V X U'J ? -1 « - ^ < X 3 iif L- L ) li U 11 o vj c L L con PA n'' The Weather U.S. WMtliir •mail C®ld THE PONTIAC PRESS Home Edition VOL. 125 — NO. 33 ★ ★ ★ ★ PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, MARCH 16, 1967 —84 PAGEh -C/0 Pullout ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. (AP) - Walter ’P. Reuther plans to ask representatives of 200,000 skilled tradesmen in the United Auto Workers for endorsement of his threat to pull the I.4-million-meinber union out of the AFL-CIO. Unless there is a last-minute change in plans, delegates to the UAW’s 12th international skilled trades conference will be asked to support Reiither’s charge that the labor movement is “vegetating” under leadership of the AFL-CIO’s president, George Meany, 73. The conference opened today. tomorrow or Saturday among 1,300 delegates from practically every UAW local union in the United States and Canada. himself as a savior of mankind, being more interested in world affairs than in sad and-butter union affairs. ficials to give up committee assignments under the Executive Council. A vote most likely will be called for A vote on the threatened pullout had not been anticipated before a UAW general convention m betroit April 20-22. The 59-year-old Reuther delayed until tomorrow his keynote speech to toe three-day conference, and associates forecast he would go into differences with toe AFL-CIO’s ruling Executive Councii, which he has said is made up of “ancient men of labor out of step with toe times.” Meany has accused Reuther of viewing The UAW’s 26-member International executive Board recently laid down what virtually amounted to an ultimatum to toe 13.5-million-member federation. On top of that, the board said it would ask authority from toe April general convention to withdraw the union from the AFL-CIO when and if the board thinks it advisable. It said in effect: Reconstruct yourself or we get out. At the same time the UAW’s board ordered Reuther to resign as AFL-CIO vice’ president, which automatically took him off the Executive Council. It also told three other top UAW of- Reuther contends his'differences with Meany are “not matters of personalities, prestige and power” but are “programs, policies and principles.” Some have accused Reuther of attempting to force Meany out and gain the presidency for himself. F J. Poole Is Named 1967 UF Chairman Replacement for Lodge Top Crisis Diplomat The appointment of Frederick J. Poole as general chairman of the 1967 Pontiac Area United Fund campaign was announced today iy Bruce J, Annett, president of the fund’s board of trustees. , appointing, a campaign cabipet to head the major Advance Gifts, Commercial, GM Industrial, Residential, Manufacturing and Promotion divisions. Poole, president of the F. J. Poole Co., succeeds Dr. Don 0. Tatroe, Waterford Township superintendent of schools, who headed last year’s campaign efforts which netted a record $1,042,107. Monies raised during the drive, occurring in October, provide operking expenses for the 55 agencies affilihted with the fund. In accepting the appointment, Poole said, “The job ahead is a tremendous challenge requiring over 5,000 volunteers who share my belief in 'jtoe work and worth of the Pcmtiac Area United Fund. The appointment marks the 19th chairman to this position since the Pontiac Area United Fund was organized in 1949 as the second consolidated United Fund organization in toe country^ In the next few- weeks, Poole will be ‘GIVER’S ORGANIZATION’ “Tfie concept of a United Fund is that of a giver’s organization those who give volunteer time and voluntary contributions. It beldings to the community which supports it. It serves our community needs directly and is responsive to change and growth as our community changes and grows. (Continued on Page A-10, Col. 1) WASHINGTON (AP)-President Johnson is sending his top crisis diplomat, 72-year-old Ellsworth Bunker, to Vietnam to. replace retiring Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge. RECOVERING AT HOME - Seven-year-old Peter Kohnpn III, mauled by. four dogs in the yard of his Independence Township home at 4630 Ihdianwood, Feb. 25, watches a program on a television set presented to Him yesterday by Pontiac Polirt Sgt. Hugh Stimson (left) and deputy Sheldon Stites. The set was present^ by the Pontiac Police Officers Association and the Oakland County Sheriff’s office. FREDERICK J. POOLE Bunker’s immediate task will be to assure success of efforts already under way to form a new, constitutional South Vietnamese government. _ ’The Lodge resignation and Bunker appointment, suddenly announced by Johnson yesterday, were the most important changes in a far-reaching shakeup of the U.S. Embassy staff to Saigon. No changeover date was announced, how- 52-Cent Refund Lawsuit . Challenges County Taxing Area Man bies in Plane Crash Pontiac Finance Study Group Stays Unchanged on Tax Stand The overhaul reportedly reflc^its a determination by the President to put new emphasis , on trying to develop po- Relaied Story, Page D-8 A lawsuit filed yesterday challenging Oakland County’s 19*66 tax levy procedure and asking for a 52-cent refund was WAYNE RUUNG viewed by County Board of Auditors Chairmari Daniel T. Murphy as a guidance maneuver intiated by Wayne County. the new courthouse wing and $54,530 for drain assessments. Wayne County’s corporation counsel reportedly made an opposite ruling which stymied efforts of Wayne County budget officials to spread an added levy. An Orchard Lake man was killed last night when the private plane he was flying crashed into a frozen lake near Plymouth, Indl Indiana State Police said Norman J. - Magill, 40', of 4715 Dublin died when his single-engine Cessna 210 plunged through the ice an hour and a half after taking off from LaPorte, Ind., 50 miles away, at 10:30 p.m. » Thomas Ellis, owner of the plane and Magill’s employer at the A & E Tool fiArvinp Tnpr npfrnlt leniH hA Ici JBy DAVID J. COOK A city income tax remains a recommended source of future revenue for Pontiac following a brief meeting last night of the Pontiac Finance Study Ct»m-mittee (PFSC). Acting committee jtoairman Edward E. Barker Jr. said wer the meeting the group’s refusal Fehf 3 to support a property tax increase ‘/would stand.” Service, IncL Detroit, isaid he knows of nd reason for the crash or for the time lapse betwelen takeoff and the accident. “He left yesterday morning to go to Muskegon and Gary, Ind., and he called me last night to say he would stay overnight in Gary as he didn’t want to fly back" at night,” Ellis said. “He was an extremely well-qualified pilot, in fact he used to manage an airport near Elkhart, Ind.” Ellis said he heard that Magill circled Plymouth and the lake a few times then plunged straight down. Magill, who h^d been employed at the tobl company about six months, lived in Orchard Lake with his wife dnd two daughters. Barker said, hwever, that the PFSC revenue subcommittee would meet within 12 days to Work out “definite recommendations on revenue” based on the City Commission’s appraisal of needed expenditures. • Restoration^of $75,000 to the parks and recreation bildget, slashed by that same amount in 1962; • Improved street lighting at a cost of $30,000;.- • Stepped-up housing inspection, costing $40,000; • In 1968, addition of four firemen at an expense of, $42,000. NO ALLOWANCE The schedule makes no allowance fon further city employe pay increases through Dec. 31 of this year, but anticipates 1968 salary adjustments up to $275,000.. (Continued on Page A-2, Col. 4) , litidal stability in the Southlyietnamese capital and to step up pacification of the war-ravaged countryside. . “We’re being the goat,” Murphy said when he learned of the suit filed by attorney Louis G. Basso and his wife, Margaret, who own property at 968 Purdy, Birmingham. Named to Basso’s suit as defendants are Oakland County, County Treasurer James E. Seeterlin, toe County Tax Allocation Board, Birmingham Treasurer R. T. Berger and the City of Birmingham. The suit ciaims the tax levy in excess of the 15-mill limitation was illegal and calls for a refund to the plaintiffs. Basso is the son of Wayne County budget director Louis Basso. Seeterlin and Oak Park assessor Donald A. Melchert were the only perstSis who strongly objected to Allen’s ruling that the bonding levy was constitutional. Seeterlin last October requested that the board of supervisors seek an opinion from the State Attorney General but no action was taken. •akland County Corporation llobert P. Alien ruled that the could exceed the 15-mill Jifnita-lion to pay bonding obligations of $236,500 due the County Building Authority on ‘VOTE NEEDED’ “I still feel that any tax levy over the 15-mill limitation should be approved only by a vote of the people,” Seeterlin said today. A two-year schedule of conunission-supported expenditures was presented to the committee last night by City Manager Joseph A. Warren. The ptoposed improvements through pmp< 1968 include: • .Addition of 38 policemen at a cost of $325,“- 17 City Policemen/ 8 Citizens Honored By JIM LONG second annual police awards ceremony 25,500; . " Sevent^^Pontiac policemen and eight held in the City Commission chamber at • New police equipment costing $40,- citizens yesterday were awarded certifi- city Hall, 000; , cates of meritorious service by Police • Expenditure of $150,()00 on local chief William K. Hanger. The guest speaker. Circuit Judge Fred- street maintenance; ★ ★ ★ crick C. Ziem, prefaced his remarks ________________ The citations were presented at the by commending Hanger and police for the way the department has been operating. Ziem said he disagreed with some of these decisions. “The policeman’s job has always been a difficult one,” said Ziem, “but recent Supreme Court decisions have made the job more difficult.” « “But I will follow the law as it is, pot as I wish it were,” said Ziem. In Today's Press Yesterday's Snow: One for the Books Prep Tourney County’s last hope. Country Day, loses in Class C.PAGE D-1. Yesterday’s snow was a figment^ of the imagination. Unpfedicted and unheralded except by the Farmer’s Almanac—which everyone knows is based on unscientific superstition and old wives’ tales—the one-toch accumulation'was not to be believed. Aijeg News Stones on West Bloomfield volunteer firemen^ White Lake rezoning protest are featured. — PAGE E-3. Jaycees' Event Annual North Oakland home and sports show starts tomorrow. — SEE 'TAB. Allergy Serie]| ......... B-10 Area News ................ E-3 Astrology ................E-4 Bridge . . ,..........E4 Crossword Puzzle' ...... E-18 Comics .................... E4 Editorials .............. A-6 Food Section ........ C-2, C-3 Markets E-5 Obituaries E-6 Sports .............. D-1—D-6 ’Theaters * E-2 TV-Radio Programs E-13 WiUon, Earl E-18 Women's Pages .......B-1—B-5 Thirteen degrees was the low in downtown Pontiac prior to 8 a.m. The U.S. Weather Bureau said today would be partly cloudy and cold with highs varying from 30 to 36. Tonight there’s a chance of snow flurries with lows of 14 to 20. The outlook for tomorrow is the same. P..S. The Almanac has no more snow warnings listed for this year. LI’L ONES m e “They talk about inflation. A guy can’t even get sick* on a quarter any more.” Five officers were recognized for their part to clearing up an armed robbery of People’s Food Market, 263 Auburn, ’ on Jan. 19. They are patrolmen Joseph Gallardo, Stanley D. Helgemo, Neil R. McCw-mack, 0. Keith Kissinger and Raymond V. Solwold. Gallardo, McCormack, Sgt. Earl W. Skrobeck and Patrolmen Travis A. Lively each received two citations. SECOND AWARD Gallardo received his second award for his initiative that led to the arrest of three persons for forgery on April 1, 1966. McCormack’s other citation was for his part in the arrest of ah armed bandit and an accompiice who held up the Clark Service Station, 382 Orchard Lake, bn Nov. 9, 1966. • The two awards presented to Skrobeck were for the arrest of two men for the attempted burglary of the Eagles Lodge in January 1966; and the arrest of a man involved to the blreak-ins of toe Minit Lunch and Triple X restaurants Novepiber. Lively was honored for toe captur* of a burglar in the Coca Cola Bottling Co,', 1130 Wide Track, on May 10, 1961^ and for preventing a forcible rape of « brutally beaten woman behind a bar. OTHER HOMPRS ^ POLICE HONOREi) — Pontiac Police Chief William K. City Hall yesterday. In addition to the policemen, ei^t citizens Hanger (right) addresses 17 policemen who were cited for received awards for assisting toe department in toe apprehen-meritOrious^s^ice at toe second annual awards ceremony at sion of criminals. Other police awards went to: Sgt. Robert W. Verhine for toe Nwr. 25, 1965 apprehension of a juvenile wbo (Continued on Page A-IO, OoL 4) V A—2 THE PONTIAC FRESS. THURSDAY, MARCH 16, 1967 BLOOMFIELD fflLLS - A cut-rate tour of Europe, including some Iron Curtain countries, ■ being sponsored by Cranbrook It will leave Detroit on iuly 10 and return on Aug. 27. Those PMlItc Pr«i Photo - READYING 9PEECH - Dr. Waiter E. JSBarton (right) discusses the functions of Poh-rpiac State Hcapital with Dr. Donalc^,W. Mar- Uh, the hospital’s medical supwintendent, before addressing 140 persons at Kingsley Inn last night on mentdl health end psychiatry. Rental Health Expert Puts Priority on Emergency Care Birmingham Area News Cranbrook Tour to Visit Iron Curtain Countries By JOE MULLEN .' Provision of emergency men-%1 health services mu'st be the starting point for any newly JftbUshed-coiQmunity psychiatry program, a nationally noted psy-'.qiuatrist said-last night. W’’ ★ , ‘ Bpeaking to some 140 persons .Allowing a dinner at Kingsley Iiin, Dr.: Walter E. Barton combed handling an emergency ■mental health problem with fighting a fire. f “When a fire erupts, it nittst ■fcc put out,” he said. “Pre-' vention procedures Mow.” , The medical director of t h e American Psychiatric Association, Gr- Bapton spoke at a din-i|er sponsored by Pontiac State Hospital; ■ •*' ' , -k ,* ■ ^Thou|h his principal topic (jpmmunity mental health, he mborated on the history of §sychiaby, commented, on the s ho r t a g e of trained mental .health administrators and de-%ed charges that Banv Gold-^|ter is against mentdi health mbgraras. l^OGRAMS EVOLVED fDr. Barton noted that many programs of mental health to-are hailed as new develop-f&ents but actually emerged from mental hospital practices dating back many years. V He added that the general decline in die number (rf resident mental patients in hospitals is a result of the im-jirovement in services. Dr. Barton said that public Anoort for community mental health programs has grown'considerably but warned that more people must be trained so re-. quirements can be met. C ★ ★ ★ 'J“’Only 800 psychiatrists are gMning out of universities each year,” he said, should be 1,300.” PSYCHIATRISTS’ RATIO He added t h a 16 per cent of the nation’s physicians are psychiatrists and pointed out that the percentage of women physicians who .become psychiatrists is greater than that of nale physicians. A real challenge to the nation’s present 18,540 psychiatrists is to keep abreast of the continuous flow of new professional information, according to Dr. Barton. ‘This number Barton said that no responsible conservative g r 0 u p opposes mental health progress. He added that Goldwater is a responsible conservative and haf been an active supporter of mental health in his state. The John Birch Society, however, is on record as opposing mental health programs,” Dr. Barton said. The mental health leader launched his after dinner speech with a humorous account of his traumatic experience of leaving balmy Washington, D. C. yester- i t day and arriving in Pontiac dur- ing the peak of the snowstorm, d. “New facts replace old ® ^ ________ In pointing out the shortage ’ trained mental health administrators, he said that Michigan and six other states are seeking an administrator for their state programs. PROBLEMS Among problems arising In community mental health programs, according to Dr. Barton, IS obtaining cooperation hi the sharing of records with other agencies and private praction-!rs. " He speculated that health records of individuals will he on a computer tape in the future and easily accessible when needed. ‘ In governmental units where alcoholism is ruled a disease by the courts, njental health agencies are called upon to provide trwtoent because punishment is nibd out, Dr. Barton said. “This is the situation in Washington, D. C., and the courts there are expected to rule soon that dope addicts can’t be punished,” he added. GOLDWATER ABSOLVED In answer to a question. Dr. 3 New Centers for Head Start Three new centers for Pontiac’s Head Start Program this; fall were accepted by the Pontiac Board of Education last night. The centefi Used in.the training of underprivileged pre- schoolers, will be at the Messiah, nonresident working in the The Weather - Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report . PONTIAC AND VICINITY - Partly cloudy and cold today. SQgh 30 to 30. Variable cloudiness with ^ chance of snow flurries tonight. Low 14 to 20. Friday: Partly cloudy with a chance is snow flurries. -North to ninlhwest winds 8 to IS miles today and tonight. Outlook for Saturday: Partly Cloudy and a little At I rf.m.: Wind Velocity 10 Dieection: Northwest , «rlun sets Thursday at 6:41 p.m. . rises Friday at 6:42 a.m. "paoon sets Friday at 12:20 a.m. :Moon rises Friday at 9:35 a.m. tB Group Stands by Income Tax (Continued From Page One) Longevity pay — described by Warren as “a problem very much with us” is among commission recommendations for fiscal 1968. “Now we have a framework within which to work,” Barker declared after Warren’s 15-minute presentation. ■k * “We now know the areas in which the commission desires to spend the money if it is made available to them.” ACTION BY CITY Asked by Barker if the city had taken action on PFSG recommendations for tighter finance control and reduced city labor expenses, Wafren replied in the affirmative. “We’ve just today announced the appointment of our new finance director (Edward R. Gallagher),” he said, ”and yre ctmslder ourselves very fortunate in obtaining his services. “In addition, we’ve hired s cost accountant'to w6rk closely with our efforts in public works and services this will give us substantial improvement in comparing city costs with contracting costs." ★ Barker, said the tax study committee would meet again March 29, shortly after receiving a final report from its revenue subcommittee. MICHIGAN LAW State law prescribes .city-levied income taxes as 1 per cent on individuals and corporations within the city and % per cent eligible .are jnembers of the Cranbrook iintitutions as well as faculty and members of other state schools. Philosopby behiad the tour is ;to b^ve students meet and share cidpiral tradiflons of young Enniieans. Guides will be provided. The tour will visit England, France, Austria and Iron Curtain nations of- East Germany, Czechoslovakia and Russia. ★ ★ Meetings have been arranged for discussion with young Russians. POINTS OF INTEREST inciuded are visits to Carnaby Street, the new Dior Boutique in Paris, a Grand Prix motor race, ^akespeare Theater, Expressionist Galleries in Paris and the Bolshoi Theater in Moscow. Missionary Baptist Church, St. James Baptist Church and in the Lakeside Housing Project. The locations were recommended by a joint committee of'school and (Hflce of Economic Opportunity officials. The centers are in primarily Negro areas of Districts 1 and 7. ’The committee was formed tpj' investigate new locations after officials of the school board and the OEO met a week ago with Congressman Jack H. McDonald, R-19th District. ★ ' The executive board of tltfe' OEO will receive the recommendations for the new centers at its meeting next week. The Board of Education, in resolution accepting the three wilf noTfie^' d ^ItidlBf^ tribute to the costs of remodeling the centers or to assume the entire 20 per cent local contribution for the $300,000 Head Start program. city. Enters Hospital Morning, cloudy; What this committee now has to determine as far as a recommendation is concerned,” Barker said, “is ‘when’ and ‘how.’ ” If adopted by the commission, an income tax would begin p^o-ducing revenue for the city in January, 1968 - barring a referendum “ahd subsequent election bh the issue. $220 in Articles A w Stolen From Avon Twp. Home Items V a 1 u e d at inoi’e than $220 were stolen from an Avon RiVnship man’s home, it was reported to Oakland County sheriff’s deputies yesterday. A portable radio, two wqjkshes and two cameras were reported- BiRMlNGHAM - Money talks —and those that represent money do too. As proof of this, the American Institute of Banking is running a public speaking contest. . The district finals will be held Saturday at the Birmingham House Motel, Hunter at Maple. Compeflng will be area bank-;rs and money men from Day-ton, FUnt, Cleveland, Toledo, Columbus, Cincinnati, and other points. ★ Winner will compete in the national convention m Detriiit on Late-Breaking News Briefs at a Glance UNITED NA’nONS, N.Y. (AP) - Poland’s ambassador to the United Nations flew home to talk to his government, Canadian Foreign Secretary Paul Martin said new efforts to end the Vietnam war are under way in “several quarters” and a usually well-informed diplomat at the United Nations said lastjjiight.tbat “things am stirring.” WASHINGTON (AP) - Sen. Thomas J. Dodd’s lawyer said today he proposed to show that the Connecticut D e m o c r a t’s former office manager, Michael V. O’Hare, was “a very excellent forger.” The lawyer, John F. Serihdtt, told the Senate Ethics Committee this was his purpose in calling Charles A. Appel Jr., identified as a handwriting expert, to testify in the probe of charges that Dodd misappropriated campaign funds fOf his personal use. LANSING tUPI) - Former House Speaker Joseph-J. Kowal* .21 ski was rushed to a hospital shortly before noon today with what was believed to be a sugar diabetes attack; 11 a.m........25 Alpena 30 1 De» Molntl 40 161 12 m. ........22 Escanaba 27 12 Detroit 41 161 Ip.*........;.20Gr. Rapids 35 11 Duluth 26 131 2 p.m........31 Houohton 10 10 Fort Worth 71 41 p K 61 I _ - _______ ________ 45 27 ^ ipvature ..................35 Atlanta 76 36 Philadelphia 50 20 ,, ----- Bismarck 34 11 SI. Louis 41 23 Robert Robertson Of 1469 : Avon Circle, deputies said. * k k ■ ; Investigators said entry was ■ apparently made by breaking through a front door window. Deputies said they- found a button at the scene believed to be from the burglar’s coat. LANSING (IPI - Gov. GMrge a fight with legislative Democrats over fiscal reform would improve his national political prospects. think there may be some, in the Legislature and elsewhere, who tl^ that preventing a program of tax reform niay be harmful to me politicafly,” Romney trid a news conference. SAGINAW (AP) - A milk ly taken from the home ofhmrier’s truck was sabotaged and dairies began reporting difficulty in buying milk today as the Naticxial Farmers Chgahiza-tion started a milk holdhi^ action in Michigan. State Police said somebody d a m a g e d the milk hauling truck of William V. Woodford of Saginaw either late last night or early today. . 30 11 I______, Marquetta 23 13 U$ Anaalai 'Pension 20 0 Miami Beach ...46 Travers* C.* » *7-N»W Orlehtir .. 24 Albuquerqqe 70 30 New York ., II. ■ ■' ■ ______ 17 26 Tampa heal and Lowest Temperatures Chicago 36 24 Salt Lake C. Thie Dal* In ,»5 Years Cincinnati 40 24 Seattle 04S 4 In 1900 Denver 49 23 Washington What Lent Means to Me 6:^ AP WtregOwt* NATIONAL WEATHER — Snow flurries were forecast -today in the Appalachians and lower Lakes region. Rain ;Will occur along the Pacific Coast with snow in the higher ’^devattom of thh Rodor Mountains, the rest of the. nation Is daiad to have generally fair weather, "* -T^ WILLIAM K. HAmER (EDITOR’S NOTE — This is the 3lst in a series of ^ articles through Lent written py prominent Pontiac area citizens.) ' By WILLIAM K. HANGER Pontiac Chief of Police “To me, Lent is a time fdf self-reexamination aimed at assuring compa^bility with God’s conunandments. In this matm-ialiatia world, it is all too easy to lose sght of the real values of life and to becmne ettgulfed in selfish isolationism while in the pursuit of personal gain. ■ it ie I feel that it is extreme^ important to each of-u$ that we abide by a philosophy built upon high moral-standards, human kindness and Christian sincerity. Such a philosophy must also provide sufficient courage, fortitude arid determination designed to protect this way of life from those who seek to destroy it. . THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, MARCH 16. 1967 A—3 laWMSCMH ^ Jvy^ Feather Yeor Neet With Theee Big SAVIN6S Frem SIMMS en All Year EASTER eed SPRINS Neede! Save on Boys' irinqf and Summer Sport Coats 39» 5»» $6.98 Plaid Coats Woven cotton plaid coat with raybn lining. Smart 3-button front, button sleeve, 3 pockets. Srtiart blue plaid. Sizes 8 to 18. —Basement $10.^8 Flannel Blazer [ Classic wool and nylon fldnnel I blozer in sizes 12 to 20. Vented r back style, 2 flap pockets, chest pocket. Block or burgundy color. —Basement Stock Up For Easter and Spring Ladies' Nylons CANTRECE* Deluxe Seamless First quality, regular 89c sellers, impeccablefit, wrinkle free nylons for softness", sheemess, beauty. Beige-tone, taupetone, tantone, cinnamon, in sizes 8V2 to 11. *by DuPont—Main Floor Washable ‘Dan River Wrinkle-Shed Boys' Poplin Jackets Slight irregulars of better 79c sellers—choice of full ^ fashioned seamed nylons beigetone in sizes 816to\10Vi2 in self or dark seams, in pecan or BV? Regular $4.98 value — CPtton poplin shell with I celonese ocetoW lining. ; Smart zipper front, W slosh pockets, elastic ' sides for snug fit. Sizes 8 to in choice of olive or tan colors. —Basement J/Vashable Polished Cotton-Avril Shell Men'jS Lined Jackets 46.95 Value cuff, slo! 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Sizes 7 to 11 for men. — Basement »98 In Other Stores You'll Pay *5.00 For 'MANHAHAN' Men's Permanent Press Dress Shirts 'Eton' style suits With 'Scotchgard' finish to resist spots, stains and creases. Striped brown or green jacket with matched solid long pnd short pants which have boxer waists, plus dress shirt. Sizes 2 to 6. —Main Floor Boys' 2-Pc. Easter Suits 2»»/ If you recognize quality, you know the name 'Manhattan' is the finest in* dress shirts for men. Permanent press, too. Long sleeve stylo shirt in sizes 14Vi to 16; — Basement Small Gentlemeii 3 to 6x $5.98 Value — save $2.99 now on iridescent sharkskin of 74% Viscose rayon,'^6% Acetate suits which are crease-resistant. Styled with popular 'grown-up' details ^ notched collar, patch pockets, zi| Warm ZIP-IINER in These MEN'S All-Weather Coats American Made Durable canvas uppers in solids and plaids. Slight irregulars of over $1 sellers. Infants' sizes 2 to 8. — Baiemfnt collar, patch pockets, zipper fly. 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These stay soft end keep their crease too . . . elastic-bock style pants for school and casual wear. Antgiepe or olive colors. " — Maijn Floor Sailcloths, flannels, suedes, denims and canvas uppers. Loafers, ties, boots in solids, prints and plaids. Sizes 4 to 10, medium widths, 8 to 11 in ££ widths. Fine American mode. — Basmmmnt $24.98 STA-PRESS COATS All-weather coat with zip-in b'ner. Sizes 36 to 46 .. Boys’ and Girls’ Dress Shoes For EASTER and SPRING WEAR ~ First Quality Cqjnpare to $5.95 shoes — for spring and Easter wearing, all styles for girls Include: straps, ties, patent^, white, dres^ saddles and loaferf, Boys' styles in tie oxfords and moc-loi!ifors. Sizes B'/a to 13V4, and 1 to '3. —Basement Boys’ Perma-Press Pants Proportion Slims - Regulars - Husky Values to $5.98 — wash 'n' dry these pants without ironing them — and they hold the shape and crease for the life of the mt. Ivy in regular or slim size 12 to IB, or Husky in sizes 8 to 20. Tan, olive or bldck . colors. r — casemen SIMMSiE. 98 N. Saginaw - Baseniant and Maitt Finer A—4 THB PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, ISIARCH 16, 1967 System of Bird Forecasts Is Aimed at Safer Flying monitored in the spring and fall tests fell in the high-risk category. of ratings five Ihroii^ eight. In September, the monfii of greatest migration activity, about 10 per cent of the record-«. j ed intensities were, of high-risk tianada’s Associate Commit-Most of these were be-ee on Bird Hazards to Aircraft! tween sundown and midnight. I is attempting to develop a sys-j ★ ★ ★ tern in cooperation with the Ca- -phe Cold Lake project in-; nadian Air Force and the De-|voived the use of a Polarbid-partment of Transport that will (.aj^gj-g^yjppgj j-adar dTsplay By Science Service WASHINGTON - ScienUsts are harnessing radar and photographic techniques to forecast the penetration of migrating birds into airport areas and along air routes in an attenipt to make flying safer. CASTLES NOT IN AIR - Set designer Edward Carrere is shown in his office at ;Warner Bros, in Hollywood with sketches of some of the mammoth sets he has piade for AP wirtphAto "Camelot.” Included is the sketch for King Arthur’s great hall (right), one of 45 sets designed by Carrere for the. $12-million spectacle. Builds Castle in 48 Hours 'Camelof' Set Designer Speedy capable of spotting bird flight with 50 miles of the base. help fiSduce the threat of bird strikes on high-speed jet aircraft. Most air crashes and accidents attributed to bird strikes occur after a jet engine has ingested a bird or after a iarge bird has struck other vital parts of an aircraft such as control surfaces, The bird intensity forecast system was tested on a 24-hour basis during the spring and fall migration periods in 1966 at the Canadian Air Force Base at Cold Lake, Alberta. These periods were selected because of the large numbers of birds crossing air routes and airports. • * - ^ ■* ■HOLLYWOOD (AP) - A thrones and a vast expanse for with plastic that is ^scratched w' ^ trade paper item a few days ago the knights’round table. look cracked, resemble solid P . . j AueLt focused attention on a Latin wbo ^ * * * timbers. Soda mixed in plaster . accurate 70 ner cent coolly delivered when given 48 If cost $500,000, and was one of creates pitted areas that look ”! onH f«r ContomhPr ! h«nr. hniiH « ..ctip M.-i .cpt.s de.ionfiH hv Tarrere for. like ancient stone tmw and for September, 71 per cent. AFCO^s.:\- COOLS IN SUMfAER HEATS IN WINTER all from the same urtit hours to build a castle. , ’|45 sets designed by Carrere for like ancient stone. !“Sure, there are problems,”;the $12-mjllioh spectacle. . ----------■ s^s Edward Carrere, ‘‘but ★ t » ‘ ■ A wiry, compact man sur- rounded by drawing tables with architectural histories at his elbow, Carrere — pronounced Car-air’ ^ admitted he had taken liberties with the design. MORE MUSICAL that’s our work.’ ' .A * • ,’Carrere, 59, is a naturalized U.S. citizen born in Mexico City of a French father and a Span-mother and married to a htorwegian. iHe is also one of Hollywood’s 2()0 art direetors — the men who Community Club Meets Tuesday EXPECTED Intensity The forecasts, prepared twice daily by the meteorological forecast officer, rated the expected intensity of bird movement for any given hour on a zero to eight intensity scale. This information wJtSFtb-e n used by the flight safety officer as a special weather The Baldwin-Walton Commtf-nity Club will meet 7:30 p.m. “Architecture of the period rfAcian HP n«ppr ^^00 A.D.) was rough cut stone nominations foVhfs sets in^The 5"2-nend‘’‘f Tf Adventures of Don Juan,” star- the agenda for the club meet-.{ rlng the late Errol Flynn; “Sun- ,, ‘ ^ .,.... ing, to be held prior to the reg- v‘ SnamraTGrlS’qSn^Sl'’^''^ incornorated weekly meeting of the City | Only 119 out of 2,068 hours “pimer Gantry,” Burt Lancast- CjamrprttmahM^ HEAT PUMP This remorkable comforlizer operates on a reverse-cycle principle. In winter, it extracts heat from the outside air to warm your home. . In summer, it reverses itself, removing heot and nfioisturr j V from inside. Call us for ” LARGEST SET The “Camelot’.’ company, the trade press reported, had moved into the largest interior set ever built at Warner Bros. Representing .legendary King! Arthur’s great hall, the stage- carving and incorporated curving Roman roof trusses which, historically,, came in later. ★ ★ i On a Friday, Director Joshua Logan had wanted by Monday a 42-by-25-foot miniature of King Arthur’s castle, to be seen at a distance in a forest sequence. Carrere and his scenic artists, working all night Saturday and filling whopper measured 250 by Sunday, had it ready. 1J6 feet and 65 feet high. It has; Carrere disclosed some mon-i massive wails and columns, a ey-saving trade tric|;s: hollowi soaring beamed ceiling, two structures, of boards, covered Mfrte FAMOUS BRAND CIGARETTES • Luckies •Camels* Old Golds • Winstons • Phillip Morris • Chesterfields • Kents, etc. 4199° Make SURE!, THAT YOU MONEY ON YOUR NEXT,! PRESCRIPTION NAVE IT Filled By THRIFTY The Price Will Be LOWER! A and D OINTMENT QQ< 1.35 Value White's 4-Oz. Tube For Diaper Rash Your Easter Goodies Cost Less at SIMMS^ Toy and Caitdy Filled EASTEITSASKETS 9t M. Saginaw $tv^Main Fleer PRESCRIPTION FILLED BY US QUALITY DRUGS LOWEST PRICE 4895 Dme Highway I'HE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY. MARCH 16. im A—5 Shop Monday, Thursday, Friday and Saturdpy 'til 9 P.M./ ■ TONITE, FRIDAY and SATURDAY ONLY! NO-IRQN', Jamaicas . . T . *2^^ Surfers . . . . . ^2’^ Capris . . . . . . ^3^^ A Kodel* fabric. Blend of conon ond polyerrpr nnie a permonent press fabric,, guaranteed to stay wnnlle free. Sanforized, side zipper, ond set-on waistband Slaclts proportioned. Cboose from Novy, Brown, Loden ond Aquo in sizes 8-18, ilzes 32-38, Surfers . . . $3.27, Capris . . . $3,97. Sportsweqr . . . Third Floor High Fashion High fashion st^es in many colors. Choose from o multitude of styles. Charge It. Men's short Sleeve DR^SS SHIRTS 2tor^5 Famous Maker Nylon Tricot SLIPS lteg.S.OO $P0O and 6.00 Choose from white or colors in women's famous maker nylon tricot slips. Generously, trimmed with lace in assorted styles. Sizes 32 to 40, Charge Yours at Waite's. LirtgerieSecond Floor 100% combed cotton oxford' cloth dress shirt with tab collar and tapered, body. White only. Sizes 4'/2 to 6'/2. Charge It. Men's Wear.Street Floor 100% DuPont Dacron®v . PILLOWS L- - 5.00 w i X 77-inch size, Mat resistant, ond nonroHergenic. Washoble, Filled with DuPont Docron *. Charge Yours. „ Pillows ... Fourth Floor Solid or Print '• JACQUARD TOWELS RegSoO to Peg. .80 ' Q $Q 8®0- r) t] EothSize Z Hond Siz« .f ZtoF O W-Cloth Z tor| famous manufacturer's 100% cotton terry towels in solicf, print ond jacquards. Choose from several colors. C^prge it. Towels... Fourth Floor Boys' Cotton Flannel SPORT SHIRTS .“S 2 to *3 100% Sanforized cotton flannel sport shirts in bold plaids with button down collars. Completely wdshable. Sizes 6 to .0. Charge Yours. Boys' Wear... Second Floor Ambassador 3-HP 4-Cycle 19" ROTARY MOWER Special . . . . ... . .^38' Tecumseh-Louson engine. Recoil starter. 4 position slide typo throttle On handle. Crankshaft is«guaranteed one yeOr against bending or breaking. Layaway now for Spring. 20“ DELUXE, REG. 54.95 .....I.. .$50 Pale tones etched with black bindings, brighteried vvilh black ties. Made from soft glove leother, for maximum comfort, wherever you go. Sizes 5 to 10 in Nar-and Medium widths. Charge Yours. Women's Shoes . . . Street Floor Reversible Oval BRAID RUGS $2800 9x12 Extra heavyweight oval braid rug ... No rug pad needed. American made. Reverses for twice the waorigg power. Approximate sizes. Assorted tolors. ^ Rugs... Fifth Floor Tamous Maker SKI MITTENS _ Reg. $■] 399 I Nylon ski mittens with leother .. polm. Sizes S-M-L. Charge tt. Sportfweor . . . Third Floor Long or Short Sleeve SWEATSHIRTS - $2 Wen's 100% combed cotton tweol ihirts with crew neck ond roglon sleeves. Completely woshoble. Sizes *S-M-l-XL. Chotge Yours.. ' Men's Wecr... Street Ffoor Two-Way „ Stretch Slacks 7 Reg. :o.oo Pastels ond dorks in step-in style stretch slacks. Stretch . ways for cemfortoble^weoring. Sizes 8 to ' 8. Sportswror... Third Floor Not. Advertised Bronds children's Shoes Choose for boys or girls In wide selection of Nationally Advertised Brands...Large ossortment of. styles and colors. Chitdron'l Shoes .. . Second Floor Permanent Press SHIFT GCSWNS Res $Z 600 H Vtfomen's beautiful rone print Dacron/Cotton permanent press shift gowns with trimmed yoke. Sizes S-M-L. Charge Yours at Woite's. Lingerie... Second Boor Famous Brand BRAS & GIRDLES 'roS” 2tcr$3 ' Choose from girdles, panty girdles, and bras in several styles. Women's TENNIS SHOES Reg. ^ ' 2 f"’- ^6 ■4.00 or 3.33 pr. Our regular stock of tennis oxfords with orch cushions. Block, navy, faded blue, white or red. Sizp 5 to 10. Narrow and medium widths. ^ Women's Shoes ... Street Flo New for Easter WHIMSEYS. Special $2 ^ $8 Choose now from mony beouti-ful cdors. Millinery_Third Floor Girls' Size 7 to 14 Scrubbed Denim Jeans .2'cr*5 Completely washable westerr cut girls' jeans. Choose from foded blue, gold.or olive. Girls' Weor... Second Ftoej Infant's Thermal Blanket Sleepers 199 2 100% cotton with full length zippers non-skid soles. Completely washable. . Fine Wale Corduroy . CHAIR PADS 'S - :2fer^3 Comfortable, washablp, chair pads in ossorted colors.’ Tie -strings keep cushion in place. M^n's Cotton Knit SPORT SHIRTS 2t°H5 ,4.00 100% combed cotton . in short sleeves with 3-button plocket collar styles and breast pocket. Com-plefcsly washoble. Sizes S-M-L Zen's Weor ... Street Floor Permanent Press BOYS' SLACKS Weor... Second Floor $4 Reg. 5,00 o^d 5.98 Choice of Ivy or Continental style casual slocks in sizes 8 tp 20. Boys' Weor.... Second Floor Mix or Match Cotton 'SPORTSWEAR FABRICS Rep. $] , 1.30 I yd. 100% wash and wePr cotton in several colors." Mix or Match prints or solids os you choose. Chorge Yours, _ Fobrics.., Fourth Floor ________' pa------------ Men's Stretch CREW SOCKS 1*00 3 for ^2 'Bulky knit orlon crew socks in , solid colors. One .size’ fits all. Charge It. MerAs Wear... Street Floor 100% Cotton Terry JACQUARD TOWELS Reg ?.00 D Both Size ,, Z foF ’^O ■ Reg. 1.40 Hand Sire I Reg. 60c O r $1 W. Cloth Z for^j Choose from several lovely colors. Towels... Fourth Floor- Your Choice DOWN PJLLOWS Reg to $1^ 17.00 I'D Choice of ^0%. dbwn/.S0% feoth-ers fir 100% down. Charge yours at Woite's. Pillows ... Fourth Floor Fully Quilted Throw Quilted Spreads Reg. 18 00 - . 2 5 Colors to choose from in < lovely satin finish. Spreads... fourth Floor Drapery & Slipcover f . ■ ■ ■■ M , . FABRICS 2t.^3 Reg. to 3.00 yd. Severol solids ond , prints. Allow one week for delivery. Some hove limited qubntity. Print or Solid slipcovers'- '••air »io -yr ’25 ■ Several colors in' 1p0% cotton., Scotdhgord" treated,. Slipcovers.. I fourth Floor Large 8 x 10' COHAGE TENT a *54 Outside oluminuiTi frame. Heavyweight drill. LdyoWoy now for Summeri' ' ’ ’ ' i. * 9x9-ft. Umbretta Style, Reg. $47. $4i' Tents... Fil|h Floor Fomous Ambassador Stqam '& fclry Iron Reg, $Q - 12.88 , ’ ■ 7 Full t5 month ,over-t|;*e with authority why Mao Tse-tung, the long-cherisjied leader, had td resOTt to the ludicrous device of young Red Guards to hush his critics ahd preserve his ideas. DfSCONTENT But there is no dimbt of broad discmtdnt in China, an indication of the Chiniese peq-" pie’s desire to skip into the future instead of being weight-•ed down by the old concepts of Mao Tse-tung. -He was a great man to the Chinese. He, too,ifelt .he was riding on the main highway of history. But his frantic actions seem to reveal he fears be may be shdved into a ditch ri time. ^ “We know you need weapons and supplies, and we have sent you more, in the ftrsl fwo months Of this year than we did all last year. yiet- WILL SOON TIRE nam a little “The>, Americans will soon better when he tire of'tlie war and try to wig- spoke here the gle out somehow, but don’t other day. forget —’your terms must be unconditional surrender. The United States is begging us for peace. “It’s true Prem^ier Kosygin talked peace ‘when he was in London, but some of the other leaders in the Kremlin reprimanded him a bit when he got back. “Any w a y, he gave the. Americans the impression that, if they curry favor with us, they’ll be better off and that .maybe, we’ll end thg war in Vietnam. Addressing himself to “those Americans who are torn by sincere and troubling doubts as to the values of a continuing war agaiilst-com-mtPn i s m in far-away Asia, where American youth again suffer and die for a cause whose value some question,” Park said: “To these troubled good people, I would say ‘Look at Kwea today.’ For Korea , ! is yesterday’s Vietnam. “The sacrifices which you made with us in our war of liberation have resulted in the “But we have told the World that we haven’t a thing to do establishment of/a prqgfes-with your policies and Aat nation qj free people: who you make your own decisions^ So we keep on urpng, the ^ Americans to stop the bomb- continuing cOmmtat to assist free peoples in their de-“ sire to remain free. ★ * * “Today, 46,000 of the flower of our youth — our sdHs — well-trained soldiers, are fighting at the side of your sons to Vietnam. ‘EQUAL’ qOMMITMENT * “Our commitment pf men, to the effort in Vietnam percentage wise is about equal to yours. “Additionally, we "have sent 10,000 engineers to. Vietnam . . .our soldiers and technicians are also serving as diploinats. “They are-esplnintog to Mr. and Mrs. Darwin Seymour South Vietnam’s peqile that of Millington; the Onited States will not im- 55th wedding anniversary. pose colonial rule on Vietnam Verbal Orchids Louis Sovey. of 2795 Oldsmobile; 93rd birthday. Mrs. Mary Smale of 181 Washin^n; 86th birthday. Mrs. Hattie Roat of 15 Susan; 89th birthday. Mrs. Alice Elizabell Pettit of 132 Fingree; 88th birthday. Mr. and Mrs. John E. Beard (rf Keego Harbor; ’ 55th wedding anniversary. because the United States has never colonized Korea, a 1-though U.S. troops have been-stationed in our country for over 20 years.” * * Korea has become o n e of our major show windows that face 4)e suspicion and hostility of a number of Asian nations. It has free elections, a free press, constitutional government, rising gross national product, and exports wilHump near the half-billion dollar mark this yePr, an increase of $100 millioh., If South Vietnam can do as well, by let’s say, 1980 ... A fine broth of an Irish girl named Mrs. Archimedes Vas-siliadis, (King Features Syndicate’s woman’s editor Joan O’Sullivan when she leaves the office and goes home to fix her husband’s souvlakia) gives me an added lesson in the contributions the Greek, language has made to ihe English lexicon. (See “lexi-kon” in any Greek dictionary.) “How could you possibly forget diplos (double) and mati (eye) combine to make our word diplomat, or kato (down) and strophe (turn) betome catastrophe? “Combine dipso (I’m thirsty) with mania (which meahs mania) and you’ve got a problem; particularly on mornings after. ★ ~ ★ w “Members of fhe Philhar-mmic are philos (lovers of) armonikos (harmony).” Urges Community School Program Support We wholeheartedly support the McConnell Community School Program and would like more people in the area to take an active part in the activities and programs. REV. AND MRS. FLETCHER W. POLLARD 57 CENTER ‘Area Needs Rpad Repair or*Care Packages’ If the Oakland County Road Commission camot find it in their heart to do anything constructive about their road (as we have been asking every year of the past 22'/i tax-paying years we’ve lived- alongside it) would they please be good enough to float enqugh Care packages down to last us until May. MRS. E. E. ALLEN UNION LAKE Has Suggestion for Position of Ombudsman With regard to your editorial concerning the Ombudsman role, currently I am attached to the staff of Congressman John Conyers Jr., primarily performing the role of Ombudsman in the First Cmgressional District. When you consider the number of governmental agencies, their ^Complicated bureaucratic;, procedures and the general lack of knowledge that Mr. Average Citizen has concerning their operation, it seems evident that numerous citizens, especially the disadvantaged, will need some assistance in securing adequate service. ★ ★ ★ Hence, as suggested in your article, many come to their legislators. However, the legislator has, many and varying duties. It seems logical that rather than estato lishing a new and separate office for this role, the positidn could be cn;;atrili within each congressional office. MICHAEL F. CALDWELL I LAKE ORION I Says Gimmick Winners From Out of Tdwn Please print this so that the people' of Pontiac can quit falling for the supermarket gimmicks. You will notice there are winners but never anyone in Pontiac—always from Another town. KATHRYN McGEE 269 DELLWOOD Another Disagrees With Choice of Speaker Ss a taxpayer and an Episcopalian, l am anything but proud of the sponsoring of Bishop Pike. I had greater hottos for Oakland Community College and the use of our tax doMrs. James Pike no longer merits the name of Bishop. He is hatjdly a commendable speaker for our community. How about more publicity for the really, worth while speakers who come to Oakland Cewnty? MRS. C. HOFFMAN CLARKSTON ‘Concerned by Effect of Today’s Evil Force’ It s^ms that evil forces have taken over our way of life. They organize, demonstrate and strike like puppets on a string, according to the will of their masters; These masters have ulferiM' motives and are not cMicemed with those who follow their orders. Prices- are going up, There’s corruption in high places, and insecurity everywhere. Let’s wake up and stop this foolishness. ■ « concefu«:d cation of all local newts itrinted entitled republl- Tlie Pontiac Press Is delivered by carrier for 50 cents a week; where mailed bi Oakland, Genesee. Livingston, Macomb, Lapeer end Washtenaw Counties It U $1L« a year; elsewhere In Mktilgan end other places in the yjnited I bean paid at the 2nd MSibet-i, Question and Answer Our class at Webster School has diffeirent countries to study. Mine are Finland knd Sweden. Would yon know where I could .write for maps, picturjcs and g^eriu Infomiation The driver of the other epr, Mrs.JBertella Nicholson,^ 47, ef Mt. Clemens, is listed in serious condition at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital, Mt. Clemens. ' Also hospitalized, but reported in satisfactory condition, are WilUam WilUams, 29, the dead woman’s husband, and a ond child, 2-year-old Duane. Macomb Sheriff’s deputies said hh's. Nicholson lost control of her car on a snow-slick road, went off on the shoulder, came back'on the road and crossed the median line, hitting the Williams’ can head^n. (Continued From Page (tee) broke into the United Mis-(Juiicfi.,f49vE^st Blvd. PatrolmahKobert N. Brown for his part tt capturing two men who held up the Clark Service Statiim on Nov. 9,19N. Patrolman William C. Smith for the arrest of two youths who burgiarized-the. Quick Service Laundromat and who Was involved in solving a larceny at the Kwik Car Wash. ★ ★ ★ Patrolman Thomas Gracy for the arrest of a young car thief, vrho later admitted to seven other stolen car offenses. Patrolman Thomas H. Crandall for the apprehension of a burglar in a case involving a break-in at the Firestone Store, 146 W. Huron, on Jan. 8,1966. Patrolman Raymond Dickinson and Patrolman James I. Batchelor for the capture of a burglar inside the City Beverage Co., 117 Turk, on Jan. 25, 1967. Patrolman Donald W. Brown and Sgt. Eugene Hendren for the arrest oi a man in a stolen car and the clearing up of 17 other felony offenses he was involved in. it * k Dative Dallas J. Flescher for the arrest of a man he saw hold up a motorist at gunpoint on Hughes on March 8, 1966. The1:itizens recognized were: Leonard DennisMi, 17, of 529% N. Perry, and George Steinbach, of IM E. Rimdell, for aiding a police^n in capturing a bad check i&er after he had fled from fte \k>mmunity National Bank on Mdrch 4; 1966. ’Theodore Vibbitts, 137 W. Cornell, and\ Walter E. Os-Imne, 43, of 7544 Hi|d>teiid, Whitd Lake Tomiship, for rescuing a y 0 n n ^ tie r pinned under a wheel o^a car that rolled down a dmeway last August. Mr. and Mrs. Billy G. Wilson, 1446 Oregon, for purging and obtaining the license nu^mber of Cift Ideas In Time For a car involved in a fatal hit-and-run accident on South Blvd. last July. If ■ vSr , '★ Nancy Elkins, 19^ of 774 Firsf and John Lilliquisti 1^, of 331' ewport for following a car involved in an injury accidentj and then turnii^ over the license] imber to police. Pontiac Press reporter David | J. Cook received a special com-1 mendation for his “d i 1 i g e n t, ethical and imaginative approach to (he reporting of crinie| news and‘associated police ac-! tivity.” , CARAVELLE PENDANT WATCHES by BULOVA Form Yields Up EAST LANSING (AP) - Improved varieties, pesticides, expanded use of fertilizers and improved techniques have allowed Michigan farmers to double com and sugar beet yields since 19«. Michigan State University scientists* say wheat yields have increased by more than 50 per cent. wH4BnUlilBK WBBK Regular Open Stock Prices Total $69.99 Set includes Vi, Va and y2-in. drives with a total of 30 assorted sockets with 6 and ll!-pt. open-end wrenches, midget combination wrenches. New, exclusive Vs and Vi-in. Quick Release Ratchets, extensions, flex handles, assorted tools and Craftsman tool box. Save *7 Roller Caliinets Save ^30 on Sears Stock Up Now on Craftsman Tools J Craftsman 80-Pieee I Meehanie’s Tool Set with Metal Tool Box 3»»» B ^-in. Drive Sockets Craftsman 6-pt. and 12 pt. sockets with sizes from3/16to Vz-in. fiV Your (ihoire A-xsl’iI. Exirn. 99o rarh 22' ' %-in. Drive Sockets Craftsman 6-pt. and 12-pt. sockets with -sizes from % to 13/16-in. Oioirr 44® Relraur Ratchrta .... 6.99 Vz-in. Drive Sockets Craftsman 12-pt. sockets with sizes from 7/16 to IVi-in Hot-forged. (w 66® Drive Ratchet . . . .’>.99 $4999 Craftsman. 3 full-width drawers. Heavy - duty slides. 3 - in. ca.sters. 263/8x17.%x32-in. SAVERS 6-Drawer Chests Regular ^6 Metal Tool Duxes Your /§ 99 Choice Craftsman. FuM-lcnglh piano hinge with water shed. Two I-pc. draw-holts, hasp. Tote tray. Craftsman. 3-full-width drawers. Tote tray. Full suspension slides. 26xl2xl4%-in. overall size. Craftsman Hand Tool Guarantee ^3 Crafl-sman hand tools are unconditionally guarantee, Any tool that fails to give complete satisfaction will be replaceil free of charge. This guarantee does not apply to hand tools used in rental service. Save *49 on Craftsman 158-piece Tool Set at Sears! Craftsman Portabl^ Electric Hand Tool Sale Total Separate Prices up to $54.46 Router Kits Kit includes rotiter with %«H.P. motor and . 100% ball bekrings, . edge guide, trammel point, metal case. Sep-arate prices total $.74.46. 6-p<*. Router Ril .Srla $10 Sabre Saws 3' speed selections to cht wood, metal, plas-ti(|. Reserve poWer circuit gives full motor torque at all speeds. Edge gnida and 3 saw blades. Pkg. of 14 Saw Rlades .3.99* each Saw With Case 7-in. saw develops 1%. H.P. Full wrap around ' base. Retractable blade guard. Blade wrench, rip guide,^arryiiig case complete. Hardware Department Main Basement "Satisfaction guaranteed or Yoiir moiiey back” SEARS Dowiil own l^mtia(• P1hhu‘ I K o- I’HE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, MARCH 16, 1967 A—11 You Can Count on Us ... Quality Costs No More at Sears -To- Sears Paint Copper Bottom Marine Paint Reg. 3.95 2^1 Tough tcryl^c with TBTF, protects boat all Mar in salt or freah water. Hard glosi. 13.95, Spar Varnish, qt.... .1.97 Reg. 4.49 Rest resistance to shock, saltwater. abrasion, sun. High gloss hardens cbeminalijr. Craftsman %-HP Tank Spnifers Reg. $190 $169.95 Completely automatic. Gun wraya a|i paintsi varnishes. Belt guard for added safety. Heavy-duty uae for lubrications, air cleaning, inflates toys and tires. Get lOOfSI. Ideal for farm. Estate unit, safety belt guard, 2.1 CEM. 100 PSI, twin cylinder. "Satisfaclion guaranteed or your money back” SEARS " o\\ iilcnvi oiiliac IMioih' I Ik o-11 71 A—12 ffiE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY. MARCH 16, 1967 SAVE *7d on Airline® ^95 sq. in. COLOR TV Hurry in! Pricf returns ^e reg. ^599.00 Monday! Limited quantity NO MONEY DOWN e Exclusive Color Trac cuts tuning time 50% o Built'in Color Magic keeps colors clear o 3 IF chassis with giant rectangular screen o Decorator-designed in walnut veneer You’ll appreciate Wards new Color Trac. . .It actually eliminates critical “fine" tuning,of color. You can adjust colors to the exact Inter^l^ you want, too ... no need to fiddle ogdini 295 tq. in...creen tiz* ASK ABOUT A ^eE home trial Sa,ve^80 airline deluxe steree compare wards PRICE! 3 STYUi WITH AM/TM, STEREO FM RADIO REG. Solid state, fully transistorized chassis delivers 75 watts of peak power treble horns and bass woofers provide brilliant full-spectrum sound ' . , -in turntable, light-tracking tone arm separate treble, bass controls Hand-crafted, genuine veneer in elegant Contemporary or Colonial design Sale Ends Sat., March 18 Powerful Signature vacuum has autemulk curd rewind •24 e Powerful — built to lost e Cord rewinds automatically, tool caddy e Wrap-qreund vinyl bumpers protect furniture e Includes set of 7 deluxe attachments e Stand-on-end design for easy storing e All steel construction Floor Mre mode easy with Words shoMpoe-polisher Come itt today! H9 JkkjL, *, w * • Scrubs, waxes, pelishet oil types.«f floors • Shompees rugs—ends big cleaning gusts • Polish dispenser remoyas for oasyJBHIi^ • Inciudes duahHirpeso bnwhos, Mt buffing pods, rug deny and carpal shampoo Ol’EN MOJvDAY TllHi; FKIDAY 10 4.M. TO 0:00 l>.M. SATI lil)\’l 0::',0 \.M. TO 9:00 T.VI. S(M)\Y 12 NO(i\ TO r> F.\i. . f)H2-lolO THE PONTIAC PRESS PONTIAC, MICHiaAIir, THURSDAY, MAECH 16, 1967 B—1 Current Film Is Highlight of Benefit The Oakland County Bar Association Auxiliary is planning a benefit theater party on Wednesday. ' Academy Award nominee} “Man for All Seasons,’’ has been, choaen I^Ae^oup. The movie is beirijg ^own at the Studio New CenteK Theater on Third Avenue in Detroit, just north of Grand Boulevard. , Curtain time is 7:45 p.m. ★ ★ ★ Proceeds from the party will be donated to the Oakland County Juvenile Court Child Care Facilities, known as the Children’s Service Center. ■ The center cares for children who have become wards of the court. Ticket information may be obtained by contacting Mrs. Ivan Forbes, Pebble Creek Road; • Mrs. James Hewlett or Mrs. Jerome Barry both of East Iroquois Road. Fete Newlyweds Following Vows The I4frenc6 H 011 e r s of Hatchery Road hosted a fam-• ily wedding dinner in their home following the recent marriage of the former Sharon Louise White to their ward, Ronald Kreigerl Hie bride is the daughter of Mrs. Dorothy White of West Ann Arbor Street. ’The newlyweds will reside on Dunforth Drive. ^ Sororities Pontiac Prau Photos Mrs. Albert Kisshauer of Wolverine Village (left) represented her sorority, Sigma Beta, as one of the hostesses at Wednesday’s combined sorority fashion show in the Huron Theatre. Shown with her is Mrs. Thomas C. Smith, who is leaving the Oakland CMnty Childrens Village, where for years she has been a head supervisor. ’ ' Mrs. Goines Is Reelected Mrs. Fred Goines was re-elected president for the coming year at the Wednesday meeting of , the Parliamentary Study Club. Serving with her are Mrs. Ervin Christie, first vice president Mrs. Ross Elliott, second vice Grace Holton, secretary to the county highway .engineer, and . Dennis Grylicki, construction engineer, Oakland County Road Commission, presented a program on Michigan roads, to members of the Parliamentary Study Club on Wednesday. president; Mrs. Vernon Jeans, recording secretary; Mrs. Vivian 'Tubbs, corresponding secretary; Mrs. Merrill Petrie, treasurer; Mrk J. R. Shaffer, auditor and Mrs. Lee Hill, parliamentarian. Dennis Grylicki, cOTStructmn engiriteer with the Oak^d County Road Commission was a speaker at th^ annual luncheon. Slides and comments about “Michigan Roads Are In-A Jam’ were highlighted at the meeting in the First Federal Savings of Oakland Building. Grace Holton, secretary county highway engineer, assisted„in showing the slides. Elect Presidenf ofPEOUnit Mrs. Paul F. Thams was elected president of chapter CL, PEO Sisterhood, at the recent meeting. * * ★ ' Serving with her will" be Mrs. R. B. Fell, vice president; Mrs. R. L. Justice and Mrs. Glenn Griffin, secretaries; Mrs. B. M.- Mitchell, treasurer; Mrs. J. H. CoWen, chaplain, and Mrs. John Williams, guard. Mrs. Thams and Mrs. Mitchell will be delegates to the state convention in April. Alvin Steinman^ owner of Alvin’s of Pontiac, supplied the fashions and narrated the show. One real stand-out was the “young thing’s minisuit” which boasted matching bloomers with very short dresses. = Calendar > TODAY fj. Fashion Your Figure . Club of Pontiac, 7:30 p.m.. Consumers Power Company, Pontiac Unit. Lenten foods. , FRIDAY Pontiac Rebekah Lodge I No. 450, 8 p.m., Malta f Temple. Card party fol-!f lows meeting. Piedmont College A Cap-pella Choir Special Concert, 8:30 p.m., in Pine Hill Congregational Church. Patrons, the James Hunts (left) of become an annual event, will be used to Ostrum Avenue, arrive at the show with supplement the playground equipment friends, the Ted Noldes of Third Avenue, fund for the Oakland County Children’s Hunt is director of juvenile services for Village. _____ Oakland County. Proceeds from what has Hotheieof iHSebrooniff MARCH SPECIAL VALUE |i^ 3-piece bedroom^in , rich Palmetto Walnut and Burl engraved accents Exquisilr can only iiarlially dctrribf the rophMiralion and charm of tliia dcaiim. Succpinfi conlrmporary linca arc enhanced by dfaniatic moulded overlay* of NyAa uiiod. handcrafted nilh rich engraved burl arainintt. The added touch of a •marlly aculptured bate ... and the mperb craft»pian,lnp make thi« an exceptional v Pontiac Praia Photoi Arriving for the annual luncheon of \ the Parliament^y Study Club Wednesday race; and Mrs. Ervin Chrisfie, Blaine are (from left) Mrs. Ros"k Elliott, Oneida Street. The event was held at First Fed-Road; Mrs. David Saks, Bloomfield Ter- eral Savings of Oakland building. of T 662 S. TELEGRAPH RD. • PONTIAC Hours 9-9 Daily,, Sunday 11-5 334 4593 . Naar Or^oird Laka Rd. B—2 THE PbNTIAC PRESS/ THURSDAY. MARCH 16, 1967 << I rmTmT»iTnnnfiTnrwTmTm»v»T¥7rrrmTiTrr¥Tny^Trnr^^ OPEN TONIGHT TQ 9:00 P.M. intyr 4 COMPLETE FLOORS or HOMf FURNISHINGS-ilEVATO* SERVICi TO EACH FLOOR 17-19 : S. SAGINAW' DOWNTOWN PONTIAC • PROVINCIAL- • COLONIAL • TRADITIONAL • MODERN All By America's Leaditig Manufacturers^ SPECIAL PURCHASE LU nF^\nN4ffew officers of the Pontiac White Shrine No. 22 wili assume duties at Saturday’s installation ceremonies slat^ for 8 p.m. in Roosevelt Temple. H e a d i n g the list are fhe George Stitts, she as worthy high priestess and he as watchman of the shepherds. Two more are the Homer Smiths as noble prophetess and watchman of the shepherds, respectively. Others will be Mrs. Wayne Reaves, scribe; Mrs. Samuel Smith, treasurer; Mrs. Cres-ton Tooman, chaplain; MKs. Paul Hanson, shepherdess; Mrs. Catlierine McCrin-dle, guide; and Mrs. Orville Cummings, herald. Her topic will be, ^‘Christ in our Day — a Vlew/of .Good Friday.” / ★ ★ ★ " Holder of a mas%'s degree frwn the University of Michigan ai^ a Phi Beta Kappa member. Miss James Im long had'an interest in Bible study and folklore. She was president of the American Folklore Society, 1949-50, and became a FellovV of the Society in 1961. She is a past district governor of Altrusa International. One of her more recent awards was the Bishop’s Cross — Episcopal Diocese of Michigan in 1965. , . ON COMMITTEES Mrs. Stanley Kipp is general chairman of the 9:30 a.m. breakfast. Tickets are being handl^ by Mrs. Cecil Bondurant and Mrs. Herbert Hotchkiss. Mrs. Ray Meiser, Mrs. Charles Andrews and Mrs. O. H. Lundbeck are working on other details. Mrs. Mac Whitfield has charge of hostesses, while decorations are the responsibility of Mrs. C. L. Coppersmith, Mrs. Ray Caughill and Mrs. Joiuj Greenlee. Working with Faye Donelson who heads the kitchen committee are Mrs. Eiwood Bigler and R^rs. James Absher. The event is open to ali interested womert. Reservations may be made by calling the church or contacting any of the committee members. New Hosiery Has Long Life A new twist to nylon fibers has resulted in hosiery that gives lasting stretchability and clinging fit regardless of innumerable sudsings. Invisible coil-like springs — that bounce right back to shape after washing — are crimped right into the yarn during the spinning process.-^ Uo you l^owydur cjWs? fo\i€ watch wise, ybn do. Qive }6ui§elf a gold star for kpowing that the most famous ABCs in time all have one thing in common, of tEem ai€made AcBULOVA Ml I CCUTRON A i, .ecu.,......................... ^ i.Hri’t a watch at. all. A watch has a balance uliccl. Acciitron has a tuning fork. It’s so amazingly V ) accurate, the government uses it in satelliti- guid- ______f / anee systems. It’s the perfect gift for the busy ^ executive or professional man. 125. Ml] li ULOVA B respected name i J\ railroads, airlines. B is for Biildva, the world’s most respeefod name in time styling. It’s the choice of railroads, airlines, businessmen and fashion conscious women who demand reliability in theii minute minders. ARAVELLE C is for ('aravolle, inter- n nationally reeogniztal as an exceptional value in y tinu'. Ideal for the soung student or the active I / man on the go. S39.95 -S10.95 love^ses for Spring'' PONTIAC WlALL Irlegraph at thzabeth lake koad you're between the ages qI 17 and 21. >u can open your own credit account. THE LADY POOLE PLAYS iT COOL m tcE BLVE: A swiisGim .mw . SHADE FOR LOmOIS FOG*S CLASSIC Breath of spring for a classic raincoat: London Fog's Lady Poole in o smashing new shade of ice blue ... os well as ivory, natural, and navy. It's styled with a dashing stand-up collar, split ^shoulders, storm tab, lined self-yoke, and slash-thtough pockets, ’ In sizes 6-16 petite, 8-18 misses. And it's completely wash 'n' wearable. 37.50 SUSAN THOMAS DASHES INTO SPRING WITH .4 SPLASH OF COLOR Pick a bouquet—-of sunny yellows, delicious oranges, tranquil^ turquoise, perky pink dazzling amethyst, cool whiteA^ That's how Sifean Thomas flowers this spring . . , iryrwo delightful >vays- (featured) Pure Irish linen, simply cut and intricately detailed, with a tucked overblouse and softly tailored matching skirt. In orange, white, turquoise, or yellow; sizes 8-18, at $33. jsmaller figure) Textured rayon demurely spiced with contrastin’g yoke and banded skirt hem. In pink/amethyst, '^lemon/turquoise, or orange/taupe; sizes 8-16, o*t $30. Our Pontiac Mall Stora Open Evtry Evening to 9 P.M. B-1-4 THE PONTIAC PRESS, TgURSPA, MARCH 16, 1967 NO POINTIO TOES IN hacks PATENT STRAPS BUY, SEUi, TRADE - - - USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! PTA in Action Ponfiae THURSDAY Bethnne, 5/to 9 p.m./^ring Fair. ' Crofoot, 7:30 p.m., T h 0 r Petersen, piincipd, vill present a slide ^ogram outlining ways in whidi federal money has been utilized. Election of officers. EmmoBu, 7:30 p.m., Annual Men’s Night. Physical education demonstrat^n. Frost, 6 p.m., “F'amilyp Ni^t,” cooperative dinner and crowning-of the king and <}|ieen and prince and iwincess^ , DURIMG OUR om^ PRE-EASTER oALE MEN'S SUITS rr..*39” SPORTCOATS BOYS’ WEAR sum rms $10.88 SPOftreOATS $14.05 upj CONN’S Men’s & Boys’Wear 78 H. SAOiNAW, DOWNTOWN PONTIAC 338-6611 Webster, 7:30 p.m.. Dr. Mary {laanes trill be guest speaker; election of officen. Filins and discussion period. > F1UDAY Owen, S to S p.m., PTA Fair, games, prizes, booths and a talent show, featuring “Hie One juid Onlys.” Waterford THURSDAY Beaumont, 7:30 p.m., Beaumont chorus under diredion of Barbara Miiler. Slide prc^ on poisons, Mrs. Whit^ Carnahan moderator. Burt, 7:30 p.m-> panel discussion of special services available to students. ★ ★ * Lotus Lake, 7:30 p.m., classroom visitation,-Lotus Lake Brownies will perform a flag ceremony. Discussion on camping pri^aih by Don Maxtrell. Guest of Honor Kathleen M. Clancy was honored Tuesday at a bridal shower by her siiiters Pamela, Beverly and Patricia at their Doris Road home. Mrs. Larita Hudson of Vicksburg, Pa. was a pest. Miss Clancy will wed Charles E. Lester, Jr. on April 21. FOR THE WELL DRESSED TOT 'N' TODDLER SPRING FASHIONS PrwHy iHtla enat’ Drassas and Coats to maka tham frath ond lovaly as a tulip for thair first Eastar Parada. Adorable Coots in Blua, Pink, Yallow and Saucy Checks. 2-4x. 10.98 to 19.98 Precious Dresses all wdshabla—in cotton or blands af Dacron and Nylon. Eqstar Egg Colors. Sizas 9-18 months and 1-4 Toddlers. 2.98 to 8.98 Young Folks—Lower Level The First Federal Savings -ol4)akland B#lding (m West Huron Street Was the setting Sunday tor the annual Hand of Friendship Memberriiip Tea by the Hpacm Charter Chapter of the ABWA. Purpose of the tea is to ao- The Kenneth L. Madsens, Pioneer Street, announce the engagement of their daughter, Susajt Jill, to Michael James White. His parents are Mr. and Mxs^ Forest R. White, also of Pioneer Street. He attends Eastern Michigan University and.his fiancee is in the X-ray technician course at Pontiac General Hospital. September vows are planned. Tuesday Musicale The Pontiac Tuesday Musicale met at Central Mefiiodist Church, not the First" Methodist Church as reported. Annual riendship T ea Celebrated by Tipacon Youth Aide Is Speaker Norman aothier, director of “Youth for Christ” was the pest speaker at the recent Junior Pontiac Women’s Club meeting. He illustrated his discussion with chalk drawings. Guests at the meeting in the First Federal Savings of Oakland building were lama Hodc Mrs. Claude Sioup and Mrs. Joseph Chummings. ★ ★ ★ Mrs. Robert Stogdill was chairman of the social committee which included Mrs. Emerson Gordon, Mabel Smith, Mrs. Ray Kingsbury, Mrs. Vilas Newcomb, Mrs. Carl Martin, Verna Overend, Mrs. Cams Schmidt, Mrs. Brgdiey Scott and Helen Kinney. Assisting at the meeting were Mrs. Clarence Pud-ney and Mrs. Paul Hoskins. SEW SIMPLE By Eunice Farmer Dear Eunice Fanner If I want to use top stitching about % inch from my seams to look like the poplar welt seaming, how do I go about it when the pattern doesn’t show it? Also, any clue about keying top stitching evoi and avoiding that pulled, bias look between the stitching line and edge or seams of garment will be appreciated. Mrs. D. W. Dear Mrs. D.W. U you intend to top stitch seams where file pattern doesn’t show this detail, be sure to cut the garments with a 1 inch seam allowance instead of the usual % inch. The effect yon want of a welt seam wouldn’t be the same without stitching through the seam aUowance as well as the tc^ layer of fabric. Here’s a great tip for keeping the stitching straight and avoid that pulled look, which one of my former students came up with. Take a piece of cardboard from hem tape (or whatever), and cut a 2 inch slash straight down from the long side, the exact width of the stitching you are using. Then cut a wedge out of this by cutting Vt inch widet at th€!,.lop to nothing at the end of your slash. You wfll,have a “V" type cut out with one straight edge. Place the long edge of the cardboard alimg the seamline or the outer edge of garment. Carefnlly and firmly hold your fingers on each side of this wedge and allow your presser foot to ride on the cardboard with the needle sfitching your fabric right next to the straight edge of the wedge. Wh6n you have stitched to the end of your slash (2 inches) keep needle down and raise presser foot and slide the cardboard down and continue. Thb whole secret is not only are you getting a perfect guide but holding the cardboard firmly as you stitch' is preventing the top layer of fabric from slipping forward. This works perfect on straight stitching. Sorry, you’ll have to struggle with curves. Dear Eunice Farmer I’ve been watching the fashipn p^es in every book and paper as you suggested. I notice mat jeweled buttcms are used today m everything from cottons to evening clothes. I usec^ some lovely jeweled buttons on a lew silk and worsted suit, and the buttons are breaking the threat and raveling the button-p holes. Can we prevent this? Mrs. Mary K. Dear Mrs. Mary K. You’re right about the jeweled buttons; they serve as an accessory instead of a mere necessity. If the buttons are made with stones that have a prong t^ setting. It’s better to sew them on your jacket at tie comer of the butttonhole aid use snaps for the closing. Be sure to use the very large snaps and carefully cover them with a lightwei^ matdiing fabric so they won’t be objectionable when your jacket is open. Jeweled Jiuttons are used for daytime as well as evening clothes and would give a garment a real'lift Perhaps you had better check your older clothes out; just replacing the buttons can give you the latest fashion look! With tiny loops, ties and belts used on so many crepe dress you’ll want my step by step instructions called “Spaghetti Straps and Rope Belts.” Please send a self-addressed, stamped envels^e with 10 cents to Eunice Farmer in care of ’Die Pontiac Press with yc^ request. A copy wiii be sent to you. g ADD A TOUCH OF AAAGIC II ... A NOTE OF GAIETY ' to Your Spring Wardrobe with on •xeiting NEW SPIKING HAT. Gdy, young sllhouattis, Sassy straws or alluring fihrals, to anch^nt the «yo and male* you EmI . bsautiful. Try them on today. From ^8.98 AUiiinsiySalM-Secend Floor 48 N. Satjihaw BUY, SELL, TRADE - - - USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! quaint prospective members with the organizatiM. < Chsdrman If the event was Mrs. Franca Murphy assisted by Mrs. Frances Birch, Mrs. Elmer Addison, Phyllis Adifir son and Mrs. Neda Kiqip. The theme was “Smoke Signals,” with Phyllis Addison narrafing file story of the Tip. accyt cl^fs* and committees keeping file fires of the chapter burning. , * . '*■.; * Some 38 members were present with guests: Mrs. Robert Butler, Mrs. Dorothy Du-‘ gas, Mrs. Ami Higson, Mrs. Mildred Rawlings, Mrs. Robert Stivers and Mrs. Ccmiiie ’Tucker. | Gardeners Club Joins Federation Members oi the Dirt Gardener’s Ciub voted at a recent meeting to join the Pontiac Federation of Women’s Clubs. Mrs. Vivian Tubhir-vras elected delegate to the Federation at the gathering in the Mmningside Drive hoihe of Mrs. Chester Dlugoszewski. Hie program included a talk on poisonous plants by Mrs. Robert Playter and Mrs. E. M. Thomas. Mrs. Frank Datsko was welcomed as a new member. Old Hunter Didn't Miss SELMA, Calif. (B - After 30 years as a professimal bit hunter, R; W. Lahann estimates he killed about 100,000 jackrabbits during his career of bagging the animals for San Francisco’s gourmet market. ★ ★ ★ The 84-year-old retired hunt-er, recalls that on a good day he could shoot, clean and bag 330 pounds of rabbit. He didn’t wa^te many shells either. ‘Td miss maybe three or four times out of 100,” he declares. Bias Decorations Sew mnall ends of left-over bias tape together on the bias and use as attractive multicolor Imrders for tea towels, baby bibs and other small articles. Jeffrey Arrives Mr., and Mrs. Frank Horn-back (Mary Jo Falkner) of Abom Heights fimounce the birth of a son, Jeffrey Wade, on March 6. Grandparents are the ’Thomas B. Falknere of Keego Harbor and the Earl Hoi^acks of Elsiq. Jute, principal export cre^ of Pakistan, often is called the ‘golden fiber.” _______ August 12 has been chosen as a wedding date for Karin Cecila Lewis and Ralph David Savage. Their parents are Rev. and Mrs. Alger T. Lewis of West Auburn Road, Avon-Township and the Ralph D. Savages of Hood Road. The couple attend Midwestern Baptist College. No—We don’t graduate the most students, * Just the Best Trained! Pablo’s School of Beauty, Inc. Drayton Plains OR 3-0222 MawhlTImiyarohEI TOMY AT 3iM and liSd Bom Offltm Opam Nooh.9 FM. Dally 6-6239 PH. WO 243S3 \nn'i COCKTAILS ?BOSIHESlllEirS NOON SPECIAL* • Steak • French Fries • Salad $]25 ^ SPECIAL SUNDAY DINNERS^ Featuring lobster Tails Regular Menu Also Availabla ^5 Dine Hwy. •tsSE.trOR 3-2to C. R. HASKILL STUDIO Has Photographed Over 2,000 Wefddings, May We Make Your Pictures? Price Includes: s Picture for Preu s Just Married Si|pi a Weddini Cueat Book Mrs. James Spadafore 1 Mt. Clemens St. Cenificala a Rica to Throw “Everything but a WILLING MATE!” FE 4-0553 St. Patrick’s Feature *61*61” EVERY BONANZA STEAK IS TASTILY CHARBROILED TO YOUR ORDER “World’s Fastest Grounng Steak House Chain” 2K H.19 *1.19 Corral oil hands and shoot strpight for owr Bonanza Sirloin Pit to so# and tosto tha rich tizxis of a Bonanza Stack Dinnor for yourssK. Tha ontiro family aoting-ovt savingsl STEAK DINNER Complete Dinm *1 59 NOW OPEN AT KMART SHOPPING PLAZA “WiSSirir -COME AS YOU ARE! OPEN T DAYS A WEEK - II A.M. TO S P.M. Qlenwood at Perry - Call 336-9433 - Carry Out Available othar Location at iim E.1 Mila Take home a honeycomb! NEW FROM SCHAFER'S... ^@ney-Grafn lite enriched broadi It’s likai baehivs freshl Made With vita-mina-n-AOiiey for lively nouiishment; and packed With tha golden glow of Waatem grains for rousing, <,hearty flavor I Yout honeybunchei will love It So get buzzin* ... get Honey-Grain todayl In the red-and-yellow wrapper... "it’a a honey of a loaf I" who put tha flavor back in braadi THE PONTIAC PRiSSS, THURSDAY, MARCH 16, 1967 B—5 Fiancee yjhnt Need Contacts to S^e Handwriting on Wall Canister Carousel, the newest addition to the Rubbermaid line of products for kifchen organization, is designed to make good use of corners and to keep countertops neat and tidy. This four-compartment revolving circular storage unit takes up less space than conventional canister sets. Made of sturdy plastic. About $10. y ABBY Tots to Hove New School A new nursery school for children ages two-and-a-half to six, the Galloway Park Nursery School and Day Care Center, located on a 16-acre site on Mt, Clemens Street, will open Monday. Sponsored by the First Church of God and licensed and supervised by the Michi-gan,,^taff Department of Social Welfare, the enrollment capac- His Problem Is Weighty TAMPA, Fla. - Chester Holley has a 45-ton problem— a massive locomotive which sits on a siding at the Port Authority yards here. He can’t get the 26-foot-long steam engine home. Operator of a model railroad hobby shop* he has a roadbed and tracks in front of the shop ready to receive the huge locomotive. But since there are no tracks between where it is and where he wants it to be, the only way to move it would be to hoist it onto a huge flatbed truck and drive it. The cost of this is prohibitive. Holley bought the engine more than two years ago when it was ready for the scrap heap. ity is 20. The first ends June 12. Activities are planned to improve the child’s -educational and social development from 7:30 a.m. until 5:30 p.m., week days. Mrs. Everett 'Warner of Lynch Avenue may be contacted for further information. By A^dAIL VANBUREN DptH ABBY: I am engag ) a girl who will graduate frmn college in June. I am a professional man. When she went home for* ChrisUnas vaca-F tion she had herself fitted' for ' c 0 n t a c t lenses. Abby, I likedl; Her in glasses? (I wear them,| too) and I have? never told her' th,at I would like her better in contact lenses. I didn’t even know she was interested in them. Fot whom is she preening? Whom else, besides me^ dora she have to please? Why this sudden vanity? To top it off, her lenses have a violet hue, a la Elizabeth Taylor, and the girl I love has hazpl eyes. Should I put her to the test and ask her to choose between me and the contacts? ONLY HER FIANCE DEAR ONLY: Perhaps she^s pleasing only herself, which is her privilege. You should be familiar enough with the girl you’re about to marry to tell her you like her better in spectacles than in contacts. Having %aid it, drop it. If you insist on making this a matter of “choice” the Jady needs neither glasses por contacts to see the handwriting on the wall. I \ I DEAR ABBY: We are eight retired housewives (i-ather our husbands are retired — wives never do) and we have a common prc^lem. We live in Clearwater, Florida, and have all received cards and letters from friends up north who write, “We plan to ^op in for a visit this winter.” Nothing is said about WHEN they will, drop in, or for how long. This is disturbing because since we have no idea when to expdct them, or for how long, we can’t make any plans of our own, or even accommo- Plan Opera by American The Piccolo Opera Company’s production of “Little Red Riding Hpod,” an opera by American composer Seymour Barab, will be given at the Detroit Symphony Orchestra’s last 'Young People’s Concerts of the current season on March 25 at 11 a.m. and 2 p m; in Ford Auditorium. Valter Poole will conduct. The Henry Ford High School Performing Arts Dance Group, under the direction of Mrs. Beulah Hamilton, also will participate. Tickets are available at the Ford Auditorium Box Office. date bihCTS who have planned] to visit us. Please print this with your comment for the benefit of others who are similarly vexed. CLEARWATER, F^^A. DEAR CLEARWATER: Unless you are running a resort and booking reservations, you should be ASKED if it is convenient to receive guests at a specific time for a specific I number of days. Those who would descend on you with the kind of “notice” you describe should be given directions to the nearest motel. CONFIDENTIAL TO “HAD IT” IN HILLSBOROUGH: Why do you feel that you must tell your neighbor in a “nice” way to keep her dogs off your property? Tell her in a respectful, but firm way that when she “walks” her dogs, to please keep walking until thej^are beyond your costly lawn and shrubbery. , A NEW PIANO from Grinnell's wide selection IN YOUR CHOICE OF STYLES The Philip E. Ryck-mans of Lake Orion announce the engagement of their daughter, Bonnie Jean, to Airman 2.C. Thomas Allen Hathaway^ son of the Perry Hathaways of Oxford. She is a graduate of Pontiac Business Insti-tUte. Her fiance is stationed at Keesler AFB, Biloxi, Miss. Grinnell's Renta I-Purchase Plan allows you to rent a new piano. If you buy, all oayments apply! Home of Steinwoy, Knobe, Steck ond other renowned rromes. GRINNELL'S, Pontiac Moll, 682-0422; Downtown Pontiac, 27 S. Saginaw FE 3-71681 Use Your Charge, 4-Pay Plan (90 days same as cash) or Budget Terms Montgomery WARD 3 Doyi 0ni(g! Save ^10.07 on Wards own fine imported ironstone sets for 8 LoQk again at Wards low sale price for this lovely ironstone dinnei:wo'’®l PI®®® settings for 8/ serving pieces, even coffee server and salt/pepper in set; 3 colorful patterns or all-white. Thin, light, amazingly durable-a beautiful spring "lift" for your table! PONTIAC MALL phom: 682-1910 fov EoAtW/ PERFECT ALL 4 SEASONS OF THE TEAR \ ^499 to *999 Choose from an array of choice, let-out skins, skillfully fashioned into beautiful Classic Jackets with shawl, notched'or portrait Collars. You'll .feel like a queen in your choice of flattering. T?anch, Pastel, Cerulean, Dawn, Tourmalinef^^or Azurine, all natural skins. 1 * Furpfedurtilab*l*dtsi Fur Salon — Second Floor "Put 5p/twig IN YOUR -HftOitt AND yOK/tz Fi^im NEW ARNEL JERSEY PRINTS- so lightweight ■and wrinkle-free. Skimmer^ subtly: fitted- for form flattery,'or two-piece classics with’ Dash.- Wonderful • color'combinations. Sizes 10- 0. 17’8 to 29’« Dress .Salon — Second Floor L IT'S A (W .C(y\tMez SPRING!^ .’Coats with their, own under-cover story — THE TOTAL COSTUME - a trim coat and completely separate dress, or skirt-and-blquse ..combination, yet with' a born-to-be-worh-together lo6k. See our young and .•vital collection, in all the newest fabrics, styles and colors. Sizes 6.-16 and 5-13. 35’« to 89’® Suit Salon — .Second Floor THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY. MARCH 16, 1967 f Earth Slide Buries Two BoyS; One Qies CAMP PENDLETON, Calif. (AP) For almost 18 hoiirs , David Shaw, 9, was buried alive iunder t(ms of earth. His legs cramped tightly be-neatb, him, he breathed the air trapp^ by an overiianging ledge above tum-^nd stayed too frightened to fall asleep. ‘Where’s Ronnie?” David I asked when a Marine rescue team found him Wednesday. I His friend, Ronnie Staggs| 10, was killed by the earth slide that fell on the two boys as they played in a steep-sided canyon on the Camp Pendleton Marinei tinned at the base—wandered I into the canyon Tuesday after-SCREAMED jnoon in search of a model air- ‘When 1the dirt first fell, I plane. Search parties hunted heard Ronnie scream ‘get me out.’ ” David said. I told him I didn’t think could get out. Then I heaid him crying and it was the last thing I remember until I heard footsteps and the noise the shovels made. I thought they were going to kill me because all the dirt was falling on me.” The boys—sons of noncommissioned Marine officers sta- fiirough the night and found the cave-in by midmwning. Lancd Cpl. James Sylvester of Portland, Ore.,'dug a shovelful of dirt and uncovered a deep hole. Pfc. Charles Perkins of Lexington, Ky.,put his hand in tile hole and touched David on the head. “He began to cry,” Sylvester Tlien Pfc. Terry Womack of Shfelbyville, Tenn., crawled into the hole and tied his belt around David’s waist, and the other Marines pulled him out. A few minutes later several more tons of earth fell into tiie area . where David had been trappe^ The body of the Staggs boy was uncover^ nearby. ' Of his ordeal David saidJt seemed like “only a^»QOupln of hours.” He asked for Rotuiie, I shouted that we found! then he wanted his mother and ihis model airplane. the Look” ini^'smoother that any thought of , your last'birthday or your next just won’t occur even to people who know you weU. They’d just admire you, anew. Nightly application of 2nd Debut and the "ageless look’’ comes over your face afihost before * realise it Just how 2nd Debut ____so much for you in such a dunt- time is our secret; the pleasure of it all, however, is yours. You’ll not weep over vanquished skin dryness either. 2nd Debut (with CEF 600) if ycni’re under 40 ;j-f$3.O0) or 2nd Debut (with CEF grave blessed - Members of the Kennedf family and President Johnson stand in the rain early yesterday for the blessing of a new grave for President John F. Kennedy at Arlington National Cemetery. The widow, Mrs. John F. Kennedy (in dark dress), stands at right of center between President Johnson*(witii bowed head) and Sen. Edward Kennedy. At left foreground in Richard Cardinal Cushing of Boston. Ai.go<^ drug or department stores. arrivals, ltd.. CHICAGO. U.S>. \t S(Nii*s ears Original Formal Design Changed New Resting Place for JFK like Garden WASHINGTON (AP) - The new and permanent^., resting place of the late President John F. Kennedy lies on a terraced slope amid type^ of flowering trees he once lik^. The memorial, in Arlington National Cemetery, is more like A garden, a change from the formal design............... planned. * *■ Kennedy’s body was moved there, without prior announcement, Tuesday night. It is some 20 feet from the site where his body had lain since Nov. 25, 1963. Moved to the permanent memorial at the same time were the graves of two of his children, Patrick Bouvier Kennedy, who died two days after his birth in 1963, and an unnamed daughter stillborn in 1956. His widow. President Johnson and five brothers and sisters of the late President gathered at the new site, huddled under umbrellas in the rain early Wednesday for the blessing of the grave. OLD GRANITE The decision to change the memorial design, came last fall, it was learned, after some of the Kennedy family found that granite quarried over 150 years ago, was available. This stone had been cut from a quarry on Cape Cod, Mass.,' near Falmouth and also near the home where Kennedy spent his summers and went wliile he president to sail and relax. The granite was^ collected from stone fences and abandoned foundations of barns and brought to Arlington. Now, the rough-hewn slabs pave the area around his grave. The eternal flame rises through the center of a lighter-colored round stone, five feet in diameter, at one end of the grave. It looks like an old millstone but is simply an unmarked round stone also found on Cape Cod. MARBLE STEPS Wide white mqrble steps lead from a walkway up the terrace to the grave area. Around the walkway is a low stone wall inscribed with seven quotations from Kennedy speeches* T^e original design for the $1.4-million memorial called for a terminal wall behind grave with the presidential i on it. But now there will be onl grassy slope that undulates up'the hill to the steps of mansion where Robert E. once lived. ; Around the grave have t planted boxwood, saucer magnolia trees just about ready to bloom, flowering cherry holly and crabapple. More shrubs and trees will be | planted. There will be flowers, too. Kennedy often used to look j out of his presidential office to check on the flowers in the j White House rose garden. * ★ ★ The earth is bare now, but there will be grass, the blue-grass that Kennedy favored. Reitorters who (nice were admonished by Presidrait Kennedy “stay off my grass” in the rose garden remember how he liked j|>luegrass. 3 DAYS ONLY Where But Sears J SEARS in Sears EVVISO. NO-LINE GLASSES Enjoy all the advantagea qf the finest bifocals WITHOUT the dividing line on your lenses. These invisible bifocals give clear, comfortable vision in near and far ranges withont annoying Jump, blur or distortion. Now you can enjoy the extra comfort our contemporary eyewear creations bring yoii. Come in dr pbqne for an appointment SEARS OPTICAL SERVICES • Optical repair or fraiiiqs replaced while you wait • Eyes examined, jdasses fitted and lenses duplicated by staff optometrists • FVescription sun passes are also available " Your EYEGLASSES can look fashionable too— SEARS OPTICAL DEPARTMENT Dr. H. Bronson, Optometrist No Money Down On Sears Easy Payment Plan Pontiac 154 N. Saginaw Phone FE 5-4171 NO MONEY DOWN on Sears Easy Payment Plan Tire department, Perry Su 6.00x13 Tubeless Blackwall with Old Tire. Plus 1.59 Federal Excise Tax 4 Aetna! Piles of Nylon Cord Highway Special mSTATE Tires ALLSTATE P.is.st‘npn‘r Tiro Giturantoc .............. • Deep tread, longer mileage Dynatuf tread-rubber • Traction slots boost rainy day grip of the road • Get bjetter all-around performance from this tire Tubeless, Blackwall 4-pty Nylon Cord Tires to Fit Most of the Following: sv Price With Old Tire Plus Federal 1 Excise Tax 1 6.50x13 Buick Special, Chevy II, Mustang, Falcon, Comet, Valiant, Corvair, Olds F85 10niB G. Jarboe and Joseph L. Hdsniewski. Michigan law requires estab-lisfiments that hold a beer, wine and liquor license to be open to the >Mblic. Until just recently, the D^roit club has been open to members and .nonmembers alike. ★ ★ ★ Thayer said the first the commission knew of the club’s decision to enforce Playboy Inter-naticmars members-raily policy wad when a representative of the Detroit dub notified him by telephme last month. TOOK OUT ADS On March 7 tee club took out full-page ads in two Detroit newspapers announcing t h e chpnge. ’"F^m now on the Detroit club will be operated exactly as the 15 other clubs in Playboy’s internatimial. chain—exclusively for the enjoyment of Playboy’s cardholders and their guests,” the club an- Dr. Berman noted yesterday that only a small percentage ' requested personnel has been granted in, the past six years said that in view of the county’s population growth it will be difficult to meet commitments unless a sufficient staff is allowed. * * * The need for a deputy director of the health department is urgent, he said. “When I’m out of my office at a meeting such as this, soifteone should be minding ttie store,” he added. PERSONNEL Included in the health department request for added person-18 nursing positions, eight sanitarians, an alcoholism program counselor and a dentist. Other department officials who made their projected 1968 personnel needs known yesterday were County Treasurer James E. Seeterlin; Duane W. Shaw, director of the veterans affairs department; and Thomas Fitzpatrick, assistant county planning director. Seeterlin asked that^ two engineering aides b& added to his staff of 35 on the assumption that the task of maintaining the The ads boasted the club now bas a “new air of exclusivity.” An ad placed in newspapers yesterda3^aid the “Detroit Piayboy Hub is open to the general public” and explained the club is “open” to any person who pays a $25 admission fee. The commission views the “admission fee” as a means of ducking under the protection of iaws that aliow cover charges. ★ ★ ★ The club’s license comes up for renewal May 1. development coordinator, federal aid coordinator, a librarian and a stenographer. Presently a’staff of 13 ,is authorized. i Shaw, whose department has i 12 employes, asked for three new people, a field service representative and two clerical workers. Cost of the 53 new positions sought yesterday would be $359,-325.'This includes $304,085 for the health department, $11,298 for the treasurer, $29,496 for the plapning unit and $14,446 for the veterans department. The personnel policies com-mitteer will meet again tomorrow with four other department head£ A tentative 1968 salaries budg-, et is expected to be completed by the committee and County Board of Auditors by the end of this month. It will be presented to the supervisors’ ways and means committee April 3. Grain Farms Up EAST LANSING (AP) - Because of high labor costs in dairy farming, “cash grain” op-...c M.. V................. erations rapidly are replacing county’s parcel numbering sys-|‘^^'D'ing> as Michigan’s most tern will be the responsibility of common type of farimng, Mich- iaan StatA ilniuprsitv cpmnficfc the treasurer’s office. ■k He it Fitzpatrick requested four new persons for the planning unit to meet anticipated needs, PLANNING NEEDS igan State University scientists say. They estimate teat by 1980 Michigan will have 13,000 cash grain farms, which can be highly mechanized, compared to about 8,000 dairy farms. In 1964, the state had 15,500 cash gfain Requested were an economic farm? and 20,230 dairy farms. SMILEY BROTHERS deluxe console Only *573 • Made Expressly for Us by One of America's Oldest and Most Reliable Piano Makers . • 50 Year Guarantee on Soundboard • 10 Year Warranty on Workmanship and Parts • 88 Note Full Keyboard, Light and Responsive Action • Professional Type Three Pedal Assembly • Unequalled Dollar for Dollar Value • Bench, Delivery and Tuning InctuHed NEW STORY ft CLARK ORGAN 2 Manuals, 13 Pedals, Walnut Finish, Including Bench and Delviery.....^OZU Free Cummer Parking Rear of Store Smiley gi DETROIT 10 Woodward . TR 3-6800 fAO 119 North Saginaw Open Monday and Friday BIRMINGHAM EveninQS 'Til 9 P.M. 115 S. Woodward pC A.A791 Ml 7-1177 TOGETHER AGAIN Bob Reynolds well known area auto salesman has been appointed General Sales Manager of Oakland Chrysler-Plymouth. Reynolds joins Cy Owens newly qnnounced owner of the dealership. Bob extends an invitation to all his friends and customers to stop by and say hello this week. . . 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SCREEN iNWODucim rm *tM8 COOKUm CENTER Demonstrat FRIDAY 3:00 P.M.-5:30 P.M. 6:00 P.M.-8:30 P.M. SATURDAY 1:00 P.M.-6:00 P.M. Southfield Store YOU WON’T VELIEVE YOU SEE IT! . . ON IN ANO WATOH IT SO IT UNTIL COME COOK! Ho4r much time will our Time Machine save you ? Regular Oven Electronic Oven 14-lkrand Turkey TSainitas WOULD YOU BEUEVE? • COFFEE BREWED IN 30 SECONDS • BROlUNG BACON IN 90 SECONDS ON A PAPER PLATE YET! • COMPLETE MEAL DONE IN 7 MINUTES! 1^ SEE MANY KINDS OF FOOD COOKED ELECTRONICALLY TAPPAN Microwave CooKing DEFIES the IMAGINATION! A STEAK WILL ACTUALLY “SIZZLE” IN SECONDS Nothing in the Oven Gets Hot... Except the Food • POACHED EGG ON TOAST.... 27 SECONDS! • BAK|S A CUR CAKE.........27 SECONDS! e BAKES AN ApPLE .........T/a AAINUTES! • BAKES A POTATO...... 4 MINUTES! • BAKES A CAKE ......... 6 MINUTESI • ROASTS BEEF..............30 MINUTES! • 14-LB. TURKEY......... .... 75 MINUTES! COME IN AND WnffiSS THIS TIME MACHINE AT WORK! SOUrHFKLP SYORBI FRETTER’S PONTIAC TELEGRAPH RD. y* S. Orchard Lake Rd. FE 3-7051 FRETTER’S SOUTHFIELD TELEGRAPH RD.-Just South of 12 AAile Rd. THE PONTIAC PItESS. THURSDAY, MARCH 16, 1967 B-9 this Easter dress better for less at Robert Hall! 1 I 1 S, MAGNIFICENT WORSTED AND SILK SHARKSKIN SUITS 59.95 comparable value $70 i Todays overwhelming suit favorite! Come See our exciting new collection of meticulously tailored 1,2, And 3 button continental and conventional models with aU the ppdated lapel treatments... in lustrous, vibrant multi-tone Iridescents, spothghting French blue, bronze, teal, and many, many morel These magnificent suits belong in a well-dressed man s wardrobe! Superbly styled in regulars, shorts and longs. complete alterations included ‘ in time for Easter! hd FULLY LINED LAIMI-KNIT NYLON JACKETS 8“ comp, value 12.95 \\'ashable lami-knit nylon —won’t sag, stretch out of shape, or wrinkle eoer/ Smartly styled with expen-sive-lobk saddle stitching. Sizes 36-46. HALL-PRESr NEVER-IRON DRESS SHIRTS ir%99 comp, value $!(. Permanently pressed polyester-cotton keeps a "just-iron^” look for good! These shirts shed wrinkles in the wash! Spread or buttondown collars, short sleeves. White or blue, sizes 14 to 17. l«nitl««v*9hirtt,asab«v*......3.99 i FINE SPORTCOATS IN DACRON*-WORSTED, DACRON^-RAYON 16“ comp, value 22.95 Crisp, ciomfortable fabrics-in full-bodied Dacron polyester-worsted or Dacron-rayon, H Y Deep-tone plaids and subde IP I checks, higUghting spring I shades. Quality tailor^ 2 and i 3 button models. n, hall-prest* NEVER-IRON DRESS SLACKS 6“ Amazing buy! They stay'“just-ironed” forever thai^ks to the permanently pressedDacron*polyester-Avril* rayon blend... trim-fitting plain front model' Spring shades,29-42. complete alterations included in time for Easter HALL-PREST* DACRON*-COTTON ALL-WEATHER COATS jSlays freshly-pressed foreverl Dacron polyester-cotton-poplin, Zepel-b^eated forrain and Stain repellency. Raglan should^ modd, novelty plaid lined. Black, tan or olive... Mgulan, shorts, longs. terrific value PONTIAC 200 N. SAGINAW OPEN SUNDAYS, NOON ’TIL 6 P.M. For Above Avenge Sise and Eictprienal Values Visit Our li‘g end Tell Men'i Department •t 16051 Grand River er 8800 Van Dyke CLARKSTON 6460 DIXIE HIGHWAY Jut North of Wu.tf.nl Hill B^10 THE PONTIApVrESS, T^RSDAY, MARCH 16, 1967 By A|l»gy Fooi^tion ' irf Amdica OMstriboted by NEA Special Services) Just thinking about poison ivy can make you itch. . Most pec^le know of the dangers which lurk in the resins that abound on the three-leaf clusters. If you can’t identify poison ivy, stay away from all plants and vines. Poison ivy and this woes it can bring (almig with poison siima^ and poison oak) is a classic -and easily understood example of an allergy and the it. SHE’S PROLIFIC i- The five lambs shown above were bfflTi to this ewe (center) uTthe space of 16 months. The ewe gave birth to two sets of twins plus a singly b<»ti lamb between May 1965 and September 1966. Normally, sheep lamb once a year. Geneticists hope to develop a strain of sheep with ye^r-round births, heavy fleece, hornleSSness and white, open.faces. at School for Deaf Asked LANSING (AP) — A check on are one that can pretty well af- admission policies at the State School for the Deaf at Flint was asked Wednesday by a member of the State Board of Education. Ferris Crawford, associate superintendent of the State Department of Public Instruction, gave the board a breakdown on enrollments at the Flint school and at the State School for the Blind in Lansing. ★ ★ ★ The deaf school has 106 students enrolled from Genesee -County out of the total of 440, the board was told. Wayne County, most populous in the state, was next highest wHh 49 enrollments. J "That ratio seeim a little out of kilter,’’ objected board member Thomas J. Brennan of Dearborn. "That aeems a real windfall for the community, and they Allergies and You—10 i _. „ ',>• -.'j Beware of Poison Ivy It is a true allergy, one ol the most common, About one of two . one of three, are susceptible in varyhig degrees. HARMLESS TO MANY It is harmless to many. They work in it and can even sleep in it. Spread widely throughout North America, it is found virtually nowhere else in the world. In Europe, they dodge wild primrose. There’s one curious thing about contacts with poison ivy, a circumstance that is repeated over and over again in the personal histories of individuals suiieit iiioiuut^s uiuiviuuaioi:" - r , / , who have fallen victims to al-™NK you have touched it. lergies of et^ery description. ford to educate their own.” Brennan said other board members also are concerned because this "does not seem proper adjustment.” Of^the 196 enrollees from Genesee County, 10 are residents of' the school and 96 attend classes. Brennan said he also wanted a check on a claim that many j residents from other sections of the state move to the county so ' their children can attend the' day classes at the school for the i deaf. 1 The education board took no, action on a recommendation i. from a Special/ Advisory Com-f mittee on Education for thel' Handicapped that education forj' the handicapped be supported i on the same level as for reg-ji ular students. • The first contact with poison ivy, or the first few contacts, will bring no reaction whatever. The body’s defense against them "Allergy” c/o The Pontiac Press P.O. Box 489, Dept. 480 Radio City Station New York, N. Y. 10019 / (Please print this is your mailing label) Please send me .... copies of “Allergy” at $1.00 per copy. Enclosed is my check or money order for $..... Name...............i............. Address ......................... City.......... Stat^.............. Zip.. (Allow three we^s for delivery) may crumole ar)d the next contact will bring rapid reaction. , MUST BE TOUCHED In a test with infants, none showed any result when exposed to minute quantities of poison ivy resin at birth. Six weeks later, 75 per cent were sensitive. You can’t get an ivy reac-, tion just being near it. You must touch it or something it has touched, like a pants leg. It can cause anything from a slight rash^to widespread infla-mation and blisters. Scratching, of course, spreads it. Most violent reactions come from the smoke of the burning plant. The skin, the eyes and the lungs are exposed when this happens. ★ ★ / ★ Avoidance is the best guard against poison iVy. Wash with soap and water quickly if you A doctor can give you relief and sympathy if red welts and blisters inform you without j question that you HAVE. (NEXT: TMy Call It Hiy F(v«r.) i in the Easter Start Easter off on the right foot. Take the kids to Thom McAn»t.®„ and treat your family to our bright new Easter styles. The girls will waltz into spring with our dressy Petal Colors. Boys will look their best in our srpart siip ons and dress styles. (And your children’s feet grow right because we fit them 5 ways ... comfortably!) Dad can marshal the Easter Parade in our top-grade Bootmasters or cushiony Soft Lined Romas. And ... for mom, Thom McAn a bouquet of cherry styles.Jn all sorts of perky colors and heel heights. AM/FM PORTABLE RADIO S-/J.47 Discount Price Charge It 11 transistor radio with-3” speaker. Power converter jack lets you play off house current, batteries. Comes in high impact case. Batteries and AC adapter extra. 2 SLICE PROCTOR TOSSnR f.57 Model IVo. 2022S i Discount Price Charge It Fully automatic 2 slice toaster reheats toast without burning. Snap-out cruiiib, tray makes cleaning easy and convenient. C hrome finish stays bright with little care. . THOM McAN SHOES Step into Thom McAn and pick the shoes that go with your Easter fashions.'You'll find our prices make your Easter money go further... with sat^ngs on every pair you buy. What makes the shoes good is Thom McAn.. . not the price! f . ■ ■ ■ . ^ MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER im S. telegraph road, PONTIAC, MICH. Just say ^‘CHARGE IT” at Kmart. Take months to pay with easy budget payments. 9 IN. PLASTIC PAINT 1RAY! 57* OitrReg. 76e 4 Day* Only Smooth t surface tray fits 1 or 9” rollers. Never rusts. irighUy Colored PLASTIC PAILS Our Reg, 24c 4 Day Only "TALKING" ROLLER CCVER 9$t Our Reg. 1.3^ 3 Days Only New talking “SprCad-O-Meter” Pronel Holler cover lets you know when to reload. It warns you when paint thickness it to low for full hiding power. Oh sale now at Kmart. Save. 13-OZ.’AEROSAL EPOXY PAIRT Our Reg. 1.96 3 Djiys Only Will not peel, crack on chip. Dries rock hard. For all appli-ancesi furniture and toys. Gives fuse-on porcelain like finish. Ill appliance white or coppertone. Save. UTOER ROLLER TRAY LOCK U2 Our Reg. 1.97 3 Days Only ■ Just clanip this ei|teirior ladder roller tray lock to your ladder rungs. You have your p4|int supply right where you’re rolling. Instant adjustment saves time and climbing effort. GLENWOOD PLAZA . . Perry Street at Glenwood TWK PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, MARCH 16, 1567 B—11 Knowing 'Plot'Suspects DALLAS, Tex. (A^ — niver met David Ferric, or aliy of the others,” says Marina Os-wald Porter, once wed to man the War-1 ren commissionl declares single-handedly killed President John] F. Kennedy. Marina, now! remarried and pleading for privacy, said Wednesday in MARINA an AssocUited Press interview she never heard of the persons New (Cleans Dist. Atty. Jim Garrison claims conspired with Lee Harvey Oswald to assassinate Kennedy. * ★ ★ She said she had never heard of Clay Shaw or a Clay Bertrand and saw Shaw the first time “on, television recently, after Garrison arrested him and said he would prove Shaw was part of the conspiracy. Garrison asserts that Oswald, Shaw and Ferrie met in Ferrie’s New Orleans apartident in September 1963 and plotted the assassination. A three-judge panel is hearing evidence to find out if there is enough to warrant hling charges against Shaw. BRICK DUPLEX Marina, 25, still slender and pretty, but firm about not granting formal press intetviews, talked from her brick duplex in North Dallas. Two of her fhree children circled shyly but curious around the visitor. She said Garrison bad neyer contacted her concerning his Investigation into the assassination, Her only comment on his probe was that “I believe that all this is blown up and said over and over again, and then people just believe.” Osjyald v^as slain by^Jach Riiby two days after the Nov, 22, 1963, assassination of Kennedy. Ruby died this Jamiaiy of cancer. ' Ferrie, a former airlines pilot, died in bed Feb. 22 in New Orleans of what the parish coroner called natural causes. Garrison said irwas suicide. CLAIMED ‘TROUBLE’ A Garrison witness. Perry Russo, testifying before the New I Orleans judge, said Tuesday he last saw Ogwald in Ferrie’s apartment as Oswald described trmjble with Marina. Russo quoted Ferrie as advising Oswald, “Don’t worry, I’ll handle it.” ★ ★ * Marina said emphatically She never met Ferrie. She has shunned the spotlight since the assassination. BOUGHT HOUSE She bought a house with some of the $70,000 in sympathy donations she received after the as- In June 1965, she was married to Kenneth Jess Porter, then technician for an electronics firm. They had a son in July 1966 and moved to Greenville, 60 miles northeast of Dallas where Porter had relatives. They returned t o Dallas in late &ptember and Porter began operating a bar and grill. Marina rarely is seen outside the house except for walks with the children to a nearby supermarket. When asked if she knew of or had met David Ferrie, Marina ducked back from behind the door to answer firmly in the negative. TRIO IS CHARGED - A Tennessee state patrolman explains charges to Brian Heggen (center, gl^ses), 22, of San Jose, Calif., after he and two companions (foreground) were arrested in Nashville yesterday on charges of having thrown themselves in front of President Johnson’s car. Heggen was booked on a disorderly conduct charge of throwing himself in front of a moving vehicle; Shirley Newton (left), 22, of Memphis, Tenn., and Jariett Dewart, 20, Charlottesville, Va., were booked on charges of having participated in an attempt to leap in front of a moving vehicle. Modesf-Sized Crowds for LBJ WASHINGTON (AP) - President Johnson’s first major speech-making trip beyond Washington since the November elections brought him warm greetings from modest-sized Tennessee crowds. If there were fewer ♦ homemade greeting placards than would be normal in a campaign, there also were far fewer critical signboards than Johnson on most of his excursk " outside Washington last year. In visiting the Nashville ar( Johnson made a start on an un-.dertaking urged upon him by She then conversed briefly, number of Democratic leaders apologizing for her appearance disturbed about their party’s in her barely accented English;!election losses last November. They want him to make nlOrfe personal appearances around the country, taking his case to the people. He addressed the legislature, helped celebrate the 200th birthday of Andre% Jackson, helped dedicate a new conununity col-in Columbia and participated in a seminar on regional educational undertakings. He had' a speech for each The President, in effect, upstaged his wife, who had been scheduled to m^e solo appearances at all these events — apart from the one before the joint session of the Legislature. His major surprise was the announcement of a reshuffle of Autobiography of Philosophor Russell's Book Out LONDON (AP) — Lorq Ber-|known to me at/the ago of 12," trand Russell Says in the firsti)!owrite|;“lt appeared to^me at volume of his autobigrajhy toel^jj^ tffii^ltovident that free three passhms of his life have been longing for love, the search for knowledge and unbearable pity for mankind’s suffering. The pholosopher, whose “Prin-cipia Mathcmatica” won him acclaim as one of this century’s most brilliant mathematicians, also says that as a boy heiound algebra difficult at first, “perhaps as a result of bad teaching.” mathematics but gave, up his religious beliefs in his teeik Re wrote his agnostic views in Greek so that his family and teachers could not read them. the embassy in Sai^n. He told the «f^gislature Henry Cabot Lodge is resigning and will be replaced by Ellsworth Bunker, 72, now an ambassador at large. Johnson also announced other top-level changes and promised intensive ground operations in the war iri the months ahead. There were barely a handful of antiwar pickets butside the legislature in Nashville. But there was one untoward incident — when; a young man, with obvious support from two women, plopped himself down in the middle of the roadway in front of the presidential limousine as Johnson was leaving the Capitol building. But when he was introduced to Euclid, the ancient Greek geometer, “I had not imagined there was anything so delicious in the world,” he writes. ★ ★ ★ Now 94, Lord Russell in his long career challenged most of society’s accepted relipous,, social, moral and political views. He was awarded the Ck-, der of Merit, conferred on nb more than 24 living Britons, and the Nobel Prize for Literature. In recent years, he has been a virulent critic of U.S. policy in Vietnam. FIRST HUNTING Russell sent the first volutne| of his autobiography to his pub-! lisher 15 years ago with the stipulation that it would not be published until after his death. He was persuaded to change his mind and the book appeared today in a first printing of 25,OM copies. The first volume ends with his campaign against World War I. 1 is now working on the second volume at his home in Wales. love was the only rational sys- G tem and that marriage waste bound up with Christian supers sflUon." LONELY YEARS says his adolescent s: years were lonely and unhaf^y Q and he was shy, childish, awkward, well behaved and good-' , “i went out biCTcling one aft-natured. , jemoon and sud^ly, as I was * * * riding along a cotm^ road, I He says he divided bis inter-1 realized that I no k^er loved est among sex, religion and’Alys,” he writes. The^fet of his four marriages, at 22, was to Alys'Pear-sall Smito, 27, an American Quaker. Hiq love for her waned. You’ve seen Imperial ’67, newest American prestige cars in a decade. Now drive one. In clear, candid, matter of fact style, Russell tells of his personal life and crusades. ‘The facts bf sex became imperial 67 AUTHORIZED DEAUSa « ^CHRYSLER Oaklond Chrysr^r-Plyinouth, Inc. 724 Oakland Avenue Pontiac, Michigan McComb Chrysler-Piymouth, Inc. 1001 R Main St. Rochester, Michigan IN PERSON AT KMART F|HDAY AND SATURDAY THE POLAROID CAMERA GIRL FRIDAY SATURDAY 10 A.M. to 15 P.M. 5 P.M. to 10 P.M. demonstrate the new "200" series of Polaroid Cameras for your convenience. Come in. Save on these Polaroid Specials Thursday, Friday, Saturday and Sunday. March 16, 17, 18 and 19. BRAND NEW ONES FROM POLAROID I POLAROID 220 COLOR PACK CAMERA Featnres double-window ran;;e finder focusing, duplet iy. lens and electric, eye. Adapts to a number of Polaroid iji; ■ accessories. Color prints in I minute, black and white in 10 seconds. POLAROID 230 COLOR PACK CAMERA. Baa triplet lens, electrie eye, 4 expoaore settinm and Him speed settings and electronic shutter. 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SI 24.66 GLENWOOD PLAZA NORTH PERRY AT GLENWOOD B—12 THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, MARCH 16^ 1967 UNDERSEA STATION — The research facility sketclted above is another step toward exploitation pf "the ocean’s resources. Conceived by North American Aviation^ Ocean Systiems Division, the station is designed for close observation of divers, manned submersible vehic>S, habitats and support equipment to see how they are affected by an undersea environment. , Dresden Cilizens Bitter Over WW IDestnietion DRESDEN, -East Germany (AP) — “Bitter?” the elderly woman said. “Anyone who live^ through that night is bitter.” “That night” Was Feb. 13, 1945 when waves of Allied bombers pounded Dresden. Thousands were killed and much of the architectural splendor of Germany’s “Florence of the Elbe” was destroyed. * ★ ★ The woman’s bitterness is echoed by other Dresden residents who were in the city the night of the fire-bofflbing. “What was the point?>1isked another woman. “It ntust have been obvious that the outcome of the war had been decided.” World in Europe ended MarlM5. PA^H DECIMATED Said a clergyman: “On Feb. . 12, 1945, our parish had 10,000 1955. carried\out as part of a sysr temaMc^n designed t^ brea^ While the (lisptite continues the pe(^le of Dr^en know their 13th century ^ never again will be what it w Both the people and the Communist rdiime ' that governs East Germany, are proud of what has been rebuilt — for example, the baroque Zwinger Museum'YJt was a burned-out ruin. MADONNA “A MUST” The display of Raphael’s Sis-tine Madonna has become a must again for visitors to the Dresden Gallery. Paintings, removed for safekeeping during the war, were sent by the invading. Russians back to the Soviet Uqion. They were returned in Revishns to Draft Are Just a Starter By JERRY T. B^ULCH A special effort is being made to re-create as much as possible the city’s traditional image along the Elbe River. But many ruins remain. Many more great palaces and buildings are gone. ★ ★ * The Communist regime reminds Dresden’s people of the ;i The clergyman said the East misfortune that once over-I’ German government’s estimate whelmed them with poster slo-|of the bombing death toll.gans such as, “Never again a ; ranged from 28,000 to 35,000. | Feb. 13.” * *. . r-I They compare Dresden with I “From my talks with city offi-Hiroshima. j cials at the, time of the bomb- on rebuilding, the Communists people in it. After Feb. 13, there were 320 left. Not that they all died. Many did. Many fled. No one will ever know how many exactly did die in the bombing of the city. It was filled with refugees from the East. No one knows exactly who , and how many.' I \, (AP Newsfeatures) ' \ ■ FW draftees, servicemen and veterans, there is a lot more cookingNln Washin^n right now than the highly publicized changes made and pf-opoised in the draft. Of coui^the draft revisions are on the front burner. Hiere ai^^^o drastically different proposals — a complete overhaul proposed by the presidential commission and a much milder prlmsal by a committee commissioned by the House'Armed Servi^ Committee. Without awaiting congressional action. President Johnson has decided to make effete by 1969 the proposal to draft 19-year-olds first and to use a fqrm of lottery on making the draft selections. \ Also he will cut down on defer and fathers but leave to Congress ements is ^ d ing,” he added, ‘‘I heard figures of more than 100,000 having been killed.” Dresden’s current population of about 500,000 compares to about 640,000 ip 1939. CONTROVERSY FLARES The controversy of the bombing of Dresden flared again, recently in Britain where Lord all-German development. Boothby called the raids “the most dastardly act in the whole The country of origin claimed of British history!” by most of the white foreign- This brought a sharp response born population' of the United from historian A. J. P. Taylor States or who had at least one who contended the Dre^en foreign-born parent is Italy with raids, in which the U.S. Air 145. million persons, Germany is Force also participated, “were! second and Canada third. recently rejected a West German offer of $7.5 million to restore the opera house that sits a massive ruin on the theater square near the Elbe. The rejection was based on a recently initiated East German pwey tine that there is no longer any Is Soft Whiskey soft? ' Draw your own conclusion. YOU have to taste Soft Whiskey to believe it. Anything less won’t prove a thing. Do all whiskeys taste the same going down? Or is this one different? Can Soft Whiskey do what any other 86 proof whiskey can do, only softer? Or is it a gimmick? You know our answer. Now we’d like yours. How soft is Soft Whiskey? We’ll accept your conclusion if-you’ll swallow our pride. for graduate students decision on undergrad- ACnON REQUIRED \ Congress will have to take some action on the draft, however, before June 30 when the present law expires. There was immediate talk of blocking-the lottery proposal. GI BILL: An item of legislation almost sure of passage is a new GI bill providing better benefits for veterans since Korea -especially those who have fought in Vietnam. There seems general agreement that the GI education bill passed last year is too low. j President Johnson has asked that, the rate for single veterans be raised from $100 to $130 monthly and that the $150 rate for married veterans with children be raised $10 for each child beyond one. And he wants to help those who need to finish high school to do so, with help beyond that through college. At present high school help counts against any college benefits. ★ ★ ★ /The President also wants to...increase to wartime rates the disability compensation and pensions for veterans who served on or since Aug. 5, 1964. 5.4 per. INckEASE He seeks a 5.4 per cent increase in the general pension rates for 1.4 million veterans, widows and dependents, and extra medical benefits for pensioned veterans. He has called for higher insurance benefits up to $30,000, * * ■* Rep. Olin D. Teague, D-Tex., chairmpn of the House committee, wants to raise the pension rates for non-service-connected disabilities for veterans and to extend the peacetiitie benefits to men who have entered military service since Jan. 31, 1955, the cutoff date for Korean GI bill benefits. MEDICAL: It’s uncertain what will happen to the Defense Department’s plan to bring dental care Into the medical program the military services provide for dependents of active duty personnel. TTiis is now excluded along with routine eye and physical examinations. ★ Indications are that Pentagon officials feel it is too costly to push at this time! MILITARY JUSTICE: Also in the works is a proposal to improve military justice. , Two sticklers are what to do about crimes committed by American civilians accompanying the armed services overseas and military crimes committed by veterans while they are in service. Also involved is how to make certain military laws comply with recent Supreme Court decisions on confessions and legal counsel. • PAY: The military has gotten two military pay raises since August 1965, but many influential congressmen feel the pay is: still too low. I The unofficial but authoritative Army, Navy and Air Force Times says defense officials have decided against submitting a pay package early this year. Instead, small pieces of legislation may be Submitted ftom time to time. RESERVES: Rep. P. Edward Hebert, D-La., has reintroduced his scKcalled Reserves Bill of Rights whi(^ passed the House last year but died in the Senate. TTie House has passed it once more. Drawingroom. Calvert Extra $10.85?.J5*U $4.68c7J:#h $2.96 mcu-.. t.x.. BLENDED WHISKEY-86 PROOF-65% GRAIN NEUTRAL SPLITS 01967 CALVERT DIST. CO.. N.Y.pi NOW, BUY FAMOUS BRANDS AT MUCH LESS THAN THEIR ACTUAL VALUE! COSTS HAVE BEEN 'ORGOnENl' PROFITS ELIMINATED! FiUUIKLY. WE WERE SHOCKED ... WE FOUND MAMY ITEMS IN OUR WAREHOUSE THAT BE SOLD! AFKI III WIinilSE Hebert’s bill W^d ^ve the varioius Reserve components ^ higher status in me Defense Department, place pern^anent " manpower floors ifeder the Reserve^ and National Guard, .. and require the Se*;retary of Defenie\to\support theml witli nmple equipment and training. It is intended to bar any further merging of the Reserves and Natumal GuaixL TREMENDOUS LIVING-ROOM^VALUES JUST IN TIME FOrEASTER^tind SPRING; SAVE ^88 Beautiful Italian Provincial Sofa SAVE ^50.95 Nylon Frieze So^a and Chair SAVE *110.9^ Deluxe 4er and soy Stfr until juice thickens. 4-6 servings. Spantth onions s i mered with Burgundy wine Bake Frozen Vegetables in a Covered Casserole Although one of the great advantages of frozen vegetables is that they can be cooked in minutes on top of the stove, there nre times when it is more convenient to cook them in the oven. * ★ w Baked in a slow, relaxed sort of way along with a roast, souffle or other main dish, they can be timed to emerge piping hot and ready to serve without the need for last minute, attended cooking. ’The technique caUi far a casserole that caffl be covered, the frozen yegetpble of your choice, a tamaq^ or two of butter or nargtiriae and a few selected seasonings. The frozen vegetable cooks in its own stpam gs It defrosts in toe oven; there is no liquid to drain off. The vegetable retains its garden fresh coitor, the flavor is notabin iredi and the texture is teate-criqi. Basic Directions for Baking Frozen Vegetables 1 package (9 to 12 ounces) frozen vegetable or 2 cups frozen vegetable from poly-, bag 1 to 2 tablespoons batter at ^ margarine V4 teaspoon salt , , Dash bladr pepper * Additonal aeasaii%. B desired- Place frozen vegetaUe without defrosting in a 1 to 1% quart baking dish with a tigMrttBng cover. Add butter and season-bigs. (B cover does not fit ti^t-ly, it may be necessary to add 1 to 2 tablespoons water.)' Cover and bake in moderate ovm (350 degrees) for time indicated to foltowing chart. About 15 minutes before done, remove from oven and mix well. Return to oven and continue to bake ^itil just tender. (For a 325 degree oven, add 10 minutes to baking tone; for a 375 degree oven, decrease baking time about 10 minutes.) to poaltry, wild game or stMlm and pot roasts. Remember toat wine loses its alcoholic content when it is cooked. Only the flavor is left-like vaailla to cake. BUNGUNDY ONIONS Choose fiVe or six Idaho sweet Spanish pnictosr about 3 inches to width (which is actually on the smallteh side for this mammoth-sized variety!) Cut off the root end; carebdly peel back the fra^le skin, leaving toe stem end to serve as a handle. Cut in %-.inch slices. Pack into a quart measure. There should be 2 rounded quarts. Separate sUces info rings. The centers and end pieces may be held badk, to be chopped and used to vegetable salads or added to cooking carrots, peas, and other vegetables foi' subtle flavor. Or spread on cookie sheet and freeze for later use. Heat three tablespoons butter in a Dutch oven, deep heavy frying pan or your electric s^et. Add onion rings, tosstog them about with a wooden spoon until, rings are coated Wit^ butter. Ad three wholb cloVes, % teaspoon salt. A A . Continue cooking over low heat unto onions juaf start to. brown. Watch this! Add one cup Burgundy wine. Ctover pan; rim-mer about 15 minutes, (toions should be slightly crisp toit tender. Remove cover and code nntfl the wine is reduced ultoost to a glaze. Serve at once. Note: at the start, this may seem like a lot of onions bat they do cook down and folks’ idea of size of serving^ changes with the first taste! Oh, yes, remove cloves before sermg! Makes 6-8 servings. Thre are some new frozen beans in your grocer’s refrigerated case. AAA Deluxe peas, whole ^reen beans, sweet white com, baby sprouts, baby broccoli whole mushrooms and artichoke hearts are choice products. If you’re looking for a new way to serve peas, get a package of toe tomy ^nze ones and serve them to the manner suggested below. / , GotlRWPEASIN -SODrCHMM SAUCE Vi teaspoon dried tarragon leaves 2 tablespoons-warm lAater 1 package (10 oz.^ frozen deluxe tiny peas 1 large oucumber, peeled and sliced Vi inch thick 1 teaspoon salt ^ cup sour cream / % cup cooked salad dressing or y mayonnaise ' 1 tablespoon lemon juice Soak tarragon leaves to warm water 10 minutes. Placi pea8, cupuiltoer, salt, and tarragon mixture to saucepan. Bring to boil. Cover and sinuner 5 minutes. Drain well. Combine soar cream, salad dressing, and lemon juice. Place over low heat arid stir constantly until thwoughly heated; add to vegetables. Makes about 2Vi cups or 5 servings. TIME CHART FOR BAKING FROZEN VEGETABLES Vegetable Artichoke Hearts Asparagus, Cut Asparagus, Regular Spears Broccoli, Chopped Broccoli, Spears Brussels Sprouts Carrots, Sliced Carrots, Baby Whole Catiliflemrets Com, Whole Kernel Green Beans, -Cut Green Beans, French Style Green Beans, Italian Green Beans, Whole Lima Beans, Baby Lima Beans, Fordhook Mined Vegetables Peas Peas & Carrot Slices Spinach, Chopped Spinach, Leaf Squash, Cooked Time at 350” 45 minutes 45 ” Wax Beans Food Spending Rises; Percentage Is Down EAST LANSING — If food,sidering the number of women spending trends established tojWW^ S the last ten years continue, we should see a decreasing proportion of tte family income spent for food in 1967. A a The permitage has declined from 26 percent to 1947 to about 18.2 per cent in 1966, according to Mrs. Anita DeUn, Cooperative Extension Servics ^lecialist to foods and nutrition at MSU. AAA Mrs. Dean noted that another increase in family income and the increase in off-farm enqiloy-ment. If you're hoptog for a higher income to 1967, plan to spend a bigger chunk of it for food. “Statistics show that the proportion of toe total dollar outlay for food away from home increases sharply with' income. At toe lowest income levri |2 out of ev^ $17, or ■ per cent went for trend, has been established: the proportion of a rural family’s' “Mid-income families spent food that is home produced is $6«out of every 136, or about 17 declining. Tbis means that food per cent. And at the $10,000-and-expenditures of rural and urban^ever income level, atout 27 per families will be muck more alike cent went for meals and sna^j in toe future. eaten a'^ from home,’’ Mrs. Homemakers are sure they are tfendliig more money for A A A j food than yon nsed to. They And it’s still chesqier to eat are pnfeaUy right. to the South. The value of food ^ Mrs. Dean not^ thaj J^^rtoe^NoJhl^^^^^ ^ ' from home varied at aboto the EAT OUT MORE - 'in food speiidtog are lessening. And fomtoes are spendtog.This is to keeimw with the gen-mare money for food eatenieral lessening of geographic dif-! amy from iherae. lEhia isn’t isfferences to standards of livtog Ugbm ndgMImeipeded, c(ih|totiwU.& i BURGUNDY ONIONS QUICK PORK AND CABBAGE vmi/'ms^rs/ffSAVMffSA SPECIAL THIS WEEK! Sweet California Sunicist ORANGES Size 113 $4 00 3 Doz. I California Iceberg LETTUCE ^ Size 24 2.25 Chiquita BAhANAS 1 Lb. MICHIGAN POTATOES 10 Lb. 29^ toai APPLES ViBUi $|00 23 Lbs. I FRESH, SWEET 1 Gal. fief the Best for Less at: Corner of Clarkston and Sashabaw Roads Vk Mila anrth at lashabawExH eiaaad Mangays-Ogaa IStN la Itll Tuaa., Thnrs., tun. ON YOUR FAMILY MENU SHOP • ROUND • SIRLOIN • CLUB EGGS Fresh-Lean HAMBURG “49J Buy Now and Save!! , SKINLESS and DEFATTED IIIEIESS Meafy BEEF POT ROASTS Junedale Brand SMOKED PICNICS • 10 CHUCK PmiES MILD CURED • 3 lbs. Slieeil Bacon LEANMEAH • 2 lbs. Pork Steak QUARTERED CHICKEN • 3 lbs. Legs-Breasts • 2V2 boxHIooked Fish Fillfits YOUR CHOICE MARKETS T8 North Saginaw^ Pontiac / Open Fijday Evenings (til 9 P.M. v TkU Ad in Effect Bom Stores , \ Friday and Saturday Quality" MeaU Since 1931 4348 Dixie Highway-Drayton Open Wadnasdaya 9 A.M. to 6:30 P.M. thuradoy thru Saturday 9 A.M. ta 9 PM. idoya 9 A.AA. to 6 P.M. THE POXTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, MARCH 16, C—3 FLORIDA VITAMIN REUSH-You’ll relish vitamin C and A in this fresh Florida orange and vegetable relish that’s so good with fish, fowl and meat. Make enough fw Easter dinner and after; it keeps well in the rejfrigerator. Oranges and Vegetables Ground for A Relish Canned Tomato Sauce Is Easy Way to Flavor The Pennsylvania Dp^ch are known for having quite a way with food. Their busy cooks take pride in serving good food and lots of it. Their soul satisfaction !S from clean plates and contented family countenances when the meal is over. This “Dutch Spiced Pot Roast’’ ^ reminiscent of Pennsylvania kitchens. It’s not only pleasantly spicy but has tang, too. Cloves, bay leaf and onion mingle with piquant canned tomato sauce exchanging good flavors with the beef roast as it simmers. * The roast is first marinated in a spicy vinegar mixture, cooked in the marinade for an hour. Then convenient canned tomato sauce with its dash of salt, spices and sugar for seasoning is added and the Savory juices that collect are thickened and served as graVy. Dutch Spiced Pot Roast 4 to 5 Ib. beef rump roast 1 medium onion, sliced 1 bay leaf 3 whole cloves 2 teaspoons salt % teaspoon pepper Vi cup vinegar 1 cup water 2 tablespooni'oil 1 (8-oz.) can tomato sauce J Flour to thicken gravy Combine, onion, bay leaf, cloves, saltj pepper, vinegar and water. Pour over beef and marinate in refrigerator overnight. Pour off liquid and save. Brown beef in oil in Dutch oven. Pour marinade over beef. Simmer meat for 1 hour. Remove cloves and bay leaf; add tomato sauce and cook 2 hours longer. The Valencia is the juicy allpurpose Florida orange — ideal for slicing and sectioning for appetizers, salads and desserts. This superior variety, with its deep colored peel and fruit, is practically seedless and has exceptionally sweet, rich flavor. Fine quality oranges and grapefruit continue to be the juiciest food buys at your market, and,are listed by the U.S. Department of Agriculture as plentiful foods for April. Due to the abundant supply, prices are lower than they haye.been in years. The total 1966-67 Florida or-142,400,000 boxes — 42 per ange crop has been forecast at cent above last season! This is a record for the Sunshine State’s citrus industry. 000,000 boxes of the prized Valencia oranges — 35 per cent above 1965-66. This variety will be coming into markets nationwide from approximately the middle of March to July this year, with the heaviest supply expected in A^ril and May. The new crop includes ( roast is cooked two hours Add flour to thicken gravy, if longer. desired. Makes 6 to 8 servings. DUTCH SPICED POT ROAST - There’s homey goodness in this Pennsylvania Dutch-inspired meal: Chicken corn soup, Dutch Spiced Pot Roast, mashed potatoes with car- rots, pickled vegetable relishes, freshly baked bread, lettuce salad and apple pie with coffee. ......................... ...".......................................- Q. What is the name of this cut of meat. During the Valencia season, you’ll find Florida Vitamin Relish a refreshingly different way to savor the heavenly sweet orange. This crisp raw relish is superb with fish, fowl and meat. Made with oranges, carrots, green pepper and onion, its healthful content of vitamins C and A gives it its name. As the crunchy orange-vegetable combination keeps well in the refrigerator, you can make it up for Easter dinner and enjoy it during the week with cold sliced turk^ or ham. FLORIDA VITAMIN RELISH 4 Florida oranges 2 carrots 1 green pepper 1 small onion (optional) Vt cup sugar Few grains salt Quarter oranges; remove any] leeds. Scrape carrots; quarter lengthwise. Quarter green pepper; remove seeds and stem. Peel onion. - Put oranges, carrots, green pepper and onion through food chopper using medium blade. Add sugar and salt; mix well. Chill, covered, in refrigerator several hours before using. Yield 4 cups. Note: Relish will keep I well in refrigerator. Chopped Peanuts Fill Baked Applps A. Salt pork side. Q. Where does it come from? How is it identified? A. As the name indicates, it comes from the side. It is sold as a square Or rectangular piece. Salt pork side is composed of alternate layers of fat and lean. It’s cured by rubbing with or packing in salt. Q. How is it^ prepared? A. There are several nwthdds: cooking in liquid, panfrying, panbroiilng, baking and broiling. One of the most popular is panfrying. Slice salt pork side one-fourth inch thick, cover with water, bring to boiling and pour off water. Dip Preserved Ginger Spices a Dessert Why not try a light but rich dessert that is refreshing? Gingercream With Peaches V4 cup cold watef I’/i teaspoons unflavored gela- tin 1 cup milk^iheated 3 tablespoons finely chopped syrup-preserved ginger 1 cup heavy cream, whipped 1 package (10 ounces) frozen peaches Sprinkle gelatin over cold wa- slices in cornmeal and fry in'^^f ^nd allow to stand about 5 hot lard or drippihgs until golden *^inutes to soften. Add the very brown. Serve with cream gravy hot milk; stir until gelatin is made by blending one-fourth cupj'^tssolved. Chill until _partly set. of flour with an equal amount of dripping^ Add to this two Clips of milk and cook, stirring constantly, until the sauce is thickened. ’This takes three to . four minutes. stirring a few times. Fold in the ginger arid whipped cream-Turn into 6 dessert dishes; chill' until set. Top with de-frbsted peaches. Makes 6 sery- Canned Chili Con Carni Aids Hostess in Easy Cooking For end-of-winter entertaining it’s fun ^ try a meal that’s a novel change from standard company fare. To give a distinctive touch to your next party, why not take a cue from colorful Mexico and serve a tasty chili supper? . Besides being a perennial crowdTpleaser, a chili supper lets you put yoiir most imaginative party ideas into action. Attractive crockery serving piisces, a gay tablecloth and napkins, all add festive notes to your gathering. The'main attraction? Hot and hearty Fiesta Chili... a dish that’s snbstantiai enough to^ satisfy the. most robiist'appetite. It’s tasty enough to please the most discriminating palate and certainly attractive enough to hold the ; .^spotlighl on your table, too. ^ And good news for the hostess, Fiesta Chili is a “iix-in- no-time” dish. Thanks to the seasoned goodness of canned chili con carrie (with beans) you can have a memorable party meal with a minimum of time in the kitchen. Fiesta'Chili V4 cup diagonally sliced celery 2 tablespoons chopped green . pepper 2 tablespoons butter or margarine 1 can (15H ounces) chili con ' came (with beans) Vz cup cooked macaroni Shredded Cheddar cheese Shredded lettuce der. Add chili and macaroni. Heat; stir now anB then. Gar- Makes 2 servings. with loaves<)of brown and serVe bread, fresh fruit, cookies and coffee. It’s a feminine tradition. Ever i since Eve offered Adam the] fatal apple, women have been tempting their men with luscious apple desserts. So here’s an enticing new number for your recipe repertoire — Baked Peanut-Glazed Apples. i The magic ingredient is dry roasted peanuts which are com-j bined with a cinnamon-crumbi mixture to fill the center of each j apple. A clear glaze completes' the.picture for a dazzling offer- 1 cup boiling water ' 1 cup sugar Combine chopped peanuts, bread crumbs. Vs cup sugar and cinnamon. Core apples remove Way of Cooking Has Changed skins from top half or apples. Place in large baking dish. Fill centers with pqanut mixture. Dot with jriiargarine. Pour boiling wate# into dish. Bake in modef^'oven (350 degrees) about yhour or until apples are tendar. Remove apmes to serving platter, reserving % cup of liquid. (If necessary add water; to make V^ cup of liquid). In a smfill saucepan, com- BAKED PEANUT-GLAZED APPLES-rThese j^ill tempt anyone on a cold winter’s day. The apple centers are filled with a heady mixture of dry roasted peanuts, cinnamon and crumbs; a clear glaze completes this dazzling dessert. For Baked Peanut - Glazed Apples choose apples that are plump, firm and mellow-tex-tured. These include such Uprie-ties as the Rome Beauty, York Imperial, Stayman and Golden Delicious which are all available at this time of year. Baked Peanut-Glazed Apples Vi cup chopped dry roasted peanuts Va cup bread crumbs Vs cup sugar 1 teaspoon cinnamon 6 baking apples 2 tablespoons margarine, melted An old-fashioned New England “boiled dinner’' often consisted of corned beef, cabbage, carrots, parsnips, potatoes and beets. The beets were cooked separately so that they wouldn’t color the other foods; the other vegetables were all added to the kettle in which the corned beef had partly cooked. Nowadays we would still cook the beets separately, but we wouldn't add the cabbage until shortly before the beef and other vegetables were done b< cause modern tastes call fojl tender-crisp rather, than sogf cabbage! bine apple liquid with re-4 cup sugar; bring lainiu^ to a Doii and simmer for 5 When/ ready to serve, spoon syrup Bver apples. If desired, top with, additional chopped peani/ts. Makes 6 servings. Sardine Recipe iutter white bread on both Ides and place a slice of Amer-j/can cheese on one piece. Place sardines over cheese. Top with other piece of white bread. Toast in electric grill or oven until golden brown for a tasty I luncheon treat. A big fat offer from the kinni tunaJ /super y ' PRICES SUBJECT TO MARKET CHANGE | U.S. #1 Michigan . ^ All-Purpose AlVn Potatoes vllV 50 lbs. 1 i : Floridf, . Seediriss .VMa GrU«»5g* CALIf. O SWEET G DSii ORANGES - ■ ■ , lettuces;..-:. 19* GNIONS3 >- 29* CELERY K.... 19* LEMONS T"i. ...29* C ARROjPS CELLO S'orl 9* Tomatoes • 19* RAN AN AS FANCY 10ib. ONIONS . '.-t 8* FRESH DRESSED ||ll^ STEWERS CO: FRESH DRESSED ||VA FRYERS Zir ;;Trk.vs 35! FARM FRESH H AA GR. A EX. LARGE i| BlC EGGS ... *lw OLE TIME HICKORY m jNJk SUBjMOKED Am BACON A TO 1 NRK ROAST <^39* LIVER 1.29* RACON SQUARES ..25* HAMBURBER "S 2-. 89* SAUSAGE 1.49* HOT DOGS sk^n\^ss 3 BfflDCN’s KINGNUT Slfcs. £1.JFoieo n ^ A A X SPARTAH 6 6-oz.Cans 79' Buytwo7-oz. cans^f Empress WhiteTunaandget one 7oz. can free. Just send the labels and4he coupon belowto Empress, and you’ll get a coupon back-good for a free 7 oz. can of the skinny tuna. We call it skinny because of the way it’s packed. In nocalorie water. Which keeps the tuna tasting like it does when it's fresh caught. And keeps your waistline in shape. Try it. You’ll never want oil-soaked tuna again. Even if ^they’re giving it away. Empress, the skinny tuna. M s I 608 W. HURON ST., Near Webster School iL iSsS ^ ^ rees Fahrenheit could be achieved. But it took an awkward orb called Sputnik to bring cryogenics into closer focus, by spurring research into the reaction of materials in extremely low temperatures. The resulting discoveries could have vast down-to-earth applications. ★ ★ -k Dream worlds are opened for experts in the fields of power transmission, medicine and preservation of organic materials. Included is, as one technician put it, some of the “gee whiz stuff” of cryogenics. METAL i STRENGTH INCREASiSS For example, in sapfcold temperatures certain metals increase their tensUe strength as much as four times, electricity seemingly flows on forever and a liquid flows q^ll. None of which ^ have the historical significance of the cave man’s discovery of fire, but it conld hflve considerable influence im mankind’s future Ufe. Among those making such discoveries are engineers for Pes-co Products of Bedford, Ohio. Pesco, a division of the Borg- Wamer Corp., builds electric )rs and fuel pumps for the les of some of tbis country’s space rockets, the ones fuele(i with liquid oxygen and liquid hydrogen. The fuel is, by nttture, about-459 degrees F. ★ ★ ★ As anyone who has had electric motors freeze up in subzero tempraturp can imagine, problems were expected. Some of the advantages were not, The problCTtis included find- ing mateiials fiiat could withstand ^e cold. Molecular structure changes with temprature. Moteciilqs in metel move around free and easy in warmth. In cold they slow down and huddle together. In supenmld, they get so close ai^ nnmoving that some metals shatter, like crystal on an opmratic high C. There were other matters, such as replacing rubber gaskets in motors, since the rub-Pr also turns brittle as dry clay. But then came the pleasant surprises. While some metals turned brittle and useless, others gained additional qualities. Cop-pr acquired more tensile strength. Aluminum became stronger. Stainless steel tripled in strength. DISCOVER ELECTRICTY But the most dramatic d i s-covery in cryogenics has Pen the behavior of electricity in suprcold cMiductors. The resistance of wire losing much higher currents to P carried in smaller circuits. This meant a small motor could be called upon to do Herculean tasks. The one designed for punrjping fuel into rocket engines, for example, is of one-horsepower size small enough to be Pld in your POWER MAGNIFIED BY COLD - This small one- hand. Submerged in liquid hy-horsepwer motor can generate 50 horsepower in suprcold drogen and oxygoi at -423 detemperatures of —423 degrees — and can attain 90 h.p. in grees, it can generate 50 horse-short bursts. pwer and up to 90 in bursts. Elegant spring costumes! OUR 3-PIECE WOOL DOUBLE KNITS IMPORTED FROM BRITISH HONG KONG Suits of the finest woo! yams... made with painstaking finesse by Hong Kong craftsmen. Jackets, skirts, shells, all beautifully full-fashion^... highlighted with brilliant contrasts, self-covered buttons, striking details, flashing stripes... even extra buttons and yarn. And the colors dazzle! Come see this fashion eleganp, at an amazingly small price! Sizes 8-18. 88 You'U agree fhey*re to j OPEN SUNDAYS, NOON TIL 6 P.M, PONTIAC CURKSTON 200 N. SAGINAW 6460 DIXIE HWY. Juit North of Waterford Hill • For tho Big and Tall Man in tkt Family, FlnaM Rotor to Oor Big Mon'i Shog at KOSI Grand Rivnr MECHANICS TOOL BOX REG. $6.88. EACH ^^$R85 VI lEA. 26 IN. HAND SAW $ 10 point NOW EA. MAGNESIUM LEVEL IeG. $5.69 EACH SALE PRICE $i 155 EA. 7 PC PROPANE TORCH KIT REG. $6.79 EACH SALE $C88 PRIM 51 EA. REPUCEMENT CYLINDER-NOW Mc'El WICKES'SPECIAL 5 FT. WOOD STEPLADDER $4.44 EACH 5 m ALUMINUM StEIHnADDER $788 SAVE ON EACH TOOL SABRE SAW • WITH RIP-GUIDE • FULL 1 IN. STROKE ORBITAL A SANDER • 4500 0PM • .TAKES Va OF STANDARD SANDPAPER SHEET HEDGE TRIMMER • DOUBLE EDGE BLADE • FULLY INSULATED • SPECIAL PRE-SEASON LOW PRICE REG. $19.95 EA. YOUR CHOICE *1511 ELECTRIC ROMEX WIRE METALLIC 12/2 (plishc jacket) WITH GROUND -par foot 12/2 (plastic jacket) Pliin par feet DOOR CHIMES , REG. $3.58 EACH $997 SALE Ml PRICE HEAVY DUTY STAPLE GUN REG $9.45 EACH $044 8i EA. 1/4 INCH DRILL REG. $8.99 EACH S SALE PRICE 7i* HEAVY DUTY 3'/»cu.n. WHEEL BARROW PNEUMATIC TIRE REG. $28.95 EACH I99II PRICE fcyEA. QUALITY SHELVING 1 X 12 f 2 BTR. PONDEROSA PINE 14‘ par foot CHANDELIER Black with walnut finish. F'lye flame type cande-labras. Walnut finish ■wood column, scalloped drip pans. 20i/2j4liam-eter, lAVi' height. Reg. $17.50 Each SALE PRICE WICKER RIG. $9.95 MMMER SWITCH-WOW $744 bgh ESTAiSUSHED II LUMBER & BUILDING SUPPLY CENTER BALDWIN and HOLLY ROADS 5 Miles Soutfi of wm BUNG. MICH. (313) .694^86 HOURS: i Monday-Thunday ... 8 A.M. to S 9.11^ Friday .........8 A.Mi. to 9 P.M. Saturday • A.M. to 4 P.M. EAST SIDE Of ROUTE S3 2 Miles South of ROMEO. MICH. 152-3501 USE OUR CONVENIENT LAYAWAY PLAN. NO EXTRA CHARGE OPEN EVERY FRIDAY EVENING! rTfE PONTM PRESS, THURSDAY, MARCH ^6, 1967 GENERAL ELECTRIC WESTINQHOUSE ZENITH STEREO CONSOLE STEREO COMB. STEREO CONSOLE Solid stoto itor«b Hi-Fi ... no Cembinotion lUroo Hi-fi wifh Doniih modorn cobinot of gon- A rell oround atoroe Hi->i com- Solid atatb doiign. Storoo Hi-Fi lubti fo bum oufl 4-tpood outo* AM-FM, FM-itoroo rodio. Boou* umo vonoort and hordwoodi. binotion with AM-FM, FM-«t«roo with AM-FM, FM-ttor«o radio, motie racord chanoor. Welnuf bful contomoorory docorotor 4 - iDOod outomotic rocord radio. Solid stato. Contomporory A F C. jom-proof chongor. Roc- itylod finith., efd atorago. Walnut syoodi $99M $110 $13088 $103 "$339 $109 $199“ ^78 H49 $99 n48 H58 GAS DETROIT JEWEL MAGIC CHEF HOTPOINT30” SUNRAY DRYER 30" GAS-RANGE 30" GAS RANGE ELECTRIC RANGE GAS EYE $126 $148 FREE DELIVERY! FREE SERVICE! thstont ciwdit! Highland makes credit buying easier than ever! All major ' credit cards, bank cards or store charge >. plates honored for immediate credit. Buy with no money down. $178 PHILCO 14 CU. FT. HOTPOINT 14' 2 CU. FT. ( 14 CU. FT. 2-DOOR ALL FROST-FREE ALL FROST-FREE REFRIGE .Sipss sssS'S ggs® SSss psss slssl *179 *198“ »i98 *a09-* *il8“ *79 "'*79 NO MONEY DOWfl • 3. YEARS TO PAY PONTIAC MAU Chopping CEimR TELEGRAPH ROAD, Comer Elliabeth Lake Road . OPiN DAILY 9 a.m. to 9 p.iii. • PHONE 682-2330 , ■.. , ..--y LAST 3 DAYS Thurs., Fri., Scit. OPEN DAILY tO'. p-iii. C—6 THE PONTIAC PRESS. THU^DAY, MARCH 16, 196f A LUCKY FLOWER — Maj. Thomas James Patrick Shau^essy, 38, ($, Delafield, Wis., polishes the painted shamrock on the nole of his H23 scouting helicopter. Shaugh-nessy coimnands D^oop, 1st Squadron of the 4th Infantry , Division’s 10th Cavali^. and his unit has takeq on the name “Shamrock Plight.” Hiey call their helicopters leprechauns, shillelaghs or banshees — depending on the type. Shillelaghs, Leprechauns, Banshee Awhirl in Viet PLEIKU, Vietnam (AP) -U.S. Army Maj. Thomas James Patrick Shaughnessy will not be in South Vietnam for St. Patrick’s Day but he has left his leprechauns, • shillelaghs and banshees behind to bedevil the Vietcon^. Shaughnessy was born in-Wisconsin but says he is Irish because his mother and father were. He commands D Troop of tlie 1st Squadron of the 4th Ifan-try Division’s 10th Cavalry. Although he may cldim the leprechauns, shillelaghs and banshees, they really belwjg to the army. The leprechauns are H23 scouting helicopters, which carry a pUot and gunner-observen ’Die shillelaghs are HUIC gun-ship helicopters, which have Explanation of Aging Tests Out NEW YORK (UPI) - The recently offered “error” explanation of why people age and in the long run die o^agiI^ if they manage to escape dying from disease or accident, has had its first test and verification. Even though the testing was in fruit flies, it was imbressive enough to promise science eventually will know precisely why it is all living things must die. Whether it will be Able to do something about it is anoUier matter. The “error” ex{danation belongs to an American scientist, Dr. L. E. Orgel. It holds errors are bound to crop up in any process which is based on repitition. And that is life. In the fertilized egg from which life springs are both the patterns of the proteins whidi will form it into a particular organism, whether man or fruit fly, and operate the organism, and the means for repetitiously using the patterns to make the proteins. , | The patterns are themselves proteins, and so are ithe means of making proteins from They must also repetitiously duplicate themselves. ERRONEOUS DUPUCAUNG Many repeating processes are going on simultaneously and constantly. In the course of time there is bound to be erroneous duplicating, Orgel reasoned!^ A new pr ate i s Wti^ule could be only slighay different from its preifeeessor and still have a slowing influmice on the whole operation. As the repeating went on'and on and on,' more and more defective molecules would be pa^ tktoiiiqg and life would dow more and more until it the standstill of death. rockets and machine guns. And j the banshees are HUID helicop- | ters, which carry troops as fast i reaction forces pr to recover downed "aircraft. CODE NAME 'The troop has adopted the code name “Shamrock Flight,” Shaughnessy said recently, the occasional consternation of the rest of the division.” “Other military minds keep ^ trying to change the name of our flight to such imaginative | titles as ‘Sour Diller’ and ‘Ox I S|ioe’ but we don’t use them,” j he said. “We made the decision, | and it was a popular one, before | the division left Ft. Lewis ! (Wash.) last summer.” ★ ★ ★ Was there no opposition? * ★ “There were no EngUsbrnra among us,” Shaughnessy said. " The t^p includes such names as Archleta, Venti, Frierson hnd others that sound more Irish with m “o’ front. They acquired gallons green paint and marked each helic(^tei;: with a shamrock so big it could be called glorious. ‘BIT OF CAIN’ One general raised “a wee bit of cain,” Shaughnessy recalled, and the troop compromised by painting smaller shanq-ocks. ‘These shamrocks have been good luck for us,” Shaughi said. “We have never hi _ man killed with a shamrock on his ship.”. ★ W ' . Nine of the troop’s helicopters have been shot down since the division arrived in Vietnam last autumn and ipany others have ■ een hit. Two men were killed when they were shot down during a battle Feb. 17 between U.S. infantrymen and North Vietnamese regulars near the Cambodian border. Their helicopter bore shamrock. HAS EFFECT “We feel the sight (rf a cheaper with a green shimrock frightens the North Vietnamese gunners,” Shaughnessy- said. ‘Tbey now know that if they shoot at a shamrock, hellfire arid brimstone will descend upon them from our shillelaghs.” Shaughnessy, 38, of Delafield, Wis., carries two real shamrocks in his wallet. They i grown in a window box by his wife, Margaret, and tended by his children, Patrick, 8; Lynn Coleen, 13, and Margaret Etrin, 7. The family lives in Tacoma, 7ash. The major''is foregoing the party he customarily throws for his troops on St. PaWck’s Day. Instead, he gave a party Mar^ nd then packed for leave with wife in Honolulu. I hqwVnd have faith,” he said, “that the boys can‘celebrate in the proper way and find a cMitoany. of Charlies In fee open and hit them with some Irish confetti.” I TgE PONTIAC PRESS. THUlg^SDAY, MARCH 16, loBT -fcL Chromosome fs Linked to ------------------- friminality , By Science ^rvice LONDON—A rare genetic abnormality appears to explain criminal behavior in men afflicted with the condition — extra sexual chromosome. Instead of XY, the men in question have an additional male chromosome and a pattern ofXYY. The link between XYY and criminality was first suggested two years ago in Scotland, when researchers discovered a remarkably high incidence — three per cent — of the rare condition among patients of a maximum security hospital for the mentally ill and retarded. Since then, further surveys In similar English hospit^s have borne out the three per cent figure, implying that genetics may be an important consideration when the criminal shows evidence of Severe mental disturbance or retardation. Drs. W. H. Price of Edin-- burgh’s Western Genoral Hospital and P. B. Whatmore of Carstairs State Hospital in Scotland reported today the followup studies of personality and criminal pattern in these patients. W * * *' Ailbgether, there were nine XYY men out of a total 342 patients at Carstairs. All suffered from severe personality disorders. When matched with 18 other patients with normal sexual chromosomes, no great differences in personality and mentality could be found, with some important exceptions. Rarely were the XYY patients violent, while the others were more openly hostile and aggressive. In affect, the XYY men were less dangerous criminals than the men with normal chromosomes. But their criminality began at a much younger age. The XYY patients first ran up against the law at the age of 13, while the others usually got into trouble before 18. MORE SHOPPING DAYS ’TIL EASTER^ . . . WHEN HE’LL LOOK GREAT IN ONE OF THESE ' COLOR-COORDINATED DUOS AND TRIOS...FROM OUR DOYS’ & STUDENTS’ SHOPS Sportswear duo's and trio's take the guesswork out of looking great. (A) This TRIO has 0 2-button s^ort coot with shaped sides; a 6-button double-breasted vest that reverses to match the slacks; and plaid slacks. Blue or gold olive. Sizes 6-14 at 29.95; Sizes 15-20 to ^$35; sizes 13-20 slim at $30. (B) This DUO has a double-breasted sport coat (with pocket puff) and tattersall check slacks. In maize or red. Sizes 6-14 at 27.50.(0 This DUO has a 3-button hopsgck blazer (with pocket puff) and checked slacks (with belt).,. In brown, blue, olive, or rust Sizes 35-42 reg., 36-42 loi^, at 39.95.,, (D) This DUO has a double-breasted sport coot with hacking pockets and 8" side vents and checked slacks. In brown or navy. S izes 6-14 at 27.50; sizes 15-20 at 32.95; sizes 13-20 husky at $35. Our PonHae Mall Stori^pen Every Gvaniiig te 9 P.M. Our Mnninghaiii Store Open Thun, and Prl. to 9t Sat. to 5:10 fHE PONTIAC PRESS, TOURSDAY. MARCH 16, J967 • OFFICIAL SIZE BASKETBALL • GOAL HET • MASONITE BACKBOARD Rea. 27.00 ■ ■ 19»» . Official sike, molded, Spalding basketball. Sturdy 12 hook, 48 thread outdoor goal. 36"x48“ waterproof, laminated tempered masonite backboard. i BASKETBALL SPECIAL Reg. 8.50 S'"LSr“'s..».£; NOW 4®® m. msnilTWUII«"M.inD’’ PlaU or Checked -Fresno Slacks Very much in the patterns of ; J Spring; new Chelsea Cloth slacks in-quiet Tottersoil plaids or small, tqrieful houndstooth checks The C ________________________ f wrinkles, shapes tifully In the dryer thgf no pressing is necessary. The Mode® fine-fitting styled with beh loopi L-shqpeo Fresno pocKets. loops ond popular / |2ZB@ OPEN: eJiSaa, / SIZES 4-7 *4.50 8-12 *6.00 TEL-HURON UnVaurSteinilyCtatie ELMS BROTHERS Winkelman’s own ^cpat gives you all the features you want most 32.00 • Exclusive at Winkelman's, tailored to our exact requirements in textured wool/nylon; welt-seamed front and back • Excellent tailoring throughout, even to fine hand-made button holes; bonded to keep its fine shape • Exceptional size and color range. Choose white, navy, beige, kelly, orange or lilac in size 8 to 18 • An ideal coat to wear for Easter and all season long shop monday through saturdaj- to 9 Tel-Huron Shopping Center (Telegraph at Huron Roads) Ki ' i PONTIAC 1 1 f;:j Op.nMon_.Thur.. 11 34 Gri.weld ' i 0^/moh., BIRMINGHAM Op.nTI.urs. and. ^ ; A shapely skimmer sets, a tri-tone theme in a linen-look blend of rayon and silk. Beautifully rolled and buttoned collar accents the grace of this summer freshener. In blue and mint. Sizes 8 to 18 *20 THE MERCHANTS of TEL-HURON SALUTE THE eiRL SCOUTS 'Valuat to Hold^Worldt to Explore* Is tho them* for Girl Scout Woak (March 12-18)-th. * 55th onnivortory of Girl Scooting in tho U.S.A. ...L .... , Girl Scooting, sho^promiios 'Voluo t world of citizonihip. Sho -lets of living . bocomot oworo of tho practical otpocts In a domocrocy—looming officort in hor Girl Scout t ........... govommont in hor Ideal community; participating I Scout troop; looming o Ideal .......... ) community affairs; t munity os part of the nattonal picture; oi ginning to understand our notion's role Girl Scout Week March 12-18,1967 GIRLSCOUTiNG * Ounningham’s * Winkelman’s * Osmun’s * Kresge’s * Sander’s * 1 Hour Valet * Jayson Jewelers * Children’s Shop * tiriswold Sporting * R. B. Shojts * Beckwith-Evans * Shoe Box *Wrigley’.s * Camera Mart * Petrusha & Sons Golden Thimble Spring is in the air ATTEL-HURON ^ ;^UST ThVsHOE BOX r\ HOmST PRICES flV TOWN TO KNOW AND CARE On Goi 45” WIDE CHECKED GINGHAM 66$ About Shoes for Batter on Tele graph at W. Huron Street ‘ DECORATED CERAMIC 6-PIECE BEAN POT SET Casserole, Cover and 4 Servers Attractive! Useful! Specially Low Priced! WITHA I OOLDEN I NEEDLE TEUHUROryl SHOPPING CENTER Phone 335-5471 KODAK INSTAMATiC CAMERA SALE AT THE CAMERA MART! SUPER SPECIAL^ POUROID COLOR nPE Fim ■ 449 TASSELS by f^RCNCH *29.95 corJam AT TEL-HURON and TEtH PLAZA STORES ONLY i ^ Aniehigan-Bankord ____________________J MoHm Thura., Fn^ Sot. Security Charge TEL HURON wXW* 29 So. Telegraph w.ai.w..dc«e.r,»n-io.k .fs5?i JAYSON JEWELERS ; FE 5-3557 Often Mon., Thurs., Fri. Mi Sat. THI a’ V ^ ChaPge Accounts Invited - Easy Credit Tome ^ All With i/nnai/ Batteries KUDAK and Flashcube INSTAMATIC 104 KIT......13“ INSTAMATIC 304 KIT______34” INSTAIUnC 404 KIT......43" For Color Slido. ond Color and B-W Prints BE SMART.. .SEND YOUIMIRDERSTO ThC'GotneAit Mojct TEL-HURON SHOPPiNQ CENTER 55 S. TELEGRAPH ^ W fE^ 4^9567 A terrific touch...the tassel! It lets a man deess the way he wants to: dfessy or casual. And the good lobks of these French| Shriner shoes williast—thanks to man-made Coriam. (What comfort!) Choose Black or Burgundy. z pari ol Penliae since 1931 ISMUN’S |V;| -.FREE PARKING at ALL STORES O Dw.ni.wniMfae X 1 Open fri.'til e I Tel-Huron Center in Pontiac r -Tech Ploia Center in Warren J Open Every Night 'til 9 * • . ,;r. 0-10 THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, MARCH 16, 1967 Flint Hospital Fighh Kidney pisease Toll FLINT (AP)-Flint is creeping toward establishment of a center to treat people suffering from incurable kidney failure. First step toward starting an artificial kidney treatment program at Hurley Hospital w a s taken in September when a six-member committee of p h y s i-dans was formed. Today, die lives of four Flint area persons — who would have faced certain death 10 years ago — are being prolonged of! Hurley via an artificial kidney machine. TTie four are making history in Genesee County. At the hospital they are considered very special patients — they have permanent kidney diseases. Their situations were unusual because the hospital hasn’t been and won’t soon be equipped to handle such patients for long periods. They are fully aware of their unique status. They know their cases are experimental. Incurable loss of kidney function each year claims die lives of more than 1,000 Michigan residents. according to the Michigan ludney Foundation. Nationally, only about 250 patients facing this fate are receiving treatment on artificial kidney machines, but an estimated 10,000 a year die simply ! because they are unable to obtain such treatment. If detected early enough, infectious ■ • ■ ■ to drug therapy. If a patient’s kidney disease progresses undetected or does not respond, one of two or both recent medical advances may be used to prolong a useful life. One is kidney transplant. The other involves a treatment known as dialysis, in which an artificial kidney is sed. In cases of chronic kidney diseases, the patient periodically is attached to an artificial kidney and the machine cleanses the blood of impurities and restores normal chemical balance. But there are very few kidney treatment centers in the state— and they have long waiting lines of persons needing the immediate, prolonged machine treat-lent. Because of Hurley’s new program, the lucky four now being kept alive in a hospital close to home—so they can lead near-normal lives and make themselves useful in the community, and so doctors can determine whether they can be candidates for kidney trans-piants. j Transplants could extend their; [lives for months or years and , end the need for the machine. ' The four make two trips weekly to the hospital for treatments that take between four and six hours each. Because of limited trained personnel and time, between January, 1962, when it was installed, and last September, the machine was used only 14 times on 10 patients—and these were acute, emergency cases. As a first step toward building an extensive, long-range program here, the committee has ordered two additional twin-coil Kolff artificial kidney machines which it hopes to have in operation within two months. Funds to purdiase the $1,800 machines were supplied by the Hurley Hospital Women’s Auxiliary. There now are six physicians qualified to operate them and it planned to train three technicians to assist. The immediate goals of the committee are: To be alile to treat more patients with acute kidney dis- ases. — To keep alive — on a very limited basis at first — patients suffering from incurable kidney failure. —To determine if persons with chronic cases are fit candidates for transplantations at one of the few kidney transplant centers in the country. AP Wlrtphtl* ARTIFICIAL KIDNEV - Hurley Hospital in Flint has joined the small numb^ of Michigan hospitals where artificial kidney treatment are available. $howh undergoing treatment is Stanley/Biddis, 44, of Genesee Township, the first person suffering from complete kidney failure to benefit from operation of/toe facility at Hurley. Channeling Energy Is Key 7*' New Iheory on lidal Waves Offered By Scieno^ Service NEW YORK — A new inathe-jmatical,'theory to explain..how tounami, pr tidal mves,' can severely damage one'harbor, yet kibre »■ nearby spot virtually untouched, was reported to the Anerican Physical Sodjety meet-Infhere. ^he purpose of the theory, developed by Dr. George Carrier, an applied mathematician at Harvard University, is to understand how the tsunami’s energy is channeled in order to “then maybe do something about it.’’ Although destructive tsunami swell in toe Paciflc Ocean less than once a year, on toe average, the tremen-dim pilenp of water resulting when waves that are merely long swells on toe open ocean hit shallow places, can be dev- sufficient to give coastal residents two to three hours ‘to evacuate low-lying areas that light be inundated. Dr. Carrier has found toat the earthquake energy carried away by the giant ocean ripples can be channeled by ridges on the ocean floor. The ridges, and the troughs between them, give the sea bottom a washboard-like effect. The Cocoanut GroVe night club fire in Boston Nov. 28, 1942, resulted in 491 deaths. AMERICA’S LARGEST FAMILY CLOTHIIUe ftrtAl'R Tsunami are the end results Iter an earthquake rocks the ocean floor, releasing huge amounts of bnergy, most (d which is carried away by water The effect is the same as when a stone is dropped in a quiet puddle, but the ripples resulting from an earthquake are on a giant scale. WARNING TIME Radio and television warnings of the giant ripples are noW Wap Gabert Retires Frp the Appliance Bnsiness! THE GOOD HOGSEKEtlPING SHOP OF PONTIAC BOUGHT HIS ENTIRE INVENTORY Once in a Lifetime Chance to Save Big HURRY We’re passing the savings on to You - while they last! FRIGIDAIRE “Top Quality” Refrigerators Some 1966 Models •w' ★ ★ FEW DISPLAY MODELS Some Dented Models — as they are ★ All Brand Mew! ALL FULLY GUARANTEED 90 Days Same As Cash No Money Down, Free Delivery MAYTAG Automatic Washer Dryers Washers Dryers Ranges Freezers iGREAT VALUES SAVE I NOW WASHERS, DRYERS REFRIGERATORS, TVs FREEZERS RANGES HUMIDIFIERS, VACCUMS COME IN TODAY! WASHER With the Double Tub NOTE OUR FAMOUS BRANDS ... Admiral-Speed Queen-Philco'-Eas^-Sunray'^Frigidaire \ -Maytdg-RCA Victoi>>General Electric-Zenitli-Hamiltoii-Metorola-Gibs<)n PRE-EASTER SALE BOYS' SUITS Reg. 74.95 PREPS & STUDENTS’13 TO 20 k2g. J7.9S.. 14 36 'inE 6000 HOVSiSiXiPlNG SHOP.OF PONTIAC, 51 W. HUION, Fii 5-1555 ' ■ ' ■ , - ' , ■ ■ 'I, Look for the rod tags on this special sale merchandise.., the regular price ticket is on every suit so you see what yOu save! Choose from long-wearing new spring fabrics in classic 3-bulton Ivy models... British-styled continental models with side vents, hacking flap pockets. In lustrous iridescents and black. SEHCRi EARLY FOR BEST SELECridN OPEN SUNDAYS, NOON TIL 6 P.l PONTIAC (BBBI 200 N. SAGINAW fljHD ISSTSml CLARKSTON 1|P IMMl 6460 01X11 HWY. ----------- Jait Mrili *r wmr* . Sbavt Avaragt Stt* i ___i VhU Ow Bit Bat T at nasi Brand Blvy m THE jPONTlAC PRESS, THURSDAY, MARCH 16. 1967 C—11 Pontiac Prtif Photo ky RMt WIntor - Pfc. Gordon Doyon of 57 Park Place describes his Experiences in Vietnam while on convalescent leave from Great Lakes Naval Hospital near Chicago. Doyon was wounded Ipy a Vietcong grenade in January. Pontiac Leatherneck Learns That Marines Tpke Cdre of Own By LOIS MANDIBERG When Gordon Doyon of Pontiac enlisted two years ago he heard “the Marine Corps takes care of its own — you’re never Jeft behind.” Doyon, recently home on leave, learned how true t h' motto is when he was wounded by a Vietcong grenade in January. The Vietcong had attacked the command post the night before. Pfc. Doyon and other Marines were checking the area in the early morning for damage and booby traps. Doyon and a friend picked up a bamboo post. * * * “I saw the trap ignite,” he s^d. “I yelled ‘live grendde’ ^ Md twisted back, THROWN BY BLAST “The grenade went off too soon. I was only 2 feet away,” he recalled: The blast flung him 10 feet onto a barbed wire fence. Doyon received second and third-degree burns and bamboo shrapnel wounds over the entire left side of his body. * * “I was given a shot of morphine, loaded into a waiting helicopter and put in a field hospital within six minutes,” he said. ‘MOTHER HENS’ “We called the Medi-vac copters ‘Mother Hens,’ ” he added. “They’d hover above gunshot range and' dip down, when radioed, to pick up wounded and move them to the field hospital. The entire operation usually took at most 10 minutes and saved a lot of Dves,” Doyon said. The Pontiac Marine was flown to Ctm Lai and ultimately to a Navy hospital in Da Nang where ’ sutgeons operated to remove bamboo shrapnel from his eyes. Doyon, who^remained in crit-icnl condition with bandages oypr his eyes and the left side he w^'rece'iving oxygen' of his body for several weeks, remembered being conscious of all that was happening. MOVED TO U.S. He was eventually moved to the Great Lakes Naval Hospital near Chicago where he returned Th^ medics are optimistic tiiat Doyon of 57 Park Place still have few scars. Dpyon, who continually expresses gratitude for the superb medical attention he has received, reflects their confidence. Arkansas Official to Speak in State MOUNT PLEASANT (UPI) -Maurice L. Britt, lieutenant ^v-eraor of Arkansas, who fought for the U.S,^ Army, the Detroit etnan^ ors will let 1^. He has two more years of active duty. ‘VffiTNAMESE WANT HELP’ The medics say it will be three to four moo&s before any-thi^canbededded. SpeaUng of his five months in Vietnam, Doyon recalled the general morale was quite high. “Although if made us mad to see some of those demonkra-tions in the States,” he said.’ ★ “The people did want hflp, he insist^. 'They wanted us to stay in the villages because we represented security against Vietcong actions. When we came in, the vietcong went out the back exit,” he described. WATCHES FOR infiltrators As'a member of tiie sniper platoon, 19-year-old Doyon’s post was beyond the perimeter of the base area. He said his job to make sure no enemy soldiers infiltratbd the camp. “It can get frightening when you’re all alone listening . . but you learn to live over and above the fear. “My nerves were the normal run-of-the-mill me — but I’ve been shaky since the accident,” he added. Doyon mentioned that the men were well informed about what was happening in Vietnam but had little knowledge of stateside news. He said “too few hometown newspapers” was the major reason for the lack of stateside information in Vietnam. * Ex-Governor Suffers Attack WASHINGTON, Pa. (AP) -Former Pennsylvania Gov. and U.S. Sen. Edward Martin was reported in critical condition today, at Washington Hospital following-a heart attack. . A hospital spokesman said Martin, 88, spent a “rEstless evening” Wednesday in the hospital’s intensive care unit where His am, Edward, spent t night at the hospital. Martin suffered the seizure at his home. A Republican, Martin served in Congress until 1959. He last week for further tests. Doc- «« tors also will operate to move a bamboo spliliter in his his Senate seat. le^ eye which is partially obstructing his vision. FOR EASTER SAVE UP TO 40<^o OVER 1000* DRAPERY SIZE AND COLOR CHOICES ('^Most popular sizes and colors in stock) tarv haircut - is “wiffing to go '"^11 be the principal speaker at Sdt’’ to Vletnamlf his supe?i- Ife Isabella Coi«ty Lincoln Day dinner April 22. Britt won the Congressional Me^al M Honor, Distinguished Service Cross and the Silvei Star in World War II with tiie 3pfl Division in Europe and a&i c^. He was a member of «hi D^it Lions in IMl. Wall’to-wali draperies— you'll find them at Wards *■ SAVE >2 Single width pair SAVE <3 One and one-half width ^ SAVE H Double width SAVE *5 Two and one-half width ^SAVE^e Triple width TEXTURED JACQUARD Thermal self-lined, easy-core Avisco® rayon and cotton beauty. Machine v/ash and tumble dry. SR.T.M. Owcns-Cornlng Corp. ANTIQUE SATIN ■ Lovely colors “locked in" Wards Coloray® rayon and acetate draperies; Twill lined for quality, wear. of Covrtouldi - XxU’ REG. 8.99 6” REG. E 799 30x84 " Pr. REG. 9.99 CLASSIC FLORAL LOOK Decorator elegance in jac-guard woven, washable, drip m m dry, Avisco® rayon and cot- 3Cx84'Pr ton blend. -Lined or unlined. SK.f.H. Owtm-Corning Corp. REG. 11.99 WULGLAS" DRAPERIES Lush look of wool and easy care of Fiberglas® is yours in rich boucle weave and fashion colors. Lined, unJined. 10 99 REGv 13.99 TEFLON® Ah|D FIBERGLAS* 99 Teflon®-treated Fiberglas’* for longer wear ... draperies are easy to care for, heavier for graceful hanging. CLASSIC TEXTURED 15 REG. 21.9^ Only at Wards—the total drqpeiy with n^ "Sheffield 600" acoustical and insulator self-lining. 23 99 RE6. 27.99 n Pontiac Mall UI’EN MONDAYTHRU FRIDAY 10 AJf. TO 0:00 I'.M. SATURDAY 9:;!0 A.M. TO 0:00 P.U • ' .SUNDAY 12 NOON TO I>.M. . 682-1010 C—12 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, MARCBt l6> 1967 Pioneering Legislation Lenders Target'of Massachusetts Law BOSTON' (AP) - TWe Mas^-chusetts consumer wlA gets hooked on excessively high credit terms has only himself to blame under a pioneering truth in lending law. The new act and a sister measure require the lender to spell out clearly—and in large type—what the transaction is going to cost the borrower. Major provisions took effect Jan. 1, and Dermot P. Shea, executive secretary of the Massachusetts Consumers Council which pressed for enactment, sayji only minor pK*leinS\}ifivp sjlaied to cLirb abusifes of dww-to-cropped up since then' dwr salesmen, it allows a buyer 52 Yanks Are Killed in Vietnam The truth, in, lending bill requires that lenders explain in detail the costs of a loan, including the interest rate oil a yearly basis. MUST BE PRINTED The yearly interest rate must also be printed on the agreement in boldface, 12iwint type. Thatb half again .as big as the average newspaper type. The loan must specify the total charge for insurance, including a description of the types of coverage in simple terms, and the amount of official fees. . WASHINGTON (AP) - The Defense Department has released a list of Vietnam casualties that included 52 men killed in action. Also on the list are the names of four men who died of wounds; three who were missing and now are dead; 13 missing as a result of hostile action; 11 who died not as a result of hostile action; one changed from ing to dead, nonhostile, and five missing not as a result of hostile action. Killed in action: On revolving credit arrange-menlp, the. creditor must list the balance outstanding, a brief description of the transactions, the amount of finance and other chaises and the ainount which ;ieased^on^mer“u“s« must be paid, and when. to cancel an agreement made at any place other than the seller ’s address. The cancellation must be done by certified mail before 5 p.m. on the next business day. ★ ★ ★ Drr Edward R. Willett, chairman of the Massachusetts Consumers Council, said the next step is education of consumers to the protection available to them. FIRST STATE “I believe we are the first state in the Union to get a truth-in-lending bill passed. It’s quite significant,” he said. Willett, head of the Department of Finance and Insurance at Nor&eastem University, said that for the free enterprise sy^ tern to work properly, “yjm must have an informed-/and CALIFORNIA - Ut LI. Harry R. Stalwart, Fort Ord; Sgt. Waltar R. Blalock, North Edwards; Pfc. Jaua R. Castro, Fremont; Pfc. Richard A. Rowell, San Mateo. CONNECTICUT — Spec. A Edward J. ILLINOIS -Cairo; Smc. 4 -----s; Pvt. Gi ’The law also bans false or misleading advertising about rates or terms. TEETH IN THE LAW ’These are the teeth in the law: violations call for a fine of. up to $500 or six months in prison, or both. Failure of a creditor to disclose the required information—except in the case of an acAdent or error—cuts him from claiming any of the finance, collection, delinquency or refinancing charges. ★ ★ ★ • retail installment which paved the way ft truth-in-lending mei resuires full disclosure of finance charges in b^ money and percentage teriyls at an annual rate. should want this too.’’ * * / Shea, speaking/tor the Consumers Council/told an interviewer that since Jan. 1 “we and the b^ing department have of c^rse been watching ail adver^sing, and every where they slipped in their ads was iiw^iately changed. “Qm retail installment sales, aly the paper (contracts) I have seen has been generally : , 'I 'l WOUNDED GI — An American paratro^r, bandaged '"beoause of a head wound suffered during fighting in War Zone C, puffs a cigarette as he awaits a helicopter to fly him out Of a jungle clearing in South Vietnam. Paratroopers of the tJ.S. l^rd Airborne Brigade had to battle five hours for a Vietcong base camp in Zone C before they finally overran it last week. They suffered a score of dead and woundeij. Stafe VA Reports Oh '66 Service k^chigan veterans and tlieir families received a total (SEI229,-143 in cash benefits and services during fiscal year J966, the Veterans ^dn^nistratitmW ported today. This is $8,126,519 more than the $221,803,824 distributed in the same programs the preceding year, according to Robert M. FitzGerald, manager of VA’s regional office in Detroit. Ihe comparison was made from an outline of expenditures in the 1966 annual report of the VA which has just been released. In Michigan, 123,016 living veterans received service connected disability compensation or nonservice pension totaling $114,928,257. ■R ★ ★ . In addition, dependents of 44,-19 deceased veterans received $36,448,074, Hie combined $151,-376,331 last year compared with $143,971,352 in 1965 and reflects inweases approved by Congress, FitzGerald explained. Total beneficiaries in 1966 in- creased from 166,915 in 1965 to 167,275. GI Insurance dividend and indemnity ipayments last year totaled $22,9U»393. In 1965, they «reh! ^,594,713. Impact'^bf the new GI bill was not reflected in the report, FitzGerald smd, in listing totals for veteran education and training along with vocational training for disabled veterans. An average of 17^ dfeabled veterans daily received special-’ assistance costing 1^6,997. GI’TRAINEES For the fir^ time, the report did not take note of GI trainees under the World War II and the Korean GI bills, since most of the^se trainees have exhausted their entitlement. The report does show, however, that a daily average of 357 sons and daughters of deceased or totally disabled veterans went to school in Mich, igan with VA assistance. Smaller benefit programs accounted for another $2,484,585. Assistance to seriously disabled veterans in obtaining cars cost $ffi,295; housing suitable for paraplegics accounted for $340,-000 ^ direct leans to veterans unable to j obtain home financing totaled $2,179,290. A total of $144,630 was spent on construction and maintenance of five veterans hospitals in toe state. I Hospitalization costs we r e grouped with administrative costs for all benefits and totaled $40,511,315, an increase of $1,200,000 over the preceding year. Detroit Soldier Killed in Viethom WASHINGTON (UPI) - A Detroit soldier was among 27 U.S. servicemen listed by the Defense Department yesterday as having been killed in recent action in Vietnam. He was Army Pfc. GprdtMi R. Rightler, toe husband of Mrs. Janice L. Kightler of Detn^ NOWr WORLD WIDE IS OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEKI DONT WAIT! MARIWE CORPS CALIFORNtA — Staff Sgt. CMvaland I D. Jont*. RtvatiMB. ' WISCONSIN — Pfe. Ptillip J. Klmptl. Fond du Lac.. Missing to dead, nonhostile: ARMY _________rtV WO HaraM K tC--- ... Sgt. I.C Byrwi O. Hamlatt Sgt. Haaiard B. Carpantar F U t u r « astronauts may be “talked lMMk”^ fi«m apace for a aafo return on land by the ( use of a new Tenninal Lauiding i HERE’S PROOF ... YOUR DOLLAR BUYS MORE AT A WORLD WIDE STORE! THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, MARCH 16, 196T C—13 BOX SALE / Very pleasant savings on our own brand shirts—in a permanently-pressed, no-iron blend of *65% Dacron® and 35% cotton. Wash it by hand or machine or send it to the laundry; whichever way, it still never needs ironing. Styled in a regular collar*model with convertible cuffs; in white and assorted solid shades. Collar sizes 14^2 to MVi, sleeve lengths 32 to 36. They're an exceptional buy at this price. 3 FOR ^13 Our Pontiac Mall Store Open Every Evening to 9 P.M. Our Birmingkam Store Open Thurs. ond FrI. to 9; Sat. to 5:30 C—14 THE^ PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, MARCH-16. 1967 Ky, 7 Top S. Viets to Confer With LBJ of Guam Conference - SAIGON (AP) - President Johna>n’s little get-together Guam with his top men in Vietnam is turning into a full-scale conference on the order of the Honolulu meeting 13 months ago. . Sources close to the South Vietnamese government report-led today that eight of its top officials — not just Premier Nguyen Cao Ky and chief of state Nguyen Van Thieu — will attend the conference, which opens Monday. A number of aides will accompany them, the sources said. * ★ ★ i The sources said the delegation would also include Lt. Gen. Cao Van Vien, the defense minister and chief of the joint general staff; Maj. Gen. Nguyen iBao Tri, the minister of in-'\3formation and open arms (the to attract Vietcong hfectors); Maj. Gen'. Nguyen “ the revolutionary ent (pacification) min-n Huu Hanh, the “|ovemo\ of banks; Foreign fllinista' wan Van Do; and Bui IJiem, the\mbassador to the IJnited States^ • Johnson on Mlirch 9 said he st^ds going to conifer with Am-Jjassador Henry Ca^t Lodge luid Gen. William C. Jpnd, the U. S. militar^hief in yietnam. He said t tibout every six months, iiating It was a r i»ce. KY TO ATTEND /: Ky announced Wednesday he iipaid attend. Hie aiurces close to Ky's gov- ernment said the decision for Thieu to go also. was made Wednesday night at a meeting of the ruling military junta. Although Ky is the evident leader of the junta, Thieu technically outranks him and is a power ir his own right within the group. ★ ★ ★ The addition to the conference of four government ministers, the bank governor and the ambassador to Washington will permit discussion with the Vietnamese of all major facets of the situation in Vietnam, including the military, chic action, psythological warfare, economics and aid relatiohs. {Helmet 6y County sheriff’s men said 19-year-old William Donaldson, armed with a knife, was t^en into custody at a bar in Oiarles, nine miles south of [Inaw. ht car was recovered and D ^’s companion, Jeff T was sought. said Donaldson and Tonek o walked away from thfe J igan State Re- formatpiy Ionia Tuesday night, stole i car of Eileen De Pue, 29; a her at the two- room Chittl ^hool at Long Lake, hear NOT HARMED Before continuing their flight, Donaldson and Ton^ tied up Miss De Pue and a boy pupil with electric cord. OneW them held a knife to Miss D^ Pue’s back. Neither Miss E _ the boy was harmed. . Donaldson gaye up in Charles bar without resi officers said. '■ * Donaldson, sentenced fj Siginaw County to l%-2 y< for car theft, was held at County jail. Toner was serving 3%-15 years for breaking and entering in Bay County. RUN FOR COVER — An American soldier races for cover near vUlage of My Phu in South Vietnam. He carries, the rifle of a dead buddy and is poving dovm a rock-strewn slope amid fire from automatic weapons. GIs were moving down the hill to relieve a company pinned down in flat area when they encountered heavy fire from North Vietnamese regulars and were forced to withdraw. Renew Fight in Congress By iScience Service WASHINGTON-Pointing to a “rapidly deteriorating water situation’’ in Arizona, backers of the Central Arizona project have once again begun their fight to get*the project autWized by Congress.” This year’s proposals to pipe Colorado River water into central Arizona include a variety of modifications, all designed to ease the controversial bill’s passage down the congressional throat. Hearings opened this week before the House Interior Committee. Perhaps most noteworthy now is the total abandonment of a direct attempt to raid ihe plentiful waters of the Northwest’s Columbia River. This was being considered last year to augment the flow in the Colorado Mver. States now using the water Arizona wants made augmentation a condition of support. Notable also Is the lack of a guarantee, in bills intjpduced by Congressmen from Anzona, of the minimum 4.4 million acre-feet of water that California representatives say their state cannot do without. Postponement of direct attacks on the Columbia, however, doesn’t mean that Southwest legislators and water planners have abandoned importation of water as a solution to their problem. A broader plan is under consideration. In addition to the 21 bills introduced in the House to authorize various forms of Colorado River basin development, nine have been introduced for establishment of a National Water Commission. A Senate bill, S20, for establishment of a conunissitm has already passed the Senate and is also under consideration by the House Irrigation and Reclamation subcommittee. Closed Court Hearings Denied in Sex Slaying ANN ARPOR (AP) - A request for a closed coort hearing for the examination of Ralph Nuss, 30, charged as the slayer orners. Wo hope to have them bopk again soon. OUSE a sinoM COFFER 56( Big Chief SUGAR 5 Lb. Bag 44( CAI0ELL'S SOUP Toptoto or Vegetable IU'/z-Ol Can W Your Choice Blue Ribbon BLEACH special low price! Gallon 2P ___—^ New Jell-0 Plain or Iodized B&B Townhouse or Club HYGRADES CHEESE jdlKE Morton Salt Button or Sliced MUSHROOMS Hekman Crackers VIENNAS 10V4-O^.Pkg. B9° /. ■ ^ 1-Lb.,10-0z.Pkg. 3-Oz. Can Mb.pkg. 5-Oz. Can 10° 28° 38° 19° Sweetmiik or Buttermilk Pilisbury Biscuits Sawat Felice Mkt. PRESTO-WHIP SEALTEST TOPPING BUTTERMlKer CHOCOLATE MILK ^34^ iW FEUCE TENDER JUICY f'i'i Bldde Cut BEEF CHUCK ROAST $|00 Indian River White Seedless 36 Size,.. GRAPEFRUIT Fresh, Crisp, Green PEmRS • Round Bone or English Cut l|i. 69° • Choice Boneless Roast lb. 79° • Choice Lean Stew Beef lb. 79° tfPUwKteH Westpac Sliced |BANQUET FRIHT PIES STRAWBERRIES I I4.b. 09c «4z.Pkc. £,^u. R 10-cz. $100 g Pke- 1 J ) bunch ALL VARIEnES except BRUSSEL SPROUTS FAIRliWE>ro«en VEGCTABLES C n,,. S400 f tresh,t,nsp RADISHIS w Fresh, Crisp mmh*^ Your Choice FRESH lUH ALL BEEF HAMBURGER U.48* Freshi UNDER, SLICED BABY BEEF LIVER 49* Armour Star SLICRD BACON Z 48*. HYGRADES WEST VIRGINIA Smoked CHOPS 89* HYQIHDE’SPoiiciit CORMED BEEF BRISKET ' ■ 1 ■ / ^ Vac GAc OSib. 79*1.. Hygrades Lean Sliced BOILED HAM tb.99* THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, MARCH 16, 1967 D-1 Birmingham Five Is Loser in Class C By FLETCHER SPEARS LIVONIA — Oakland County will be without state basketball champion this year. ★ ★ ★ The county’s last hope for a state crown was erased he. last night as Detroit Country Day of Bimingham dropped a 58-52 decisiMi to Detroit All Saints in a Gass C quarter-final game. The triumph earned All Saints a shot at Leslie In a semifinal scrap tomorrow at 8:30 at the Gvic Center in Lansing. Leslie downed White .Pigeon last night, 64-60. The defeat brought to a close one of Country Day’s finest campaigns, giving the team an over-ail record of 19-3. * ★ ★ 'The loss to All Saints was attributed in part to an old problem the team thought it licked during the regular season. USED PRESS The old problem was a press that Saints’ coach Michael Guza employed on and off in the second half and it was enough to turn the. tide in favor of the Detroit quintet. ★ * ★ Yellow Jackets’ coach John Hannett could only shake his bead in thinking of the press. “It bothered ns early in the season, but I thought we had licked it,’’ said Hannett, who was in the quarter - finals for the first time as a coach. TraiUng 23-21 at halftime, Guza tried the press early in the third stanza and it shot the Saints into a 35-30 lead with 3:49 left in the third. The squad reverted to a standard defense late in the frame but still enjoyed a 38-37 lead going into the final period. * * * Guza started the press again after Country Day, trailing 52-48, sliced the deficit to t w o points, 53-51, with 1:12 left in the game. It worked again. It unsettled the Yellow Jacket offense and produced an easy basket for the Saints to go with three free throws in the final minute. LEADS WINNERS Another problem the Yellow Jackets couldn’t handle was 6-3 center Stanley Grayson, wh scored 27 points, collecting five easy buckets by outmaneuver-ing the Yellow Jackets near the basket. ★ ★ ★ Along with his scoring Grayson helped the Saints control the backboards by a 52-39 margin. Country Day had trouble ' finding the range in the first period and fell behind early, 12-3. I Tourney Qiecklist CLASS A Detroit Pershing vs. Detroit Catholic Central, Jenison I Fieldhouse, East Lansing, 7 p.m. f I Flint Central vs. Kalamazoo Central, Jenisoq Field- f I house, 8:30 p.m. CLASS B Willow Run vs. Grahd Rapids East Christian, Lansing | i Waverly High School, 7 p.m. ^ } Lansing O’Rafferty vs. Menominee, Lansing Everett I High School, 7 p.m. CLASS C Detroit All Saints vs. Leslie, Lansing Gvic Center, 7 p.m. Wakefield vs. Mount Pleasant Sacred Heart, Lansing Civic Center, 8:30 p.jp. CLASS D Flint St. Matthews vs. Free Soil, Lansing Gabriel High School 7 p.m. Ewen vs. Adrian Catholic, Lansing Sexton High School, 7 p.m. QUARTER-FINAL RESULTS Detroit Catholic Central 80, Hamtramck 57. Detroit Pershing 89, Warren Fitzgerald 59. Flint Central 71, Grand Rapids Ottawa HiUs 67. Kalamazoo Central 74, Ypsilanti 53. CLASS B Lansing O’Rafferty 65, Flushing 59. Menominee 64, Standish-Sterling 44. Willow Run 65, Mount Clemens Clintondale 57. Grand Rapids East Christian 58, South Haven 53. CLASS C Wakefield 86, Gaylord 60. Mount Pleasant Sacred Heart 72, Shelby 53. Detroit All Saints 58, Birmingham Country Day 52. Leslie 64, White Pigeon 60. CLASS D Ewen 76, Cheboygan Catholic 54. Adrian Catholic 66, Centreville 45. Free Soil 82, Posen 69. Flint St. Mathew 93, Bay Gty St. Joseph 59. Pershing Rolls Despite Errors By BILL HALLS Associated Press Writer Can a team that commits 23 floor errors in the first half be a contender for the State Class A high school basketball title? Detroit Pershing did just that Wednesday ni^t and still swept past Warren Pitegerald 89-59 to gain a semifinal berth at East Lansing Friday night. The Doughboys will oppose Detroit Catholic Central, who ended Hamtramck’s Cinderella dreams with an 80-57 victory. The other semifinal game will match Flint Central, a 71-67 victor over Grand Rapids Ottawa Hills, and Kalamazoo Central, which eliminated Ypsilanti 74-53. eyes will be on Pershing’s sensational senior center Spencer Haywood, when the Doughboys play Catholic Central Friday. HITS 34 POINTS The 6-foot-8, 220-pound pivot-man notched 34 points ard hauled down 13 rebounds in Pershing’s triumph over Fitzgerald. Haywood’s running mate, guard Ralph Simpson, scored 21 points and added 10 rebounds as the Doughboys raced to a 45-33 halftime lead. ★ ★ ★ Fitzgerald, ending the with a 20-2 mark, played without 6-foot-5 center Cliff “ out with a sprained ankle. John Pahoski topped Fitzgerald with 22 points. Lions Draft to Plug Gaps The losers’ first field goal came by a short jumper by 6-9 center Dave Swift with 19 seconds left in the period. # * ★ Tim Baughman, who on his first seven shots, hit four straight in the second quarter to spark the Jackets to a 20-point period and a 23-21 lead at intermission. TAKE LEAD It was Baughman’s shooting that triggered a Country Day surge early in the fourth frame. He pushed in a pair of free throws and added a basket to give Country Day.,a , 43-40 with 7:00 left. The Saints responded by tightening their defense and regained the lead for good at the 5:40 mark, 4543. Baughman led the losers with 21 points, while Swift and Paul Miller tossed in 14 apiece. |, Gkiza was happy with the victory but n^ particularly pleased with the Saints’ play. ★ * * Both teams were shaky in the opening half. They toss^ the ball away so often that ttiey scored only five (4-1) points between them in the first four minutes. ALL SAINTS fofttp SOIfeu^'^ M 5 Mlllw i i-t 14 » »-IJ 7? B'ghman ♦ 3-3 21 " crgowski 4 3-S II Tarciy « 2-3 » KulIcK 2 «-» 4 Imtmtr t 1-2 Gari* i 1-1 2 SwWt 4 M SladKh 2 0-14 r County Teams on Way The All-County teams in basketball, wrestling, swimming and skiing are coming your f way! The honor teams as selected by coaches ; and writers throughout Oakland County will i be announced in Friday’s Press, along with the County Coach-of-the-Year and final accumulated I statistics of the cage teams. Watch for these high school honor teams in the sports pages tomorrow. Ex-Mentor Accepts 'Horns' in Defeat DETROIT (AP) - An in-and-out night for Dave DeBusschere may have cost the Detroit Pistons a spot in the National Basketball Association’s Western Division playoffs. Detroit, with three games to play, dropped a 98-91 decision td the .Chicago Bulls Wednesday night. Detroit fell a half _ behind the Bulls in the battle for the fourth and final playoff berth in the West. Chicago has two games left to play so the decision on who makes the NBA playoffs may to the final day of the season. A tie for last place would necessitate a playoff for the layoffs. If that happens, the jme will be played in Detroit. In other NBA games, Balti- more crushed New York 121-114, Cincinnati beat Boston 112-108 and Philadelphia dumped Los Angeles 138-123. Detroit, wWch led 54-51 at the half, fell before the marksmanship of Chicago’s Jerry Sloan. He scored 32 points and put the Bulls ahead to stay, 71-70, with a basket in the third quarter. DeBusschere who scored only eight points, was disconsolate after the game. “I can't believe I could play that bad,’’ said the former Pistons player-coach. “If I could have just shot better we would have won. Everything I threw up there went in and out-It’s all my fault. DETROIT Bing Central Michigan i Ousted in Tourney ^ SCORE BY QUARTERS * AH SaMl . . .. 11 IITU , I CMMnr OBir’^i... imi4IS-ss KANSAS CITY (AP) Elvin Ivory carried the hot hand as Central Michigan was eliminated from tlte NAIA basketball tournament 70-62 by Southwestern Louisiana Wednesday. iVory hit 10 of 14 floor shots as Southwestern overcame a 37-34 halftime deficit to upend the Chippewas,, Southwestern took a.61-54 lead with 3:09 to play, bat*CMU fought back to within one point with 1:42 remaining only to out of gas. Ivory led Southwestern with 24 points. Willie IversM topped the Chips with 25. CMU mided the season with a 23-3 recadL Debert Miles Strader Tresvant Harding 2 4-4 a Kolls 10 2-2 22 Mueller 2 0-0 4 Rodgers ' 0-1016 Sloan 2 O-I 0 0-0 3 5-8 34 2^32 0 F 3 3-3 . . 4 2-2 10 4 8-12 16 3 6-7 12 12 8-» 32 0 0-0 0 MLmore ’ ' ° " Ward wnson NBA Standings By Tha Associated Pratt ............... 57 21 .731 a Cincinnati ... 37 42 .468 2»V4 York ... 36 43 .456 more .... 20 58 .256 46 . _ Wasleni Division xSan Francisco . 42 35 .545 - St. Louis ... 38 41 .481 -5 'os Angeles .... 35 44 .443 a tilcago....... 31 48 .392 12 Wrort » 48 .385 12W X—Clinched divisional title ^ Wednesday's Results BdHImore 121, New York 114 Cincinnati HZ Boston 108 Chicack) 98, Detroit 9l Philadelphia 138, Los Angeles 123 St. LouIs\m. Cincinnati^ Cleveland Boston at miroit Phiiada^la at San FrahCiico SanFrknclSWi?” Los Anaalw at BalNn Seek Blockers, [defensive HB Barry Siler Chosen by New NFL Outfit NEW YORK (AP) - The Detroit Lions concentrated on bolstering weak spots in the defensive backfield and offensive line Wednesday with their picks in the combined National and American football league draft. Detroit’s top choice was offensive halfback Mel Farr of uaA. But after that. Coach Joe Schmidt and his aides concentrated on the defensive backfield and offensive line. Among defensive backs drafted were Lem Barney of Jackson (Miss.) State, Mike Weger of Bowling Green, Efic Watts of San Jose State and Sam Burke of Georgia Tech. OFFENSIVE LINEMEN Offensive linemen included tackle Paul Naumoff of Tennessee, tackle Ted Tuinstrat of Iowa State, guard Jerry Hayho of Southern Cal and guard Lamarr Wright of Georgia Tech. The only other offensive back picked by Detroit was quarterback Tim Jones of Weber State, a tiny Utah school with a big football reputation. LewICamanu, a defensive end from Weber State, was another Lions pick. The Calgary Stampeders of the Western FootbaU Conference of the Canadian Leape however announced Wednesday the siping of Kamanu, a native of Hawaii. Other Detroit selections included 'defensive end John McCam-biiidge of Northwestern, end Gerry Zawaldzkas of Columbia and defensive tackle Ken Ramsey of Northwestern. LOCAL GRIDDER Among Michigan players ilected was Barry Sifer, a linebacker from Albion who was chosen 14th by the New Orleans Saints. Siler is a former West Bloomfield High pidder. Other players with Michigan illege affiliations selected: Baltimore: Bubba Smith, defensive end, Michigan State; Jim DetwUer, halfback, Michigan; Rick Volk, defensive back, Michigap. Minnesota: Clint Jones, halfback, MSU; Gene Washington, end, MSU. Itallas;\Curtis Marker, pard, Northeih Michigan. New Yoric Jets: Jeff Richard-(Continued on Page D4, Col. 6) Open '67 Tour ST.PETERSBURG, Fla. (UPI) — The Ladies Professional Golf Association (LPGA) kicked off its 1967 tour t^ay as last year’s official leading money winner — Kathy Whitworth — and 6 other lady pros teed off in the Orange Blossom Open Golf Tournament. The $12,500 72-hole open over the par 71 Sunse^puntry Club course was formerly called the St. Petersburg Women’s Open. Catholic Central can thank Gutkowski for the victory over Hamtramck. He scored “ points, most of them early in the game when the Cosmos still had a chance for victory. Gutkowski, who averaged 13 points during the regular season, has been hitting at a 24-point-a-game clip in the tournament. [’ve got confidence in myself now,’’ said the 6-foot-6 center who also hauled in 20 rebounds. “I’m not afraid to shoot now. I was before.’’ It was a good thing, because the Shamrocks’ ace scorer, Nick Ferri, hit on only five of his first 22 shots. He didn’t get 15 of his 28 points until the last quarter. Catholic Central’s tough defense held Hamtramck’s high-scoring guards, Jim Smith and Ike Blessitt to 24 points, 17 by Blessitt. FALL BEHIND Flint Central fell behind Ottawa Hills 39-34 at the half and didn’t catch up until the final six minutes before pulling out the victory. The lead changed hands four times in the final quarter until Freels Bacon hit a basket to put Central ahead 66-65 with 1:13 to play. Bacon then canned three straight free throws to ice the ame. Bacon topped Flint with points. Otis Smith, who fouled out with 3:30 to play, topped Ottawa Hills with 27 points. Kalamazoo Central led by only one point at the half but roar^ away after the intermission to whip Ypsilanti’s Braves handily. Joe Blakely topped the Maroon Giants with 23 points and teammate Sam Simmons added 20. EXPRESSIONS THAT BLOOM - The advent of spring means golf and baseball are around the corner and Florida is predominately the training area for competitors in both sports. These are expressions in the Florida sun. Bobby Nichols (top left) grimaces as a putt fails to drop; Doug Sanders looks as if he has taken a punch in the-stomach (top right); Mickey Mantle of the I Yankees shows his batting determination; (lower left) and Atlanta pitcher Denny Le- • master might be giving an opinion of spring ' training. AP wiraphoto JOINS COLTS - (Quarterback Terry Southall of Baylor was selected by the Baltimore Colts yesterday in the opening round of the second day of the combined American and National Football league draft. Pro Football Tapping College Cage Talent NEW YORK (AP) - On the final day of the first combined draft by the National and American football leagues such stars Jimmy Walker, Pat Riley and George Carter were picked. If you say these three were basketball stars in college, you’re right. * * R And if you also say such pro football players as AU-NFL defensive back Cornell Green of Dallas played basketball instead of football in college, you’re right again. following the formula which has proved so successful the cases of players like Green and his Dallas teammate Pete Gent, the pros selected Walker and several other basketball standouts Wednesday. Walker, the All-America from Providence which fields no football teanj, was taken by New Orleans on the last pick of Uje 17th and final rdiind. The 25 NFL-AFL clubs drafted 262 players in the final 12 rounds after picking 133 Tuesday in the first five rounds. GRID STARS Some college stars, strictly in football, drafted Wednesday included quarterback Terry Southall of Baylor, by Baltimore in the sixth round; quarterback Virgil CJarter of Brigham” Young, by Chicago in the sixth; Tulsa tackle Don Bandy by Washington in the sixth, and All-America defensive back Tom Beier of Miami, Fla. by Miami in foe 10th. it it * One player also was signed — San Diego’s first round pick, defensive tackle Ronald Billing-ley of Wyoming. Riley, the backcourt star from Kentucky, was selected by Dal.^ lakm the llth pound. Carter, the scoring star of St. Bonaventure, another school which shuns foot- ball, was picked in the 13th by Buffalo. Walker was chosen as an end, Riley as a quarterback and Carter as a halfback. Wings Retain Fading Hope TORONTO (AP)-The Detroit Red Wings, fighting to keep their slim playoff hopes alive, struck for two third period goals Wednesday night for a 4-2 victory over Toronto. But the Wings failed' to gain on the Montreal Canadiens who hammered Boston 11-2 while Chicago dumped New York 3-1. The result left the Red Wings eight points behind Montreal for the fourth and final playoff spot with eight games to play. ★ ★ ★ Red Wings’ rookie Doug Roberts slapped home ,jthe deciding goal on an assist by Gordie Howe at 1:40 of the third period in Detroit’s victory over the Maple Leafs. Paul Henderson scored the first and fourth Detroit goals and Howe managed the other tally. ■ EARLY LEAD Bob Pulford and Jim Pappin scored for Toronto to give the Leafs a 2-1 lead in the first pe- riod. Detroit tied it on Howe’s goal at 1:21 of the second period before Roberts and Henderson wrapped up the victory. Ralph Backstrom, John Ferguson and Bobby Rousseau each scored two goals in Montreal’s victory over Boston. Bobby Hull scored his 49th goal of the season into an empty net with nine seconds to play in Chicago’s victory over New York. Phil Esposito and Ken Hodge got the other BlJack Hawk tallies., Orland,,^ Kurtenbach scored New York’s lone goal. Top Seed in Net Win CARACAS, Venezuela (AP) -Top-seeded Tony Roche of Australia beat Ronald Barnes of Brazil 52, 51, Wednesday to reach the quarter-finals of the Altamira International Tennis Tournament. • Malchud Set of 9 Iron* . (2 thru 9, plus putter) • 3 Matched Woods (1,3, and 4) • Full Size Bog in Green or Block •' 3 Motching HEod Covers • 3 Golf Bolls • 1 Pockoge of Tee* irs A $152.30 VALUE! USE OUR LAr-A-WAY PUNI 198T LADIES* WILSON OUTFIT 5 Irons, 2 Woods S9Q9S raluet $69.95 | w9 MATCHED 1967 GOLF SET Including "Sam Snead" and "Patty Berg" Woods, libns, and Everything You Need to Enjoy the Healthful Game of Golf—All at. 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The ball has already struck Clarke and is falling behind him while Andrews watches. The Yankees tallied four runs in the inning and went on to a 6-3 victory. Gophers' Ace Tops Scorers in Big Ten CHICAGO (AP) - The Big Ten’s basketball season of the newcomer was capped by junior Thm Kondla of Minnesota becoming the first Gopher player to win the conference scoring title in 50 years. ★ ★ ★ Final official league statistics Thursday certified Kondla as point-making champion with a 14-game average of 28.3 in performing for a ninth-place club. * * * The campaign was devoid of super stars of recent vintage as Michigan’s Cazzie Hussell, Purdue’s Dave Schellhase and Terry DiSchinger and Ohio State’s Jerry Lucas and Gary Bradds. But things look bright for next season with a returning crop including 14 of the tqi 20 conference scorers this. Top Individual scorers: Mouhij Problems Abound in Majbf League Camps ^LAKELAND, Fla.. (APj-the Detroit Tigers, smarting under the weight of a three-game losing streak, met the dneinnati Reds today in friendly March-ant Stadium. The Houston Astros and flamboyant Bo Belinsky nipped the Tigers 4-3 at Cocoa Wednesday with the aid of a throwing error by rookie Tom Matchick. ★ ★ * Dave Wickersham was to have faced the Reds today but was scratched from the pitching order by Manager Mayo Smith in favor «f Earl Wilson. Bill Monbouquette and Hank Aguirre will divide the other six innings. BIG MISCUE Matchick, playing jse, appeared, the hero going into the ninth. His sold homer in the third gave Detroit a 3-2 lead which stood up until the fielding miscue. ★ ★ * With two out and a man on second, Matchick fumbled pinch-hitter West Bales’ high hopper and the rookie’s hurried throw to first baseman Jake Wood sailed into the dugout, allowing the tying run to score. Bales took second on the overthrow and scored the winning By the Associated A couple of veteran pit have discovered they have problems, while the San Fr^ ciscg,.,Giants have discoverei they have a problem pitcher. The problem is Juan Marl-chal. Giants’ President Horace :oneham said in Phoenix Wednesday that contract negotiations with the ace righti-hand-ef have reached an iinpasse ‘and it looks like we have i definite holdout on our hands.’ ★ ' ★ * The club said Marichal has been offered $100,(K)0 and that he is asking $110,000. “The next move is up Juan,’’ Stoneham said. Marichal, 25-6 with a 2.23 earned run average last season, is in the Dominican Republic. ★ A ★ Whitey Ford and Don Drys-dale had problems of a different nature Wednesday. Drysdale, making his first start of the season for the Los Angeles’Dodgers, gave up five hits and a run in three innings at Vero Beach, Fla., and the St. Louis Cardinals took a 5-2 exhibition victory. 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C.WA. three innings the first time he ^worked this season, gave up singles to the first four men he faced at Fort Lauderdale. The little lefty regained the touch, however, retired the next 11 mei^he faced and started the N^ York Yankees to a 6-3 deci-sion\over Boston. \ In the other exhibitions in FIorida,\ Cincinnati beat the New York Mets 11-6 at St. Petersburg, Xwashington nipped Atlanta 2-1 iii 11 innings at Pom-ich.^e Chicagp White Sox stopped Pittsburgh 4-1 at Fprt Myers, Houston edged Detroit 4-3 at Codpa, Baltimore romped over Kansbs City 114 at Miami and Minne^ta shelled Philadelphia 14-1 at Orlando. * * ★ \ ■ In Arizona, the Chicago Cubs defeated California 7-6 at “ dale and San Franpisco edged Cleveland 3-2 in lO innings at Phoenix. NHL Standings Toronto Montrea Detroit W L T Ptt. OF CA ...... 38 14 to >6 228 142 27 24 11 45 184 1S9 ...... 24 24 11 43 144 178 ...... 25 25 12 42 145 144 .... .. 25 33 4 54 184 202 . . 14 37 10 42 144 224 __leacne title Weanodiy'e Results .. Montreal 11, Boston 2 Detroit 4, Toronto 2 Chicago 3, New York 1 Today's Gomes No games scheduled. Friday's Games No games scheduled. Columbus 5, Dos Moines 3 V Today's Gtmos Port Huron at Ooyton Friday's Games Dayton at Columbus Des Moines at Muskegon Fort Wayne at Toledo TOP DEALS NOW SAYINGS MERCURY OUTBOARDS Optn Sunday 12-S m BOAT"ZENflf "Booting's On* Port of Call" 12H S. Woodward at Adams Hoad JO M121 Ml T-0111 Mon., ThufS., Ffi. 6 -1 Astros Wih, 4-3 Error Costly for Tigers run on a single by rookie Jose Herrera... A1 KaUne drove in Detroit’s first two runs with a single. Ka-line and Matchick each laced out two hits. Houston scored single runs in le first and second innings off Tigers starter Joe Sparma. Larry Sherry took the loss in relief. Sparma was proud of his performance despite three hits and a walk, plus a wild pitsh. “I didn’t have a good fast ball and I couldn’t control the slider,’’ said Sparma. f'But four times I used the changeup for a strike and I’m pleased with that” HOUSTON Golf Still fun for Nicklaus Despite Money JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (AP) — Jack Nicklaus became a millionaire by playing golf, but the 27-year-old Ohio belter says he thinks there are “lots of things more important in life than beating a golf ball around a course.’’ ★ ★ ★ The three-time Masters champion — and only golfer to win consecutive titles — isn’t ready to halt his bid to become the game’s undisputed top player, however. * ★ * “As long as I enjoy it and can compete successfully, I’ll play," the blond distance-hitter said before starting his challenge in the $100,000 Jacksonville Open today. \ . * * * Nicklaus admitted he is pointing toward the Masters next monjh, where he will be trying for a third straight title, but he believes his game is good enough now to win the $20,000 prize that goes to the Jacksonville winner. Doug Sanders is defending champion in the Jacksonville Open. Sparma walked a inan in (he second, then uncorked a Wild pitch and veteran Eddie Mathews followed with a run-scoring single. ★ ★ w “It was a decent wild pitch 3,’’ said Sparma. “All the way to the screen. I didn’t kid around with it.’’ The loss evened the Tigers’ Grapefruit League record at 3-3. DETROIT irhbl ibrhl lb 4 0 10 Morgan 2b 3 0 0 _____-k 2b 3 2 2 1 Alomar 2b 1 0 0 Brown, If AI I 0 Jackson ss 2 0 0 Kalina, rt '■ 3 0 2 2 Lillis ss 2 0 0 Sfanlay cf 1 0 0 0 Wynn cf 3 12 Nrthp cf-rf 3 0 0 0 Davis cl 10 0 0 Wert, 3b 4 0 10 Mathews 3b 4 0 ' ' ----han c 3 0 0 0 Staub rt ' " .0 0 0 Edwards c 1001 ena p 1 0 0 0 Bales ph 1 1 0 i Wilson p 2 0 0 1 Belinsky p 10 01 Herrera ph 10 1' Totals 33 3 I 3 Totals 34 4 7 2 ETROIT ........ 201 000 OO0-3 OUSton ........ 110 000 00 2-4 E—Freehan, Matchick. DP-DETROIT I, Houston 2. LOB—DETRQIT 5, Hous- IP H R ER BBSO Belinsky (W) 4 1 0 HBP-Bellnsky (Northrop). T-2:20. A-774. COMPLETE Bachelor Keglers in Doubles Lead MIAMI BEACH, Fla. 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Buy now and savo now* NIT to Decide Finalists Jotiight By die Associated Press The Giant Killers of Soutiiern Illinois, college basketball’s lat-cinderella team, go aft^ their 18th straight vicft»y against Rutgers in the semifinals of the National Invitational Tournament tonight. * ' * -k A capacity turnout of 18,000 is expired at New York’s Madison Square Garden to watch the Salukis from Carbondale, 111. play the Scarlet Knights from New Brunswick, N.J., in the feature of a doubleheader. Marshall University’s 'Thundering Herd from Huntington, W. Va., faces the Marqi|ette Warriors from Milwaukee in the opening NIT semifinal. Southern Illinois, which passed-up the NCAA national small college tourney to go after the big boys in Hie NIT, whipped the St. Peter’s Peacocks and the Duke Blue Devils in their first two tourney games. Rutgers upset Utah State and New Mexico to reach the semis. 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Huron St. 335- 9101 DRAYTON PLAINS Regal Feed 4266 Dixie Hwy. 673-2441 OXFORD Kamm F€ed & Grain 33 Pleasant OA 8-2293 LAKE ORION Jacobsen's Greenhouses & Gorden Town 545 S. Broadway MY 2-2681 ROCHESTER Bprdine's Better Blooms 1835 S. Rochester Rood 651-8803 the Bruins and their super-soi^omdre. Lew Aloindor, strive for their 27th straight vic-t(H7 against Wyoming Friday liight in one of eight sectmd-hNind games at four^fegional sites in the NCAA touniament for the national championship. * * U;CLA and Wyoming meet at Ckfrvallis, Ore., in the Far West regional doubleheader. U. of Pacific, with a 20-gamd’mnning streak, battles Texas Western, the defending diampion, in the other half of the twin bill at Corvallis. ★ ★ ★ The NCAA East regional dou-bleheaderat College Park, Md., pairs Princeton against North Camlina and Boston College against St. John’s trf New York. Tennessee battles Dayton and Indiana takes on Virginia Tech in the Mideast Regional at Evanston, 111. MIDWEST In tlie Midwest Regional at Lawrence, Kan., it’s' Southern Mpthodist ys. Louisville and Kansas vs. Houston. Kentucky Wesleyan, . which beat Southdm Illinois last year in the final of the NCAA small college championship tournament, continued its drive Wednesday night for a second straight title. The Panthers whipped Cheyney Pa., State BBSS in the quarter-finals at Evansville, Ind. ■* * ★ ''Wlfiston-Salem State beat Long Island 62-54, Southwest Missouri defeated Valparaiso 86-72 'and Illinois State went three overtimes before eliminating San Diego State 77-7G in the other quarter-finals. Earl Monroe Arew In : points Winston-Salem for season scoring record of 1,26 It Wiped out the mark of 1,21 set by Bevo Francis of Rio Grande, Ohio, in 1954. Kentucky Wesleyan battles Winston-Salem and Southwest Missouri tangles with Illinois State in the semifinals tonight. SA^ETMUi SCOKk Kentucky WesMyan M, Cheyney SttW Southwest Mluourl U, Valparalw 72 Lions Draft to Plug Gaps (Continued from Page D-1) son, defensive end, MSU. Cleveland: Carl Ward, halfback, Michigan. Washington: Bob Rodwell, linebacker. Eastern Michigan., Boston: Charles 'Thornhill, defensive back, MSU. St. Louis: Bob Rowe, defensive end. Western Michigan. San Francisco: Frank Nunley, linebacker, Michigan. Denver: Jim Summers, defensive back, MSU. San Diego: Torre Osmo, tackle. Western Michigan. Green Bay: Mike Bass, defensive back, Michigan. Houston: Hal Decker, defensive end, Kalamazoo. DETROIT SELECTIONS .,... ______________ir St., de; John Tibridge, Northwostern, de; Tim , Weber St., qb; Ted Tulnstra, State, t; Mike Weger, Bowling . db! Jerry HaVbolt, Southern Cali-hirley, Arizona Stale, t; ..ison. South Cai^ina St., de; Sam Burke, Georgia Tech, db; Jerry Zawadzkas, Columbia, te; Ken Ramsey, Northwast- WlnstSlfcSalem 62, Illinois Mate 77, hre. oveni-SNe^ sechM Baptist.. San Diago State 76, NAIA ROUIMi 70, Valdosta, Ga., ,^7,&ufh»m. Ark., St.' Mary's, Tex., 55, Westnjlniter, M., Morris Harvey 91, Chyiron;, Nbb., 76 Central Washington 7S, GuiltpreSsH.C., Southwestern Louisiana 70, Cam*^ lew Mexico 69, St. Thomas, Wesleyan 65, , Midwestern, tklatnma E |lp 62 Loser's Bracket Trenton, N.J., 96, Rochester, mm renlon Sen Jacinto, T**- »9, Wright, lit. Ranger, Tex., 9», Durlin0on, low; Lew Unanimous Pick on All-Star'5' SAN FRANCISCO (AP) UCLA’s Lew Alcindor, was the only unanimous choice on the 1967 Pacific-8' All-Conference basketball team that includes a Bruin teammate, guard Lucius Allen. Alcindor and Allen are the only sophomores on a team filled out by three juniors-Wash-Ington State’s Jim McKean and Southern California’s Bill Hewitt at the forwards and California’s Russ Critchfield at the other guard. DODGE FOR '67 The Dodge Rebellion Wants You ^ Gilnter*s m^^sspm 855 OAKLAND AVE. FE 8-9222 Honor Spartan Coger EAST LANSING (AP) -Matthew Aitch, ;6-foot-7 center and leading scorer on the Michigan State basketball team, has been named most valuable player Jby bofii teanuimtes and newsmen covering the Spartan games. Aiteh, a senior from St. Louis« Mo., scored j376 points, average-ing better than 16 points a KING TIRE Specials SPECIAL TAKEOFFS SAFETY 800 125x14 NARROW WHITE 2^95 TIGER PAWS R«d Circle Factory Seconds 115x14 1750 KING TIRE CENTER 31 W. Montcalm FONTIAC, MICHIOAN « FE 3-T068 HEADQUARTERS FOR U S. ROYAL TIRES AVAILABLE NOW FOR YOUR CAR The tin that's origina! equipment on Americals finest new 19B7 high-performance cars! the tire shape of the future.., nearfyZ incheq wider than- the tires on your present cart This high perfonnPnce passenger car tire got its start from Firestone recing research,. 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Ve 5-6136 JTI South Safiiiaw - Pontiac M The SMith Ent if Wide Track Drive THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, MARCH 16. 1967 Registrations Set Plan Summer Program Boys and girls interested in organized summer activities of the Hi-White Youth Athletic Association will register at two sites Saturday. The Association will offer baseball for boys in the 7- French Favored , VAIL, Colorado (AP) - Competition in the American International team races gets underway Thursday with the French ski team heavily favored to sweep the meet. Teams from Austria, Switzerland, Canada and the United States also are entered in the , three-day skiing event. age group, softball for girls and golf for both boys and girls. Registration is slated for Saturday from 10 a.m. until 4 p.m. at White Lake Township Hall on M-59 and Duck Lake Fire Station on Duck.Lake Road. Parents are requested to accompany their children. Registration is $5 for the first member of a family and $2.50 for each additional child. NEW YORK-Angel Oquenda, Puerto Rico, outpointed Levan Roun I Zealand—Manuel wumcOji 7940 COOLEY LAKE RD. UNION LAKE HHKIDS KASH & KARRY KRAZY SPECIALS OPEN SUNDAY CEIIIIK (In boxes ■ Ea. of 64) ■ 4” DRAIN TILE Ac in lots of 5R 00 pieces Ea. / 4'x8» PUSTER BOARD $■129 SUSPENDED OEILINGS MAHDOANY PANELING W|]| 4x7 V-Groove. Beau- luVn^ l t i tiful. Sanded. Fine X M | 1 ; color. Build a 8x10 B ifl D vLvN i v ’r paneled room for only V 3 VvMwl T [ $99.60. Hundreds of ^ ^ ' panels on display. ' f| BATHROOM!^ VANITY Qi IF W£ AINT GOT IT B’GOSH, WE’LL GET IT! Cosh and Carry. We Reserve the Right to Limit Quantities. COUPON SPECIALS, BRING THIS ADI PNH Pool Site of 16th Meet Nearly 750 Tankers Coming for 2 Days The 16th annual State AAU Boys and Girls swimming and diving championships will be held Saturday and Sunday in tile Pontiac Northern Natato-rium. Nearly 750 swimmers from throughout the state are expected for the two-day events that will begin Saturday at 9:30 a.m. ad continue until late evening. The girls’ finals are expected to start at approximately 3:00 p.m. ★ ★ ★ Sunday morning the boys’ prelims will be held and the finals are slated to begin at 4:00 p.m. The age-group participants must all be registased as AAU, YMCA or YWCA members. Fourteen girls’ events and 11 boys’ events are on the schedule with medals awarded through six places and trophies to the winning and runner-up teams. The Pontiac Swim Association,; with the sanction of the Michigan AAU, is hosting t h e meet with Melvin, Yedlin as chairman. Lopsided W/n§ in Coge Rec Action The pacesetters in Waterford Township’s Class A recreation basketball league posted^ lopsided decisions last night. Drayton Drug (10-1) rolled past Bob’s Five (3-8), 103^, and S e n c e r Floor Covering (9-2) whipped Day’s Sanitary Service (3-8), 81-53. In the other game, Genesee Welding (4-7) squeaked past Powell’s Trucking (4-7), 74-71. John Saum poured in 24 points and Mike Miley added 22 to spark the Drayton Drug attack. The winners held a 52-37 lead at halftime. -Mike Applegate tossed in 29 for Bob’s. ★ -At ★ John Keller collected 26 points for Spencer which outscored Day’s in every period. It was 36-21 at intermission. Bill Bryce led Day’s with 16. Trailing 72-70 with 12 seconds left, Powell’s Ron Lunday had a chanee to tie the game when he steppied to the line qn a one-and-one situation. He made the first, but missed the second, and Genesee grabbed the reboqnd and fed the [ball to HqWard McCray fbr the final basket. * ★ ★ McCray finished with 22 points for the winners, while Dave Dodd collected 23 for the losers. The teams pair off for position night next Wednesday, and Drayton Drug will be trying to sew up the title. The Drug crew Takes on Spencer Floor. A win for the Drayton team will bring it the cham-picmship. ASpencer victory would produce a tie and force a second game the following week. Tbe first game W'ednesday (6:55) has Powell taking on G e n e s s e. Drayton Drug and Spencer (8:20) meet in the second game, while Day’s Sanitary and Bob’s Five (9:40) tangle in the nightcap. Southpaw Takes Keg Lead Share TAMPA, Fla. UP) - A texas left-hander and a California right-hander took the opening round lead in the $40,000 Tampa Bay Sertoma Open Wednesday, outdistancing a field of the Professional Bowlers Association members. ★ * ■* Skee Foremsky of El F Tex., and Mike Durbin of Costa Mesa, Calif., fired identical six-game blocks of 1,331 to lead Don Glover of Bakestield, Calif., by 18 pins. Joe Wolcott: Incentive Wdrks Against Champ NEW YORK (AP) - Jerseyi Joe Walcott, who was 37-years-old and a 6-1 underdog when he won the heavyweight title, sa^ Zora Folley has a good ch^e to upset heavyweight chanJ.' Cassius Clay next Wedne^ay night. / Folley, 34, and a 5-1 ^ng shot, jrees. ,/ Walcott was 33 When he got his first shot at the title and almost whipped Joe Louis in 1947. Four years law he knocked out Ezzard Chajies in the seventh round and became the champi- From my, eperience,” said Walcott, “when you finally get your/Tirst chance at the title you forgetting everything th^t wept before. It’s a lifelong ^ream at last here and you’n ready for the fight of your life.’ Golf Teams After Champions' Cup HOUSTON (AP) - Sixty-two teams that included a pair of former national amateur champions begin the seventh annual Champions Cup Invitation Golf Tournament today. Fpr one of the few times in the history of the tournament there was no clear cut favorite. Deane Beman, a two-time U.S. Champion, has Allen Me-bane of Martinsville, Va., as his partner. Harvie Ward, who wmi successive national championships in 1955 and 1956, is teamed with John brodie, the San Fran->rs, quarterback. 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For critical polotf OB your car Protect your car from winter’s ravages. Trained, expert operators will apply Sure-Sealing Compounds to save your car’s appearance. Ask about our complete rust-proofing offerl MARCH SERVICE SPECIAL! Brake & Front-End Offer 95 Regularly $9.95 Now Only... 8' Any U. S. parts.^'AM U Adjust brakes, add brake fluid and test. Repack front wheel bearings. Align front-end, correct camber, caster and toe-in. Balance both front wheels. Rotate all four wheela. If you’re the'sort of person who likes to know where he etands. the 25-month OK used car warranty is right up your alley. Every car with the OK warranty has been inspected, road tested, and reconditioned as necessary. It’s just the thing to help you breathe easy whep you’re buying a used car. Look for your Pontiac Ar^. Chevy Dealers’ “Breathe Easy” specials in the Classitied^tion. \m 20-GaI. Trash Can $J44 Unbreakable plastic Limit two to ccuitomer at this price. No rust, no rot. Lock-Lid handles. Ribbed construction. Grey. Wack lid. Rubber Floor Mat Goodyear $919 Exclusive ^ Limit two to a customer at this price. Deluxe quolity, door:tQ-door style. Crested design. Six beautiful colors. good/!tear $lRVICi STORI 1310 Wiiit Track Drive 02976431 THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, MARCH 16, 1967 Snow, Cold Keep Skiers Riding Michigan Slopes By The Associate Press Persistent mid-March sno\^ and cold keep skiing conditions ip good to excellent shape at most Michigan resorts, the Michigan Tourist Association re-ported Wednesday. A few resorts have closed for] the season. EAST MICHIGAN SKYLINE, hear Roscommon - B-I0| Inch base, skiing excellent. MOTT MOUNTAIN, near Farwell -HO base, good to excellent, PINNACLES, Geylord - 30-M base. AuSABLE LODGE, Gaylord - 12-1 base, good to excellent. MOUNT MARIA, Hubbard Lake - b SO base, good to excellent. SYLVAN KNOB, Gaylord - 10 basi **BEAr' MOUNTAIN, Grayling < base, excellent. . _ . ^ ,, OTSEGO SKI CLUB, Geylord - 20-4 base, excellent. MOUNT FREDERICK, Frederic - II 'VgEMAwT' H*LL? West Branch -Inch base, fair. SHERIDAN VALLEY, Lewiston - BRADY'S WILLS, Lakevlew - K-2 base, 1 powder, excellent. CABERFAE, Cadillac — 20-30 base "'cANNONSBURG, Grand Rapids - 3-^ base, 1 new, open weather permitting. CRYSTAL MOUNTAIN, Thompsonvilli — 20 base, good-excellent, MAPLEHURST, Kewadin - I base SHANTY CREEK LODGE, Bellaire -12-14 bate, good. SUGAR LOAF MOUNTAIN, Traverse City - 30 bast, good-axcallant. THUNDER MOUNTAIN, Boyne Fall! -10-30 base, good-axcallant. WALLOON HILLS, Walloon. Laka - 24 BRULE MOUNTAIN, Iron River -ase, excellent. PORCUPINE MOl^NTAIN, Ontonagon MOUNT RIpSy, Hdughton - 30 bas xcellent. I BIG POWDERHORn/ Bessemer — ! INDIANHEAD A Cass Lake Ice Yacht Club members will dodge the cracks in t^e ice with only the^ ular fleejl competition for the rest of the season after finally completing their annual Invitational Regatta last Sunday. Club member Chuck Cart- Chlcago, ^ CLIFF'S RIDGE, Marquette - 30 base. Cleveland .............. 1 Kansas f Risults Washington 2, Atlanta 1 Cincinnati 11, New York, N, 6 X, Detroit 3 5, Los Angeles 2 ■' Philadelphia 1 Pittsburgh 1 Kansas City 4 New York, A, 4, Boston 3 Chicago, N, 7, California « San Francisco 7, Cleveland 4 Thursday's Gamas Baltimore vs. Pilfsburgh at Ft California vs. Chicago, N, at Scottsdale, Cleveland vs. San Franciscd at Tucson, Vermont Skiec PaceTwrney 2 Families Dominate Early Junior Action Cincinnati vs. Boston at Winter Haver Ta. Houston vs, Philadelphia at Clearwatei Lqs Angeles vs. New York," A, at Fi _auderdale, Fla,, night Pittsburgh vs St, Louis at St, Petersburg, Fla, Chicago, N, vs, Cleveland at Scottsdale San Francisco vs. California at Phot STOWE. Vt. (AP) - Two families of young skiers from Vermont and California dominated the opening day of the 1967 National Junior Alpine Championships and it could be more of the same when competition resumes Friday. Bobby Cochran, 15, of Richmond, Vt., won the boys' giant slalom Wednesday, flashing down the 52-gate course in 2:14.22 for a second advantage over runner-up Pat Simpson, also 15, of Sun Valley, Idaho. Sandy Poulson, 14, of Olympic Valley, Calif., negotiated the shorter girls’ course in 1:36.41 to win that event, with seciHkl place going to 17-year-old Marilyn Cochran, Bobby’s sister, who missed out by just .03 of a second. Injuries Mount as Fans Watch Soccer Action LEEDS, England (AP)-An undetermined number of fans were injured in the ci^ush of the crowd watching Leeds United and Sunderland struggle to a 1-1 overtime tie in a replay of an English Soccer Cup game Wednesday. ★ ★ • * ■ Officials said no one was seriously injured. The game was held up for about 15 minutes shortly after it started because the crowd of 57,-892 spilled over onto the playing field. The referee took both teams off the field until the fans could be herded back into the stands. I, VI. BalllmoPt at Miami, Cass Lake Sailors Dominate Ice Competition 'M'Gridders Stay Indoors Spring Drills Open; 20 Lettermen Back ANN ARBOR (AP) - Forced into ancient Yost Fieldhouse by late winter Snowfall, Michigan opened spring football practice Wednesday with 100 candidates. Coach Bump Elliott said 20 lettermen returned from last year’s team which posted a 64 record. He must fill 14 starting positions, including eight on offense. Gone via graduation are All-America end Jack Clancy, fullback Dave Fisher and halfbacks Carl Ward and Jim Detwiler. Among the more promising lettermen are quarterback Dick Vidmer, center Joe Dayton, halfbacks Ernie Sharpe and Ron Johnson and fullback John Reynolds. Elliott said he plans four-day-a-week Workouts through April 15 with a scrimmage every Saturday. Wright of Orchard Lake retained his regatta championship trophy by besting almost 50 DN Class sailors in the once-)}ostponed re-gatta. I Cartwright won one of l^un-day’s five DN races, took two seconds, a fifth and sixth in the ice competition that saw Cass Lakers take four of tbe top tive berths. Potent Squads in Ice Opener SYRACUSE, N.Y. (AP) E a s t ^ meets west tonight when two of the nation’s most powerful and precision-drilled collet hockey teams face off in the opening round of the 20th annual National Collegiate Athletic Association championships at County War Memorial Auditorium. in champion Cornell, with a 25-1-1 record, pits its hopes of returning the national title to the east against North Dakota, 19-8, the Western College Hockey Association champion. The winner of the Cornell-North Dakota game will meet the winner of Friday night’s Michigan State-Boston University game Saturday night for the title. Michigan Sthte is the defending champion. Neck Surgery for Argo Bock TORONTO (AP) - Dick Shat-to, a longtime halfback wUh the Toronto Argonauts of the Canadian Fooiball League, underwent surgery Wednesday to repair a damaged vertebrae in his neck. I Shatto, 34, retired after the 165 season after playing 151 years for the Argonauts. He is a graduate of the University of Kentucky. I Only runner-up Joe Holman of 'Toledo cracked the host plub’s domination of the standi^ngs. Cartwright had 16 ppints and Holpian, who had one first place finish, posted 20. ★ ★ ★ Metamora’s Roy Holden was third with 23 points and one first. Gene Treuter of Orchard Lake had 29 for fourth, and the other two firsts went to De-trmter Dan Woodruff who had 30 points. ★ ★ A dozen open class ice yachts also vied and Cass Laker “Ro” Redner .Jed their four-race competition in a homemade craft. Ed Stack of the CLIYC was second, Toledo’s Chuck Miller third and Bob Redner tied Dick Pollock for fourth. Hat Trick Does Damgge DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) -Nelson Tremblay scored a three-goal hat trick to lead the Columbus Checkers to a 5-3 victory over Des Moines in an International Hockey League g a Wednesday night. Automatic TRANSMISSION • SERVICE 4 '‘‘fully guaranteed" RELIABLE TRANSMISSIOH m laUaim - PC 4.111)1 Big 10 Group to Hear lllini Saturday CHICAGO (AP)-The University of Illinois, ordered to fire three coaches in its $21,000 slush fund scandal or face ouster from the Big Ten, goes into the showdown Saturday playing cards close to. the chest. “I won’t be able t» say until after Saturday’s meeting,” university President Dr. David D. Henry replied Wednesday when] asked whether Illinois has a counterproposal to the Big Ten demand to fire the coaches, Dr. Henry has called the demand “too harsh,” a viewpoint shared bv Illinois Gov. Otto Kerner. ★ * * The meeting was requested by Dr. Henry and convened Wednesday by the Big Ten’s commissioner, Bill Reed. Policy-making faculty representatives frorn the conference’s nine other members will be present Saturday at the Chicago meeting. Illinois must appeal by Friday the faculty group’s March 3 mandate upholding a Feb. 22 action by Big Ten athletic directors. directors at that time ordered the firing of head football Coach Pe.te Elliot, head basketball Coach Harry Combes and assistant basketball coach Howie Braun, Soccer Site Selected MEXICO CITY (AP) - S Stanley Rous, president of the International Football Federation (FIFA), said today the 1970 World Soccer Cup tournament in Mexico City will be held between May 24 and June 14. WINNEGABO MOTOR HOMES l6'-1T’-19’-22'-2r Howland Trailer Sales 3255 Dixig Nwy- OR 3-1456 jaPHRinuRsaF tu ntn «s. tumr. tamu iisnuas comn. ufi Don't Mis Shelton's BIG BIRTHDAY Car for Car-Compare the Price! PONTIAC GRAND PRIX $3466 Beautiful Turquoise, Pushbutton Radio, Heavy Duty Air Cleaner, Clock, Foam Seats, Remote and Vanity Mirror, Cornering Lights, Custom Seat Belts, Power Steering, Power Brakes, Tinted Wind-^ shield. Whitewall Tires, Automatic Transmission, Front Floor Mots. plus tax and transfvr WIN A WEEKEND FOR TWO ON THE TOWN! Ralax at the famous Sheraton Cadillac Hotel. Enjoy cocktails and dinner at the Roostertail or an evening at the Fisher Theater. Live like a king with breakfast in bed on Sunday morning... then hove dinner at the Sheraton Cadillac and spend the evening at the theater of your choice, lathing to buy, you do not have to present to win. Drawing April 1st, 1967. Free Refreshments Friday and Saturday! Buick Value Carnival In connection with Shel* ton's 9th Birthday Celebration . . . Buick is sponsoring a Value Carnival to prove to you ... that 4 out of 5 car buyers can afford a Buick! Big-Bold-Beautiful AND THRIFTY Buick 9-Pass. Sportswagon Burgundy, 400 Transmission, Power Steering, Power Brokes, Radio, Whitewall Tires, Trailer Towing Package, Custom Seat Belts, Tinted Windshield, Remote Mirror, Door Guards, Carpets Front and Rear, Clock, Custom Brite Mouldings, Luggage Rock, Power ReorWindow. SHELTON •3576 plus tox and transfer PONTIAC-BUICK Inc. 8K $. RochMtsr Rd. \ %^ile South of Downtown Qpen Monday and Thursday Nights 'til 9 651-5500 THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, MARCH 16, 1967 Disasters Are Way of Life for Imogene THOMAS By BOB THOMAS , AP-Movie Television Writer I HOLLYWOOD — Comedienne^ Imogene Coca has a knack for' becoming involved in disasters. ii Such as buying a bloodh o u n d ■ and starring in ; a television ,se-: Ties called “it’s About T i m e.” About the I bloodhound. She I had always I wanted one, and •husband King Donovan located a likely puppy after a lengthy search. Puppy grew to the size of a small horse, and it charges through the living room of the Donovans’ hillside house like a runaway freight. •k it it “The main trouble is with our standard poodle, who has decided it has to kill the bloodhound,” said Miss Coca. “They had one encounter on my bed while I was in k, and I was never so frightened in my life. “Now we keep them at opposite ends of the house. I’m terri- Marriage Licenses 101 East Howard and , 16 West Howard Drayton Plains and ler Jr., Clarkston and Tied to be here alone with them,!cavemen. Reviewers deplored for fear ‘they’11 get out and I’llTthe waste of Miss Coca as a pre-be caught in the middle again.” 1***®*°^’*^ crone. j wPi^Ainxr Producer Sherwood Schwartz; WEINI ALONu ^ attempted to save the -series Miss Coca seems willing to goTfo™ extinction by switching the; along with such a situation, justi t™e element to modern-day. as she went along with “It’s That prevented a midseason About Time,” which some crit- wipe-out, but it wasn’t enough to ics termed the worst television forestall CBS’s cancellation at series of this—and perhaps any fhc end of 26 weeks. —season. The show concerned * ★ ★ i two astronauts who crashed the “I was sorry about the whole time barrier and landed amid thing, especially for Sherwood,i who got the most brutal kind of, criticism for creating the se-1 Said the comedienne. “I| didn’t think that was nice at! AA ONTGOMERY WARD Mary C. Richai William B. McCowan, 55 Patsy M. Lowes, Gingell Ralph E. I ---- Beverly J. UrI Elmer H. B lotte A. SchunI Robert W. Albert’ G. Havi -..V, ^wwv.M Heights snovic, 1121 Orchid jller, Rochester and e, Mount Clemens ames, 906 Cambero 5174 Ridgetop ski, l=armrngfon Elizabeth Winborn, Rochesh na|ane*^tnter, RocS'i^ste°r^ ^ Sharon F. Maule* 3365 Bathi Gary C. Salk, Rochestei L. Scheer. Dublin Heights John R. Young, Farming! K. Towers, Farmington Raymond B. Tilton, Ms Michigan and Judith A. Ragatz, CHarkston' Stephen J. Barger. Waterford and Karen M. Thrift, Lathrup Village Gltn J. Miller. South Lyon and Susie r. Hann, New Hudson Barry M. Kahkola, Farmington and John t. Pyke. 106 State and Beverly J. Moore, 43 Florence William W. Melr, *204 Fernberry and Rose A. Wisda. Birmingham Charles E. Crisp, 125 Calgary and Rada A Morris, Lake 6rlon Edward V. Neaves, 1015 Berwick and Sammey Ramey,' 322Va '?*rqpspect and Malendd L. Ferrell, 435 South Paddock Gerald J. DeRoso, Lake Orion and l^ecretia R. Close. Lake Orion Clarence E. Black, Walled Lake and Robert H. Curry, Drayton Plains and Janet C. Walters, 2721 Llttletell Arzo Carson. 399 Prospect and Paulette Ems,^l83 South^Sh^rley i, Michigan all.” How did she get involved in it? NO DOUBLE-TALK j “I was intrigued' anyone! who could be named Sherwood; Schwartz. We talked, and I liked him; there was no double-talk j from him. I did the pilot without' Imuch expectation that it would i sell. But it did. ■ “The management of the show and the cast were wonder-fpl to work with; nobody sluffedi it off. Perhaps the scripts were! not always good, but we tried.] There was only one troilble: The I audience didn’t seem to like the I show.” ‘ Miss Coca is wasting no time in lamentation; she has labored too long in the televineyard for that. On CBS April 5 she will be .seen in a re-creation of the his-, toric “Your Show of Shows.”| The broadcast is ponderously titled “The Sid Caesar, Imogenej Coca, Carl Reiner, Howard] Morris Special. ★ * ★ “I was a little worried that our getting together after all those ^’ears might be like opening Pandora’s box,” she commented “But the show worked out beautifully for all of us.” ‘ JOIN FORCES FOR SPECIAL - Actress Imogene Coca is surrounded by comedians — Sid Caesar (seated!, Carl Reiner (top left! and Howard Morris ^ as they gag it up during rehearsals for their upcoming special, a re-creation of the historic “Your Show of Shows.” WKC HOME OF FINEST BRAND NAMES 108 N. SAGINAW-FE 3-7114 CANDY TREATS WITH All^ EXCITING TOY IN EACH! • “Boy and girl baskets • Each basket is cello-wrapped, topped with a bow! Nifties! baskets you’ve ever seen! Delicious candy treats and bright-colored eggs of oil sizes and flavors-plus an exciting toy in each basket! See the big selection - today, at Wards! phom: 682-1910 BUY, SELL, TRADE ... USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS I PRE-EAfiTER I PARADE OF sjEWELRyVALUEfil L, Pagei. e L. De^o.’walli Ra^f?Tir«!°"Detroit and Ma I. Kretsch Jr., 1288 LaBroi n Luke, Royal Oak E. Carnes, Clavtrson fl Breckenridge. 5425 Vincent Jack^son,^»5 Central and Fi A. Reynolds' Draytojj F j"'. Zaie, ^D?lro^f^and Carol A. Stephens, 773 East M Iden, Walled Lake J. McCloud. 38 N. Paddock ■nd*8onnle'^. Hohwar?, Farming E IN TOOAYI Don't be OLD FASHIONED about your UKOMETAX ‘5 G«t it done the MODERN way ... the fast, safe, economical way COMPLETE ... at BLOCK! We'll RETURNS figure your tax and have it on its way in a jiffy . . . and often save you money, tool See BLOCK TODAY! 'T== GUARANTEE H’RfRrt/^ic^rTYco. America's Largest Tax Service with Over 1500 Offices 20 E. HURON PONTIAC 2255 ANNEX MIRACLE MILE 4410 DIXIE HWY. DRAYTON PLAINS 429 WALNUT ST. ROCHESTER Weekdays: 9 o.m. to 9 p.m. — Sot. and Sun. 9 to 5 FE 4-9225 NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY I :•:! Have you ever wanted’a piono or organ? Then don't miss thisi The luck of the Irish ,is with '$■ you. Yes, Mr. Gallagher said this year we will celebrate all week. Join us during this annual 'i; celebration for savings up to $500 on pianos and organs. This is a once a year event we have •:5 been planning and working on for months, so hurry. Seyerol one of a kind. Lowrey Pianos and Organs Chickering, Fischer, Kimball and Grand Pianos JUSTARRIVEDi BRAND NEW STOP IN FOR YOUR FREE FOUR LEAF CLOVER Spinet Console Pianos 3990° e Full U Note e lS-Yeer • No Money Down e First Faymcnt in May e Fraa Latsons Trade-ins and Mise. Hems Priead to Sell Quickly! Wurtimr Sptn»i Stor Spinet--- Kimball Spinal ... M.00 lovnay Holiday, Dal............... 911.00 .. 201.00 Hammond M-t....................... 908.00 ..311.00 Hammond LI00.. We are showing onlyse few of „ rhntrm many fabulous new styles! Come cnoiee in see them all — every one a m qj- real swinger. You’ve seen styles fY ^93 like these selling for more else- I ■# where. SEE QUR WIDE SELECTION OF FAMOUS MAKE WATCHES. W^ARE AUTHORIZED JEWELERS FOR AMERICA'S BEST KNOWN NAMES IN WATCHES. D—8 THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, MARCH 16, 1967 ON PATROlr-Spec. 4 Ronald 0. Abernathy of Evanston, III. looks around during a patrol in the jungles of Vietnam’s War Zone C. He’s with the recon platoon, 2nd Battalion, 503rd Infantry of the 173rd Airborne Brigade. The platoon often operates deep in Vietcong territory. ^ Townsend Answers U.S.-Canqda Pact Critics DETROIT (AP) — Chrysler’sireported that the number of un-No. 1 man spoke out strongly ih amrirora favor of renewal of the Ameri-can-Canadian auto trade agreement Tuesday night, hours after the pact came under attack on the U.S. Senate floor. Lynn A. Townsend, Cfirysler’s board chairman, urged at a Windsor, Chit., dinner that the thrfee-year pact which runs nut next January, should be^ extended for three to five years. ★ ★ ★ • Sen. Albert Gore, D-Tenm told the Senate Tuesday that the treaty was “monstrous and disastrous” for American workers. Gore called attention to an earlier statement by Sen. Vance Hartke, D.-Ind., that the pact had cost the United States 60,000 jobs. “Now,” said Gore, “it can be employed automobile swelled because of thp operation of this Ibe two senators long have been exposed to the agreement which provides for du^-free, movement of cars and parts across the Canadian-American border. ★ ★ ★ Gore pointed out the _ ment comes up for review next Jan. 1 and he called for a full review, warning: “Unless action is taken, more thousands of our auto workers will be unemployed.” OPPOSITE VIEW Chrysler’s l\)wnsend took an opposite View of the workings of the treaty, whose sponsws had said it would better auto indus- try conditions in both the United States and Canada. Townsend said the current trade pact had been the best solution to the problem of imbalance (HI the Canadian economy, insofar as autos Were concerned. ★ * * One way for Canada to control its growing deficit in automotive trade with the United States would have Seen to move towards protectibnism...either to raise tariffs against imports of auto components or to increase substantially the local content requirement for Canadian automobiles,” ’Ibwnsend said. He ^aid of the working of the current agretment: Before it, Chrysler Canada had to assemble in its plant in Windsor virtually every Chrys- ler automobile sold in Cana. ‘v N '• D-10 THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, MARCH 16, 1967 'Blackboard Jungle in NY NEW YORK (AP) — It was In New york in 1954 that ex-schoolteacher Evan Hunter descri(ied the city’s classrooms—already f< cro\yded with thfe angry children of the poor and increasingly the arena for teen-age savagery—as “the blackboard jungle.” Today the fear is growihg that the jungle is spreadiiy. ening to obliterate the education of many, along with all that education means to their hope of a better future. This week New York witnessed one of the most disheart-’’^ning aspects of the battle for young minds whdn former comrades-in-arms against the jungle Instead took aim at each other. On Tuesday, 79 teachers at Junioir High &hool 98 in the Bronx resigned, accusing the New York City Board of Education of failing to alleviate overcrowding, overwork and student assaults upon teachers. TEACHERS RALLY In an astonishingly i%pid and widespread display of sympathy, niore than 1(000 teachers from all over the city rallied the next day, echoing the complaints from “98 Bronx,” premising protest pickets and urging school boycotts, teachers’ union strikes and mass resigimtions. School officials expres'sed dismay, stressed their claims that they have tried to ease the lot of teachers and then announced -as boards of education must, several officials suggested -that they would deal firmly with the rebel teachers, that they had “no alternative but to ao cent" the resignations. An Associated Press survey of school officials, teachers, parents and even students revealed an ironic similarity in the views of all parties to the bitter dispute; There appears to be no single master villain anyone can name, the same complaints about school conditions feed the wrath of all combatants, and everyone agrees on who stands to suSffer the worst — the kids. Says a Puerto Rican mother of a 98 Bronx student; “My girl sure ain’t learning a thing when those teachers aren’t in school, but sometimes I think she ain’t learning much anyrway. Not when some of those kids start tearing up the classes.” TEACHER DEMANDS Ken Allen, a teacher at the nearby Bronx ^h School of Science, said at Wednesday’s massive teacher rally; “We’re demanding psychologists and psychiatric help, more supervisors and more civiliana.. in the schools to help with the disruptive students.” Seelig Lester, superintendent of the 12th District, in which 98 Bronx lies, commented; “If I had them, I’d assign them. I just don’t have them.” And a 98 Bronx boy; “I’m with the teachers. I think they need more protection. There’s this girl in my class that’s always yelling dirty words, and it always breaks everything up.” When Hunter wrote the “Blackboard Jungle,” it was considered chiefly a Manhattan phenomenon. The most crowded of the city’s five boroughs, it had long been the first stop and final home of immigrants,. Southern Negroes and Puerto Ricans who have come to make up much of the city’s population. DISADVANTAGES SOAR As the populaticm has soared, the city’s disadvantaged nei(di-borhoods — with language problems, high joblessness and welfare costs and rising crime rates — have spread, beyond Harlem and finish Harlem to BnxAlyn, Queens and the Bronx. Ihe Boaid of Education announced on Monday that for the first time in city history, Negro and Puerto Rican pupils were in the majority in the public schools — W.2 per cent city-wide, as compared with 31.7 per cent a decade ago. Dr. Nathan Btown, executiw deputy superintendent of schools, said the figures “were no surprise,” adding that the increasing ethnic topheaviness “makes it more difficult fw us to provide the kind of integrated education that we would like to provide for every section in the city.” While Manhattan, at around 70 per cent, still held the lead in Negip-Puerto Rican sdhool population, the Bronx had 45.6 per coit as of tite October 1966 bount. ETHNIC COMPOiSrnON And 96 Bronx itself is 77 per' cent Puerto Rican and 19 per cent Negro. . A large; squat concrete structure, 96 Bronx broods like a fortress over row upon row of streets filled with three- imd four-story bridk tenements. The ■beets teem with children, even on winter days. Built to hold 1,598 students, 98 Bronx currently has about 2,000 enrolled and 200 more scheduled next September, with teaching staff of 126. Its iwincipal. Dr. Janres L. Mandell, says; “This is not a terror or fear school.” There have been 13 assaults in this school year, he says, “and all can be characterize as minor, requiring no medical attention.” ‘ONE IS TOO MANY” Then he adds; “Even one is too many, of course, but 13 saults out of an enrollment of 2,- 000 doesn’t seem excessive in this city.” Mandell says teacher absenteeism has risen rapidly ih his schoW in recent months, to roughly twice \the city average, and that tiiis.has thrown exba work onto those teachers who do report for work. the other major complaint of the resigned teachers was of “coverages’’ being required to take on extra classes, at no extra pay, when regular teachers were absdnt and substitutes were not availa-le. Apd Uie complaints were not confined to 98 Bronx. At We^esdayls protest meeL ing, led by officials of thA United Federation of Teachers, AFLrCIO, teachers from mwe than a dozen other schools throughout the city charged officials with bad faith in ^serving the contract, in not providing substitutes, in imposing coverages on already-burdened teachers, in not adequately punishing assault cases. Lake Shore Bus Strike, Averted ST. CLAIR SHORES (UPI) -Drivers and mechanics of Lake Shore Coach Lines yesterday approved a new contract offer, averting a Mljeduled striketfor today.' ’Ibe bus lihe serves commuters and schoolchildren in the Grosse Pointe suburbs of Detroit as well as St. Clair Shores and Harrison Township. WASHINGTON t (AP) American inspectors calling at antarctic scientific stations of the Soviet Union and six other A soft maple near Stratford, Iowa, is the largest of its kind in the United S t a t e s. It has a height of 115 feet. Anfarcfic Check Finds Nothing Bad mg more Tbd inspectors “do not seem to have turned up anything unusual,” was the way State De-parbnent officials phrased to^ day a preliminary rep(n1: on the findings of the five-man U.S. team. ★ ★ * The check began in January and ended early this month. It was carried out under the 1959 Antarctic Treaty, which outlaws military use of tiie south polsr continent. The 12-nation treaty allows its members to inspect the area to make sure treaty provisions are obeyed. A U.S. group inspected once bef BONDED KNIT SOUPS! PRINTS! Great spring collection of all the best in fabrics... including bonded cotton knits, hopsacking, DocroH* ' polyester 'n cotton blendsi Jacketed Sand pullover styles in gay Easter ''I colors and printsi Sizes 8 to 18. UDIES' SPORTSWEAR I.ADIES' BETTER IaSTER HATS! YOUR CHOICE 2"i.5» UPIES' MIIUNERY Many beautiful styles . « . induding pillboxes, rollers, clochesi Newest shapes, injcluding the bubble-shapel In straws, straw fabrics, organzas... to name just a fewl Newest shadesi UOUS’TULORED SPBINB N&TS Classic box Styling with 3-bulten closing, button-trimmed pointed flop patch pockets, pointed Pilgrim collarl Spring-perfect laminated triocolotto . . . fully linedi Sizes 10 to IS. . . . popular 32“ length for springiT Single-breasted stylo- with 4-bulten dosing, button-trimmed pointed flap pockets, pointed cellar. Sizes IQ to IS. THK PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, MARCH 16, 1967 Watch Our M Thursday, March 23rd Fcr The OnnCanccmcni cf Our "GRAND OPENING” Prize Wiimcrs. Hurry, Reg' islratiens . End en Saturday, Match ISIh. Oven>Fresh AccoHed 2V4-0z. LUNCH CUES IC/’I Spartan Sliced | WHITE BREAD. . S/’l FRESH' I^^PRODUCE . Michigan U.S. No. 1 : ! POTATOES 2w» B.s Calif. Naval I ORANGES 88 Size Doz. TOMATOES T>.d.pak 11.Z.19' ; Michigan Dry IjONIONSs-lbSag Hius BReTHiRS Gan COFFEE ROMAN CLEANSER. C29 Roman Softner........................'t.c‘'29‘ Ajax Detergent, King-Size... ...... 5*lb. 4'OZ, box 89° Boid Detergent, King Size... . . . S-lb. 4>oz. box 89° Hersiiey’s Choceiate Syrup..........Mb.cn 19* Horniei SPAM ................ i2ei ,andi'f“> j period is headed for a serious n cars ndiose average age was 3.2 years with no mechanical defects and no seat belts. Automobile Club , of Michigan’s General Manager Fred N. Rehm said today. Driver failure was primary cause of 89 per cent of the deaths. ’These facts emerge from a 61-page study, titled “How To Bring More Back Alive,” which projects a representative 20 per cent sample of Michigan’s 1966 deaths. It will be published soon along with Auto Club suggestions on .what to do about the 7 per cent increase in traffic deaths lastj year. Triple-A safety analysts visited scenes of 435 traf^c deaths in July, Aupst and Wer Memorial Day weekend and analyzed them plus drivers’ records and what drivers had been doing immediately prior to the OTHER FACTS Other facts the study reveals: • The point system identifies bad drivers but does not protect the rest of society by taking them off the road. The 10 worst drivers involved in the 363 accidents studied had a lifetime average of 44 points each, 11 times more than the average driver gets in his lifetime. ’They had an average of eight speeding or reckless driving convici tions. Four per cent of the drivers involved had a total of 35 suspensions, with one suspended eight times. But nearly 20 per cent of drivers whose licenses are suspended or revoked get them back or have the suspensions modified by appeal, boards or the courts. less than 7 per cent 10 years or older.y Only 13 per cent of the cars checked had seat belts, and in only two cases were they used. a Fifty-five per cent of the deaths occurred in 12 counties: Wayne, Oakland, Genesee, Macomb, .gaginaw, Ingham, Lenawee, C^tarJient, Livingston, Ottawa and Allegan. “’This was in spite of the fact that our analysis occurred July and August plus Memorial weekend, when counties north of a line from Bay City to Muskegon had their heaviest vacation traffic,” Rehm said. ★ ★ ★ • Even in Michigan’s peak NOW! at TiOO and 9:35 R0DGERS& HAMMEK times greater than the averse driver. Secretary of state figures show, the average driver has four points and one accident in his lifetime. ★ A Our investigators, who are not auto engineers, could find no evidence that vehicle defects played a significant role as accident causes,” Rehm said. ONE BALD TIRE “They could find only one bald tire that may have contributed to severity of an accident, but could not have caused it. ’Tire defects were found on six cars, along with one light and one brake defect, “Old cars — the kind that look unsafe standing still — were in a surprisingly small minority,” Relftn said. “Average age of the cars was three most dangerous. Eighty-two per cent (d the drivm involved were within 25 miles at honw, not on vacation. Only 2 per cent wm« on vacation ami more than 25 miles from home. • Some basic law violation was involved in 89 per 'cent of fatalities, with spe^ too fast for conditions most common. Others included driving to left of center, failure to yield ri^t of way, running traffic signals, disregarding stop signs and improper turns. Many mptorists misunderstand Michigan’s basic “what ever is safe and pri^r” speed law, for many apparently pre-incorrectly that they could safely go to the statewide limit of 65 daytime, 55 at night, on any unposted two-lane county road. Neurosis Jars 'Simple Life' Some Disorders Felt More in Rural Areas By Science Service WASHINGTON-Rural Americans may have a weakness for different kinds of neurosis than their urban counterparts, according to a Kansas study of accident.vlctims. In a group of 150 patients who came to the Menninger Foundation suffering long-term mental trauma after a frightening accident, 40 were specifically afflicted with “free-floating anxiety” — tension, great easiness, irritability and drawal. These 40 could be likened, reported Dr. Herbert C. Mod-lin in the February American Journal of Psychiatry, to the “hurt aulmal who withdraws to the safe seclusion of h i s cave to lick his wounds. If someone approaches, he growls an uneasy warning.” Curiously, the 40 patients typically came frpm simple, Ihriited, rural backgrounds. ’They were “literal and unimaginative,” had eighth-grade educations and traditional val-jues, such as: “Men work, do not cry, drink beer, hunt and fish; women keep house, rear children.” Dr. Modlin suggested this simple cultural background produced a simple ego structure, whose troubles were manifested in this “relatiydy simple’ mixiety syndromfK^ To develop “symbolic nesses” — phobias, obsessions, or hypochondria requires more ego sophistication thaii ' tients possessed, he sale Nearly 70 per cent of the fa-tlitij^s occurred bn two land roads, ^ p^ c^t of thi^ at speeds too fast for conditimu. Only 4,000 oi 24,000 miles of two-lane county roads have been studtod scientifically to determine their speed capabilities. ON FREEWAYS “This problem is especially acute in counties with freeways running Uirou^ them, which indicates drivers tend to continue at high speeds when they leave freewrays,” Rehm said. The s p e e d problem is indicated by the fact that, white total accidents decreased by 2.7 per cent in 1966, deaths increased 7 per cent and ip-Juries increased 3.5 per cent. “We feel this is due to high speeds on two lane roads,’* Rehm said. Largest, single accident type m single-car ran off read accidents J34 per bnt) followed by twocar colMcms (31 per cent). a An even 20 per cent of drivera at fault were between ages 16 and 20. Nearly IS per cent were between 16 and 18 — far out of proportion to the 8.9 per cent of drivers it is estimated they represent. In addition, 50 per cent of teen-agers involved in fatalities had been drinking. ' ★ w ★ a Most dangerous hour was 6 p.m. with 10 per cent of the accidents. Next was 1 a.m. with 9 per cent, followed by 2 a.m. with 7 per cent. Sunday was most dangerous day, followed by Saturday, Friday and Mrai-day. Presumably these days experienced highest traffic volumes also. a At least half of the* acd-duit reports examined were in-comniete to some deiffee. Maiiy lacked any information <» drinking condition d the drivers. Our investigation in many cases showed that the drivers had been drinking, n^e the reports did not show this,” Rehm noted. • One out of 17 of the accidents involved motorized hikes or cycles, while they represent only one out of every 65 vehicles on Michigan roads. While the number of motorized cycles and bikes on Michigan roads is increasing at an unprecedented rate, the number of accidents and fatalities involving these vehicles is going up nearly 50 per cent fas^r. ■ ★ ★ A • The vast majority of cycle drivers who died were under'age 25. Average age was under 21, ranging from 14 to’31. Almost all occurred cm weekendb. ! kw^FACTORS i “Driver failure, due to bad haMts, and attitudes, alccdiol, ignorance, poor judgment, in-1 experience or a combination of toese, underlies most fatal acd-| dents,” Rehm said. “The dispropOTtionately large number of high point drivers in-f volved is evidence of the role of habits and attitudes. “Speed too fast for’conditions, ^ combined with tiie large num-i ber of single-car accidents, the extremely high percentage of fatals on two-lane roads and the large number of teen-age drivers, indicate poor judgment, ignorance of the basic speed law, driver fatigue, inattentim, bad habits and attitudes and-or alcohol,” Rehm said. last times tonite "Cat on a Hot Tin Roof”' "Doad Hoat on a MonyQo-Round”_______ Sill a.M. to iito P.M. TEENAGERS rWiHiis CflC UPTO20 iOUPON gU Years Ok III e*irt. M Ml. I* II (II >.111. ta If >.■ EAGLE Slant FRIDAY Walt DISNEY’S 'THOSE CALLOWAYS" 2nd BIG HIT! HAVE YOU SEEN- Chalet Inn’s New SCOPITONE? irs tmc most remarkable INNOVATION SINCE TELEVISION! FEATURING,,. GOOD MUSIC and BEAUTIFUL GIRLS LADIES' Cind BUSINESSMEN'S LUNCHEONS SERVED DAILYI Along With Your Favorite CooMail Enjoy One of the Chalet’s Famous PLATE SPECIALTIES •.'Corn^ Beef-Koihar • Tuna Fish Salad • Roumanian Pastrami • Choica Cuba Staak • Tandar All-Whita Turkay • Ham A Swiss Choica Ground Baof FREE PARKINQ, Roar of Building Max von Sydow a* Jesus Dorothy McGuire as Mary Charlton Heston John, the Baptist John Wayne the Centurion OHILPHEN 8Sc - ADULTS S1.0S State Man Pilot in N. Viet Raid SAIGON (UPI) - A Michigan, man was one of p group of U.S. Navy jet pilots who struck targets in North Vietnam this week,| U.S. spokesmen reported yester-| day. Capt. Larry D. Waller, 33, ofj Coldwater, Mich., led an air strike which cut the approaches to a ford about 13 miles south-1 southeast of Don Hoi. I I First “BREATHTAKING! Srobert elke iSin! s STACK SOMMER^ =NANCY iKWAN PAUL*’ . NEWMAN _________ flATSlJYA MtHASW -TAKESHI KATO i?WOOI)w!SS^ lllli Seckw£tK-]Ev(m£ FIHE #l.obR CqVEmNjBS TEL-HURON For FfeB^None Service THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, MARCH 16, 1967 White Lake Stalls Its Zoning Changes \ WHITE LAKE'fOWNSHIP Crowded into the JXiblin School gym, an estimated 250 persons last night obtained a 30-day delay on adoption of a new zoning ordinance and map. Near the conclusion of the three-hour public hearing called by -the township planning commission, Charles Harris, planning chairman, said the hearing would be reccjnvened at 8 p.m. April 17. The delay was one point sought by those opposed to the new ordinance. Purpose of last night’s session was to hear objections to the proposed ordinance, which would set updated zoning classifications for all property in the township. The current zoning ordinance and map — adopted in 1956 — would be abandoned u^n proval of the new ordinance. Strong protests from a parade of property owners were recorded last night against the proposed ordinance. Only o n e change was agreed to by the planning commission. Nine Back Firemen Board in W. Bloomfield tiy JANICE KLOUSER WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP — Aftgr taking the barbs of critics for several months, the Township Board found some friends last night. In a letter to the board, nine members of the volunteer fire department assured the board of their support and said recent charges made by other members of their department “are completely unfounded.’’ The nine, members of Station No. 2, Walnut Lake, say they were “conveniently omitted’’ from a previous letter _ which reportedly represented the thinking of about 75 per cent of the volunteers. That letter charged the board with dictatorship, with stripping the chief of his authority and with evading answers to similar charges made by former supervisor Duane K. Sanford when he resigned in January. ★' ★ ★ The unsigned letter last month called for a “general house-cleaning.” ‘UNFOUNDED’ The nine volunteers claim charges made against the three-man fire committee, headed by a fire captain and board trustee, are “completely unfounded.” Referring to Walter J. Whit-mer, they asked, “Who is better qualified to head up such a committee than a man who has more than 15 years experience as a fireman, is a successful business owner and is a lifetime active community resident” They also wanted to know If accusations that the chief is being stripped of his authority are “merely personal grudges of a few discontented firemen.” “We, as firemen and fellow taxpayers. Would like to help clear this matter up,” the letter .said.“We realize that this township is a rapidly growing community and possibly we are starting to feel some of the growing pains. However, we do not feel that the proper way to try and help the township solve its current problems is by writing defamatory letters_to the board.” LESSER FEE The nine volunteers suggested firemen get paid a lesser fee for their services so that capital could be freed to hire additional full-time firemen and buy new equipment. T. Cleve King, one of the volunteers who signed the letter, said it only answered points contained in the first letter pertaining to the firemen. He also said those who wrote the first letter should have signed it and asked them to “step forward and clarify the charges.” The township board also re- ceived a report from the special committee set up to investigate Sanford’s charges, stating its progress to date “has been substantial” and that a complete report should be ready in the next 15 days. The committee is Investigating Sanford’s charges of "harassment” and lack of authority given to the supervisor to determine if the allegations are justified. After a huddle during a brief recess, Ohairman Harris said the planners would amend the proposed ordinance to permit suburban farm and agricultural districts to remain as they are under the existing ordinance. Objections voiced at the hearing centered on the suburban estates classification proposed for current suburban farms. Residents indicated their opposition to the use restrictions provided with the “estates” zoning. Pontiac attorney William M. Travis, vrtio said be represented agricultural interests, claimed suburban fanners ^w e r e being discriminated against limited in the use of their property. CLASSIFICA'nONS HIT Other residents complained of proposed new classifications for specific pieces of property. Township officials indicated the [voposed zoning map would make changes in classifications, but thought the new ordinance did not propose a wholesale rezoi^g of the township. ' WdIJed Lake Meeting Fiscal Reform Discussion Set WALLED LAKE — Fiscal reform legislation will be discussed at a public meeting at 8 p. m. tomorrow at the Clifford H. Smart Junior High School, 8700 Commerce. Rep. Clifford H. Smart, R-19th District and Rep. Donald E. Bishop, R-18th District, will discuss issues now before the Legislature. ■★ ★ ★ Carl Anderson, legislative consultant of the Michigan Congress of Parents and Teachers, will present the needs for fiscal reform as they relate to quality education. Cosponsors of the meeting are the Walled Lake Council of . - . Parents and Teachers, the Rotary Club and the Lion’s Club of tern for better recording of in-Walled Lake. come. Lapeer Church Has New Pastor LAPEER-— Rev. James A. Threlfall, a former evangel and pastor in Shelbyville, III, will begin his ministry of the First Baptist Church here Sunday. ★ ★ ★ A special welcome service will be conducted at 10 a.m. The regular service will be. at 11 a.m. and an evening service at 7 p.m. E—3 NEW TROY PARK SITE - This former truck farm is the future site of a Troy city park. Lee Osborn, parks and recreation director, inspects the land, bought by the city for $131,750, of about $3,500 an acre for 37Vii acres. Trees in the background are at the rear of the property. The city will develop the park with baseball diamonds and picnic areas. The remains of a barn and other old buildings are to be removed. Pilot Is Unhurt as Plane Flips An airplane pilot e^aped in-c . T,, j ^. jury late -^yesterday afternoon Supervisor Edward Chayz^^j,^^ /i„g,e.engine said the blulk of the township would remain in the agricultural district. He said that the old map was “too broad.” It had only four zoning classifications, while the proposed map provides for 11 different typ» of zoning plus a desipa-tion for state-owned recreation Final. adoption of the zoning ordinance and its accompanying map rests with the township. After the planning commission Issues its recommendations, the proposed ordinance goes to the Oakland County Coordinating Zoning and Planning Committee. ’The combined recommendations then go to t^e township board. Builder Set to Revisej: Rejected Troy Plans craft somersaulted in a Holly Township farm field. Pontiac State Police said the pilot, John D. Johnson, 37, of Flint, was attempUng to take off when the plane’s nose wheel got caught in a furrow. The plane landed upright and Johnson walked away unmarked. Damage to the plane, a two-seat Ercoupe, was estimated at $1,000- Prior to the mishap, the plane ran out of gasoline, forcing Johnson to land in the farm field located one-half mile east of the Holly Road - Belford Road intersection. After replenishing his f u e supply, Johnson attempted the takeoff. The plane was traveling at full power when it "nosed over,” State Police said. Johnson began his pleasure flight from Flint’s Bishop Air^ port only 15 minutes before the forced landing. Avon Twp. Sets Expenditures AVON TOWNSHIP - At a preliminary meeting recently the Township Board set annual expenditures for the new budget at $380,000 — up nearly $20,000 from last year. Further meetings will investigate recommended changes in the township bookkeeping sys- TROY — The Biltmore Development Co. will “start all over again” in attempting to gain the rezoning needed to about double its $125 million Somerset complex, a spokesman said yesterday, Bernard Stollman, a company attorney, said the firm will hire a major planning consultant to revise Us plans for. expanding its present venture in the Big Beaver and Coolidge area. Rezoning of a 204-acre parcel was rejected by the City Commission. Numerous objections were lodged by residents and members of home-owner groups. , Rezoning was sought for two high - rise apartments, more two-story apartments, commercial and office construction in an area zoned single-famUy residential to the north of Somerset apartments. Strollman said he felt much of the objection centered around construction of apartments. ‘QUALITY TYPE’ “People seem to feel apartments will decrease valuation. However in the quality type we build, it has been found tha valuation of neighboring property has actually increased,” he >aid. • He said the high - rise construction originaily intended for the area would be eight to 10 stories high. He said his firm felt the Big soon be a main intersection and ' that the kind of development planned would be in the best interests 6f long-range planning, h; A “tapering” effect of com-j mercial, apartments, then sin-| ^ gle-family residential construe- = tion leading away from the in- s tersection is what the firm had || in mind, Strollman said. ' STORES WILLING Several large stores had al- -ready expressed wUlingness to ; locate in the proposed shopping ~ center for the comj^ex. ‘"This! indicates that these stores feel' that this is logical location,”! he said. The firm is now building on I. 33 acres at the intersectioD. | The sought-for rezoning would'^^ have added 42 acres more to the shopping center which was slated to cover three corners of the intersection. In the light of the rejection of the proposed development, Biltmore will hire a planner to make a new survey “to see what land use is required,” he said. The new study will concern the ultimate use of a total of 320 acres in the recent area for which a 204-acre rezoning was sought as well as 275 acres, some of it still undeveloped, on the west side of Coolidge owned by the firm. “Our new plan may differ radically from the former or it may, be similar. It may call for or less of an investment. In case we will have a better of how to proceed when A is Beaver and Collidge area would; finished,” Stollman said. Village Green Back in Mod^n Setmg FARMINGTON TOWNSHIP A great deal of early Colonial life centered around the village green or “common.” This charming gathering spot disappearec^ from the American scene as the population boomed and little villages and towns gave way to housing developments and look-alike subdivisions. Now, the old village gr«en is coniing back. Reversing the trend that threatened to “lay a mass of roofs over the land,” a local community developer is pioneering a new subdivision concept based on the village green. ★ ★ ★ The 2-year-old Canterbury Commons Subdivision at 13 Mile near Orchard Lake, developed by Thompson-Brown Community Planners, is the first of several such subdivisions in the township and one of the first in the state, according to the developers. PARK AREA In this planned residential development, each lot size is reduced and the savings from each lot combined to create an, open space p^k area to be used by all resid^ts of the subdivision. The conmuMb as it was known in the past, desorbed land owned in common by the iandowners. The same principle is applied to the Thompson-Brown subdivisions. The two private park areas, 15 and 2.4 acres, are owned by the residents who must pay a $25 maintenance fee. They also pay a prorated share of the taxes assessed on the open area. of Thompson-Brown. “It has been found in Boston that neighborhoods with parks retain their values better than those without.” The park can be used for dances, parties and picnics, and T* if .in (hi it is designed for the wear If they don t keep it up, thii youngsters. Young children can play in the “tot lot” while their mothers watdi them from benches provided near the area. Until 90 per cent of the lots are sold, the developers assume responsibility for the upkeep. The community association then takes over and contracts for maintenance work. COLLECTIVE PRIDE township can take over and charge the cost back to the taxes. “’There Is a collective pride in the community about the parks,” said William Bowman Older youngsters can ride bikes or roller skate on the mile] “Our whole philosophy is to of hard-surfaced walkway which I retain the natural beauty.” also leads to a high school andi several other subdivisions in elementary school, avoiding the.j,g g^ea are/based on the same necessity for crossing busy Colony Park, Old Franklin Town, Heritage Hills, East LinTOlnshire, Independence Commons, Franklin Ravines, Churchpl Estates and Camelot. lip officials express approve of the new concept. “ley add beauty to the area, we are not burdened with upkeep of the parks,” said T(/wnship Clerk Floj^d A. Cairns. “One of the biggest assets,” said Bowman, “is that it will provide a means for preserving the natural beauty of our country side without being completely dependent, on local units of gobernment for the establishment of an expensive park system. Tempers Warming Political Disputes Abound BylUGARYTHORNE ; ^ ^ Assistant City Editor — Suburban It can’t be on account of St. Paddy’s Day because more than the Irish have their dander up. Maybe it’s the | weather. Regardless, it seems that political controversy is the | order of the day in a flock of area communities. Tempers appear to be warming with the sun. Note the following: WOLVERINE LAKE - A “dissident” group of residents is unhappy with the way the village does its v., business. They want to secede. ^ Petitions have been signed to have Walled Lake annex I an estimated One-third of the already small village. The I annexation move was disclosed Monday. Not unexpectedly i the village council played to a full house at their meeting f that evening. 51 * * * Interest has been heightened considerably in next il month’s council election. m Meantime: WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP - Supervisor Duane K. Sanford is long gone. He resided in January. However, ’ his parting shots live after him. Ah interim report of an ‘: investigating citizens committee was made last night. Complaints from volunteer firemen might also be linked to Sanfwd’s charges that department heads ’l were “harassed by various (township) board members” and that there wasn’t sufficient authority vested in the supervisor. Issues pending elsewhere include: ROCHESTER — With incorporation came a move to < incorporate the balance of Avon Township, which sur- ' rounds the new city. That matter is before the Oakland \ County Board of Supervisors. Meantime, city and township ) officials warily work toward a settlement of mutual owner- 4 ship of such items as the library, the park and the fact | that the new city has no dump. , ' ★ ★ ★ i OXFORD TOWNSHIP — Renewed litigation to secure | zoning to permit a proposed mobile home p»k is re- fi portedly on its way to the State Supreme Court,^Tbe trailer park battle is nearly a year old. i POTSHOTS AT BOARD / T PONTIAC TOWNSHIP — Outgoing Spbervisor Leonard Terry took some potshots with a verbal scatter gun at the township board, which is partiaRy made up of those i of a differing political faith, although this may not have \ too much to do with Terry’s explain!. Terry was an- 1 swered by Walter Smith, a towpship trustee. s ★ ★/ * Despite the recent trend/a couple of controversies did end. The building ban w^ lifted itf Utica and final) con- 4 tracts have been signe^y all the participants for the i giant Clinton-Oakland Interceptor. The latter means sewers | will someday be av^ble to a large chunk of northern I Oakland County. Expert on Moon I sat Cranbrook ED BLUNDEN 'ill men on the moon need ^raincoat? Will they walk in a rthpastelike substance? 'These are some possibilities, brought out by a space scientist who spoke to a Cranbrook Institute of Science audience last night. In any case, Dr. Paul D. Lowman, a NASA geologist, said scientists believe “man will be able to land and work there.” Lowman is one of about 400 scientists studying photographs taken of the earth by astronauts in the Gemini series and of the moon by lunar orbiter satellites. Some features on the m o o n still remain a mystery and matter of controversy among those working on the project, Lowman said. Scientists studying the photos see possible evidence of water erosion on the moon. Lowman said it was possible that after a meteorite strike, condensation and rainfall could ta^e place. Also the past existence of glaciers on the moon is being debated, he said. Whether or not there are or were volcanoes on the moon is also a matter of contention. Russian scientists favor the volcano . theory and use the ‘moon blipks” phenomena (flashes of light) to back the volcano theory, Lowman said. Using slides of orbiting camera shots, Lowman showed some fbrmations that were being interpreted as extinct volcanoes. He also used the slides to demonstrate what an audience mem- ber labeled the “toothpaste theoiy.” Lowman said he and a few others analyzed light-colored areas on the mowi as being ma-terial that flowed up from under the surface in recent geologic time. He backed this up by showing there were fewer craters in the lighter-colored areas than in the adjacent dark areas. He said this showed some moon material is neither fine dust nor solid ibek, but material capable of. flowing like “toothpaste.” A questioner f r o m the audience wanted to know if tha weight and size of the moon pras not increasing due to the mass of material falling on it and forming craters. Lowman said due to the velocities involved, the meteorites may be causing material to be knocked off the moon. In examining the photos of earth, Lowman stress^ the importance to geologists of obtain-in aerial mapping of surface features. / He said some 1,100 photos are under study. Many large meteorites, extinct volanpoes, huge earth faults and other phenomena are being discovered that scientists before were unaware of, he said. Dr. Lowman was the geologist in charge of terrain photography for Gemini missions and is a specialist in lunar geology. He spoke to an audience of about 100 Cranbrook Institate of Science members and guests as part of a lecture series. He is from the Goddard Space Flight Center in Maryland. Concert in Rochester Aerial View Of Canterbury Commons, A Subdivision With A Village Green ROCHESTER-The Rochester Community Orchestra, under direction of Richard Goldsworthy, will present its annual spring concert at 4 p. lii. Sunday at the Avon Playhouse, 1185 Washing-ton. * ★ * Featured soloist will be violinist Barbarp Cobb who will perform Symphonie Espapola by Ed Lalo. The concert program Includes Academic Festival Overtmb by Brahms, S^nmphony in^B hfinor (The Unfinished Symphoity) by Schubert, and Down a Country Lane by Copland. Tickets for the concert may be purchased at the door or in advance from Mrs. Robert B. COok, 1455 S t b c k p o r t, Avon Towndiip, tl<*et (jiairman, w any ordiestra mend>er. 1 E—4 ____ ' ■■ ■■ '' ' ^ I Jacoby on Bridge || the PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY. MARCH 16, 1967 NOBTH AKQ104 V J3I2 16 V J3 2 ♦ Kl»r», rolanvw,, TAURUS (Apr. M • Moy »>!^MoW. your own Indepondeno .................lion. Than af- fort, ara crownad with wccaii. GEMINI (May 21 - Juna 20): Cycia nvea up. Straw orlolnallty, ——• —< -™*»ets. Taka a ------------------ aa. Highlight graatar thought, action. Look 'cancer (Juno 21 - July 22)i •tforts may appaar to bo burled. , attempta to aotk greater recognition, -aalizo tha mora you roapoct youriall . . the mora othara will lolloa- “ LEO (July 23 - • “• ------ ..oni from frlom You learn moat “ Srtal^ toward na>. VIRGO (Aug. 23 • Sapt. 22)i Your .blllty to get d^ to builnoat ' alzad. No day to wasto lima. .. than taka dafinito atept to ay NO to (riand who wanti------------------- LIBRA (Sept. 23 - Oct. 22): Put Meat ..ito action. Peraonal desires fulfilled If you toko Initiative. Many — — but you must lead wav. let personality glow. TAINT OF INNOCENCE. Bytelligence Agency, and now Marquis Childs. Harper. ^.95. Childs has found a new approach to the currently popular fiction theme of international inh*igue. His hero is a very {woper young man of go^ background, Robert, earner oh, idealistic and innocent enough to have been called a Crusader and Gallahad in his training days. Because of his education in the Middle East and his knowledge of Arabic, he has been recruited into the U.S. Central In- finds himself trying to cope with an emergency‘in an oil-rich . ^aya significant rola whara jo ...alth are concarned. Bt frank, hvina,, apacific. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 - Dec. 21): Perfect special techniques. Others looli But the author is concerned less with the actv^ spy claptrap than he is with the moral and ethicalqualms of young Cameron. The author is not very skilled t narration. His atmospheric and descriptive passages seem authentic, but the story moves slowly and awkwardly. The principto appeal of this novel is its concern with the matter of conscience in the rough, tough business if international affairs. yoursalf. Mate, partner require attention. If generous, you ara well repaid. Heed GOLDEN RULE. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 - Jan. If): Promiaas mad# In past come to torefront THE BETTER HALF “Care to buy a couple of tickets to the Refuse Collector’s BaU? ... Highlight of the evening will be the crowning of ms Garbage of 1967’.” IP Friday is your birthday ... you are practicel, datarmined, yet atnaitive enough to ptrealva true fatlinga -* others. Your ability to see behind r-..mta could be invefuible In any pc tion requiring research. Investigation. ★ ★ * GENERAL TENDENCIES: Cycle high lor GEMINI, CANCER. Special word to -aka Initiative In eefttlnt (CepyrlgM IH7, (Miieral Peeturee Carp-) aodal acttvlty. Turn on ctiamil .. ^ j,,. Ygu -----------teinily. Too Much Light Foils Escape ST. LOUIS, Mo. (AP) - A trustee walk^ away from the Benz prison farm near Jefferson aty. He made one little slip. He was stopp^ by a pctlice officer in St. Louis for failing to dim the headlights on the car he was driving. The patrolman recognized the fugitive and he was soon back behind bars. BERRY’S WORLD-By Jim Berry BOARDme HOUSE (iF ANUY ^AhAl WdULO HA>«B mb a more definite J ' TW106S MAV HAVE 61VBN M^\ SU<36ESTlON / BUT PRE-THEOERM-OF AN IOEA/WHENJ | DICTIN© X'D FlNo THE IEUMINATE ONE ASPECT OF SM06,THE PROFITS WILL FiNANCE MORE COMPLEX OUT OUR WAY “Why don’t you forget about what they’ll name the child and come to bed?” THE BERRYS By Carl Grubert EEK & MEEK By Howie Schneider DONALD DUCK By Walt Disney THE POIIJ^IAC PRESS. THURSDAY, MARCH 16. 1967 E—5 mce ♦ The following are top prices covering sales of locally grown produce by growers and sold by tf’m in wholesale package lots Quotaf 'ns are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets as of Friday. Produce FRUITS Apples, Delicious, bu Apples, DeMclous, Red, bu. Apples, AAcInlosh, bu...... Apples, Jonethan, bu....... Apples, Northern Spy, bu. . Apples, Steele Red, bu. ... Apples, Cider, 4-gal. VEGETABLES , Beets, topped, bu. ............... Cabbage, Curly, bu............... j 75 Cabbage, Red, bu ................. 3,C' Cabbage, Standard, bu..............3.5 Carrots, topped, bu................ 2.( Celery, Root, dz.................. 1 ■ Horseradish, pk. bsk.............. 4( Leeks, dz. bch..................... 3/ Onions, dry, 5(Mb. bag .......... 3(< Parsley, root .....................j'.C Parsnips, '/i bu. ................ 2.( Parsnips, Ceho Pak................ 2 ( Potatles, 50 lbs............ 2.( Potatoes, 20 lbs......................8 Radishes, black, Vi bu. 2( Rhubarb, hothouse, dz. bch. t's Rhubarb, hothouse, 5-lb. box B Squash, Acorn, bu................. 15 Squash, Buttercup, bu.............. 15 Squash, Butternut, bu..............1.5 Squash, Delicious, bu. 15 Souash, Hubbard, bu. 15 Turnips. Topped ................. 2 ! Poultry and Eggs DETROIT POULTRY DETROIT (AP)-Prlces paid per pound Tor No. I live poultry: Roasters heavy type 26-27; Broilers and tryers 3-4 Whiles 19-20'/4. DETROIT EGGS DETROIT (AP)-Egg prices paid -----------------;ers fincluding U NEW YORK (AP) - The stock market approached new highs for 1967 as it resumed its rally in heavy trading early this afternoon. The ticker tape ran late as stocks took off from their vigorous advance of yesterday and pushed ahead despite profit taking here and there. ' * ★ ★ Among victims of profit taking was Chrysler, whose 3-point rise as yesterday’s second most active stock, inspired motors and other industriais. Chrysler eased fractionally but gave AbboH Lab 1 ABC Con .80 Abex Cp 1.60 ACF Ind 2.20 le A lumbo 38-42; exit 33 Vj. CHICAGO BUTTER, EGGS CHICAGO (AP)- Chicagn Mercantile — ......................‘--'tsale buy- e AA 66; ♦0 B 65; W C 62%. Alleg Cp .20e AllegLu 2.40“ Alleg Pw 1.; Exchange—Butter steady; Ing prices unchanged; 93 _______ •43 A AA. «A • 64Va; 89 C 6J' . w V-, -e ^ 623/4. Eggs steady; wholesale buying prices unchanged to '/a higher; 75 per cent or better Grade A Whites 34; mixed 33Va; mediums 31; standards 31’/a; checks 24. CHICAGO POULTRY (USDA) - Live AtliedStr 1.32 10 25 243/4 25 Allis Chal 1 82 26V4 26^/e CHICAGO (AP) __ poultry: wholesale buying changed; roasters 25-26'/a; Whit# Rock fryers 20-21. A Enka 1.30a AmCyan 1.25 295 25^ 34H 343/4 + ’ AmElP 1.44b 30 38'/^ 37'/s 37^/e .... * " • * 8 31'/i 31% 3r/i + 1 3 19% 19% 19% .... 26 943/4 94 22 10Vs 173/4 173/4 — * Livestock DETROIT LIVESTOCK DETROIT (AP) - (USDA) - Cattle ICK). Not enough slaughter steers or ' '' ers to make market test. Run 1 cows these active fully steady 62 18% 17% 17% — Vi AMet Cl 1.90 19 44V4 44% 443/4 + Va *- Motors '127 IOV4 10 10 4Gas 1.80 68 39 38% 38% — tic 1.35b 14 89% 88% 89 ' Photoepy 221 9'/4 " Smelt 3a 20 60% 4,500; butchers steady to 25 higher; sows steady to 1.00 higher; * To ArmsCk 1.20a AshIdOM 1.20 Assd DG 1.60 Atchison 1.60 ;hoice 950 -M50 slaughter steers 24.00 and choice 23.50-24.00 wooled slaughter lambs 22.50. American Stock Exch. NEW y6RK (API - American btoc 9 36 % 35% Asamera AssdOII & G AtlasCorp w‘ i 33% 32% 33 •+ 1 11 11 11 24 383/4 38% 38% -f S Eng 20 35% 35% 35% -f-l' . *«... 6 23, ^ , e fry wide RIt " Creole 2.60a Data Cent EquityCp .16f Fargo Oils Felmont Oil FlyTiaer .20g Fly Tiger wi Gen Plywd It Giant Yel .40 Goldfield Gt Bas Pet Gulf Am Cp Hycon Mfg Scurry Rain Signal OilA 1 45 76 75'% 75'/4 - ’ 30 38»/4 373^ 37^4 + ' 17 9% 9% 93/4 18 8'4 8M6 8M6 - ' 57 2% 2'/2 2% + 4 13% 13% 13% — ' 56 30'% 29% 29% - ' 2 5% 5Vi 5% + \ 63 63% 62'/i 62'/4 - ' i 27% 27'/i 27% -t-5. i2'/j h'/* ^12%'+ ; Stocks of Local Interest Figures after decimal points are eighths OVER THE COUNTER STOCKS Quotations trom the NASD are representative inter-dealer prices maiely H “ “ '■*— larkup, markdown i Associated Truck ............. Boyne ............... Braun Engineering ............ Citizens Utilities Class A . .. Detrex Chemical .............. Diamond Crystal .............. Frank's Nursery ............... Kelly Services Mohawk Robber Co.............. Monroe Auto Equipment ... North Central Airlines Units Safran Printing Scripto ........ Wyandotte Chemical MUTUAL FUNDS Atfiliated Fond' ............ Chemical Fund ...............] Commonwealth Stock ..........' Dreyfus .................... ' Keystone Income K-1 ......... Keystone Growth K-2 ......... i Mass. Investors GroV- ' Putnam Growth Television Electror Wellington Fund Treasury Position WASHINGTON (AP) - The cash P ■Itlon of the Treasury compared with co "*’’‘"M!,lV'"MS?ibt,.W66 ®*'*"T5,M3,370,388.07 $ 3,010,3I6,«2.14 Deposits Fisc . , , ■'•'”’"’tor!Si*l8&'’“'Vl07,968,132.5, 95,,288,4.3.85 ‘’'*"'^“333,492!768,017.56 324,103,745,597.59 *'i3!i05,748!o52.62 If733,222^91.37 (*) - Includes $264,W7,W.53 "" Rllt ripg w ACCUMULATIVE ,«b. :;^ 2 tn Ifo House Defeats Market Nears New '67 Highs 1st Bill ot Year ground stubbornly while other blue chip industrials forged ahead. Analysts said the market was still responding to Congressional committee action in not only recommending restoration of the 7 per cent investment tax credit but also making it retroactive in some instances. TAKE PROFITS Prices rose from the start and widened gains, pausing slightly dh traders took profits. Gainers outnumbered losers by a margin of better than 8 to 3 on the New York Stock Exchange. The Associated Press average of ed stocks at noon was up 2.2 at 321.7 with industrials up 3.8, rails up 1.0 and utilities up .7. Prices were mostly higher on the American Stock Exchange. Cosmodyne and Scurry Rainbow Oil advanced about 2 each. AMK Corp. lost more than 2. Nuclear Corp. of American and Westt)ury Fashions were active fractional gainers. Valve Corp. and Alloys Unlimited rose about a point each. The New York Stock Exchange 13 22% 22V4 22V4 - 1 10 333/4 33'/2 33% + a 78 30% 30Va 30% 9 11% 11% 11% -F ' 39 66% 65'/4 65V4 -f- ' 13 25% 25% 25% .. S»lts (hds.) High FIrstChrt .5U 51 25% 243/4 25% + % Flintkote 1 ...... .......... ‘ " Fla Row 1.3< Fla PLt 1.64 FMC Cp .75 FoodFair .90 - .w- FordMot 2.40 205 503/4 50 ForeDair .50 67 24 23% 24 FreepSut 1.25 23 45% 45% FruehCp 1.70 56 33% 323/4 33 —G— GamSkp 1.30 132 79% 79 79% +!'/• 10 94Va 94'/4 94Va .. 273 94 91% 92% +1% 123 39 38% 38% -F % 220 82% 81 81 -F13/4 33 52 Va 52'/4 52%+ “ Gen Elec 2.60 Gen Fds 2.20 -....... GenMIlls 1.50 4 63 62% 63 9’/i - '. 60’/a 60?/* — Va I 20% + I 62% + 49 35% 35 35 - ' 2 21Va 21% 21'/a + ’- ‘ 14 75 72% 75 +2% 199 31 Va 30% 31'^a + ’ 43 263/4 26% 26% + - 161 81Va 79Va 81 +1% ....... . 53/4 53/4 53/4 ., G PubUt 1.50 30 31Va 30% 31 GTel El 1.28 Gen Tire .80 Ga Pacific lb Getty OH .lOg Gillette 1.20 Glen Aid .70 Goodrich 2,40 Goodyr 1.35 GraceCo 1.30 Granites 1.40 GrantWT 1.10 GtA&P 1.30a Gt Nor Ry 3 Gt West FinI GtWSug 1.60a GraenGnt .80 Greyhound 1 GrunrWir 1.20 39 363/4 36'/a 36% + % 1 543,^4 543/4 54% ~ “ o Cp 1.20 324 42% 42 42% et .50b 147 30'/a 29% 30 + , n Pd 1.40 117 94 92 933^ +2'/4 BabcokW 1.36 Balt GE 1.52 30 38 37% 37% + 325 33.i 3% 33,4 . Boeing 1.20 BoiseCasc .25 Borden 1.20 BorgWar 2.20 "-iggsS 2.40a 1st Mjf^^.80a BucyEr 1.60a Budd Co .80 202 82'4 80% 81% + Burl I .60b 197 123,4 12% 12'/a + V 19 30Va 3OV4 30V4 .... - 129 17Va 17V4 17'/a + V 6 27V4 27 27 .. 42 27% 27'/4 27'/4 + V 90 33% 32% 33Va +1. 167 113% 111V4 112 '.+3'/ —C— 39 37% 37% 37'/a + 2 “ ^ Iv CdnP fnl.SOa Canteen .80 CaroPLt 1.34 2 43 43 43 + ' 26 97 95 9674 +2' 8 1674 16'/4 16'/4 — ' CelaneseCp 2 21 57’/. 57V4 57’/4 -I- • L„. 30 23 49 483,4 49 -F ' ,60 47 44’/. 44V. 4474 -t- I. , 42 3774 37V. 3774 + 74 .80 17 18''i 18 18'/4 ' " CessnaA 1.40 2 7 44V. 43Vj 43'’3. 9 4J3,, 421,4 423, . 4 68'/3 68V3 68'/3 -I- >/4 117 5274 5274 523/. - - 13 35 34’/. 35 + I 2I7/4 213/4 213/4 -I- 68 32'/2 3174 32'/4 -H 827 42 V. 41'/. 42 — 83 317/4 31 Vi 31 Vi + 70 4674. 46 V. 4674 + 15 367. '3874 38Vi + 18 •96' 3 9 574 96Vi +1 39 30 2934 2974 84 7834 7774 78 - 23 727/4 72V. 7274 - 30 277. 27V. 2774 -F 5 36’/. 3674 36’/. + 18 2774 27 2774 -F 32 5374 5274 5274 + 21 5074 50'/4 5074 ■■ 61'/l 61 ” CocaCola 2.10 Colg Palm 1 Col'inRad .60 CBS 1.40b Col Gas 1.44 Col Plot .83f ConEdls 1.80 ConElecInd 1 xio 4 ConFood 1.40 II 5 ConNGas 1.60 40 2 3374 33'/. -F '/. 49 -F2 22 31 307/4 31 54 106'/3 105 1 06'/4 -F174 Coni Mol .40 Cont Oil 2.60 2 0 78’/. 7B'/4 78'/3 -F '/4 Data 192 5874 57 5774 -F 2 47’,. 47'/l 47Vi - ’ CrownZe 2.20 5 51V. 50’/i 5l'/4 - 'A 1 5074 SO'A 5OV3 -3 .3 47'/. 47Vi 47Vi 27 25 247/4 25 DIamAlk 1.20 Disney .40b DIst Seag 1 DomeMln .80 Doug AIre 101 . . 16 1374 13Vi 13Vi ,. 28 2374 53'/i >23Vi - ----D—!■ 17 22'A 22 22V. -F 10 2974 29'/. 29'/l -F 23 28’/. 28'/l 28Vi .. 23 75'A 74'/. 75'/. -F 211 13274 13074 131 - 9 19 18’/. 19 -F •5 30’/« 30’A 307/4 11 1474 1474 1474 4 36 38 A 37'/4 3774 4 _ 4 857/4 85 85'A - 74 20 3474 34Vi U'/i — 74 5 387/4 38'.'- Dressind 1.25 DukePw 1.20 luPonI 1.25g Duo Lt 1.60 DynamCp .40 East Air .15g EastGF 1.49t EKodak 1.60a EatonYa 1.25 EG&G .20 T H 32’/. 32'/4 32’/. 4 ’A 2 4174 4174 4174 - 'A 66 15476 1SDV4 152'A 42'A 24 145 144'A 145 4- 7A HJTjIbn's^ 3 2?" 29 ■ 29 ’ IthyVcwv^W 135 43% 42% «% + % E.vansPd .6Cb « 27% 27% , 27% ^ _F— FairCam .75# 103 177 175 176 +1% Fair Hill .3Ce 171 23% 23% 23% + % Fansteel Met 33 42% 42 42% ^ -- X* . ,«T/. ||;,4 F^'M(^ LM U66 33% » ' 33% + % Ferro Cp 1.20 18 31% 30% 31% + % nitrol 2.80 4 56V4 55% 56% + % P\f ■ ■ “ .......... 16 45% 44% 44% — ' 5 16'/4 k 247'8 24% 24% .. ■ — 25Vi 25% + » 21'/« 21 Vi - 60Va 61 + % ...j 92'/4 92'/4 -'/# 55 74% 72% 74V4 +1% 98 52Va 52 Vi 52% + 61 32% 31% 31% .. 21 53% 53 53'/4 + 51 43% 43% 43Va + 34 52 51% 51% + 19 25 25 25 + 87 13% 13% 13% + (hds.) High Low Last Chg. 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Hoff Electron 20 13'A 13 13'/. .. . . .................... 7 50 4977 49’/. + / 5 24'/. 24 24'A -F V 6 4377 43 43 ... 48 87 86'/l 8677 , . 65 41'A 41 41'A + V 9 2877 28'4 28'A - - ly t ip ____d 2.80 SL SanPran 2 SfRegP 1.40b SearIGD 1.30 25 4 14 16’/. 1677 16’. 21 41’7 41'., 97 8571 83’/. 85', e 13'i 1377 13', 360 27'A 26’4 27V 64 887/4 88'/. 88', 8 2577 25'/l 25' 20 4974 48'/. 49' SingerCO 2.20 50 57 56’,. 56’« - SmIthK 1.80a 273 5177 50’/. 50’/.- SoPRSug .52g 10 4l'A 40’A 40'/.- SouCalE 1.25 33 39',-I 39'4 39’,. + Southed 1.02 25 287'. 28 28’7 ,Q2 3274 3277 327,4 15 32'.'i 32',. 327. + 51 5177 50 51'. +1 64 2377 22’4 23'I -F 213 34’/. 34'/. 34'A - o-—- ^ 64 23'/i 22’/. 23 StdBrand 1.30 28. 3577 35'A 3577 + 25'/l - Std Koll: StOilCal _____ StdOMInd 1.90 StdOilNJ .800 StdOllOh 2.46 St Packaging '•-ley 1.35 . _nWarn n1 SfauffCh 1.60 SterlDrug .90 StevenJP 2.25 47 45’/. 4577 4577 + ' 17 4374 4377 43’A + Studebak,.25g 128 53;a 527. 52^ + KernCLd 2.60 37 30 2977 29’/. —K— 683 43 4177 4274 +177 6 2577 2577 2577 + 77 69 3877 37'/> 38 + Vi 13 58’A 58'A 58'/. 78 100’/. 99’A lOO'/s 33 60'/j 60 60'A 16 32'A 32 32 14 51'/I 51 51'/I 31 23'A 2377 2377 Sun Oil-1b ' nray 1.40( fltt Co 2 Lehman 1.86g xS 32'A 317/4 31’/4 + 98 457/4 45 45'A 2 12 12 12 + 7 72'./i 72'7 72'A + .. 162 997/4 987a 9977 + 77 25 1777 1777 1777 + ' 29 20 1974 19’/. — ' ■ 28'A . MackTr 1.59t MacyRH 1.6P Mad Fd 1.93g ----aC 3.65 LIvIngstn LockhdA 2.20 Loews Theat LoneSCem 1 LoneSGa 1.12 LongIsLt 1.08 LTV'*.50 ^'***12,900 13477 132'A 13277 +2V Lucky Sir ,80 It 18’/. 1877 18’/. tSkens StI 1 151 38'A 377. 37»/4 —M— 126 4977 48'A 49 3 44'/l 44'/. 44'A 27,,22’A 227/4 227A 13 51 50'/a 51 116 4077 39’/. 40'A 48 70'A 697A 70 . . 7 29’A 2977 2977 — 'A ....rquar ,25g 28 1577 15'A 1577 +. V. MarflnMar T 100 21'A 2077 21'A + 77 MayDStr_ 1.60 145 M77 35’A 35’/. - ]A McS(f y Sh 1,60 35. 4 34 79'/! 7877 79'/4 + ' MIdSoUtll .76 MinerCh 1.30 MinnMM l'.30 21 88 87'A 88 +1', MtStTT 1,24 8 31 3074 31 + 40 2477 24 24'/a + 88 36’/. 36'A 3677 + .. 100 108'A 106’A 107'A + Vi H 25'/a 2577 ISV3 _N— " 184 82 81'A 81'A + Vi Nat Can .50b 60 31'A 30’/t NatCash 1.20' 36 94V4 92 59 4277 41’A 42 + ’A 13 2977 29'A 2977 + " 16 10'/. 1077 1077 - -1 38'A 3777 38 114 62 '• 61’A + Vt NEngEI 1.36 NYCent 3.12a NIagMP 1.10 Norfik Wat 6a NA Avli 2.80 NorNGn 2.40 Nor Pae 2.60 MV* Nwat AM .70 Norten 1.50 Norwich 1.x 106 46'A 45’/i - 29 13’A 13’A 1374 .. 2 3» X 38-77 21 1W 17'A 17'/i 9 2677 2677 2677 48 83'A 82'A 83 63 2174 21'A 2177 27 10477 1047A 104'A ... 36 4674 40 46'A + T4 4 4877 4877 4877 -V7 7 5577'S5V7 5577 + 77 5 3374'3374 M74 + 17 59 29'A 29'A 2977 -1- 14 52 135 134'A 134'A ■ ■ 65 S2’A 5177 5174 Occideni .lOb 162 48’A 48 4877 OhioEdli 1.x 17 2677 26'A 26'A OlInMoMi 1.K 170 67V4 66'A 67'A +1'A Oils Elev 2 X 4377 '42’A 43'A ' Outb Mar .80 51 X77 20'A 2077. Owenslll 1.35 26 63'A 63 63 Oxford Pap 1 56 21 2077 21 PacGEI 1.x 43 34 33»7 3377 Pac Li# 1.x 29 2877 M'A 2877 Pac Pefrol 41 1074 1077 1077 PaCTBT l.M 24 27'A 27 27 Pan A Sul .60 M 19'A 1977 1977 — - ■ -- 172 72 71'A 7UA + V7 94 36 35 357 306 »'A 27'A av PanhEP 1.60 23 27’A 27 27'A 125 2577 25'A 2577 + 'A 51 82’A 81'/a 81'/. + ' I 1415 6277 61 132 31'A 3077 3 4 55'/a 55','a 55'/a 587. + ' 19 5377 53'A 53',a + 773 62’A 62 29 6377 62'/l 92 13’/. 13'/. 13'/a 500 36’A 36'A .36'.'a + 2 57'/a 57 314 32'A 3174 24 54 Tex G|Sul .40 TexPLd .35g Textron 1.20 Thiokol ,40 Tide Oil l.lOg Tim RB 1,80a TransWAir 1 Transamer 1 5377 537. + -T— 29 29'/l 29'A 29'/a 119 143'/a 141'/. 14I'A + 52 227A 22'/a 227. + 55 7774 77'/. 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I 45Vb -r 28, 40V4 39 Va 39 Vj - Guest Passenger Act, DST Revival Killed LANSING (AP) - The House Wednesday defeated a bill for the first time this year, rejecting a measure that would have repealed Michigan’s “guest passenger act.” House members also easily defeated an attempt to reconsider the vote by which they gave immediate effect to a bill exempting Michigan from Daylight Saving Time. Wednesday’s action allowed the bill to go back to the Senate. ★ * ★ On the calendar for today was one bill involving implied consent in drunken driving cases and another permitting a delay in implementing the state Medicaid program. The guest passenger act would have exempted a driver from damages suffered by a nonpaying passenger in his car unless the driver was guilty of ‘gross negligence or wilful and wanton misconduct.” AVOID PAYING Members favoring repeal of the act noted a negligent driver currently can avoid paying damages suffered by his passengers. If a driver transporting his neighbor’s cow negligently causes injury to the animal, noted Rep. 'Thomas Brown, R-Lansing, the owner can sue and collect damages. But if the neighbor himself is crippled in a similar accident, he cannot collect from the driver. ★ ★ Opponents of repeal said it would increase liability insurance rates and would make people unwilling to give others a ride. The repealer, sponsored by Oak Park Democrat Daniel Cooper, was defeated 69-31. SERVED NO'nCE The House passed the time bill Tuesday but kept possession of it after Rep. Joseph Kowalski, Detroit; served notice he would ask for a reconsideration of the vote on passage. Kowalski did not make the request Wednesday, but Rep. Dale Kildee did move to reconsider the vote by which the bill was given immediate effect. Kildee’s motion lost, 28-72. * ★ * When the House adjourned, the bill was returned to the Senate which has passed it but has not given it immediate ef-febt. Unless the measure gets immediate effect, requiring a 2-3 vote in the Senate,'and is signed by the governor before April 1, the state will go on Daylight Saving Time April 30 under a 1966 federal law. ByJOHNCUNNIFF AP Business Analyst NEW YORK - Some former aides of President Kennedy who formed a mutual fund to sell shares in, American business and real estate to for-| eigners have now made some' basic changes,; partly as a re-j suit of criti-! cism. Even though^ the operation, the United States' Investment Fund, is less than a yb^r old, It Formed by Ex-Aides of JFK Fund Yields to Crifics CUNNIFF had become embjoiled in the wide, ^di)|eral criticism of thfe mutual fund industry. And specific criticisms were leveled No longer will the fund, based in the Bahamas, accept accounts designated by numbers rather than by name. No longer will it reinvest in other mutual funds, a practice criticized as costly to investors. Both these practices are legal and, in fact, widely used in foreign financial operations. The atmosphere, however, is becoming ch&rged with adverse criticism. MRS. L. P. WILLIAMS Grandmother Will Oppose Adam Powell NEW YORK (AP) - Lucille Pickett Williams, a 50-year-old grandmother, Jias taken on the Republican task ®of opposing Democrat Adam Clayton Powell in a special congressional election April 11 because She wants to “preserve the two-party system.” State GOP Caucus Airs Tax Rebates WarnLamb WashWal 1.16 WestnAIrL 1 s WnBanc 1.10 WnUnTel 1.40 Westg El 1.60 Weyerhr 1.40 Whirl Cp 1.60 fhite M 1.80 7/ 44^ 4-JV3 44-VB tiV. JilSOnCo 1.70 98 64 58Va 61% +5,'; WinnOlx 1.44 45 29% 29% 29% • ^ 73 22% 22V4 22Va + g 1,50 82 39% 39’% 39% +1 —X—Y—Z— orp 1 62 265'7 263’A 265 - ' ......It 1.80 86 3277 32 32'7 + 7 Zenith R 1.20 145 5777 56'A 57 +1'', Copyrighted by The Associated Press 1967 Sales ligures are unofficial. Unless otherwise noted, rates ( ends in the foregoing table are ...... footnotes a-Also extra or extras, b—Annual ■Is Dius stock dividend, c—Liquidating d—Daclared or jiald in 1967 _______________________id or ex- n date, g—Declared or paid so 'ear. h^eclared or paid after CK oivldend or »WIt up.'k-Declared paid this year, an accumulativa Issue h dividends in arrears, n—New Issue. -PeW this year, dividend omitted, oe-red or no action taken at last dividend letlng. r-Declared or paid In 1966 plus __ck dividend. 1—Paid In stock during 1966, estimated cash value on ex-divioeno r ax-dlstributlon date. z-Sales In full. cW-Called. x-Ex dividend. y-Ex divl-end and sales In full, x-dis—Ex disfrlpu-r-Ex rights. xw-WUhoul LANSING (AP)- Senate Republicans discussed Wednesday what, if any, property tax rebates should be included in a proposed state income tax package. But they failed to reach a majority position on the matte^. Senate majority leader Emil Lockwood, R-St. Louis, said the GOP caucus .considered property tax plpns. The caucus intended to continue its discussion today. —— * * * The meeting was the third in a series in which Republicans are examining fiscal reform proposals in detail in an effort to reach a majority position prior to considering (Jov. George Romney’s income tax bills. Senate Taxation Committee Chairman Harry DeMaso, R-Battle Creek, said most Republicans seemed to favor Romney’s proposed state payment of 10 per cent of all local property tax bills. However, some senators fa-vwed adjustment of the percentage figure to provide more relief for individual jwopwty tax pay-for corporations, De- For 20 years, she has been working for the Republican party while holding a series of jobs ranging from a stock girl at Sak's Fifth Avenue to teaching beauty culture at the YWCA. * ★ * “I am a determined woman, she says, noting that there appears to be overwhelming popular support for Powell in the Harlem community. She says she has no fear that the people will turn against her as they did ()h James H. Meredith when he agreed to oppose Pow-the Republicans’ first choice, then withdrew. I have no fear of the people up here,” she says. “I’ve spent the best years of my life here, 22 years. I’ve worked hard for the two-party system. I think important for people who don’t want to vote for Adam to have choice.” PARTY SPIRIT A week ago when Meredith had declared his intention to run against Powell, Mrs.- Williams was determined to stop him, because she was sure he would wreck the small toehold the Republicans have managed to get ' 1 Harlem. ★ ■* * Two days ago, she went into a Caucus of Republican leaders determined to convince her party if it should endorse Powell, as it did in.. 1958, when she supported him. Pair Await Arraignment in BOrglary Two Waterford Township burglar suspects bound over to Oakland. Count^ircuit Court yesterday followingxtheir preliminary examinations fore Township Justice PatriA K. Daly. Clarence J. Brown, 18, of 1604 Alma, and David Daley, 21, of 3060 Seebaldt are slated to appear before Circuit Judge William J. Beer for arraignment 2 p.m. March 27. They are charged with breaking and entering Wayne’s Sinclair Service, 930 S. Cass Lake, Jan. 25. Township police said about $1,500 worth of tools and automobile equipment was taken in the break-in. Brown and Daley also are suspected in 22 other township burglaries, including several recent school break-ins, according to police. LOOT IN CAR The pair was taken into custody by township police earlier this month after alleged stolen merchandise was found in Brown’s car. Brown and Daley both posted bond on the breaking and entering count. The Kennedy aides, former White House Press Secretary Pierre Salinger among theip, also felt desirous of obtaining an early reputation for mutual fund reform, in line vi^th recommendations of the Securities Exchange Commission. They were equally desirous of avoiding the derailment of a potentially profitable worldwide venture. The story of the former presidential aides and their miitual fund\goes back several years, but — In—Foreign Issue sublect 1o » Ralls Ind. Util. Egn. L. Yd change +.1 Noon Thurs 72.5 95.1 83,6 91.9 «7.( Prey. Day 72.4 95.1 83,6 91.9 87.( Week Ago 72.7 94J 83.4 91.9 17.; Month Ago 79,9 94.8 84.3 91.6 M.l Year Ago 77.2 96^ 14.3 92.2 W.: 1966-67 High 794 10U U.1 93.1 90., 1966-67 Low 70.1 11,9 79.2 90.4 , 83.; 1965 High U.7 1«4 88.9 95.0 * 94.1 1965 Low 79.3 99.9 86.4 91.4 90.' Two Subpoenaed in'JfKPIot' Probe NEW ORLEANS. La. (AP) -Attorney Dean Andrews Jr., who once handled some legal matters for Lee Harvey Oswald, was summoned before the Orleans Parish grand jury today for the second time id connection with Dist. Atty. Jim Garrison’s probe of the Kennedy assassination. , * ★ ★ Subpoenas were issued for Andrews, now an assistant (iis-trict attorney in suburban Jefferson Parish, and for Gordon Novelle, whose address wqs listed as the Jamaican Inn here. Novelle has not previously been connected with the investigation. Andrews was questioned by the grand jury March 9. He told the Warren Commission in 1964 that he was contacted by “Clay Bertrand” after the Nov, '22, 1963, assassination of Prpsi\ dent John F. Kennedjf and asked to defend Oswald. Oswald was identified later by the commission as the 15 Ind. R«lli Util._________ . ..+3.8 +1.0 I +.7 +'4.2 .. 455,0 184.3 ‘154.- — ‘ .451.2 183.3 153.. _________ 443.5 183.0 154.3 316.6 .448.0 179.5 155.2 317.' ...494.4 191.6 159.1 M2.: .. 537.9 213.9 170.5 369.; ,. 380.0 143.9 130.2 269.' ,. 523.3 194.5 178.2 358. 451.4 149.3 162.6 308.1 DOW-JONES AVERAGES Higher grade rails . Headquarters were set up in Nassau, the Bahamas, where there are no local income, sales W inheritance taxes and where, ofNcourse, American taxes do not ^ly. Shortl^ thereafter, the SEC filed its highly critical report on mutual funds. SEC CRrncAL Among other things, the SEC criticized mutual f^ holding companies as poor investments. To. pay a commission th\a mutual fund that in turn phid a cpmmission to another muiual fund was not good practice, tnis^ SEC said. \ The SEC has little jurisdiction over the United States Investment Fund. However, as former Washingtonians, the fund’s board is experienced and knowledgeable in various areas. Richard Donahue, lawyer, fund officer and former White House man with Congress, commented: “The board felt that whether good, bad or indifferent to our interests, we should be in the vanguard of reform.”^,. In other words, a reputation for reform and cooperation rather than antagonism, as was the immediate reaction from some funds, was simply good business. ELIMINATION The fund, therefore, eliminated its mutual fund portfolio, the first to publicly announce such a move, an announcement scheduled to have been made at the annual meeting in Nassau next month. The numbered account aspect left the fund wide open for exploitation by various parties with one common motive: to remain anonymous. It also left it wide open to criticism. ★ ★ ★ '•te.-- To their chagrin, the officers found, as Donahue put it, that the anonymous accounts operation “subjected us to more criticism than it was worth. We wanted long-term investors, not those seeking bearer (securities issued by number) paper.” Trimmed of some problems, the fund officers now are emphasizing the real estate portfolio, which they claim is unique among funds. Consul Treaty Near Likely Senate Okay WASHINGTON (AP) - The S.-Soviet consular treaty headed toward expected ratification in the Senate today. Four attempts to attach conditions, which supporters of the treaty said would in effect doom were soundly defeated Wednesday. ★ ★ * The majorities voting against all but one of the conditions were well over the twt)-thirds margin necessary for ratification. Democratic leader Mike Mansfield won permission to bring the pact to a final vote today. VOTED DOWN The senators quickly voted down other so-called reservations and understandings after Sen. Kart E. Mundt’s effort to tie the pact to the Vietnam war lost, 67 to 25. The South Dakota Republican, chief opponent of the pact, dur-^ the debate that started last week wanted a reservation that would have required an end to Soviet aid to Hanot before the treaty would go into effect. Proponents of the treaty argued that was outside the realm of a treaty which would set up operating rules for consulates in the two countries. And they cited statements by Secretary of State Dean Rusic urging that no change or conditions be attached because they would jeopardize chances of Soviet ratification. similar Vietnam reservation offered by Sen. Carl T. Curtis, R-Neb., was beaten, 71 to ADDED WORDS One by Sen. Strom Thurmond, R-S.C., went down, 68 to 24. His would have added words toi the effect that the treaty would in no Way jeopardize the security Ttf the United States. An understanding proposed,by Sen. Margaret Chase Smith, K-Maine, earned the closest vote — 51 to 38, less than the tw * The governor\ considered top prospect for tW l968 Republican presidential Xnomination, described his attendWe at the seminar at the John FxKennedy Institute of Politics asVworthwhile.” \ “I secured information I todnM have before and 1 thinKsl^if the two-way exchange some of those I talked to benefitted,” he CHANCE TO LEARN Romney said be also had a chance to learn what students and faculty members are thinking. He said he hopes to confer with ^milar groups at other institutions “particularly here in Michigan.” He declined to comment about a private conference he with faculty members. He said it dealt with Vietnam, but added: “It would be improper to comment on it or indicate iinr pressionk gained as a result.” Before leaving Harvard, Romney huddled with Massachusetts Gov. John A. Volpe and several leading state Republicans. Volpe emerged from, tlje meeting saying the party’s Uber-al-moderato element should line Up early b^nd a single candidate for the Republican presidential nominaticHi. OEO Aid OK'd TRAVBBSE CITY (AP)-The Office of Ktonomic Opportunity has granted $33,000 for ttie community action program in Charlevoix, Cheboygan, Emmet, and Ots^o counties. 'Ihe funds will be used in an ll-month program to serve low-Incpme rodents and to anfdoy tour county-community ai^ « guide civic activities. Mentally handicapped children and their teachers will demonstrate the importance of physical education in their training during a conference at Oakland University tomorrow and Saturday. About 150 teachers and supervisors of special education and physical education programs are expected at the gpi-nasium and pool-side meetings to watch the children demonstrate what they can learn about sports and gymnastics. from Pontiac and Farmers' Group in State Starts Holdout of Milk OWOSSO (AP) - National Farmers Organization members in Michigan started a milk holding action today as part of a nationwide attempt to win a contract that would boost the farmers’ milk^'price 2 cents a quart. / * ★ ★ Charles King, NFO publicity chairman in Midhigan, confirmed the start of the holding action after it was announced by NFO national headquarters in Corning, Iowa. ^ ‘My milk is going to stay in the tank,” said King who milks 21 cows and supplies about 700 pounds of milk a day from his farm near Owosso. * it * NFO leaders decline to reveal the number of members in the farm organization, which aims at negotiating contracts to guarantee a price for milk, meat and other farm commodities. NOT THE SAME Their complaint is that when they go shopping, they pay the price mark^ on the item, but when they go to sell their products to processors, they end up sking, “What will you pay?” Michigan dairy farmers receive- about $5.53 a hundred weight (46% quarts) for their milk. The NFO seeks a boost of $1 a hundredweight. * * * Meanwhile, the NFO chalked the Michigan Milk Producers Association to a public discussion at a meeting of dairy farmers. The two farm organizations have been at odds recently over Michigan’s dairy ||jrice situation. MAKES CHALlJvGfi Ray Neilsen Jr., Saranac dairy farmer and state NFO representative, sent a telegram‘'to Glenn president of the association, ' I which he made the challenge. Hiere was no immediate response from Lake. * ★ * Neilsen said his Wire to Lake prcfosed a public discussion with both organizations limited to 30 minutes a side and then Birmingham will go through basic movement routines and play low organization level games during tomorrow’s sessions. A class from Coldwater State Itome and Training School will demonstrate body building, rhythms and tumbling. Other sessions will be conducted by staff members from the Metropolitan Toronto Retarded Children’s Authority. WAYS OF PARTICIPATING Larry Meier, -Brandon Community Schools special education teacher, will outline ways mentally handicapped youngsters can participate in the school physical education p r o-gram. Donald A. Place, Oakland Schools consultant for the mentally handicapped, will describe camping and outdoor education four-year bonds are retired. Retirement of the bonds will require a half-mill levy in 1967 and a 1-miU levy in 1968-69. The board also directed the Pontiac architectural firm of Denyes and Freeman to prepare preliminary drawings for a new elementary school adjacent to the Lincoln Junior High School. The hew school is being planned to eventually accommodate 950 pupils. open the meeting for questions projects that hajre been success- from dairy farmers. Neilsen suggested the Lapeer Center Building at Lapeer for the meeting. Neilsen said the NFO feels Lake misstated the facts concerning NFO and its efforts to get higher prices for dairy farmers. Lake recently responded to an invitation from the NFO to bring association directors into a parley about the dairy situation by challenging the NFO to reveal more facts about itself. ★ * * ■ NFO leaders contend that secrecy atiput its affairs gives the organization extra marketing power in its dealings with processors. ful in programs for the young-'ers. Place and Dr. Lee Haslinger, Itontiac School System director of physical education, are co-chairmen of the conference. Ex-Sicilian Banker Tied to Embezzling AYLESBURY, England (AP) - Frank Maule, 66, got the retirement gift he wanted—his own grave site. The Aylesbury Town Council voted Wednesday to give him the plot in appreciation for his many years of service as an attendant at the cemetery. Otherwise it would have cost him “I am surprised and delighted,” said Maule. “The plot is near the cemetery office where I worked. It is a nice grave.*’ Truck Overturns ,IONIA (AP) - Traffic was blocked on M21 several hours Wednesday wdien a semitrailer truck loaded with steel went out of control and overturned west of here. Driver Louis T. Whit-taU, 49, of Comstock Park suffer^ possible rib injuries and was taken to Ionia Memorial Hospital. The tonia Fire Department was called to put out a ftoe that broke out fplloving the accident. 6 in Area Get Fellowships Six area scljplars were among the 1,259 across the nation to receive Woodrow Wilson Fellowships for 1967-68. Tliey r e c e i V e an academic year of graduate education and a living stipend of $2,000. Michigan State University students from the area who were picked for the awards are William R. Ives, 707 Rnff-ner, Birmin^am; David B. West, 4217 Carey, Bloomfield Township; and Edward J. Williams, 171 Tree Top, Avon Township. ^ Those from the University of Michigan are David H. Halpert, 4740 Walnut Lake, West Bloomfield Township, and Marcella E. Neal, 30443 Rockshire, Farming-ton Township. ★ ★ ★ Also desipated as a recipient was Roger R. Keeran, 18 Cherokee, Lapeer, of Wayne State University. Retirement Gift: a Cemetery Plot PALERMt^, Sicily (AP) -Carlo Bazari, former president of the state-eontitdled Bank of Sicily, was arrested Wednesday niight on charges of having embezzled $1.6 million from the institution. The mws shodced the nation’s economic circles, where Bazan was prominent. Bazdn, 67,1^ (he bank In (X> tober 1965, after having beett president li years. Moves Favor Generic Drugs Big Name Companies Expected to Battle By Science Service WASHINGTON - Ever since the Kef'auver-Harris Drug Amendments shook the drug industry in 1962, the big name companies have successfully fended off proponents of generic rather than brand name prescribing. Now, on Capitol Hill, where pressure is mounting to include prescription drugs in Medicare benefits, there is a movement afoot to cut the government’s drug bill, which already hits close to ^00 million a year, by encouraging the use of inexpensive generic drugs instead of their high price brand name counterparts. (In referring to drugs, the generic name indicates the active chemical ingredient in a specific medicine, not a class or type of compound.) Aspirin is always and only as pirin, whether it costs 39 cents or $1.39; the difference is a matter of semantics. Call it aspirin, and the price is low. Attach a brand name and the cost mwe than triples. ■k-k-k Price discrepancy is reater when it comes to prescription drugs, an are: which the consumer-patient is usually in no position to choose among various brands; but his doctor is. /i Service for William J. Hurst, 45, of 166 Eiiclid will be 1:30 p.m tomorrow at V o o r h e e o-l^ple Chapel with burial in Perry Mount Park Cemetery. Mr. Hurst, a driver for Ellis Trucking Co. Inc., died Tuesday. Surviving, besides tliose listed yesterday, are two sisters, Jeannette Hurst of Pontiac and Mrs. Tonya Tunney of Lake Orion, and a brother. Charles F. Inglewright Service for Charles F. Inglewright, 88, of 59 Roslyn will be 10 a.m. tomorrow at the Bos-sardet Funeral jHome, Oxford, with burial there in the Oxford Cemetery, Oxford. Mr. Inglewright, q self em-itioyed farmer, &ed Tuesday. He a member of the Methodist Church. Surviving are a brother and a sister. Rhonda L Nelson Service for Rhonda L. Nelson, 10-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Leon Nelson of 259 S. Jessie, will be 10 a.m. tomorrow in Frank Carruthers Funeral Home with burial in Oak Hill cemetery. Rhonda died March 6. Surviving are her parents and a brother, Keith at home. Mrs. Walter J. LaPonsey Requiem Mass for Mrs. Walter J. (Marilyn J.) LaPonsey, 35, of'1285 Whittier, Waterford Township, will be 12:30 p.m. Saturday at St. Perpetua Catho-ic Church with burial in Mount Hope Cemetery. The Rosary will be recited at 30 p.m. tomorrow in Donelson-Johns Funeral Home. Mrs. LaPonsey died yesterday. She was a member of St. Perpetua Church. Surviving are her husband; her “parfints, Mr. and Mrs. Les-:er Shroyer of Manhattan, Kan.; :our children, Stephen M., Gweneth A., Glenn T. and Deborah J., all at home; and a sister. Mrs. Ray W. Pierce Service for Mrs. Ray W. (Bernice T.) Pierce, 55, of 6236 Grqce K, Waterford Township, will bo 1 p.m. Saturday in Weid-man Methodist Church, Weid-man, with burial there in Fair-view Cemetery. Her body will be at the Lewis . Wint Funeral Home, Clarks-ton, until 10 p.m. today when it will be taken to the Crittenden, Funeral Home in Remus. Mrs. Pierce died yesterday. Surviving are her husband; her mother, Mrs. Catherine Johnson of Weidman; a daughter, Mrs. Ronald Kushion of Waterford Township; a grandchild; two sisters; and four brothers. Mrs. Bert L. Tibbetts Service for Mrs. Bert L. (Mat-tie F.) Tibbetts, 81, of 1018 Ar-gyle will be 11 a.m. Saturday at Voorhees-Kple Chapel with burial in Paty Mount Park Cemetery. Mrs. Tibbetts, a member of First Assembly of God Church, died yesterday. Surviving are four daughters, Mrs. Joseph Lipka of Clarkston and Mrs. Wilbur Russell, Mrs. James Pope and Mrs. Russell DeWolfe, all of Pontiac; four sons, Bert L. of Lapeer and Kenneth, Louis and Harry, all of Pontiac; 33 ^andchildren; great-grandchildren; and two from the Arnold Funeral Home, Aurora. He die(l yesterday. , Amon^ survivors is a daughter, Mrs. C. R. Gately of Pton-tiac. Marvin R. Cooper COMMERCE TOWNSHIP -service for Marvin R. Ckwper, will be in Hartland Cemetery, Highland Township. Mr. gpoper,,a self-employed accountabt, di^ yesterday. He was a member Christian Missionary AiliMce Church df Pontiac and of the Pontiac Camera Club. Surviving are four daughters, Mrs. Joan Rentier of Union I iVidl Vlll iV. VA/UJA5* , n J wnii* Ci. f 74, Of 8603 Palomino will be 1:30 Lalff; Mrs Sandra Elliott of p.m. Saturday at Sparks-Griffin Mrs. Ruth Gl^a of Funeral Chapel, Pontiac. Burial Plymouth and Marion \ -----------BrOwn of Charlotte; two sons, Robert Cooper of California and LeRoy Moore of Fenton; three sisters; 15 grandchildren; and two great-grandchildren. Exam Slated in Shooting John D. Hudson, airested % attempted murder in the shot-, wounding of a Pontiac man Monday, faces preliminary examination on the charge Wednesday in Municipal Court. He was returned to Oakland County Jail yesterday after failing to post $5,000 bond set at his arraignment before Judge Cecil B. McCallum. Hudson, 65, of 447 S. Marshall is accused of shooting L. C. Green, 47, of the same address, during a reported argument in their home. Harry R. Lovell AVON TOWNSHIP - Service for Harry R. Lovell, 68, of 1435 • Courtland will be 2 p.m. Saturday at Pixley Memorial Chapel, Rqchester, with burial Paint Creek Cemetery, Goodison. Mr. Lovell, an attendant nurse at Pontiac State Hospital died yesterday. Surviving are his wife,Donna; three sons, David of Toledo, James of ^ar Lake and Norman of Pontiac; five daughters, Mrs. Joann Allen of Pontiac, Mrs. Jane Hill of Greeley, Colo., Mrs. Joyce Salyer of El Paso, Tex., Mrs. Jerry Bolle of Rochester and Janice at home; 21 grandchildren: a great-grand-^ „ J uj child; and two sisters. Mrs. Green, who suffered abdom-g^^^er Eldred of White Lake inal wounds, remains in cntica Township and Mrs. Mabel Jewel r*nnriitinn af Pnnfian lipnprar condition at Pontiac General Hospital following surgery Tuesday. k k k An alleged witness reportedly told police Hudson fired the shot after Green refused to obey an order to leave the house. Investigators said they impounded a 12-gauge shotgun at the scene. A Royal Oak teen-ager was released on $4,000 bond yesterday after being ordered to stand trail in Oakland County Circuit Court on n second-degree murder charge. The boy, Robert Quinn, 16, America, stood mute to the charge at his] Surviving are a son, Greer of arraignment before Circuit Holly; a sister; seven grand- Charles S. Turner Service for former Pontiac resident Charles S. Turner of Aurora, Mo., will be Saturday Trial Ordered for Boy, 16, in Fight Death John T. Reid AVON TOWNSHIP - John T. Reid, 69, of 2359 Auburn died yesterday. His body is at the Harold R! Davis Funeral Home, Auburn Heights. A retired employe of Pontiac Motor Division, he was a member of the Sacred Heart Catholic Church, Auburn Heights. Surviving are his wife, Della; one sister; and one brother. Mrs. William Suber GROVELAND TOWNSHIP -Service for Mrs. William (Hul-dah) Suber, 76, of 13214 Dixie will be 11 a m. tomorrow at Dryer Funeral Home, Holly. Burial will be in Hadley Cemetery, Groveland Township. Mrs. Suber died Tuesday. She was a member of the Daughters Judge Clark J. Adams. No trial date was set. Quinn is accused of the death of Gregory Barrett, 18. Barrett died of pneumonia that allegedly developed from spinal injuries suffered in a fistfight with Quinn. Juvenile jurisdiction over Quinn was waived last January by Oakland County Probate Judge Norman Barnard, allowing the boy to stand trial as an adult. Barnard explained that (Juinn had a juvenile court record and was on probation at the time of the fight, which took place near Royal Oak Dondero High School. children: and 13 great-grandchildren. Grenade Kills AreaGI in Viet City Auditor Quits, Effective April 29 City Auditor William J, Cheal, 48, of 219 Cherokee submitted his resignation yesterday, effective April 29. V According to Nicholas Santi-wan, personnel director, Cheal indicated other employment as is reason for resigning. Cheal joined the city’s staff in mid-1958 as an account clerk-2. In October 1958, he was named city auditor. His current salary is $11,137 annually. A West Bloomfield Township man, Gary K. Smith, 21, was killed in action in Vietnam Feb. Army Spec. 4 I Smith, the son of Mrs: Richard Clear, 7820 §Barnsbury, and Harry W. Smith 0 f Anaheim, Calif., had been in Vietnam for 2 weeks. Military rites were , . held in Tustin, SMITH Calif. Smith was participating in an assault landing near the Cambodian border with the 173rd Airborne Division, Second Battalion. A grenade attached to his belt accidentally detonated, according to a Defense Department announcement. A paratrooper since 1965, Smith had seen combat duty in the Santa Domingo crisis. He I attended Walled Lake High. Surviving besides his parents are his stepfather, Richard Clear; two brothers, Richard of Union Lake and Thomas of Anaheim, Calif.; and a sister, Nancie of Union Lake. CAR-TRAIN CRASH - A crushed front end is evidence of the force with which a Grand Trunk Railroad train (background) collided with this car about 8 a.m. today. The accident oocurrei^ at a crossing on West Bou- levard near Oakland. Oakland Township residents George Harold, 38, of 1737 Braemar and Robert Johnson, 35, of 1821 Braemar, joccupants of the car, were treated for lacerations at Pontiac General Hospital. 'i Art Teachers af OU Workshop High ^ool art.teadiers from vough^it Michigan are Convening at Oakland Univm’sity to-da^OT an “exchangeH»f-ideas” * k , k /' Johti B. Cameron, acting chairinan of the OU art department, will be in charge of the workshi^. The 3 to 8 p. m. session is part of a series offered at the university to acquaint high sciiool teachers and kimin-islrators with the latest ievelop-ments in their respective fields. Flint Man Guilty ! Death Notices in Stabbing Death THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, MARCH 16. 1967 E-7 FLINT (UPI) — Andrew Newell, 50, Flint, was convicted yesterday of first degree murder in the fatal stabbing of Mrs. Thelma Atkins, ^6, during an hrgmpent last SeptSo, * ★ ★ ■ The Genesee County Circuit Court jury deliberated less than two hours before returning the guilty verdict. Judge Anthony J. Mansour set sentencing for May 3 and remanded Newell to the county jail without bond, i * * * The stabbing occurred near the downtown area. Newell had pleaded self-defense saying Mrs. Atkins had pulled a razor on him while he said he was trying to find out if the woman would marry him. LaPONSEY, MARILYN JEAN, March 15, 1M7; 1285 Whrttiar, Waterford Township; age 35; heaved wife of Walter J. LaPonsey; taloyed daughter of Mr. and Mrs. i.ester Shroyer; dear mother of Stephen M„ Gweneth A., Glenn T. and Deborah J. UPonsey; dear sister of Mrs. Glenn Scholz. Recl-'lie Rosary will be Friday at 8:30 p.m. at the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home. Funeraf service held Saturday, March 18, ’ at St. Perpetua 12 J0 p.m. Church. Interment li, muum nope pmetery. Mrs. LaPonsey will lie In state at the funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 and 7 to 9 p.~ ' Causa No. 22488 STATE OF MICHIGAN - In the Probate Court tor the County ot Oakland,; Juvenile Division In the Matter ol the Petition Concerning Peggy Kay Stocker, Minor TO Leroy Ralph Stocker, father of said minor child . Petition having been filed in this Court alleging that said child comes within the provisions of Chapter 712A of the Compiled Laws of 1948 as amended, in that the present whereabouts ol the father of said minor child Is unknown and said child has violated a law Of the State, and that said child should be continued under the liirlsdlction ol this Court. I In the Name of the People of the State of Michigan, You are hereby notified that the hearing on said petition will be: held at the Court House, Oakland County Service Center, in the City of Pontiac in said County, on the 27lh day ol March, A.D. 1967, at nine o'clock in the forenoon, and you are ' - - . . . appear personally If being impractical to make personal service hereof, this summons and notice shall be served by publication of a copy one week previous to said hearing in The Pontiac Press, a newspaper printed and circulated in^said County. Witness, the Honorable Norman R. Barnard, Judge ol said Court, in the City ol Pohtlac in said County, this 14lh da of March, A.D. 1967. (Seal) NORiyiAN R. BARNARD (a true copy) Judge ol Probate NELSON, RHONDA LaFAYE; March 6, 1967 ; 259 South Jessie Street; age 10; beloved daughter ol Leon and Annie Jewell Nelson; dear servfce will'^''"' '"‘"'"'A' 17, at 10 a.m. at the Frank Car-, ruthers Funeral Home with Rev. William E. Teague officiating. Interment in Oak Hill Cemetery. Rhonda will lie In stale at the funeral home Mter_ 7 p.m. today. pierce, BERNICE T.; March“^15, 1967; 6236 Grace K„ Waterford Township; age 55; beloved wife of Ray w. Pierce; beloved daughter of Mrs. Charles - Johnson; dear mother _ ------dear sister of Mrs. Robert VahNess, Mrs. Thomas Powell, Howard, Charles, Gerald and Fay Johnson; also survived by one grandchild. Mrs. Pierce will lie in state at the Lewis E. wint Funeral Home, Clarkston, until 10 p.m. Thursday after which time she will be taken to the Crittenden Funeral Home, Remus, Michigan, until time of Pthef*! service will be held Saturday, March 18, at 1 p.m. at Weldman Methodist Church, Weidman.. Interment in Fairview, Cemetery, Weidman^ Michigan. REID, JOHN t.; March T5, 1967; 2359 Auburn, Avon T------- 69; beloved hi R. Davis Funeral Home, Auburn Heights, where Mr. Reid will lie in state. (Suggested visiting hours _J_to 5 and 7 to 9 p.m.) TIBBETTS, MATTIE F.; MarclTTs, 1967; 1018 Argyle Street; age 81; dear mother of Mrs. Wilbur (Muriel) Russell, Mrs. Russell (Phyllis) DeWolfe, Mrs. Joseph (Befty) Lipka, Mrs. James (Priscilla). Pope, Kenneth, Harry, Louis and ‘ Tibbetts; dear sister ' i. FIbrer s. Lila said hearin y 33 grar Juvenile Division March 16, 1967 Pursuant to an Order entered by the Circuit Court for the County ot Oakland on Monday, the 13th day ot March, )96i7, in the case of Edio DeCiantis and Shirley, OeClantls, his wife. Plaintiffs, and Carl F. Rehblne and Mary N. Rehbine, his Wife, Defendants, Case No. 3), t03, public', notice is hereby given that all per-soni, firms or corporations having claims or demands against DeRae Studio ol Music are required on or before April 22, 1967, under penalty of hereafter having \sald claims disallowed in the discreliori.pf the Court, to file the same with Stephen w. Jones, Permanent Receiver of DeRae Sfudio of Music, at 521 Washingtoh \Square Plaza, Royal Oak, Michigan, w'bich claims or demands, shall be suppoVted by affidavit and shall state the actiJel consideration thereof, when the same Was contracted, when the same has become or will become due, whether any or wlfat securities are held Kierefor, whether eny and what payments ave been made thefeon, that the sum ' claimed Is justly owing from DeRae Studio of Music, to tf- —' that the claimant has Jren and 33 gree I, Funeral service win oe ncio irday, March )8, at 11 a.m, the Voorhees - Siple Funeral le with Pastor Arnold Q. Hash-officiating, Interment in Per-' Mount Park Cemetery. Mrs. husband willlar........ birthday March 16, 1967: VObf .Wffbday darling, the first one since you passed away. We love you and miss you very Bessie Sadly missed by your > and daughter Shirley.________ N LOVING MEMORY* OF MY yife Helen^ passed Borowy V larch 16. 1963. memory fades ^nd lif claimi Sadly missed by her husband August Borowy. ______ __ 4 LOVING ME'mORY OF HOWARD Sadly missed b thereof shall be attached to the proof of claim. March 16, 23 and 30, 1967 NOTICE OF I ANNUAL TOWNSHIP MEETINO NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, that the next Annual Township Meeting of the Electors of the Township of White Lake, Oakland County, Michigan will be held at the White Lake Township Hall, 7525 Highland Road beginning at 1 o'clock p.m., Eastern Standard Time, on Saturday, April 1, 1967. At such time in addition to other regu- shall be submitted for < ANNOUNCING ANOTHER DEBT AID INC. office, 718 R,lker -^Building, brandh of Detroit's well known Debt Aid, Inc. to serve the REPOSSESSIONS, BAD CREDIT AND HARASSMENT. sands of people with credit problems. Let*^ us consolidate your debts with one low payment you can afford, No limit as to amount owed and number of creditor?. For those that realize "YOU CAN'T BORROW Hours 9-7 Mon, thru Frl. Sat. 9-5 ' FE 2-0181 _ (BON PEP A N D LiCENS ED) "AVON CALLING"-FbR SERVICE FERDINAND C. VETTER, Townshtp Clerk ►fvnt.c y.wc March 16 and 17, 1967, HALL FOR RENT - NOTICE OF I ANNUAL TOWNSHIP MEETING | Notice Is Hereby Given, that the next Annual Township Meeting of the electors' of the Township of Springfield, County! pf Oakland, State of Michigan, will be' held at the Springfield Township Kall.j Davisburg, Michigan, beginning at onei o'clock p.m„ Eastern Standard Time,! on Saturday, AfX'il 1, 1967. Proposed Budget for fiscal year 1967-68 will be submitted. . DAVID H. FIELD ! Springfield Township Clerk: March 16 and 17. 1967 _ lodges or church. OR 3-5202. Death Notices COOPER, MARVIN R.; March 15, ■1967; 8603 Palominq Drive, Union Lake; age 74; dear lather of Mrs. Joan Bentler, Mrs. Sandra Elliott, Mrs. Ruth Glaza, Mrs. Marion Brown, Robert and LeRoy Moore; Mrs, Bertha Christie and Mrs. Emma Musgrove. Funeral service will be held Saturday, March 18, at 1:30 p.m. at the Sparks-Griflin Funeral Home. Interment in Hart-land Cemetery. Mr. Cooper will He In state at the funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 and 7 to 9 p.m.)___________________ HURST, WILLIAM J.; March )4, )967; 166 Euclid Street; ag« 45; beloved son of Charles L. Hurst; dear father of Arnold Whisnant and Charles L. Hurst; dear brother of Mrs. Fred (Genabelle) Toney ' and Mrs. Charles (Eleanore) Hoce-var, Mrs. Tonya ?unney. Miss Jeanetta Hurst and Maxwell Hurst. Funeral service will be held Friday, March 17, at 1:30 p.m. at the Voorhees-Siple Funeral Home with Rev. Edmond I. Watkins officiating. Interment in Perry Mount Park Cemetery. Mr. Hurst i INGl^EWRIGHT, CHARLES FREMONT; March )4, )967; 59 Roslyn; age 88; dear brother of Mrs. Dorothy Straub and Frank Ingle-wright. Funeral service will be held Friday, March )7, at 10 a.m. at the Bossardet Funeral Home, Oxford. Interment In Oxford Cemetery, Oxford. Mr. Inglewrighf will lie In slate >Mhe JunCTal_hOTe. /^AAAPNER, BEATRICE, ot Pontiac, / Mich., March 15; dear sister of ' Samuel, Irwin, and Morris Kamp-ner, Mrs. Bertha Blumeno, Mrs. Fred Abramson (Lillian), Mrs. Nora Rose. Services Friday morning at 10:45 at the Ira Kaufman coapal, 18325 West Nine Miif Road, Southfield. Interment Mach-palah Cemetery. Family at residence of Mrs. Bertha Blumeno, 20653 Kensington, Southfield. __ KeiS(3GLOU, PESPINA E. (KEIS); March 14, 1967). 51 Fairgrpve; age 16; beloved daughter ot Ni'- 8 p.m. at the Donelson - Johns Funeral Home. Funeral Service will be held Friday, March 17, at 1:30 p.m. at the St. George Greek Orthodox Church, 1515 Woodward Avenue, Bloomfield Hills. Interment in Perry Mount Park Cemetery. Despina will He In slate at the funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 and 7 to 9 4>.m.) The family suggests meiPonal contributions may be made to the building fund of St. George Greek Clrthodox Church. j BOX REPLIES I I At 10 a.tn. today there | I were replies at The | I Press Office in the fol-| I lowing hiixes: ! i 5, 12, 15, 28, 40, 66, 67 I ______________________i Funeral Directors 4 COAT'. FUNERAL HOME DRAYTON PLAINS _674-0«1 C. J. GODHARDT FUNERAL HOME __Keego Harbor, Ph. 682-0200. DONELSON-JOHNS Funerel Home "Designed tor Funerals" Huntpori FUNERAL HOME Serving Pontiac for 50 years 79 Oakland Ave. FE 2-0ie» SPARKS-GRIFFIN FUNERAL HpME "Thoughful Service" FE B-9288 Voorhees-Siple FUNERAL HOME. 332-8378 ____Established Over 40 Years Personals % 4-B FE 2-5122 petore 5 p.m., or ii no answer, call FE 2-8734. Confidential.___ ANYONE HAVING INFORMATION Mar. 12 Call FE 2-4186. Reward. DAINTY MaFd SUPPLIES ------- tammond FE 5-78115 GET OUT Off DEBT ON A PLANNED BUDGET PROGRAM YOU CAN AFFORD TAILORED TO YOUR INCOME OLD FASHIONED HORSE DRAWN sleigh rides are exciting Winter fun. Includes Spaghetti Dinner or Hot pog meel and club rooms. Childrens party Includes farm tour. Groups ot 20 or mort call for reservation. 628-1611. UPLAND HILLS FARM WANTED: INFORMATION REGARO-Ing wrecked white 1962OldsmoMIe Cutlass. Accident happened /on ailarch 4,. 1967 at 2:30 a.m., Williams Lake Rd. Hit end run. Coh- tact 673-7138. _____________ / WEDDING photography hv Professional Color. Free brochure available. 338-9879 anytime. 2-YEAR-OLD DACHSHUND, NEAR Montcalm and Baldwin, reward. LOST: FRIENDLY MALE BEA- loit and Jeund 5 l-IGHT BROWN POODLE, children's pet. Walled Lake area. Reward. MA 4-2807. LOp: MIXED BEAGLE, AAALE, VI-cinity Brendel Lake - March J. . Family pet — does not hunt. Any Information on whereabouts, pleasa hund; answers to "Timmy." E — derly man's companion. VIC. B Lake Rd. and Hillsboro Rd. •V THE 1964 CIVIL RIGHTS X LAW PROHIBITS, WITH (v C E R T A I H EXCEPTIONS, Iv V DISCRIMINATION BE-CAUSE OF SEX. SINCE I} X SOME OCCUPATIONS ARE v) CONSIDERED MORE AT-X TRACTIVE TO PERSONS (v :X OF ONE SEX THAN THE v-•X OTHER, AOVERTISE-X-,X;MENTS are PLACED;:;) i;!; UNDER THE MALE OR -X FEAAALE COLUMNS FOR % CONVENIENCE OF READ- (v •X ERS. SUCH LISTINGS ARE ; ;-:;); NOT INTENoED, TO EX-;;;: CLUOE PERSONS OF X EITHER SEX. 2 MEN TO ASSIST AN EXPANSION of last growing direct sales company — average 110,000 par year. 3 YOUNG MEN-19 TO 29 L,ue TO expansion, j men lor luii lime work for a company who never had a strike or layoff In several years of operation. Have steady year-round work, S5Q0 a month. Call 674-2233, 9 a.m. to 12 noon Friday only.______________ 4 WELL DRESSED MEN TO DE-liver advertising material. $15 per evening. Car necessary. 625-2648. $142.50 WEEKLY SALARY .. ages 18-25, ne€_>_ local staff for national jn. Must be high school neat appearing, and able work immediately. Phone _■ ■ ■ , 4-3549. ____ LSST; FEAAALE BRITTANY PUP, Waterford Area — Reward. 682- Sb-mIv"___________________ $400 TO $600 TRAINEEE POSITIONS In all fields. Age 21-30 INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL 1080 W. Huron_________334-4971 $435 - NO FEE FINANCE TRAINEE 21-30, no experience necessary, Mr. Hofer. INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL 1880 S. Woodward. B'ham. 642-8268 $450, TRAINEE DRAFTSMAN 16-25, high school or college draft- $5,000 FEE PAiO FINANCE TRAINEE installation. 360 on order. Pay to commensurate with experience, Royal Oak area. Pontiac Press Box 7.____________________ ASPHALT LUBE MEN. EXPERI-ence only. 357-5205 or 353-9800. A TRUCK MECHANIC. OWN tools, good wages. 554 Franklin. A PART TIME JOB 4 hours per evening. Cali 674-0520. 9:30 a.m. to 8:00 p.m. $200 PER MONTH lunity w 1 small dealership Chrys- 11—Fringe benetlta B-VecMIoo Pay 3- Hollday Pay 4- Premium Pay 5- Hoagltalintlqn Pe 6- Llfe Inturaitbe APPLICATIONS NOW BEING TAK- liac. Apply between 1 and 4, 7 and 8.______________ ___________ AUTO DEALER NEEDS MAN TO clean and condition used cars. Experience preferred but not necessary. Call Jim Taylor, Taylor Chevrolet Sales, 624-4501. AUTO MECHANIC, GOOD OPPOR- ... ____let experience _______ We pay 70 per cent plus benefits. Colonial Chrysler Plymouth Inc,, Milford, 684-3691. BRIDGEPORT OPERATORS Opening with 25 year old company. portunity to become skilled in ftit phases ol automation assembly equipment with leading company in thi? field. Clyde Corp., 1800 W. Maplp, Troy. ______ BUS BOY WANTED, PART tiME. Apply in person only, Franks Res-taurant, Keego Harbor.s;__________ CAR WASHERS, FULL OR PART time. 149 W. Huron.___________ ■carpenters HELPERS WANTED _____________335-3213 _________ , car“pente'rs' chemTcal engineer, ■ WILlllNC; to relocate. 3 to 10 years exp. $1400 potential to grow with Co. can Angie Pook 334-2471 Snellino and Shelling.________________ COOK, DINNER, EXPERIENCED. Club or hotel, good wages, paid vacations, sick leave, plus working conditions. Apply in person. Orchard Lake Country Club, SOOO W. Shore Drive, Orchard Lake. can 684-5665._________________ CONCESSION OPERATORS FOR City of Birmingham, starting salary $2.50 to $2.70 per hr., depending upon qualifications. Applicants should have experience dealing with the public. Position offers year eround employment and full employee benefits. Apply Personnel Office, 151 Martin St. Birmingham. controller trainee National retail organization has an excellent opportunity for a graduate with a B.S. degree in Business Administration o r Accounting or equivalent experience. -Seind complete resume to Pontioc Press Box 38. DIE LEADER Progressive dies, 8 men iob shop, Brent Tool and Die Co., , 350 S. Sanford, Pontiac. 335-4563.____ DISH MACHINE OPERATOR, 6 p.m. to 2 a.m. shift. No Sundays or holidays. Bedell's Restaurant. Square Lake an<( Woodward. DRAFTSMAN, ELECTRICAL AND DUMP TRUCK DRIVER Year-around work, must be steady - 624-5411. After 7 p.m._______ EARN AND LEARN TO BE A DAVEY TREE SURGEON Experleiioia not necessary. On the |ob training program, many 1 abaat tor advancement. V'-1 need exper*-—-■ — I foramen. _____ .. ___te hydraulic cranes, aerial baskets, ohippers, stump removers, mist and hydraulic sprayers. DAVEY TREE EXPERT CQ. 3S46 Rochester Rd. i Troy East of Birmingham beV tween U and 17 Mile Rd. JO 4-6007 7 a.m.-S p.m. MU 9-2200 GR 6-0IS7 tvenings . 548-1405 Evenings—Part Time 3 men needed Immediately for part-time evening work. Must be ' neat mature, married and havt good work record. Call 674-0520. 9:30 a.m. to 4:00 p.mt EXPANDING COMPANY NEe6s trainees, prefer mechanically Ir .EXPERIENCED FRY COOK WANT-ed. Apply between 10 and 5 p.m. Steaic and Egg. 5395 Dixie Hwy. . ( Waterford. 674-2811. _ EXPERIENCED TRUCK ME-chanic to manage garage, good salary and fringe banafits. Reply to Pontiac Press Box 27 giving age, experience and reterencss. BODY SHOP MANAGER eluding Blue Cros ment. See Del W TON PONTlACffBL , .. Rochester Rdw Rochester,_____ FIXTURE BUILDERS Experienced, 58 hrs. wk. Apply In person. Joda Industries, 590 Wide Track Drive. ______ wants steady office work, ( Press Box No. 16. ___ FOREMAN, SMALL SHOP,' G-OOD mechanic, tool, die, fixture experience essential. Exc. growth oppor-tunlty, 887-4079.___________________ GUARDS Full and part time, Immediate city and suburban job openings, Mount Clemens. Utica and Birmingham Included. Bonded Guard Services, .441 E. Grand Boulevard, Detroit. LO 8-4152, 10-4 p.m. GRILL MAN FOR NIGHT SHIFT. Good wages plus all benefits. Apply in person. Big Boy Restaurant, Telegraph and Huron._____________ ______________W^ton, Pontiac. _ HOUSEMAN FOR PRIVATE CLUB, good wages and working condl-t^s. JO 6-7199. _ _ _ HUNTER AND OAK STANDARD Service, Birmingham. Job openings lor shift manager and driveway Excellent starli *and fringe benefits. Call 646-5300. ’ I. D. GRINDER, 0. D. GRINDER. Inspector. Steady work, overtime, full paid hospitalization and other fringe benefits. Briney Manufacturing Co. 116S Seba Rd. Off W. M-59 at Pontiac Lk. Rd. INSTANT MONEY ... ____ ., ...... to fill unskilled and semiskilled factory and Warehouse lobs. Machine operators, assemblers, welders, common labor, etc. Come In and apply. Office Open 6 a.m. to 6 p.m. NO FEE Employers Temporary Service 65 South Main, Clawson 2320 Hilton Rd., Ferndale We need to n LATHE HAND AVIATION TOOL & GAUGE CO. 24490 Telegraph Rd. SOUTHFIELD EL 4-: LEADS LEADS 1 natron's num Mar advertir'--r week guai I. you are i Needed to train as SEMI DRIVERS. You can earn over $3 per hour. Call 1-513-893-9383, or write Al-Win Semi Division, 814 High Street, Hamilton, Ohio. MAN FOR NEW LAUNDROMAT, experience not necessary. Apply 405 Auburn. MAN TO WASH CARS, MUST HAVE own transp. Good pay and fringe benefits. Contact Dick Lowe, Au-dette Pontiac. 1850 Maple Rd. (15 MANAGER, SMALL LOAN, WILL-Ing to relocate, Exp. In managing small loan Co. $8500. Call Marge Parker, 334-2471, Snelling and Snell-Ing. _________________________ MANAGER PUTT-PUTT GOLF COURSE Must be promotional minded, hard worker [and like people. We will train you, ,$500 mo, plus bonus. Apply H. Bloch, 1301 E. Mc- be able to weld. ______ _____ ____ trical experience. Apply at Dixie Tool and Stamping, 2815 Dlxi MEN TO WORK IN SERVICE STA-- lion, attendants, mechanics and wrecker drivers. Must be over 25 years of age with Ideal refs. Full time only. Exc. wages. Vacation with pay. Shell Station, Woodward and Long Lake Rd., Bloomfield Hills._______________________ MEN WANTED FOR GOLF course work. Would like experienced. Starting April 1st at Pine Knob Golf I, Country Club. 625-3731. 606 Maybeo Rd., Clarkston. bet. 8 A.M. and S P.M.__________ MEN'S WEAR Manager . . . Large national retail chain has an unusual opportunity for an experienced clothing manager. Excellent income, many company benefits. Send complete resume to Pontiac Press Box 38. ! center, in Pontiac, no experience necessary! We will traini Salary plus comm, and expenses, ----- Eiijjbdth , 4111 PART TIME EVENINGS. MA'RRTED Over 21. Call 332-8670, 5-7. “ PROFESSIONAL Wafer conditioner salesmen to set “ sales dMartment snd r----- TOOL DIE MAKERS IM|l Wonted Main_________ 6 TV SERVICEMEN, EXPERIENCED, road work, Blrmlnoham area, full time. 6264710.______________ TEMPORARV LABORERS FOR ■ ■■ ningbam Golf Course einfenance work. Must City of BIrmI and parks mah...---- ... be over II, Birmingham prefered. Work scheduled hour day which may Inclu include ei • Lake Golf course mainte- . nance. Must be over 18. 673-6573 ; bet. 4-6:30 P.mJ' ; / WANTED EXPERIENCED SIDtRS: /top wages, ret^ement PROFIT SHARING PLAN. GUARANTEED YEAR ROUND WORK. GROUP HOSPITALIZATION. CALL 332-5231. WE WANT TO TALK WITH AN enthusiastic salesman for our Pontiac heating oil branch. Wide territory north of 12 Mile Rd. Phone Mr. E. K. Harrop tor date of personal discussion. FE 4-9539 or Detroit, 826-2708. Mobil Oil Corp. WE ARE HIRING REAL ESTATE salesman In Oakland County. Call Bill Jennings, 37411 Grand River, Farmington, 476-5900.________ WELDER Good working conditions, steady, fringe benefits, meMI door and trams work. A. L. DAMMAN CO. 1200 Naughton, .Troy __________689-4700________ minded. Phone 333-7147 bet. 10 a. and 2 p.- ' Glynn. n. Mon.-FrI. Ask tor Pot International Corporation » it 300 Bowl, 100 S. Cass Lake Rd.__________ YARDMAN AND DRIVER, $75 PER week and live In. Call V. Hollis, 852-1602. ________________. YOUNG MAN OVER 23, DESIRING |i Wanted Female ekAUTICIAN, DRAYTON PLAINS area, will train ambitious beginner. 673-7184 after 7 p.m._________ BEAUTICIANS, EXCELLENT Opportunity, salary plus commission, paid vacations, bonus plan, hospitalization, high volume salon. Call lor appointment. Miss Bryce. Ml 7-3033 or MISS Pat, Ml 64383. i commission. AAA 6-2270. AAA 6-2037.______ ^___________ BOOKKEEPER (SOUTH EAST PONTIAC) OPPORTUNITY Growing manulacturing company has a responsible position tor (a career minded woman) I girl office, position requires a thorough '—owledge of bookkeeping, payroll, etc. Salar- ator, experience- ... _______ .- celvable, Exc. opportunity In new administrative offices of multi-state concern. Reply in writing only to Jed Products Co., 1604 E. Avis Drive, Madison Heights. Mich. CLERK TYPIST, PART TIME TREASURERS OFFICE City of Birmingham, 4 hours dally, 5 days week, for 8 months of the year. 8 hours dally, during the month ot December, January, July and^August. Typing and number skills required, public contact and cashier. Experience helpful. Apply 8 a.m. to Noon or 2 to 4 p.m. Personnel Office Municipal Bldg. 151 Martin St. Birmingham. meals, uniform r House. 199 N. Hunter, BIr- ^ Help Wanted Female . 7 $300-$400 , , GIRL FRIDAY Varied duties, typing, 50-60, Interesting lob, some office experience. Fee paid. Mrs. Nichols. INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL 1880 S. Woodward B'ham. 642-8268 $325-$400 GENERAL, OFFICE Receptionist, typists, accounting clerks, many varied positions. Fee paid. Mrs. Nichols. INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL 1880 S. Woodward B'ham. 642-8268 $350-$500 SECRETARIES Good skills, Exp., Necessary Age No Limit INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL 1080 W. Huron__________3W-4I971 APPLICATIONS NOW BEING TAK-en for concession and cashiers. Apply Miracle Mite Drive In Theater. 2101 S. Telegraph, Pontiac. Apply between 1 and 4, 7 and 10._________________ APPLICATIONS NOW BEING TAK- ASSISTANT MANAGER Experienced in better ready-to-wear. BLOOMFIELD FASHION SHOP PONTIAC_MALL AAA‘l CORPORATION ' ^ete^^our '*^Pont!ac*‘^oSice. Must be 18-26, single and high school graduate. Salary ot $124.50 per wk. Call Mr. Williams. 338-0359, 9_^m.-2p.m. _ _ APPLICAtfo'NS ARE NOW BEING received at Oakland Community College tor the following |ob classifications: Secretary, stenographer, clerk typists, switchboard operator with typing ability. Apply MESC FE 2-0191.____ BABY SITTER TO MVE IN, REF. BABY SITTER, 12-9 P.M. 1 CHILD. Call 338-3940.___________^____________ BABY sitter, IN YOUR HOME, 1 child, 3- or 4-day week, $10. In Pontiac. 338-6854. ________ BABYSITTERS Agency In lOth year opening branch at Cess Lake,, no fee to register. Call 542-9742 or 682-6432. BARMAID - MIODLEAGED, ---- prefer--" State transportation. Apply in ’'"'’“HOWARD JOHNSON'S Telegraph & Mapie R(is. DEPENDABLE CLEANING WOM- Irans. Ret. FE 2-74S8.' J.C.A.H. approved. Near Detroit, salary, $8,500 and up depending on education and exoerience. Phone Romeo 752-3551. DRUG STORE CLERK. FULL time. J. V. Pharmacy, SJ9p Hrgh* Rd., 674-0551, Mr. Gordon. DRY CLEANING INSPECTOR, Experienced, good salary with bonus. Birmingham Cleaners, ‘1253 S. Woodward.JMI 4-4620.____ EXPERIENCED BEAUTY OPERA- EXPERIENCED WAITRESS WANT-ed. Apply In person OeLisa's Restaurant, 6980 N. Rochester Rd. OL 1-7800._______________ FIELD MANAGER leks career type , - fleid organization of jies .in group plan or direct For confidential perse view phone FE 4-4507._ ;EN?RAL OFFICE gTr no experience necess school grad, type 40 __at 920_W.J-^uron. GENERAL HOUSEVVORK, THURS-days or Fridays. Own transp. 626- fransp, Clarkston KITCHEN HELP - WEEKENDS - Pnntlac Lake Inn. M59 on Pon- tiac Lake. ___________________ LADY WITH PRACTICAL NURSING experience. To care tor elderly woman who suffers from memory failure. Hours 7:30 to 5. Income discused at interview. Call FE 4-7938 between 10:00 and 4:00 p.m. LPNs FOR THIRD SHIFT - APPLY in person - 1255 W. Silver Bell Rd.___________________________ •MATURE CAPABLE WOMAN care for 1 child in vicinity of James K. BlVd. 4 days a week. Must have own transportation and local references. 338-9294 before i P.M., after 5, 338:6277. Help Wanted Male 6Help Wanted Male MICHIGAN BELL Has Immediate openings i»^ the Pontiac, Royal Oak end Southfield areos.for: Linemen and ^ Installers If you are a high school .grottoerte or equilivent, 18 years of age and at least 5'6" tall— APPLY NOW Between 8:30 a.m. and 5:00 p.m. Mondoy thru Friday at: 90 Lake St„ Pontiac (2nd Floor See Mr. Strasser) ROOM A-17? 1365 Cass Avenue, Detroit ^MICHIGAN : BELL \ Part of the^ Notionwide Bell System IAN 6QUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER^ , Help Wanted Female children prefer to live In; I- area, before- 5. p.m. FE 4^25. NIC)HT SHIFT WAITRESS, .OVER 21, merried and steady, no Sunday. Before 6 P.M. FE 4-5760. NURSE AIDES All shifts. Training program In a year-around basis, Good working condition. Experienced and Inexperienced. Apply In person any vve^day from 9:30 to 11:00 a.m. Seminole Hills NOrtlng Home, S32 Orchard Lake Ave., Pontlic. PART TIME 4 hours, one afternoon girl, 2 eve-. ning girls, pleasant talephona voice — Salary plus commission. Celt 9-4, Monday 5-1. OR 4-2233. Mrs/ >n help nei R 3-9t73 or typing, filing. Call OL 1-7370. REAL ESTATE SECRETARY It you have above average ° ability and looking lor above average lob in a top Real Estate office, send complete resume to Box No. 50. Pontiac Press, 28 West Huron. Restaurant Dinin(3 Room -Supervisor Mature dependable and lady for dining room Hostess or extensive w essary. Very good s—. shift. Call Ml 4-7764 bet. 9 and 5 tor appointment, TEB'S _____BLOOMFIELD HILLS__ REPRESENTATIVE FOR M A N U-factuf^e of gift, and variety store,^ merchandisf. $375. Fee Pd. Call Jo' Martin 334-2471 Snelling and /ailable near your home if you type or take shorthand. Experience necessary. Apply today and become a highly paid Kelly Girl Employee. KELLY SERVICES Kelly Girl Division IS N. Saginaw 33MI338 Equal *-----‘-------------- SECRETARY FOR REAL ESTATE office—full or part tlme-623-1333. 5660 Dixie Hwy., Waterford. Help Wanted Female Help Waotid Famala 7 Secretarial Position 17 months position, ftochaster Community schools, shorthand-typing required. Excellont opportunity lor a qualifiad parson. Apply; Rochester Board of Education Offica, Fourth and Wilcox, Rochester, Michigan 48063._ SHIRT marker, GENERAL UTILV lly girl, downtown Birmingham. Bob White Cleaners. Ml 6-l7» TYPIST FOR GENERAL OFFICE work, part time. Call 334-4755. Be-tween 10 a.m.-l p.m.___ Unusual Opportunity dren who have a tew hi Commission. For appolnt- 'nent call 674-2342. exp. preferrec. ------- _______________ with figures. Reply P.O. Box 218, Walled Lake, Mich, stating agt, WANTED TO LIVE I or Sun. Call Mr. Coleman Ml 4-5510, WANTED: COOK TO WORK EVE-nlngs, 12 noon to 8 p.m. Good wages plus benefits. For further Information contact Mr. Elwell at UL 2-3410.__________________________ WAITRESS WANTED, FULL TIME employment. Apply In person only, Franks Restaurant, Kaego Harbor. WAITRESSES WANTED, MUST BE •experienced In serving fine food and cocktails. Aggressive, neat and reliable. Please call Ml 4-4800, 2 100 S. Casa Lk. Rd. Waitresses Curb waitresses for both day and night shifts, tree blue cross and life Insurance, uniforms and meals furnished. Top wages and tips, vacations and paid holidays. Apply WE NEED STENOGRAPHERS SECRETARIES PROFITABLE TEMPORARY WORK ASSIGNMENTS AVAILABLE NOW —Pontiac area— MANPOWER 332-8386 Call E ARE LOOKING FOR ONE Secretary who Is able to take dictation li English and German. Also lor oni bl-llngual. Clerk-Typist tor Invoicing and shipping. I> Wonted Female Oakland University Secretarial Positions Available A number ot new secretarial positions havt bean craatad In asveral areas at the University. Openings exist in Admlnlstratlvs Offices, the Library and In the accounting Department. Since these positions have been classilied as departmental secretary, they are located at the mid-point on thi clerical salary scale. Actual starting salaries wilt be based upon training skills and previous experience, Opporfunitles lor advancement are excellent, due to the rapid and continuous growth that the University will experience In the months and years to coma. Above average typing Is required. Shorthand Is preferred. OAKLAND UNIVERSITY Personnel Department Rochester, Michigan Between 8-12 and 1-5 MICHIGAN BELL Part of the Nationwide Bell System Has IMMEDIATE OPENINGS fbr KEY PUNCH OPERATORS and CLERK TYPISTS in Our Southfield . Accounting Office -No Experience Necessory--Full Pay While Training— Requirement Must have dwn transportation Must meal minimum qualiticationa High School Graduata APPLY IN PERSON 8:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Monday thru Friday at: Northwest Office Center Room S-IOl, Service Center 23500 Northwestern Highway (ENTER ON SOUTHFIELD, NORTH OF NORTHWESTERN HWY.) \ Southfield, Michigan \ (AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER) E—8 THE JpyTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, MARCH 16, 1967 WOMAN FOR GRILL WORK Jacks Di’lv»lnn, 22 W. Monies FE «-78M.______________________ WOMAN OVER M FOR FACTORY 7 Work Wgirted Molt n A-1 CARPENTER. ALL KINDS. Upholsttring small lobs, celling tile. . Telegraph; Tel-Huron Shopping WOMEN, PART TIME OR FULL time, experience not necesr— Champs Drive-Inn, 1J20 W. Rd., Troy, Mich. Apply In or call 646-3411. ___________ YOUNG LADY TO WORK IN DRY cleaning plant. Apply Walker Clean-ers. Lake Orion. 185 S. Broad.. Hel^airted M. or F. BLOOD DONORS URGENTLY NEEDED All RH Positive ings. OR 3-5JM. ____________ GENERAL HOUSE MAINTENANCE, my phase of house repair or emodellng Inside or out. We do ilmost anything, anyplace. S73- Work Wonted Female 12 CASH FOR GOOD CLEAN USED 1-day MrvI HOUSKLEA _______eaning; neeB trans- portation. OR 3-85IS. *^■5® IRONINGS DONE IN MY HCDOlE. ru FrI., 9 a.m.-4 p.nj. DEBT AID, INC., 711 RIKEO BLC FE 2-0181. See announcements. Retired couple. Experienced wit ret. Pontiac Press Box 32.________ MAN AND WIFE TEAM TO CLEAN restaurant, 11:30 p.m. to 4:30 a.rti. Apply in person. Big Boy Res-*-------1, Telegraph and MANAGER - CARETAKER TO maintain group ot apts. In Brmg, area. Must be reliable. Apt. plus good salary. Send reply, Pontiac Press Box 30. income Tox Service I HOUR AVERAGE TIME SPENT home slightly higher. E. Ounn, 662-7581. C.M. Bradleyy 673-5457. motel manager, middleaged couple. Experience helpful birt not n&essary. Furn. apartment plus an excellent salary. Ml 4-1848 oi W. J. Sourlall, OR 3-0074 or FE 3-1181.______________ ALL PERSONAL AND ---------------- RETURNS. REAS. RATES. EXP. some selling e^rlence. Late It office building In good lo-n. Mr. airk, FE 3-7888. - si Estate. Mes^^jJMoie-Femaie 8-A AETNA / LIFE INSURANCE CO. work with estate planning, estate analysis, business analysis group Insurance, exc. salary . one of the finest training programs Including 4 wk. home office schoc' In Hartford Conn. Phone for at pointment, Mr. Capoccia, 354-5244. REAL ESTATE SALES 2 salespeopla with proven spies ability and 1 to qualify as sales manager. Ample floor time and highest earnings. KINZLER REAL-TY. 5319 DIXIE HWY. 474-3235. iERVICE SALESMAN WITH DIS- Ask for John McMullen. plus fringe itlac. 442-8400. our Some, I It Is gojng to lTE, depek :, laKp-'Prea. L. Stack. 482- KEYS - NACKERMAN. YOUR home or ours. $4 up. FE 8-2297 or FE 2-3171. ; FORM ACCURATELY PRE- pared, S4 up. Call FE 5-0402. Short Form $2, long form Itemized S4. Dunn's Tax Service, 3094 Cass iPke Rd., next to ‘ Office. 482-7581._________________ {living jnd Tnicking 22 % TON TRUCK FOR LIGHT HAUL- Pointing and pecorrt^^ QUALITY WORK ASSURED. PAINT-Ing^ papering, wall washing. 473- BUY ON LAND CONTRACT — 2- apply at; M & M Motor Soles Ilk) Oakland FE ^9^42 NEAT COZY APARTMEMT FOR working couple. 338-8924. PRIVATE entrance AND BATH, suburban area. Call early for best dealp. No closing costs. Current rale of Interesf. HACKETT REALTY - 7750 COOLEY LK. RD., UNION LAKE. 3434703.______________________ LAND Cl CASH CONTRA^Tl-iHOMES EQUITIES WRIGHT 382 Oakland Ave.______FE 2-9141 °ranc°”l,^-'?S*^*e.°-rLj°?Ani*'f 2 car g 1-2 bedroom, a bepd Mail. 2427 E 5-8S85. 2-BEDROOM, 2 children r 1-75 or Clar... ____ call Dorris and - Son Realtors - OR 40324. DOES T You may own the home my buyer Is looking for. Call Nick Back-alukas at O'Neil Realty, Inc. OR HEAR OUR PRICE BEFORE YOU ‘-'te so little for your furniture appliances and What have v~" We'll auction It dr buy It. B & B AUCTION Dixie_______________OR 3-2717 Kampsen Realty & 1071 West Park. ......-onally. & Bldg. Cp. >TED JM [. Contact y. , Kamp- Wanted MIscelianeous 30 'II buy anyttitrig^xford OA 8-1854. WANTED/ijSED FURNITURE miscellaneous. 332-0347. WANtED, aI ,-1ty furnltur M. H. Ballo' WANTED —_ LARGE STAKE OR 4-3547. for furniture dealer. OR Wanted to Rent 32 IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY WANT-ed, four- or five-room house, general outlying Pontiac area, for single person with references. An-swer Box No. 29, Pontiac Press. RESPONSIBLE KRESGE MANAGER needs attractive 3-bedroom home. MY CLIENT WANTS ME TO FIND WANTED TO RENT GARAGE ... ----' and Joslyn St. area. Please Big Bear -----— — Share Living Quorfers WORKING GIRL TO SHARE ...„ .............. ...... I child welcome. FE ^24«2. After 7. YOUNG WORKINb GIRL TRYING Wanted ^ql Eitnte 1 TO 50 HOMES, LOTS, ACREAGE PARCELS, FARMS, BUSINESS PROP, ERTIES, AND LAND CONTRACTS WARKEN STOUT, Realtor 1450 N. Opdyke Rd. FE 5-8145 Urgently need for Immediate Salel J. C. HayCten Realtor 3345 WATKINS.LAKE RD. MANAGER'S APT. C-2 - and 2-bedTOOnr apartmentu ..... be avallajue soon. We furnish all utilltleixlncludlng electricity. Car-ports^avallable at no extra cost. No children, no pets. 4742492. fEEP YOUR GANG TOGETHER, ----------------------5 room, 2 bed- rent on large 5 room, 2 ..n,... fiat. Newly redecorated _. clean. Unfurn. except for appliances. Available immediately. $38 weekly rent, $120 sec, dep. 240 N. Perry. ______________ luxury 1-BEDROOM APART- beach tor swimming. Bl._ will pay cash If you have a 2 >r 3 bedroom with basemer' LAWYERS Real Estate Co. PROPERTY OWNERS We are In need of large acreage, commercial. Industrial, multiple In Oakland Coopty. Contact our office If you are interested In selling. 689-0610 3525 Rochester Rd., Troy ite closing. F y, 426-9575. Williams Lake_______...___________ dren, prefers lake front but would consider a home with lake privileges. Call Jim Williams at O'Nell Realty, Inc. OR 4-2222 " NEED GASH? oving out of state? Need cash to settle debts? Need cash to buy another home? Want cash for your home? Cosh for your equity? We will buy your ■--- cash today - Call Ni lukas at 6'Nell Realty 4-2222 or FE 5-4684 now Ray O'Neil Realty, Inc. 3520 Pc-"" ■ ^ l-BEDROOM APARTMENT, ST,OVE 44i Rt^^TATE WATERFOiyr^ Near Waterford .— ------ --- Blacktop High. Mtednwln ranch, blacktop & .liiFlor newly palnttd, oil heat, VA- LAKE OAKLAND MANOR APTS. 3610 W. Walton Blvd. Open 5 to 4 p.m. Monday tl Friday Open 2 Saturday and , ____ 4 p.m. Mon. FrI. 473-4102 and anytime Sat, or Sun. NEWLY REDECORATED, CLEAN, no children or pets, married cou-pie. 451-3742 after 4. Rochester. D ROOM apartments tor rent — rear Elks Temple. Call FE 3-7245 ' " pointment to — WEST SIDE, INDIAN VILLAGE. 1 bedroom apartment, carpeted, air conditioned, built-in Frigl-dalre appliances. Laundry and spacious recreation room. Adults only, no pets. Manager, FE 2- Rent Houses, Furnished 39 2-BEDROOM HOUSE. 2-BEDROOM HOME, CASS LAKE, deposit and refs, required, no pets. 682-2610 ------ 3-bedroom' home in ROCHES-■ 2-car garage, fenced yard, through August, 451-3612. *" ..20 Pontiac Lake Road OR 42222 or FE 5-4684_____ IEEDED,£ADLY 2, 3, AND 4 BED-room homes In pood locatl " ers waiting, will buy youi trade, or pay cash for yoi Call us for full particulars. weekly. Sec, dep. UL 2-1657. SMALL HOUSE IN AUBI Heights. UL 2-5534. GEORGE IRWIN, REALTOR MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE 8 W. Walton ______FE 3-7883 YEAR around attractive lake front home, furnished, fit"'*'* — 2-bedroom, gas heal, city ....... paved streets, ref. required. Call after 10 a:m„ MY 3-1014. Yes, Iff experts help yi ----- ---» — estate, you may sell for less than the real value. No obligation advice. Put ---------------------^ ReaJ^H^se^ Unfurnished 40 2 BEDROOMS, CHILD WELCOME, $125 monthly, dep. FE 8-9011. 2-BEDROOM HOME, GAS HEAT, YORK Air Cooied Engines & Parts BRIGGS STRATTON -Kohler — Clintin - McCulloch Lawn Boy KING BROS. FE 4-1442 FE 4-0734 Pontiac Rd. at Opdyke Aiuminum Bidg. items Cement and Block Work Guinn's Construction Co. I PIANO TUNING AND REPAIRING FE 4-7677 Eves. FE 5-9122 Oscar Schmidt________FE 2-5217 Plastering Service Architectural Drawing Dretstnaking, Tailoring ALTERATIONS ALL TYPES, KNIT dresses, leather coats OR 3»7193. APPROVED AUTO DR I V I N G Fencing Eavestroughing JIM/AND RUSS Autt) Repair Autornhtic Transmission / Specialist Any 6-^yl. engine . . . $150 8-C7I. rebuilt... $269 Jim and Russ Auto Repair Elizabeth Lake Rd. 334-0184 SELF-SERVICE GARAGE. REPAIR your own car, tools and equipment furn. Min. charge plus 50 cents per hr. Bobs Garage, 5500 Elizabeth Lk. Rd. Pontiac, 682- _7m.______________ ______________ WE SPECIALIZE IN REPAIRING, . rebuilding, resealIng automatic and stindard transmissions. Band ad-; lustments. Fluid and filter changes. All makes. All models. j Rochester Transmission I - 124 Main SI. Rochester CUSTOM FLOOR COVERING. Ll- 451-4820 All work guaranteed: noleum, formica, tile. Carpeting. —— -------------------------:----I 74t PArru CP o.xnon Painting and Decorating le Bert Commlns FE 8-0245 Piano Tuning A-1 PLASTERING __________FE 8-2702_________ PATCH PLASTERING. ALL WORK guaranteed, reas. rates. FE 4^941. Dry Waii BROWNIES HARDWARE FLOOR SANDERS-POLISHERS CUTLER CONTRACTING Licensed - Bonded. FE 5-4844 5932 Dlxle^l^ 0A‘ 3-4'95 QUALITY ROOFING. NEW AND RE- ---------OILH-W root. Bonded material. Free estl- , mates. Reasonable. 682-7514. W NEW, REROOF - REPAIRS Call Jack. Save the lack. 338-4115. OR 3-9590.___________________________ SPECIALIZE IN HOT TAR ROOF-ICARL L. BILLS SR.. NEW AND Ing. L. J. Price. FE 2-1036. old floor sanding. FE 2-5789. ~~ ' ’ Fioor Tiiing Sand-Gi S. A. W. TRUtKI iravei-nDirt 2S63 after 5:30 625-4585. Ptrry, FE 2-4090. Bosemen^Waterprooting 1 j^^^^Heatlng S^ke________ FURNACE REPaTr ^np^Mld and repaired. Cone's ^ Brick A Biock Sijrvice BLOCK BASEMENTS - TRENC Day or r..,..., ... ------- heaters. Including mobile Walters Heating, a^7222._________ MAINTENANCE FOR PLUMBING and heating. 24 hr. s^lce. — and oil fire burners. CTaud ..... ders. Days FE 5-7553 Eves. FE BRICK, BLOCK, STONE,, CEMENT work, fireplaces specialty. 335-4470 QUALITY MASONRY, BRICK VE. -neers, basemenfs, fireplaces, 1-year Income Tax Service Tree Trimming Service “DALBY & SONS" STUMP, TREE, SNOW REMOVAL FE 5-3005 - FIREPLACE WOOD TREE TRIMMING AND REMOVAL. Reasonable. 334-0044.____ Trucking FREE RENTAL SERVICE TO landlords. Art Daniels Realty, 31000 Ford. 537-7500, 537-7220. Furnished or unfurnished. Clarks- WEST ^|DE ing credit checks. Complete property management service available — Call for details nowl ROLFE H. SMITH, Realtor 244 S. Telegraph FE 3-7848__________EVES. 333-7302 SMALL FARM OR WOODS WITH pond or small lake for hunt club. Write Bill Jennings, 37411 Grand River, Farmington or call 474-5900. SPOT CASH FOR YOUR EQUITY, VA, FHA, OR OTHER. FOR QUICK ACTION CALL NOW. HAGSTROM REALTOR, OR 4-0358 OR EVENINGS 682-0435. SMALL 2-BEDROOM HOME IN Huron Gardens. 682-2610 aft. ■' NICE CLEAN ROOM, lSkE PRIV-Ileges. OR 4-1397 after 7 p.m. Nice room, quiet neighbor- hood, shower, 682-361Q. - CLIENT HAS t, 1 car garage. V jr equity, $6000 d< von REALTY Apaitments, Furnished 1 LARGE 1 ' nice. FE 2-4376: SLEEPING ROOMSz FOR MEN, 140 StalCy private entrance. SLEEPING ROOM FOR LADY -kitchen, laundry privf'"“* week. If Interested, i 2 ROOMS, PARTLY FURNISHED. 324 Oakland. 673-5849. 2 ROOMS AND BATH, ADULTS only, no children, vie. Ho' ' E. Dep. required. FE 2-4931.__________ 2 ROOMS, private ENTRANCE and bath, adults. FE.4-4881. 2 ROOM APARTMENTS,' UPPER and lower, pr^vaje^ refs.- 2 ROOMS ON BUS LINE 2 ROOMS AND BATH, BEAUTIFUL- ■ ' '-" irated Includir* ----"" !S, etc., priv pets. 335-7942. 2-ROOM BASEMENT APARTMENT and garage for couple. $25 wk. $50 dep. Washln—-FE 5-9394. in St. Call after 3:30 ^Building Modermzofion KAR GARAGES, 20'x20', $875. V are local builders and bplld ( Janitoriai Service [HAULING AND RUBBISH. NAME| ^ your price. Any time. FE 8-0095. , onnu^ AMri~ BATH—t9S PER • LIGHT , MOVING, TRASH HAULED' week, $75 deposit, ghlld welcome, reasonable. FE 4-1353.__________| inquire at 273 Baldwin, call 338- LIGHT HAULING, BASEMENTS,! _ )e Co. OR 3-5619, CARPENTRY AND REMODELING __________OL 1-8255 COMPLETE REMODELING SERV-Ica alorm windows and aidlnn. s. 474-2498. complFte remodeling Service Kwork since 1945 best time to plan or remodel - prices are lowest I Additions—recreation rooms attic rooms — aluminum storm windows - siding and trim. 86 N. Saginaw G 8 M FE 2-12)1 Free estimates__________Terms A-1 INTERIOR AND EXTERIOR, LIGHT AND HEAVY TRUCKI rubbish, fill dirt, grading and grav-el and front-end loading. FE 2-0403 TALBOTT LUMBER Glass service, wood or aluminum, Building and Hardware supplies. 025 Oakland fE 4-4595 Moving and Storage dRAPPiN MOVING - HOUSEHOLD STORAGE days - eves. FE 5-9178, Truck Rentai Trucks to Rent miles, opeq dally and Sunday, 2 to 6, AND VWestrldoe ot Water-lord North on Dixie (U.S. 10) to Our Lady of Lakes Church, open Sunday, 2 to 6. O'Neil, Realtor Rai ay O' 3520 Pi OR 4-2222 Webster DREAM COME TRUE How many times have you dreamed of owninfl J-berirrom »t.T^5 w &' “iL elude a ^0 Anderson window iTtfiirvo^^?!’ Withs stainless steel byllf-Ins, attached 2-car garage with •uto^«t-Ic door opener. Well, stop dreaming and call for an appointment to see this lovely house with lake privileges, today. Priced below re-production et 28,500. Terms. C. A. Webster, Realtor 692-2291 _________ 628-2515 OFF BALDWIN Cule and cozy 2-bedroom, large carpeted living room, picture window, oak floors, near bus. easy FHA terms. TOM REAGAN REAL ESTATE 251 N. Opdyke___________332-0156 Frushoiir SPACIOUS COLONIAL THIS 4-BEDROOM home Is located in one of the loveliest ^neighborhoods around. It has a beautifully PRACTICALLY NEW A sharp 3 bedroom brick and _ inum sided ranch home on a big lot, gas heat, can be purchased on easy FHA' or Gl terms. Owner will take offer thro; YORK WE TRADE OR 4-0363 le Hwy., Drayton Plains SEE THIS .BRAND NEW oom tri-level with 1'/z baths and a split rock fireplace. It'~ in a well established area. Cal OR 3-8021 weekdays 2 to 6 p.pn A quality Ross Home. SOUTH. SIDE Completely redecorated 3-bedroom bungalow. Features warm gas heat — large kitchen and dining are alum, awnings, storms and screei... ceramic tile ba% large utility room. Bargain priced at —■ *“ 250. $350 moves yoi7 In. only $8,- Wal-U-Way Ing room, peted. Bed kitchen Is lot. $11,500, terms. 345 Oakland 'Sak^llon?!' I'VE BUILD - 3-bedroom ranchers After hours, FE 4-with nak floors, u.nitv In hath. -------------------------------------------- A Honey for the Money! Family room In this 3-bedroon. home with gas heat, m bafhs. Paneled dining room. 2-car " rage. Fenced yard. Near GM _ Ford plants at Milford. 10 per cent down, $17,900. Phone 651-8503. Shepord's Reql Estate ALL VACANT -Gl, $0 down. LAKE FRONT - Mvlpg I of Pontiac. TE 0-2703. . 6-ROOM BRICK, ATTENTION WE COOPERATE PONTIAC ALMOST NEW 332 RUSSELL BRICK, $400 DOWN Vacant, completely decorate. . bedroom ranch, full basement, gas heat, no waiting, FHA appraised. 15510 LiveTnols Dl 2-8600 Arthur N. King MILO STRUBLE CLARKSTON AREA - 3 bedrooms fC 8-4025 ‘ 682-5047 and den, loads of closet space,: ,u«o\ large living room and kitchen,!------3881 Hlghland^lll^ carport and large patio. lAMORE MOTEL, SINGLE OC-ipancy, $35 per week. Maid serv-e, TV, telephone. 789 South Wood- SLEEPING ROOMS, MEN, 2 FUR-hished rooms, private bath. 852-4959. Pontiac. SLEEPING ROOM, 24 NORTON Crestbrook MODEL OPEN DAILY 1-6 3 bedroom, family room and 2 car garage priced at only •" lot. Located In new sul streets, curb, gutter and city water. Drh to Crescent Lake Roe. ... to Crestbrook street and model. DON GIROUX Rooms With Board LICENSED OPERATOR, 3 MEALS, 6 days week lunches, any shift, living room, TV, Innerspring mat- LOVELY ROOM FOR A LADY only, call after .5. p.m. 363-9335. MEN ONLY. NEAR MALL. LUNCH-packed. FE 8-9005. ROOM AND BOARD, cooked meals. 335-1679. ROOM AND board. WORKING RMt^ic^Spoi^ BIRMINGHAM, AIR CONpiTIONED, carpeted, office, Down*"™ looking City Hall area, ly. Utilities furnished, answering avalleble. Rent Bosiness Property 47*A 3,COMMERCIAL STORES, 1300 E5, 1300 SQ. 144 Highlahd Lk. Rd. 7»3-, 16,f00 Sq. Ft. Downtown Pontiac 4 story masonry bldg., 8400 sq. on each ,floor, ^ freight elevator, nett personally for further informa-Annett Inc., Realtors, 28 E. -----1. 3384)466._____________________ 'OR RE fit OR LEASE - 14)00 "*uare feet of floor space with rool up door. All private on n highway In, Pontiac City ilts. FE 8-0688 days, FE 5-9178 BY OWNER, 3-BEDROOM HOME at 5n2 Dvorak, Independence Twp., partly furn. and carpeted. $2,000 dn., take over payments. Call aft. 5 p.m. 674-3614.__________________ , Lake Oakland CRESCENT LAKE HIGHLAND LAKE ESTATES Two 2-bedroom bungalows, modern except for furnaces. Also extra lot, all for $13,500 cosh to close estate. K. L. TEMPLETON, Realtor 2339 Orchard Lake Rd. 682-0900 HURON GARDENS BRAND NEW-3-BEDRM. RANCH bungalow, close to St. Benedict's. Full basement, FULLY INSULATED, family size kitchen. $1600 dn. $7950 ON YOUR LOT. 3-bedroom ranch, full basement, alum, siding, plumb-Ing complete. You odlheflnlsh-Ing, no money down. YOUNG-BILT HOMES REALLY MEANS BETTER-BUILT Russell Youngs 334-3830 ^ SV/7 W. Huron YORK WE BUY WE TRAD OR 44363 OR 4-03 4713 Dixie Hwy., Drayton Plali DRAYTON PLAINS Gl no money down on this lovely ranch. With part basement. On ' ------* land. Close to schools " ■ imiedlate -... costs to quell C. SCHUETT FE 3-7088 OR 3-7102 DRAYTON WOODS 3-bedroom home wil fireplace And ' $25,900 a hMural ____ heat, full ............. a finished recreation room, 2Vz-car attached garage and a covered patio, bullt-lns In the kitchen and In immaculate condition throughout. You can own this lovely home for only $25,900 and this Is a good buy. Call about it today. WATERFORD TWP. $23,900 We have a lovely split-level with 3 bedrooms, tvb baths end a family room, 2W-cer attached garage, $27,500 Rent Miscellaneous 48 54 FOOT Trailer, 3 bedrooaas, furnished. FE 4-9656 after 6 p.m. S^Hoose^ 8-BEDROOM RANCH IN DRAYTON — ii)ned commercial — nt ' "" peting — large family rc huge modern kitchen — 30 lot with fruit trees and bci_ 2V)-car haatad garage — 8ZIJOO bank terms. S-bedroom firm home an IVS acres —H ot Clsrfcslwl - ft " •-— Straits Lake - lake privileges -attached garage - fenced shaded lot - $6,950 — $2,500 down. room - $19,930 bank tetta. UnderwoocT Real Estate <25-2615 1665 DIxia Hwy., Clarlcston It no answar, <2S-S0tS CANDLESTICK This Weinberger r___ .... . t year old. Ownar Is leaving .... area and this Is a chance to pick up a real quality 2-badroom home with all brick, 2-car attached garage, full basement that is tiled and painted, bullt-lns In the large -----------------------------. other extres. WATERFORD HIGH $19,500 New 3-bedroom Irllevel with family room, tiN?M^5r: *“• BUILD NOW 3-bedroom- — full baiamant, IVi baths - 17' lining room. All 3 bodroomt art largt, 14' dining room, sliding door-wall off dining sliding dooi a patio, dl m the exttrl “I'SLK? '-OT OR OURS 10 PER CENT DOWN sfiiossytgjoi?"'"'' ROY UZEMBV, REALTOR W W. WALTON - OR 4-0301 (I Block E. of Dixie Hviy.) V Saif HriotM 49 -------------------- GILES GET INTO BUSINESS •-•'3? •“.t house, 12-1 motel wlHj 3«' lake frontage Northern Michigan. Gaylord-Gr ling area; Buy one or both. Ten THREE-FAMILY INCOME Two It-mln apartments and ' two 3-room bbart^ts. Private bathk, private entrai\ces, new gas furnace porches. Pried 321,500. Call tor further Information. IN CITY e-room m-story with 1 bedroom down and 2 up. Full dining room House very cleaii throughout. Enclosed, front porth. Gps heat, full basement, gaca^. Purchaser have good ^rOdlf. Price: $9,5i GILTS REALTY CO 221 Baldwin Ave. CURK 26 living room with brick firel Pining room, mod-refrroef»t^" huilt-lns Including DltSwilf L if ^®"es),\ oak floori,i pfastered walls. car attached fncluSid mortgage terms. Might accept trade. ^ $15,000 ON LAND CONTRACT OR WLL accept TRAdI'^j family Incorne, full basenoent, gas heat, ^LtvI'T t'r'Provements. Each apart- FE 5-6175 t^OR THE CLARK REAL ESTATE RHODES 1’/yea, gas heat, tile bath, storms and screens. Only $450 moves you In. It's vaCOnt — Sale Heusei S^hi Heum 'Buzz" BATEMAN RETIRING TO FLORIDA? BATEA6AN REALTY w “•---- of your prater — ,.ju In the p^t retirement home. Cm to NEAR FISHER BODY NO MORTGAGE COSTS: |ust as-sume sy. par cent low Interest gov- w. nuron Mul.tiple Listing Serv -----------------------throughout. Priced at $11,500 with approx. $2500 down and only $75 per month. This Is a MONEY SAVERI No. 39 HERE'S THE LO-DOWN NOTHINGI If you are a qualifying veteran. Sharp 3 bedroom-ranche- ■-the dfy and built In 1957. It's proved by V.A. for $10,950 and closing costs will move you In. ter look TODAYI REDUCED $700 UNION LAKE VILLAGE: brick rancher with 2 car garage. Ideal location; you can walk to all shopping, on large well-l— ----- ' * ‘-Bsement, f—'■ aluminum storms and screens and lust 10 years old and nicer than new. Price reduced ^o $19,250 with as little as 10 per cent down plus coits. Make your appointment NOWI No. 49 SPRING JUST AROUND THE COlRNEI^: En-■''V swimming and fishing this su""-ler on Big Lake. Everyday will ■cation for the entlra family ... lis 5-room bungalow with glass--iclosed front porch. Frice Inch ' furniture so you can move rlgh. ... and enjoy yourself. Full price only $9,700 with $2,500 down on land contract with payments of only $72 per month. Better hurry on this and CALL TODAYI MODEL HOMES COLONIAL, TRI-LEVEL OR RANCH-ER In Lake Oakland Shores; « new Close-In ares with blacktop streets, community water, lake privileges ind close to Waterford Schools. Several new homes with Immediate occupancy. Excellent terms, or you may TRADE your present home jquity. OPEN' SAT. — ......... -hd DAILY I TRANSFERRED? NATIONWIDE REFERRAL SERV-will locate your new home for No charge; call for more da- UNION LAKE Br. ROCHESTER Br. 377 S. Telegraph Rd. EM 3-4171 OL 1-8518 ....----------$■ 730 S. Roch, Rd. ANNETT FE 5-8183 WATERFORD AREA Four-bedroom, brick bungalow. Living and dining area. Kitchan and utility. Family room, V/i baths, oil HA heat, attached garage. About $l,SpO required. NORTH SIDE Two-bedroom bungalow. Living and dining area. Kitchen. F u ' ' basement. Oil HA heat. Vacar About .$700 required. SOUTH SIDE Three-bedroom bungalow. Living ---- Kitchen —' -— -.... Oil H..... About $750 required. Eves, call MR. ALTON, FE 4-5236 10 ACRES-GLOSE IN Near i-75 .with 780' road frontage; live spring, lake could be developed. $12;000, terms. 4 ACRES-3 BEDROOMS 6-room home In good condition, 5 rooms and bath on first floor, largo dormitory room on second floor, full basement, »u*n heat. Large garden area UNION LAKE AREA STOUTS Best Buys Today LAKE FRONT- Whlte aluminum rancher with 24' carpeted living room, fireplace. screened porch, c 2 king size bed" fall closets, gas attached 2Vi-car garage, wor Priced at $27,500 with terms. BUILDING?- See us "NOW" for plans enc prices before spring rush, wil build 3-bedroom aluminum ranch er with V/2 baths, spacious kitchen —I area, basement, at- r ^garage^ o^ti your lot h LOG HOME- Near Oakland University, charming 5-room home with spacious living room, beamed ceilings, modern Idtchen and bath, basement, gas heat, corner lot, paved frontage. Possible use as Curio, antique shop. Only $14,000 with terms. t 3-bedroom North Side home ----.1— g.j h.jt, storme nvenlent to school: Priced for IM7‘= >10,850. Warren Stout, Realtor 1450 N. Opdyk» Rd. Ph. FE 5-8165 Open Eves, 'til 8 p.m kA.ViFiwxiaa I lc*lnM Orv TIMES 15 ACRES in the Independence school system, close to Clarkston, with the cozy ranch home. Ideal spot for 2 or 3 people, to buy. ant together, property alone worth the asking price. Call for an appoir* ment, to see your future estate. SUBURBIA Uig ranS, with lake prlvfleges, brick and frame construction, and built In 1957. This home appeals «n nonnif> who like closc In Accommodations and 4 bedrooms; V/2 bath$» cafpeting. floor to celling fireplace, breeze-wav attached fv, car flarege, out-door grill, underground sprinkler system, dishwasher, are only sortie of the features, plus W" porch patio. Oh yes, the lot Is almost an acre. Let one of the courteous salespeople at TIMES show you this home. PINE LAKE PRIVILEGES one of ftia'tin* appoint'"*"** *!; fered you on the tng^llsh stylM mlonlal, 4 bedroom ."o™ full basement, gas heat, 1V4 lalln, formal dining area, living r^ with fireplace, bullt-ln oven and range, plus guest houw with Bor-geous rooms all turnished j™ ■ Beautiful landscaped lot *11 in. Owner leaving fw California, buy now and enioy the pimurat of beautiful Pina Lake fhls sum- I. (DICK) VALUET R FE 4-3531 T en-acre tracts I deal locations M any to choose from E njoy country living S elect today WHEN YOU SEEK OUR SERVICE YOU "JOIN THE A6ARCH OF TIMES" Times Realty THE PONTIAC PRESS, THUKSD^Y, MARCH 16, 1967 E—9 NEAt 7 ROOMS PLUS 3 SMALL apartmanti, cloa* In, $19,500 - -000 down. FE 24I663._____________ Lake pyyrW 51 1 log-lake FRONT, 3 LEVEL, 2 stone fireplace, bar In basement, 65' frontaga. $20,400. Terms. FLATTLEY REALTY < » Commer -' ' iiLDiNG BUILDING SITE ON MANITOU ' —e, 86x110', $7500. PR 3-2807. KEATINGTON Beautiful lake-front and lake-prlvl-legs lots available. Plan to live on this beautiful new town in Orion Township. Models open 36 dr" 116 Sat. and Sun. HOWARD T. KEATING CO. 22060 W. 13 Mile Rd., Birmingham Ml 6-1234 LAKfe FRONT HOMES - NEW AND —" - J. L. Dally Co. EM 37114. LAKE LIVING. 15 MINUTES PON-tlac. Wolverine-Commerce areas. Fish, swim. $1495. $15 mo. Open Sun. Bloch Bros. 623-1333, FE 75' cenel frontege, $3,500. 10 per cent Other ioo' lots with lake privileges. $2,500. 10 per cent down. Sislock & Kent, Inc. 1309 Pontiac State Bank Bldg. kprtl^ Pr^ ^ 51-A N T H E R N LAKE PRONT A frame home. Could be year-round home. 3 bedrooms, full basemer* $16,500. Les Brown, Realtor 50^EIIzabeth Lake Rd. (Across from the Mall) ■"• MlOor 14 VACANT LOTS \ Near Longfellow School. Wm trade for land contract, house orXwhaf have you. \ BREWER REAL ESTATE 724 RIker 80 ACRES - ALLEN RD. SEcTS. Deerfield Twp„ Livingston CountyN $26,000, terms. FE 2-2144. Smith. 100'x200' LOT ON M-24 N approximately 2 ACRES. 1680 N Opdyke Rd. By owner. BY OWNER, 120'X170' LOT WITH a tree In HIgh-HIII.................... $3,150. OR 3-1979, CLARKSTON ON PERRY LAKE RD. near 1-75, wooded, 103'x617.5', $4,950. OR 30709. ELIZABETH LAKE - 300' TO semiprivate beach, lovely large lol In choice area, perk tested, $7,200. 3386342. 37 ACRES-CLOSE IN Ideal Investment property of Pontiac. 2 old houses _ rd basement barn., Priced right settle estate at Only $27,750, clous modern kitchen with built-ins, sunroom, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, 15' cedar closet. Full basement, elec, heat, rec. room (34'x55'1 with fireplace. 2-cer garage. $65X«0. Terms. „E WILL TRADE REALTORS 28 E. HURON ST. OHIce Open Evenings and Sunday l-> 338-0466 O'NEIL NEW FINANCING 10 PER CENT DOWN DO YOU LIKE LOTS OF COMPANY? lovely 3 bedroom brl> WE'RE JUST BURSTING WITH PRIDE ...» 3 bedroom brick rancher. The owner has kept every Inch of this home Immaculate ----- *- .o.v. ______________ fenced for their protection. Very Important are ■ taufiful Lotus Lake park and beach /enable for the whole family. Full ^■ice only $19,900 and ■—*- *" comparison; wa think yi HAPPINESS IS LIVING close enough to school to walk with your friends. Three bedroom, car-living room, oak floors, ♦i"- No. 8-16 SUDENLY IT'S SPRING- but If you wait till the lifsf moment, ----------'-a will own this like new o ,-ench home In Wolverine Lake Manor. A darling family roo" fhe first floor features a netur_ ad burning fireplace. Full base-..„nf for future "Recreetlon" room, gas heat, community water. Lake privileges are yours with ownership r'___________.I. civ>. *1100 NORTHEAST AREA When the day's work 1$ done, can relex betida the fireplace In huge family room. Atother will ... the compact step saver kitchen, with dining area; room for lha ch'“-" foo. ^ra's a mud room an between the garage and dining----- 3 big bedrooms, living room. Lots of -■---- space, fast possession, IFr The price Is right. Car ytima. Don't welt on thU No. 7-17 can purchasellhli o« F.HJt. terms. I will I $93 per ,---..isuranca. for later purchase. ^va yuur.u.i. ... Total prlc^l0,750. Roy 0'N«il Realty, Inc. 3520 Pontiac Lake Road OR 4-2222 MLS FE 26239 Sale ^ acres - HOUSE • BARN ACRES - Home - flreanv .0 ACRES — Houta - orchard. 20 ACRES -r- Vacohf - Irontaga. IS ACRES - Home • 1^. 1$ ACRES — House ■ stream. H ACRES — HPUsa - pool. MILTOH WEAVER. Inc, ReaNori In the Village of Rochester 10 W. Unjverslly i; 1112' HAROLD R. FRANKS, Realty SUMMER COTTAGE Good beach, nice trees. 2 lots, approximately 14 acres. S-room cottage usad year-around, on Cadar Island Lake. Full price, $9,500. Requires largo down phyment but a good buy. Everett Cgmmings, Realtor rut-,,-. bn (Rods: north of Kpcnesier. rnc» uvii today's market — $23600 with $ 400 down, $125 per month. CLARENCE C RIDGEWAY realtor 28 W. Walton , 33340 Multipit Listing Service 200 ACRE FARM LOCATED Northern Lower Michigan, 1 sdras tor general farming. acres in woods with a spring fed Stream. Buildings are In^falr condition. Can be bought with without machinery and lives...... For more information write to Box 16, Route 2, Posen, Mlchl- BY OWNER, 200 ACRES, NEAR Sfandlsh. 5-bedroom house, 2!en* Sato Uad Contracts 60 1 TO 50 LAND CONTRACTS '^ou'dea! "**“*i' WARREN iTOUT, Realtor 1450 N. Opdyke Rd. FE S6165 ''— Eves, 'til 0 p.r Wontei^art^ 60-A, 1 TO 50 LAND CONTRACTS *^ou dee! "**^***‘ “* WARREN STOUT, Realtor 1450 N. Opdyke Rd. FE 56165 **--!n Eves, 'til 0 p.r NEED LAND CONTRACTS. S/WALL OUR • OFFICE SPECIALIZES IN 'ind contract collections. FLOYD KENT, REALTOR C2'>ti N. Saginaw_______FE 56105 BUSY RESTAURANT Near town, sitting capacity 31, all stainless steel equipment. Selling tor $5500 - $1500 down, $75 per mo. Frushour Realty 5730 WII-----■ ' Rd„ MLS, 674-2245. QUICK CASH FOR LAND CON-tracts. Clark Real Estate. FE 37088, res. FE 46813 KEEGO HARBOR Located at 3125 Orchard Lake Rd. 3 bedroom home with adlolning lot 100x185. Will sell on contract. Only $23,900. Income $145 per mqr" JACK LOVELAND 2100 Cass Lake Rd. nities 59 LOANS $25 TO $1,000 COMMUNITY LOAN CO. 30 E. LAWRENCE FE 0-0421 25 HORSE JOHNSON MOTOR FOR "-sp freeze. FE 56575.___ 'BUD" NEW WAREHOUSE SPACE for details call W NICHOLIE-HUDSON Associates, Inc. BULK MILK ROUTE FOR SALE. $30,000 cash. Grossing $2,000 per mo. 334-9415.________________________ "BUD" MULTIPLE DWELLING SITE CITY OF PONTIAC North Side area, close to Fisher Body and Pontiac Motor, frontage on 2 streets, zoned for multiple usage, up to 40 units (1 and I bedrooms), water and sewer, bu< transportation, shopping center anc laundramat across street. Pricec at $30,0(»cash. NICHOLIE-HUDSON Associates, Inc. 49 Mt. Clemens St. FE 5-1201, After 6 P.M. FE 5-0198 COMPLETE EQUIPMENT FOR Dairy Queen store and franchise. Lake Orion area. Call 6936348. FOR LEASE - WINKO'S RESTAU-rant. Orchard Lake Rd. and Middle Belt, city of Sylvan. Remodeled and fully, equipped, $200 per mo. OR. 36539 or EM 3-5361. in Pontiac NORTHERN PARTY STORE Nice brisk business In year-round operation near Lake Huron. Grocery, meats, beer 8. wine, bakery dept., gas pumps. Living quarters available, Perfect family setup, Onij/ $6,W plus stock down Inci, Warden Realty 3434 W. Huron, Pontiac 333-7157 ‘ If no answer call 335-1)90 OXBOW GRILL-CORNER OF ELIZ-—th Lake Rd. Union Lake Business property, building and PARTRIDGE “IS THE BIRD TO SEE" courses. Fun to operate _____________ very profitable. Open 6 months of the year. Should net you near $30,000 on you $99,500 In- stend only operat.... .. _____ during summer. You will winter in Florida on this Investment. $20,000 down buys. PRINTING Ottiet and letter press. Growing by leaps and bounds. Don't work for someone else when $6,000 down wilt buy your own business. Should net you near $15,000. Cell us today on this. PARTRIDGE REAi ESTATE 1050 W. HURON , ' FE 4-3511 OPEN NITELY 'TIL 9:00 SEND FOR NEW FREE CATALOg THE WINDMILL SERVICE STA- business, toe It opportunity Substantial 0 ACTION On your land contract, large or small, call Mr. Hitter, FE 2-0179. Broker, 3792 Ellabeth Lake Road. BRAND-NEW END AND___________ tables, SS.SS ee. Little Joe's, FE BROWN MODERN touCH AND chair. Call after 5, FE 36208. BRONZE OR CHROME DINETTE sale, BRAND NEW. Large " small size (round, drop-leaf, (angular) tables in 3-, 5- and sets. S24.9S up. PEARSON'S FURNITURE 210 E. Pike________________FE 4-7801 E SETS. ASSEM-i; 4 chairs, table $1,000 for cash needs or di tion. One small mon...., to repay. Credit life Insurance. Ours is a fast, convenient — DUO THERM GAS INCINERATOR, r used, $45. Girl's " '---- spring, mattress, exc. condition, $100. FE 2-1156. Eves, and Sat. HOME & AUTO LOAN CO. N. Perry St. Pontiac FE 5-8121 Mon. 9 to 6; Tues. Wed. Thurs. 9 to 5, Fri. 9 to 7. ELECTRIC RANGE, 025. T $25. G. Harris. FE 32766. LOANS $25 to $1,000 Insured Payment Plan BAXTER & LIVINGSTONE Finance Co. 401 Pontiac State Bank Building FE 4-1538-9 FREIGHT DAWIAGED (SLIGHTLY) — 1 bedroom — 2 living rooms. $119 ea. Little Joe's, FE 26842. LOANS TO $1,000 Usually on tirst visit. Quick, friend-ly.ttielptul. FE 2-9206 is the number to cell. OAKLAND LOAN CO. 202 Pontiac state Bank Bldg. 9-5 - Friday 9-7 f" GOOD REFRIGERATORS $48, GAS or electric stoves $15 up, used Maytag Washers $47. Used furniture of -* -------- prices, es«, ........ .... — -- TRADE-IN DEPARTMENT. Bald-win at Walton, FE 26842. HOUSEHOLD SPECIAL * $20 A MONTH BUYS 3 ROOMS OF FURNITURE - Consist* of: 8-plec* living room outfit with 2-piece mobile, or small bulldo cruiser or sailboat. Call 6 5-piece dinette sat ...... - Chairs and table. All tor S399. credit is good at Wyman's. W1MAN FURNITURE CO. .7 E. HURON FE 5-1501 18 W. PIKE FE 32150 HOT POINT REFRIGERATOR $25, 2250 Richwood, Pontiac. 3326366. KELVINATOR REFRIGERAT6r, $45. 625-2356.________________ LEAVING STATE — ANTIQUES, for Econoline bus. Sale Clothing LACE OVER TAFFETA WEDDING dress. Other dresses, size 74. FE 2-649T. sRaNch mink cape, exc. con- .RAN I, medium to small si (BODING DRESS, SIZE 10, LONG slaves with alencon lace, detachable train, $75. AAA 6-2372. ... -........1 beds, $20 ea.j refrigerator, $60; stove, $30; maple ouch, $25; desk, $75; chest, $35; 1 - A-l HOUSEFUL I A sofa, chair, 2 tables, 2 lamps, 6-plece bedroom outfit, 5-pIece dinette, stove and refrigerator. $285 $3.00 per week WORLD WIDE HOME FURNITURE Call Mr. Adams FE 4-0904 (Next to Kmart) 90-DAY-OLD ZIG-ZAG ed for hems, buttonholgi, fancy patterns, etc. Pay off account balanc at $4.20 monthly or $43.00 cash. CERTIFIED SEWiNG, 363- l-PIECE SECTIONAL. 27" CONSOLE 3 Rooms Furniture BRAND NEW $288 $2.50 Weekly PEARSON'S FURNITURE 210 E. Pike FE 4-7881 Between Paddock end City Hall Open Mon, and Frl. 'til 9 p.m. 4-PIECE BEDROOM SET, $2,50 Weekly $18. MA 5-^ after 5, 9x12 Linoleum Rugs . .$3.89 Solid Vinyl Tile ......... 7c ea. vinyl Asbestos tile ..... 7c ea. '-laid tile 9x9' ..... 7c ea. Floor Shop—22S5 Elltebeth Lake "Across From the Mall" 1965 WESTINGHOUSE DISHWASH- 1966 Norge Conte$sa Ronge Goodyear Service Store 1370 Wide Track Dr. West Pontiac APARTMENT SIZE REFRIGERA tor, excellent condition, $29, 30" ^^ric range, $65, G. Harris, FE AUTOMATIC WASHER, $35; •r, $45; $1" TV, $45; gas ____ $35; all Itemr gilad condition. G. Harris, PE s-VU. _____________ automatic WASHER. $45; RE- Soto HeoieheM Goode 65 UNaAIMED LAYAWAY COMPLETE HOUSEFUL TAKE OVER PAYMENTS 7-piece living room grouping, 6-piece bedroom propping, 5-plact dinette, range and refrigerator, Mr. Hubbard FE 2-022$. World Wide ----Furnishings. AAARBLE TOP DRESSER AND t stand, tncylopedia of en-es, Chinese snuff attic, het hoMer, dishes, sllvar, (ewslry. BLACK AND WHITE RCA VICTOR, ’ —‘ stzs refrigerator iRpIt.'i 4Jlaflos_ FISHER AMP, 2 WARFDALE BUNK BEDS Walton TV, FE 2-22 515 E. Walton, ci Furniture, 210 E. Pike. Orig. $699, a repo-but like new Now $475. $10 down, M week FRETTER'S APPLIANCE CO. 150 S. Telegraph________FE 3-7051 Fluoreaegnt, 393 Orchard Lk., FE PEARSON'S FURNITURE DRAKE 2-A RECEIVER AND 2 AQ, exc. condition, $108. 673-1062. GOVERNMENT SURPLUS TRAN--Istors boards — an-om ««.r :30 P.m._______________ _ 11-FI, duced the price on ..., __________ Inghouse record player, and 'FM-AM radio from $75 to $50. Perfect tor rock and roll records and screaming DJ's playing the too 5,000 tunes. FE 2-9677.___________ RCA LIVING STEREO COMBINA-tIon, 23" TV, Mack-White, AM-FM radio, $125. 638-1108, after 5. ' length, $1 ■el, $100. 33 chairs, $25. — ............. Sofa bed. $35, other misc. OR 3-9630. For Sole Miscellanoous 67 $30. 15 cu. ft. freezer, $05 new wringer washer# $5$. 61 beds $40 end ta les ! $6; cedar chest r .'XI2' LINOLEUM RUGS $3.95,,EACH Plastic Wall tils. lc ea. Ceiling tile — wall paneling, cheap. BAG Tile. FE 4-9957. 1075 W. Huron 6826841. 32'X21' DOUBLE COMPARTMENT stainless sinks with frame, $24.95. G. A. Thompson, 7005 M59 W. 1967 WESTINGHOUSE REFRIGER-—- ---------- ---- Sprlng- GAS AND ELECTRIC DRYERS. BRADLEY CAMPER - FITS '/4 ton pick-up. Iron-rite Ironer. chair. 12 gauge Savage auto. CAFETERIA TABLES, FORMICA top, 6 stools that fold In. Used, In good condition. Price: $19.95. BLVD, SUPPLY 500 S. Blvd. E. CAST IRON POT BELLIED STOVE, oak china cabirtat, large Oak tabla with 4 leaves. TE 26454 aff LIVING ROOM SUITE, 21" TV, chest, Ironer, vacuum, old disher mIsc. 332-0367.____________________________ March Scratch & Disnt Sale New GE Portable TVs Goodyear Service Store 1370 Wide Track Dr. West - SELLING OUT NICE reasonable. 35 RosshIre patter; Pay I account balance of $4.02 TER. 335-9203. PLASTIC WALL TILE PFAFF AUTOMjATIC ZIG ZAG Sewing medilne — deluxe features — Maple cabinet, "Early American Design." Take over payments $5 PER MO. \ OR $49 CASH BAL \ 5 Yr. Guarantee uKiVERSAL CO. FE 4-0905 ipWi REPOSSESSED CABINET MODEL hems\ buttonholes, etc. Guaranteed. Cash price $33.00 or $5 per mo. Call 338-0329, United Sewlr- ..hlrlpool 14W cu. auto, defrost. 26oor, extra Ig. freezer Final close-outs. In original factory cartoni A give away at $108 $5 down, $2.50 wk. FRETTER'S APPLIANCE CO. 150 S. Telegraph FE 3-7051 SPRING AIR BOX SPRING AND mattress $20, 625-4144. 1966 dressmaker In new ce------------ zigzagger for hems, embroidery buttonholes, designs, etc. Must collect balance of $4262 cash or $4.82 monthly new contract. Guaranteed. Call 335-9203. RICH-AAAN BROS. SEWING CENTER. SINGER ZIG ZAG Sewing machine. ‘Maple cabinet, automatic "Dial Model" makes blind hems, designs, buttonholes, etc. Repossed. Pay off $53 CASH or PAYMENTS OF $6 PER MO. Guaranteed UNIVERSAL CO. FE 4-0905 SINGER ZIG ZAGGER cabinet, makes blind hems, buttonholes, etc. No extras to buy. Pay account balance of $4-20 or $37.62 total cash price. Call CERTIFIED SEWING AT 363-2622. SAVE MONEY Have your old furniture custom reupholstered. Hundred* of fabrics end color*. Free, Frever-s. UPRIGHT 'PIANO, $75, WILL DE-refrlgerator, 195. Drop-lid OP 36709, isED TV'S ...................■-• !,!!!•!! :OLOR TV'S .............. . . . . .S199.9S Sweet's Radio and Appliance, Inc. WANTED TO BUY ____d glass lamps, or It. glass lamp shades. FE 4-9096. WASHER AND DRYER SET, SOS; refrigerator with too freezer, $49; Maytag wrlnnr washer, $4S; G. WYMAN'S. USED BARGAIN STORE At our 1$ W. Pike Store Only STOCK REDUCTION SALE 25 per cent off on alt tomt and apollancts In our used d • A reel miineyi to'-' Your Credit Is gsodt«t easy terms ‘ THE salvation ARMY \ RED SHIELD STORE 11$ W. LAWRENCE ST. tub ENCLOSURES, G WAS-HED WIPING RAGS low as 19 cents lb. 25 lb. boxes to 300 lb. bales Blvd. Supply 333-7081 500 S. Blvd. I Cameras • Service Musical Goods 2 mike pickup, $7,5. I Sure mike and stand. Ilka new, $25; 1 EpI-phone amipllfler by Gibson, features too numerous to mention, $200. Must sell quickly. FE 2-0440 RECORD ( NEEDLES AT GALLAGHER'S ST. PATRICK DAY SALE Buy your piano or ogren — now during this once a year event at savings up to $500. Free lesson*. Open eve., till 9 p.m. — Sat., 5:30 p.m. 1710 So. Telegraph______FE 4-0566 hard to find? an US — we have all kmus. Johnson TV - FE 8-4569 I install now or later. A CONSOLE PIANO $399 GALLAGHER'S 1710 So. Telegraph , FE 46566 Open Eves., 'tit 9 p.m. — Sat., 5:30 p.m 220-GALLON FUEL TANKS WITH 7" BENCH SAW, $35 BARITONE UKES. $21 AND $26. All Mahogany. STORY 0. CLARK ORGANS $585 and UP MORRIS MUSIC 34 S. Telegraph Rd. FE 2-0542 Across trom Tel-Hi— BLACK FENDER BASSMAN AMP. CHERRY LESLIE ORGAN SPEAK-er, nriodel 251. Call bet. 3 p.m. 674-1947, aft. 3 p.m. 3356187, EKO BASS GUITAR, MAGNAT0N8 piggy back amplifier. 335-160). FENDER MUSTANG GUITAR AND 6ULBRANSEN AOAHOGANY CON-lole 3-paddle, piano, 5 yeirt old. Original orlce $650 .Will secrifica. UPRIGHT PIANOS PRICED TO sell. Smith Moving Co. l0 S. Jes-sle. FE 46864. USED CHORD ORGANS, 2 MAN-ual, oil walnut with bench, $10 month. Smiley Bros., Music Co. 119 No. Saginaw, FE 66721. half. FE S-5437. DRAFTING BOARDS AND TABLES, 6' and 7'. Forbei, 4500 Dixie, Drayton. OR 3-9767._________ USED PIANOS AND ORGANS , Uprights from $49.00; Grands from $149.00; Organs from $249. Grinnell's Downtown 27 S. Saginaw tome of the Pontiac Hammond ' Organ Society Large Dealer deluxe bible, $19. I For The Finest In Top-Quality Merchandise Shop At Montgomery Ward Pontiac Mall FORMICA COVERED VANITY CAB-Inel to receive 10" round bos' $44.95. G. A. Thompson, 7005 A/ A JOB WELL DONE FEEL- IR "A JOB WELL DONE FEEL, ng" clean carpets with Blue Lus-re. Rent electric shampooer $1. '"Ison's Hdwe., 41 E. Walton. FURNACE SALEI IMMEDIATE IN-stallation. Low prices. Also we Install aluminum elding, windows, expert job. Call A & H Sales 625-1501 or 673-0363. _______________ GOING OUT OF BUSINESS. AMAZ-Ing offer. Baby Wonda Chair Combination, originally $169, now yours $50. Now you can afford the ............tiler, high chair, rocker. finest SI ... Grovelend Sales Agency, Holly, Mich. 637-7281.____________ Sat., 2-6 p.m. 1054 Myrtle. HOT WATER HEATER, 60 GAL., gas. Consumers approved, $89.50 value, $39.95 and $49.95 mr Michigan Fluorescent, 393 Or Lk„ FE 4-8462. —16. Lustre. Rent electric $1. B 8. G TILE CO. 1075 W. HURON. 334-99S7» NEED VENTILATION? CALL BOB. NEW AND USED HEATING EQUIP-ment. 24-hour service. 333-7171. M. A. Benson Co.. Heating Div. root work. OR 3-7044,_______________ PLYWOOD CAMPER BOX FOR heater, $49.95; 3-plece bath sets, $59.95; laundry fray, trim, $19.95; shower stalls with trim, $39.95; 2bowl sink. $2.95; lavs., $2.95; tubs, $20 and up. Pipe cut and threaded. PHILGAS HOT WATER HEATER, alum, storm door, $35; 46" metal kitchen sink complete. $15; 1 prime window, approx. 3x4, $5; alum, door grills, $1 ea.. Initials, 25 cents each. FE 4-9460. SELLING OUT Don't miss these good buys. Furniture. refrigerator $25, clothing ell kinds, dishes, etc. Stop, look. Adeline's Resale Shop, 1300 Baldwin Ave. Open 9 till 6 Mon. thru STALL SHOWERS COMPLETE with faucets and curtains $69.50 value, $34.50. Lavatories complete with faucets $14.95, toilets $18.95. Michigan Fluorescent, 393 Orchard Lk., FE 46462. — 37. RENT IT A good rug shampooer, floor senders, polishers, wiall steamers, do- THE SEASON'S HERE! BOY'S BASEBALL SHOES SIZE 10, GOOD CONDITION, $5 CALL 6256044 AFTER 4 P.M. Hand Tools-Mochimry 68 LORRAINE CRANE FOR SALE, ON amplifier drums, . band Instru- exc. cond. only ) e. 674-3237 after 7 p.m. HAMMOND SPINET ORGAN, Walnut, almost like new SAVe-SAVE6AVE BETTERLY MUSIC CO. Ml 6-8002 USED PIANO And ORGAN > SPECIALS UPRIGHT PIANOS :S Is ................... $3 Delivery Extra RESTYLED & RECONDITIONED PIANOS - to console type ... S22J Studio used ............. $309 LOWREY SPINET ORGAN a than 2 yrs. old — $1,200 when *w — excellent condition .... $495, 27 S. Sagina: FE 3-7140 WURLITZER AND THOMAS ORGANS AND PIANOS INSTRUCTIONS AND INSTRUMENTS JACK HAGAN MUSIC 469 Elttebeth Lake Rd. 332-0500 0192 Cooley Lake Rd. 363-S500 Office Eqaipment 72 Store Eqaipment 73 RESTAURANT EQUIPMENT, REA-sonable. FE 4-1044 trom 9-2. Sporting Goods 6 p.m. OR 3-0566. brayton. OR 36lis. TRAP GUNS, 2 GUN CABINETS, 1 showcase, Burr-Shell, FE 2-4700. 5x7 POOL TABLE, GOOD CONDI-tlon, $60. OR 3-5242. BUY - SELL - TRADE 5V Guns-720 W. Huron-FE 4-76S1 BOWS AND ARROWS-3346349 GENE'S ARCHERY-714 W. HURON GUNS. BUY, SELL, TRADE. BURR- Shell, 375 S. Telegraph.___ ifY gUN BLUISG. GTT ■t rule ready early, 052-4616. Ski-Doo Polaris Sno-Traveler as loVK as S695 LARGE SELECTION OF GUNS AND EQUIPMENT ALL ICE FISHING BAIT 8. EQUIPMENT Cliff Dreyer Gun and Sports Center ---- "" Holly, ME ly and Sundays SKI DOO'S GUNS-CAMPERS ^ CRUISE-OUT, INC. 63 Walton Daily 9-6 p.m. FE 8 Sond-Grovel-Dirt 76 ■A DRIVEWAY GRAVEL, 10-A way or parking lots. OR 4-14M. CRYSTAL TRUCKING - SAND, gravel, black dirt, del., 674-3367. GOOD RICH TOPSOIL AND BLACK dirt, Del. FE 4-'"~ L. AND A. TRUCKING, TOP SOIL, , (III dirt. OR WoodCoaKoke-Foel 77 A-T (JAtK, 2 CORD, $27, delivered. FE 16846 V FE S-2483._ WHITE BIRCH DELIVEltEO, $1$ A d. 33^1704, Pet^oj^ngJiogs 79 , -A DACHSHUND PUPS, AKC, IIO down. Jahelm's Kennels. FB $-2t» 1-A PObOLE CLIPPING, tSup. 060 Sarasota. FE $^69. TALBOTT LUMBER U" Black and Decker drill, 01.99 Appliance rollers, $7.95 a pr. 4'xl‘xW' pertlelo board, $3.75 oa. 4'x8xto" particto board, $4.95 ta. 1025 Oakland FE 4659S ALL BR^ED GROOMING Cannplato Professional Caro -10 The PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY. MARCH 16, 1967 J TOY P0004t$> male, AKC fwirttfiii. OT-»m «fnf s. A-l OMHSHUND, STOOi AKC, ESTELHEIM KENNELS, FE * AKC MINI-TOY TOOOLE PUPS, EKTNA GOOD HQRSk 1x43 2-BEDROOM MOBILE HOME. ^ ms Henrydilt. Ai^m H«lgtit». 10X50 1063 DETROITER, $700 DOWN, 12XM NEW MOON DELUXE, PAT-•ci io, large lot, furnishings, awning, -I 1040 PEERLfeSS, io-XSO', EXC: CON- Pouitry AIREDALE, old malt 625-550t. BEAUTIFUL 1 YR. BIG POODLE PUPS FOR EASTER, Champion pedigree, cream, black, t6S UP. VA- 3-0542.______________ BRITTANY PUPS, « WEEKS Farm Equipment 87 BOLENS RIDAMATIC TRACTOR with altachmentt, $300. 052-3027. »" Cocker spaniel, niale, i-ye/^r- old, shots, license. 082-2903. lull while coller — shots, wormed. JOHN DEERE AND NEW IDEA parts galore. Your Homellte chein uw dealer. DAVIS MACHINERY CO... Ortonville. NA 7-3272. JOHN DEERE PLOW, F-120, 5X14. DACHSHUNDS, MINIATURE PUP-ples, AKC. Both colors, 140. Richard Weber, 2317 Fenton Rd., Hoi- ly, Mich.______________ FANCY PIGEONS, REASONABLE reasoneble. FE 5-5735 a rtOLDEN RETRIEVER PUPPIES, ■HONEY COLORED BRITTANY y, black. 502-5721. POODLE BEAUTY SALON Clippings—AKC Pups—Stud Servlet Pet SUpplles-502-5401 or 502-0727 POODLE CUPPING, BY APPOINT- POODLE CLIPPING AND SHAM-poo. OR 3-0203. Reas. t>OOLDES, AKC, TOY, BLACK, shots, S50 up. 574-3347 for appt. Poodle, white, 4 mos., shots, male, paper trained. 574-1757. Poodle pups, mini-toys, sil- ver males, AKC. 582-3520. SILVER MINIATURE, AKC, exc. pedigrees, mal ----“”“1L_____ POODLE CLIPPING AND_^L poo, v«ry reattf by appt. FE 5-4075. fcEGISTEREb t6Y Fok;teW|R pupplas, fen* to toy p^le, te chihuahua stud .... -nd chit ...s. FE 2-1477.________________ fciGisfERlD TOY, FOX TERRIER shots, wormed, 055. FE SABLE AN maiC^ mo. $25. FE 44I047. SELLING ALL P U P F I E S AND ........................... SILVER POODLE STUD SERVICE, TINY TOY poodles WITH new hend crocheted coat and bon-, net. SS5 to good home. 528-3515 ’ VERY SMALL TOY FEMALE POp- t4| Mobile Homes BALES ALFALFA BROME. od qualM no roln. 40 «~t cenlt, 7W-4445 f ml. N. ^50'xIO'sIpACES available. Centrally located park. Natural gas. Appllcatlont bahn trican at 753 LaSalle St. Hra 7-5. B & J MOBILE HOME FE 2-2915 AUTHORIZED DEALER NOm^-Js^TscA^Slar ®l'-g?aiS^ra» MA 4-2552. OUALITY MASSEY-FERGUSON Snow blowers, blades, tire chains, and garden tractors. Pony carls, and pony sleds. . Hlllson Lawn I, Garden 5570 Dixie Hwy. _____57341830 WINTER CLEARANCE , USED TRACTORS, LOADERS, TRENCHERS, BLADES, PLOWS, AND TRAILERS. ALSO GOOD check tor our free DISCOUNTS ON NEW TRAC-' ^............. TORS AND IMPLEMENTS. Pontiac Farm and Industrial Tractor Co. 825 S. WOODWARD FE 44)451 FE 4-1442 AMEPxICA'S FINEST SELECTION OF NEW AND A-1 USED MOBILE HOMES NOW AT TOWN & COUNTRY MOBILE HOMES HERE IS A BEAUTY - delivered and set $3,875 DIXIE HIGHWAY AT TELEGRAFH M-57 at-CRANBERRY LAKE 574-3320 or 334-6694 Stop in and see us. LIGHTS AND 4y'"MdfOR.'ONLY cobo Hri*'"® ** I BY OWNER, AVAILABLE APRIL MANY OTHERS 1’55 Parkwood, 12'x52‘, carpet- COME IN NOW AND SAVE eO, 2 bedrooms. Gas heat, partly Viwr'none O" suburban Pontiac lot, min- KING dRUj. I Utes to 1-75. $700 down, take over E 4-1552 FE 4-0734 payments. 335-1870 after 5:30 p. Pontiac Rd. lust east ol Opdyke DETROITER - KROFF 1967 Boats on Display , PONTIAC'S ONLY MERCURY-MERCRUISER DEALER Cruise-Out, Inc. Dally 7-7 p.m. Walton___________f DRAG AND SKI BOAT 1966 Kindsvater, 18' Powered I 527 Forde with trailer^ $3700. Pho “She has a beautiful wardrobe—I’d Uke to get to know her well enough to borrow some of it!” Mew m4 Uiod Tmcb 103 ^utobahn " SPRING PICKUP SPECIALS 1954 CHEVY ’iioc with real economy ..... .................. 1965 CHEVROLET t,--- Sports Sedan. Automatic, V4, radio, heater ...... flZYj 1963 PONTIAC > ‘inhe Star Chief Hardtop. Automatic, power, nearly new. > 11YJ 1964 BONNEVILLE ...qc Convertible. Automatic, power. A reel spring spfclel. > I ‘*TJ 1963 CATALINA ...Qe Hardtop. Automatic, powqr. An Ideel vacation car. AI IYJ 1964 OLDSMOBILE <,,0, Sedan. Automatic, power. It will appeal to you. AIOY3 1965 OLDSMOBILE Convertible. Automefic, power, radio, heater. Show- (.gnc room condition. A reel buy . .... ........ flOYj 1964 COMET . , Sports sedan. An toea.l second car. ..... A 'Y3 1965 CHEVROLET Impale. >Door Sedan Hardtop--Automatic power, ertonr radio, heeler, factory air. A "cbdl" one. LINCOLN-MERCURY 1250 Oakland 333-7863 Wreckers Heovy Duty One Ton 1951-1962 GMCs Complete — Ready to go I John McAuliffe Ford TRUCK DEPT. 277 West Montcalm FE 5-4101 MOST UNITS CARRY A 25"MONTH WARRANTY 1965 FORD %-Ton With V4, redio, heeler, slepside box, yours-* and will do the (obi $ave 1966 CHEVY Impolo Cinvertlble. SUnfIre'red finish, V-B, eutomatlc, (totter steering, power brakes, 1959 PONTIAC Catalina J-Door Hardtop. Automata, radio, herier, power steering end brakes, V-8. Save -V Save 1967 PONTIAC Cetallne Station Wagon. Redio, heater, automatic, power steering end brakes, eir conditioning, 6-way seat. Save 1965 CHEVY Impala 2-Door Hardtop. 6-cyllnder, redio, heater. Like new throughout! DnIy— Save 1966 BUICK Riviera with full power, factory air conditioning, end only 6,000 miles, tool Only— Save 1964 GMC ’/2-Ton Pickup with radiOe heater. The unit for thet special job you have to do this year! Only— Save 1962 CHEVY Wagon Bel Air. V-8, automatic, power steering end brakes. Only— Save HOMER RIGHT Motor Inc. ON M24 IN OXFORD' OA 8-2528 We Want to Sell One Full Block of •USED CARS THIS MONTH''^ Mabuting Sasakyan (Good Transportation) 1959 FORD $395 1958 FORD -Convertible- ....$95 1960 CHEVY $395 1966 BUICK ....$295 1960 PONTIAC ....,....$495 1957 FORD Pickup-NIcel ....$195 1959 RAMBLER .. .....$ 95 1936 PACKARD ....$595 1966 Pontiac LeMans Convertible With 4-speed; sprint opp., power steering and brakes, whitewalls, buckets, wood grained steering wheel, base group, rally gauge, rally wheels. Barrer blue. Only— $2295 1966 Buick LeSabre Hardtop 2-Door. Power steering, power brakes, automatic, whitewalls, radio, haater, medium blue finish. $2495 • 1965 Chevy Impala Super Sport 2-Door Hardtop. Air conditioning, power steering and brakes, white-wails, push-button radio. Only— $1995 , 1964 Pontiac Catalina Hardtop 2-Door with radio, heater, white*-wells, automatic. Only— $1495 1964 Chevy ’/2-Ton Pickup with 4-ply tires, radio, heater, green and white finish, stick, V-8, reedy I This Week's Special at Only- $1295 1964 Chevy II 2-Door with 5-cyllnder engine, stick shift, radio, heeler. A perfect second carl $995 1965 Pontiac Hardtop 2-Door Catalina with automatic, power steering qnd toakes, whjtewalls. $1795 1962 Rambler American 2-Door E-stick transmission, radio, heater and 6 ml'>n^^[d^^'*MU 1763 S. Tatagreph** ''^**'*FE ImSSI CONDITION, $350, OR 3-3611 attar 6 pm 1962 DODGE MO 4 DOOR SEDAN, V8, automatic, power ttaaring, radio, heater, 8195. RADEMACHER CHEVYdOLDS, Tnc. on USIO at M15, AM 5-5P71. 1986 bODGE DART, TAKE OVER paymahts. 674-2394, * 22P"' autoamt- Ic, axtre tiMivtm 6256144. 1929 MODEL A FORD, 2-DOOR, not restored, 1175. FE 86779. w tlras. 338-2152 attar 7. 3 GALAXIE VI, BEAUTI- MOTORS, 250 Oakland. Fi M472. ... CHEVROLET IMPALA SUPER! Sport convartibta, full power and! air conditlonad, 12,395 at MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET, Blrming- MIKE SAVOIE^ Birmingham's New ^ CHEVROLET DEALER 1104 S. Woodward Ml 4-2735 SHORT ON DOWN PAYMENT i Ke^OT^tlac Salas. Call Mr. Caly. $1195 BIRMINGHAM chrysler-plymouth S. Woodward_____Ml 7-3214 Kessler-Hahn Chrysler-Plymoulh )n Dixie — Clarkston — M* CHEVY IMPALA CONVERt-mia. Automatic, iMwer steering, brakes. A-1. FE 2-0M2.____________ 8 AUTOMATIC. ME- 1958 CHEVY, FLOOR SHIFT. S9 CHEVY WAGON. RUNS GOOD. Best otter. 332-1696. Dealer. * appreciated. Nb m LUCKY AUTO I960 CHEVY. $225 1961 Chevy Impala 2-door hardtop, 6-cyl. stick, full price: 1397. Credit no problemi Wa handle and arrange all tinanr FE Woh Capitol Auto 312 W. MONTCALM _____Just East of Oakland _ brakes, $795.'4/AN CAMP CHEVY. Milford. MU 4-1025. SI CORVAht MONZA COUPE, AU- Capitol Auto 962 CHEVY STATION WAGON, VS automatic, power steering, radio, heater, whitewalls, see this'one tor a second car! $895. RADE-MACHER CHEVY-OLDS, Inc. on US 10 at AMS, MA 5-5071. L 'cal^yR 3^064'3' I kTlON WAGON 9- 164 BISCAYNE, POWERGLIDE transmission, 4-door, radio, exc. condition, SI .095. 4d79 Elmdalt — Drayton Plains. OR-3-8990. 1964 Chevy Bel Air Wogon With V8, automatic, radio, heatei Only - ■ $1395 BEATTIE "Your FORD DEALER Since 1930' On Dixie In Waterfwd at the double stopli^t OR 3-1291 1%5 CHRYSLER CROWN IMPERIAL, with full power r conditioning, leather Interior HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. 464 S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM _Ml 4-7500 1960 DeSOYo 2-DOOR HARDTOP, full power, a real good looker see to appreciate! Kessler-Hahn HAPPY ST. PATRICK'S DAY Only 2 days left to take advantage of our St. Patrick's Day Celebration. Prices slashed for this sale only. We have a large selefitiooLiof late-model cars that make it easy to find the cor you want. Let your~1fisli Eyes Smile at pur once in a lifetime bargains at 1850 Maple Road in Troy. 1960 Olds Wagon. 30,000 mllas, automatic, powar ttaaring, powar brakes, white wall tirai. Ilka $595 '65 Tempest 2- Ooor Sedan, Custom. V-l, automatic, 22,000 actual miles. New car factory warranty. Silver blue. $1595^ 1963 Pontiac Catalina 2-Door Hardtop. Silver blue, ardio, whitewall tires, 40,000 actual miles and 3- speed transmission. Priced $925 1963 Pontiac Grand Prix. Two to choose from. One black and one blue. Automatic, power ilaar-Ing, both Ilka new. Only— $1495 '64 Chevelle Super Sport 2-Door Hardtop. Automatic, power ttaaring, red with white bucket teats, 20,000 actual miles. $1595 l965~01ds^ vista Cruiser Wagon; 4,000 miles, dark blue, tinted glass, power steering, powar brakes, radio, heater, specially tor this weak only. $1950 '65 Tempest Custom 2-Door. Silver with automatic transmission, custom trim, decor group, new car factory warranty. $1525 1966 Pontiac Catalina 2-Door Hardtop. Dark green, automatic transmission, factory*vwrrantyriMM mlln! $2525 '63 Cadillac interior. Full I than' new. A _ special at only— $2095 Ask for Lysle Basinger or Dewey Petiprin (2 Minutes East of Woodward Ave.) —-------------On 15 Mile Road------- 1850 Maple Rd., Troy 642-8600 >65 CHEVELLE CONVERTIBLE with 4-spaad transmission, $1,495. MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET, Blr-mlngham. Ml 4-2735.__________________ -......- ------ ROSE RAM BLER SALES, 8145 Commerce Rd. Union Lake, EM 3-4155i BOB BORST "Where Quality Counts" 1965 MUSTANG ..............................$ave 4 to choose from. V-8's. 2 year or 50,000 mile warranty. 1964 FORD 2-Door Hardtop ................$1095 Bucket seats, V-8, automatic. 1966 MERCURY Parklane Convertible ........$2795 Fully loaded. St. Patrick's Day Special. 1966 COMET Caliente 2-Door Hardtop .......$1895 Automatic, V-8, Sharp. 1962 CHEVY Impala Sport Coupe..............$995 Automatic, 6 cylinder, clean. Also Continentals^ Sedans, and^ Lincoln - Mercury 520 S. WOODWARD Birmingham - 646-4538 CARNIVAL OF VALUES 1966 BUICK SKYLARK Convertible. Inca silver with a black tob and black vinyl trim. 8-cyllnder angina and powar steering. Only $2288 1964 RIVIERA Radio and heater, automatic, power steering, power brakes, power $1988 T965 BUICK wildcat 4-Door Hardtop. Automatic, radio, heater, full powar. Only 21,000 actual mllas. $2088 1966 BUICK (DEMO) LdSabre convertible. Automatic, radio, heater, power steering, power brakes, dark green with black top and black vinyl trim. ■ $2488 1965 BUICK ELECTRA 4 Door Hardtop. Power steering, power brakes, white with turquoise $2188 ' 1963 BUICK SKYLARK 2-Door Hardtop. Automatic, radio, white with black vinyl top, air “"""'"$1288 1966 RIVIERA Bucket teats, console, powar steering, powar brakea, automatic, radio and heater,- new car war- ' $3288 1965 BUICK ELECTRA "225" Convertible. Dark green, full power, and one owner. Only $2388 1963 BUICK Electra 4-Door. Automatic, radio, heater, powar steering, power brakes, power windows and fac-. lory air conditioning. This waek't St. Pat's Spaclal. $1288 -DOUBLE CHECK--USED CARS- 545 S. Woodward FACTORY OFFICIAL CARS All Titled in Chevrolet Division Name All of These "Breathe Easy" Specials Carry a 25-MONTH WARRANTY 1966 CHEVROLET Super Sport Convertible 396 engine, Hydramatic, power steering, power brakes, radio, heater, whitewall tires,, factory warranty. 5,000 miles on this car. Tuxedo $AVE $$$ $AVE 1966 CHEVROLET Caprice 6-Passenger Wagon Has V-8 angina, automatic transmission, power brakes and pdwar steering, air conditioning, radio and heater, whitewall tlras, luggage rack on top, and In a beautiful ermine white tinsh wlh black vinyl $AVE $$$ $AVE 1966 CHEVROLET Impala Sport Coupe This one has 396 V-8 engine, 4-speed transmission, power brakes and power steering, radio and heater, whitewall tires, factory warranty and a beautiful willow green finish. $AVE $$$ $AVE 1966 CHEVY 2 Nova Station Wagon 6-cyllnder with standard shift, radio, heater, whitewall tires, Granada gold finish. Factory, warranty. $AVE$$$$AVE 1966 CHEVROLET Custom Sport Van This Is a 3-seafer model with positraclion, radio and heater, white-wall tires, has factory warranty and a beautiful saddle tan finish. $AVE $$$ $AVE 1966 CHEVROLET Impala 4rDoor Sedan 327 engine and 4-speed transmission, power steering and powar brakea, radio, heater, whitewall tires. Tuxedo black finish. $AVE $$$ $AVE 1966 MALIBU Super Sport Convertible 327 engine, Powerglide, power steering, power brakes, radio, heater, whitewall tires, 8,000 miles, matador rad finish. $AVE$$$$AVE 1966 CHEVROLET Biscayne 6-Passenger Wgn. With V-8 engine, Powerglide transmission, power steering and brakes, radio and heater, power tailgate window, whitewall tires, luggage rack on top, fawn beige vinyl trim and aztec bronze finish. $AVE $$$ $AVE 1966 CHEVY Impala Sport Coupe With powerful 427 cu. In. engine, 4-spead transmission, powar brakes and power steering, radio and heater, whitewall tlras, vinyl top, $AVE m $AVE 1966 CHEVROLET ' Biscayne 6-Passenger Wgn. With powerful V-8 engine, PowarglWa transmission, power brakes and power steering, positraction axle, radio and heater, tinted wlnd-ihield, factory warranty, blut vinyl trim and Danube blue finish. $A3ri! $$$ $AVE ^CHEVROLET^ Oakland County's Volume Dealer USED CAR HEADQUARTERS FE 4-4547 631 Oakland at Cass FE 5r' THE PONTIAC PltBS^S, THURSDAY, MARCH 16> 1967 $695 BOB BORST LINCOLN-MERCURY Yard Blrmlnohai 64MS3I____ Niw and Ustd Cart MUSTANG 2-DOOR HARDTOP, :ellent condition, outo., radio. Kessler-Hahn 1M2 T - BIRD HARdYoP WITH POWER EQUIPMENT, RADIO AND HEATER AND WHITEWALL TIRES, FULL PRICE ONLY $9»5, ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN, Auumt weekly payment of M.94, CALL CREDIT mgr. Mr.--Parks at HAROLD TURNER FORD, Ml KM I FALCON STATION WAGON Witti automatic, transmHsIto, S99S at MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET, BlrrWIngham, Ml 4-273S.'__________ . condition 11050 402- Pretty Ponies 1965 & 1966 MUSTANGS SEVERAL USED MUSTANGS TO CHOOSE FROM CONVERTIBLES HARDTOPS 2PLUS2's FULL EQUIPMENT Priced From $1295 As Low As $49 Down And $49 Per Month HAROLD TURNER I T-BIRD HARDTOP, AUTOMA-power brakese Ford motor finest unit. Specially priced at "Only 688 full price." "Only $88 do< "Ont^ $53.61^per month."^ ^ Get "A BETTER DEAL" at: John McAutiffe Ford 0 Oakland Ave. F E 5>4l0t r-BIRD 2 DOOR HARDTOP, $1795. 41025. 1964 T-Bird 2-Door Hardtop automatic*Va"onl7-**' $1995 . BEATTIE "Your FORD DEALER. Since 1930' On Dixie In Waterford at the double stoplight OR 3-1291 1>64 FORD GALAX IE 2-DOOR hardtop V8 automatic, full r- $1,097 full price. $100 down. LUCKY AUTO tj of $7.M. CALL CRED-AGR. Mr. Parks at HAR-I TURNER FORD, Ml "It only takes a minute" to Get "A BETTER DEAL" at: John McAuliffe Ford K65 MUSTANG FASTBACK, BUCK- 1965 FORD CORTINA 2-DOOR. 4-cylinder, standard tran$m‘— SALES. 8145 Comme MARMADUKE By Anderson and tefming with almost everything, Vt ing, brakes, vinyl top and > much more. S,0W Actual miles. Specially priced. "Only S26.M full price.'' "Only SU down," "Only St7.10 pe >60 COMET 2-DOOR, TRANSPORT teflon, $55. 6S1-364- MERCURY MONTEREY -r hardtop, g—' ‘ »er, 363.63l» tr MERCURY MONTEREY, 2- Ntw and Uud Cart 1964 Comet 2-Door Sedan with 6-cylinder engine, slick. Only- $995 BEATTIE "Y.our FORD DEALER Since 1930" On Dixie In Waterford > at the double stoplight OR 3-1291 New ond Used Cart________19^ “"'I I**'** 196 DON'S USED CARS Small Ad-3ig Lot so CARS TO CHOOSE FROM 1965 MONTCLAIR MERCURY, POW-rw^rT wa's Jtra,*'wni NEW IN THE AREA? Drive a new or used car Keego Pontla"----- — at d2-7300. S GOOD. 569.00 RE- cylim OLDS F-05 CONVERTIBLE 8-automatic transmission, ring, $1,095 at MIKE SA-;VR0LE- - • • ?T3IE^ CHEvft'OLET," BIrmingha'm, Ml 4 2735._____________________ 1965 OLDS HOLIDAY SEPAN, POW. er steering, brakes, automatic radio, heater, whitewalls, locally owned, $1750. RADEMACHER CHEVY-OLDS, Ir ........ M15, MA S-5071.- 1966 BONNEVILLE BROUGHAM Coupe. Alr-conditloning. w’——-AM-FM. Vinyl top. Lots of 7,704 actual miles. Just Priv! owiter. 602-522' Ask for Clint Miller. 1966 CATALINA WAGON, DOUBLE power, deluxe Interior, 12,000 mi., $2,550. 673-1716.___________________________ “Let’s choose up sides againT” 1964 PONTIAC TEMPEST LeMANS Sport Cou^, 4-^d,^bucket----- 1960 PONTIAC, GOOD CONDITION 1961 TEMPEST 4-DOOR. 1250. GOOD rubber, auto, transmission, rad'-heater, good transportation. Summit oft Oakland. FE 4-4013. OWNER. RED AND WHITE 1964 Catalin- ------------ terlor. Get "A BETTER DEAL" el; John McAuliffe Ferd 10 Oakland Ave, FE 5-4 You Don't Have to Give Away Your Present Car Here! We Allow Top Dollar for Good Clean Trade-Ins 1965 Dodge Dart hardtop, factory fresh, V$, I automatic, loaded with goodies, $$9 down, ASKING ONLY - I $1369 1964 Ford Convertible with a fire engini finish, 390 engine, automatic, er end really iherpi Be reedy tor spring with winter price on this unitl $69 down, ASKING ONLY $1369 5 MUSTANG GT HARDTOP, V8, Autobahn '60 PLYMOUTH WAGON . Grlmeldl Cars____900 5 S. Tsiegraph th of Miracle M E 0-4531 1965 FALCON SPRINT CONVERT!-ble, V8, 4-speed, radio, heatr-bucket seats, sunburst gold w black nylon top. Gold , bucket sea Really a beauty. "Only $1,288 f price," "Only $88 down," a "Oiii^ $40^,22^ per month. ^ ^ Gel '"'A BETTER DEAL" at: John McAuliffe Ford 630 Oakland A 1959 PLYMOUTH STATION WAGON, $695 BOB BORST LINCOLN-MERCURY ' 520 S. WOODWARD, BIRMINGHAM _________646»4538____ 1962 PONTIAC, BONNEVILLE, I door hfcrdtop, full power, no cai I needed. LUCKY AUTO I 1964 PONTIAC DOOR, has automatic transmission, radio and heater, whlte-wal Itires, power equip., full price $1295, only $49 down and weekr - HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. 464 S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM_Ml 4-751 760 PLYMOUTH, 9-PASSENGER -Power steering, brakes, V8, $150; “• 6^951. 1964 PLYMOUTH CONVERTIBLE VERY REASONABLE *65 Falcon Like New 2 Door .$1297 '65 Dodge Radio and Heater ..'$1297 '57 Pontiac Wagon ....... ...... '54 to '58, 5 Convertiblet, Cadillac, Plymouth .. ... .. Plenty of others and few trucks ECONOMY CARS 2335 Dixie Hwy. 1965 MUSTANG, V8 a^SPEED, . owner lithe car, $1,59$ full price, $100 down. LUCKY AUTO 1940 W. Wide Track Get 'A' BETTER DEAL" at: John McAuliffe Ford 630 Oakland Ave.______FE 5-4101 1966 Dodge Charger, V$, automatic, full teC' tory equipment, a real sharp unit, balance of S-year naw-car warranty, $169 down, ASKING ONLY $2269 1961 Ford ECONOLINE Van, extra good throughout. Ready to go to work tor you. No money down, ASKING ONLY $ 397 _ _ k unit tor youl Id ASKING ONLY $1569 1962 T-Bird 2-door hardtop with ; white TInish, black le ‘" ONLY 1962 Corvoir Coups with radio, he mafic and with no mone Wa are ASKING ONLY $69 down, ASKING $1169 Kessler-Hahn Chrysler-Ply mouth 963 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE CON-vertlble with automatic transmls- 1964 PLYMOUTH BELVEDERE 2 door with 6-cyl. automatic new-ca warranty, $995. Kessler-Hahn Chrysler-Plyiqouth 1966 FORD GALAXIE 500 2 DOOR HARDTOP . .... V8 engine, automatic *-- ion, radio and healer, u and power steering, .... tires, full price only SI99S, $49 down and weekly HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. 464 S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM _Ml 4-75( $ 587| SPARTAN DODGE 855 Oakland Ave. FE 8-4528 1966 Ford Galaxie 500 Hardtop 4-door, power steering, brakes, a tometic, air conditioning, Only $2495 BEATTIE "Your FORD DEALER Since 1930' On Dixie In Waterford at the double stoplight OR 3-1291 966 FORD GALAXIE 500 2-000 hardtop, V8, automatic, radio, he. Kessler’Hahn Chrysler-Plymouth in Dixie ~ Clarkston - MA 5*263 963 PONTIAC STAR CHIEF. BEST $1495 BIRMINGHAM CHRTJSLER-PLYMOUTH t964 PONTIAC TEMPEST 2-DOOR -------------1 transmission, $1,295. PRIVATE OWNER — 19 villa 2-door hardtop, p Ing and brakes, radio, I TEMPEST LEMANS 2-DOQR Kessler-Hahn SHOP THE "GOODWILL USED CAR" LOT FOR GENUINE VALUES PONTIAC RETAIL STORE : STAR CHIEF. BEST j j Dixie, welertord. FE L^JQ^Y AUTO 1061 CHEVY i NO ESTABLiSKgD CREDIT? Keego Pontia at 6E-7300. Iles!*^‘M r. 682-5225 or ,MI\ 4-1930. Kessler-Hahn Chrysler-Plymouth 966 TEMPEST CUSTOM WAGON, V8, stick- nnwer .teerlno. brakes. 332-4865. er steering. Positractlon. Many r extras. Has 12,000 ml. A real p carl Will sacrifica at $2,150. —■ 674-3301 after 6.________________ 1966 TEMPEST LeMANS, EXC. CON-ditlon, $2195, 673-5315, aP" ' Kessler-Hahn !. ROSE RAMBLER Lake, EM 3-4155.________________ 1964 RAMBLER CONVERTIBLE, $795 at MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET,' 4.}735, 1964 RAMBLER AMERICAN 6-CYL- Kessler-Hahn Chrysler-Plymouth '65 RAMBLER, V8, POWER. $1,680 1965 RAMBLER CLASSIC 2-OOOR Hardtop. V-8, Automatic, Radio, Heater, Power Steering, Power Brakes. Like new. $1495. VILLAGE Rambler, 666 s. woodward, Ml 6-390O.____________________ RAMBLER, 666 S. WOODWARD, BIRMINGHAM, Ml 6-3900. i RAMBLER AMERICAN .. $1,580 WHY BUY A USED CAR? NEW 1967 AMERICAN, $1,839 full price. We take anything In ,„-4F#de for $200 dowoMyrnent. ROSE RAMBLEROrePr41« Commerce Road, Union LalSr-' EM 3-4155. Tremen(dous Savings, Seeing Is Believing 9th BIRTHDAY SALE TODAY'S $1195 $PECIAl one Ilka It, no* Is your chance to save. Priced 1965 PONTIAC,''Cetallna 4 - Door Sedan that has elT'the equipment for easy and economical driving, save a lot today $1395 1965 FORD Cortina 4-Door^ Peau-tlful while with red leather bucket seats. Economy plus first class WW5 1963 BUICK LeSABRE , 2-Opor 1962 BUICK 4-Door Hardtop. Power ^Dteeringr power brakes, auto- 1964^ CHEVROLET Impala 9-Pas-sengeT Station Wagon. Hat reck on top, Ibwi^mlleage, I owner, has all fha goodies, only ona ^llk^e 1955 PONTIAC Sedan with lots of extras. Folks, this one Is way above average. Would make wonderful transportation $250 1962 PONTIAC Catalina Sedan. Power brakes, power steering, automatic transmission, 35,000 guaranteed actual miles and one owner $995 1965 PONTIAC Bonnevilia Convertible. Low mileage, 1 owtier and almost like .new. We call this one the black beauty. $2195 1966 PONTIAC, Catalina 2^1oor hardtop, power brakes end steering, automatic fransrnission. A 'Mmpany DEMO car, light aqua finish *“»5 1964 PONTIAC Catalina Convertible with beautiful platinum finish and sparkling black top. Buy now and save much $1595 1965 PONTIAC 4-Door Sedan. If has a solid white finish. Want to save lots of money? This Is your chance $I3»5 1964 CHE^Jmpala 4-Door. V-8, power brakes a^ steering, automatic, radio, heater. Look no further, this is it ... r,.... |1395 1965 CORVAIR Moilie, Corsa Con-j vertible. 4-speed transmission, radio, heater. A red and white 1 beauty ready to go $1395 1964 BUICK, Riviera, has a beautiful beige finish with gold leather bucket seats, lets go real first class now $2095 1963 CHEVROLET, Impala, 2-Dooh-. hardtop, automa^ trWsmIssion, and one ow'ner, like pew . . .$1295 mama 1963 BUICK Wildcat ^DDor Hardtop. Has a solid white finish with red leather Interior, bucket seats, consols. Let's go first class now. $1495 1959 PONTIAC 4-Door Hardtop. Here is wonderful transportation. Has power brakes and power steering. Here's your chapce to really savt $245 1961 BUICK Eleclre "225" 4-Door Hardtop. Full power. Let's go first class In this llke-n(w dream-boat $995 1964 CORVAIR Monza with automatic transmission, radio and 1 heater. This one It almost tike ' new inside and out $995 1965 PONTIAC GTO Convertible. Power steering and brakes, auto- treated extra nice $1995 1965 MUSTANG Hardtop. Beautiful white finish, red leather buckets. Only $1495 1965 CHEVROLET Impala Convertible. V-8, power steering, automatic, 14,000 actual miles. A { real sharp car for only .... $1895 1966 PONTIAC Bonneville Hardtop. Factory air, blue with a vinyl top. Look No More . $2995 1966 CHEVROLET Impala 2-Door Hardtop. Power brakes and steering, 327 V-8 engine, eutomefic, new car warranty 82395 1966 PONTIAC, Catalina 2 ■ door hardtop, power brakes and steering, automatic transmission, nice 1962 CHEVROLET Impala 2-Door Hardtof^. Nice gold finish and and out $895 1966 BUICK Skylark Gran Sport 2-Door Hardtop. 10,000 guaranteed actual miles, new car factory warranty. Only on# Ilka It $2495 Dick Phillips-Norihon DoVis—Tommy Thompson, Soles Mgr. PONTIAC-BUICK 651-5500 OPEN. MONDAY and THURSDAY TILL 9 P.M. 855 S. Rochester Rd., V2 Mile South of Downtown Rochester 4 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE STA-ires.'3^36^.‘' lent condition, i 964 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE. 4 dr. Viste. Blue with bik. Cordovi top. 320 W. Iroquois. PONTIAC CATALINA, t-DOOR, . 800. in front 4030 Dixie Hwv. OR 4-0411. 1965 PONTIAC Convertiblt Bonneville, with V8, autoiMtic, power steering, brakes. Only — HAUPT PONTIAC an N. Mein St. Clarkston THE NEW AUDETTE PONTIAC NOW SERVING Tr«y.-Pontlac-Bli WOULD YOU BELIEVE? | I CASH NEEDED-BANK RATES i ' Pontiac Catalina ...... $199 ...J Pontiac Catalina ...... $299 1960 Corvair coupe ......... $199 1961 Ford V-8 2 dr.............$199 1962 Ford V-8, 9 pass. wgn. . $299 1961 Pontiac 9 pass. wgn. ... $599 1956 Ford Pickup ............. $199 OPDYKE MOTORS 2230 Pontiac Rd. at Opdyke '< FE 8-9237_______________^ 8-9238 PONTIAC K60 (Jj^ALINA^ WA50N,I tires, Mechanically sound.” inel owner, $195. MA 6-7019. ! STAR AUTO SALES We finance. Credit no problem. All applications accepted. 1960 Pontiac ............... $297 1961 Comet ................. $297 1962 Falcon ................ .$397 1962 Chevrolet ............ $497 mMMMM mm ONE-STOP TRANSPORTATIOr'CENTER VALU-RATED USED CARS 2-YEAR WARRANTY 1965 PONTIAC Catalina 4-Door Sedan .. .$1995 Air Conditioning 1964 PONTIAC Catalina 2-Door Hardtop.$1495 Air Conditioning 1964 OLDS Vista Cruiser Wagon...$1695 Red Finish, Matching Interior 1965 OLDS Starfire Convertible .$2195 1964 OLDS'88'4-Door Hardtop.....$1495 1966 OLDS Luxury Sedan .... .... . $3295 1965 OLDS '88' 2-Door Hardtop .. .•.$1995 1964 PONTIAC Grand Prix 2-Door Hardtop ...$1595 MBMBM , 635 S. Woociward Ave. Birmingham 647-5111 —J, can't be told trum new, uniy $2188 tUll prIce, $88 down. $69.36 per month. "If only fakes a minute" to Gel "A BETTER DEAL" el: John McAuliffe Ford 9 Oakland Ave. FE 5-4101 Buy With Confidence - NEW - 1967 OLDS "88" Hardtop Coupe FULL FACTORY EQUIPMENT FULL PRICE 50,000 MILE OR 5 YEAR FACTORY WARRANTY. $2437 Asklfbr Leon (Goose) Robertson c klf^r 3 Mathews HODGHTENOlds OL 1-9761 Rochester -SHOP IN COMFORT IN OUR INDOOR SHOWROOM Choice of 12 1964 Cadillacs in a variety of body styles and colors. Most with power, and several with Air Conditioning. Priced from $2195. EXAMPLES: 1964 FLEETWOOD'60'Special ............................................. ^ Metallic green with black vinyl root. Full power and cllmafa control, and JpQVe 1964 DEVILLE Convertible .................... ......................... ^rrTT-o Full power, leather Interior, 1 careful owner. , t^aVe 1964 DEVILLE Sedon ........... ........................................ - Basildon grean with matching Intarlor, full power, i-way leafs, and air Lhn’VF^ conditioning. ^ ^ 1964 COUPE beville ................ ........................... . ... « This Is lime green with special leather Interior. Very low mileage end iKQVC^ real sharp. 1964 CALAIS; Coupe..................... ........................... Saddle bronze with power steering, power brakes end e-wye glass, -and JhQV© exceptionally sharp. 1964 COUPE Deville.....................”...................t........... equipped with full power, and runs and drives Ilka O)QV0 iffumw vOF.BIRMINGHAM V Ask For Rich Kroll 1350 NORTH WOODWARD PHONE Ml 4-193D QUALlhf USED CAR DEALER WARRANTY 25MONTHONALLt "OK" USED CARS 1966 CHEVY Impolo 2-Door Hardtop, V8, automatic, full power with air conditioning. $2495 1966 CHEVY Bel-Air 4-Door, V8, automatic, power steering, heater, radio, whitewalls. Only- $2145 1966 CORVAIR , Monza 2-Door, with outomotic, heater, radio, whitewalls, red finish. Only— $1795 1965 CHEVY Impolo 2-Door Hardtop, V8, automatic, power steering, heater, radio, whitewalls. $1795 1965 PONTIAC Cotolino 2-Door Hardtop, V8, outomotic, power steering, brokes, heater, radio, whitewalls light blue finish. $1795 1965 CHEVY Del Air 2-Door, V8, automatic, beater, radio, ^ whitewalls. Now Only- $1595 1965 CHEVY Pickup ’/2ton truck, 6 cyl, stick shift, rodio, heater, with fleetside body, color is red! Only- $14§5 1964 CHEVY Station Wagon, Bel-Air series, V8, automatic, heoter, radio, whitewajils. Only- $1445 a 1964 TEMPEST 2-Door, with V8, automatic, 326 engine, poyver steering, heater, radio, whitewalls. Only— $1445 1964 CHEVY % Ton Pickup, with 6 cyl. standard transmission, fleetside body and o red finish. Only— $1295 1964 CHEVY Bel-Air 2-Door, 6 cyl. automatic, heater, white- '^ walls. Only- $1095 1962 CHEVY Bel-Air Station Wogon, V8, automatic, heater, whitewalls. Now Only- $895 1962 FORD ^ . English, 2-Door, 4-Speed, red finish, matching interior. Now Only- ' $49^ 1960 CHEVY Stotion Wagon, 4-Door, 6 cyl. automatic, power steering, brakes, heater, radio, whitewalls. Only— $495 CRISSMAN CHEVROLET \ (OnYop .of South Hill) Rochester ':’\OL 1-7000 \ THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, MARCH 16, 1967 E—13 —Television Programs— Programs furnished by stations listed in this column are subject to change without notice (R) Rerun 6:00 (2) (4) News (1) Movie: “Vengeance Valley” (1951) Burt Lancaster, Robert Walker, Joanne Dru (R) (50) Superman (R) (56) Friendly Giant (R) 6:15 (56) Science Is Everywhere 6:30 (2) (4) News (9) Twilight Zone (R) , (50) Flintstones (R) 7:00 (2) Truth or Consequences (4) Michigan Outdoors (9) Rogues (R) (50) McHale’s Navy (R) (56) Experiment in Prog- 7:80 (2HB«liseum (4)Pr^t20 (7) Batman^x (50) Honeymooiiera (R) (56) Managers in Atetipn 8:00 (7) F Troop (9) Secret Agent (50) Periy Mason (R) (56) Musically Speaking 8:30 (2) My Three Sons (4) Circus (7) Bewitched (56) Great Decisions 9:00 (2) Movie: “Major Dundee” (1964) Charlton Heston, Richard Harris, Jim Hutton, James Cobum (R) (7)’ Love On a Rooftop (9) Horse Race (50) Movie: “In This Our Life” (1942) Bette Davis, Olivia de Havilland. George Brent, Dennis Morgaii (R) (56) Sunday Showcase 9:30 (4) Dragnet (7) That Girl 10:00 (4) Dean Martin (7) ABC Stage 67 (9) Telescope 10:30 (9) 20/20 11:00 (4) (7) (9) News (50) Alfred Hitchcock (R) 11:30 (4) Johnny Carson (7) Movie: “The Night Fighters” (1960)'Robert Mitchum, Anne Heywood, Dan O’Herlihy (R) (9) Nightcap 11:45 (2) Movies: 1. “Strike Me Deadly” ( 1963) Gary Clarke, Jeanne Riley, Steve Quinn; 2. “Neptune’s Daughter” (1949) Esther Williams, Red Skelton. (R) 12:30 (9) Window on the World 1:00 (4) Beat the Champ 1:15 (7) News 1:30 (4) News (7) Wanted—Dead or Alive (R) 2:45 (2) Highway Patrol (R) MORNING 6:15 (2) On the Farm Scene 6:20 (2) News - 6:30 (2) Sunrise Semester (4) Classroom (7) Three Stoc^es (R) 7:00 (2) Woodrow the Woodsman (4) Today (7) Morning Show 7:55 (9) Morgan’s Merry-Go-Round 8:00.(2) Captain Kangaroo (9) Romper Room 8:30 (7) Movie:v‘‘Luck of the Irish” (1948) Tyron Power, Anne Baxter (R) 9:00 (2) Merv Griffin (4) Living (9) Bonnie Pruddep Show I il , \ - TV Features ^ A Prenuptial Parody PROJECT 20, 7:30 p.m. (4) “End of the Trail, nar j rated by Walter Brennan, is a ciironicle of the American Plains Indians during the 1800s when their civilization was ^ reaching its highest level while, at the same time, the westward expansion of the white than was threatening to destroy their way of life. • CIRCUS, 8:30 p.m. (4) Roy Rogers and Dale Evans 1; host this 97th edition of the Ringling Bros, and Barnum I and Bailey circus. ABC STAGE 67, 10:00 p.m. (7) “I’m Getting Mar-tied” is a two-character musical satire starring Anne Bancroft and Dick Shawn, with book and lyrics by Betty Comden and Adolph Green and music by Jule Styne. The story parodies the fears and fantasies of a young women on the brink of matrimony. ' TELESCOPE, 10:00 p.m. (9) “The National Game” is a look ,at hockey, Canada’s national pastime. DEAN MARTIN, 10:^9 p.m. (4) Guests are Ella Fitzgerald, Edie Adams, Red Buttons and Dorn De Luise. (56) Rhyme Time 9:10 (56) All-Aboard for Reading 9:30 (9) People in Conflict (56) Numerically So 9:55 (4) News (56) Let’s Speak Spanish II 10:00 (4) Reach for the Stars (9) National Schools (50) Yoga for Health 10:10 (56) Numbers and Numerals 10:25 (4) News 10:30 (2) Beverly Hillbillies (R) (4) Concentration (7) Virginia Graham (9) Hercules (50) Peter Gunn (R) 10:35 ( 56) Science Is Everywhere 10:50 (56) Let’s Speak Danish I 11:00 (2) Andy Griffith (R) (4) Pat Boone (4) Supermarket Sweep (9) Mr. Dressup ' (50) Dickory Doc 11:05 (56) Art Lesson 11:25 (9) Tales of the lUver Bank 11:30 (2) Dick Van Dyke (R) (4) Hollywood Squares (7) Dating Game (9) Friendly .Giant 11:45 (9) Chez Helene 11:50 ( 56) Memo to Teachers AFTERNOON 12:00 (2) News (4) Jeopardy (7) Everybody’s Talking (9) Take 30 12:25 (2) News 12:30 (2) Search for Tomorrow (4) Eye Guess (7) Donna Reed (R) (9) Communicate (50) Movie: “Confidence Girl” (1952) Tom Conway, Hillary Brooke (R) 12:35 (56) Let’s Speak Spanish ! 12:45 (2) Guiding Light 12:50 (56) All Aboard for Reading 12:55 (4) News 1:00 (2) Love of Life (4) Match Game (7) Ben Casey (R) (9) Movie: “One Foot in NHeaven” (1941) Fredric M^h, Martha Scott, Beulal^Bondi, Gene Lockhart (R>- 1:10 (56) Science Is Everywhere 1:25 (2) News (4) Docotor’s House Call (56) Adventures in Science 1:30 (2) As the World Turns (4) Let’s Make a Deal 1:55 (4) News (56) American History 2:00 (2) Password (4) Days of Our Lives (7) Newlywed Game 2:20 (56) Numbers and Nt merals 2:30 (2) House Party (4) Doctors (7) Dream Girl (50) Love That Bob (R) 2:45 (56) Let’s Speak Spanish II 2:55 (7) News 3:00 (2) To Tell the Truth (4) Another World (7) General Hospital (50) Topper (R) 3:25 (2) (9) News 3:30 (2) Edge of Night (4) You Don’t Say! (7) Nurses (9) Swingin’ Time (50) Johnny Ginger 4:00 (2) Secret Storm (4) Bozo the Clown (7) Dark Shadows (56) Continental Comment 4:30 (2) Mike Douglas (7) Where the Action Is (9) Fun House (56) Spectrum 4:55 (4) Eliot’s Almanac 5:00 (4) George Pierrot (7) News (50) Alvin (R) (56) Recital Hall 5:30 (7) News (9) Cheyenne (R) (50) Little Rascals (R) (56) What’s New 5:55 (4) Carol Duvall Cash for Any Purpose to home owners, even if you have a first or second mortgage. Consolidate bills, bring payments up to date. S|op foreclosures. Leave your name, address and phone number yrith our 24 hour operator. ESSAY ENTERPRISES, Inc. Telephone 1-UN 1-7400 Africa Policeman Discovers Thieves Have No Honor DURBAN, South Africa UP)-„Robbers and murderers have no honor — or so a young policeman discovered here. ★ * ★ After transporting a group of African prisoners awaiting trial to court in an escape-prtx»f van, one man was found to be mis^ ing. I / * * * I / The young policeman /discovered him inside the/vaii, strangled to death and ((obbed of the small amount of,/Tnoney the prisoner was known to have carried. ★ ★ ★ The other prisoners professed innocpnce — although the man was alive when he boarded the jvanat the jail. WILSON Film Duo's Rqm^-NY Trip Sparks Romance Surmise By Earl wilson NEW YORK—Ui^ulp Andress and Jean-Paul Belmondo will lay ttwimselves open to a lot ot faisedr«yebrows publicity when they come to NY nekt week from Roiiie to attend the Cassius Clay-Zora Folley fight at the Gardeij and do publicity on the “Casino Royale” film. Though! they’ve been rumored breaking up (even though they’re not married), Jean-Paul recently intro-duced Ursula to his parents which she could only interpret as a good sign. ' ' ^ * ★ ★ There were few dry eyes at the Waldorf after Patricia Neal finished her touching speech (for the Bhain-Injured Children dinner), espe- , daily her tribute to her husband Roald Dahl|| who kept her working to recover: “My hus-band is a great man—I love Him!” . . . Pat said her doctor thought she’d conk out during an operation ’but Tennessee hillbillies don’t conk that easy!” Rod Steiger, who was there wearing his hair grey around the fringes, said he and B. W. Claire Bloom are selling their Brooklyn Heights home and moving to 90th and Park, Manhattan . . . Joan Crawford asked me to explain that she left the “Shrew” preem the other night to go to the powder room. “Please print that movie stars have to go to the powder room, too, will you?” pleaded Joan. ★ ★ ★ Julie Harris’ husband Manning Gurian says the rumors they’re divorcing are untrue. Julie’s going to Mexico not for a divorce but for a “Tarzan” movie. And he’s going to Hong Kong to arrange for manufacture of a toy to teach mathematics to preschool children. THE MIDNIGHT EARL . . . Rock Hudson-vs.-Mayor Lindsay in a male beauty contest would be a toughie . . . Rock tied up pedestrian traffic when he and Polly Bergen saw “I Do” . . . Burton & Liz’ll next do Public Eye,” together; they get twice as much . . . The Palace denied my Meg-and-Tony meeting-at-the-airport story. Pardon my English. The Palace was a bloody liar. ★ ★ ★ Secret Stuff: A glamorous older girl singer tiffed with her young beau. She was paying to get his choppers fixed. He wanted them capped and she balked . . . Eddie Fisher: “About marrying Connie Stevens, I’m still married (to Liz Taylor) and when I get my divorce I’ll get marrie^.” . . . George Hamilton didn’t even tell his press agents he was around town with that Johnson girl. TODAY’S BEST LAUGH: Comic Bob Melvin, who Uves near the approach path to Kennedy Airport, says, “It’s such a thriflvto sit in your living room—and see a ‘No Smoking’ sign go ohl” REMEMBERED QUOTE: “I’d a whole lot rather hear a fellow say ‘I Ven’ when he saw something than say ‘I saw’ when he ain’t se^ nuthin’.”—Pic Larmour. EARL’S PEARLS: A rock ’n’ roll singer had his hair trimified and the barW found a guitar. Veteran actor Lee X Cobb, who has a scene in women’ clothes in “In Like FlintX says wryly, “As a result I expect! to be asked to play Lady I^cBeth.” ... That’s earl, brother. (The Hall syndlcati, Inc.) I MNlrnbu. . 15 Varnish ingredient . 16Clothe.,(coU.) SS^tomiiL - _______ 54 European rivee 19 Hen piquet 85 20 Property item 86SwJii might 21 Pea container g Tear 23 Redact , 28 Diminutive of IFeaUval Ronald Z Breed of SI Talisman equinea 34 Withdraw from « Setae a lecond a federation time 88Haying cards, 4 Confounded 37VeryamaU **'•“' amounts 9 Rou^ paddles 9 Toward the ruler SSaeevelesa irment state, as garment 0 Mental st Upright standards fo RECREATION ROOMS He Didn't Know GAFFNEY, S.C. (AP)-A defendant in Recorder’s Court, charged with possession of illegal moonshine whisky which police found beside his bed, pleaded his case befbre City Judge H. R. Swink: “I went to sleep after work,” lie explained. “When I woke up, the officers were shaking me. There it was, beside the bed! I don’t know where it came jfrom.” The judge wasn’t impressed. $50 or 30 days,” he ruled. Nondrinkers" Bar CAMBERELY, England (UPI) Terrance Lyim is an understanding and friendly pub keeper. He has opened a “bar” for nondrinkers in his establishment. ★ ★ * 1 don’t drink or smoke myself,” he explained, “but often go into a pub just for the atmosphere. Now nondrinkers can find their atmosphere in my place.” Amnesty Firm Weighs Move LONDON (UPI) - Amnesty International, which seeks improved conditions for political prisoners throughout the world, may nfove its headquarters from London to Strasbourg or some other city for security Its president, lawyer Peter Benenson, said after the organization’s files were rifled — and the theif not caught — that the move was contemplated because London police “apparently not furnish proper protection. PLUMBING DISCOUNTS 13-Piece BATH set; I White or $CQ95 I I Colored Uv I I TOILERS »16»1 -I I FIREI^LACE Gas Logs I I ^—II—------------- I / 24" VANITY WITH TRIM 49“ ; EXTRA SPECIALS! i I Lguitdiy Troy ond Trim.$19.95 I ” SloioloH Stool Sinln'.$92.95 . I BolKTubi.Irtog....$20.00 up | I Showor Stoll with Trim.$35.95 . ■ lOOol.iOToof . I GoiHolWalorNtaltr $49i95 I !r iSovepLUMBiNel ; 841 Baldwin I FE 4-1516 or FE5-210d | . Open Mon., Sal. S;30 P.M. . ■ wad, a Fri. Eves. 'Ml S^P.M. ^ Authorized,^ RCA."ZEMIXI1 • ALCOA ALUMINUM SIDING • ALUMINUM AWNINGS • DORMERS • ALUMINUM STORM WINDOWS • FOUNDATIONS • MURAL STONE • GUTTERS • PLASTERING • FURNACES • GARAGES • ROOFING AND SIDING a HOUSE RASING • PORCHES AND ADDITIONS • KITCHENS • BATHROOMS REMODELED • PORCH RAILS • TILE FLOORS BIG BEAR Guaranteed Workmanship CONSTRUCTION COMPANY 739 Northferiy PONTIAC FE 3-7833 See Our Selection of New RC/^and ZENITH COLOR TVs Check Our Low Sale Prices on PORTABLE TVs Quality Color TV Seivice! AAember of NATESA CONDON’S RADIO & TV inWaitHuraa - FEMm — Raidio Programs- WJRC760) VyXYZn 270) CklWCSOO) WWJ(950) WCAkO 130) WPONH 460) WJBKd 500) WHFI-FM(94.7) WCAR. Newsa Joe Baca^ WJR< Bus. Barometer frOO->WPONa Newsa 9:00-WHF , Jack F 10:0»->WJRa Kaleidoscope n;0a-WWJ, News. Sports wjR, News, Sports. Music ;at^ 11:25-WCAIl, Ron Rose 11;30-WJBK, Consensus I2:00-WXYZ, All Night St life WJR, News, Sports, Music FRIDAY MORNING $:0»-WJR, Music Hall \ MM I News. Rooerta ' •---- Music, News \WJBK,’ News, Books, Edit TVCAR, News, Biil Oelieil VPON, News, Ariiftna West-' ern -WJBK, Bob Lee, TtOP-CKLW, News, WHFI, Almanac WPON, Bob Lawrence Show. News Bud Davies 7:30-WJBK, Sports t'OO-WJR, News, Sunnysida WJBK, News, Lee »:0«-WJR, News, Harris WHFI, Uncie Jay 9:I5-WWJ, Ask Neighbor WPON, News, Ben Johnson WJR, News, Music lltOO-WJR, News, Godfrey WJBK,, News, Eder, Music WWJ, News, Market, Music WCAR, News, Dave Lockhart WHFI, News, Boyle WPON, News, Ben Johnson CKLW, News, Dave Shafer liOO-WJR, News, Elliot Field WHFI, I ncore CKLW, Dave Shafer WWJ, News, Neighbor 3:04-WXYZ, Dave Prince Show ■WPON, News , Pete Ladd ' WWJ, News, Emphasis WJR, News, Linkletter 3;00-WCAR, News, Bacareile WJBK, News, Music, Sports THURS., FRI.; SAT. JUMBO CABINET SALE A. Steel Utility Ca|inet. 5 shelved, spice racks on doors, large botton compartment for pots and pans. White.* 66” 'high, 2-1” Wide, 14” deep...............J8.83 •Available In CopHitSIMl SHlMly Higher Prise B. Kitchen Base Cabinet. Sleek white* cabinet has hooks OO;, both doors, flush doors, semi-concealed hinges, chrome piills. 3^ high, 24” wide, 20” deep'...J8.8.3 •Vnilible in Coppsitona al Slifhtly Hiyhar Price C. Steel Wardrobe. Fini-hed in rich brown enamel, this roomy wardrobe has full hat shelf, tie rack, chrome pulls, 6:$” high,wide, 19” deep.............. j8.83 YOUR CHOICE 83 Charge It Discount Price ARE YOU LOOKING FOR A PUBLIC ADDRESS SYSTEM? MICROPHONES? AMPLIFIERS? ACCESSORIES? We have a varied end ample supply of everything it takes to complete your combo. All famous brands. and THE PRICE!! IT’S RIGHT! LIBERAL TaADE-INk, GLENWOOD PLAZA * North Perry Street Corner Glenwood -USED 20" Admiral $199S 17" Emerson' $2495 21" CBS $2995 -21" RCA 21" Westinghouse $39*5 21" Emerson .$39»s 21" Motorola $3995 21" Sentinel $3995 24" Motorola $4995 24" Emerson ~ ^499*. 30 DAY EXCHANQE PRIVILEGE FE 2-2257 WALTONTV 515 E. Walton Blvd.^ CORNER JOSLYN OPEN 9 to 6 BUY, SELL, TRADE - - - USE PONTIAC PRE§S WANT ADS! THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, MARCH 16, 1967 SPECTER OF WAR - A grim lookout for a makeshift laundry at an encampment of the 1st Cavalry Division is this skull, as a soldier hangs up his clothes. Births TTie following is a list of recent Pontiac area births as recorded at the Oakland County Clerk’s Office (by name of father): I O'Berrv, 5850 Prentice s J. Ryan JR., 932 Emerson - 5 C. Aultreng, Drayton Plain! le J. Luft, 102 South Marshall RIcha Sttvan D. ”t Cornellls VanTuyl, Clar James W. Allen, 1335 A Clayton Daniels, Aburn Darwin D. Donaldson, r ' V. Fenton, Drat Larry E. Fisher, 220 West Longfellow J. W. Long, 509 Bloomfield Billy W. McCain, 232 West Columbia Orville L. McDonald, Clarkston Ules P. Murphy, 59 South Anderson Saturnino Rodriguez, 32 Clark Moses E. Ellout, 195 Wall Roger A. Fast. Waterford Jack P. Gillespie, 394 Bay Wayne^A.^Saul5,^Ke^o^Harbor ^ ^ " ■ ' ■ I. Baxter, Drayton Plains IS A. Conwav; Li lid I. Parry, Drayton Plain s •5 J. Arterburn, Union Lake ‘II Taylor, 149 North Avery P. Foraker, 1065 VInewood Louis Kogan, 900 East Boulevard I Gary L. Alex, Walled Lake John P. Raffleld, Clarkston WendVil E.' Whflel'un'lon"Lake" John R. Anderson, Drayton Plains C. J. Brock, Farmington Donald G. Erskine, 34 Wisner Charelwp. Gamalski, Walled Lake Robert L. Wilson, 9219 Buckingham Marvin G. LaFond, 2955 Keely Gary R. Madlll, 273 North Cass Tony Parlse, 985 Kettering ■— “ Bergel, Bloomfield Hills L. Bonilla, Birmingham pwii**a' Ralph^J.’ScSlT “-----el P. Sli Hack, 1141 Stanit -5, Drayton Plain, txander, 544 South Jt— „a,„c3 n. Amell, 3145 Beachum Leland C. Coffey, Bloomfield Hills Richard C. Egan, Ortonvllie Glenn G. Gaeth, Union Lake Roy D. Hendrix, Lake Orion Wendell. R. Hammons, Farmingtor Larry J. Stecco, Beverly Hills Carl E. Code Jr., Utica Louis Conti, 7175 Howell Donald E. Cross, Holly Oyde E.^Ed^moih Oxford Robert B. Gonzales, 32S Judson Roger E. Grimm, 94'/> South Andet William T. Heldrelh, 309 Clifford Duane E. Hotchkiss, Lake Orion Jimmy A. Lane, 2558 Flintridge William D. Lintz Jr., Milford James C. Rule, Lake Orion William A. Chandler, Oxford Truman K. Ward, 585 Lowell Ronald V. Baker Jr., Rochester Noah W. Eldrdge, Union Lake James D. Baird, 7698 Pleasant Mai Hyman P. Berkowitz, 59 South * Anthony B, Castle] Walled Lake David W. Karl, Dtaylon Plains James G. Lawrence, Waterford Floyd K. Crosley, 6351 Elizabeth L Harold O. James, 180 West Hopkins Howard Queen, 211 Voorheis Herman J. Grelt Jr., Orchard Lake Daniel L. Jenks, Clarkston .Wesley V. Papple, Union Lake Franklin D. Blevins, 218 Chandler Douglas W. Heckert, 192 Clifford Lyle 0. Stiner, Holly Bruce R. Laverdlere, 448 Kenilworth R^be t'c*’^™l*tf'W*t”°lS* CREEPY FEEUNG - All wrapped up in his work is Earl Satterfield, a member of the staff of the Science Center at St. Petersburg, Fla. ppe of Eat-l's favorite snakes i!s. this South American boa constrictor, shown here giving him a slithering caress. "Sali?fiiclion guaranteed or voiir nionev l.iaek SEARS Don iiloHii Pontiac IMionc I' I, ,i- 1 I , coum IMMINULIIORIHOUIJUID COUNTY MARCH 17,18,19 HOME & SPORTS SHOW sss: HH Sponspred hy WATERFeRD JAYCEES TWO THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, 5IARCH 16, 1967 Stage-Evans Equipment 2461—Warden Cycle 2 k »-Klinglehut 4 & 5—Keego Pontiac Sales 6—CIcssic Modernization "t—Gidley Electric t—1st Federal-Girl Scout Council t & 10—Michigan Bell Telephone 11— Equitable Life Insurance 12— Niagara Massage of Detroit 13 & ll^rBill Petrusha & Son AppUAsce IS—Richard Dairy IS—Richard Dairy lS-C(donial Fumuiture 17 k IS—Richman Brother Sew-ing It k SS^-Clty Soft Water Service n k 22xNu Sash Corp. 23—Ritter’s Markets k 2t-See Above ^ 2S—Grlnnell Music-Sotres ' SS-Vooley Deft Water Service . 27 -Miracle Atambnim K-JXw Swudia Insurance * 2t—Benaon Lundier Bute Bank n ft XS-BsTCieiMttiatlon 3S-Jadc Hagen Stnras SS-^1 Carpet 35- Uiitt^ Usiing Sacvicf 36— White Motor Salaa 37r-Krump be. 38-^ltsBerald Plumbing 3t-Dawson Hardware .. 4S-BftG’Floor Tile 41—Pav Way Crap. ' 42 ft 43—Hampton Electric 44— Marcel Construction 45— Waterford Jaycees 46— ft 47-Wateifard Fuel 4S—Waterford Jaycce Auxiliary 4t- 50, SI ft S2—Roy’s Motorcycle Sales ft Service Hallway A—Alsar Aluminuni Waterford Realty Room A — Community Services Disbiay Bdr ^■:v 4d 47 46i 43^ 44 49 50 F Vi 42 Com// ■^o/??eAS/ix>rAs' Sk>fV 37 3t UP 36 Jr. M / 4 2/ "■‘yt. 20 /9 •im ■*' 73 //. 70 70^ J/ 72 73 74 73^ 2 3 4 3 6 7 6 - Z5 \ HOME OF FINEST BRAND NMAES 108 N. SAGINAW-FE 3-7114 Now! for the Luxury of TWO Ovens RELAX, RELY on FINESSE by At A Special Low, Low Price ★ FREE INSTALLATION ★ FREE DEUVERY ★ FREE 1-YEAR WARRANTY ★ FREE 1-YEAR SERVICE This two'-oven style gas range has the luxury look of the built-in plus ftli these deluxe features: • Timer Clock • Fiberglos Iri-swldtlort • Oven Light in Both OvenI • f^ftrceloln Broiler • Por* cetoih Burner Box • Low BTU Flash Tube Ignition • Polished Burner Cops • Spill-Free Top and Many More. OPEN MONDAY and FRIDAY NIGHTS Until 9 P.M. $247 PERSON-TO-PERSON CREDIT e No Down Payment iAiL|i e 90 Days Same as Cash * Dp to 36 Months to Pay '» ^ 7' »\ V« »♦ v» •i THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, MARCH 16, 19 THREE DONT WAIT.. ACT NOW... Only The Look Is Expensive! FAMILY ROOMS CUSTOM BUILT GARAGES Add Value and Beauty To Your Home No Job Too Big or Too Small!!! A BIG BEAR CUSTOMER WILL BE SATISFIEB CONSTRUCTION COMPANY • 739 North Perry - PONTIAC Operators on Duty 24 Hours Daily FE 3-7833 FOUK THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, MARCH 16, 1967 ^ SUMMER RE9TREAT—Vacations ho longer come but once a year. Most of us like a short break both sununer and,winter, plus as many treekrads a$ we can manage. If you’re loolEing for an A-frame cabin for A.-1 vacations, you’ll find the design shown* here to be comfwtable And inexpeoMps, It is a holiday home that jou can prorobly buQd: yourself, w if yoB’like, you can call on a professional to help hi the first stages. After that, it’s ea^! r Protection UFE INSURANCE liortme Life • • • Savina Plan Batirament Income... tidaealion AUTO INSURANCE Safa Driven... Cancelled FIRE INSURANCE RnaineM Ownen* Package Borne Ownen’ Package OTHER FORMS Sicknem and Accident... Bonda Boaia • • • Hoapitalization Waterfro/it Property Up Norfl}^ Sportsmen purchas^ sizable t If you are looking water- front property, head north. Thii is the advice given by Fory A. Risberg, Hayward, Wis., trealtw wbo speciaUzes in recreatioiud real estate, in an article written for the bulletin of thd National Institute of Beal Estate BrdceiA ^ RUliitrg toys: “East, ar sonfll In the United Sj there are very few lots available for /less titan X ■ “Hie cost Is^ far greater in any numb^rof places. Only in northern/regions, where there are lakes, can the average man hove io find a lake shore lot ^vithih his means.’’ People used to think our forests were inexhaustible, but learned otherwise. Similarly, Risberg said, lake frontages will prove totally insufficient to meet the denuuids of the near future. “Not one more foot of nat-nral lake shwe exists than tiiere was a thousand years age.:.. fMan can build flowages, creating new lakes, but the opportunities are lifted. Further, man-made lakes seldom compare Aith the natural ones.’’ Risherg forecast an increasing interest on the part of U. S. residents in Canadian lakes, despite the distance from most of our. urban coitus, the chilly swiimning waters and the possible complications in foreign ownership. Describing th e 'phase through which all waterfront property Seems to go, regardless of its locatiMi, the antiior pctoted but tiut at first, lacking roads '^and utilities, the supply of land is greater than demand. acreages at iaricps that later se^ ridiculously low. Inexpensive fMiing hunting camps predenatoi Gradpdlly, amenities are added. ^Ricreasing demand for a ted supply of waterfr