Goldman and Blansett answered the bells. The Pueblo came to a halt. COLONEL STEPS ABOARD Another torpedo boat backed down, and a second boarding party stepped onto the deck. It included a North Korean colonel with a scar from the top of his head to the nape of his neck— Col. Scar, the men later dubbed him. With him was an interpreter who looked Uke MaximiUian Schell. He became Max. w w w “Now they’re in our country,” said the interpreter. “Thejy’U be tried by our lawa. “’Turn over your knives and your guns!” he yelled. Along with Col. Scar and Max came a civilian pilot to steer the ship into port. ' ' Reluctantly, Berens Ufted his hands from the wheel. They tied his wrists. SUN GOING DOWN As they marched him out of the pilot house qnd down a passageway, he noticed that the sun was going down. ’Then they bUndfolded him. Back on the well deck. Law whispered to the men. “Remember,” he said. “You’re only aiqqioacd to ^ve your name, rate, aervlce number and date of birth.” , ■ w ★ ■ w Stuart Russell, a psychology graduate from the University of Southern CaUfomia, who was now a ship’s cook, beard smne-body elsb say the North Koreans had the crew’s service r^rds. Col. Scar indicated he wanted to tour the ship. At bayonet pdnt again, Bucher led him into the passageway where Hodges lay dying. He needs medical help, said the captain. No reply. POINTED TO BUM>D Col. Scar pointed to the blood, flesh and ashes. Had Bucher been trying to deatroy his o^ ders?: ' '■ “This is where we make ice cream,” Bucher said. For that, the guards i^iabbed him, And several of them kicked him ip ^ back. ★ w ♦ ’Then they toured the rest of the ship. The Sod Hut door was open. Bucher walked in-and saw the bags. The bags he had told Lt, Harris to get rid of were still lying on the deck, still full. ELECTRONIC SURPRISE The Koreans were surprised, and even more surprised at the * ‘ i ^ y I" LBJ Pondered Position, Kept Guns Holstered elabwate accommodatlcms for electronic equipment. Battered as it was, with dents from blows from fire axes and sledge ham-, mers, most of it nearly pulverized, there was enough left to show what the space had contained. A radio transmitter was still on. Card readers were open, but destroyed. ’The teletype was still hunnuning. Turn it off. Col. Scar demanded. Bucher refused. ’They hit him. ’The ctdonel ordered him to gather papers jammed in the doorway and bring them into the hut. Here was a chance. Bucher still had Ids cigarette lighter. He’d set the papers on fire. GUARDS GATHER PAPERS But the colonel got suspicious. ’The guards held Bucher against a bulkhead and picked up the papers themselves. As they marched him out, they closed the door. Silently, three locks clicked into place. Now it would take a blowtorch to open it. Next stop was crew’s berthing, then the laundry room. As he passed, Bucher noticed three holes from 57 millimeter shells near a passageway outside his ’The captain was wdered to sit outside Ids room between two guards, who hit him with rifle butts until Col. Scar came by and made them stop. HODGES DEAD Woelk was on the deck with one foot on a chair. Hodges had ' already died. The North Koreans moved all the men below decks into forward berthing where it was warmer and searched them. ’They took their wallets and watches, occasionally their tings. ’They let the captain keep his wrist watch aiid-tiie black star-sapphire ring on his left hand. Later on, they took his wallet, and he never saw it again. At 8:30 p.m. her captors tied ub the iPueblo.in Wonsan ha^ b(fr. A NorthbKorean hauled her colors down. Meanwhile, back in Okinawa several hours earlier Lt. Gen. McKee had made a declsiim. Hfr {danes could not reach Won-aah until after nightfall from Osan. S6 he ordered them to stay there. ’Dnse were the only planes launched that day to aid the Pueblo—and the ones most distant. The 16 flghters in Japan were in various stages of training configuration and would have takoi four hours and 45 minutes to be equipped, armed, fueled and arrive over Wonsan. It would have been too dark for them, too. ’There is a status of forces agreement between Japan and the United States by which the U.S. must ask Japan permission to use aircraft based there for combat. The request never came—even if it had been decided that the planes were on a combat rather than a rescue missimi—although Ambassador Alexis Johnson thought the Japanese would have said yes. ’There were eight other U.S. jets available that day, the eight A4s and F4s of the Marine base at Iwakuni which were under Seventh Fleet command. Had they been notified, they would have had the fastest reaction time of all available aircraft that day — an estimated two hours and 40 to 50 minutes to Wonsan. But they were never called. Word of the Pueblo did not reach the Marine base until early the next day, more than 12 hours after the ship had been taken. NAVY SECRETARY LAST ’niere waa a final footnote to a day M fumbling communica-Uons. The last high officUd in Washington to be notified the Pueblo was lost reportedly was Paul Ignatius, the Secretary of the Navy. McKee was asked afterwards whether he thought his aircraft could have Saved the PueUo. ‘"niis is pure speculation,” he said. “I think one of three things wquld'have happened: we would have changed (the situation), I would have gotten my aircraft shot down or we would have started another war. I ^ don’t know which.” At 10:25 a.m. local time the morning after, the White House put out a hold order, directing all American planes add ships to keep at least 80 miles (df the North Korean coast. That same morning Johnson met with Rusk, McNamara, Rostow, Richard Helms of the CIA, Undersecretary of State Nicholas deB. Katzenbach and several others. NO HAWKS, NO DOVES “On this one there were no hawks, no doves,” said a man who was there. “It was unanimous. Apart frewn the danger of starting another war with North Korea, it was obvious the rescue attempt would almost certainly result in the immediate death of the Pueblo’s crew.” Jim Leonard, the Korean country officer at the State Department, did not think retaliation would have started a war. “I don’t think North Korea would go to war without the as^ surance of Chinese and Russiaq supp9rt.”And Kim II Sung’s re-/ latiohs with Peking and Moscow had not been cordial of late. Nimetheless Johnson did . something he’d never done in South Vietnam: he called up the reserves, 14,787 Air Force and Navy men and 327 inactive planes. He also ordered aircraft escorts for all ELINT planes flying near North Korea and halted seabwne ELINT missions along its coasts. Codes were changed immediately. But the Intelligence community worriedly asked itself how much equipment the Communists had taken. There was no sure way to know. One authority said loss of the ship was a “major catastrophe.” Not all agreed. OPINIONS DIFFER “Even assuming we lost every bloody thing on board intact to the North Koreans, there is a great difference of opinion as to the damage from the loss of the ship,” said Otis Pike. “I found this intriguing.” Evaluation of Lloyd Bucher was no easier. Many facts were unknown, but at least one was: he had given up the ship. ★ ★ * • Back in the United States on the west coast it was still January 23 and the working day had just begun. Stella Hodges was listening to the radio when she . heard. Her husband was at work in the lumber yard in Eugene when he heard. Far to the souUi, in San Diego, Rose Buch-‘ er was looking at the “Today” show on televisiim in her suite at the big, lush Bahia Motor Hotel when she heard. Hodges dropped his tools and raced home as fast as he could drive. Mrs. HodgCs called their daughter, Sheila, in mmhy Goshen and she camA-^^t over. When they heard a crewman had been fatally injured, they prayed it wasn’t Duane. But Jesse Hodges had a premonition that the odds were much, much shorter than that, in fact, even. SONS SENT ’TO SCHIXH. Rose Bucher had just sent her two teen-aged sons off to school. She had been living in the hotel for two months since her husband drove them down from Bremerton. “Oh my God,” she thought when she heard the news. She called her mother in Missouri and asked her to pray. Lt Cmdr. Alan Hemphill, the friend and former shipmate of her husband’s, hurried over to help. Several hours later she picked up her boys from school and told them. * * ■*■ Rose Bucher knew something about war prisoners. Her brother had been captured by the Japanese in World War II. She grew increasingly apprehensive Uiat her husband and his men would be shot. Or tortured. Half way around the world, Lyndon Johnson already had one war on his hands and that BELATED ACTHW Belatedly, plans were unde^ way to take action. The Ente^ prise was steaming north. ’There also had been three destroyers in port in Japan and another 120 miles south of Yokosuka when the Pueblo was taken, the nearest 20 hours from Wonsan. ’Three of them were now ordered to join the Enterprise. The Higbee, a Seventh Fleet destroyer in Sasebo for boiler repairs, was told to prepare to enter Wonsan under an air cover and tow the Pueblo out. But time had passed and it was on the side of the North Koreans. Under the doctrine of hot pmv suit, U.S. vessels could have legally pursued the KmrNn ships up ^ the tereemile iitolt. “I would say tha rules were such that they would go ri|^ ahead and attack and they would worry about how some body Interp^d them later,” said Sharp. But going into Wonsan when hot pu^t was not involved was a different matteai Temperatures were already rising. The North Koreans massed 400 jets along the DMZ. MIG pilots were overheard talking to their bases: “Where’s the Enterprise? Where’s the Enterprise? ADVICE: COOL IT “My strong advice to Ndrth, Korea is to cool it,” said Secretary of State Dean Rusk. ’That was also the President’s advice to his commanders. “We are not going to shoot from the hip,” he told the. American people. Her ensign now a North Korean trophy, her engines now silent, the USS Pueblo lay tugging inertly at her mooring lines now fast to a pier in an alien and hostile land. ★ ★ w ' Aboard, 75 officers and men of file U.S. Navy tried in the forward berfifing compartment to peek beneath their blindfolds, to listen for a tellbig sound, to shift position and ease the throbbing in their bound wrists. Below, three enginemen exchanged mute glances while their guard stood over them with madiine-gun cocked and ready. The guard barked something at Engineman Blansett Blansett looked at him qumiously. The guard smashed his fist in the sailor’s jaw and sent him reeling. He turned to Engine-man Gerald Hagenson, shouted, kicked him, sfruck hbn in the face and knocked his glasses crashing to the deck. DOWN THE GANGWAY Above, the soldiers prodded their captives out of the berthing space and shoved and kicked them in a long stumbling line down the gangway. A guard discovered a knife in Roy Mag-gard’s pocket and beat him ri-dously. Wendell Leach moved too slowly and a rifle butt jarred loose his teeth. The guard in the engine room motioned the three men iq> the ladder with his madiinegun. Blansett went last. As he left, ha kicked a switdi which turned out every ii^t on the ship. The guard slugged Blansett and made him turn them back on. The last American to leave the ship, bound and blindfdded, was the captain. ’The guards herded the crew down a street toward four waiting busses. W«d of the capture must have preceded the ship’s arrival, for a thousand or more North Kweans had gathered to view the c^tives. Lloyd Bucher got a look at them whmi his blindfold slipped and was appalled if not terrified. Men shouted and shook their fists. Women shrieked and spat at the sailors. CMdren mocked. A squad M soldiers tried to restrain the mob, knocked soine roughly to the ground when their thrusts came too close. Down the hysterical corridor of hate two Ncnrth Korean soldiers bore Steven Woelk on his bloodied Utter, jostling and bumping throu{^ the night Several times they dropp^ him. When he groaned, they struck him. At length they shoved him and the rest aboard the busses where they were finally safe fr(»n the mob but not from fiieir own fears—and not from the rage of the guards, who continued to slap and Mck them as they sat in the darkness of their blindfolds and the helplessness of their bonds. Pueblo, Ensign Lowered, Lies Moored In Wonsan 3^4 THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, NOVEMBKR 11. 1069 ADMIRAL CLOCK-RADIO G. E. BAHERY PHONO FdriIrMr - Play r«c ARVIN4-SP. 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TUESDAV, NOVEMBER 11, 1969 DIOOLOR 4MrMirooaff«tf m GO FORWtmER ' Get your inuMon myrntem GO FOR WlIVTER Carefree in a Car that is Cared For! Know the secure feeling when your car has bMn properly tuned, serviced and made ready for winter driving. The Pontiac Press, in this section, gives you driving tips for winter weather... suggestions on the proper services a car need$ to assure yoM of easy storts, warm travel and dependability for safe journeys. CM pieirr fuel GO FOR WINTER ‘f'A / ‘ GO FOR WINTER Get year GigilHta eyetem GO FOR WINTER GoiyouFlgnhhmo^oiiGm GO FOR WINTER GO FOR Mcflioeieioiw WINTER THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY. NOVEMBER 11. 1909 Winter Automobile Safety Begins With S #imwMMyl»glniwlthS fiv* of 0«n In fact Tho thnud 8aMy Cound! lists the fedlowing as IwUspoisable to lata winter operatfan: • M yoursdf by having your ear fWMty for winter. • See by keqiiiig wlndshleU. windows and U^ts*dean • Start witb a gentle touch, don’t qdn iriwels. following distance, watch for tompwrature traps. • Stop by pumping brakes. Id pnparing a car for winter, the Council recommends the since tiiey have lost Utility to grip tqr (Hr snow-covered roads. Check brakes Unco unevi pidling on iHTakes can put you into a skkL Make sure I and the blade arm preesuro is titfit. Check wiper solutltm and defroster operation. * * w Exhaust condition is vital in winter when car win- Winter Roads Take Toll on Car's Wiring Motorists idw look for the end wiring insulation to become pg| dows are usually dosed. So Inspect mufflef' and exhaust pipM for leaks. Check tlwi bat-t^ and Ignition system which get more severe tests in winter. WWW Carry shovel, sand and traction mats to help you out of emergency situations. FOLLOW ADVICE Since winter darkness and snow or ice put a premium on good visibility, follow this advice: Before starting out make sure all windows are free of ice of BRAKING DISTANCE IN F[ snow. Don’t forget to clean the hood and top since blowing snow from these anas^ can obstruct vision. Don't start off until there is enouf^ heat in the car to prevent condensation that can ^ up windows. w * * use your lights at low beam at dusk, in rain or snow or in gloomy weather. Keep windows espedally dean at this time of When pulling away on'‘slip-ichange of direction such as in pery sfreets use the gas pedal lane hopping can put the car gratiy. into a Spin. 8ANDHBX.PFUL Steering movements should transmission cars and in second ' with manual transmlssi(m inside and out with a mixture of water and windshield antifTeese of hard starting trouble during warm spdls may be in for an unpleasant surp^. Fvt the ravages of winter driving may brittle and to cra<*k. Wat« and dust can entfar these cradcs and partially ground the high-tension voltage. hit a critical area, the wiring As a result, not enough current system. Ireaches the spark idugs. As a result, starting may be| Another cause of wiring difficult and driVinggeterioration Is corona. Corona performance erratic. All this is a magnetic field surrounding may stem from salty slush^ihe wiring and is caused by sprayed on the engine com-jhigh-tension current s u r g i n g partment or extremdy edd through the wiring. temperature that makes wiring brittle. w ★ ★ And less driving during Winter means tewor stops at trouble nuty be quitted. Inspectko pf ignitina wiring dong with other normal services at tunecqi time Is In-dspoisalte to good nwtoring. Qwtting signs of wear may catch present performance troidde as well future trouUe. CAUSES m CRACKS Oracks in wiring insdation or corroded terminals can affect engine performance cause (xnnidete There are several causes for the cradcs and corrosion, eqieclaliy in older cars. Excessive oil, grease or at-^ion and for proper connec-iQoqdMric oondit^s can cause tigivo you a boHor fab at no addmonol ceri. BE SURE... BE SAFE... Drive in to the garage displaying tha IB 0 shield. Thoro'G an 10 • collitlon emr eouision 311 West Montcalm 833-7I36 GLMkEBOOYtALiaNMBNT 3r76AubumAve.^^^^^ EASTOWM eOLLItlOn 55S South Sogieow St. ,'reanee ^ ■ \ 682-0255 Pontiac 333-7151 AUTBIOOY "^^^2-6114 ftiuit Read at FAT KIITH’S eOLLItlON 5475 Dixie Highway 6234)717 OAiuae 380 University Drive 335-8583 UKELAnO COLLISION 4686 West Walton at Dixie 674-0700 674-0339 Penties 106 East Menteolm 335-1866 PONTIAO CHIEF OOLLIilON 2035 Pontiac Reed 332-5607 AtAROtSMANOOLUSION ^ , nSEestUnIveitIlyftv Boehester 651-3131 IfltfONTlAC CATAUNA4D00R HARDTOP ryOUeeee tNUAlirt OOLUIION «5EestWahenllvd. 332-4953 TRIPLE N eOLLISION 2634 Auburn Rd., s 352-1440 UNION AUTO BODY \ ^ 1524 Baldwin Ave. ^ ^ 338-3131 WALLiD LAKE OOLUIION 2035 West Maple Wailed Lake 624-4547 WAROIODY OF HUOHIBAN, INO. 580 Best Welten8lvd. If the car should go Into a skid, immediately turn the steering wheel in the direction the rear wheels are sliding. Avoid oversteering and when you feel the car coming out of the skid straighten the wheels. * it it Be extra cautious on bridges or in shady areas since they are more likely to be icy when other road areas are clear. KEEP DISTANCE Lastly, follow other cars at twice the distance you normally do in good weather. This will enable you to stop safely if the car ahead geb into trouble. Word of Caution; Watch Weather Thb b advice for auto tbn available from stationi ev-ownors. It means knowing in advance not only what weather conditions may be tonwrroyr, but what they are like in the area toward which the motorist Is headed on a longpr than “jiilt about town" trip. A' *', * It Is the cir radio, of coutm, that b your "eny time" pipellM to the wanted When on a trip, one should have no difficulty in picking up dcaab from stations in s t(wani which tho motorbt b travelling. e A A In addition to call letters they usually identify the city frpm which they are broadcasting: THIS FMTUnO SPORIS CM NOW AVAILAILE FOR IMMEDIATE DEUVERY GRIMALDI IMPORTS 900 OAKLAND AYE. 338-0421 Dick Flannery Says: Take advantage of our few Remaining New '69's and Demos SPECIAL PRICED EXAAAPLE: New Custom 2 door, 8 cyl., 302 V-8, vinyl trim, Std. transmission, body sido moulding or Lt. plHttaxaUe. Demo Stock No. 370 . GALAXIE 500 2 Dn Hardtop li extras — low mite. •2flG5 Shnlnaue. Flannery Drirr hxtrtt ,> Milrx l H alrrjord / ill the Double Stop luf:hl w 5806 Dixie Highway Waterford 623-0900 14 100% FROTECTION III AU 22 CRITICAl RUST AREAS INSIDI DOOR POSTS INSIDB 000 U08 INllM FINMI WILU Ketp Your Gar Looking Showroom New! RUSTPROOF TODAY- KEEP YOUR CAR CLEAN, SAFE AND VALUABLE FOR years RuitprOeling It net reiMcted le brand new cert. Used cert can else be'pietected. Ziehart Gives a Written Money-hofik, 5 Year Guatantee on New Cars! Ziebait Protsets Freni ths bslda.,, Wtan Most Rust Starts! 821 Oaklaml kmm, Fg^ ’ . Pham 334-0502 Michlgon'Banfcardt Honorod or Tgrmg THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1969 C—8 Auto Defects Signal Warnings to Alert Drivers StRUAN MATHE80N InformattoB Director, Canada Safety Coun^H There’s no getting away from It — motorists are responsible toth morally and legally for the igre operating condition of their Vehicles. And whether or not there are compulsory spot or jmiverBal annual car chwks in Sheir part of the country. i Winter Hazards ^Are the Greatest The driver himself can detect the major dangers. A A * The most common fault .spotted in mass vehicle checks both in Canada and the United States is the lighting system, dangerous defects which decrease the ability of the motorist to see and be seen. * w * Headlight alignment should be checked at least once a year. But most faults detected were those even the most non- mecbanically minded drivers should have defected themselves. ^ Roads present more hazards! tires during winter months! ^an during warip-weather| il^onths. Foreign objects such as ^ils and glass are retained in' ;0ie buildup of ice and snow. | A * ★ _ I !!/F WALL SIZES REGULAR PRICE EACH 2ND TIRE ONLY PLUS F.E.T. EACH D70-I4 $33* 1A50* 2.24 E70.I4 $35* ilso* 2.33 T70-I4 $37* 18.50* 2.44 F70-I5 $38* $19* 2.50 G70-I4 $39* 19.50* 2.59 G70-I5 $40* $20* 2.69 H70il5 $43* $21.56* 2.85 •tte trede-ln required FAST FREE MOUNTING WHILE YOU SHOP AT WARDS For o smoother, safer ride SHOCK ABSORBERS Riverside^ Deluxe INSTALLATION AVAILAILI EACH REG. 4.99 EA. fown ir Country HEAVY-DUTY SHOCKS Reduce movement of cer springs caused by dips, bumps, emergency stops! Deluxe shocks give you a velvety ride. REO. S.99 Safer riding for you and the jijhola family. Sovo $4! Our front or roar levtitrs GataluxurlousJJ^ limeuiina rldol SAVE $7! WARDS 50 - MONTH X-TRA HEAVY DUTY BATTERY Gives you going power on deep- 12V. EXCH. freeze winter mornings! Extra re- $4 A serve for air conditioners, poyrer, I m windows, accessories. RIG.S2S V V - I WARD Riverside* Deluxe MOST FORDS. CHEVROLETS Dynamic safety special — Wards Riversida* shocks in> stalled and a complata front-end alignmantJ For groator riding comfort. cor. tl m»r( :sIL&Iu.U}oaA. :V: OPKN MONDW ITIHl’ KHIDW 10 A M. TO ‘>00 O.M. SA'n l{l)\^ 0:.M) A,VI. ro V):00 l‘.M. SIMIVV 12 AOON ro () I’.M. • (»02-1‘MO |,v V Vf ”: "f I j ^ ■ «• 4. C-—^ THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESPAy. NOVEMBER U, >»«» A. 0: ' I* grain Involving customers' cars. An alarming statistic revealed was that eight out of 10 of the tested had unsafe windshield wipers. WiN'nSR WEATHER — lliera are few areas In the Unltad States or gray have troubla ti progressively less severity. White areas are relatively Canada that are immune from eerroaton caused by winter weather. Areas corroelon-frea. Polluted or salt air takes a hehvy toll of car bodlee as do salt depicted in dark gray have the most severe problem. Ughtor shades of and other types of chemicals on roads. Car Corrosion Loss Seen Climbing Hie U.S. Department of Commerce reports that corrosion loss in the United States Is estimated at |10 billion annually and, perhaps SO par cent of this loss is in the automotive field. It appears this figure is on the rise. One of the contributing factors is current vehicle body design. This, along with Industrial fallout and air pollution, moist and salty coastal air, road chemicals, heated garages, ■now and Just plain water — the principal causes rust and ooiroeion — points toward confer car theU.3. Although auto companies spend millions of dollars each year on rust preventives, an estimated 30 per cent of all buyers still get additional after-market rust protection for their cars and tnu^. In the past few years, the manufacturers have stepped up their use of rust-inhibiting prlnriers elthw with a spray apjdication or dip. Use of galvanized steel, zinc and aliimlniini coatings have also in- But, body design, in Itself, an everdiuii^ necessity, aggravates the problem as certain desipi features are conducive to Often those curving lines attractive to the eye lead to confined, poorly ventilated areas In which moisture and dirt can accumulate. And, it is now an accepted fact that most rust begins from the Inside, rather than from the outside as had been the popularly accepted theory. Salt, either from the air In coastal regions or from de-ldng chotnicals, has <^n beoi felt to be the principal culprit in speeding up rust destruction. Howevtf, recent studies, such as those conducted by the Ontario lO^way Dqiartment, are specifically reporting that “atmoqdiere poUutloo rather than salt Is shaidng up as the real villain in the rusting of automobiles." Over New york City alone, almost 600,000 tons of sulfur dioxide is in the air and a simple rain contributes to form dilute acide which accelerates the natural tendency m minor stone-nicks to more sizeable ■carldies, scrapes or dents. Gosa examination may even produce evidence of more serious damage with rust appearing in the rocker panels, lower portion of fenders, or at other points. This time of year is an especially important one to make needed repairs. For winter road conditions take a harsh toll of car bodies. your next and most important step Is to locate a reputable auto body repair and refinishing sh(di — one that has adequate facilities, modem equipment, and experienced personnel to do the job. SH(NP QUAUFICATIONS Such a shop will have amide parking and work space, modem metal working tools, quality spray equipment, spray booth with proper exhaust for dust-free paint jobs, force dry (Infirared) equipment for drying fresh paint in minutes as opposed to hours with air dry, and factory-trained spray operators. A shop with these qualifications can assure you of a first-rate, professional job in shmiest possible time. COSTS MONEY Regardless of the origination or extent of the pTesent damage, it’s costing you money every day It goes unattended. Once paint Is chipped away and bare metal is exposed, corrosive action begins and will continue to grow until arrested and eliminated by repair. \ Metal dfterimation.t^ occur from hiheath the car. This usulliy goes undetected until nut appears on the outside surface after corroding the metal behind. (Undercoating will, in most cases, |»«vent the ■tart of this latter form of corrosion). In efiher case, the longer the damage la neglacted, the more Don’t settle for a 50 per cent job at a bargain basement price from a shop that has makeshift facilities. It’ll ix-obably cost you more In the long run through costly rework at a later date. ★ ★ ★ When the original beauty has been restorhd to your car, don’t be misled Into believing it to be permanent. New damage is likely to occur at some fut date and corrosiim will c again attempt its ugly deed. Periodic checks and continuous, proper maintenance are your only assurance of prolonging the original finish life. Do tli^ faithfully and you’ll derive the many benefits from owning, driving, trading selling a clean, rust-free car. the rapafr baooiiMS, thus in- Oaoa jmiY* randy for rspalrs, RENT-A-MOtOR HOME COA^PLETELY SELF-CONTAINED the obvious liability to a vehicle’s looks and resale value, auto rust also is becoming an Increasing safety problem. ’The Society of AuUmohlle Engineers (SAE) has said that salt.spray rapidly deteriorates brake lines and steering paratus, and some fleets report that 40 per cent of their brake lines are rust damaged after two years of service. Frequait car washes as well as commerciajgiutproofing can fi^t detorioration and add vtdue to a car at trade-in time. Wipers Are Imi^ortdnt One of the major i oil companies recently'annoimebd ths results of an inspection prothousands of its will detwlorate anyway over a period of time, and a hard bla^e is just as IneffecUve as a wbrn one. Don’t wait until you can’t see out to realize you should have investigated new wiper bladesiw«r out, too Why such a high rate of bad wipers? Probably because most of us pay very little attention to them until we have to use them. ’Then it is Inconvenient to have them replaced. And after the rain, we forget about the wipers until we have to use them again. Why unsafe? Because on-coml^ headlights are magnified in the smear caused by streaking wipers. Because in a downpour, worn wipers will not clear your windshield properly'. You need every inch of your windshileld, clean and clear. If you are to drive safely. the last, time! you stopped for gi|s. It might be too late. instead, have the blades changed every spring and fall. And when new blades still seem to be ineffective, perhaps new wiper arms are needed.'Thiy RinewTKB Looks Of Your WWif 1st or 2n|A Cor' Custom Enamol Paint Job! Guarantood To Givo You 100% Satisfaction. Wo Uso 100% Dupont Matorials MMa— I Oakland St Cass , Phena SIS41At WASHER FLUID Equally frightening is thel rude awakening to tte fact that you are out of washer fluid when your windshield has been aplattared artth mud. When this )«ns, avep the best wiper blades can causa smears ftat causa accidents. SCHRAM AUTO anti TRUCK PARTS All wiper blades dry outj eventually and beewna hard,| due to exposure to sun, wind and oily road film; so you cannot expect to get longer life from your wipers just because you don’t use them much. They LATE MODEL WRECKS OVUL Select yew krte model wed parte for PARTS DelySia*SiNSet.'M4pjh 2549 DIXIE HWY. U.S. II, POKTIAO tVk IBto Berth at’ISIegMsW • SLEEPS SIX Make your raaervatiena new... FE 5-4161 rental A LEASE, IN^. 630 OAKLAND AT CASS, PONTIAC [fblks ciHi a ioi| way to ieal at Mattbews'Hirgream Chevrolet! m if You Care For Your Gar... Why Not Boy Your Sports Car From Tbo Chevrolet Dealer Who Has Just Opened A Specialized Sports Car Departflient Come see the all new SS 396 Sport Coupe Plus the complete line of Chevrolet Sports Cars on display. OUR lEWSHHE CAR SHOWROOM IS ACROSS FROM OUR MAM SIURE 630 Oakland Ave. at Cass There’s no mistaking a Corvette for anything but a Gorvstts Coma in and look at thorn, drivo tham, loam about thorn, and buy ono. Youll ba glad you did. No nood fa bowai» of substitutot. ThongranYony. 630 Oakiand Ave. jyUcMgoii^i irtimoV Vtltwn fhomfit Dtaltr FE 5-4161* THE PONTIAC FRKSS, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 11, IM® C"«“T TMI NhW Nf W AUTO CENTERS LOW, LOW PRICES ON YOUR AUTOMOTIVE NEEDS MIX 'N MATCH TIRES YOUR CHOICE REGULAR OR SNO Deluxe mud and snow or safety custom tires 4-ply nylon cord mud and snow tires give deep Whitewalls gripplf*® action. No trade-in required. Safety $3 extra Custom 4-ply tires give you o smooth ride. Plus F.E.T. ®ay now and all you have to say is "Charge it'. Traction Plus snow tires or Premium Plus tires 4-ply nylon cord snow tires are fortified vdth polybutadiene compound. 4-ply premium Plus whitewall tires. Nylon cord body Is up to 53% F.i,T. stronger than our lower priced tires. Savel New 2+2 snow tires or Performance Plus tires Premium traction 2 plus 2 snow tires feature 2 plies of fiber glass and 2 plies polyester Plus 9°°** traction. Performance Plus whitewalls give long wear and a smooth ride. steel fire studs give you positive traction Positive traction even under glare ice conditions. With purchase of snow tire. Lifetime wheel balancing for the life of the tread We balance, rotate 5 tires. Rebalance and rerotate as needed. 5t?'6*99 USE YOUR FEDERAL’S CHARGE PLATE C—8 THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUEwSDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1969 By Urry Uwli Bridge Tricks From Jacobys By OSWALD & this didn't really faze our hero.l We approve of the quick play JAMES JACOBY He led his deuce of diamonds at trick three and of the long South let the opening club and went up with dummy’s king study ^uth Save the_ hand lead come around to his king, in the vain hope that West had before fading to j™*' "y®- .Then he liid down his ace of the ace. East won and returned Eventuaily he spades. West showed out but a club to dummy’s queen. ij?*-*, nf ............... East s queen with the three of trumps. His next two plays were the ace of hearts and a low heart to the jack. Then he discarded his last club on the 10 of diamonds and a high heart on the irine, while East had to continue to follow suit. Now came the fifth diamond. East was down to -Junior Editors Quix on He was down to tlie last two, tricks and could top whichover! trump Ea.st played after South led from dummy. South was very happy andj asked, “Pretty well played, wasn’t It?" 1 It was beautifully played after | the initial mistake, since it re-| quired a combination of perfect | timing, plus a lot of good luck,| to salvage the slam from the wreckage, but any really good player would have made the hand with no trouble at all. i The really good player would | THIS CAMPUtUNRRST l« .MAKINS YOU A NERVOUS . WRECK, PRESJPINT POMP/ By Carl Grabert VOUR SUPPER g frumps and chose to ruff with have led the three of trumps to the nine. Not that it did him|dummy’s queen at trick two.! any good. West would have shown out but, South overruffed, ruffed his South would have had no trou-! last heart with the queen of ble picking up the trump suit.! trumps and showed his hand.!He would simply lead trumps (twice from dummy, covering I East’s played card each time. NORTH 11 AQ42 ¥J2 aKJ1094 «AQ7 WEST EAST A Void A 109765 V109753 V86 A863 AAQ75 A109864 AJ2 SOUTH (D) A AKJ83 VAKQ4 A2 AK53 ' QUESTICm: Why is i^atinum so precious? ANSWER: When the SpanM cMiquistadors were ex-plolng their c^pdured South American territory in 1750, they found grains of something that looked like a heavy metal in the sandbed the Pinto Rivo* in Peru. From the name they gaVi this metal; Platina del Pinto, came our modem wmtI platinum. ’The conquistadores were hypnotized with the idea of fmding gold. They had no Idea that their Platina del Pinto was actually more valuable than gold. l%e heavy metal platinum is used in many ways in modem laboratories. Its great value is'that it is resistant to corrosion by other chemicals. Being able to resist the powerful acids, it is often used to make cracibles or containers for chendctd processes. Platinum wire expands and contracts at the same rate as glass, so is often used to s^ wires inside glass tubes and so on. In jewelry, platinum has an exquisite luster and silvery brilliance, which makes it highly desirable. Althou^ rather soft, various alloys can be added to harden It, without losing its natural beauty. , fYott con win $10 cash plus handsome World Yearbook if your question, mailed on a postcard io Junior Editors in care of'thti newspaper] is selected for a prise.) West North East South 1 A Pass 2A Pass 2¥ Pass 3A Pass 4 N.T. Pass Pass se Pass Pass Pass 6* Opening lead—A10 Q—The bidding has been: West North East South lA Paiis 1 ¥ Pass 2 A Pa.ss 3¥ Pass 3 A Pass 3 N.T. Pass ? You, South, hold: AAK876 VA2 A3 AAK754 What do you do now? A—Bid four hearts. The hand should play better there than in no-trump. Your alternate call Is a pass. A further black suit bid would be bad. TODAY’S qUESTION Instead of bidding three no-trump. your partner has bid four clubs over your three spades. What do you do now? OR RATHEI CQFFE TEAFl CHANGE? THE BORN LOSER VDO Know, IMSTEAD OF 60RM RAKES THIS M0RHIH6,1THIWK I’LL HAVE SARDIMES AMP MAPLE SVROP OM SPA^Tl! --------------------------------VT PLAIN JANE THE BETTER HALF CSNlirywEUrTVIBKGSCl I CHC3DA! SHE FINALLV«S< I • I “Oh, Mister Garbologist.. OUT OUR WAY ay i BUSINESS kicks will, neback irall recovery Is slated for third ' month. Byt today thara or signs; Ihert Is sound and fury. ^ ‘ ★ ARIES (March tl-Aprll 1»): Accanf fhls afternoon on Kow you handle special ra-quasl. Tdnigtit IS markad by ovarfime, added work. But you gain racognition. Km. Is Id bt thorough — and dedicatad. TAURUS lAprll SO-May 30): Good lunar aspect today coincides with long-range plans. Think of future rather than wor-rying about past. SAGITTARIUS tn-dividual could provide Inspiration. GEMINI (May 31-Juna 30); Money and Idles it is of coi ust In Individual atic. But Insist < LEO (July 33-Aug. 33); Thara pressure. But H Is the kind you anioy. Is challanga and a chance to show sptclal abilrtlas. Rost. Prepare. Taka care -;a best possibl VIRGO (Aug, 33-Stpt. 3 moon aspect coincides v Interlude. ASarried or elngt with canawad vigor. Throw rightV yoot own. Begin H own style. LIBJiA (Sept. 330ct. 33): Paste lams Ohould be faced’. Especially good tor making decisions rsgarding land, propel^, real estate. Older ta.Tilly member wants new deal. This it couraglng sign. SCORPIO (Oct. 33-Nov. 3t): Ideas can be transformed into reality- Much depends upon Inner conviction. Accent on short trips, articles, relations with neighbors. Don't bo dissuaded by thr little felth. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 33-Dec. Spotlight on what you own — what potential Is for greater pain. You opportunity to make valuable cor perhaps through social affair. Be And also brIghT. CAPRICORN (Dec. 33-Jan. W); Moon (n your sign colnc|dfs with dynamic change In appearance. You T---------— attention gattor. Paopla notice Ing Improves. Tsks Initlativi ‘’’aIJuARIUS (Jan. 30-Feb. IS): Much o( what you do today adds up to a perlormanct. Your Inner desires do not necesserily coincide with actions. Strive to achieve a balance. Bt discreet without creating falsehoods. PISCES (Feb. 1*-Merch 30); Don't give UP something lor nothing. You are templed to tike a fling. Maintain balance. Weigh actions. Be soclalble wlthoul being foolish. Message very clear by tonight. if IF WEDNESDAY IS YOUR BIRTHDAY you strive never Io break a promise. But olheri don't always live up to your 1 discriminating in choos-upcomlng weeks you are going to hevo to mako some careful tel^lons. Realize ell Is not tun and ^mas. Appraclata on# „ AAAAZINe. ISN'T IT, HOW FAST X OH,THAT AIN’T FICKLENESS li bUTPOOR LOV/ERS R(PTHEM- I ON OUR PART—BLAME IT ON SELVES OF THE OUTPOORS / NARROW-MINPEP PRIVERS AS SOON AS THEY HIT ^AND MOTHERS/WE’P NEVER THE ROAP RACK TO J ( R«(RT WITH ANY OF IT IF IT civilization/ WEREN'T FOR THEM/ •me STUPID MWJ's FISTS (UIO. AUMAVS (SET HIM IWTROgBLe! r X NEED SOME PRACTICE WALKING ON MV SKIS BEFORE THE ' SNOW COMES 7 BEF THE EARTH MOVERS BOARDING HOUSE Paalura* Carp.) & state\Ed Bioard Resets Meeting LANSING (UPI) - The State Board of Education has canceled the regular meeting it had scheduled for today and tomor^ row and rescheduled it for next week as a result of the death of board member Leroy Augen-stein. I The meeting will be held thej evening of Nov, 18 and ail day NOV.W. ll (SpOOVV/ THAT /WOTH SAIT-LIKE HAS •y«?UR NAME ON n/ my word, it POES RRINS OUT MV NATURAL VieOR.' BUT X PONT WANT TO SEEMT
  • '. X()\^I-:M HI-:IM1. 11»((9 Treat Gross ' tor Chjggers, Spoil Birds B-5 MRS. WYCKOFF MRS. WAGNER Four Girls Don Bridali Veils on Saturday Carolee J. Phelps chose a street length dress of lace over taffeta for her marriage Saturday to Ross A. Wyckoff. The couple exchanged vred-ding vows in Calvary Lutheran Church. A reception in the Italian-American Club folllowed the candllelight rites. Mrs. Leonard K. Ferrell and James Wilson attended the couple as matron of honor and best man. The daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harold Phelps of South Hospital Road carried a bouquet of chrysanthemunns and orchids Parents of the bridegroom are the late Mr. and Mrs. Ainsworth Wyckoff. Use Our Christmas Lc^yaway The couple are honeymooning in St. Clair. Sfeinbach-Phillips Newlyweds, Mr. and Mrs. George Steven Steinbach (Linda Sophrona Phiilips) were married Saturday In the home of the bridegroom on Cameron Street. A reception in the AMVETS Bemis-Olsen Post 113 followed the evening exchange of vows. Gowned in peau de soie wit{i French lace and satin, the bride carried a cascade of carnations and an orchid. Mrs.- Wiliiam Phillips and Frank Weatherbee assisted the coupie as matron of honor and best man. Parents of the newlyweds are Mrs. Thomas A. Phillips of Oakdale, La. and the late Mr. Phillips, Mrs. Kenneth Cooley of and the late Adam J. Stein- couple Is honeymooning iagara Fails. Phelps-Schreiber m evening wedding i n Abping Presence Lutheran Chirch was chosen by Kathleen Am Schreiber and William Janes Phelps of Auburn Road, Pottiac Township for their mfrriage Saturday. ^ reception in the Limber-lost (Hub followed the cere- ({owned in peau de soie with peiu d’ange iace, the bride carried a bouquet of carnations, roses and baby’s breath, tjeannie Schreiber and Mr. and Mrs. William H. Phelps of Oakmont Street, Pontiac Township. The couple is honeymooning in Florida. Wagner-Shafto Gowned in velvet with lace accents, Roseann Marie Shafto became the bride of Henry C. Wagner of South Commerce Road, Commerce Township. St. Patrick’s Catholic Church was the setting for the morning exchange of vows on Saturday. A receptipn followed in the Dublin Community Center. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Downing assisted the couple as honoi* attendants. Parents of the newlyweds are Thjmas Rosheck were honor Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Shafto of attendants for the couple. jCrayview Street, Whiti Lake ★ ★ * j Township and Mr. and Mrs. farents of the newlyweds are Henry Wagner of Redford. MiL and Mrs. Carl W. Schreiber! The coupie is honeymooning WASHINGTON - ( A P ) -Thousands of turkeys found to contain heptachior residue may have picked up the powerful pesticide from land treated for control of chlggers, according to Agriculture Department sources. Chiggers, the same small mites which can cause humans to itch after working on lawns,! are troublesome to turkey growers who want a nice,! smooth bird to sell. | The department announced last Friday that 150,000 live turkeys and some four million pounds of turkey meat were held off the Thanksgiving market after heptachior residue was found in some birds on Oct. 9 at a Minnesota processing plant. About 90,000 of the turkeys were found to contain varying amounts of heptachior epoxide,^ the pesticide’s residue form. Officials say all contaminated birds were traced to farms | supplying Arkansas Valley Industries, Inc., headquartered in Little Rock. The department in Little Rock. The department said the investigation would continue to determine how widespread the distribution has been. NONE MARKETED Officials said none of the contaminated birds had reached the retail market. Dr. Gilbert H. Wise, head of Consumer protection for the Consumer and Marketing Service, said Monday he did not know for certain how the pesticide came to be in the turkeys. Food and Drug Administration regulations do not permit any traces of heptachior in and poultry, although some pesticides have “tolerance” levels which permit some residues in the products. 7236 HOLCOMB - Homes by Booth "CLARKSTON MEADOWS" — Brick and aluminum axtarior, 3 badroomt, 1 Va baths, family room, firoplaco, 2-car attachod garago. Drivo thru Villago of Clarkston, loft on Bluograss to opon signs. RAY O'NEIL REALTY, 3520 Pontiac Lk. Rd. 674-2222 Match Buttons When buying buttons for a new garment, remember to keep them in harmony with that of the garment — tailored buttons for tailored clothes and decorative buttons for dressier styles. 'Vom All Over The World . . . ExquititelY Beautiful Giftware Item* Are In Abundance At Wigg» . . . A. Charming cheese plate with cover... And, on the cover, a perky little mouse is engraved... S.95. Only one of many cheese servers... B. Sllverplaled Wakefield party set with fluted edge ® and scroll trim ... S.9S. See all the other Tine silver and pewter table accessories.... Silver water pitchers. Many styles to choose from 15.00 and up. * ^ CLEARANCE SALE... of fine furnishings, wall decorand accessories. Also china, crystal, cookware and giftware... Fine for giftgiving. PONTIAC 24 West Huron, FE 4-1234 in Downtown Pontiac Cklmm, Cryttal, Glflutan « Ethan Allan Fumitura WIQQS BLOOMFIELD HILLS 4080 TeicKraph R< at Lons Lake Road, 644-7370 Mon.« Tkura. St Fri. China, Crystal, Cifiumrm and Compiatm Fumitura / BUY! SELL! TRADE!... USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS The in-and-out carpet that solves all your ups-and-downs! Handicapped Women Get Speciolly Designed Robes A versatile and well styled' housecoat, or robe, is just one example of the work niat is being done to make dressing j easier for the millions of^ physically limited women in' this country. At left, a long, concealed zipper makes this an easy step-in for the disabled, but ambulatory woman. At right, there is no zipper under identical front trim, but a Velcro-tabbed back wrap converts the robe into a simple front slip-on for women in wheelchairs. Deeply cut armholes, full. over-elbow sleeves, roomy pockets add to comfort as well as appearance. As a further step In physical rehabilitation, this robe and other specially designed lingerie items are made by handicapped women in a sheltered workshop that is part of the vocational retraining program that is beihg carried out by Vocational Guidance and Rehabilitation Services of Cleveland. For additional information, write Fashion-able, P. 0. Box 23188, Ft. Lauderdale, Fla.! HUHENLOCHERS, KERNS, NORVELL, INC. 1007 W. llURON ST. 681-210(1 YES, You May Have YOUR CUSTOM MADE UPHOLSTERED CHAIR or SOFA in time for ibiEiYii IIOLII If you order right now, \ “•Flue FurnlJiir# and QuaUl.y CnrpallHKSlnif J9J4" jx' OF WATERFORD S40U DUiv Hl|ihw«y .. . 334-0981 Anew type of indoor-outdoor carpet: Courtyard by Evans Black There's fresh informality: in this new carpet of 100% Creslan* acrylic fiber pile, perfectly dyed for color-fastness—and featuring a weatherproof backing to answer the need for a smart appearance indoors and out. Courtyard is tough, too. Highly resistant to wear, abrasion and hard living. Its 3-level, random-sheared brick pattern takes to the great outdoors like a natural. 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We'll automatically keep your tank filled, and help you to keep your budget in balance with easy-to-meet equal monthly payment plans. High Court Rejects I Appeal of Protestkr By BARRY SCHWBID WASHINGTON (AP) - The Supreme Court has given tacit appiuval for campus police to ■ demi lonstrators who raise a clamor on university property to protest the Vietnam war. Bui because the court did not LUMBER & BUILDING SUPPLIES SIN^E 1890 107 SQUIRREL RD. UL 2-4000 WE Will KEEP YOUR TANK ElllED 8 PREVENT CONDENSATION Huber to Speak to County AlP Sen Robert J. Huber. R-Troy, will address the American Independent party of Oakland County at a joint meeting of the 18th and 19th Congressional District organizations Friday. The meeting will be held at the Knights of Columbus Hall, Maybee and Sashabaw, Independence Township, at 8 p.m. The meeting is open to the public. Car License Tags on Sale Saturday LANSING (UPI) -Automobile license plates for 1970 wUl go on sale Saturday but Secretary of State James M- Hare says car owners should check with their license Isranch office to see if that particular office will be open. Hare said individual branch offices will decide whether they will be open to sell license plates to “early bird” buyers. set forth its views with the ruling Moi^ay, the effect is likely to be limited. The court acted, by a 7-1 vote, in a case from Wisconsin where a student claimed the state’s disorderly conduct law was of “free speech” claims Raised by Zwicker. A i However, these dcdr““''" are shaky, at best, becau high court has the pesk]lt|habit| of laying back and wail being used to suppress his freedom of speech. The student, Robert K. Zwicker. had held over his head, outside a University of Wisconsin placement office, a picture of a Vietnamese child seared with napalm. The university had turned the office over to the Dow Chemical Co., a napalm manufacturer, to conduct placement interviews. Zwicker was sentenced in Dane County Circuit Court in 1967 to a fine of flOO or 30 days in jail. NO PARTICULAR REASON The high court, in dismissing his appeal, did not state any particular reason. The only thing else the court said was that: “Mr. JusUce (WiUlam t>.) Douglas is of the opiq^n that probable jurisdiction should be noted.” This meant that of the current eight justices, only Douglas felt Zwicker had made enough ^ an impression to warrant at least a hearing if not eventual revecsal of his conviction and invalidation of the state law. The abruptness with,# which the court acted may indicate there is little sympathy among most of the justices for the kind same issues in a shai ion. The court generally] shunned appeals by collef testers. Last March, for pie, it turned i Bluefield, W.Va., state students who were discipli rock-throwing confi with police. And yet, the court al edged into this field by pioning the right of school students in Iowa tolbvear black armbands to schojl in peaceful protest of the war! . v\ Just drop it! A smokeless, odorless gas incinerator gets rid of all burnahle trash indoors. Drop it!... the papers, garbage, burnable trash... drop all of it directly into a modern gas incinerator! With a smokeless, odorless gas incinerator in your basement, garage or utility room, you can forget that daily dash out into the rain and snow— ; with smoke and 'nice iihcineratar is that it costs just pfeAnies a day to operate. iritfi upny ud:»ri uui imu uio rcuii giiii no more\pojluting t^e air with smol \ Nodor from burning trash.'AWhef; .feature Of \the dutomatic gasincim \ \ See your Gas Incinerator Dealer has NOTICE TO PONTIAC TOWNSHIP RESIDEgTS Pontiac Towniilip roaidonto may Ufa tha Oakland County landfill on Bold Mountain Road. on Saturdays and Wednesdays by applying for d card from the Pontiac Township Clerk, 2060 Opdyke| Road. Roy Wahl Pontiac Township Supervisor BUY! SEUI TRADE! USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! USIODAYS Great News for Overweight People AND^ENJO^ COMPLETE COURSE 14S14 ^CLUSIVB N^W HOT WHIRLPOOL MINERAL SPAS - DiSPLAOilOJ^C ^ AN^FkTIQUE WHILt YOU luxuriate LOSE THOSE UNWANTED POUNDS AND INCHES CALL 682-5040 NOW arm hv for your P|E| TOUR and figuro or fitness analysis PjfcKShidbyC^ 4432 y NEIILTH SPA B—12 V -'li ^ ^ . £r -^ipp THE PON riAC PRBSS, TUESDAY. NOVEMBER 11. IftHtf Pueblo Jockeys for' Time as 'Rescue' Effort Forms (EDITOR’S NOTE - TM$ ia the aeventh article‘in a aeriea on the USS Pueblo written by a newa team from the Aaaociated Preaa.) The Pueblo bobbed idly in the water within the circling PTs. Bucher told Lacy to tajie the con and went below to his stateroom. He made a hurried inspection, destroyed a few remaining papers, and remembered two other items he did not want to fall to the enemy. His pistols. By history’s strange customs of men and arms, a tactical . military surrender somehow becomes a matter of private ignominy if one yields his sidearms. Bucher rummaged in his gear, gathered up his personal 22-caliber and tt-caliber revolvers, handed them to a sailor and ordered him to throw them over the side. Hurrying back to the pilot house he noticed Law and Alvin Plucker, a quartermaster, burning publications and Nolte swinging a sledgehammer. He told Nolte not to destroy the radio transmitter; help might yet come and he wanted to be able to communicate. Bucher also observed that both crypto safes were open, their contents gone. He considered the crypto gear the most sensitive material aboard. Steve Harris had reported that it had been destroyed, and Bucher was relieved to see for himself that it was so. Back in the pilot house, he ordered the engines ‘'started again —at one-third speed—about four knots, scarcely enough to ripple the water. He put the rudder over five degrees and the Pueblo began a wide, lazy circle toward the wake of the SO-1, which was heading into the sun, shoreward. The time was approaching two o’clock. Bailey: “We are now being escorted into probably Wonsan. Wonsan. Wonsan.’’ MORE 'HME NEEDED The ship continued its slow arc. The SO-1 pulled away, about 300 yards ahead. Bucher wanted as much time as possible to finish destroying classified material. Earlier, running at full speed, he had maneuvered the Pueblo 20 to 25 miles from land, thus was still a healthy distance from the 12-mile zone. Bailey: “Are you sending assistance? Arp you sending assistance?’’ Japan: “Word has gone to all authorities. COMNAVFORJA-PAN Is requesting assistance. What key lists (of crypto material) do you have left? Please advise if it appears your communication space will be entered.’’ The PT boats kept their distance, for a time. Then one pulled along the Pueblo’s port side and its skipper motioned to Bucher to go faster. Bucher looked down at the PT over the wing of the bridge and shrugged. The Pueblo held her speed. IMPATIENCE SHOWN Impatient, the PT skipper again motioned to Bucher to speed up. Equally impatient, Bucher shouted a stream of untranslatable gibberish and waved his arms in crazy gestures. If the antics did not cemfuse the PT skipper, they at least seemed to satisfy him. He pulled away, and he and the other PTs contented themselves with playing porpoise with the Pueblo, weaving arrogantly back and fofth 30 yards in front of her bow. Bucher needed time. Time to destroy documents. Hme to allow help to arrive. Hme to see for himself how far the destruction had progressed, lime to What would happen if the Pueblo stopped? Just stopped? Bucher decided to try it once more. He rang up full stop and the engine room responded instantaneously. CANNON FIRED So did the North Koreans. The SO-1 wheeled in a spray of foam, sped toward the Pueblo and (g>ened up with its cannon. The I^s raked the vessel with machlneguns. ^ A cannon shell split the hull . like a oiieper apd exploded in the'laUndt^ room. Another . blasted the main mast and showered the deck with debris. A third slammed through the starboard side Into the passageway outside the officers’ staterooms wlwre sailors were burn- ing papers in blazing trashbas-kets and when it explode a cry thigh and chest. Blood pulsed from Bob Chlcca’s thigh and Harry frandell’a legs. Bits of red flesh splattered the bulk- blood soaked thp papers at the door of the Sod Hut so they would not bum. Bucher ordered the ship underway at one-third speed. As she moved the firing stopped, except for occasional machine-gun bursts. He gave the con to Lacy and went below to check the damage. •HE’S DYING’ Corpsman Baldridge was ministering to Hodges and Woelk in the wardroom. Bucher examined both men and asked Baldridge if he were going to amputate what remained of Hodge’s leg. Baldridge shook his head. He told Bucher he needed morphine, and Bucher said to find Lt. Murphy, who was narcotics control officer, and get it. “For God’s sake help this man,’’ Bucher said, “he’s dying.’’ Baldridge knew as much. He' gave both men drugs, elevated their legs, covered them . Bucher made his way through the mess of papers and gore and smoke to the Sod Hut. ’The door was locked. He pounded on it How about some help? These guys mean business. Have sustained small wound In rectum. Do not Intend to offer any resistance. Do not know how long will be able to hold up circuit and do not know if communication spaces will be entered.’’ Japan; “Roger. Roger. We doing all we can. COMNAVF-ORJAPAN on hotline. Last I got was Air Force gonna help you with some aircraft but can’t really say as commander coordinating with I presume Korean force for some FlOSs but this is unofficial, but I think that’s what will happen. Keep on the air as long as you can. We staying right with you.” a message to Japan notifying them that he would not be able to complete destruction? Buchei' asked again If all the crypto was destroyed. Harris assured him it was. Bucher assumed the three large bags he had seen in the Sod Hut were by now at the bottom of the sea and did not bother to ask Harris if that were the case. He told Harris to go ahead and send the message. Bailey; “Roger. Will keep this (circuit) up until the last minute and sure could use some help Japan: “Roger. Roger. We still with you and doing all we can. Everyone really, turning to, and figure by now Air Force got some birds winging, your way.” BUSY DESTROYING Bailey; “Sure hope so. We’re pretty busy with this destruction right now. Can’t see for the Japan; “Who I got that end of circuit? What status of classified material left to destroy?” Bailey: “We have the K2KW7, KW7 and some cards. The 3 and 14 left to smash. Think that just about it. Destruction of publics, tions has been Ineffective. Suspect several will be compromised.” NARRATIVE DESTROYED At 1425 Tim Harris went to his stateroom to check for classified material. He found none, returned to the pilot house and destroyed the narrative he had been keeping. Bucher likewise tossM his tape recorder over Murphy went below to check stateroom and saw Ralph ed there applying a battle and when it opened he saw the men sprawled amid the documents. Machinegun fire rattled against the hull. “Get the hell off the deck and turn to with this destruction!” he shouted. The sight of the supine crewmen was not all that startled Bucher. He also saw three large bags—he -assumed they were mattress covers—jammed full of documents. It astonished him that there was that much classified material aboard. “Let’s get rid of this stuff,” he said to Lt. Harris. MEN DOING BEST The men were doing their best. Sledges and fire axes were flying. Trashbaskets blazed in the Sod Hut office and in the passageway, where the heat blistered and warped the bulkheads. Teams of men were stuffing into bags the papers scattered a foot deep on the pas-sagewhy deck. The papers had been bagged once, but men emptied the bags when someone had the idea to pile all the papers on the deck and set fire to the whole passageway. Burthen someone else .remembered that the fuel tanks were beneath the passageway. Lt. Harris ordered the papers bagged up again. At least one bag was tossed over the side. Peter Langenberg ran to the rail and dumped it even though he had been wounded slightly In the neck on a previous trip to the side with handfuls of equipment. area commander and they in turn coordinating for whatever action gotta be taken. Sure process already being initiated for some immediate relief. COMNAVFORJAPAN got all info.” From his own observation and from what Harris told him, Bucher reckoned it would take another half hour to get everything destroyed, or nearly everything. A,tM^ he went Wiethe radio compartment and drafted a hurried message to Japan: THREE WOUNDED “Havt been requested to follow into Wonsan. Have three /one niM with leg Duane Hodga’s leg was gone and half his abdomen. Hot shrapnel ripped open Steven Woelk’g pelvis and out Into hls« weapons nor uncovered .60 far aWay. . The situation was very vague,” said the admiral. Later it would be argued that when Bucher radioed he had not uncovered his guns or shot back, the Navy had implied consent for his action by telling him nothing. REACHES WHITE HOUSE 1515; Walt Rostow, President Johnson’s security adviser, reached the White House. 1611: The first F195s-twe of them—toric .off .from .Okinawa bound for Osan, South Korea, 650 miles away, to refuel. They were to be on the ground there 20 minutes. Flying time from . Osan to Wonsan was 28 .minutes. McKee thought his planeS could handle seme of toe North Korean planes such as the MIG 17s. But against the MI G81s, it would be “nip and tuck.” And toe 105s were not carrying lir-to-air rockets because’ it would have taken too much titoe to mount their launching rolls. They were flying Into an area that had an air base only 25 miles from the. stte of the seizure with 65 MIG 17s and five MIG 21s. It was defondod by 14 antiaircraft battwies of six guns and two SAM ground-to-air missile sites. FIOSs From Qklnawa Woro Orjj^y ' Phtm$ Airhorno And Wo^o Too Lato D"^4 THE POXTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY. NOVEMBEK 11, HUH) Colt Saddles a Lion Two arms against one. It isn't really fair, but Bill Munson does his best to ward off big Lou Michaels of the Baltimore Colts in their game in 1968 in Tiger,. Stadium. Munson played most of last season with a shoulder injury. Photos on this page by The Pontiac Press, Associated Press and United Press International Steeler Finds His Prey This isn't a Sunday afternoon tango. It could be more compared to a Steeler gathering fuel for the Pittsburgh steel mill blast furnaces. Defensive tackle Chuck Hinton accomplishes his objective, making Munson fumble the ball. ^ Ram on the Prowl Deaton Dave Jones of the Los Angeles Rams is one of the best QB hunters in pro football a(td Bill Munson is just about to find out why. Munson figures a tfuarterback gets hit on 75 per cent of the passing plays even if he has released the pigskin. Longest Hunting Season—for QB's By BRUNO L. KEARNS Sports Editor, Pontiac Press Every hunter has his season — for ducks, pheasants, bear, deer and, most kind of edible animals. But in the violent world of pro football the open season on quarterbacks runs from August when exhibition play starts through January when the season ends with the championship games. The only thing the big defensive hunters haven’t done js to mount the heads of the quarterbacks as the game hunters do with their prize horned heads. A famous incident was in the 1956 game in Chicago against the Bears when Ed Meadows hit Layne early in the second period after the Lions’ QB had pitched out to Gene Gedman. Without Layne, who suffered a brain concussion and shoulder injury, the Lions lost 38-21 and lost the division championship to the Bears by a half game. THEN BROKEN LEG The next season at Tiger Stadium big Don Colo of the Cleveland Browns hit Layne so hard it broke the QB’s ankle. The Lions stiil won the game 20-7 and it was then that Tobin Rote finished the season and led the Lions to the championship. ★ ★ ★ “I think most quarterbacks remember the player who hits them at the time of injuny,” said Bill Munson, current Lions’ quarterback who has been out of action with a broken hand since the October. 12 game with the Green Bay Packers. In this case, Munson wasn’t hit. It was he who hit Dave Robinson’s helmet while throwing a pass. Munson himself suffered a broken leg I in 1966 while with the Rams and he could ) never forget the player who made the tackle. “It was my roommate while at Utah State, Clark Miller of the 49ers, who hit me,’’ said Munson, “he didn’t do it deliberately, he just caught me while I was off balance.’’ “I think the Bears have always been the toughest on quarterbacks: Maybe Its because I still remember my rookie year with the Rams and maybe the Bears tried to rattle me. but there was more ankle twisting in that game than I ever experienced.” “Generally speaking though, I don’t think there’s a deliberate motive to injure the quarterback. If the defensive player has a shot at the quarterback to stop him from passing, he’ll take it.” Today however, one of the big statistics of the game is the number of times a quarterback is thrown by the defensive team. „ “1 figure a quarterback gets hit at least 75 per cent of the time,” said Munson,” even though it’s only recorded when it goes for lost yardage. “If I throw 20 passes, I expect to get hit 15 or 16 times, most of which is when the defensive player’s momentum carries him into the quarterback after the ball is released.” Munson like all other quarterbacks also remembers from what position the hunters come at him when it happens too frequently. * * ★ “Sure, I’ve had a few words with many linemen if it happens too often in a game,” said Munson, “it happens a lot with today’s red dogging linebackers and safety blitzes, but you know who’s not doing his job on man-to-man pass protection.” The Lions, who have always been known as a tough defensive team, have a few trophies of their own. Most famous game as far as hitting the quarterback was the Thanksgiving Day game in 1962 when they dropped Bart Starr of the Padkers 11 times for 93 yards. In 1965, they hit Starr again 11 times for 107 yards at Green Bay. This year the Minnesota Vikings and Los Angeles Rams are big QB hunters in. the league. The Vikings have gorged themselves officially with quarterback ala mode 35 times and the Rams 37 times, and in pro football this season at least nine quartebacks have been put into feeze either temporarily or permanently by the stalking defensive hunters. Victim of Browns' Don Colo Helped by Dr. Richard Thompson (left) Bobby Layne was wheeled off the field with a broken leg in the game Dec. 8, 1957 after he was hit by Don Colo of the Cleveland Browns. The Lions defeated the Browns, 20-7, ahd then went on to win the NFL championship, whipping the Browns in the title game, 59-14, behind Tobin Rote at quarterback. Viking Goes Lion Hunting Minnesota's Car/ Eller is the hunter and Lions' Greg Landry is the hunted in this picture. Getting hit from "the blind" as quarterbacks call it, is always the most dangerous hazard to health. Landry was shot down eight times in the game lost by the Lions, 24-10, in Minneapolis this season. The Vikings are noted for their big hunting days for quarterbacks each Sunday. "m « Pro Football's Blitz When the term "blitz" came into being by the German bombing of London in World War II, little did Bill Munson realize he would be one of the "blitz" victims in 1969. Green Bay's Ray Nitschke does the blitzing in this September game at Tiger Stadium. Lions' Biggest Delicacy The Lions are by no means always the hunted as Bart Starr of the Green Bay Packers knows. The most times Starivhas ever been hit in one game for lost yardage passing was 11 times on Thanksgiving Day 1962. Here Starr has Joe Robb (84), Alex Karras (hitting low) and Jerry Rush as his hunters In a 1968 game won by the Lions, 23-17. f THK PONTIAC PllKSS, TCKSDAY, NOVK.MHKR II, limil MAMETS The followingvre top prices covering sales q locally grown produce by gro4rs and sold by them in wholesie package lots Quotations are lirnished by the Detroit I Friday. 'Youth Wage' Prices Continue to Taper Of/1 Below 11.60 Hit Early Trading Is Moderate U. S. Airlines Wear Glum Look in Private By JOHN CUNNIFP AP BusincM Analyst NEW YORK - What’s this, the airlines laying off workers? Why, isn't this the same indus- Produce NEW YORK (AP) - Sttek Marketras’ ot P‘‘‘“s continued a tapering.^ff that began late Monday, as le-dines jumped off to an eaay lead in moderate trading todw. The Dow Jones industrial w. erage at 10:30 a.m.‘ dropped to ^^ 862.06, off 0.99. Early New York In stock Exchange prices inclui Labor Sure to Joinj2,^S^ and much belt-tightening by most other lines, Is the earnings situation. It’s very poor. Shultz WASHINGTON (AP) or bu.siness with a hold on the A future, the won- urn 24%, up %; and Mead Corp.| Some analysts said Friday’s 23%, off %. rally was kept boiling early Opening block trades includ-j Monday because investors were ed: I buoyed by the stability of the Bethlehem Steel, 7,800 shares market and its ability to break at 29% unchanged: Chrysler I the 860 Dow Jones level. Some |,jgj,Vipyg|‘NiVon administrationbusines 8,500 shares at 40%, off ‘/»: Gen-'said the market had been doing! is developing over a pro-^^at will trans-eral Motors, 5,000 shares at I well to move upward without pgsal initiated in the White o.s into to-74%, off %: Pan American'much fuel, such as outside stim-'i]o\js(. jq ggt a special "youth ”’”'''’”'''’ World Airways, 16,000 shares at ulating developments. wage’’ below the federal mini-' same. 14%, off %; Groller, 70,000| Of the American Stock Ex-.^um wage of $160 per hour T*’® problems, ° however, are I disappointing. Planes are being hijacked. People complain more and more about airport noise. The airports are congested. Access roads are c 1 o g g e d . In the first three months of There aren’t enough traffic this year, the Air Transport controllers. * {Association reports, the scheduled airlines suffered a Benguet 16%, up %, American shares at 32, unchanged; Ben-|change’s 20 most active Issues, CIJNNIFF I Viritty, bu. .... 2.35 Beyond the next few years there is an additional problem , - - I Secretary of Commerce Mau-i"""';,;''"*’of financing supersonic aircraft, S.W Smelting 33%, up %; Lums Inc, guet, 25,000 shares at 18%, upilO opened lower, 7 higher and 3 rjee H Stans has endorsed thei'^‘‘^ present. The public dealing with the sonic '25%, off %; Occidental Petroln.|v4, and 39,400 shares at 16%. (were unchanged. i^ea. but a spokesman for Sec-li?'“*® airlines is a roman- 1,^^ 13—---------------------r—--------------------------------------------»> p Shultz said “he wouW be op-1 reality and!"““‘®«' And perhaps the biggest problem of all is how to finance those huge new jets that someday might make profits but which now represent an outlay of more than $2 billion a year. ADDED PROBLEM net loss of 816.2 million. A profit of $67 million was made in the next three months, b u t preliminary and u n o f f 1 c 1 a 1 figures indicate no real Improvement i n July-Augusl-September. The New York Stock Exchange as 44Va 44% 44% + % a 47% . - ~s— 31 27% 27 2 38% 38V* .. . II 41% ,41% 41% + % 32 33% 33% 33% 1 zm 39% 39V4 - V4 26 38% 38% 38% - Va 51 52% 52% 52% - w Hc reportedly said the 24 27'/4 27V< 23 46Va *HW4 15 37'/i 37'/« 37’/« 3 47Vi 47V4 47^j 24 23^ 23 43 45W 44v 22 '234)1 23/3 52 Sa'/i 58t ■" 55 51 <74 51 25 30'A 30'.* 30'/4 — th n won’t matter to me. It seems nested in 6 75% 7% and 8% , to me by switching to other ^onds. We also have 600 shares . . . bonds I would still get the same af American Hospital Supply. 62 27% 26% 26% + % ® spccial, lower wage; income and also have cash to jgpi that the orosnects S IS SS « 2« « Pf V”” '"'iPtoy In.™ • KLOCK, THEODORE (TED) NovemBer 8, 1969 ; 34 Evelyn Court; age 22; beloved son of Mr. and Mrs. Edward W, Klock; dear brother of Mrs. Robert Irwin, Mrs. P a u Mahaffey, Evelyn Lucile «Joseph D., Margaret, Henr; D. and Edward W. Klock Ji Funeral service will be hel Wednesday, November 12 11 a.m. at the Sparks-Griff Fuperal Home. Interment Riverside Cemeter Kalamazoo. Mr. Klock will in state at the funeral horn (Suggested visiting hours 3 5 and 7 to 9.) Look light, feel lighthearted in this young dress that zips up quickly to a scooped neck front and back. Choose carefree blends, cotton. ; Printed Pattern 4917: New iHalf Sizes 12>/3, 14'A, 16Vi, |l8Me, 20Mi, 22V4. Size 14% (bust 37) takes 3Vi yds. 35-lin. i Sixty-five cents In coins for each pattern — add 15 bents for each pattern for first-class mailing and special handling. Send to Anne Adams, care of The Pontiac Press, 137, Pattern Dept., m West 17th St., New York, N.Y. 10011. Print name, address with zip, size and style number. DR. EDWARD B. DIETHRICH federal matching grant to hire faith reflected first” in the fact ^___ ^ 17 police officers. It would cost that fewer nuns and priests are Aviation” Commission will ' the township a total of $412,500 available as teachers and also reimburse $15,000 of a proposed «nT m/ for three years. that supporters or particular * ★ ★ faiths are less willing to give • Passed a new ordinance the same proportionate share of authorizing the police chief to income as they did 30 years ago call an auction for unclaimed to maintain their r e 1 i g i o u s stolen property after six schools. $36,000 cost to build a crossover |3g ™corded put, wh«re such parmioni from the east-wext taxi strip to p"an^ "ioi"’avtn an apron in front of a new air-freight building being erected^M3^.f by Frank Cryderman. |of tha chartar tow™iwp «J '“sVllev; Cryderman is to pay another j watarforn. Township citrk ,. months. * * * $10,183 to continue the strip to; Okayed an ordinance "Those parents who genuinely his property, county officials The new building is being drunk persons, can be pro-Children will do what i s greeted on the Hi^land side of ' secuted under the disorderly necessary to maintain their jhe airfield, and the apron In persons ordinance. schools without interference or gf his building eventually • Approved an ordinance domination by the state,” will connect with the ramp in amendment allowing property Mazey said. front of the terminal, according owners to split an adjoining lot r * * present development plans. Noted doctors from aroundP''®P®f‘y “T® abandon the principle of I w w IX a ^ W U «1I liluac pmemo v»uu g'-n Nnfen Doctors provldng that in-desire to have e d u c a t i o n gay I 4' toxicated persons, in addition to permeated by religion for their to Appear at Local Forum the country are scheduled to have less than the state re- separation of church and state speak at St. Joseph Mercy 65 feet in width Hospital’s annual clinic tomor-; row. The forum on Clinical im« munology will feature Dr. Edward B. Diethrich, assistant professor of the department of | surgery at Baylor University i College of Medicine. He has| been involved in open heart! surgery. i ; * * * The State Municipal Finance! Other speakers include Dr..commission has approved Bernard B. Levine of New York issuance of $8.5 million inj University Medical Center, Dr. county general obligation bonds! Kamran S. Moghissi of Wayne | to pgy part of the cost of con-‘ State University School 0 f struction of the Huron-Rouge Sewer Bonds Get State OK an effort to bail out what some claim to be financial plight of parochial schools, I think would open a Pandora’s AMENDMENT TD ORDINANCE NO.« the township of white lake ORDAINS THE FOLLOWING AMEND-MElJt TO OIWINANCE NO. « Articli III—Partlllonlng or dlvlilpn of lots, outlols or olhor porctit of lind In a '*Arlfcle Hl**’ls hereby amend fo read box thaV would not only greatly l^jhiji^ng m ,byjh«; weaken religious liberties but wi.h^ihe^whiu ^L.k^ drasUcally undermine t h e in^ «i..ing^r^^^^^^ public school system in ‘he|whH.^L.k.^Toj^^^^^^^^^^^ state, he said. ishBlI, m rggird to wldthp dopth am mint Wife Stands Mute i; on Murder Charge ; being Ordinance^, No. 2M of Fubllc Acta TT,- Tt-llinl 1)' Lillie' ’ iit »,”j Ao 18-ycar-old housewife, Further providing, li Medicine and Dr. Elliot r. LlliSisewage disposal system. Walled .. „«c»prHav at her'"s nf Ilnivoreifv rifPrilnrarini,. ' StOOd mUte yeSterOay at ner,Town>Wp Board from approving tho dl- of University of coioraao Lake Arm. arraiarimpni on an nnen charce '1' "•'’"I Medical Center. 'rv.„ ---... arraignment on an open cnarge , caso whor# the owner of I7d,h? The county intends to seek , murdering her 28-ycar-old rap: arty to tha awnar. Tha fawnrtlp board, ■hall not approva •ny^eldl"’* mart than ilx manttn attar tin Tha Chlaf of Polica dlipatiiM of prop- ***l("any iMtian or pravlilon e r;}Wr.S!:i!..r«.M: Thit ordininca ihail bteamt affacti' upon publlctflan. Mtda and paaiM by fha TRwnihlp Beard of tha Charl«r Townthip.of watarford, Oakland C^n, ty.^MIrtldan. Thli Jri day of Nov>^m.' bOr. l^, J. SALLEY, NW,ri5*, RUDOLPH, HENR November 7, 1969; 5734 roll Lake -Road, Comm^ce Twp.; age 79. Funeral sei ice will be held W e d n e s d November 12, at 11 a.n the Elton Black Fune Home, Union Lake. Interi ent in Commerce Cemetery^hfr Rudoph will lie in state funeral home. SCHERMERHORN, EDk )ND D.; November 9, 1969; 8265 Dequindre Road, Roch iter age 76; dear father of Mrs Frank (Virginia) brother of Mrs. John t*tkins, Charles, William, Fri Oscar SchwmerhwnJ also survived by two children. Funeral]! will be held W i day, November 12, p.m. at the Funeral Home. Inti Perry Mount Park Mr. Schermefhorn state at the fiinei'l ii^ggest^ visiting OaklaiM luMn ax Caur^ Death Notices Bf^NETT, CURTIS D.; November 9, 1960; 2562 Pre-mont, WateHord Twp.; age 73; dear father of Donald E.' and William K. BarneU; dear brother ol Mn. Minnie Amitt and Claude Barnett; also survived by thn nd one great- 3TENERSEN,, IDA IM A E November 9, 1989; M Ferry St.; age 8ft; belovel wife of Hans Stenersen. ice will be held Wdi®9day November 12, at II $.m. at A good-looking, cozy jacket is a girl’s best friend. Star of separates wardrobe! Knit star-stitch jacket with, without sleeeves. Has single crochet band collar, border. Pat. 809; New sizes 14-20 incl. Size 14 (bust 36). Fifty cents in coins for each pattern — add 15 cents for each pattern for 1st-class mailing and special handling. Send to Laura Wheeler, (The Pontiac Press, 12 4 Needlecratt Dept., Box 161, Old C3ielsea Station, New York, N.Y. 10011. Print Pattern Number, Name, Address, Want A(ds For Action To Buy, Rsnt, Ssll or Trade Use Pontiac Press WANT ADS \ Office Hour$i ' ft am. to'S p.m. Concellotlon Deadline 9 a.m. Day Following First Inisrtion hi MMoriam 2 IN MSMORY OF OUR btlovM fPtiMr png Br«ndl(lh(r Floyil E. WMltpy, who piMMl awiy 3 y*iri iMNpy. II, 1347. I net foF^in Pathtr tfMr IT ihall you to; .. J as lifs and mamary last W''m'iK!8"ll?'’yorch,M«h .hd For Wont . is Dio| 334-4981 CUlil I^TICES ........1 ........3 ........3 Florists.....1............3-A Funeral Dlr-sctb.............4 Cemstiiy Lotsl.............4-A Ptrsonals .................4-B Lost and Founq...............5 Help Wanted MI.............. Help Wanted Fenalc........ 7 Help Wanted JVI or F. .... 8 Sales Help, Mak-Female...8-A Employment Aoijcles.......9 Employment Infobatlon ...9-A Instructions-Schlols......10 Work Wanted IVlIo.........11 Work Wanted Finolt........12 Work Wonted Cobles ...,12-A SERVICES (fFERED Building Servli Veterinary . Business Service Bookkeeping end taxes.....16 Credit Advise Income Tax Servici ........19 Laundry Service ...........20 Convalescent-Nurs|g .......21 Moving arid Truckitjg......22 Painting and Decoititlng....23 Television-Radio Service...24 Upholstering ......k.....24-A Transportation ...|........25 Insurance.........\........26 Deer Processing .........x2P WANTED Wanted Children to Board..28 Wanted Household (bods...29 Wanted Miscellaneous.......30 Wanted Money ....(.........31 Whnted to Rent ...1........32 Share Living Quartert......33 Wanted Real btato..........36 RENTALS OFFEkED Apartments-Fumished........37 Apartments-Unfurnishid ...38 Rent Houses, Fumishek ....39 Rent Houses, Unfurnisled.. .40 Property Management;.. ,40-A Rent Lake Cottages.........41 Hunting Accommodottoris 41-A Rent Rooms............><>«>42 Rooms With Board ........43 Rent Farm Property.........44 Hotel-Motel Rooms......... .45 Rent Stores ...............46 Rent Office Spoca..........47 Rent Business Property...47-A Rent Miscellaneous ........48 REAL ESTATE sale Houses ................49 Income Property............50 Lake Property..............51 Northern Property ......51-A Resort Property ...........52 Suburban Property..........S3 Lots-Acreage ...............54 Sale Farms ................56 Sole Business Property ....57 Sale or Exchange...........58 FINANCIAL easiness Opportunities.....59 Sole Land Contracts........60 Wanted Coritracts-Mtges...60-A Money to Lend .............61 Mortgage Loons .............62 MERCHANDISE swaps .....................63 Sale Clothing .............64 Sole Household Goods.......65 Antiques ..........'.....65-A Hi-Fi, TV & Radios.........66 Water Softeners...........66-A For Sale Misceltanaoos .... 67 Christmas Trees..........67-A Christmas Gifts..........67>B Hand Tools-Machinery.......68 Do It Yourself ............69 Cameras-Servico ...........70 Musical Goods..............71 Music Lessons ............71«A Office Equipment...........72 Store Equipment ............73 Sporting Goods.............74 Fishing Supplies-Boits.....75 Sond-Gravel-DIrt ...........76 Wood-Coal-Coke-Fuel .... 77 Pets-Huntipg Doi|S ........79 Pet Supplies-Service.....79-A Auction Sales ..............80 Nurseries..................81 Plonts-Trees-Shrubs ....8T*A Hobbies and Supplies.......82 FARM MERCHANDISE livestock .................83 Meats ...................83-A Hay-Grain-Feed ............84 Poultry.................. 85 Farm Produce...............66 Farm Equipment............87 AUTOMOTIVE Travel Trailers ............88 Housetrollers...............89 Rent Trailer Space........90 Commercial Trailers .90-A Auto Accessories ..VLU...91 Tires-Auto>Tryck .........92 Auto Service ; ............93 Motor Scooters.............94 Motorcycles ................93 Bicycles ................. 96 Boots-AeeissorlM ........97 Airplanes...................99 Wanted Cors*Trucks ......101 Junk Cors’Trucks......x.lOLA Used Auto-Truck Ports ...102 New ond Used Ttucks .... .103 Auto-Morlne Insurance ...104 Foreign Core..............10S New and Used Cars.........IQft