Th0 W0ath0r U.I. WMHnr kartM rcracaM Cloudy VOL. 123 NO. 13 THE PONTIAC PRESS ONE COUffi Home Edition ★ ★ ★ ★ PONTIAC, MICHIGAN. MONDAY. FEBRUARY 22. 1965 —36 PAGES Survives Slide KETCHIKAN, Alaska (^Einar MjrllyJa Is partly frozen, —but alive. . He lived for 79 hours under an avalanche of snow and crushed buildings at the devastated Granduc mining camp in northwest British Columbia. A Finnish contraction worker in his 31s, Myllyla is one of 139 miners who survived Thursday’s giant slide off Le Due Glacier near the Canadian-Alaska border. He was pulled from the' ruins of a bunkhouse by rescuers yesterday afternoon, then hospitalized at Ketchikan. He was reported partly frozen and in serious condition. Searchers continued io probe acres of ice and snow | on the precarious mountainside for more men. So far 14 i bodies have been rfcovered. At least 13 are missing. [ * * * I Continuing heavy snowfall, darkness and threat of more | slides hampered tired rescue crews. The finding of Myllyla | renewed hopes that still more might be found alive. USING HAND TOOLS ' Rescuers used ham w^d trigger another slide as they continu^ sifting throUg(i the devastation around the clock. S«i^veral other miners were dug out alive earlier from undtf the tons of ke, snow an3 debris<—saved only by pocket^ of air buried with them. About 49 were rescued Thidoday from ■ tnm^i the-.minecs- fear Efforts to Avenge Malcolm X were boring nntkr the glacier for Granduc’s low-grade copper ore. \ A bachelor from Winnipeg, Map., Myllyla was saved by an air pocket in the bqld. wet darkness. Doctors here said th^ are amazed Myllyla could survive for more than thi^days. He was weak and emaciated. Parts of his arms ond legs were frozen, but he had no broken bones. Romney: Position Firmer After Halting Tax Revolt I LANSING W*t—Gov. George Romney put his future I and that of the state Republican party on the line in a brief speech demanding support for his fiscal reform j position at the party convention over the weekend. Romney demanded and helped bring about defeat piopused lesolution which called for a reieren-. . dum before the state LI Impasse Cohmmed by Romney, Hatcher GOP Names 7 in County to Committee Seven Oaktand County Republicans were named to the State Central Committee at the GOP State Convention in Lans-yesterday.-------------------— volt strengthened support for his position ’on tax revision. “The development clearly threw support behind my efforts to seenre tax reforms now,” Romney told a news conference. “They show that I have the support of the Republican party. In fact, my position is stronger as a re- sult.” Elected to the 76-member committee from the 18th Con- The resolution was proposed , _ , gressional District were Mrs. by the 14th District, h^ed by HOS AQr6©Cl tO otSp UOWn James F. Carey, 2691 Bin- conservative Richard Durant, ______________________________________________________________ brooke, Troy, secretary of the an old Romney foe. district; aiyd Robert Flint, 1577 It appeared to have strong Island, Bloomfield Hills. 65th support, but was defeated by a Representative District director, roll call vote after Romney's speed The spee^and a fast maneuver by outgoing State Chairman Arthur Elliott turned back the uen. i^guyen luiaiiii luuay as h- imcaicucu iw . _ ■ . - •■evolt. tried to carry through its ouster in the Dalat arCa 200 mileS quarters building and drew up Elliott, replaced.at the con- of the armed forces chief and northeast of Saigon. LANSING (A>V-G0V George Romney and Univ\ Le^^,'^ MewaJf'Ridge, ®a sity of Michigan President Harlan Hatcher confirmed member of the County gop today their impasse over how the state’s higher edu- Executive Committee; and caUonsystemshould'be expanded. ^ Hatclier told Romney at a IW-hour mating that ......................... __ ................... _ University of Michigan will go ahead with plans to served on the central commit- ventionby.Mrs.Qly Peterson, get him out of the country. NEW ACTIVITY expand its Flint campus to four years this fall and tee held off a storm of protest Three members of the armed Romnev said such basic _ * , *, * „ ‘‘‘”“8'' j • • u 1 j 1- J Those elected trom the 19th a motion to suspend debate on decisions should be made congressional District were a statewide income tax and by a central authority. Howard Altman, 61 S. Holcomb, bring Sen. George Murphy, The basic question, the gover- Independence Township, town- R-Calif., to the speaker’s nor told newsmen afterward, is clerk; and Jioihil. Cart- rostrum, who should make decisions of wright, 7119 N. Tratham, .West i. university boards and contununi- township director. \ ties, or the legislative with ^« ^ *, * * \ embatUed delegates and bought . . m !.• advice of the Board of Educa- Mrs. Charles E. Haynes, 33475 \, A 4-year-old Shelby Township governor and governing Leisure, Farmington Township, “ ’ ... boy was killed early yesterday boards.” past secretary of the County when the car in which he was y Michigan and GOF; and Mrs. Marion Donald- riding collided with a New York _____________ . gram without central authoriza- also named. (Continued on Page 2, Col. 1) future. hind barricades at the Saigon tion. “then there is no reason Bullets Riddle Ex-Muslim at NY Gathering Man Is Charged in Slaying; No Reporf of Black Notionalisf Ties NEW YORK m — Police in New York and Chicago kept wary guard today against anv effort to avenge the assassination of Malcolm X, fiery counselor,of violence in the Negro civil rights movement. The rebel Black Muslim, who broke from the parent group to form his own ^t, was shot down by conspirators here yesterday as he stepped forward to address a meeting of his followers. Police seized a young Negro man, wounded in the kg during the disorder caused by the slaying, and charged him with homkide. The FBI identified the man as Talmadge Hayer, 22, alias Thomas Hayer, whose last SAIGON, Viet Nam (AP) - One report said Brig. Gen. airport. The airport was re- address was in Paterson, South Viet Nam’s new' junta ne- Nguyen Chanh Thi, impatient opened to traffic at dawn, but at j gotiated long distance with Lt. with Khanh’s stalling, has noon troops loaded antiaircraft ‘ ‘ * * * Cx, Ngwen Khanh Mda, a, it tlrejfnrt ,•» I*'*™ ” ^illaas rBlas at wlraKea to ?" the fieUi, Indicating that the ere apparent outgrowth of the 15. sis was not over. , , r New military activity around _________ FORDS LEAVE FOR SKHNG, - Henry Ford II and his bride of three days, the former Mrs. Maria Cristina Vettore Austin, board a plane at the London Airport today for Zurich. Switzerland. The newlyweds plan to spend a skiing honeymoon at St. Moritz. (Earlier story, Page 13.). Viet Junto Deals With Khonh Car Hits Train; Boy„4, Dies “I just felt that we had kept , the senator waiting too long,” forces council were reported back from Dalat where they Saigon Airport kept tension up. have been dickering with the Unconfirmed reports former strong man. — ~ There was speculation that they offerod Khanh a post abroad to get him to agree to leave South Viet Nam. -Military leaders in Saigon bad ___ ___ announced that Khanh had gen. Nguyen Cao Ky, were agreed to step down but said contending for power, later he had asked to meet with , . a full session of the armed The military leaders con--te . discuss his ferred lfoyighnut the night be-... See Story, Page 23 culated that the “Yonng Turk” generals who toppled Khanh had already begun squabbling. One report said the 1st Corps c 0 m m a n (Fe r. Brig. Gen. Nguyen Chanh Thi, and the air force commander, Brfg. British to Ease Import Surtax month feud between Malcolm X and the Black Muslims headed by Elijah Muhaipmad in Chicago. NO REPORT Police, however, did not re-Announcement Made port any evidence of a link between the assassins and Mu-by Labor Spokesmen hammad’s faithful. train in Avon Township. Dead on arrival at St.^ Joseph Mercy Hospital was Robert D. Fellows Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Oakland Highway Toll in '65 23 why Michigan State can't add a medical school o r Western Mkhigan an engineering sehooT ' or community colleges decide they want to go to four years.” The controversy flar^ last week when Romney warned the schools to step carefully into LONDON W - The British government today cut from 15 to 10 per cent Its controversial ^bert D. Fellows of 52726 expansion or they might find themselves under stricter controls, Hatcher fired back that Michigan was going ahead with its Flint operation. U. of M. Pyof Brookfield. State Police at the Warren Post said the car, driven by the boy’s father, hit the second and third cars of the northbound NYQ train at Dequindre Road, near Yates Cider Mill, at about 1:4S a.m. Fellows told police he didn’t - see the train nor hear fta whis- /^0f (JSGS fO The boy’s parents and a> Pay '64 Tax year-old brother, Alan, were ' treated and released at St. Jo- ^^N ARBOR, Mich., (AP) -seph Mercy Hospital. Because “Much of my tax mon- ey is going to armaments which threaten the world and provide no security for this country or my family,” a University test by not paying the balance of his 1964 income lax. In a letter accompanying his 1964 tax return. Dr. Johan W. Eliot wrote: “I stand ready to face prison or whatever other penalties may come from Hits matter,' having determined in prayerful counsel with my in Today'i Press details were posted ontside Muhammad’s three-story bouse and Mosque of Islam No. 2 in the wake of nncon- ^ mp^t surcharge, effective April 27. The announcement was made in the House of Commons by bers of Makolm’s Afro-Amer-kan Union had departed from New York on separate jnis- Chancellor of the 'Exchequer ,j„„g ^ revenge. James Callaghan. A similar announcement was officers walked the streets, on made in Geneva by Econom- guard agamst any new violence, ks Minister George Brown to The murder came exactly a Britain’s trading partner In ^continued on Page 2, Col. 3) the European Free Trade ' ___________ Assn. (EFTA). --------- “We have now decided that enough progress is being made Cfrnln F\/ln^ni to enable us to reduce the OirUin LYlUCrit in Detroit Talk to Followers DETROIT IM — The strain of leadership in a controversial WHERE IS EV^YBODY? - Last July the Press photographer volunteered to go jet a ^1^ weather” shot le new'Slbney TTfeeTT^tropoITtan Park. He wasn’t so eager to return to the same spot last week. We can’t imagine why. After all, that cement umbrella is still providing lust as much 5hade. Jt .appears-that the Woter Wonderland is more popular than the Winter Wonderland. But be of good cheer! Spring is just 27 days away, according to our calendar. Ulbrieht ' iE. Garmany iMdar aafla Cairo today - PAGE ^Gyn Gap' ' _ . Shlpil «i» back Ifirkw landlngt — PAGII. tourism coarse together to resist the evil that this great country of ours is doing.” Eliot, an a^istant professor in the university’s School of Public Health, and his wife, J'rances-, are the parents of five children. Eliot, a Quaker, said his decision to protest was made after the receipt raids by U%S. planes j on North Viet Nam. I He added, however, that “Though the air raids triggered my decision, my prot^t is not ^directed sokiy at the situation in Viet Nann, which is only symptpmptic of a foreign polky based <1^ threats.” The members of the association — Europe’s “outer seven” — have complained about the surcharge, installed by the Labor government last fall to cut cause was evident when Mai-imports and reduce the trade colm X spoke to a small, 1>at defkit. ardent group of followers in De- Edward Heath, Conservative tmif a wt>ok hefore hi« death spokesman orTfinancial affairs. The 38-year-old Negro black asked why the reduction was nationalist leader was shot to being delayed untn April. death at a rally before 500 of He said it gave a clear indi- his militant foUowers in New* cation to importers that if they York yesterday, held up siupments lor two ^ months, their duties would be u^j^oit for a speech at Ford lower — and a rush of imports ni« Y o r would'follow. Tilt leduclluii, h« home had been IxMnbed that said, i mise.” “an unhappy compro- morning. (Hb salvaged a g^ay suit for the spcccfa. Mercury Will Cling Near Zero Tonight address which was a depar^re from his normally articulate forensic manner. folittwers, about K per cent Negro, he condemned Negro reliance on nonv iolent methods to win their fi|^t for cqanllty. There was something for the “The Klan goes through the _________• Better check your car’s antifreeze and gas tank if you want a sure start tomorrow morning, Ku Klux Klan as well, tonight’s temperatures are due to hover between 4 below and 6^ve country frightening black peo- Tuesday will find the ther- , ,. ^ ** m^eter climbing to 22 to 28. oT^^aS^ vio- on^Se^aT knee Iwm the Kto and. white. inu, 9 Rv councils. Wo shouU de- J iS '■»' ««*-“■' «•“ coaxed the mercury to 8. (Continued on Page 3, Col. 6) ''1 '•r THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1965 Supervisors to Eye Board Soviet Arms Are en Route The Oakland County Bg||fd of Supervisors win face a crowded agenda when it convenes at a.m. tomorrow fdr its regular February meeting. -Jk_ tien is the formation of a board of institutions. Missiles, Jets Said Going to Hanoi Rdds One of the more important items coming up for board ac- State GOP Puts Down Tax Revolt MOSCOW (OTB - Diplomatic sources said yesterday Soviet ground-to-air missiles, jet fighter planes and technical advisers are en route to Communist North Viet Nam to defend against any new retaliatory air strikes by the United States. Birmingham Area, News May Have Decked L6t Ready f^r Yule Parking BIRMINGHAM - Shoppers driving to the dowAIbwn Birmingham area could be using a decked parking structure during this year’s Christmas rush season, according to City Manager. R. S. Kenning. The administratoc predicts the structure could be available by Dec. 1 if work proceeds without a snag. He will recommend to the City Commission tonight that O’Dell, Hewlett and Lucken-bach Associates be retained to design the bnilding. .He noted today that hlS original offer to the dty was made almost five years ago. MATERIAL COST His services would have been free, but the cost of materials for the proposed sculpture and reflecting p^ was estimated at $50,000. Prior to Birmingham’s cen-will BViggOfft tM I teimtei celeheatfaw last year, the City Commission agreed ’The Birmingham architectural firm, Kenning notes, designed parking structures at the University of MI c h i g a n, Wayne State University and Ann Artor. show of hands showed the convention nearly equally divided over a resolution amendipent calling for a statewide referendum before any inconne tax could be miacted. After Morphy’s and Romney’s speeches, the move was voted down, 1,27$ to 23$. Although his renuu-ks appar- by majority vote. Also in connection with the transfer of smne 7S TB patients into the Medical Care Facility will be fi recommendation that a lilllMIOQ remodeling project be authorized to comply with State Health Department regulations for the combined faculty. ‘ ' MOON’S SURFACE — This is one of more than 7,000 pictures of the moon made by spacecraft Ranger 8 and released by Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) in Pasadena, Calif. JPL scientists said Uie photo was nutde from an altitude of 15| miles, 2 minutes and IS seconds before impact. The report was based on accounts received from persons who arrived in Saigon from Hanoi. engineers at McWilUam and Kecfconen be engaged as structural consultants. SUBMIT PROPOSAL The manager wUl recommend Hiat-the immediate problem, MurjUiy warned the Republicans “stop intramural flghting; It’s a luxury we can’t afford." Warned Romn^ in his impromptu speech; “If this amendment is adopted you can kiss goodby to the future of the Republican Party in this state...it would cut the ground right out from under TO DELAY REFORM Such a decision, he said would delay fiscal reform untU after November M66. “We would put ourselves in n of taking fte blame Tw whatever problems may arise as a result of not getting tax reform before IM," be told the nearly 3,IM delegates and alternates. Diemoa^ adopted" a "r^u-tion favoring immediate fiscal reform and an income tax at their state convention in Grand Rapids a week earlier. RoronQT warned that delay erf fiscal reform would make the state run the “risk of being plunged right back into the very type of financial difiiculty that caused us to lose our reputation in 1958 and 1959.” A reconunendation to award a $39,650 contract for remodeling of the social welfare and bureau of social aid offices to Bundy Construction Co. of Pontiac will also be presented by the ways and means conunittee. SEVERAL RECOMMENDATIONS TTie county legislative committee is scheduled to make several recommendations to the board regarding the county’s 1965 legislative program. Included will be a request to the State Boating Control Committee for a public hearing on legislation to control the use of alcoholic beverages IpTboats on Oakland County PASADENA, Calif. (AP) -The first man on the moon should walk softly and carry a big stick. So says the head of a scientific team studying more than 7,-000 pictures beamed to earth, early Saturday in the final 23' minutes before the Ranger 8 spacecraft crashed into the face of the moon. Dr. Gerard P. Kuiper; chief of the five-man analysis team, said the photographic bonanza indicates the lunar surface may be a froth of dust and fragile lava that might hide dangerous tunnels and caverns. A special committee on traffic safety will recommend that a permanent county traffic safety study and make recommendations oi; the county’s traffic problem. ’The County Department of Public Works will present"reso-lutions on a proposed water supply system for Pontiac Township and the establishment of the Wixom and Milford sewage disposal systems as couiity systems. The Weather PuH U.S. Weatber Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Low tonight between 4 below nnd 6 above. Tuesday Increasing cloudiness and not as cold. Higbs 22 to 28. Northwesterly winds 15 to 25 miles diminishing today and tonight. Southeasterly winds Tuesday, increasing to 18 to 20 miles. Wednesday’s outlook, cloudy with snow. n rites Tutedey at 1:51 a.tri. SWprp^r la I (a* rtceiOeS Pi Hiphnt temperelure , Lowest tem^eture M«n tvnpareture . Sunny P Lasmt Tempareturet TMs Oata la n Yaan -I] Kanaat City M 15 I Milwaukee M -I n Plttsburpn 47 I Sell Lake C. 51 Moon Explorer May Face Hidd^ Wsks, Photos Show ^Tr^TvTdenr in Detroit Talk “This could be very tricky and treacherous stuff,’’ said Kuiper, of the University of Arizona. “Many parts of the moon might be hard enough to support considerable weight, but an explorer could not assume that he would be safe everywhere. LONG POLES “It may be that the first astronauts would be wise to carry long poles to probe the surface ahead of them to be sure it would hold their weight.” As with layed last July 31 by Ranger 7, the five men disagreed about what the new, high-quality photos showed, but agreed that they were not sunx-is^. Fear Reprisal for Slaying (Continued From Page One) week after Malcolm X and his family were driven from their residwee in Queens by firebombs. . BEING EVICTED He was being evicted from the dwelling which was purchased by Black Muslim donations before his break with Muhammad. For months, Malcolm had spoken of a conspiracy against his life and he reportedly planned to name his assassins at the meeting yesterday. But the blast from shotguns and pistols cut him down after The Kennedy remark ostensibly was the cause of the split between Malcolm X and Mohammad. But many observers believed the cause was Malcolm's desire to seize power and that Muhammad used the “chickens” re- ____mark, as an excuse to oust tus New Yortt lieutenant! Tbe feud divided even members of Malcolip’s own family. ACTIVE MUSUMS Two brothers, active Bteck Mostiffis Th Graind Rapids and Detroit, could not be reached for romment. Malcolm )iad started to address a gathering of about 500 followers and sympathizers, when a commotion, apparently Idanned. b^e out m therear^^e ^^rface - which he the second-floor ballroom. It drew his t^odyguards in the di- rection of^ disorder. Under the cloak of confusion, three men with revolvers and a sawed-off shotgun raced down the aisles, pumping shots into Malcolm’s chest. SHOTGUN Police Capt. Paul Glaser said Hayer shot Malcolm X -with a shortened, double-barreled shot- 11 him. Hayer and two spectators were wounded in a wild melee that followed. three words: “Brothers ^anrf -g^ Two pistols also were fired Tsttep team member, said he sisters.’’ The man who .advised Negroes to form rifle dubs to fight the “devil white man” for civil rights, to use “ballots or bullets” apparently was dead before his body hit the floor. CAUSE OF SPUT It was he who had spoken of the assassination of President John F. Kennedy as a case of the “chickens coming home to roost.’’ Hayer, with a pistol wound in a leg, was held in the prison ward of Bellevue Hospital. Police said Hayer was shot by Reuben Francis, 33, a Negro identified by police as Malcolm’s secretary and bodyguard. TWO CHARGES Francis was arrested on charges of felonious assault and illegal pobession of a pistol. TTie insect-shaped Ranger 8’s six television cameras returned sharp close-ups of lunar mountains and plains in the final minutes of its death plunge into the flat, broad, dusty Sea of Tranquillity, 15 milps fn»n its original target. Its impact point was 1,000 miles east (rf where Ranger 7 crashed in the Mare Cognitum. Kldpef said he saw evidence" that much of the Snoon’s surface is covered with three to six feet of look, lava-like material, similar to tunnel-coursed, cavern-marked lava areas on Ha-waiT Hp surmised that the material is volcanic overflow, a thin chist of solidified foam. FOAMY LAVA But Ewen A. Whitaker, Kuip- er's associate at Arizona, .sU. also believes is foamy lava would hold the weight of soft-landing manned spacecraft. Dr. Harold Urey of the University of California at La JoUa said the lunar surface may be blanketed by 50 to 60 feet of dust. Several craters of that depth, he said, showed at their bottoms a “whitish button” which may be the moon's solid core beneath the dust. Dr. Eugene Shoemaker, an- doesn’t believe pictures cart reveal the surface's strength but added that the photos did show the surfaces of the seas where Rangers 7 and 8 crashed to be “substantially the same.” The team will continue studying the giant photographic harvest for nmnths ^ well beyond the scheduled launching of Ran-in mid-March. Blaze Sweeps Apartment of Cassius Clay (Continued From Page One) upon anybody to be violent with- out a cause.” LANGUAGE OF FEAR “The black man is justified in standing up and defending himself. The Klans spe^s the language of fear. It is time we started learning a language the Klan will understand so that when they come up on our doorstep they’ll get the point. “Tt’s your duty and ours to organize ourselves. We o n I y need vigorous action in self-defense.” W declined Id talk with reporters afterwards. A s p o k e s-man said he was under heavy sedation. submit a proposai covering the schematic study stage and complete design of a parking structure for lot No. 5, an L-shaped lot fronting on Woodward and Willits. Indeslgning"^" stmetve, the firm is to assume that it will he decked and that future expansion be provided for, al-thm^h the unit would Mt nec>> essarily cover the entire lot. Kenning rt p t e s that patrons would park their own cars and that^ attendants would collect fees. The exterior, he said, should be “in keeping with the high munity.” JUNE DEADLINE The architects, if approved by the commission, could begin their work fanmediately, aiming at a June deadline for letting construction contracts, Kenning said. His report will be made at an 8 p.m. meeting of the commission. But, although he was three hours late for the talk, he was given a standing ovation by his followers. 2 OTHER APPEARANCES Malcdm X had made two otb- eeappearanees-OFDeteoit:--- On A|wil 13, 19M, about a month after his break with Black Muslim leader EUjah Mohammad, he sptdw to 3iN persons at the King Soieinoa Baptist Church. He predicted a “hot summer, one in which one spark of violence could sweep the nation.” Marshall M. Fredericks is tired of waiting for the city to do somethii^ about a center-piece. The Royal Oak scplptor who lives at 440 Lake Pai^ has rescinded his offer to design a memorial swan fountain for Shain Park. Fredericks announced the end of his plans la a letter which city commhisiMers will receive tonight. “Because of the great delays and apparent lack ol-interest, except for a (feqr dhdicited and devoted Individuals whp h a v « worked untiringly te adieomplis)i this project, Tfeel thafit is best to sever my connection," Fredericks wrote. to pay for half the sum if fund raisers could collect another $25,IN. Fredericks said-as far as he knew the project nevecAot any further. “I hope that eventually, a worthy centerpiece can be accomplished,” he wrote. Pension Plan to Be Viewed in Waterford A revised draft of a proposed pension plan for Waterford Township employes will be presented for consideration of the Waterford Township Board tomorrow night. standards established for gov- _ . . . emmental facilities tr^he-cunK^ ’^ bo^ is me^ tonw- row due to the legal holiday today. will be the Employes Retirement Committee which has been working on the plan since last fall when provlskm for a pension program was anthorized in the IMS budget by the township board. The plan coven all employes except police and fire personnel who already are covered by a pension program. - Markets Take Holiday Because the stock exchanges are closed due to Washington’s Birthday, t h e market page will not appear in The Porttiac Press today. When the proposed pension plan is adopted, it will become effective retroactive to last Jan. 1. OTHER BUSINESS In other business tomorrow bight the board will consider a request for teansfer of ownership of a beer and wine licensed business and -another request for a new beer and wine license. The owneriship transfer Is proposed at the Waterford Hotel and a new license is sought for a proposed party store at 3660 Dixie. Pontiac Line Earns 3 Additional Awards NATIONAL WEATHER — Snow flurries are predicted for the lower Lakes area tonight with scattered showers along the north Pacific and Tmias coasts. Snow is expected in the North Central area. It wifi be colder in tbe Atlantic states, except Florida, and very cold in the lower Lakes and Ohio Vall^ areas. Temperatures will rise slowly in the South and Central Plains, and centeal Mississippi Valley. But in Boston, a sister who sided with Malcolm, Ella Mae Collins, said his death “will be avenged.” Leaders of the Black Muslims ^ whidi had been accused by Malcolm X of plotting his death — denied any knowledge of the killing. ■Malcolm WM iily>niHil^~Sir the stage at a rally in the VMi-ington Heights section, north of Harlem. His wife, Betty, 35, awaiting the birth of their fifth child, was in the hall. . $2.5-Million Hall to Be Started at OU Contracts have been let and construction will begin immediately on the $2.5-million Matilda R. Wilson HaU at Oakland University, according to Robert W. Swanson, director of business affairs at OU. Two Pontiac firms awarded contracts on the basis of low bids were Schurrer Construction Co., architectural trades, $1,* 356,000, and Schultz Electrical at $250,470. A classroom-office wing of the building is scheduled for use by Jan. 1, 1966, with completion of the entire building set for Ju^ 1, 1966. CHICAGO (AP) - Fire damaged extensively the apartment of ^vyweigbt boxing ehampi-on Cassius Clay Sunday ni^t a few hours after black nationalist leader N^colm X was shot to death in New York. Clay was not in his third floor apartaent at the time, police said. Firemen said the blaze, confined to a second and third floor flat in a 30-apartment building on the South Side, caused an' estimated $6,000 damage. No one was injured. Polioe and fire department arson squads questioned Carl Elliott, occupant of the second story apmtment where William Foley, fifth division fire mar-016 Idxte bitdte m Foley said there was no possibility of arson. Merlin Nygren. acting deputy police superintendent, said earlier the fin was “arson.” Later, police reported the fire was ac-ddentaL Pontiac, which recently was named Car of Uk Year, celved three additional trophies preceding the official opening of the 57th Chicago Automobile Show Saturday. Pontiac officials wen presented with the “Best (Dar of 1965” Award from Motorcade Magazine; 0te Popular Science Gold Cup for brake performance and a trophy for capturing first in Class II in the recently-concluded Pure Oil performance trials at Daytona. In pnsenting the “Best Car of 1965” trophy to E. M. Estes, Pontiac general manager, Don Werner, Motorcade publisher said Pontiac offered ^‘a choice of models, styles and options nnmatched in the car at Uie pure Oil performance I trophy. The award went to a trials. I^ontiac Bonneville for winning A Tempest LeMans won this' ^ Deluxe V8 Class at the Day-test with a stopping distance of! ‘om tests. 161 8 feet Following the trdphy presen- DiiDE-mi tations, Estes told newsmen that PURE OIL , Pontiac expects to sell an; esti- Hugh Hemingway, research : mated 800,000 cars Uris year and vice president for Pure Oil, pre- achieve a deeper market pene-sented Estes wiUi Uie Pure Oil I tration. Specifically, Werner said, tbe award was given to PonUac “for over-all excellence in American automobiles.” Werner pointed out Uie choice rtf Uie award Uiis year was an easy one. “Without qualification, one make stood out as the obvious recipient of our second annual award. The car is Pontiac.” GOLD CUP The Popular Science Gold Cup presentaUon to PonUac was by Hubwt P. Lw^tt, editor of the teclukml group, fit giving the large trofdiy to John Z. DeLorean. Pontiac’s chief en--, Luckett cited the division for a “signal achievement” The cup is presented for brake perforinance - tbe shortest official stopping distance for any AWARDS PHJ: up FOR PONTIAC-Three more awards for PonUac, recently named “Car of the Year,” were presented during a news conference prior to the opening of the 57th Chicago Automobile Show Saturday. Here E. M. Estes, GM vice president and' Pontiac general manager, receives the "Best Car of 1986” trophy from Don Werner (left) publisher of Motorcade magazine. f' X- THE PONTIAC PltESS^ MONDAY. FEBRUARY 82, 1865 THREE . neFViKstSflr*k»,i teuidi|i>ttioii«lf«MteaBdoUMrUai(ta ef Department tt Africul- totaling about 186 mOlion acm ture, haa Juiiadictioo q( tSf I in 36 states «id hierto Rk». k^en Aom* ckan^ed matle ONYOUM MCOaETH The eoiy way to fcna tbo^ - I owile on yoor incemo taxhtoWWgla toko H to 810CIC While you toko It aaty, they figure your return quickly and accurately. Their nominal fee ii lerne* thing te ting ebeut, tee. mu 5 «[3a^D@[irco- AoNricn's Urftst Ta Swvke wHb Over 660 Offices 20 L HURON ST. PONTIAC WMkdaytt 9 A.M. H 9 9.M.—4at. and Sun. 9 te 5. FI 4-9225 ________MO APPonmniiT mkcbssut____________ To Close 'Gun Gap' hr Marines Assault Ships Reactivated WASHINGTON (AP) - The Navy is preparing to poll four rodtet-^biig ships out of mothballs to he^ plug a “gun gap” wMcfa has been worrying te The four vessels -- three of them dating back to World War n — each can dteer a “tremendous amount of rocket fire” against shore defenses to soften them up Just before U.S. assault troops land, the N6vy said. In a related action, the Navy will keep on duty the last two heavy ^ cruism, the Newport News and the St. Paul. These ships, mounting eight-inch guns, were scheduled for retirement. For a long time, Gen. Wallace MsTiadlte M. Greend Jr., the Corps commandant, and Navy aopUhious experts have beoi concerned over a steady attrl-iloq in te Navy’s lack of fire power to support over-tbe-beach BRIEF MENTION Burled in Secretary of De- fense Robert S. Mc^anura’s annual repwt to Congress last week wa^ a brief moition that three m^um landing ships with rockets — L5MR — and one inshore fire support ship — IPS — would be tate out of the reserve fleet during the coming fiscal year “in order to provide increased ship-to-shore fire power to ‘cover’ the landing forces during an amphibious “The requirement for ship-to-shore fire power is sUll under study and we may recommend at a later time the activation of additional ships from the reserve fleet or the construction of a more efficient landing force support ship,” M^amara told the House Anned Services Com- The LSMR’s were built during the latter part of World War II, IFS, one of a kind, is called the Carronad and was built in 16K. Amplifying oo McNamara’s statement, te Navy said te additioB of these rocket-firing craft to te active fleet “will bfliiy to land'assault forces over ROCKET BARRAGE The medium landing ships carry 10 automatic nxte launchers, each able to fire SO five-indi rockets a minute — or a barrage of 300 rockets with high explosive warheads. In addition to te rocket launchers, the medium landing ships carry nxatars. a five-indi craft guns. One of them is at San Diego and two are at Mare Island near San Francisco, the Navy said. The Carronad is somewhat heavier than the medium landing Alps and a bit faster, tt carrier a is-inch gun and efght rocket throwers which are capable of rapid fire. Coals to Newcastle LONDON (UPI) - A factory in Somerset, te heart of Eng-Uuid’s cider apple country, has ordered 160,000 gallons of dder from France to help meet local DR. HUBERT H. CURSON — Foot Specialist — Announces the Removal of His Offices to 536 WEST HURON STREET . (■ext to iMrktoK lot of Betoaay B^Stot Choreh) Hours by Appointment FE 5-6129 ioo% INTEREST Tho 4% Interost Community Bank new offers on oil savings accounts loaves 96% of our interest story untold. For years, your Community Banker has had a 100% interest in what you do with your money, and what it can do for you. To him, 4% on aavings Is a small port of the interest picture. Next time you're near one of the 16 Community Bonks, ask the Community Banker for the whole story. He'll teH-yeyr , 1 Other types of investments pay higher interest than bonk savings. But none ore . .^so safe ... and none keep your money so available for use. When you need or want it, it's there t with . 2 Community Banking offers 100% interest • in you and 100% service for you. If you hove money to spare, your Community Banker can help you put it to work. If you need money, he can help you get it. AH you have to do is ask. 3 Community Banking is so convenient. • Comrnunity Bonks are open Friday eve-tijngs and Saturday mornings. You may transact business at any branch office, regardless of the iCommunity Bonk in which you have your account. Drive-in banking is available at 12 locotions. And, of course, you may bank by mail without ever leaving home. For 100% Interest, See Your Community Banker IF YOUR ACCOUNT IS NOW WITH A SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSOCIATJpN: Now that all tovingo oajn 4% at Community Bank, isn't it timo you considorod changing to Community Banking for 100% intorost in all your monoy roqu'Fo- ments? So many mbro sorvicos aro availablo to you that is just makes good sons*. Won't you think it ovor? Community Bankers oro at your service. Bank MiMSIR OF TNi FEOiRAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPOitATION Ii . V'- I .SIMMS"* pen Tonlle 'HI Ns TUEIOAY Ifort Hourt t B.a. to t M. 2nd Floor HARDWARE DISCOUNTS ii' New Safety Fer StalM Can ^ari-Flares’ WARNING SIGNAL Carried by drivers who valve Kfe ond property. Sets up quickly—reflectors for night — flog hr day. Bgy two — one for behind or»d one for beside yovf cor. for drivers of cors, trucks, tosii, etc. STypt A Transmitsioii FImhI Wo»co Au«onia«fe'lrahianM>on MM ^ fluid mixee with preeent fhiidi. Qtt. mS C Can alB be in powwCK - veering unit. Full quart cant. MM MM Llnrilt8.qlt. Handy Car LITTER BIN Fits Over Car Fleer Humps As shown in choic* of colors. Holds litter or accessories. Use if in front «r bock seat. 1 39 UuntimncS 10-lnd) Aluminum Quick, even heat- A ^ Ing aluminum chicken fryers compleOs with ^ ^ cover. Heof resistant hondle pnd cover knob. SIMMS DISCOUNT BASEMENT nmoeoos Men’s Insulated Suits 499 ih without weight Dacron and wothoble n theflt. Snop or tipper front |eckait. wide el^wolVbondonpaiili.Antiiei. ___________ DRUG and COSMETIC DISCOUNTS BUFFER1N Tabl«h rai—, large 13«vnce con of profemlonol type, hair spray ‘for prpfettiaAal lype hoir styling. Aq^KS^NeMhe oil CAMERA DEPARTMENT DISCOUNTS GENERAL ELECTRIC Flashbulbs 12:84'^ L~^SSS?/ STJ*.........70* _Snimte>r iovie Film nKi?Es»*No a««40 »• Y»«r Heme — — — Technicolor 8mm color film in ASA 26 oukfoor or ASA i 6 indoor speeds. Processing included at this price. Limit I Drolls. I« ‘Delta’ Camera Outfit 298 \ Clearance of 2-Models ^Mransistor Radios Simm$ Ducaunt iiiiria Hi KJB Tour choice of 'St. Morltx' or 'Invicta' pocket rodiOiL Price iocibdet cose, boeery and earphoeeL Good tone quolily.St .Op holds in layaway. ______________ ^Solectron'AM-FM iSSS. 111 Radio SIMMS..% FOUR THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY. FEBRUARY 22.^ 1965 Councilirian Nartied Citizen of the Year ROCHESTBai — Roy Rew<^^ the youngest village president Rochester ever had and noir in his seventh year on the Village CoiMKtl, was named this mu-ni(/pality’s “Citizen of the Year’’ ^urday ni^t at the annual ^amber of Cmnmerce dinner-dance. Rewold, taken completely by surprise as his selection for the annual award was announced, Elly Will Donate Pari of Salary to Cut GOP Defidi LANSING (API - Mrs., Elly Peterson, starting her term as Michigan’s first woman state Republican party chairman has pledged 16,000 of her first year's salary to help get the Republican ^rty out of debt. Mrs. Peterson, the wife of an Army colonel and a resident of Charlotte, Mich., promised to apply that much of her $21,000 salary to help cut the OOP’s deficit of more than $250,000. She had been Gov. George Romney’ s personal choice to succeed Arthur G, Elliott Jr. who retired ^m the post. Teamsters to ignore Union Picketiine^ KALAMAZOO (AP) - Members of the Teamsters Union no longer will respect the picket lines of the United Packinghouse, Pood and Allied Workers Union, James R. Hoffa, Teamsters president, said Sunday. Hoffa told a meeting of workers from the Peter Eckrich and Sons, Inc., plant here that the policy was the result of a “blatant organizing raid” the Pacl^n^use union. active in many aspects of community life. He served as village pfesi-deat in lNt43 after being elected to the couacU in INI. The 36-year-old asaistant fire chief is a member of the Rochester Elks and Lions clubs and has worked every year on the Christmas Parade. Rewold is a vice president in thf firm «f Frank Rewold & Son, Inc., builder of many of the village’s major structures, such as the library and municipal building. II YEARS Frank Rewold, his father, served for 11 years himself on the council. There has beoj a Rewold on the council every year since 1948. Rewold was presented the “atizen of the Year’’ plaqne by dinaer toastmaster Jack Taylor, vice preoldent of the National Bank of Detroit in charge of the Rochester office. It’s quite an honor-^ guess everyone knew It but ipe,’’ after receiving the award. He and his wife, Beverly, live at 312 Glendale with their fbur children. NEW OFFICERS Taylor also introduced new chamber officers, including Robert Shueller, president; Nell Hartwig, vice president; Don Foss, treasurer; and Mrs. John e, Levickj secretary. Outgoing President William W. Toussaint was lauded by Taylor for his past year’s performance at the h^ of the chamber. WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP — A proposed amendment to the township’s multiple-residence zoning c^ and a request for rezoning to that classlfica-tioB will be considered at tomorrow night’s planning com- Usber Society Elects Officers in Orion Twp. The councilman said “I feel ORION TOWNSHIP-Thomas Hunt of 553 Bagley, Lake Orion, has been elected president of the newly formed Usher So-city of St. Joseph Church. Other officers chosen at a recent dinner meeting- include Robert Green of 2544 Semloh, Orion Township, vice president; William Middleton of 2776 Stoney Creek, Oakland Township, secretary; and Edward Podzikowski of 820 N. Baldwin, Oxford Township, treasurer. The dinner \ s given by the r Rev^ Mi pastor, the Very Rev. Ms^. Arthur M. Karey in appreciation of the work done by the men of the St. Joseph parish since Msgr. Karey became pastor in October 1964. Troy Legion Cord Party W. Bloomfield lo Weigh ’Block Plan' for Builders The amendment being weighed by .conunissioners would encourage “block plan” develo{»nent by alleviating the need to build each building on a separate lot. It would regulate the required parking areas and side yards and stipniate that each building be no longer than 125 feet. Developers then could stagger buildings rather than string them out in a line, acccHtiing to planners. All of the buildings on a parcel would be considered as one for the purpose of computing yard requirements. REZONING REQUEST Also to be aired by planning cjanmissioners tomorrovt night is a rezoning request fot-Jfi.13 acres of oroperty on the west side of Orchard Lake Road. The prepcrty is juM north of le Towniblp Hall, separated -am It hf two ' amendment. Approved by the commission Feb. 9, the amendment would give the planning commission the authority to review site plans of potential multiple residential developments. I code $1-MilJi6n Rochester Fadlity ToTy^o6n>oor,ia*fm — The Board of Education will consider, and perhaps take action on, plans for a $1 million swimming pool and auditorium at tonic’s boafd meeting. Part of origipal plans for the senior high school made in 19(3, the pool and auditorium would be paid for through a bond is- The plaiM presented by architects O’Dell, Hewlett & Lockenbach of BinatoghaBi represent many hours of die- Talent Show Winners Named in 4-H 'Share the Fun' Night Crofoot Elementary School in Pontiac was the scene of activity Saturday night as entrants from Oakland County 4-H clubs competed in the ISth annual “Share the Fun” talent show. Winners in three categories were chosen from 17 acts, ranging from pantomime to public speaking, instrumental solos to The public speaking prize went to Nancy Mils of the Oak-hill club. Presented with the flrst-'place plaque in the small group division was Linda Armstrong of the Galloway Lake club, playing a piano \arge-group winner ‘Goldi and the Group Plus TROY — Charles Edwards imerican Legion Post No. 14 will sponsor a card party at p.m. Wednesday at the post home at Maple and Crooks I roads. Herman Ross of Detroit seeking to have the claalifi tion of tl^L. property changed from general commercial and parking to multiple residential >and limited commercial. Ross plans to build a complex some 130 units and enough] small shops to- accommodate | residents of the development, j Consideration of Uie amend-] ment and the rezoning were tabled last month pending the out- Waite,' Jack Middleton, Pam Mirakian,;BiH Rathburg and Mary Ann Yasaitis, all of the East Orion Club. SPONSOR The talent show was sponsored by the Oakland Couidy 4-H Savfce.Qub. Winners cab cumpete in the district talent show June 31 at Pontiac Northern’s little The- Those who win first places in that competition have an opportunity to perform at state 4-H functions. Judges for Saturday's show Were A. P. Johnson, (Hrector of Pontiac’s Hayes Jonas Recrea- of the Waterford Schools music department; and John Withenip, Ctakland County director of pi^- cussioa and analyiis of the project by school officials lud A of board n^em- bers went on several frips to other school systems to earn-tne their use of swimming pool facilitim while dedding what type of pad Rochester needs. Schoo^^^■ Dr. Winimn Japan Is Topic ofAAUWTalk ROCHESjER -Thought in the TwenUeth Century,” as explained by b Wayne State University professor, will highlight the February general meeting of the Rochester Branch of the American Association of University Women (AAUW) Wednesday. Featured speaker at the 8 p.m. meeting in (he Avon Township Library wiU be Dr. Cietong Song Of the WSU philosophy depart- The AAUW branch b also looking forward to State Legislative Day on Thursday. The program deals with legation on edncatkm and includes a visit to the l^slatnre in session at the cu|^ Any members interested In attending may contact branch legislative cfiairman Mrs. Robert Early said that schools now have bo ssrimming facility at all, and «« participating in e pilot proiect.for swimming instruction d fifth and sixth graders at Oakland University. USJD>BYALL Early idi ill XHVd q-8 {»-» to'C fa-l :i IMW WASHINGniN'S 4 DAY SALE ll'y tor*. Ih* Ml* thol Kppp ir, yVathinpraii't liithdar Spied TM« petocelbr tolo It te.eeiaee Ikol gene obtoluttly wiU in pricing i any* you cnn molM stupenSeut buytpnibp again and rtMy’tp oil pricud •# lour that you'd 19” Portable TV's ^98“ RCA Color Wood Console TV' ‘298“ EASY SPIN-DRY WASHER *128®“ 20 Lb. CAPACirr Special Offor . . . limited time only • Biggoft dryor drum and foit-driot cfothot foator, moro wrinklo-froo. o Giant lint scroon — traps moro lint, roquirot tots cloaning. o Exclutivo Norge 5-way venting-^sovos installation cost. Limited Time Only $^Q0OO ECONOMY SPECIAL NORGE 13 Cu. Ft. Refrigerator NORGE GAS RANGE • Deluxe Hi-Lo ^ Burners • Balanced Heat Ovtn • Automatic Icnitien • Speed Broiler ^134” / FREnER’S PONTIAC WAREHOUSE APmANC£ WAREHOUSE. TaEGRAPN RD. Vt MILE S. ORCHARD LARE RD. 1 MUoNoHhofMimeUMitS' OPEN StmDAY - FE S-7051 OKN DAILY 10-1 SUN. 10-7 NO IMNIY DOWN^Uf TO M MONTHS TO NT Exctpt RCA Whirlpool X- -X- THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 22, l»6.v FIVE X M ONTGOAAERY WARD % PRICE JACKET SALE BRINT PREP RiVIRSWU SKI JACKETS 6" Rtfularly 12.S9 100% nylon visual quilt reverses to smooth nylon; bonded Dacron* polyester interlining for warmth without weight. 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L99 PRICED FOR A SELL-OUT RIVERSmE PERMANENT ANTI-FRHEZI Prevent trouble I Wards permanent anti-freeze with rust inhibitors guards against rust, foaming, corrosion, h^-evaporating ethylene ^ glycol base. VL FINAL CLEARANCE WINTER SPORTS EQUIPMENT SAVINGS -M. 60% Brokan Sint atSkalat Brakan Sizat of Ski Baalt ___Han’t Sktt-WhUa-Thartjtt FREE! WHEEL ALIGNMENT CHECK-UP e Adjust Caster, Combef;Toe-in, ■ Toe-out e Re-test wheels METHANOL ANTI-FREEZE TESTED ON PRECISION EQUIPMENT If alignment it needed we will: 39! Budget Priced Protection Extra Savings. Buy Now and Sgve! STORE 9-.30 LM, to ROC P.M. HOURS: MONDAY Him SATURDAY Pontiac Mall Telegraph at Elizabeth Lake Jloetf PHONE 682-4940 ■( THE PONTIAC PRESS MONDAY, FEBRUARY S, IMS ISaKCTSfflSi?’ Mm W. FinoMiu It Seems to Me . . Is stability or Total Victory Our Goal in Southeast Asia? The more you read about this Southeast Pacific situation, the more bewildered you become. Whichever action anyone espouses in an informal discussion with friends, finds an “authority” who champions another viewpoint with gUb and specious reasoning. Some think “stability” is the ultimate U. S. goal Instead of victory. In a case like this, what’s “stability” and what’s “victory?” ★ ★ ★ Many people feel that “complete victory” for the United States is an absolute impossibility. To begin with, even the natives in the area aren’t particularly concerned with “victory.” And, the bulk of them don’t especially find the United States much of an aUy in a flltie .“of ^ stress..Someone ■: oaid the - - “true reasons are blurred by rhetoric.” Certainly the rhetoric has been vague and inconclusive and never persuasive or instructive. ★ ★ ★ Those who feel frustrated by our presence probably include the Nationalists, the Buddhists, the Communists and a big percentage of the peasants. Without doubt this group would be. happy to have the U. 8. pull out—and stay out. Originally, we went in to this catastrophic “adventure” when the French defected a decade ago. They found they couldn’t handle it and their losses were tremendous. Our ostensible purpose was to stem the advance of communism in that section of Southeastern Asia; -------- ★ ★ ★ No allies Joined us. Perhaps they were too smart. Our motives were lofty but the exactions that have been wrested from us ever since are all out of proportion to anything we have accomplished. And now increasingly we hear an unanswered question: Must this go on and on? ★ ★ ★ For ages, Washington has appar-enUy felt that if North Viet Nam were harassed sufficiently, she would agree to some form of peace talk. But as time passes, the likelihood becomes less. If you grant the truth of thta, you face the imp ic it it We hope — and hope — for a negotiated peace. But apparently nothing moves in that direction. We aren’t going to win anything worthwhile with these glorified de/ensive sniper operations and we may never, never wanted” colleges by high school grads: MIT, Harvard, Stanford, Cal Tech, California, Yale, Princeton, Cornell, Columbia and Michigan. That’s for men; and the gals voted: Stanford. Radcliffe, Cornell, California, Michigan, Wellesley, Duke, Northwestern, Barnard, and Smith. ★ ★ ★ Scouts d e -dare Karil Haaseth is one I of the attrac-1 live young la- ’ dies in the - ,It is true that a 9-to-5 advisory opinion by the World Court in costs can be assessed against all members. But it is equally true that Russia and France, by refusing to pay, have shown be^ yond doubt that the U.N. does not have' the power to enforce this advisory opinion. Even thoagh the General Assembly may vote, as it did, to accept the advisory opinion of the World Court, this docs not necessarily make the ophuon blndfaig, becatise only the an all-out war. Perish the thought of that. ★ ★ ★ This newspaper 1b one of a growing group that would .like to see us get out as honorably as we can. We aren’t “staying in’’ with any perceptible face-saving. Our futile pliysiQgDQitgF Js already clawed beyond recognition. Every passing day involves the Rods m»e deeply. ^ China has pledged iGomptete support to our enemy. Russia has done the same. Are we fUrtlhg with the possibility KARI . . . Imperial ' Magazine: “C o u r a g e it bearing one’s ^ own personal tragedies without dramatizing them to others.”......... . . Overheardj “Why is it backseat drivers never run oot of gas?”.......... ... David Susskind says TV is helpless to produce better stuff when “Peyton Place” ranks as a smash hit with the viewws. ★ ★ t Cures for baldness are legion but there’s a new one extant that has the AMA really looking...............The Sunny Jim golf club in New Jersey is accused of being the hardest in the rland/^ last May and no one has broken par, despite a standing offer of $1,000 to the first one who does it. It’s 7,354 yards — which makes it a plain mon- for the crack- up- ^ere are 100 ralutes to it in Bartlett's Familiar Quotations, overwhelming-ly complimentary except for Rabelais’ reference to its qwtient of cheese” and Shakespeare’s reflection that it was “cold and fruitless.” John Randolph used it in the coarse of his epic vitoperation of Edward Livingston In the House of Representatives on March 5, IM; “He is a man of splendid abilities, but utterly corrupt He shines and sttnfcs like mtoh madieirel by moonlight — certainly no way to speak of a Princeton man. Nobody can be quite sure just where the moon came from, other than from the direct Hand of God. Charles Darwin believed the earth threw it off in the course of a gigantic prehistoric tide, “as a wet dog will shake water from its sides” Left scar we call the Pacific Ocean, it was said later. Another theory: It was just a small happy-go-lucky planet that happened to wander Into earth’s gravitational field and got stuck in orbit. IN IfUNDRED AUTUMNS' It is changeless. “Let a single leaf fall from a tree on earth then Ranger 8, find yourself a tektite. Tektites are chunks of the moon knocked off by meteors and spun down to earth. Lots of them in Austratie; the FhHip-pines and Viet Nam. It has been suggested that 18-vear;fessara at Shizuoka University were reieased yesterday from a conference room where they had been lodced in for 18 hours by students. The lockup was in protest against the sdraol’s refusai to hire an extra cdok at the students’dormitory. GLASSES NOW FORMING FULL OR PART-tlMC ' DAYOREVENINQ SESSIONS SEND FOR NEW ILLUSTRATED CATALOG wwtitoj ELECTRONICS INSTITUTE r VA-nCAN CITY (AP) - Pope Paul VI created 27 new princes of the Jloman Catholic Church today, bringing the membership of the College of Cardinals to an all-time hifdi of KB. Creation of the new cardinals ■ including three from Conunu-nist nations, three Middle East patriarchs, and prelates from, the Americas, Africa and Asia — gave the college its widest international representation. Forty-one countries are now represented. OF TECHNOLOGY Datroit, Michigan SALESGIRLS! CLERKS! TYPISTS! your next job can be more rewarding! ABC SHORTHAND MAKES IT SO EASY! PopeCreates 27 Cardinals All-Tima High of 103 Members Established For the fomud creation of Uie 27 new cardinals, Pq>e Paul and 36 members of the college met in the Apostolic Palace’s Consis-torial Halj. The Pope announced nomination of the 27 on Jan. 25, but approval of the other cardinals was required. The 27 were the first cardinals he has named in his 20-nnmth-old reign. He has said he will name more after the Vatican Ecumenical Council ends later this year. MESSENGERS SENT After the secret consistory, papal messengers fanned out across Rome to give formal notification to 26 of the new prelates waiting at four Catholic establishments in the city. One group, at the North American Pontifical CoUege, included two new cardinals from North America — Archbishops Lawrence Sbdmn of Baltimore and Maurice Roy of Quebec. Sp«edMirUi$Eg ihertiund Is ths mStni shorthand. It uses the d>c's DW. No syn^ls. No The three cardinals from Communist lands are Archbishop Franjo Seper of Zagreb, Yugoslavia, Josef Beran of Prague, Czechoslovakia, and Josef Slipyj, primate of Ukrainian Catholics. Archbishop Beran came to Rome last Friday after 16 years of confinement in Czechoslovakia. He will remain in Rome. Archbishop SUpyj has been living in Rome since he was released from confinement in Siberia two years ago. BEHIND IRON CURTAIN They were the first prelates from Communist lands to be made cardinals since 1953. The 27th new cardinal. Bishop Angel Herrera y Oria of Malaga, Spain, was not in Rome. In ^accMdance with the tradition ^Catholic countries, be will receive his insignia from the SpanisVdiief of state. Generalissimo Frkqw. ‘ iHKhimTw iMnrqui^^^ ihf iav ily-bi • iMtwit, relsxed wty...m only I friction of the time symbol •horthifld riquins. Oitcovir how Speeduriting intenstinf, excnthg business uresr. Frio Ufitimi Plicimont Servici. Clistts limited. Act todayl New Gass Beginning March 15 Day School Evening Division PONTIAC INSTITUTE BUSINESS 18 W. 1.4iwrence mi TUESDAY ONLY THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDaV, FEgBUARY 22, 1965 SEVEN^ aCEEF>S PRICES DOVl^N Matchstick vinyl cafes in white and vertical stripes Look Hkd bamboo, but ore lightw, ooiierto cioqn, won't splintor. 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Come la today to eiperieiice the luxurious comfort of La-Z-Boy't Order Yoon Tod«yl Remembor Metbor's Day, Swn., May 9 Coavoniwif fonM OPEN DAILY 9:30 to 5:30 Moodejr and Friday ------EvSHgeWl----- 144 OAKLAND AVENVE Out nih fmai of Bullur Poraifnro ValuuM FUKNITURE AAodal 305y 6E14 Cubic Ft. Refiiprafor Onfy »239*® Or Just »10“ Per Month Copper Ton* Or Colors K12 Cu. Ft 2-dr. Migerator’199% Electric 3 Heat Dryer . . . *79^ P I ELECTRIC COMPANY I PE 4-2525 825 WEST HURON STREET TERMS AVAIURLE \ampkn^ U.S. Embassy Prepared for Soviet Demomtrations MOSCOW (AP) - UsuaUy there is a warning. Scnneone, perhaps an Am^ can exchange student Or .a friendly neutral, telephones ue U.S. ^bassy that a notice is up for a demonstration. A * * , Some person, with official approval at least, has ordered a group of students to gather In front of the Soviet Foreign Ministry. ITwy are to march three blocks to the U.S. Embassy and protest air raids on North Viet Nam, U.S. actions in the Congo or something similar. POUCE PROTECTION The embassy calls the Foreign Ministry to ask for police protection. Then the embassy begins preparations based on the expectation, bom of hard expoi-ence, that there will not be much protection. A ★ ★ The U.S. Embassy is a 10-story building. Ihe ground floor, penetrated,, by two driveways with massive iron gates, contains administrative ofOces and the consular section. From the second through seventh floors are residential apartments. The heart of the embassy, where Ambassadw Foy D. Kohler and others have their offices, is the top three floors, entered throui^ just one steel door. Plywood panels are put up inside windows facing the street on the ground floor to catch flying glw. The 2S American women and 19 Russians who work on the ground floor put .-^pewriters and other equipment under desks, draw curtains behind the windows and leave. Apartments from the second through , sixth floors are virtually abandoned. ★ A ★ Three American men, led by administrative officer Roger A. Provencher, and seven members of the embassy’s Marine Corps guard unit then take over the ground floor. Hie driveway gates are locked and heavy trucks parked Inside against them. ★ ★ ★ The main job of the men, and one person left in each apartment, is to watd) for fires. WINDOWS BROKEN The damage in November and in the Feb. 9 demonstration against Uie bombing of North Viet Nam was about the same; almost all ground floor windows broken, numerous apartment windows broken, ink stains on the outside walls and a few inside. The militiamen made no attempt to prevent the throwing of stones, large hunks of metal and bottles, or the shooting with slingshots of metal bolts that Kohler said endangered embas-^"personnel. ★ ★ * The embassy Is technically Bomb Hanoi if Necessary —Goldwater WASHINGTON (UPI) -ry M. Goldwater says if it is necessa^ to bomb Hanoi, the North Vietnamese capital, to win the war in South Viet Nam, “H should be done.” ★ ★ A Goldwater, In a television interview yesterday, added that he didn’t believe the Red Chinese “would do anything about extending the war.” Goldwater said he could not conceive of Peking sending “her only strength, which would 1^ ground forces,” against superior U.S. air and sea power. , “It is worth any kind of risk,” he said, to protect the freedom of Viet Nam and all of South east Asia against communist aggression. The defeated jwesidential candidate also urged President Johnson to declare a “foreign policy of firmness” to assure the American people and to impress: the Communist world that “we n t e n d to win in South Viet Nam.” THE BEST MILK USED TO COME FROM COWS... NOW ITCOMES^ DONT GIVE YOUR FAMILY LESS THAN BEST! RICHARDSON'S MILK IS PASTEURIZED, HOMOGENIZED, VITAMIN-ENRICHED GRADE 'A'. HALF GALLON CARTON . 3 HALF A QAL. I OUSS I .3/1.05^ 00 SPECIAL THRU SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 21. REG. 210 QUART ]3iuttermilk 17S. QUART • HOW 'BOUT SOME DELICIOUS BUTTERMILK PANCAKES! !Richardson FARM iSdiry N3I MIS CURKSTIW Z4G6 Orchard Lk. Rd. SUYAN UKE 3414 W. Huron at ILIZIBETRXIKE DRAYTON PUmS —-----; ifiwtilaai J I4PVV nl^lllMIIU MS9 PUZA OPEN Doily & Sun. Sa.m.-IOp.i fended, but the Marine guards would have to cross the line of jurisdiction to try to halt throwing from the sidewalk. If the embassy were invaded, there would be no defense either. It is feared that force would only inflame the nx>b and that^ bloodshed w worse would follow. STEEL DOOR If an invasion began, everyone would retreat to the top three floors, behind the steel door. Some of the men assigned to the ground floor are not so sure that, in a really nasty situation, th^ would be able to make it in time. w * ★ The most extreme possibility, that demonstrators might set fire to the building and its entire staff would be flapped on the top floors, is hardly considere(f. Oil producfleq in Libya haa l year Walla ia 4he Libyaa|aiaii^a milli doublad in volume in the paat|Sahara ware timing out mare|last month. , barrels a dayl AvonBurrwastriedfartraa-I son on Sept. 1,1807. mkw of progress... 1964 I am pleased to report another year of prafresa in aH areal of aperatioa. But eeare ieiportant, a ruter oueibar of puoplt wore provided with the kind of financtai protactien and sMurity they need and want^ Only through dedicatioa and pnrpasa are tra ahia » aarva the best intareeta of eur peficyhaldara and their benafidariot. Wtstoni-Seulham will eenlinua, aa always, to strive for batter ways ta Impravi ita larvicas in I94S. WILLIAM C. SAFFORD 77th annual statement December 311964 immast In asttls...S74,53l7l8 f liuttnum Ik /trte...K,SW9l,SS9 Cash an Hand and in Banki...........$ 20,895,944.00 United SutaaGovamoNiit Banda........ 133,870.410.43 Munidpal and Cpfporation Bmida...... 194,109,484.87 Staeki.....y,....................... 789.94I.il Mart|afeUans>-GMraiitaad-FHA,.VA. 795,721,293.29 Martgaaftaana-Othar . 1S4,04S,34».75 HaaMDffica and Regional Office /Prapartiaa........ .............. 23,219,539.03 Cromid Renta.......................... 11,4MA74.81 Policy Leans........................ 47,040,425.93 Accmad Inlarest and Renli............. 7,150,399J8 Net Dna and Defarrad Preodoau, ate.... 51304,220.82 liabUilits Statutory PaBcy Raaarvaa...........91,170,285,290.00 PaKcy Piracaada and Dividanda Left with Caai^y........................ 18309,390.09 Pnlicyhaldert Dividanda Payahia..... 7.587339.00* Policy Benefits Currently. Outitanding.. 4,174392.77 - Praiiiimi and htaraat Paid in Advance............................. 4,379339.39 Accrued Taxes PayaUa in 1945 .......... 4,801,147.45 Fundi Held in Trust.................... 12384,954.11 Other Liabilities......................... 839532934 Security and MartgagaLaan Resarves.. 10,714,119.54 SURPLUS.................................I05,021,121.« ....................$135e356,S(».61 Total..........................51350356309.61 •AMtM Mmd, M.nUMMr UMMh. II. IK WESTERN-SOUTHERN LIFE 1105 S. Ai INSURANCE COMPANY A MUTUAL COMPANY • HOME OPFICC: CINCINNATI, OHIO J. T. Johnstone, District Soles Monoger Rood Birmingham, Michigon Phone 646-6020 IF YOU ARE NOW RENTING A HOUSE m ■...... t ped the Germans; in Novembw they drovo them back. ♦ ★ ★ At Lodz, thd Kaiser’s army was a 1 m 0 s t defeated by the vastly superior Russian forces. But the better-led Germans broke through later in the month and escaped. WINTER NEAR The dreaded winter was com- Bnt it was ontnumbered by the vast hordes of men the Czar wu aUe to send into the field. DAMASCUS. Syria (UPI) — They were badly armed and The U.S. Embassy announced to- poorly trainedi but they were so day that the Syrian government numerous that they were able has ordered the expulsion of a j-------------------------- second member of the embassy I sUff here as an alleged spy. The spokesman identified the e m p 10 y e as Miss Martha Scherrer, a secretary in the embassy’s administrative section. Miss Scherrer b In her 31s and has been in Damascus for about two years. She was said to have relatives in California. Walter S.^ Snowdon, the embassy’s second secretary, left Damascus last week after spy charges were made against him by the newspaper of Syria^ Baath party. * w ♦ Snowdon allegedly tried to obtain military Information from a Syrian army officer. The United States denied the charges. 4S HOURS The embassy spokesman said today that Miss Scherrer has bhen given 48 hours to leave Syria. Ha said she has no diplomatic status. (Reports Saturday from Bel-mt, Lebanon, quoted Radio Damascus as announciBg Riat a Syrian military court had sentenced a naturalized American citisen to death on charges of spying for the United States and Israel. (The American’s cousin, a Syrian army major, was ^also sentenced to death on the same charges, it was reported. The U.S..Embassy in Damascus was implicated in the spy charges. * * ♦ (The sentences for'Farhan At tassi, the American, and Maj. Gen. Moeen Hanimi must be approved by Syrian Premier Amin Hafez before they can be carried out, the broadcast said.) How to Make Snowshoes Indians to Relearn Old Art MOUNT PLEASANT (4» - Palefaces are going to teach three Indians the ancient Indian art of making snowshoes. Stanley Bennett Jr., Henry Baker and Joseph Jackson, all Chippewas, were to leave here today for the Cusino Wildlife Experiment SUUoh near Shlngleton in the Upper Peninsula. Three Department of Conservation personnel will teach them how to make snowshoes. The idea is to set up a saowshoe fai^tory operated by Indians at Mount Pleasant. . The program to provide gainful employment for Indians b backed by the Chappewa Indian Tribal Council, Central Michigan University, the State Department of Corrections and interested citizens. ★ ★ ★ The United States Bureau q{ Indian Affairs provided funds for initial training. ing on. By Dec. 6 the Russians had pulled back to a stronger position., and the Germans occupied Lodz. The conflict then quieted down, while bitter cold and drifting snow hxA over. The Russians had lost enormous numbers of men. The terrible vrlnter of 1814-15 took further toR, not only of soldiers bnt of civilians as well. During those months of suf-fering.'^dissatisfaction mounted. Out of the misery of that winter — and of the misery that followed—came the revolution of 1917, when Russia quit her allies and began a new Soviet state. * * ★ That state, the result of the Eastern Front, b v^ much with us today, while the battles on the Western Front have faded into history. THI MOST IN DBV CLIANIHO DRAYTON MARTINIZIN6 OpM «;M C.M. wiimi Jim in w Dixw SM.E ENDS SAT., FEB. 2T. FLOOR SAMPLES A DEMOS MACHINES OFFICE FURNITURE OU DESK • SMDIE KDESTAL 2S.42 ^ *65 WSLNirMIEIK Sinfl. |»dntal MKS 9^ *79 Dwbl. PEDESTAL DESK. Walmil SS.32 *125 Exaautiva SWIVEL DHAIR wDll Dattara *49” ADrawarFILE *39” lidwest pewriter art FE 4-5T88 7 utodREMINGTOII i UNDERWOOD HPEWRITIRI ^0^ *49” UNDERWOOD Bolden Touch TYPEWRITERS *89” CHECK PROTECTORS *49” ROYAL SAFARI Porlablo TYPEWRITERS *98*0 -*59®® DEMOADOINQ MACHINES -COUPON> 500 Shtelf Bend TYPING PAPER $3 Value 98* L)m»ap 88 N. SAGINAW ST. NEXT TO SIMMS OPEN AAON. and FRI. 'til 9 P.M. I Fire Sweeps Factory DETROIT (AP)-A fire of un-mewn origin caused an estimated $100,000 damage to Mills ProductrCorp. factory in Canton rownship new Detroit Sunday .' rhe firm used the building to manufacture kitchen appliance FDR Economist Dies BERKELEY, Calif. (AP) -ohn E. Dalton, 62, economist ho helped plan economic poll-y oi the New Deal under JPtesi-ent Franklin D. Rooeevelt, led Saturday of a heart attack iffercd three days earlier, - Some tigers are fierce. Some tigers are ferocious. We^buiid both F-A-S-T Mimeographing It’s getting so that choosing between our Wide-Track Tigers is as distressing as it is enjoyable. For instance, should you choose the incredible GTo Qgjc|( widB-Track TlgBrs with its extra helping of horsepower (360), or the way It comes (335)? Or should you go for the Le Mans wfth a 285-hp V-8, a 250-hp V-8, or 140-hp six? Either way theyVe all tigdrs with bucket seats, carpeting and lots of Oh-you-kidI But choosing is such sweet sorrow, so choose on I And on! And on! Pontiac LaMans & GTO SEE THE NEW BONNEVULE. STAR CHIEF. GRAND PRIX. CATAUNA. t f t AWTHO^^^ PONTIAC MOTOR DIVISION RETAIL STORE GkNIRAL MOTORS CORPORATION 65 MT. CLIMINS, PONTIAC IS, MICH. RUSS JOHNSON MOTOR SALES •9 (M-24> UUU ORION. MICH. JACK W. HAUPT PONTIAC SALES, INC, N. MAIN STRUT. CLARKSTON, MICH. HOMER HIGHT MOTORS, INC. 160 S. WASHINGTON. OXFORD. ^ICH. KEEGO SALES and SERVICE, INC. 3060 ORCHARD LAKi RD.. , KEIGO HARROR. MICH. SHELTON PONTIAC-BUICK, INC. S55 S. ROCHBTIR RD.. ROCHtSTIR. MK^N- THE PONTMG press, M0NDA\!^» FEBRUARY S J)odf Rusk Foreign Travel, U.S, Passport Offices Are Told WASHINGTON (AF) - The State Department has told passport offices around the country to do iKrthing that might in any way encourage Americans to travel abroad while the nation suffers from a gold drain. * ♦ ★ Among other things, the offices are being toid to take down any posters or other dispiays that encourages foreign travel. However, passports wiii remain avaiiabie to citizens who want them, and the num^ of appii- cants is expected toi increase, w * w The State Department’s directive is a foliow-up to President Johnson's Feb. 18 balance of payments message. Johnson suggested that Americans “see the U.S.A.” on vacations rather than unload their doUars on foreign junkets. Noting that American tourist spending overseas ciimbed 1600 miiiion in the last four years, Johnson said “foreign travei shouid be encouraged when we can afford it — but not while our payments position remains urgent.’” MADE KNOWN This part of the presidential message is now being brought to the attention of the State De-partment’s passport, offices in a memo from Abba~P7 Schwartz, administrator of security counselor affairs. Schwartz adds: “If you now maintain displays or other materials which encourage foreign travel please discontinue their use in view of the President’s message. “Also, it follows that we I People in the News ] By The Associated Press , Says Nikita Quietly Visited Moscow Former Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev, who siipped from power and sight iast October, recently visited Moscow with his wife, Nina, says a Soviet militiaman. The mIHtinman, who gave his name as Melnikov, told newsmen in Moscow yesterday he had seen and talked with Khrushchev at a monument to Soviet space flight, adding: “Nikita Sergeyevich visited thef' monument and spent about 36 minutes here accompanied by his wife. He was not accompanied by an official party and no special measures were taken before his visit.” Mormon Leader May Leave Hospital President David 0. McKay of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints may be released from Salt Lake City Hospital t^ week, a hospital spokesman announced last night. The 91-year-old leader of the world’s two million Mormons entered the hosiptal a week ago with what doctors described as a lung congestion resulting from a heart condition. Chicago Archbishop Tested at Hospital Albert Cardinal Meyer, 61, was scheduled to undergo a series of tests today at Chicago’s Mercy Hospital to determine the cause of headaches which hospitalized him last Wednesday. A hospital spokesman said the cardinal, archbishop of the Chicago Diocese, was not often in pain and was not confined to his bed. Last month, Cardinal Meyer spent 12 days in the hospital for treatment of a gall bladder ailment. should not engage or participate in any activities which could be view^ as encouraging American citizens to travel abroad. You may, of course, continue to assist travelers by having avaU-able visas and public health in-formatiwi.” State Department offices in 16 American cities have been dart-ment employes have called off one of thdr vacation charter fU^its to Eurqw this year. Whether either the President or flie State Department thinks Americans actually will cut back overseas tours is anotho’ question. . a A A In his budget request to Congress, Johnson asked for a $10-mUlion boost in State Department funds tor the fiscal year star^ July 1, and be lists as one reason an expected riie in the woric load on issuing pass- ‘^ASording to the presidentol budget: “More Americans wiU be traveling atet)ad hi IW suiting in an estimated 1,320,000 applications for passports — a 10 per cent increase over 1965. Limit fwa wHk coopoa below. Meadowdole — Fresh Frozen Orange Juice 6-oz. Can _ Save lOc oa 2 V Whk Coaaea ■ Country Kitchen — Creamed Cottage Cheese 1-lb. Carton |M ilGg Smile With CoapaaHtfew " ^ Mow " ARMOUrV Counj,.. Kitchen 39* Roman StcH*ch 49* I* Sm( troth ^ Hygrade Viennas 9 ■ 12*«. Con - m me Stockton ToBMrtees *9 j 100-ft. Rot - Controniont I Kwik Wrap IV i Qt. toltio - Aont Jonoo Koohor Dill Dherkins 9Vi-oi. Pks- PUhbnnr I tern Muffin Mix Pkf. - Soot Sootono Brown Gravy Pkf - Sccto"* Onion Gravy Mb. Cooirtry Kilcboii MkoJ Amorican Chooso ------------------- Mb. CooNtry Kitebon - PimoMo Rodieiter floza lk. MAIN ST., liOCHESTER THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1965 ELEVEN Less Secure In Homes, Communities U.S. Losing Desperate Race to Crime (EDITOR''S NCrrE: Four four uritm crimes are committed every 90 seconds in the United States. There hat been an alarming rite in every type of crime. l/PI’« national reporter, in the first of three ^dspatches, examines tome of -the statistict and the reasons tome experts say they are going up.) By HARRY FERGUSON WASHINGTON (UPl)-Deep down In President Johnson’s State of the Union message was this sentence; “Every citizen has the right to feel secure in his home and on the streets of his conununity.’’ Sure. Every citizen has the through cities, small towns, suburbs and rural areas. Like this: • Four- serious crimes are committed every minute in Ihe U.S. • Once every is murdered. • Once every minute, an automoUle is stolen. - • Once every 32 minutes, a bursary is committed. • Once every 31 minutes, somebody is rap^. • Once every four minutes, an American is a victim of aggravated assualt. • Once every minute, jt larceny involvfaig ISO pr more is committed. * * * What’s happening to us? ’The li^ te he » Tniiiimnirf. fno, clib and thoughtless an- but saying it doesn’t make it The grim fact Is that every day we become less secure ties. We are losing a desperate race to crime, and we might as well face np to the fact that so far as lawlessness is concerned, the state ei the nnion Is not good. With due deference to the President’s plan to do something about crime, there is small chance, that the situation can be improved in the next three years. - • * * Every type of crime is on the increase te every type of American annmunity. Years ago, Lincoln Steffens coined the phrase “The shame of bur cities”' to describe corruption and crime. CRIMESPREAO The phrase is no longer operative. The current increase in crime spreads itself impartially PONTUCMAU OPTICAL CENTR nrmTrfWhrcSf ANDERSON SALES •i.E SEtVICE U4$ L Tri„r.,h PE 2.I1M THISCOUPOll Wsrfli 10« Off been Increasing flve times as fast as the gain in popnlation. Every year it gets worse. ’The' Federal Bureau of Investigation ' ^ xsDOCts a 10 oer cent increase hour. somebody|S*Sme in IW over 1982. But in the first six months ot 1964 tile increase over the same period in 1963 was IS per cent. SMipiD SCOREBOAliD Her is the sordid scoreboard; Murder up IS per cent. Robbery up 13 per cent. Rape up 20 per cent Auto theft ig> 17 per cent. Aggravated assault up 17 per cent. Residents hi many large cities are afraid to be on the : streets at night Bnt perish the thought that yon would he safer in some neat, quiet suburb where the lights arc out early and the doors are locked firmly. The crime rate for the nation’s suburbs was up 23 per cent fen* the first six months of 1964, eight points above the national average. swer is that sure, there is more crime because there.are more people. If that had any validity, our problem would be fairly simple. The shocking fact U that since 19S8, the crime rate has Report Says 'Radio Priest' Set to Retire DETROIT (AP) —• ’The Rev. Charles E. Coughlin, once one of the most controversial figures in the United States, may be fanning to retire as pasfOT of the Shrine of the Little Flower in suburban Royal Oak. Father Coughlin could not be reached for comment on the report by the Detroit Nbws which also said he is negotiating with a real estate dealer to purchase a house in Royal Oak for personal occupancy. Coughlin, now 72, once com manded a radio audience of some 30 million and a reader-ship of millions more for his newspaper, “Social Justice.” His attacks during the 1930s on President Franklin Roosevelt, England and Russia, led critics to label him anti-Semitic and pro-Fajcist. Both tha radio program and the newspapm- closed down at the outbreak of World War II. 1-75 Smashup Injures Man A Stv Clair Shores man, -injured when his car struck a guard rail at 8; 15 a m. today on 1-75 in Pontiac Township, is in fair condition at Pontiac General Hospital. ’Thomas J. Plowman, 23. told State Police he apparently fell! asleep while driving north on [1-75 near the northtxHmd Baldwin exit. Police said the car went out of control and struck a rail off the left shoUder of the road. buy a gun and ^ something de^rate. \/ In trying to fix the blame for the upsurge of lawlessness. of inflaming the young by creating a world of vMeiice in which every child fools ho may bo called apon aiiy min-nte to wage hand to hqnd combat with the creatare froin the black lagoon. ’The other day the Salvation Army new^per In London said laii Fleming’s fictional hero, James Bond, was demoralizing British youth and contributing to a 9 ,per cent increase in indictable offenses in England and Wales. Bond was denounced for gambling, eating food in fancy restaurants with French menus, violence, sadism and excessive enthusiasm for the principles artd practices of toujours L’-amour on all continents and islands. GRAIN OF TRUTH Perhaps there is a grain of truth in the contention that there is some relation between the increase in crime and the activities of Dillon, Bond and the ing, a threat to devour human fleA and an ax murder. WWW And our students mus be protected from Shakespeare's “Macbeth” where the stage is strewn with almost as many bodies as there are in the Fisher Division of General Motors. PRIMARY CONCERN people are incUn^ to strike out creature, but there is also a in all directions. - ~ ' high content pf nonsense in it. Long before television and the moyies were invented. TV GETS BLAME Tdeviskm is a favorite whip- . ping boy, presumably on t&s. children were subjected to ac-theory that if you watch M^ shal Dillon shoot a man in Dodge City shorter after the middle commercial in “Gun-smoke,” you will be tempted to ^counts of violence. If pUlon and Bond must go, then ah^nust Little Red Riding Hood bechqw she is tiw heroine of a story inVulylng house break- Forest Service to Buy U.P. Land for Park Back on Jobs at Greenfield's Long Strike Ends With Ratification of Pact WASHINGTON (AP) - ’Ilie U. S. Forest Sendee has agreed to buy the Sylvanla tract in the Upper Peninsula of Michigan „ . Gi-miu for addition to the Ottawa -Na- „ employesu at Giw tional Forest. Sen. Philip a. I ^ Hart and Rep. Raymond CJev-enger, both ^Mich , announSd t following today 1 weeh strike. The 4,000-acre nrivatelv-! _ 0" Saturday, members of —------------------- me -«,uw-acre privately-1 „ ■ • “—T'J.* “7TJ’ » ■ President Johnson has not owned tract is in Gogebic Coun- *^4,“ “‘f** said so. but it is safe to say ; ty adjoining the Wisconsin bord-! Restaurant Employes Union *•*- primary concern is not wi^ ' er and is made up of lakes and • three-year contract. the spectacular crimes that woodlands, bring out the big headlines. . ; w w w We eagerly read about the Describing the move as a big theft of the Star of India sap- , step forward in developing tour- phire from a New Vork Mu- »sm in the peninsula. Hart and seam ,the robbery,of a Brink’s Clevenger said in a Joint ttate-truck carrying big money and n’ent: 1 the senseless work of a van- “The agriculture department dal gouging boles in Floren- estimates that development of ending the strike that started Jah. 5. Robert Teays, Local 794 secretary, said that he expects all I2S striking employes wiU be hack on the Job within f week. They are being recalled on a seniority basis, be said. Driver Breaks Leg in Crash Jerry Barnett, 22, of M E. YpsUanfi suffered a broken lag when hte car went out of conlrol at 12:40 a.in. Sad hit a atop sign at Scott Lake and Elizabetii ship. w w w Barnett, who told pelkf he knew^ notiiing about the /tted-dmt, is reported in satiMCtory condition at Pontiac General Hospital. WWW Police said Barnett's car was traveling south on Scott Lake Road when the accident occurred. tine paintings. Texas Bishop Expires CORPUS CHRISn, Tex. (AP) — Bishop M. S. Garriga, 70, „ „ spiritual leader of about one-, the tract will require an esti- restaurant at 725 S., half million Roman CathoUcs in nnWKS iMn-Xr, of work Sooth Tei«. died Sumfoy in to The new contract, according to Teays, provides for a annual j four-cents-an-hour increase forj the next three years, giving em- j ployes a total increase of 12 j sleep. Wreck Injuries Fatal . __________ « SOUTHFIELD (AP)-Robert cents an hour during the lasti®**F Seaman, 32, of. Traverse year. {Saturday of Injuries our lives or create dangers on .*,« —iiiun the streets and in our homes. The story of the sensational OPERATING (X)STS increase in crime usually is told “This in addition to .the esti-in short stories udder modest mated $437,700 yearly opera^ headlines inside our news- costs that would continue indefi- papers. nitely. year. j-—----------------- - -v—— You have to put them all to- “Selective timbering would al- di am suffered Feb. 15 when his tmdr gether to get the real impact so be allowed, and the depart-, Iran off 1-696 at the Telegraph of what is going on. ment estimates that 21 million' Teays said that a new hos- Road exit. When you do that, as the FBI feet of saw Umber and 400,000 pltaUzation plan with increased ------------------------------- does in its uniform crime re- cords of pulpwood douW be cut benefits will ge into effect hi ports, the picture beiges dear in the first 10 years without in- January 1966. and it isn’t a pretty one. Jury to' the landscape or wild- State and federal mediators The real culprit appears to be life.” ‘ j entered negotiations between the American youth. I ------------------------ j the unirni and management on WWW I Snakes do not bite with their j Jan. 20, staying on until a^ee- (Next: The desperate |riight ef i tongues, which are soft and | ment was reached at a meeting «to - Fire -Accldant and HeoIlK Ona slop takas core of alt your msuronca 4. NMA Motor Club! Our Notlonwida Motor Club aitmbership' pVoffars tie I SI tooisibla pne 6. Three Generations in tha Insurance Business! Over fifty Veors lervlhg ^nlloe'i bisuronca oMds 6. Modem insurance Facilities! 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A remarkable buy at their regular price, see how you save nowl White, beige, taupe, mocha, antique gold, ivy green, tangerine, aqua blue, reg. 7.98^Tique-self-insulated draperies keep out heat, cold; machine wash’n hong, 2-yr. no sunfade guarantee.* Rush to Penney’s, see this amazing discovery. Magnificent draperies whose insulation is port of the fabric. Decorate with luxurious rayon and cotton brocade drapes and insulate against heat, cold, lunroys. Pop in your washer, set of lukewarm, dry, hang with no ironing. Ours olonel Hurry don’t mitt out on these savingsl White, beige, toast, ice green, honey gold. _ ------- these SIZES ALSO AVAHABttATRIOUCfOPRlCfy ----------- --------" 48" wide X 63" length ....Now 5.99 a«“ toUt« ^ ,,,------Now-~'S9^--- ya* wide X ed'lewgthTTTTTTr—T. Now 1149 tFwide x 63" length.!!!!!!!! Mew 1 o!w 96" wide X 84" length.....Now 16.99 96" wide x 63" length.....New 13.99 144" wide X 84" length....New 24.99 144" wide x 63" length. ..Mow 20.99 PENNEY'S MIRACLE MILE STORE HOURS 9:30 AM to 9:00 P.M. TWELVE THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1965 TTTmiiTrrrtnriYxiTrrrmTTmiTTrrmi mymri'tTrnTTTnn TEARS OP JOY - Mrs. Aurelia Moleta of Hawaii wipes her eyes after her first glimpse of her wounded soldier son last night at L«ttennan Hospital, San Francisco. Sgt. Raymon Ancho, hit in the left side by gren^e blasts in South Viet Nam fighting, was in the hospital plane that paused in Honolulu last Tuesday. His mother hurried to the airport only to see the plane taking off after refueling. Friends collect^ money so she could follow to San Francisco. World News Briefs 170 federal laws. H yon were born before 1915... . * » 4*t us teH you bow you can still apply for a Jl.OOO life insurance policy (issued up to age 80). Once your abdication is approved, the policy can be carried the rest of your life. No one will call on you. And there is no obligation. Tear out this ad and mail it today with your name, address and year of birth to Old American Insurance CO,, 4900 Oak, Dept. L22U, Kansas Qty, Mo. S4141. Reds Ease Scholar Policy MOSCOW UP) - The new Soviet regime appears to have adopted a more liberal policy toward experimentation in sci-^e, literature and art. But it still must stay within limits acceptable to the Communist par- Alexei M. Rumyantsev, editor-in-chief of FTavda, wrote in the party news|»per yesterday that “the fruitful development of science, literature and art calls for differoit schods and trends, different styles and New 7-Foot Vacuum Cleaner Hose Braided Cloth, All Rubber Regular $7.50 T Como in or Froo Dolivory I Parts and REPAIR SERVICE on ALL CLEANERS Disposal Bags-Hosos-Bnithos-Batts-Mtachmonts-Ete. ‘‘Rebuilt by Curf s Appliapces Using Our Own Parts" FULLY GUARANTEED V Attachments Included $1.25 Week Free Home Demonstration OR 4-tlOI WUhin 25 Mile Radiut CURT’S APPLIAIYCES Watt on M.59 to Airport Rd., North to Hotchory Turn Wpst 2 Blockt on Hotchaiy Rd. Open Mondoy ond Friday ‘til 8 P.M. genres, competing with each other and united at the same time by their common dialectical-materialistic outlook and unity of the principles of Socialist realism.’’ ernment forces massed in northeast Laos today in preparation for an attempt to retake Hua Muong, a holdout position that finally fell to the Communist Pathet Lao a week ago. Hua MuOTig had been.,, the | headquarters for two Laotian army battalions before the Ck>m-muoists took it after a two-itionth offensive. Military sources say the Communists in Sam Neua province are trying to link up with their forces farther south in Xieng Khoo-ang, which would give them a corridor across Laos. KHARTOUM, Sudan UR - Premier Sir El iOiatim El Khalifa’s attempt fe solve a government crisis by dropping one of the four (Communists in hp cabinet has ^ been rejected as insufficient by three rightist parties. Dracribing themselves as a united front, the National United party, the Moslem brothers and the Umma party held out for further reduction or complete eliminatimi of leftist membm from the cabinet. BELGRADE, Yugoslavia Oh— Borba„ Yugoslavia’s major Communist newspaper, reported today that eig^t of the 25 CWn-munist parties bivited to meet in Moscow March 1 have refused to attend. Borba’s correspondent in Moscow said the attitude of a ninlh pgrty, the Cuban, was not yet clear. Red China is strongly opposed to the meeting. Light As A Cloud GLASSES With Spring Action Tom plot • Den^ slip down • Fit foe* comfortably • HoW^ Firmly but GMtfo in©ini.^ 109 N. SAGINAW ST. STEINMAN, O.D. Daily 9;30AJM.toS;80RiM. Frtdoy ViM AJM. to 8:30 RJM. FE 2-^895 PARK FREE IN FRONT OF STORE Open Tonight TIL p/ w 9P.A/1 IN DOWNTOWN PONTIAC I /■I 9 ^ COMPLETE FLOORS OF HOME FURNISHINGS Elevator Service to All Floors S. 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[ ^^Akmn,tuimtm«mimiuiiianan«niJ3tinttiaiiiiMrnn.idint.tniitAmttatantataaa^ffflff„^ THE PONTIAC PHggS. MONDAY. FEBRUARY 22, 1963 THIRTEEN One Gi Killed in Viet Fighting .Cong Smashes ot Government Uruts SAIGON. South. Viet Nam (AP) One American was mir/l RnnHfiv s«—— mil tea owwfy—.-•wt IWV WCTC wounded *« powerful Viet Cwfg forces continued smashfaig at government unib in central Viet Nam. A U.S. Marine officer and sev* en Vietnamese soldiers were killed in a heavy clash in the northern part of moontalhous Binh Dinh Province, 300 miles . northeast of Saigon. w w ★ The officer was with two marine battalions whidi were set up two weeks ago after Viet Cong forces in the area killed or captured about SOO government troops. Surrounded bf mountains controlled by the Viet Cong, the marines were virtumy pinned down in narrow vaileW More than three quarters ^ Binh Dinh Province has been taken over the yiet Cking. , __ V Two other U.S. advisers wS7 wounded in other clashes ii^ Binh Dinh Province. Sixty miles southwest of Binh Dinh in PleUni Province, the Viet Cong audbilated a government outp^ and maided governing reiflforaementa that way from the Laotian frontier in were sent in. , a * * * In repeal months the Viet Ceng virtuaUy cut South Viet Ndm in two. taking over a vast tfnet of territory all the the west to the South ghiiie sea-coast in Due east. All the roads and raflroads through the area are cut V controlled by the Viet Cong. PORK lOINS ^ord, Brid^ on Europe Honeymoon DETROTT (AP)-Henry Ford n was honeymooning in Europe today with his blonde Italian bride, the former Maria Cristina Vettore Austin. Ford, board chairman of the Ford Motor Co., the world’s sec? opd-largest auto firm, married the attractive 35-year-oId amateur artist Friday night. Both ace divorcees. * * * ■ The Rev. Edmund Battersby, spokemnan for the Detroit archdiocese, said Ford “automatically" would be excommunicated from the Catholic Church. “When a Catholic who has a valid marriage is divorced and remarries he is excommunicated," Fr. Battersby said. "That is Church Law.’V Excommunication bars a person from receiving sacraments-of the church. PLAN RETURN Ford, 48, left for Europe with his bride immediately after the Washington, D.C., ceremony. The two plan to return to the United States neift month and live at Ford’s lavish home in suburban Grosse Pointe Farms. * * * Ford last year obtained a di-vb-ce from the former Anne McDonnell of Southhampton, N.Y, whom he married in 1940. Mrs. Austin, a native of Vicenza, Italy, and a British subject for 17 years, was divorced in 1947 from Robin W. M. Austin of Montreal, Que., a British naval officer. * * * Ford, grandson of pioneer auto makw Henry Ford, was raised as a Methodist. He was converted by Bishop Fulton J. Sheen to the Roman Catholic faith of Ms first wife. The new Mrs. Ford is an amateur sculptress and is interested in art. Her name has been linked romantically with Ford’s since his divorce, j__ Space Agency Gels first N-Generators BALTIMORE (AP) -The Martin Co. has delivered the first pair of prototype nuclear generators for-use in apact-to the National Aeronautics and Bpace Administr.ation. The first two units contain no rpnoactive fuel. They will-be^ heated electrically for their ((^IlflcaQdh laa: a Rach generator is designed to deliver 30 watts of dir^. current to' the weather satellite Nimbus B, the first NASA satellite to qm a nuclear power 'Super-RIgM” QiMlity CAFN JOHN'S aiUAOID Rsh Stiebs................3 No Coupons, No Gimmicks, No Limits. ..Just Quality Merchandise at Low Prices! 6R AOf 9T^CORt Sunnyfield Butter siLvnaaooK hne qualitt Butter.............61* JANE PARKER 1-Lb. 8-Ox. Pmedpple Pie 49* CANNED FRUIT SALE! Afre—h«i«m Bartlett Pears Afre—C«lif*nii« Fruit Cocktail AWP—UhvmM Apricot Halves Freestone Peaches 1-LB. CANS 99< SAVE lOe JANI PARKH ALL-aUTTER, CHOCOLATE . — U-OZ. FOl > 20« PACKAGE JANE PARKER BREAD BOX Sandwich Bread ^ .... ^ 4-OZ. LOAVU 39‘ WNITI, ILICtD Early Americon. io*r 25* TWIN LOAr, WHITI, ttlCIR l-Lt. ^ Old Fothioned l*oat 29‘ WHITI, SLICtP Italian Brenda.. B 29* PLAIN BTYLI RoUin Bread .. ...... ;j.% 29‘ PLAIN OR tllOID Rye Breed . . . . 25' WHITI. 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ANN PAGE SPAGHETTI OR A M Mnenroni----------3 49 Bright Sail Bleach GALLON PLASTIC CHINESE FOOD FAVORITES LA CHOT 4ia ' M akm Chop Suey Vegetables 2 c-J* 49 LA CHOT m m Bean Sprouts ..... 4 4V °LA CHOT ^ nuMtetf Chow Mein Noodles . . 2 29 LA cHor Chinese Vegetables . . . 39 GREAT LAKES—PiacM ana Utmt gp Mushroonis ...... 5 «« 9t Sultana Rice . . . . . .2 »» 27* 1«8ei The colleges never got the certain to argue that the plain- j Uffs can not legally bring the and ^ CoUcge is onH »iii ha„» In’ Umtcd ChuTch of Christ. money, intended to help construct buildings, because the bonds approved by the legislature roul^’XJjeMU after the smt was filed. ^ action, and Duckett will have to ' decide this question first. During two w 1075 W. Huron St. Phone 334.9957 If You Don’t Buy From Ut, We Both Lose Money! TRUCKLOAD PRICES FOR ALL! ONLY STEREO ----Save^26 on the certo" Magnavox portable -rmp^jflogfaph Micrc^atte lecoFd player has diamond stylus guaranteed 10 years. Grinnell's, Downtown Pontioc, 27 S. Soginaw—fE 3^7168. .■■■'' ^ "V '' / ' ■ , ■ ■" this J2’: wiH perform briHiantty" any= where. Front .speaker. _ record player. ___ ___ Pontwc Moll—682-0422. Usd ^r CHARGE, 4-PAY PLAN (90 doys some os cosh) or BUDGET PLAN. ‘ lE^N'J THE PONTIAC PHgSS, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 22. 1065 FIFTBEN South Is ' Resents Abby’s Advice Mrs. Richafd Fitzgerald, Lake Crescent Drive (right) serves punch to Michigan’s Junior Miss, Patrice Ciaunder of iMkfshnnt area hosts for the recent Junior Miss pageant were honored at a Sunday reception-in GMTC Credit Union BY ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY; I don’t know whether 4e^ feel sorrier for ABOUT HAD IT or his wife for being married to such ) a milquetoast. He cries that^ she w 0 n’t ^ “let” him go w deer hunting,. although he ' always loved ^ to. Aixl you, of| course ad-| vised him to knuckle under. It la about par for the my ABBY cotu^ in this female-dominated ^iety for the woman to sim^ her way to the altar while plotting how to remold her man a^ soon as he slips the ring on U^r finger. I do not himt and I happily married^^ (as is wife). And you, Dear Abby, are guilty of a bum pieC^ of advise in this instance,\which goes to the heart of tone-thing far more impori^t than the question of deer hunting. 5(«0 PARTNER IN SAN RAFAEL DEAR P A iC T N E R: Bum advice; I certainly would hesitate fo-advise n nuui who wants to hunt, but doeai’t because his wife ' won’t “let” him, to go anyway. She might turn out to a better shot than hd is. Problems? Write to Abby, care of The Pontiac Press. For a personal reply, enclose a stamped, self-addressed envelope. Hate to write letters? Sbnd one dollar to Abby, care of The Pontiac Press, for Abby’s booklet, “How to Write Letters for all Occasions.” (left) is Mrs. Rkhard Veasey, Mid ' Pine Road, West Bloomfield Town' ship. MrSi Veasey and other Pontiac Patrice who loill compete in May for the title of America’s Junior Miss. Robert Janes Forward to Invite Mer^uesf^ By Hm Emily Paet Institute Q: I met a woman at a lunch party In a friend’s house. She Is a very diarming person and one 1 would like ‘ to have as a friettL Would it be presumptuous on my part to invite her to lunch at my bouse after this one meeting? A: Unless in her conversation with you, she gave you the impression that she too would like to develop your friendship, it would be presumptuous to invite her to lunch with you after this single meeting. ★ ★ ★ Q; Will you (dease tell me' the proper way to serve coffee at the end of dinner? I have no maid and serve coffee at the dining table. Should I pour the coffee from my place and pass the filled cups down each side of the table, or should I put the cups and saucers at each place and then go around and fill each Calendar of Events Will Speak at Club -JiaSDAY Golden Agers; 12 noon; YMCA; regular-meeting. Pontiac Butinesi and Professional Women’s club; 6 p.m^- Devw) Gabl^, dinner meeting. Village Woman’s Club: 1:30 p.m.; Home decoration ^ sqries. Tbe Little Garden Club of Btamingham and Bloomfield i Hills, 2 p.m., Pontiac State Hospital. Tea. WEDNESDAY « Woman’s World Series, 10 a.m., Pontiac Mall Commu-i nity Room, “Choosing Bedding” by Mrs. Carol Kurth. ^ Women’s Christian "Temperance Union, disirict 19, 16 1 a.m.. Church of the Brethren, North Roselawn Avenue. Annual workshop. Pontiac chapter, American Association of Retired Per-I Sons; 12 noon; Pontiac Motor Union Hall on East Kennett P Road. Co-operative luncheon. “Public Housing.” .3 Ladies Day Out, 12 noon; Y.W.C.A. “Home Color Co-’ ordination,” Lucinda Wyckoff. Open to any interested ^ woman. I Beta Sigma Phi Epsilon Rho chapter, 8 p.m.; home ^ of Mrs. William DeRousse, Mver Street. >1 Davis extension study group, 8 p.m.; home of Mrs. l! John Novess, Crescent Lake Road. % Robert Janes will ivescnt 1l»rfoaitlr1ectureTsrihe liim- A: It will be simpler and best to put the coffee pot on a tray in front of you and pour and serve the coffee from your place, asking each guest wlwther he or ^ would like cream or sugar, before passing the filled cup down t h e table. a a ★ Q: My engagement was announced last week in the newspaper and I have received many personal notes as well as printed cards from friends and relatives expressing their good wishes. I would like to know If it is necessary to acknowledge these messages. A: You need do no more than thank verbally those who sent you printed cards, but you should write to those who sent ' you personal notes, a a a The correct' wording and addressing of wedding invitations / and announcements are described in the Emily last Institute booklet entitle!,'“Wedding Invitations and Announcements.” To obtain a co^, send 10 cents in coin and a stamped, self-addressed envelope to Emily Post Institute, in care of The Pontiac Press, a The Emily . Poet Institute tpunot answer personal ma!,’^ but all (piestions of general interest are answered in this column. • Alumnae Unit Slates March Salad Luncheon ’The University of Minne-' sota Women’s Club has slated a salad luncheon, March 5, at 12:15 p.m. in the Birmingham honwof Mrs. HaroW Nyberg. Cohostesses will be Mrs. G. E. Graves, Mrs. R. M. Mc-Kerdier, Mrs. Noel Haberkost and Mrs. Stanley Anderson. After the luncheon, members will work on handmade dolls and toys for the College Women’s Volunteer Service. One meeting a year is given to ‘helping this organization with its toy shop projMt. The toys are distributed to children in Detroit clinics, hospitals and community centers. Miss Fuller New Pledge The Eta chapter of the Chi Omega sorority at the University of Michigan announces the pledgeship of Bette Celeste Fuller. ^ iaJhe daughter of the Walter F. Fullers of Orchard Lake, presently enrolled as a freshman in the College of Literature, Science and the Arts. Gordon Mesaer, son of the Walter Messers of Pinegrove Avenue played the part of Per-cival Browne this past weekend in the spring dramatic production at Sterling College, Sterling, Kans. A musical, .“The Boy Friend” by Sandy Wilson was chosen for this year’s play in which 17 students were cast. tor Living Series at 10:80 a.m., Friday, in the Village Woman’s Club, Bloomfield Ifllls: His talk entitled “How to Fight and Stay Married” is based on his observations of American family life as executive dire FOR JACKIE She also planned flowers for the Palais du Quai D’Orsay which the Kermedys occupied during their visit. She used many mixed spring flower bouquets, she said — “Protocol had told us Mrs. Kenney liked them.” Among the more difficult decorating jobs was doing one bf the huge rooms in tbe L^re ' for a dinner the French president gave to honor Q U e e n Elizabeth H of Britain. The area, she said, was “big as the metropolitan museum” and the seating arrangement was in the form of a giant ;U. Low vases of mixed flowers alternated with candelabra on the tables. And for <4he dais — where the president and his guests sat — the firm used orchids. roses, snapdragons, crystal vases and Sevres statuary, so arranged that all present could see the honored guests clearly. “No one and nothing can be in front of the president or queen,” she said. Mme. Aignan talked of flow-os and of the famous she’s helped to serve during a stop in New York en route to Detroit for the Michigan all-industry conference ending tomorrow. The conference attracted 2,-000 florists from the United States and half a dozen other countries where Interflora, a flowers - by - wire service, (grates. The organization, world-wide except for Iron (Curtain nations, has 29,000 members. . She said s^ personally admired also th^ classic Japanese way of arranging om group of flowers set perfectly vertical, another grouji at a 4»degree wgtetetfaeboife “I like,” she said, “but\tt doesn’t a^.” \ 8 U. WASHERS 20< 12 IB. WASHEK 25« 20 LB. 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MONDAY, FEBRUARY 22. 1965 NINETEEN Week of Decision Arrives for Top Rated Michigan Quintet f(ey Contest! in Big Ten for Wolverines Romp Over OSU 9th for 'M' With Gophers, Illinois on Top ■ l« TIN CONFIRBNCI 1.000 17 > .005 1 7}} 1403 .010 10 3 .041 1SI1 13n .770 IS 4 .700 103S 1400 By Tile Associated Press Michigan's week of deeisi^j has arrived and, as lilinois, Coach Harry Combes says of! the Big Ten basketball race, “ttiere are five games to go. i Maybe Michigan won’t continue | to get the breaks ’ As far M the top-ranked Wol-1 verines are concerned, there are only two gwnes to go and J^ed Wings Advance With 3-2 Conquests By Tbe Associated Press | longest in nine years, against MacGregor, who, with goalie Detroit's Red Wings, a flock the Maple Leafs. Roger Crozier, heads the Wings’ of old birds and fledglings rated, Delvecchio, at 34 one of De- kiddie korps, and Fonteyne, no better than fourth in National troit's old pros — Ted Lindsay , reacquired recently from New Hockey League pre-season esti- 39, Gordie Howe and Bill Gads- York, scored the others, mates, are homing in on the top by, 37, and Marcel Pronovost,; MacGregor's goal was hia perch. «, are the others — fired his i9th of the season. He had The Wings dumped Toronto, | second consecutive game-win- scored only 28 tim4.g in three. 3-2 Sunday night after taking ; ning goal. | previous full seasons with De- New York's Rangers hy the “ troit. Fonteyne's tally was his same count Saturday aftei^n I | first of the campaign. Delvec- to sweep a weekend home | I I chio has 15. stand that boosted them into _____I Detroit n^ck^ all jbi «irnrlng MAPLE LEAFS SCORE - Bob’ Pulford (20) took this short-pass from teammate Andy Bathgate (9) and rifled it past I^troit goalie Roger Crozier for a score in the second both are schMuled this week. ■ Michigan takes its W) Big Ten record to Minnesota Tuesday night where a defeat would drop i the Wolverines into a tie with | the Gophers. Four days later the Wolver- ^ ines play at Illinois. Neither Minnesota nor Illinois is accus- f tomed to losing at home and } that's the crux of Oontbes' about the brcaks,......... So far. Michigan has played the basketball version of Rus-1 Sian roulette in two of its road, games. The Wolverine* were forced into overtime at Michigan SUte and tMO a double j overtime at- lndia#ia but managed to win both times. COULD END IT j A pair of Michigan triumphs I this week would end the race (or all practical purposes. That: would leave Michigan needing, two, successes in Ihe^ three! LAKELAND, Fla. fAPl^h- in the control bunting contestr games for the title. The l trol bunting and pitching con- j part of Charlie Dressen's so- ine* still have dates against jcheduiej | called “field day.” Ohio State and Wisconsm who, jj, j Detroit manager has said have a total of three victories in ; league j if a pitcher can't hit, the least 18 games. (players in the Detroit Tigers| he can do is help himself by * * * early camp at Tigertown. j learning to bunt well enough to However, losMS to Minnes^ Major League pitchers in move the runners along, and Illinois would leave the tiue ^ pitchers are bunt- “P: I ing. other pla>s in camp will ~¥THixPpIace tie with the'‘Ma-“ pie Leafs. The Black Hawks . bombed Boston 7-0 and New York tied second-place Montreal 2-2 on Doug Robinson’s last-second goal. Detroit, with three more games to play than the Black Hawks and seven of 16 against also-rans New York and Boston, has a shot ehamp Boost Record 'Manpower Shortage' Loses Relay Event period Jast night at Olympia Stadium. Behind Detroit’s Gordie Howe (9). Detroit won, 3-2. Into the second period after Bob Pulford had given the Leafs a 1-0 lead. George. Armstrong pulled Toronto close in the last period but Crozier held off the Leafs in the final minutes. Chicago’s Stan Mikita scored two goals — both unassisted — ^ and set up another, increasing Despite its shortage of man-1 his individual point lead over 0 w e r, Oakland University’s sidelined teammate Bobby Hull, its first NHL swimming team is earning its as the Hawks moved three ^MS^-wirmmg Surili l^^ Montreal M son of inter-collegiate competi- i blitzing the last-place Bruins. Mikita has 72 points; Hull, out with a knee injury, has 67. New York’s Robinson tipped season. The Wings, paced by veteran Alex Delvecchio, young Bruce '. . u. .u mr * i— „ MacGregor and handyman Val! P"day night the OU tankers Fonteyne; ran their home-ice; winning string to eight games,! 6th win in seven starts and Sat-_ * — . I urday they had to settle for a 47-47 tie because all the avail- in a Rod Selling shot with one second to play, capping the Ranges’ two-goal comebwk in Tiger Hurlers Given Session in Bunting afford a championship tie. A tie Involving Michigan would send, the other team to the NCAA championships since the Wolverines represented the Big Ten in the playoffs last year. W . A * Another important game Tuesday night finds Iowa at Illinois. The two are tied for third place with 7-2 records and the loeer will have to step out of the title scene. Two big games are scheduled tonight with Mlchian State at Ohio State and Indiana at Purdue. In addition to the Mich-igan-Illinois game Saturday, Indiana will be at Minnesota, Northwestern at Ohio State. Iowa at Purdue and Michigan State at Wisconsin. * * ♦ In last Saturday’s games four teams scored 100 or more points. ^Michigan defeated Ohio State 100-61. Indiana downed Wisconsin 100-87. Iowa won over Purdue 101-85, Illinois slugged Michigan State 113-94 and Minnesota turned in 8fi.g0-77 victory, oyer Northwestern. Prep Slate BAtKaXiASL East Datrolt at Pontiac Northern i Wallad Laka at West BtoonXlaW Oatord at North Branch Warren Cousino at Ayondale Lake Orion at Troy Emmanwei Chrietion at Lanstng I Ferndaie at Port Huron Lapeer at Davison 'Vltw, at Mount injtay CTy at New Hamady at Ortonvitw Royai Oak Dendoro at ball ■ Stockbridge at Sooth L Orchard Lake St. Mi Mt. Carmel be racing against a stop watch, tirmh first tese to home |date. I Later, pitchers will try to throw as noany strikes as poasi-' ble in five pitches. A special foot race for the catchers in camp also was scheduled. TWO REASONS Dressen has two reasons for holding the special event. First, it gives him a chance to see which pitchers need ex-' year tra work on tlto fine points of The 18-year-old Yale Universi- Rowvilla at Port H Haiel Park at Pitzgoraid Livonia Btniloy at SouthlloM Honors Pilelfe for Swim Ace Schoilander Collects Sullivan Award NEW YORK (AP) - Olympic swimming champion Don Schol-lander keeps piling up awards. Acclaimed as The Associated Press Male Athlete of the Year for his four gold medals at To-Iqto, Schoilander today holds the ■James E. Sullivan Award, given to America’s top amateur athlete. * ★ * Schoilander received his latest award Sunday from Clifford H. Buck, president of the Amateur Athletic Union, at a luncheon at the New York Athletic Club. The award is presented by the . AAU each bunting and which other players ty freshman from Lake Oswego, need to brush up oh other funda- Lj^^ j^ o K,^,.K'athleteevertoreceivetheSulll-f V®" Award. Decathalon star Mathias was six months themes, bamngj)ractice, efc. I Schoilander when Dressen has only three more days to look over the youngsters ★ ♦ ★ in camp before moving over to Buck described Schoilander Helney Field to begin drills as a great swimming star and with the major leaguers. - an honor student, who possesses The players spent 20 minutes “willingness to help others and running, during a rainfall, in advance the cause of amateur-thie only workout Sunday. | ism.’’ Titans Have Cage Streak Snapped Mikita Leads Hawks Rout CHICAGO (AP) — Stan Miki-1 figured he might need the goal ta’s talent for scoring points is] to make a bonus figure, gaining momentum. If he keeps | “It doesn’t make much dlffer-it up the Chicago Black Hawks' ence,’’ shrugged the 24-year-old might hold on and capture their ] wheeler-dealer who was born in first National Hockey League i Czechoslovakia and reared championship. ] Canada, “I’ll get a lot more scored for New York midway in and the final 400 freestyle relay' the period. Second-period. Don event was awarded to Calvin. , Marshall scored for New York Terry Koehler of Birmingham, midwiy mJht jieriotL Second-XaliT. took three IIiWTn defeat- period goals by John Ferguson ing Albion. , and Henri Richard had given With only six swimmqrs on • - hand, OU won the final free relay event in 4:05.0 but each had already been used three times and thus Calvin’s team was awarded the event in 4:19.4. Only one diver took part in the diving event. Tuesday night, OU is at Eastern Michigan. OAKLAND 47, CALVIN 400 Medley Relay - Oaklai>d (Krogs- The Hawks have managed to chahees for my share” remain in first place even Despite his size — 5-feet-9 and though the great Bobby Hull has 165 pounds — Mikita is in the missed six of the last 'eight middle of practically every games because of knee injuries. I scrap on the ice. As a result he( * ★ ★ ! is one of the league’s most pM- And, as if someone blew aji' trumpet, Mikita has moved in. Not only has the impish center taken much of the slack left by Hull’s absence but he has f i * Central produced a pair of Valley champions in John Cato (133) and Neal Peterson (heavy-weight). Peterson regained a title re-venge when he gained a decision over Flint Central’s Tom Pierson, who had a string of 20 victories going into the match and who had beaten Peterson earlier in the season. SACINAW VALLEY COfiPERENCE Snyder ISMinew AHI; 113 - Rcevei (Flint Nortliem): 130 - Flymt (Flint Northern); 137—Johnion (Flint Northern); 133 - Celo (Pontlec Central); 131 - Fteldwr (Flint Central); 143 -Lawler (Flint Central); 154 — Dent (Flint Northern); 145 - Sttveni (SagL naw AH); IM - Smith (Saginaw); Heavywtigi)) — Pettrion (Pontiac Cen- longame to the Hawks in St Louis. Meanwhile, Baltimore held on to a 3*^ game lead for the final Western Division playoff spot," ■ despite a 107-106 loss to Philadelphia. In other NBA action. New York dumped Cincinnati 109104 and Los Angeles knocked off Boston 129114. A cold third-period sealed the PistonV defeat. WWIe the Hawks hit on only six of 21 field goals and scored 18 points, Detroit managed only 20. Rookie Joe Caldweil led a rally which brought the Pistons to within two points. 107:105, with two minutes to play. But Zelmo Beaty and Giff Hagan led a late Hawk surge which clinched the game. LAST QUARTER Beaty and Hagan scored 18 of Kimball Gains Wrestling Title the Hawks’ 29 points in the last quarter of play. Each ended up with 21 points for the afternoon. Terry Dischinger led Detroit with 18 points and Eddie Miles added 17. Caldwell, who scored 12 points in the last quarter, end-«d up with 16, as did player coach Dave DeBusschere. At Baltimore, Wilt Chamber-lain scofed 40 points to help the 76ers hand the Bullets their 11th less in their last 14 games. Gus Johnson led Baltimore with 30 points. * * ♦ The New York Knicks rallied late in the game to whip the Royals despite a 49point effort by Cincinnati’s Oscar Robertson. New Yoik had seven men in double figures, led by Willis Reed’s 22 points. "At Los Angeles, the Lakers snapped, a six-game losing streak to* Boston and marked their sixth victory in a row. ★ ★ ★ DETROIT IT. LOUIS OFT OFT Butcher 3 C4 4 Beely 7 7-10 31 DcB'c'e 4 4-5 14 Bridges 4 a5 17 Caldwell 7 ^3 14 Farmer Dis'ger 4 4-1 11 Guerin Hard-g 3 13 7 Hagan Royal Oak Kimballs, unbeaten wrestling team breezed to victory SatunhqrinBie first Bouth-' eastern Michigan Association tournament at Berkley. it 'k it TTie Knights, 190 for the season, piled up 100 points in finishing well ahead of Hazel Park (81), Berklex.(77) was third, followed by ^uthfield (43) and Birmingham Seaholm (9). Kimball had eight wrestlers in the finals and came away with five Individual champion- ffetter Hatston Ouftfries PJah to Bring Davis Cup to U. S. - SAUSBUKY, Md. ' (Af»r~ Dennis Ralston has some suggestions for U.S. Davis Clup officials if they’re really intent on getting the big trophy back from Australia. The suggestions are these: 1. Name a Davis Cup captain immediately — preferably Bill Talbert. 2. Return Pancho Gonzales as coach. 3. Persuade the semi-retired Chuck McKinley to sta'y on the team as a doubles player. ★ ★ ★ “Something should be done right away — we should have a captain, get a squad and start organiziitg,” America's No. 1 ranking player from Bakersfield, Calif., said. “The longer , we sit, the worse are our chances.” Ralston was in an expansive mood in the Salisbury Civic Center after losing the National Indoor tennis championship final Sunday to Jan-Erik Lund-quist, the Swedish Davis Cup star, 4-6,13-11, 64, 11-9, On the match itsSf, the crew-cut Californian had no excuses. "Jan simply played better,” he explained. “His serve was awfully tough and he kept the ships — Sonny Smith (103), Joel Martin (133), Ron Neuman (138), Jim GaUery (165) and Gaig Irwin (heavyweight) Mark Davis (95) was one of four matmen taking titles for Hazel Park. Others were Steve Butash (112), Gary Warner (145) and Bill Kunze (154). . * ★ * Mike Monahan (12) and Dick Copeland (180) picked up titles (or Berkley and Paul Garber of Southfield paced they 127-pound division. NBA Standings EASTEftN DIVISION WESTERN DIVISION Los Angoles 38 26 ^.594 St. Louft 33 32 .508 Boitimore » 35 *44 Detroit 27 41 .387 Son Francisco 14 51 .215. kott 5 1-3 12 V4 r%jm 4 7 8 15 Wl , Totals 4$ 27*81 187 Tofali 7 78 2T 0 ^0 0 I ^4 7 5 M 18 7 44 80 ... 77 8844112 27 83 18 17--I87 - Philadetpt)4 SotnEays Rosuns ^1 la New York 109, CUKinnati 104 i: 107' Sattlmore ishin^on, D.C. TvasEay's Ot ). Cincinnati at Philadelphia at New York Jim Grelle Best of 'Slow Milers' Rookie Golfer Champ mMI. Fla (AP) - Nathan-ief Starks, 24-year:dd from Ft. ^nning, Ga. playing his seixNid pro tpumarnent, won the 12th annual^ North-South golf chan^-^ pionslap todny with a 213. I NEW YORK (AP) - Jim Grelle may not be the best mil-er in the world, but there are few who would argue that the lean Californian is the best 4:07^ miler around. The veteran fronn Lbs'Angles has won three major mile races on the indoor circuit this season, and each was tailor-made for him. The fastest was 4:07.1. “That’s fine, just fine,”Grdlej said today. “If they want to set *g*** with me. BASKETBAU, SCQgeS pressure «i me from the start. Still, I thought I might have won If it hadn't been for a line call in the fourth set.” LOST SERVICE Ralston, with a service break, was leading 93 when he served an apparent abe to Lundquist. The lineman called the ball out. Ralston/ went on to lose the service and ultimately the set and mat^. , * * * *“I would like to see Bill Talbert brought back as captain,” Dennis said. “He’s a very good captain and especially valuable in doubles. That’s the most important point ip the Davis (Jup ” Talbert was fired as captain after leading the team from 1953 through 1958. A succession of captains followed, with Vic Seixas serving last year. Eastern Mich. 70, Wash. A Jeff. Hope 115, Whufon 100 Indlane Tech 133. Spring Arbor 100 Kelamaioo 71, Calvin 73 Mich. Lutheran 111, St. Francis llnb Olivet 113. Alma 101 Soo Tech »7, Detroit Tech »3 St. Bonaventure 44, Detroit 71 WInone »4, “ Illinois 113. Michigan State 74 Indiana 100. Wisconsin 17 Iowa 101. Purdue 45 Michigan lOO. Ohio State 41 Minnesota U. Northwestern 77 EAST Army 70 NYU 42 Maryland 70 Navy 57 LaSalle 71 Wattem Ky. St, 77 Geneve 44 St. Vincent's 41 Columbia 74 Brown 73 Connecticut 115 American U 40 ,Penn St. n Syracuse 43 -----J Cornell «l Slip. Rock 72 Cam. Pa. 51. Rhode Island IS Maine 13 Amherst 44 Wesl*y«i3I. - Fordhamao St. J Rochester 14 Union nt jj Princeton 13 Harvard 73 Fairtleld U Georgetown DC 14 Leleyette 44 Bucknetl 47 . « In. p. M villaneve 41 I 75 Holy Cross 74 SI. Peters ll Niagara 47 Gettysburg At LSuilh a Penn 74 Dartmouth 70 Davidsoh 43 Citadel 50 N. Carolina St 71 S. Carolina 5* Louisiana St 74 Miss. St. 7S --------- Mississippi 71 pionship mile at M a d i^o n »id. “If it’s 4:30 and I win. I’m Square Garden, then started his delighted.” kick. The AAU championships Fri-| i He whipped past the frontrun- day and Saturday followed suit.'' ! ning Witold Baran of Poland Only four factors lifted the meet i just at the giin and took it going out of the ordinai7. There was away by five yards. The UifieT an excefieht^^ was 4:07.4.» . | dash by Fordham’s Sam Perry, : * -k * Hal Connolly’s 70V4 weight * It was his third victory on die’: throw, second best on reemd, an I indoor circuit this season. The American citizen’s re(^ ! others_weteJii07,i in the New;J3:25J^^ hero Billy York A.C- Games, and a plod- ‘ Mills in the three mile and some ding 4:13.2 in the Toronto Mafrie good performances bv the wom- Tulane •) V»fKt*rbll. _____________ Fleridi St. 71 Tamp* 44 Wwf Virginia 137, Va. Tact). 73 Banedict 131 Mprrlt CoMa^ 117 Gaorga Waahinglon *3 PItttbu Gaorgla 71 Georgia Tech 44 Mempnii St. 14 Loyola La. 54 MIDWEST Mljaourl H Dklanoma 13 Tolado 13 Marshall 74 Penn 57 Western Reserve 55 Deyton 13 Loyola III. 73 Indiana St. 161 Da Pauw 10 Evansvifla, 77 Ky. Wtsleyan 70 Butler 103 Ball St. 77 Rio Granda 77 Wilberterca 07 Wooster 71 Denison 51 Ashland 77 OMIance TO “• Hhy 113 Oelrolt College M mT Ohio 13 Xavier Ohio 43 STATE SPORTS RESULTS WRESTLING Central Michigan 24, Wastam. Illinois 14 >is Stata 35, Cantral Michigan M L- f!!.*! ??' MiSiojn '* ’.M,..Eaaten?''MStr it Wayna Stata L Cantral Michlgaii Vastam Illinois 43 Michigan State 73, Northwestern 31 Michigan 74, Ohio State 37 Wayne State 55, Allegheny 34 Wayne Stele 64, Western Reserve 34 ^ PENCIHO rinnoi’s ii' Wayne Yl Illinois 31, Iowa 4 Illinois 17, Casa Tech 16 Illinois 17, DOtroit l| Iowa 30, Casa Tech 7 Michigan Mete 14, Ohio Stata 13 Noire OiSie 14. Michigan State It Note Dame 14, Ohio State H Wayne State 15, Casa Tech 13 OUMNASTICt Central Michigan 71, Cincinnait 57 S'ete 160, Central Michigan 35 Michigan $lale 43, Wisconsin 57 Michigan 44W, Iowa 53'/V Tucson Winner Forsakes Week Off, Leads From Start Seixas is not sure he can get away from his investment bi^ ness for the campaign. The Davis Cup committee has given him 30 days to decide. Ralston said he also thought Gonzales should b# hired as coach. * * * Ralston, who is the key to U.S. Davis Cup hopes, believes McKinley, who recently joined a finanbial firm in New York, could be talked into a part-time role on the team. Brightest new prospect in the cup picture. Ralston says, is 19 year-old Cliff Richey of Dallas, surprise semifipalist in the indoor here. TlJCSON, Ariz. (AP*) - Bob CJiarles almost took off last week from his work aj a pro golfer but he'll relax this week instead. $6,800 richer for waiting a few days. The former-^ British Open champion entered the $46,MI Tucson Open tournament five minutes before the deadline and led from start to finish with rounds of 696967-70-271. ★ * ♦ His 17-under-par total gav* the 28-year-Dld left-hander from New Zealand, a four-stroke vic-for\- over A1 Crfiberger, who trailed by five strokes going into the final round Five strokes back at 266 was Don January, who bus won the Tucson Open twice. January closed, with a brilliant 63 Sunday ^ilhe 7.209yard. parfitTncson~~ National Gob golf course. Bin Caspear Jr., top over-all money winner on the tour thta year, was a stroke behind Janu-arv at 277. SIX WEEKS (Jharles had just about decided to pass up the Tucson Ci ent because he was tired after six straight weeks on the tour. “However, my game was In good shape and I didn’t have anywhere to go.” he said. “So I decided I might as well, come I down here and take the week off.” State/ Wolverines Nab Big 10 Swim Triumphs TIamesT Kmms 14 Ktnut St St. Louis II SoulTiom II Citritlian Bras. 03 Michigan State swimmers, losers only to Michigan this year in 10 dual meets, and the Wolverines, still unbeaten in seven meets, posted impressive pool vlctortes Saturday in Big Ten competition. MSU routed Northwestern, 79 31 and Michigan swamped Ohio State, 7927, in their respective pools at East Lansing and Ann Arbor. The WoNerines took first place in all 11 events with sophomore Doug Robie, Olympic silver medal winner, winning the 200 butterfly in 1:587 and the ★ -A ★ MICHIGAN 71, OHIO ST. 37 400-YD. MEDLEY RELAY-1. Mlcbl-I g*n lOrl'snd, Rsupcrt, Shtgrer, 0'M«l-Uy)i 3. Ohio SloTO. Time—3;a*.24. ‘yin.'^REESTYLE-l. HOM (M)i 3. T*«st ABM 71 ArtcontM 77 T’m happy to lay back there aST let them plod — then kick with In each case it was the same. Russia’s Valery Brumel, who them. I can kick wifh ‘most Grelle bung back in the pack, had announced a concerted at-1 anyone.’ ” , 4ound Ae siow paoe % his liking tack on his owif indoor 7-4 high i * * * and then charged away with his jump record, settled,for 7-2. He' That wa^ his strategy Satur- blistering kick. missed only once en route to the j day wh^ he loafed akrng in the I * ★ a , winning height, but wasn’t close 11 la^isof the AAU indoor cham- j “I’m running to win” Grelle j on three tries at 7-3. I UCLA 74 Oregon 44 Brigham Young 100 Utah 73 Cain^la 40 Washington 44 Colorago SloTa U. If U*oh Slala 74 VAlparalao S3JUr Fore* 47 Montana Stata S4 Montana 7| Saattja S7 Nevada 77 Washington Stott W Stantord 50 FaoRardlna Of U. Pacific 44 San Pranciscd 73 Santa Barbara St. Mary-1 S3 LoyOts Cal. 75 * San Francisco St. S4 ChM St. 7t Soulhtm CaL 44 Odwtn StaN 3* mOiyiDUAL MEDLEY _ 1. WIMtoms rnlL-!:«3‘S^ *• ^ DIVING — I. Bromt »•<• «»•< points; 3. Larson (OSU); It (Ml; 3 30B-YO. BACKITROKB - 1, Barttch . -ROKE — ). Schatror -------------- 1 Huenph- 3»YD. BREASTROKS M); 3, da Vsiming (0 las «5$U);. Tlma^:17.1 40BYO. FREESTYLE Michigan rschwartan, part. Ort«nd). Tlma-jsN 200 freestyle in 1:48.5. Birmingham’s I'om Fritz, swimming for OSU, was second in the butterfly. Other double winners were soph Tom Williams and junior Bob Hoag. Warren Dairyle Kifer helped Michigan State’s 400 freestyle relay team tie a U.S. record as the Spartans won all but one event. Kifer swhm the first 1^ in 47.9 as the Spartans finished with 3:08.) to match Yale’s record time of last year. ' ★ ★ ★ MSU 73, NORTHWESTERN 31 I lo-YD ; ..-.I stale. 20OYp. _200.YO. INDIVIDUAL MEDLEY - 1. OrsJil^jIMSU); 3. Zatson (NW),. springboard diving - 1. Genova ASU), 144.35 goMsi 2. R.' Graham 4W); 1. HlltolNW). lOO-YO. FREESTYLE - The result was the most decisive victory on the pro tour this year. It was the first time a player had led from start to finish in a pro tournament since Dan Sikes ^id it in the Sidiara Invitational last October. The $6,800 paycheck boosted Charles to the top of the heap in official 1965 earnings with $13.-575. Rod Funseth, winner of the Phoenix Open, has $12,000 and Casper $11,727. Bab Charlaf UM» Al Calbargar, tJM Dan January, 13.(00 Bill Caipar Jr., SIAOO Dick Slkei, IMOO ^^ifX5r,frp\Uh*»’w,'.« ,_10*.Yb, BREASTSTROKE - 1. Hunt (M.Tufesr,. ..440.YO. freestyle relay - 1. racard aal in 1344 by Y*W). Bob Jonaon, 33,000 .Joe Cfrr, 31,170 j Tom Wefikopf, 31,170 f: Divo Mart, 31,170 Tom Shaw, 3l,l7t Kon Still, 3013.14 Juan Rodriguez, 3033.14 .. , Llwwl Hahart,^'f4 7M443^75-S Randy Glovar, 3S75.30 71-74-7344-114 Billy AAartIndala, 3S75.30 . 75-71-73-44—214 M $575.30 ... 75-70-71-40-34 Jerry Edwards, 3575 30 ... 7^7^70•«F-3^4 Joe Campbell, 3575.30 70-7>7l-7*-3l4 OPtf*" Mtekot*' »WJ *0 73-44-74-71-304 Bobby-Nlehola, 3575.30 .. 73-71-43-n—lM Tony Lm, 3575.30 40-73-71-73-^304 Dudley-^iono, 4575.30 03-7443-73-3*4 Lw; Orihafn, 3575.36 73-73-»4-74-84 Bob Ooalby, 3575.30 . Bud Holicher, 3337J0 Gano Lltttar, 3137.56 Dave Stockton, 3355 OaN Oouglatt. 3343.50 . -----H Sltford, r - - 1-305 71-43-73T4-337 ntf-Ttn-m 7343-n.7*-i7 7 , ■V;7 Flogs lncrea$e Load goals each by Billy LeCaine and Jerry Moore prodded Port Huron to a 54 victory over Foft Wayne in the Internationgl Hockey League Sunday. The Flags’ victory put theih 10 points ahead qf the second-pifce Komet| in IHL^standings. THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, FEBUU^Y 22, im TWENTY-ONE Past Canadian Skaters ROCHESTER, N.Y. (AP) — The strongMt UnR figure ekatlng team in five years Is optimistically looking ahead 4o iMsk’-tnoath'S'' world' meet after crushing Canada Sunday in the 1965 North Ameri- Yank skaters won three of the four titles and placed second in all four events for their finest Local YMCA Tankers Fall fo Flint Unit Pontiac YMCA were fwamped in three divisions by Flint YMCA swimmen at the local “Y" Saturday. Tile Midget team had five swimmers out sick and they Intematloaal showing since flie [glory day» of the MSOi wbso American dominated World figure skating competition. -lA^eapaciirnwwd ofneart poo in the War Memorial Audi-torium looked on as Gary,Visconti of Detroit won the men’s singles, Vivian and Ronald Joseph of ifighland Park, Bl.j captured the pairs and Loma Dyer and J(dm Carrell of Seattle skated off ice dancing honors. the gniy Me that Canada could salvage went to world Me favorite Petra Burka of Toronto in ladies’ singles. Tlie IS-year-old Canadian edged Peggy Fleming, 16, of Pasadena, with a brilliant fi^tyle show. The 1965 world diampionships will be at the Broadmoor Worlds Arena in Colorado Springs, Colo., March ^6. UPSET WIN Visconti, 19, repeated his upset of Olympic bronze medallsd Scott Efium Allen of Smote take a first place. * * * In the Prep division, Jeff Klann, Steve Ashmead and Dave Hanknberg took individual events but still kd 5M8. John Mason’s double win fit the M yard medley relay and 100 fretetyle paced the juniors, but Flint still woo, 56-41. His 53.0 In the freestyle set a pool record. INywS rato^lM 1;M.4. m MfS Iraaiiivis-Culw ll>). J. (S), G&t (S), A7. UNEUP ’ CHAMPIONS These six skat»s glided to individual titles in the North American Figure Skating f!hamptnn!thip!i completed yesterday at Rochester, N.Y. Pictured (left to right) are: John Carrell and Loma Dyw, ^ttle Skating Qub (dance wimiers); Petra Burka, ’Toronto, Can. (women’s singles); Gary Vis^ti, Detroit (men’s singJesXVivian and Donald Joseph, Chicago (pairs). TU8e,TrX. TBe TtyeiroH" Alleb had been the world title favorite until his loss in the 1965 U.S. championships. Sunday’s victory piuhed Visconti into a contending position. Allen was second in the North American meet. Miss Dyer, 19, and (hrrell, 18, climbed back in to the world title picture by avenging their loss to Kristin Fortune, 18, of Northridge, CaUf., and ~ Sveum, 19, of Sun Valley, (hlif., in the national meet. 1, Owy VheonK*t ordliMit wM 1t7S4 poMt. t icM Alim, U.SA., 11 md 11»T. 1. OomM KnIWrt, CmM, 14 and 11M.3. 4. OwrlM WllhiB, Canada, M and 1MM. S. Tkn Wood, U.SA and linj. 4. Jay Humphry. Canada, M. 14*.*. j, Carala Porntl bridga, Canada, 13 ana ,m^ m, mtitmn Urhm and Stan Urbm, USA., 11 and 141.1. S. Lynn Malhtwt and Srypn Top- Imperial jH’esentsils credentials Hiram Walker & Sons CharaOer: 86Proof HuU: Smooth Reftrmett: Knowledgeable People Priei: $335 $249 4/3 01. FWI Ctit Ma. 441 Cada Na. m Auto Insurance For ANYONE .. , 53 Va W*9t Huron Wt-Hov»--.. A-Plan For . HARD-TO-PLACE INSURANCE RISKS i^Bad Rocord i^Underago i^Financiat - Responsibility DON NICHOLir iNSURANCf FE 5-8183 PNH Wrestlers Get More Honors Rec 5s Pmtiac Northern added more laurels to an already frittering wrestling record with a double victory at Roseville Saturday. (hach Bill Willson and crew won the Inter-Lakes League championship early in the day to finish first in an Inter-Lakes vs. Eastern Michigan League matdi. The league title was die HuaUes’ fifth ia aix yean of competitioii. Walled Lake fin- iag, Waterford third and Far-miagtOB came ia fourth. In the inter-league meeting. Poll Huron trailed Nmlhem by two points and East Detroit captured the third spot. WalM Lake was fourth. * * * In winning the I-L crown. Northern picked up five individ-ua} titles and four Huskies finished second. Tlie team nailed down four individual crowns in the inter-lea^ scrap. TITLE WINNERS Taking first-place points in the I-L battle for Northern^wCTe Dave Oswalt (112), Dennis Mills (120), Art Allen (138), Bruce 'Ilppin (145) and A1 Rayner (165). Oswalt made it to the finals in the inter-league match twt eout- IsirfaMlfff farwiH Mm Hinwtire. Ite oi^ionent in thg finals would have been Port Hunm’s Ken Kania, whom Oswalt had defeated earlier in the week. Mflla, Allen, Tippin and Raynw moved into the inter-league competition and came away with Individnal titles. Northern and Port Huron bat- Form Not Up to Par, U. S. Tankers Rally BREMEN, Germany (AP) — A team of American Olympic swimmers, some well off their won five of 10 final events Sunday in the windup of a star-stud-< ded International meet. The winners included Olympic champions Jed Graef of Verona, NJ., Ckthy Ferguson of Burbank, Calif., Dick Roth of Atherton, Calif., the women’s med^ ley relay team of Miss Fergus^ on, Claudia Kolb and Donna de Varona of the Santa Clara, S.C., and Sharon Stouder of Glendora, Calif. Tlie other U.S. victor was Olympian Phil Riker of Paterson, N.J. Graef to(A the 200 meter backstroke in 2:14.3; Roth won the 400-meter medley in 4:57.1; Hiker captured vthe 100 meter butterfly in 58.0; Miss Ferguson w(^ the 100 mekr backstroke In Ex-Flint Speedster Ice Skates to Title MrrROIT (AP)-Jim Chapin of St. Louis and Detroiters Eddie Bertrand and Jeanne Ome-lenchuk dominated Simday’s Midwest speed skating championships at Farwell Park. Chapin, a 3^yea^-okl druggist who once skated out of Flint, Mjch., took the men’s title in I the tvNHlay meet with victinies jaJmee MJds.iSse j»ce^ 1:09.1 and the girls’ medley relay quartet edged Holland by three-tenths of a second m 4:37.5; Miss Stouder, winner of three gold medals and one silver at Tokyo, has been busy touring the banquet circuit. She only recently resumed training. Tlie 16-year-oId Olympic queen bowed to Ada Kok of the Netherlands, who was timed in the Dutch record of 2:25.8 for the 200 meter butterfly, and lost in the 100 meter freestj'le to another Dutch girl, Winnie Van Weerdenburg, who was timed in 1:021. Miss Stouder was timed in 1:02.5 in the freestyle with Miss de Varona third in 1:03.4. Holland's Klenie Bimolt won the 100 meter breaststroke in 1:17.3, with Miss Kolb third in 1:18.6; ()zechoslovakia’s Jin-drick Wagner took the 100 meter freestyle in 54.6 with Iilike Austin of Yale third in 55.6, and West Germany'.! Hoiger Kirschke w(hi the 200 meter freestyle in 2:01.4 with Mike Wall of the Santa (Hara S.C., seventh. Bertrand, 18, won all six races in the intermediate boys class and added the five-mile special to his tro|diy case. ★ ★ ♦ Mrs. Omelenchuk, the skating school teacher from suburban Warren, also was undefeated, taking all five races for the senior women’s crown.-'" " tied down to the wire in the inter-league contest. Going into the finals, Port Huron led N o r t h e r n by two points. Both squads had five wrestlers in the finals. SHARP IN FINALS Tte^em lBien proceeded To win four qr five final matches and two of four in the consolations. Port Huron {ticked up only three victories in'the finals and only one of five matches in the conflations. Northern received some help from Waterford in the interleague finab. In the heavyweight dhiston, Waterford’s Gerry Gterow-sky, who also bag^ the I-L tide, defeated Port Boron’s Ron Stnrmer in fhe finall. A win by Stnrmer wonld have pushed Port Hnron into a tie with Northern for the title. Waterford had another I-L champion in Bill Hunt (180), who also grabbed a second place in the inter-league match. * ★ ★ Walled Lake had a pair of league titlbts in Roger Nicolay (103) and John Hellner aSS). Nicolay was second in the Inter-league, losing a duel with Port Huibn’s Gary Raven, but Kellner was more fortunate as he pifmed a ‘tiefrat on Rm^ vine’s Alif Joshua. Art Woehler (95), Dan Hever (127) and Dick Johnson (154) captured league titles (or Farmington, and Johnson finbhed first in hb division in the interleague match. InWr-LikM vi. Satltni •Itni MlcMt*ii S»; 3. Port Hur I (ED) del. Art Woehler (Port Huron) (ertolt levt otwan (Pontlac Northern' IW-Oennls Mills (Pontlec I dee. Ed AAcMIllan (Port Jluron) 3-117-^rt AAcMIllen (Port Hur-Dan. Hover (Farmington) Id. 133- Joho Hellner (Welle- ■ IH Joshua (Roseville) 4-S. 134- Art Allen (Pontiac Horthem) dec. Oer* Stamps (Roseville) 4-5.’ 14S-Bruce TIppIn (Pontlec Northern) -ec. Jerry OlxessskI (East OetroH) 4-1. 1S4-Dkk Johnson (Farmington) pinned Jdh OtzewskI (East Detroit) 4:30. 14S-AI Rayner (Pontiac Northern) dec. ameer Joshua (Roseville) S-2. 110-Ray Helloiwell (East Detroit) dec. I. Wstertord S5; 4 Go To Orion For Youf GTO RUSS JOHNSON MOTON SAUS •IM-24,UktQriM m-ttM OUR NEW Customer Relations Department TO^ERVE YOU BETTER / We’ve been workingr hard at developing an organization that will sell and service in volume as real professionals. In our consistent efforts to improve both of these ends, our custoiher relations department was founded!. With this new de{>arftnent, we will be able to devote more {xersonal time and effort to your 'Thany ne^. it is Tjur sincere desire to provide _a convenient and efficient means of clearing up any proUem, however small, which relates to Ford products and to our business. Remember, the Customer Relations Department is here for youl_ _„ A Satigfied Customer Is Our Befit Sahsmait -------------- JOHN McAllLIFFE 6d0 Oakland FORD FE 54101 2 Playoffs Beghmifig^ 4-Stroke Lead Victory Margin in Bogota Golf Argentina iinksman Coasts to Triumy>h After Fdst 5taiT BOGOTA, Colombia (AP) -Veteran Roberto de Vicenzo was locked in a threeway tie when he started, but breezed in with a four-stroke lead over the last nine holes of the Bogota Open golf tourney. “I saw A1 Besselipk shooting par after the ninth Tiitie,’^ the handsome 41-year-old Argentine said after hb victory Sunday. “I was four undo- at that potet so I was only concentrating on par golf the rest of the way.” * it * De Vicenzo, who owns a dozen international titles, shot a blistering four-under-par 32 over the front nine of the Los Lagartos Course Sunday, then coasted in with a 68 for a 274 total, a four stroke lead and the $3,000 first PowcU Truck. 4 City recreation {tiayoffs begin tonight A and tixnorrow ni^t in B at Madison Junior Hig^ Scho(ti. The Waterford Township American and National League continue through next week as well as the city Gass C and p cards. The Gass A playoff winner will represent Pontiac in the state recreation tournament. rl Lp«mg* n.i Zllka Liijuw TinliM Madlun JHS-Thp Studwiti ........ BloomfipM HNtmg, 7 p.m.; Ltoyd Molorf vs. K. D. TdtvIilM, 4:30 p.r Crpry JHS—Dumtan Floral Rita Homas, 7:15 p.m.i HI A DrI va. Ryaton'i AAarkat, 4:30 - Ing va. Packara, 7 p._m. Start, 7 p.m.; Haartit va. Cot ■nca, 4:30 p.m. Northarn HS-^toy"JrtS#'f _____________ K. D. knar, 4:30-p.m. Plorca JHS - Six Ra Conitruetton va. O'Nell Realty, 7:15 p.m.; Laktiand Pharmacy vt. Spencer Floor Covering, 4:30 p.m.; Buckner Finance va. FruBwor A Strubla Realty, * - - - Incoln JHS—Tamt vi front, end ALIGNMENT He had started out in a tie rith Besselink, Grossinger, N.Y., and rookie Willie Scholl, who plays out of the Bahamas. Besselink had to settle for a par on the final round, however, and Scholl went to a 74 and a 278 for third place. BARNUM SIXTH W® Ellis, J., and Raymond Floyd, St. Andrews, 111., were tied for fourth ^rlth 279s and John Bamum, Grand Rapids, Mich., was sixth at 280. The golfers now move on to Maracaibo, Venezuela for the on the Caribbean tour ____followed by the Cara- ^\Open and the San Juan Open). The Seagram Cup goes U> the top'^rer in the five tournaments. ^ ^ r’Sif^i'iiD”"*...:... isIsIsi-CT Ray Floydy $1300 John Bamump $100$ ... Cartel Anzaldo* $$50 •. 71*70-67>73—211 ; pSS^LWfSlSVrtll, Mlgiwl Sala, 4700 Clitt Brown, 4575 Jim ForrM. 4575 71-71-44-73—143 Art will, W5 73^74-44-»4 GOODYEAR RUSTPROOFIN6 • Critieai poiats M xtir Gir • Svre-staliif etapoBBit uti4 • Appiitd ky oar tniROP oiptrts easy^5| PAY $_______ nRMS camplBte RastprNtef $2S 195 COMPLETE MOTOR TUNE-UP Florontino W ... 74-74-72.47—347 ... nn«-n-m ______________________. 72-79-73-73-244 WII Honwnhik, 4305 .... 7^4A75-74- Jackaon Bradity, 4115X3; . 7V7^/^74-i AlChIa Dadlan, 4115J3 .. 71-44-74-74-240 Howoll Frator, X115.I3 . 75-7470 71-240 Earl Puckatt, 4115.13 71-71-44-44—340 J44 JtmonaA 433SX3 . 7»»7744- 24) Larry ZlagWr, 4115J3 73-70-77-71-341 NHL Standings W L T n*. OF BA ---- '• •".jJt- Defrolt 3, T........ Chicago 7, Boston 0 Today's Oa: No gamos schat&lad. Tuaiday's fl Wo gamas schaduwd. ■■■■BBBBaBBBaaaaBaBBaaaBBBBaaaB When You Need ; MONEY... I Srakow Hwt pall ta flw laft or r%iit V daaporoao . . kara'o Hto curt! BRAKE SPECIAL! • Froat Whaals Raaiovod • Front Whool Boaringo Repackod • Groaae Soalo Chockod Finance Plans Aren't All Alike! j , We invite comfxirisan of our new \ HOMEOWNER'S LOAN PLAN! | Tailored to suit your needs and j income, you may borrow i UP TO ‘5,000 On Home Equities or 1 st Mortgages j J with only On* convaniont monthly - poymont and your | B loop ii fully ofotoctod b^lifo ln«uronco at no additional I ~l cotti Call t^ay ... in ihooT'caooiTliSan^onSi^ complotod within 72 houro and no clotingcooto! | FAMILY ACCEPTANCE CORP. ! Compare... Today! ALL TIRES AND SERVICES ON EASY PAY TERMS GOODYEAR SERVICE STORE B« WMi Track l|. 317 Nationol Building FP Q .^^OO 10 WEST HURON W C OpM t:30 te 5:30 Fritley 'HI 9 P.M. FB S-6123 TUTSNTYtWO SrtiE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY. FEBRUARY 22. 1965 A They/ Words on BO I Fellow Failed to Smell Swell By DICK WEST WASHINGTON (UPI) - Gentlemen, I feel It my duty to xam yixrihit if your de6d(M-iot leaves you only half safe, your government likely will do nothing to protect you from the consequences. At least not if an opinion recently handed down trial examiner for the Natlohal Labor Relations Board is adopted as federal policy. In ndiat may be a landmark case, the examiner stated that firing an employe for failing to keep himself in an acceptable state of deodorization would not constitute an unfair labor practice. As far as I could lean,' was the first time that the U.S. govemneBt la all of its soffcaiB maj|es^ has raercised any soli of JurlsdlctiOB over BO. Heretofore, the problem has more or less been regarded as who heard the case, raled in favor of the naioa. Bat in doing so, he also took a prece-deaUettiag posiUoa os the BD fse^s, H W iffli the march e( civijHihtiea self. a local tissue to be dealt with amewtlrk of within the framewl free enterprise system. “ ... It can be said without serious contradiction that in our present state of existence these days we have now branched out The case in point involves a food store employe whose discharge was contested by the Retail Clerks union. Management maintained he was let go for aromatic reasons after being told that he would have to use a stronger deodorant. OTHER REASON The union, on the other hand, insisted that he was terminated for organizational activities. Examiner Phil W. Saunders, era of clean shaves and quate deodorants,” Saunders wrote. Tn fact, I thmk it safe to say that a stranger coming to our shores for the first time might conceivably believe notice Pursuant to Act 275—Public Acts 1964, Notice is hereby given, the Woterford Township Board of Revi^ shall meet on the following times and dates at the office of the Supervisor, Waterford Township HqII. 4995 W. Huron St., Pbntiac, Michigan, March . 2 9 A.M. to 5 P.M. 1 P.M. tcT 9 P. M. 9 AM. to 5 P.M. 9 A.M. to 5 P. M. 7 T: M7“Rr Morch 15 9 A.M. to 5 P. M. Signed byi James E. Seeterlin, Supervisor Secretory'—Board of Revfi|w that such preparations rank our most prized possessions.” WIDE SCOPE While conceding that “it may be somewhat difficult to ascertain the exact scope of offensiveness to others in the non- or misuse of deodorizers,'^ he said, such matters “must lx evaluated in the light of progress.” He noted that we no longer live in the “era of the old-fashioned store centered around pot-bellied stoves in the days when the homesteaders were pushing West.” Therefore, Saunders said, the failed to meet modem stand-ards of fragrance would be “within the legitimate prerogative of management.” I interpret this to mean that underarm redolence will not bf„ toierated in the “GrMt Society." If your best friends won’t tell you, maybe Uncle Sam will. A reef estimated to contain more than 100,000 tons of lead zinc pay ore in Auckland Prov- such deposit in that area. Interest (Compounded Quarterly) ON ALL SAVINGS ACCOUNTS All deposits made by the 10th of the month-earn from the Isti Packer! the Store that saves ecu More! uptoPBXMore pon ■— , ^ plunV. this McsdowdaU Ulii, D„. Swoksd FIrrar -I 5Ufjgp Om 6000 EVERYDAY LOW LOW PRICES ON BRAND NAME FOODS YOU KNOW AND TRUST! Gov’t Imp**- lb. BACON !\ .u V VrICM tHaWM mni WaUnMdtr, e«b. 14 • ni«M, PMtrvtS to _ 138Sixa I 2^89 PaKoi Ca^ry Hot Hovm Buky Boa Fresh Rhubarb Green Onions Bonk with "Tho Bonk on tho Grow!" ModforS lotto PtiKV D’Aniou Peers Here Are Examples of Our Everyday Low Prites! PONTIA STATE BANK • Main Office, Sacinaw at Lawrence • Miracle Mile • Auburn Heights • M-59 Plaza • RaUlwii^Tit Yale w 0ioointieid4tiil5-.^U WUuwgUa^ • Drayton Plains • 6 to 6, 4 E/Lawrence • New Opdyke Walton Office Next to Blue Sky Theatre • New East Highland Office M-59 and Duck Lake Rd. Cannon towel OFFER, coesPABef I COMPAm Chunk Tuna 123* Soaltott Bkli, Croomy Half ft Half 39*1 . WoA CWb •» .' Moot Spam tr Pram 39*1 O a W Brotoo Cheese Pizil 39*1 Wfiolo Komol niMjjk. 'a I, IS-II Sr W |5^o*i« 13f|-|l ■oof, Chkfcon, Torkoy froioR ■ ^ i BansHslDhHMn';;:r|39* Mswn I villas • StokilyBatiiip 14* 'White Braaf19*1^ DRAYTON PLAINS WALLED UKE 5060 Dixie Hwy. N. of Weften Bhd. 700 Peirtiee TmH at Mapla »5?Bor 124* BIRMINGHAM U55 WppdhvMd at 14 MHa THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 22, l9flg TWENTY-THREE Slaying of Malcolm X Shocks Harlem; Police Fear Violence (EDITOR’S NOTE: Two Auockited Preti writen auessed the mood of Harlem folbnring the flaying of Malcolm X. Bernard Gamier and Auftin Scott record the reactions in the mostly Negro a.) colm X supporters and the Mus-liRtt. Once high in the Muslim hierarchy, Malcolm X was forced out — by his own accord - in De(^mber 1963. Last week his home was burned .by fire bombs — and he said it was a move by MusUnu to kill him. NEW YORK (AP) - Outside Malcolm X’s headquarters fa) Harlem’s Theresa Hotel, a knot of young Negro men talked cryiAically — like conspirators in a Shakespeare tragedy — and, seemed too tense for tears. Their leader — the militant Malcolm X — had been shot to death only a few hours earlier. He was killed as he sought to raise the spirits of some 400 fol- „'about the' Muslims that is like the Mafia,” ^d one knowledgeable Negro. “You can’t resiffi. Yop can’t be as high in the MusUms as Malcolm was and then quit, or oppose It, as he did.” REAL POWER Malcolm X’s real power in Hartem or in American Negro “There will be names named.” one bearded Negro said. He had been one of the handful of men who had Just con)e from the hotel headquarters. "This is not the end of it.” Diagonally across 125th Street and Seventh Avenue, the crossroads of Harlem, five dozen well-dressed Negroes gathered before the book store of Louis Michaud —who has long promoted his brand of African nationalism — and talked soberly. A large smooth-faced brown man in a tweed coat and gray hat talked bitterly, his voice rising. HOT SUMMER “H)e intellectuai Negroes really didn’t support him outright, because they couldn’t accept his philosophy, but they liked Malcolm X because he had a style,” said one Negro intellectual. “He was bright, articulate, young, and he had a place in this whde sort of Negro revo- Mfhy would the Muslims or any Negro element want to kill Malcolm X? “It must be understood,” said this intellectual, “that Malcolm X was making a fundamentol change and that was ttiat there was a possibility of coexistence of the races. Elijah Muhammad and the Muslims preach separatism. They were experiencing too many defectors to the Mal- said, angrily. “It from last summer. That was all scientifically planned, that long hot summer the man (white men) talked about. But last summer was just a warning of what was goinig to happen. You say what Malcolm X has to. do. you? 'The man is telling you. He is telling you that you have outlived what he wants. and he is going to kill you. There was no violence in the streets, but police feared there might be a clash between Mai- ‘NONSENSE’ William Epton. of the Pro-ff^ive Labor Movement, said the notion of a fratricidal fight between the Muslims and Malcolm was nonsense. .^. .‘‘That has be«i built tip j)ver i long period so people would accept the idea, but the Mus-lims qre nonviolent and kill its enemies. Malcolm X was dangerous to the power structure because he had begun directing his fire at the racist element in American life.” Epton in the past has described himself as a Communist. AL tween Muslim and Malcolm X supporters had occurred. However, police were geared for it. Do^s of squad cars patrolled the area. Patrolmen stood in paim at almost every corner. A white reporter moving into the crowd before Michaud’s closed store drew the attention of a large surly Negro, who thnatened him. When fte reporter failed to move, the man leaned close to him aqd swore menacingly. SHOWPLACES CLOSED The Muslim slwwplaces were closed, reportedly at the request of police. Outside the Theresa, the men who said they knew Malcolm X talked about the possibility of a rally and said there would be a statement. But they seemed leaderless. A boy came Up Seventh Avenue, whirring along on roller skates. One of the bearded Malcolm X men gave an involuntary jerk to his arm. The boy “I’m with you, brother,” said the other nran. And that was pretty much the way Harlem took the death of the black na- ’There was a lot of talk about the Black Muslims, ai^ their running feud with Malcolm and his followers. But nobody really sure w^ had gunnM him down as he stood on the stage of the Audubon Ballroom. were just like me. We like to hear him speak.” The cheerful greeting “Brother Malcolm” rang out as he traveled through Harlem. Most of those who greeted him did not subscribe to his belief'that violence should be inet with vio-l«"ce. and that whites were c 011 e g eeduqated audience laughing out loud at the mention of the nonviolent tactics advocated by Dr. Martin Luther King. Malcolm X won a thundering ovation after his speech. “Isn^j he great,” scream^ one young woman as sly applauded. “He s how to siyir’ DIVE FOR COVER “I just don’t know,” was the comment made by a number of people who had ^ved for cover when the shots rang oul really devils. ~ really knows CAPACITY MEETINGS GOOD WORDS But they would sUll fill to ca- Even his enemies had good pacity the meetilms where .he; for hfa" Sunday night. .............I grin, spoke. With I easy, cultured speaking voice and his dramatic gestures as he hammered home a point, he was an effective speaker. ’The tall, sandy-haired leader did nof have j large following. IT was eslihaaled af “several hundred at best. But he had a magnetic personality, and a lot of sympathizers. "He was no leader,” said one man in the crowd. “He was another black man trying to climb all over top of us. But it shouldn’t have ended like that.’’ .“There weren't two dozen of his ovm followers in that ball-ro without that the whole thing would have been in^MMsiUe.” He says there were diffiqult obstacles to overcome to get close to the planes. These- included three outer rtnM- - tifltio, witti th6 formed by 100 “strategic hamlets” that surround the base and the 70 military posts that control them. - w w The second line comprised 12 blockhouses and 18 fortified db-servation towers and the third an inner line ipde of five rows of barbed wire entanglements covering SO yards in depth with mine fiel^ in Between the rows and triggering devices on the wire to set off flares if touched. WWW He says all of the men In his unit were from the area of the base, and that the Viet Cong knew precisely how many planes were there despite U.S. efforts to keep this secret. MORTAR FIRE To get into position to ensure accurate mortar fire “we had to carry out very complicated in-filtraUon movements with the greatest care in order not to alert the enemy. But we did this and at 11:28 p.m. as we had planned all our teams were in pndtioa and opened fire rimul-taneously. “mthin q>llt seconds there were thunderous explosions and flames shot high into the air. Our first priority was for the B57s.” ★ * ★ He added that within noinutes switdi^ to the “U S. onty” ba^ racks and the main obseriration^ post was knocked But with the first salvo. He said that the action at Hoa was over in a few minutes “and we started the complicated task of withdrawal — the whole area was lit up then by flares. There was no resistance to our attack at all and we ma^ aged to get away.”-ATTACK DIVERSION A diverskmary attack on a South Viet Nam artillery bat-tery at Tan Uyen, about ei^ miles to the north, aided in the successful withdrawal, he said. This correspondent was briefed also by a Viet Cong officer on the fighting in December around Binh Gia, « mllerAiir of Saigon, in which the South Vietnamese took heavy losses. (U.S. estimates were 200 South Vietnamese kUled. Six Americans were killed, eight Americans wounded a^ two presumed taken prisoner. He credited Viet Cong suc- among ^ Sooth VlMnamese troops and the flexibility of Viet Cong tactics. VIET MORALE He Monounil FM/AM Rodk, pewofM MikSototo loM WooFora, two 1,000 qrcio riRonontlol NOW ONLY •395^ The Contemporary-model 1-ST68S with 50-watts undistorted music power and two heavy-duty, high-efficiency 12* Bass Woofers, plus all the other features described above, fn eluant Natural Walnut, Annual Sale priced. SAVE UP TO ^50 ... on this beautiful compact Astro-Sonic that is only 38* L, 17' D, 25* H. MarWs-irattt on^^TtttfTTnis^ efficiency I2*'Bass Woofers plus the features above. ■■ Your choice of Fruitwood or Antique Ivory finishes— French Provincial model 1-St647. Also in Far Eastern Contemporary style—your choice. Annual Sale priced. A vast improvement in the re-creation of music! I solid-state circuitry eliminates vacuum tubes and compoi^t-damaging heat—gives ten times the efficiency of comparable tr’-’ * Tho Contemporary— Model 1-SC601 In rich Mahogany or DarkWalnut finishes. Annual Sale priced. Only from Magnavox-Micromatic Record Player banishes discernible record and stylus wear. Diamond Stylus is guaranteed 10 years against excessive wear in normal usage—replaced by dealer upon return. NOW ONLY *138“ Wfmderfhlly compact... ideal wherever apace is a problem! Enjoy thrilling performance never before possible at such low cost. Detachable legs make it ever so versatile as a table model—even on shelves! Powerful stereo amplifier; four high fidelity speakers. Advanced acoustical system projects room-filling sound from both sides and the cabinet front. Gliding panel opens to exclusive Micromatic Record Pbyer—lets your records bst a lifetime! never before such thrilling sound from a STEREO PORTABT.E SAVE 120 NOW, ONLY $gg8o NOW... YOUR RECORDS CAN LAST A LIFETIME-with the exclusive Micromatic Record Player ^above). The Stereo Concerto-Model 1P242 has two 8* oval speakers with coaxial tweeters; balance, loudness and tone controls. Powerful solid-state stereo amplifier uses no tubes! Wonderfully compact and easy to cany. Your choice of Hiree beautiful colors, all Annual Sale priced. * OFDI MOHRAV, IRDRSDAT, FRIDAY ’Rl 9 pjn. * PARK FREE b WKCS Lot, Rear Bf Slora meNIFlCENT MA6NAV0X... YOUR PASSPORT TO RREAT EMTERTAINMEMT... ORDER YOURS ROW! TVyhM > >S1X Education Program Funds Can Go Astray THE PONTIAC PRESS. MQNDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1065 By LESLIE J. NASON. ED. D. A cooriderable legment of the fovemment's War on Poverty program is devoted to problems of education. Propels for reeducation of the Jobless, and vill give children from unareas a better! start on their] journey through] school, are be-* ing approved in NASON large numbers. The primary purpose, relieving die plight of people, must always be kept foremost. The decisions made by one astray. He insisted that a proposed program for prekinderw garten children from underprivileged homes place 2S to 30 children to a group. The school principal questioned this point. He felt that 25 was too large a number to allow for the individual attention which such children need. The supervisor explained that jqcoby on Bridge 25 was the minimum number that could be used in his statistical analysis of the results. Thus, the children’s needs gave way to administrative expediency. LARGE GROUPS Large groups meant that schoolrooms must be used. First CCTisideratien should have been given to prepii^htiop for Under garten carried out in homes, parks or libraries in the area, rather than in schools already short of classrooms. Furthermore, the children were to be selected not on the basis of need but by means garten, for which they were being prepared, had but a two and one-half hour session. FOR STATISTICS But three hours per day, five days a week, made a more manageable portion of the child’s waking hours for statis- * tical purposes — so three hours was the specification for the NOBTK (D) ¥AQJ ♦ AKQ102 ♦ 10 7 3 EAST ♦ 1052 *J V 10 6 4 WKIS32 ♦ J74 * 0653 ♦ AKQJ *»64 'SOOTH ♦ AKQ8843 *853 No one vubierabje^ rOi Boat SonUi We«t Pm 4* Pom Pass Pass . Opening lead—* K. is no chance to collect a trick in either red suH. South has hid four spades all by himself and certainly has at least six _ I his hand. He has shown up with^tbme clubs and therefore can’t hold more THE PONTIAC P^SS. MONP^AY, F&BRUARY 22, 1965 TWENTY-SEVEN HEADS rOR CAIRO -- Walter Ulbridit (right) East German Communist boss, shakes hands with Heikal (first name unknown), head ot the United Arab Republic trade mission in East Berlin, before Ulbricht left yesterday for Cairo, Egypt. Ulbricht’s trip is straining West Germany’s ties in the Middle East. House GOP Is Readying School Aid Alternatives Nass«r Blamds U. S. for Bonn Feud East German Leader Sails to U. A. R. for Controversial Visit WASHINGTON (UPD—liouse tee together this week to start Republicans are readying their own school aid proposals as an son’s $1.2 billion plan. The admijrfatnitioa^jgQgram-would aid schools with high enrollments from poor families, help pay the cost of books for public uxi parochial schools and encourage “shared time” teaching projects. It already has been approved by the House General Education subcommittee. Rep. Charles E. GoodeH, R-TTT., r - ~ ------- member of the geiieral edaca- ing the weekend that 32 ameadments already have been dmfted. He said the de-ciiioa onwhetherto offer fade of committee Democrats when drafting sessions atari- _ in the original plans to pash the bill thmgh as qaickly as possible has given Repnblicans time to prC- draft proposed changes in the administration plan. ’The House Educatim and Labor Committee originally was scheduled to tMce up school aid earlier this month. But chairman Adam (Dayton Powell, D-N.Y., has held off the start of meetinponit, on a completely separate alternative aid-to-education plan. This might take the form of a federal tax credit system for in£vidualslii)b support niemen- The GOP committee minority, which boycotted voting on Oie wbemunittee WU on the ground ,(hat it was being ramrodded through without any attention to Republican proposals, has used the two-week delay to prepare for a Ov'mmittee showdown. START WORK ___________ "PiovmRInay 'cWIhe commlt- tary and secondary schools through local and state property, income and sales taxes. Former Sen. Barry M, Goldwater, R-Ariz., the 19M Republican presidential nominee, had a similar plan. The GOP also might offer a pr^)08at to return some portion of federal taxes to the states for use in the schools. This has been suggested, in various forms, by members of both parties in the past The possible Republican alternatives suggest that the main GOP objection to the Johnson plan will be that it would impose too much federal control on l^ cal'schooTs.' QUESTION: Will^ a barracuda really bite people? ANSWER: The barracuda looks something like the pikes and pickerel found in the streams and lakes of our eastern and central states-but this fish inhabits salt water. There is a number of different species, the smaller kmds not being considered , dangerous to human beings. It is different, however, with Iho largest variety, the Great Barmcnda, which lives off the coasU of the Caro-linas, Florida and the West Indies. Larger specimens of this can be from eight to ten feet long, although barracuda over five feet m rare. Wise swtaS htete tx« in our picture. wiU head for s^ top speed if they know a bariacuda is lurking around, as these fish do sometimes attadc Riiman beings. The barmcnda has ruorn^Mrp teetil nd a habH of foUowing any moving object, being Ifcdy to make a sadden rush or strike at anything which gleams in the water or cafches fl«e light. Although the barra^a’s tendency to strike at something moving makes him dangerous to swimmys, it also leads him to selte lures cast out by fishermen. . ’The Silver Barracuda of the coast of South California Is said -to be the Jdni n»st usrfuf to FOR YOU TO DO: Some time you may have occasion to visit tropical seas, and it’s good to know about underwater dangers so you can avoid them. Look up “shark” and “piranha” in an encyclopedia. Another very dangerous creature if Ae moray cd. CAIRO — East German President Walter Ulbridit sailed toward Egypt today for the visit with President Gamal Abdel Nasser that has produced a crisis in relations between West Oerpiany and Ae Arab*. Ulbricht flew yesterday mnnist East Gerinan regime despite West German threats te cat economic aid and break / relations with Cairo. Nasser toM'a rally y Oie United States was/t ixrttom d te^Blter^ public’s feud wife /Bonn over pressure from fee United States against fee wishes of the West (German people. If U (West Germany) is not independent, then we will have to deal with it on that basis,” Nasser de- West Germany reprisals against fee U.A.R. would be viewed as actions against tho entire Arab world. down Bonn’s offer of 111 million in money in lieu of that amount of arms which were not de- T5i5rovniF, IHe'Yugoslav coast-" al resort, and boarded an East German Ship for the trip. ’The vessel is due in Aleundria Wednesday, and Ulbricht will go by train to. Clairo for an official welcome from Nasser. ’The-Bonn government fears Ulbricht’s visit may mean fee United Arab Republic plans to recognize the Corn- West Germany halted arms e of Nasser’s objections. i that Washing-! “an international ’ to send Israel arms via W^t Germany because “it did tyit want to do it openly.” BED TO PRESSURE / He said Cfeancelor Ludwig Er-/hard’s government gave in to ’The government - controlled (]airo press said leaders of the Arab worid would draw up a statement backing fee U.A.R. against West German reprisals because of Ulbricht’s impending visit. The newspapers said the statement would warn that any GETS SUPPORT Statements of support for ' Nasser "have alr«#dy bear !*• sued by President Ahmed Ben .Bella ot Algeria and President Habib Bourguiba of Tunisia who is visiting Cairo. $20,000 Blaze Hits Grand Rapids Firm Nasser refused to call off Ulbricht’s visit even though the West Germans cut off arms aid to Israel. Israel charged that the West Germans were giving in to blackmail, and Israeli Premier Levi Eshkol turned GRAND RAPIDS (UPI) -Fire starting from an overheated smokestack caused an estimated damage of $20,000 to the Haviland Products Co, yesterday. Firemen said damage to thw building was estimated at $1S,-000 and loss to the contents $Sr-000. The company makes chemical compounds ' TO PlAV "SUPER BINGO" aso.ooo WINNERSI ..... r WIN 5 EXCITING WAYS-START TODAY...IT'S FUN PLUS 350 EXTRA TOP VALUE STAMPS WITH COUPONS IN THIS AD AND COUPONS IN MAILER BOOKLET! .Mtat.Hsnt mjf Jaat Con^ ■ffaoitva in Pnntiae Ana Only! lEAN MEATY COUNTRY STYLE SPARE RIBS-----------------49*' EARLY WEEK SPECIAL! FRESH ALL BEEF HAMBURGER nTOKMl/C O " BALL PAAKwriierSu 59* * DtmH CHOICE SMOKED CENTER HAM SLICES. 79‘ WITH NEWSPAPER I COUPON THRIFTY BEEF ROOMPT IB. FRESH PiCMIC STYLE Pork Roast TASTY KLEIN’S WIENERS . ROli PORK SAUSAGE . RING BOLOGNA, LIVER SAUSAGE OR POLISH SAUSAGE RIBzSIRyOlN STEAK 79f KROGER GRADE 'A' FRESH URGFEGGS i 1 R tr KROGER BRAND FRUIT COCKTAIL ...4i GRAPEFRUIT ,«i NEW! KROGER 100 PER CENT CORN OH, _ _ MARGARINE... 4~99‘ SAVE UP TO 30*-ELSIE OR OLD FASHIONED BORDEN'S KE «E*M SAVE lO'-BORDEN'S — CHOCOLATE miik. .19‘ MMPBEU'S TOMATO SOUP f REG. I , SIZE ■cans, WITH COUPON & $5 PURCHASE KROGER REG. OR DRIP VAC PAC COFFEE i« 1-LB. CAN SAVE 10‘ 33, 1*63. Nm mM «• dtoluM. CEpyrtjtW 1945. TKo KiGforCoHipony. WITH COUPON & $5 PURCHASE FROZEN BEEF, CHICKEN OR TURKEY MORTGN POT PIES 5^89* |BBBSIDKI!IEI!EBN| * A41V CITB ” SAVE IP-KROGER SLICED I KROGER SANDWICH BUNS OR RAISIN WIENER BREAD BUNS ic I ...ICc, 39‘ 1 ^15‘ SAVE n i ANT SI2E m ■ CREST TOOTNPASn or ■ - WITH COUPONS I head & SHOULDERS I i-iacan B5‘ savi lo-■ 3 tw. sia cam 25* savb ii< *9 V FROM MAlim B SHAMPOO ■ V«BA llmi jMMrfay, FAiwwry $3, IMS. I VaU Itmi TmiMy, <***■ WITN TtnS. COUrON AND is PUaCHASI CM MOM KROOBR RBOMAR ot MNP VAC PAC COFFEE Z TOMATO SOUP In SAVl 4R* With Mailer Coupon Toward The Purchono of Onn “WINDSOR BROCAOC” LID COVER. MVIIR* With Mailer Coupon Toward Tha PurchoM of On# "WINDSOR BR^DB" HAND TOWK. " SRVIIR' With MdRoir Coupon Toward Tho Purcheno of Volumo t, WEBSTER'S DICTiONARY. 12 Pkfs. CUT-UP FRTERS, I "l^TRfi. mER FARTS wt Plut 200 Extra Top Voluo Stamp* Wi - -- - WITH THIS COUPON AND U PUtCHASt OI ItOM ■ ALL BEEF ” NAMBUMBt ■ ■ J I VaM Him TwatOoy, Pahwoty St. 1MB. | 'Cowpam Pram Your AAndad t 12 ROASTING CHICKENS. I BEEF ROAST 1^ ihM ToMMy, PJh^ W. tOjy WHD^Tjao^, Nh^^^ML 7 : ' lUS... -i. TWEimy^KiHT^ THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY. FEBRqARY 22. 1965 Deaths in Pontiac Area MRS. ERNEST M. RARBER Service for Mrs. Ernest M. (Anna E.) Barber. 80. of SOI Kenilworth will be 1:30 p.m. tomorrow at the D. E. Pursley Funeral Home. Burial will be in Oak Hill Cemetery. Mrs. Bart>er died Saturday following a two-year illness. She is survived by her husband, one grandchild and two great-grandchildren. ' MRS. CHARLES DESCHAINE Service for Mrs. Oiarles (Agatha) Deschaine, 71, of 26 Park will be at 10 a.m. tomorrow al St. Vincent de Paul Catholic Church, with burial at Mt. Hope Cemetery. Mrs. Deschaine died Saturday after a brief illness. She was a member of Ihf diu^ ary Altar Society. A ros^ will be said, at 8 tonight at Oe Melvin A. Scbutt Funeral Home. Surviving are three daughters, Mrs. Mary Ann Brodie of Orchard Lake, Mrs. Agatha Dean and Mrs. Men Hoffman, both of Pontiac; four sons, William of Dayton, Ohio, and Paul, John and Richard, all of Pontiac; two sisters. Mrs. Katherine Doran Pontiac; 33 grandchildren; and a great-grandchild. ELMER E. HUNTLEY Service for Elmer E. Huntley, 76, of 18^ Murphy will be 1:30 p.m. Wednesday at Donelson-Johns Funeral Home, with burial in Oak Hill Cemetery. Potere Funeral Home, Rochester. Buriat will follow in Acacia Park Cemetery, Southfleld. The boy was killed in an automobile - train collision in Avon Township yesterday. Surviving besides his parents are a brother, Alan K., at home, and grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles F. Gibbs Jr of UUca and Mr. and Mrs. Hobart Gray Jr. of Royal Oak. WUJJAM E. STOFFREGEN BIRMINGHAM - Service for WUliam E. Stoffregen, 70, of 1544 Stanley will be 2 p.m. Wednesday at Manley Bailey Funeral Home. Burial will follow in Acacia Park Cemetery, Southfield. A retired sales manager of Automatic Electric'Co., Detroit, Mr. Stoffregen died today after a five^nonth '■ He was a thember of Tint Methodist Cburch; Covenant Welcome Lodge, F&AM, Chicago; the High Twelve (Hub; Independent Pioneer Telephcme Anodation; and a life member of the Industrial Electrical Engineering Society. Surviving are his wife, Jeannette; two daughters, Mrs. Ed-ward O. Falberg of Holland Birmingham; a sister; and seven grandchildren. COL. LYMAN D. TURNER ROCHESTER — Service for Col. Lyman'D. Turner, 77, of 337 Drace will be 3 p.m. Wednesday at Pixley Memorial Chapel. Masonic graveside service and id Vice Ring Use Rooms? Yard Checks Ciuas in Women's Murders LONDON (AP) - The hunt in London’s mystery of the on a grimy basement a|)hrtment whldi detectivS belleve headquarters of a vice ring. More than a dozen men of Scotland Yard’s murder squad spent all day yesterday in the apartment, checking for fingerprints and sifting a mass o^ clothing. MACHINE MATCHMAKER’S MISTAKE- matched up couples for a big dance, but iy>-parently goofed in the case of Marti Clark and Bill Baird. The pair report^ back to the dance committee tlrnt they couldn't seem' ^ find a thing in common. However, some 250 other cou^s had no gripes. Today in Washington Humphrey: Must Guard Negro Vote WASHINGTON (AP) - Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey says the administration has decided additional legislation is necessary to guarantee Negro voting rights. He did not spell out the recommendations that may be made bv the President, but did elation, appeared on a Sunday television program, “Law on Trial — Trial by News Media’’ over Washington station WTTG. Wright said he questions the constitutionality of any limits- Service Set tions on the press, but there is still a possibility that some senators and congressmen may be able to win passage of a contempt statute. Warning against any rigid and authori^ian way of attacking the problem. Friendly said: “I have a feeling that the press at this point,is..rn ,« npiri.In Some of the fundture was dismantled and taken off to yard laboratories for more d e tail e4 study. Otter detectives dug in the small back garden. Tlir apartment, in Hanuner-smith, lies gt the heart of the West London area in which six prostitutes have been found stripped and strangled in the past year. - It is only 200 yards from the home of Bridie Moore. 27, the sixth victim, whose body was diacovMredJast Tuesday. 'Washington Image Acquiring Warmth' WASfflNGTW CROSSING, Pa. (AP) — That widely held impression of George Washington as a cold fish is at last giving way to a more human and appealing image, a historian said today several books and a play about Washihgton, and chairman of the Washington Crossing Park Commission, said that more and more Americans are finding unexpected warmth in the personality of the father of his NO REGULAR TENANT Detectives said the apartment has no regular tenant. They believe it was used for weekend parties attended by some of dead women. For a long time, she said in an interview, Washington has beor overshadowed ' in" the popular imagination by the Jhaart and humor of Abraham Lincoln, the dash of Andrew Jackson, the sophistication of Thomas Jefferson. “The usual thing,’’ Mrs. Hutton continued, “was to call Washington a great man and let it go at that. Great, but touching no sympathetic chord. DISCARD IDEAS “Now, however, Americans finally- are"- discardTng those time-worn ideas of Washington as forbiddingly aloof, coldly remote, a legendary fi^re rather than one of life and bkwd, who suffered acutely, who kntw what it meant to be hard up and in debt, who was as sensitive as most men to criticism, who was fond of children and grieved that be had none of his own, and hf|d fwiHx Every year we welcome thousands of visitors to this shrine.’’ she said. “Tb# come fnmiid] the states and mens Of other countries. They have been telling us the last few years how much more they appreciate the character of Washington, and that they feel he has been mis- understood. . J’This is true even snwng grade school, children. Many of tiiese ask keen questions, far removed from that “Father, I cannot tell a lie’’ tale, which probably has alienated nune people thgn it has pleased.’’ Mrs. Hutton said she had studied attendance records at this and other favorite Washington shrines — Mt. Vernon in Virginia, Valley Forge, Pa., and tl^ Washington Monument in the nation’s capital — and found increases up to about six per cent imthe number of visitors in the last five years. after a long illness. He was a retired foreman at General Motors Truck & Coach Division and a member of the Foreman’s Club. Pontiac Elks Lodge No^ 810 and Central Methodist Church. Surviving is his wife. Myrtle. Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy. 0)1. Turner died yesterday after a short illness. program Sunday: amine itself and to move toward restraint. ALEXANDER KENNEDY Requiem Mass for Alexander Kennedy, 84, of 99 Wenonah will be said at 10 a.m. tomorrow at St. Benedict c:atholic Church. Burial will be in Mount Hope xemeiay. congregational (Ourch; Key' stone Lodge No. 778, F&AM; Scottish Rite Bodies; Moslon Shrine, Detroit; and Rochester Shrine Ciub. "He was also a—member of ' ■ American Legion Post No. 88 and a past president of National Sojourners Chapter No. 1, De-troit. “What we are trying to do is »simplify the procedure of registration to see to it that every person of voting age is permitted to vote without these imped-imebts and without all of these ginunicks that seem to deny the opportunity to register.’’ ~d rywiblftclFfl' such those encountered by Negroes attempting to register in Selma, Ala., “bring us to the conclusion that additional remedies will be for Area Man Said (3ast3ir““irirbr"can achieve voluntary compliance, it’s much better than rigid sanctions.’’ Graveside service for Laird B. Spencer 77, of 143 Albertson, Rochester, will be 2 p.m. to-»t Mrihnt Avon CemC::. tery by the American Legion Homer Wayne Post 172 of Rochester. Spencer, a long-time member FTire WASHINGTON (AP) - Congress was asked Sunday to reject numerous provisions in Preakb^t Johrumn’s ciety’’. program. The (kwncil of State Chambers of Commerce suggested rejection of some health, educa- seen alive. The yard described the man as 5 f^t 6 inches tall, with broad shoulders and brown hair, wearing a three^arter length suede jacket with a green or brbwn soft hat. Experietice—A Most Necessary Ingredient . . rAhthbiiy John Holland, car dealer who police had said could help them, walked voluntarily into the murder hunt head- M«ny years of aiiperierKe are back of the services we provide for the bereaved families of Our community. This experience it often the quality that nsaket our service superior and funy'cofhpeti^."^^ rWHIarep We are thankful for the humility that guided us to Kquire this experierKt In abundance. Our patrons benetit Mr. Kennedy died yesterday following a long illness. He was a retired employ of GMC Truck & Coach Division. Surviving is one brother, William A. of Pontiac and Lan-tana, Fla. A Rosary will be said at 9 p.m. today at the Voorhees-Siple Funeral Home. Surviving are his wife, Laura; a stepson, John Dunsmore of Rochester and a stepdaughter, Mrs. Dorothy Tremaine of Canada. necessary.’ MRS. FRAN^ RIVARD Service for Mrs. Frank (Sharon A.) Rivard, 22, of 3910 Elm-'hurst, Waterford Township, will be at 1 p.m. tomorrow «t Cedar Crest Lutheran Oiurch, Burial will be in Lakeside Cemetery. Mrs. Rivard died Saturday - after ^Jong illncos. She was a member of (^ar CTest Lutheran Church. Surviving are he husband; four daughters, Tammy, Penni, Terri and Cindy, all at home; and her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Johnson -of Waterford Township. Also surviving are three brothers, Gerald Stuart of Burbank, Calif., and Arnold and Richard Schatz of Lake Orion; and three sisters, Mro. Harold Miller and Mrs. David Taylor of Pontiac and Debbie Schatz of Lake Orion. The body will be at the Elton Black Funeral Home until 11 ff.m. tomorrow. Buried Gold, Silver Hunted in Texas Cave WASHINGTON (AP) - The ’Treasury says last year’s reduction in withholding tax payments is having a much smaller effect on the average taxpayer 'than is popularly supposed.” At the same time, Theidepart-ment conceded tiiat many persons are not average and thus will owe more income tax this year than in the past. the Hochester VoluiiileeF Department, died Friday after a brief illness. MRS. EUGENE B. STONE Service for Mrs. Eugene B. (Maude M.) Stone. 6T, of 344W Auburn will be at 3:30 p.m. tomorrow at Sparks-Griffin Chapel with Htirial at Oak Hill Cemetery. Mrs. Stone died Saturday after a short illness. She was a retired waitress. Surviving are three daughters, Mrs. Dorothy Paulson and Mrs. Betty Winstead, both of Pt«rtiae, and Mrs. Evelyn Greene of Flint; five sons. John, of Waterford Township, Eugene of West Bloomfield Township and Donald, Clifford and Charles, all of Pontiac; 19 grandchildren; and four great-grandchildren. UNION LAKE - Service for Guy L. Bttfbey, 64,x>f 3301 Mel- row at St. Mark’s Lutheran Church, Orchaid Lake. Burial wiU foOow in Oakland Hills Memorial Gardens, Novi. A salesman. Mr. Burbey died Saturday following a heart attack. -His body WiU be at C. J. God-hardt Funeral Home, Kee^ Harbor, until 11:30 a.m. tomorrow. , ROBERT D. PeLlOWS JR. , SHELBY TOWNSHIP - Serv---ice ior- Rnhert D ..Eelta«g,4r^ 4-year-old son of ^r. and Mrs. Robert D. FeiloWs Sr., 52726 Hrookfleld. wUIbe ll am. Wednesday at the William R. SALADO. Tex. (UPI) - An army of men using the latest electronic devices claim they are within a few feet of at least $35 miUion in gold and silver bullion. H. D. McCord, his partner Les Guerra, and a work crew are burrowing into the limestone to a depth of 82 fee(. ’They are ^Ing to reach the so-caUed‘ “first room’’ which, according to stories told here for the past 58 years, contains the treasure. ‘There are 2,000 bars of gold, 600 bars of- stiver, two stacks of coins and artifacts in that room,” McCord said. One of the artifacts is supposed to be a gold life-sized bull’s b«ad with ruby eyes. Guerra clainw he has seen it. He said it was in 1958. He was lost in a maze of caverns for 48 hours. Guerra said he stumbled into the room but was unable to bring out any of the treasure because of his physical condition. Guerra said there were also other rooms of treasure. In a statement Saturday night, the department said the withholding cut will not make a difference of more than $100 for single person making $10,000 annually. It said the effept on a - married couple with two-ehti-dren and an income of $10,000 would be even less. The withholding tax reduction was part of the tax cut bill approved by Congress' last year. Although the tax cut was stag' gered over a two-year period, the entire reduction in the withholding rate came the first year. The result was a little more cash in^ the taxpayer’s pocket during the year, tot a larger payment or smaller refund due on April 15. WASHINGTON (AP) - A. judge, editor and lawyer have urged voluntary efforts to con-tr(ti pretrial publicity as pref-wable to possible restrictive Judge J. Skelly Wright of the U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals; Alfred Friendly, managing editor of the WasMngton Post; and Oliver Gasch, president of the District of Columbia Bar Asso- A memorial service was held at the William R. Potere Faneral Home at 8 p.m. yesterday by the Rochester Fire DepartmeaL Another memorial service will be held tonight at 8 by the Rochester Masonic Lodge. Spencer retired as assistant chief of plant protection at National Twist Drill two years ago. He was a life member of Rochester Lodge No. 5, F&AM; a member of Royal Oak Elks Lodge No. 1523; and Metropolitan Club, Spirit 61. ___^___Jk___it___*___ Surviving besides his wife, ’Thelma, are two daughters, Mrs. Mary Owen Pelican and Mrs. Laura Mead, both of Rochester; and a son, Lt. Laird Spencer, stationed at Ft Car^ son, Colo. Also surviving are three sisters, Berhice of Detroit, Mrs. Hollis Hinkle of Rochester and Mrs. Donald Adams of Chesan-ing; and two grandchildren. programs as a beginning toward reduced fed-erai spending. The organization also said in a statement that there should be a sharp cut in ior^^. ft said this also would reduce the nation’s balance HERE’S WHY: Heating water causes it to expand and become lighter. When cooler and heavier water fa above warn lighter water, the heavier water flows ter below, they both tend to stay in place. A collection of these scientific puzzles is in book form under the name “Science Circus.’’ It is in book^ores and libraries. (CtpyrlgM Son. Pdo. Corp.) School Board Hit by Labor Council IN Jnjtotoi beSCHAINl!, I AGATHA, H Porh Placo; agl n; door molhor of Mrs. Mory Ann ■radio, Mrt. Agatha Doan, Mrt. Ellon Hofftnon, and William, Paul, John and Richard Doocholnoi door tltlor of Mrt. Kothorlna Doron and Mrt. AAory Carty. Alto tur-vlvod by 33 grandchlMron and 1 groat-grandchild. Rocltatlon of tho heoAry will bo Ihit ovoning of I p.m. of tho Melvin A. Schott Fu-norol Homo. Punaral tervico will bo hold Tuatdoy, Ftbruary a, dt W o.m. tt St. vinocfit do Paul Cothollc Church. InHrmont In Mt. Hopo Comotery. Mrt. Ootchobio will lie in ttotc at tho........... T Punorol Homo. LOST: BLACK, TAH Ah6 WHitE School. Antwart to tho noma of Sonny. Coll PB SGS3S. _______ LOiTi WHITE CHGLliH MALE bulMog, chlMo pot, nomo Champ. 334-3*5. ________________ LOST: FEBRUARY It, AAALi WIrt-holrod fox torrior In vicinity ot Sylvan Cantor. m-hW. LOST; BUCKNEd AHD VOSS wm book with sse tram Edloon-uron St. 170* Grovot-Pontloc. , Htlp Waatsd Mate b 2 MEN Hiring Part Tims Now lactory branch It taking ap-plicatlont tor Immodloto ovoning work, mutt bo 21 to 45 yoora of ago and havt a ttoady full tlmo day lob. Hourt 5;3t to 10:30. Guor-ontood aalory phn ohoro ot promt, dim S30 to tIM wookly. Coll dltar S. *51-1434. 1 EXPERIENCED BODY MAN FOR 1 EXPERIENCED CLEAN-UP MEN lor automoWlo rocondmoning thop. —II PE SdT*7. V R/Wtsson pay tor rM man. GIvo all eubiT. Wrilt to Pontiac Proat EXPERiaNcab..routb .ULd^ mi Wotad Mda ■atata. Exparlangm pro«orrad. M ^1 train. Tom Itaagan Root f.t-toto, 3331 N. OWdyko Rd. Ca.l r-B ----1 or PE Tots?. ponon. Royal Oib Ctoanori W. II Milo Im Royal Oak. YEAR ROUND EMPLOYMkWt with Dovoy Troo Export Co. Ex-parloncod portonntl roquirod. Tlmo ind 1*. Fold vacation. Paid hoH- --aw. anco. Coir MU f-130*. JO 44007 botora 5 tor oppointmont or OR 40157 ottor 7. YOUNG MAti TO PUMP GAS ANb "HELP US" DON'T PASS THIS UP wENeeovoo AND YOU NEED US. II you hovo a naat tnd dlgnltlod dppooranct; Call Mr. Jordan ot PE 40430, tor on Intorvlow. Hsavy Duty Mschonic (Trantmhtlon work) noaded tt onca to compteto our Sarvict Oapl. (Apply In perion). JEROME OM4 Cadillac 300 3. Saginaw Stroat. INSURANCE SALESMAN For althar Ufa or lira cauialtv inturanca. Wa w t GENERAL OFFICE WORKERS, tomt typing, thofthand, bookkatp-tog and pdyrell axparlaned. Own trX«iPOrtatlon. A^ I33S Wkto Track Orivf, Watt. No phono call* 3 GIRLS TO OPERATE SHIRT UNIT, DRAYTON MARTINIZING, 471* WALTON BLVO. BfeAufV opiRATty ^—^erra-, , . ^SttdoSr' ITAMINGHAM OOWNfOWN. PLEAS- kig panontllty required tor--- ling counter. Dry cleaning i ancad pratorrad. Bab Whito greater pall of gravil When the lighter hot water is above, anci the heavier cool wa- IMg Wmifad Eaairia 7 COUNTER OIRU PULL TIME, vMI troln, dudRIy dry ctodnlng ptont, Oeugiot CNttidr*. XM t. Wtoctwrd. Blrmlnghom. ___________ kASTON CLEANERS w6uLD LiKI .--------------•■-iithing and dry ,t«l . . _____ Jtit Ro CAREER wAmENI mIu working? Lika extra monay? Paw opening tor pait-tima work near your homo thowing AVON C04 nwtic*. Mutt act at anco. PE 44501 or writo Drayton Ptoina PO ror cimi lypiir wiin svnw ahorthond. Sttady work, good p»y wRh rrMoy company bonaflti. WnHq take oroo, phono IP-4m. -------------- Call colloct, Ponton, *4A *-715a. HOUSEKEEPER, LIVE IN, S DAYS, 5 nightt, Bloomllold HlUt area. Call DetraW DR 14053. HAIR DRESSER. BXPERieNCED, Mr. Thomat' Hair Fathlont. PE 443S3. LADY f0“CLEAN /illOflL RSIWaII Call V Bi» Wfilad hwda SALESWOMAN PON CNILDERI t5ttor"&itorS’t“eWblha S da SAIiSWOMIN - Rtgptar, twH and part Mnw jat* Mont avaltoBto at tnr TeSttomi Plaaid apply Wptomdpy. Thurtdpy during atora hanra to Mba Karip. WINKLEMAirS________ WAITRESS. aXPaRIlNCEO. AP- wAJfSiiili~ TELEGRAPH AT LONG LAKR RO. BLOOMFIELD HILLS Ml 44PPP WAITREU WANTED DAYS. JOE'S Cy^JUM 1451 t. Talagfpph, WOMAN FOR TELEPNOM t, dayt. Pr WOMAN FOR OENBRAL OPPICj WOMAN FOR LIGHT NOUSEW6r8 and card at girl t, llva In. Call OR 4IJPS.______________. . WOMAN FOR SBAMSTREU IN A terottona r--^--‘ —*- “ Dry Cf - USW Tallying Begins Today 2 Labor Department Officials on Hand PITTSBURGH (UPI) - The official count of the United Steelworkers Union (USW) election begins today and the outcome has overtones of a soap opera. his fourth four-year term president of the million-member Or will I. W. AbeL I oast his former ally from the top spot? ’The thrae international tellers of the USW—John Shlpperbot-tom, Wayne Antrim and Steve Caruso—will supervise the count of the Feb. 9 elections tabulated by the Honest Ballot Association of New York. ...♦ ♦ *•—-----------— The tally will be made behind locked doors in USW headquar-iers in the Commonwealth Building in downtown Pittsburgh. DEADLINE PAST The deadline for return sheets from the locals was last Friday midnight. Ballots received after that time are invalid, according to the USW ConsUtution.' ’The Labor Department has aisigaed two representatives to ^ OB hand when ballots from gJW locals In the United In a statement, the council said it is “not favorable to any organization that conspires be-‘' the backs of our union brothers and sisters.’’ “We wish to go on record that we are with the American Federation of T e a c h e r s and its members and recognize them as our brothers and sisters and we are sure that ih time, the school board will agree.’’ Finn Chief in Moscow MOSCOW (AP) - President Urho Kekkonen of Finland arrived in Moscow today on way home from a visit to India. ijB-ftjvle-t President Anastaa Mi-koyan greeted him at the airport. Kekkonen and his wife plan to stay in Moscow two days, then go to Leningrad for. a brief visit before returning to Helsinki Friday. m xOVtNG MEMORY-t»P JAMES NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE Nolica It Harabv GIvtn by Ih* unpar-Ignad Ihal an ThurtPoy, Fabraory 15th. .♦*5, al 10 o'clock a.m. at lOO Sacr— Strati, Rochatltr, Ooklanp County, MK — —-ito of * IM4 Valltm a r'^Htrplop btaring att V443 m 4IL will te htlp tor Cl Oaklanp County. Michigan. I ' State! aadTCaiiada are opened. ' Charles Donahue, solicitor of labor, and Frank M. Kleiler, director of labor and management and pension repcHts, will be tM'esent as government representatives. * ★ ♦ The Labor Department said arrangements, for their presence was “made by mutual agreements” of McDonald and Abel. NO REPORTS According to a union source between 109 and 909 locals either did not conduct elections or did not report' results. An Bnoffidal tabalation by UPI from 9J97 of 9,293 locaU ■hewed 299,199 for Abel and 2tt,779 far McDonald. Returns from some locals are expected to be igvalidated by the internaUonel tellers for varying reasons. ...*' ' * e It was recalled that when Donald C. ^rick unsuccessfully opposed McDonald for the presidency in 1907, votes from 58 locals were teased out. MANAGER TRAINEE Young man to begin training p gram leaping to tlt.000 par yo Opportunity wlthbi 4 monlht. I wookly whilo learning, now i COMPLETE BUILDING PLANS-«»S41SS ArchDoct Ml *4301. NEW house AND REAAOOELING h Iponoor, E 54343. SastaiBHt Watarpraofiag L REPAIR, JOHNSTONE W BOX REPLIES At 19 a.m. today there [ were replies at The Press Office in the following boxes: X A9, 93, 71, 22, Intarntlng potit IMKO holpluL I your pretont talary « Phon* FE S-4U' BLOCK LAYING AND CEMENT DESIGNER PREFERABlV WITH A knowlaPeo of hyproulic cireullt anp 0 mochanical backgrounp. Apply at Birmingham Hypraullct, 1*7$ E. A^l* RP. Troy. DELIVERY HELP WANTED. WORK wookonpt anP evtningt. Apply off-er ; pjtL. 1303 W. Huron, Ponftop. "NfEDED AT ONCE Auto Salesman ’wit. '.‘rSK BlvP., Pentloc. ------By; A, J. BAILEY Attitlani Cotniar Ftbruary 22 anp 33, ■ DON'T WAIT. DON'T WRITE-FOR STOP DREAMING Let Us Hslp You Save BOATS-MOTORS-TRAILERS DOCKS DIscoimt pric** now In effoct Herrington Boot Works "YOUR eviNRUDE DEALER" IIW S. Tetograoh______333-N03 -MAA FLOOR iERVICE, GUARAN--nP. ImmaPlat* tarvic*. FE S-3tS5 473-3037. NOTICE OP PUBLIC SALE Nolle* It Hwtby Olvon by the unPar-tlgnaP that on Ftbruary 35, IM5, at 10 o'clock o.m. at 22500 WooPwarp, Fern-Pato, Oaklanp County, Michigan, public tal* of a IN2 PorP GalaxI* Convarttbl* btaring atrial numbtr 2G45W lit 2*4 b* holp. tor cath to th* hlWwN b c6ats FUNERAL HOME DRAYTON PLAIN* OR 3 7757 D. E. Pursley FUNERAL HOME InvalM Car Sarvkq _______PE 41311___' DONELSON-JOHNS FUNERAL HOME "DotlBnaP tor Funaralt" HUNTOON FUNERAL NOME DO YOU NEED A GOOD PAIT-tlm* kb? For Initrvitw call - - 40717, 3 to - NEED $125-$175 WEEKLY? DlttalitflaP with earnlngt? AfrtM - ----(? Balwttn ^7 Mor- S' ftSoO^oSo”a to charm? rieP? LIkv h rCAR ( torn. PbiP DRAFTSMEN OR DETAILERS manufactoring plant, ttoapy . M25 W. NOvit, Troy, JO GRAVES CONTRACTING Prat Etflmofot_______OR 41511 CARPENTRY AND REPAIR WORK ___________OL 1-4355_______ DRIVER SALESMAN NEW CAR PREPARATORY MAN nttPaP. exporlafKeP prtferrtp. Apply at Jarom* Motor Solti, 3W S. il talat prctanlttlon that CARPENTRY, NEW AND REPAIR. Prop ottimotot. 31S40B1 INTERIOR FINISH, KITCHENS. o'clock a.m. at 32500 Woodworp. Porn-Polo, Oaklanp County, Michigan, public Mio ot a IM3 PorP GalaxI* Canver"--bearing terial number 3W*fX 100551, SPARKS-GRIFFIN FUNERAL NOME ''Thoughltul Sarvlco" PE Attocitlet Olicount Corporation 33M5 WooPwarp. FarnPate, Mich. By; B. KEITH Ftbruary 33 anp 23, _ J»UBLIC AUCTION On Fab. 25, 1H5 al 3 p.m. Auburn Avo., Pontiac. Mich., . .— Pontiac Sarltl No. I43P334331. wlH bo tolp al Public Auction tor cath to hlgh-etl bIPPar. Car may b* IntptetoP at tbPV* aPPratt. Ftbruary n anp 33 NI^E OF MEETING OF BOARD OF REVIEW City ot Pontiac, Mkfclsan Year IMS at' R#vNw*Jl*^"cily' ot Pontiac * matt ot Ih* oHIc* of ih* City Atooat. . city HalL 450 WWo Track Driva Eatt on TutaPoy, the 3np Pay pt March. INS * I o'clock a.m. Eattorn StonparP TP Al taW llm* anp plaot Ih* City At*** ahall tubmH to Ih* BoarP ot Ravtow I Oanaral Ataatamant Tax Roll of < City d Pontiac tor ya*r IMS. The Bw of Rtviaw Ntall cantinu* In tattlan toot! Iwo Ptyt tuccottivtiy anp at rm paM. S-........—-------- -------- Notol, 3* Eott Piko, Pontiac Tu*4 Pay, Fab. 13, 54 p-ELECTRONIC TECHNICIAN work In axporbiwntol Pr—' ShouM hovo axparionct pitctric mptort anp rawm >iw dwnical Povictt. immePloto opening. MoParn plant. OxtorP orbo. *-11 rawmt, ogt, apucolton. dottrt a* high, at II you ora l^lni hituro with oorningt--------------- to your otfort anP oMIlty, you ewe It to yturaoH anP Itmlly to in- Cargst Oeoaiag I GASY TO CLEAN CARPETS anp tav* monay with our EMcIrlc srr BHm Luttro. ____ ____ 41 E. Wilton BlvP. FE 44342. NURSERY mEN. GROWERS AND toPimon. Borpine't Grttnhoutt onP Nuraary, II3S S. Rodiaitor _______ MECHANIC. iXPBRI tneap. Con FE 54142.______ OFFICE AND CREDIT MANAGERS. DAINTY MAID SUPPLIES T30 Mtonotnint* FE S-7MS ANY GIRL OR WOMAn NEEbiNO a Irtanply aPvttpr, ohona FE ssm botorf 5 p.in, ar H rp an-twar, caB PI fvU. Cont P*nli*l. A SHOPPERS BEST FRIEND... Th# ^ontiac Press ’ Classified....... CONCRETE PLOORi, 4 a. Bart Cemmln*. PE >4245. Electrical Inspector - CITY OF TROY U4N TO S4.400 Rttponalbto far antereomeni ttoctrical oaP*. A laurnoymon' ----0 raquirtp. Exporlyct In PHARMACIST RtgMtrtP B.S. Ptgrtt. ImmaPI-alt eptning, m hour weak, i:b*ral iringt banttitt. Apply ParMnnal OWlca, Pontiac Gtneral NoMital. SALESMEN WANTED: 6UE TO NEW AND REMODELING WORK, Hit Hat*, marbto, Pontlae Tito A ALTERATIONS ALL TYPES. KNIT PAPER STEAMERS RUG CLEANER - POWER SAWS fO Joilyn Opan S —------- JOHN TAYLOR. FLOOR LAYINO, aqnplng anp HnWiing. 25 ypara axparwnc*. 332-4175. NEW ROOFS, REPAIRS, INSURED anp guarintaaP: CaH Tam, m--- ROOFS: f- ---------^ TILE, VINYL ASBESTOS. SS.» FaraocB Mpdr TALBOTT LUMBER IB25 Oaklanp Ava._______FE 44WS Moviai oad Starofa WE REMOVE SNOW AND REPAIR your root toaka. tea ramovap from |^ri.JS^rvicb charge. 153-1450. Saiall Eagiaa jjtdgafr LAWN MOWER AND OTHER im*ll anginas. Minor rtpoirt ot your homt FE *4501. Tra# Trimniat Sofvkt ... E. OALBY TREE SERVICE Trio, stump rotnovoL trim, Irant planting. PE 5-30BS, PB 43005. Trucks to Rent m picfcupt ------ TRUCKS - TRACTORS AND EQUIPMENT IVb-Ton State tlmoW*. Ph. UL H3W. Prac eti. T. Ptnian. 3*3-4440. 5I*RAY, BRUSH, $R ROLLER. Rk-tljpontlal or caml. Ktn, S33-2*4S. A-l TUNING AND REPAIRING Ooear idwnlPt ______PB 34EI7 WIEGAND TUNING AND REPAIR Prompt Sorvica FE 34134. POQtioc Farni ond Industrial Tractor Co. 115 S. WOODWARD FE 444*1 PB 41441 Opan Dally InchiOlnB Sanpay Timva lop.^wavvsa voMiion. rvevy piU Hit ind hoapitnl intwrnneta holtddyt. Clydt CnpIncM'ifM DMtiona Trp>Tpr1t Inc.* 17M W. Eltel^lEN^b liMN TO REPAIR Irack Hra*. 33S4I«. iXPERIENCgD DAY TIME tAU^K —---------------------- "T* ' I oxparton r. 3MI41. ____INVESTMENT" (CAN START PART-TIME) SERVICE STATION HELP WANT-Sorvlca Cantor, raliaM. ong^ tvicn servkTe sYation help want- Op tor now ttalton. Inquira at ISH Ml. Ctonton* anp 1-75, Pantige THIRTY THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDJ^V, FEBRUAEY 22, 1965 A Better Income’ WANTED: GUITAR. MUST BE IN excellent condition. 451-0*41. by Leoriling IBM Mgehines, Wanted to Rant M 2- OR 3-BEDROOM HOME, IN OR orourxt Pontiac; hove ret., ask tor AAr,«4rch,.f€«W3. LEARR IBM KEY PUNCH, MACHINE OPERATIOH and WIRING, COMPUTER programming. 4-WEEK COURSES, free CLEAN WORKING COUPLE. 2 schooltoot children, desire Ybed-room apt. or house. FE t-)141. PLACEMENT SERVICE, NO MONEY DOWN. GENERAL INSTITUTE 22125 Woodward For call COLLECT for FREE booklet. National School 01 Home Study, 27743 Mound Road, Dept. ,pp, Warrenr MIchHian. IBM ffiAINING LcOm IBM, Keypunch, m operation and wiring, 1401 poter prMrpmbing. Mich. Board of Education approved. __ placement lervice. Free parking. Complete financing — No money A I CARPENTER. OR 4HB74. CARPENTER WbRIC FE S-2IW.__________ LIGHT HAULING TOOL ROOM FOREMAN Tom work or progreealve dia. Fo • mer iMP owner qualitipn «» tw, III chmge. 244-7401, YOUNG MAN, AOt 31, CUR- . Write Ponoiac S»ran Boa SL--- Work Fbi—h 11 cleaning and wall washing. ____ or 4B2-5534 RETIRlO~W^M«AN WISHES fEw hour> morning, or evening ottic* cjMnyy Mady. Reference call Py^lLY Of F1V£ DESIRES Nl^ torde---- laa In Northvllle, MIHord, Far- VANT TO RENT SAAALL FARM, 2'or 3-badroom, tamlly 01 ■ Wonttd RbrI Estott_36 ^^'T'OSO HOMES. LOTS, ACREAGE, PARCELS, FARMS, BUSINESS PROP ERTIES AND LAND CONTRACTS ILTIPLE LISTIN ALL CASH FHA ond Gl EQUITY All homee anywhere, even H t hind In peymanta. No Hating, i red tape, no delaya. Caah Ir medlafety. DETROIT. BR 2-044B. CASH 48 HOURS ' ■ . 0 CONJRACTS-teOMES WRIGHT DON WHITE, INC. 20*1 DIaie Hwy. Phone 474 04V4 1,100 TO 2,too SQUARE FEET - aUaUaMe on Wide Treck Drive, Weal. Will divide and/or refurbish to til needs ot lertanl. Phone Lr-Trlpp, Reottor, FE 5B14I. Ci---n'li'llV i' ------Enas MODERN, PANELED, FURN--'irnlahed, elr-con-utllitlca furnished, _______ . ROOMS A>tO LOBBY. 143 Oakland. Heat end water, 3 months tree rent. OR S-13fl. OFFICE FOR RENT S40 sq. ft. office apace foi....... Ask for Tom Batsman or LrAL Grtmta. FE 0-7141. FOR SALE OR RENT: BUILDING on S. Saginaw St. Suitable tor many purposes. Large salesroom. Sioas room, clean a— —■■ -■— gas hast, 3-phasa « mately 7,000 sq. ft -- 343-3014. NEW 30'x70' BUILOWNG: PLUS full basamtnt -------------- Plaia, 3540 P<---------- ■NEIL realty, or 44)427. STORE BUILDING FOR RENT^OA IVY-STORY, 3 BEDROOMS, pat, 4rapsa and s4— --------- storms ond acroans Call OR 4-1144. WANT ADS Reach the Most Responsive Buyers For Most -^YerTthing You Have to Sell , r ' Phone 332-8] 61 family room, mw extras, see to opPreclafe. Xetlerlng' School area. Call today. 343-4703. AU for Mrs. t-------- ----------— Hackatt Realty. GOLF MANOR jom tri-level, attached | HOME FOR A SUCCESSFUL ---MAN^ You'll feel right ot home you Hrxt walk Hi. An atir-------------- tmor will be the Hrtt thing jyw clous carpeted living room tireplece and studio colling,,3 ..... »ms, 1 baths, attradive tan>-■oom with fireplace, the lest in kitchens with all bujit-lns a 2-cer attached garage. Laid In the popular "l’^ shape. II nnd this home e mur* — list ot fine homes to see. I only 021,000. Terms to Taylor Realty HIITER 01,000 4 BEDROOMS AND BATH: Aluminum siding, likt new, r---- Terms. . . 4 ROOMS AND BATH: Full mwif, large thady M. W,S0D. WHt lake trades. NEW 3-BEDROOM TRILEVEL: FLATTLEY REALTY . . COMMERCE. 343-4*31 ROCHESTER AREM-WILC TRAOE^ ReiHy, UL 22121, UL 3-5375. TWO-BEOROOM, CLEAN, BASE- THREE-BEOROOM / 312,750, eaty terms or V. Schick, 403-3711, Reilty.__________________ I — outometic Only 111,00 TRADE! Extra nice 3-bedroom I* plate built-in kitchen, man! wUh U - ft. bar I 00x140 ft. lot and rage. I ____I with small e_____ t Macomb Co. area. Priced GAYLORD HERE IS a gwd s^iedroom heme PerisIt. Has basement, garage end plumbing upstairs tor possibit income. Coll MY 2-SS2I or FE »*4*3. OXFORD -- 4 bedrooms, garage. WANT A NEW HOME? - to see. MY 2-2121 Of JE>*«*3. TWINS LAKES 4 ROOMS AND bath. Yes ‘-a* *... everything C.'*SCHUEn FE 84)458 THREE-BEDROOM, LAKE PRIVI- Lake Rd. SI.750 down, ISO ptr iiio.. ond no closing cost. Clarence C. Ridgeway Realtor It W. Walton 33i-4ae4 Muttipto Listing Service VACANT $500.00 DOWN Only S4.JS0 imel. Near Upper StraHs Lakai brHig deposit oerly. CALL TODAY B. C. HIITER, Reel- ------------- tor. 27*2 Elizabofh Lake Rd. FE 2-017*. Evet. otter I p.m. 4S2A453. highland subdivision. WATER-tord Twp. Ranch type. 3 badroonn. Face brick. BulM-Hi oven and Large family kitchen. TTx ■uu ler, 5 years oM. C' gage. 4S2-54I* after 4 pjn, WATERFORD way, garage, tot IIHklSO' Hnmadl-ate pesiesrien with no crodtt chock. Full Pfico W,S75. Peymeots S7(.por HILLTOP REALTY 4^5234 tAWREJlCFTTlWYtORir' Broadway Street Lake Orton MY 2-2121 or Fg Hm A-1 BUYS HUNTOON LAKE I a heeutHull, w?1h flri%ce! ____ fear attached . water heat. 22'xlO' ---- . . porch. Could not bt duplicated tor Hw asking price ot only S1*.5«S, terms. LAKE' PRIVILEGES Only I block to txceltont beech. 3-bedroom ranch, hM betement. Built In 1*54. Includes aluminum $500 DOWN-FHA froom brick ranch. Full_ mant, Bear etiechad garage. Cloie to iCheoli and shopping. Full priot 315,700. Eeoy tomts. WATERFORD REALTY kitchen, ____ VACANT - MOVE RIGHT INI 3-BEDROOM RANCH l-ACRE LOT West luburben ranch, : largo kitchen with d FULL PRICE. SI3.500. excellent toeturet. '^Meny*^ PRICE, 1 Smith & W'dew an REALTORS FE 44526 411 W. HURON ST. OPEN * TO -7 GAYLORD RESALE MINDED. You <_ go wrong with a price of BBMB for a froom homo with good terms. Good kllchon, gat fumaco. Call MY 3-ltll or FE 304*3. REAL SAVINGS In this buy. S-room ranch home, gat beat, •“=— tleors, plaster wells. All for terms. Cell MY 3-3121 or S-*4*3. I. t1S,500 total prICk In VII m Of Lake Orton. Call MY : ini or FE 004*1. LAWRENCE W. GAYLORD Broadway St. MY IHH FE BOO* Loke Orton. Mkh>>___________ SCHRAM A community ot fbio hornet. Thit extra large trilgvet, with * gtraga, hat 3 or pettlMy 4 rooms, kitchen wltl; bullt-Int, wr Urgo^tomllj eW Jotlyn. ^ WHY HOT LET Ivon VL Schrom -- YOUR REAl ESTATE MAN III Joslyn Ave. FE 50471 Complete Information on Government Homes for Sale -FHA-VA-It's Fasy to Qualify To Buy 131 N. Astor - V.A. CLEAN AS A WHISTLE 284 Dellwcxxi PRICED TO PLEASE ^ , no ranch stylo bungalow In the St. Joseph Hossilal a 816 Stanley IINCOLM JR. HIGH AREA 4595 Peltdn DRAYTON PLAINS gas heat, ond featuring an extra Urge M Maw •Sw^anli' center. Only mJOO, VJL S35* down. " Avon Township NORTH ADAMS ROAD lJ-Bg*S II Jtie lettbM tor thb hn-bedmom hei 'T^ro largo living room; lovely kitchen, IVk t Avon*'S3'4.'Fir??ce''to'iiirsi*!k^m^ pSTcSy ^ * Fcx)nomy Minded 501 CAMERON tShiTL*“i£^2lI?!I contract? right tor the small temlly or as an kivestment. Has ell heal love In end monthly poymantt el tS. Pontiac AreaHomes^:. Government Representative Val-U-Way Realty, 345 Ookond BATEMAN OOARANTIED . trade-in ALAN MICK FAMILY RANCHER we ^ J5M roomirwilij S> n. lamtiy room wWi otrig*. circh drive and wonderful Ykc prlvHagas wHh wWi «lfl«. only $200 DOWN PLUS CLOSIND com will pul fidroww wlrt l^bwwjwMBaw Mnt, gt hddl' carpafina and Anchor-S^ y^. Foil wlU luit IILSOa. drlHi Nw monlhly pay-InSiN Od^ FHA morlpapa. WEST SUBURBAN EAL mice walMiapI t-todrooi EffpSTSwj I ilttla as tlOSO down plus cosh. duplex income IN the CITY; Good convenient iKOflon lo OAd.T.C, also to naw proootad Ostoopatnic Collage. Live to one half Irea and let toe rental from other haH maka toe monthly payments. Approslmatoly tlMO to atsuma mrttmtt balsncai a 0«»d Investment Wjd^l security tor you. CALL TODAY. most desired------ WEST SIDE AREA at a prke you'can afford. Sharp 4-badroom, r? baths. *Tft. Ih^ room, ilre- ssh: Ujt-mMm; IRWIN lUSINESt OFFORTUNITY _ iMe tima apportw S.OA». neansa and a thriving eerrand meat business, ... aqulpmant plus an- - *"«• *-bedroom brick bungalow with J nice sited bftorooms^rge dining room, large kitchen with plenty of cupboard apace, situated on ] lots w"^ trees, «l*l* to bus i •nepping. canter. Can be bow with 10 par cant down. CLARKSTON AREA - Located nc.. . t^ L7S and lake privileges on lom brick and aluminum wfih mlly room and flrsplaca, lto'**btHtt-ln'* ” 14 LOTS IN CLINTON HEIGHTS EAST SIDE OF FONTIAC WILL TAKE TRADE WILLIS M. BREWER REAL ESTATE I) FE ASIII Eva. M»-Mn tnlvan^ tijbg.'nieauiitor’’remig "BUD" itore building I - OO'xISO' Plus 45'klSO' t37,m “Bud" Nicholie, Reoltor By Kat» Osana Idt HeweBeM tEidi FEBRUARY .SPECIALS OftICfOpah SuhiJay T to t **yLTIPLELlSTIMO SERVICE „ GEORGE IRWIN, REALTOR M V, FE >7013 .Reduced Price this iv a hat b CANAL LOTS Ice building tltos - MxID. nactad with Sylvan Lake. JACK LOVELAND tmCassLakoRd. OOS-IISt COUNTRY SEEKERS >W) HARDTOP, --- ---1 ttlxdie tfit, !LY*w8i)OeD ACRES, north Itortumn, .baautHui lanA OLIO GENT^‘ROLLING ACRES sur-rounded^^to 4 miles of Stale BATEMAN] > WOODED ACRES adlolnlng Slate land. A goad InVastmant at S325 '*'c“'*PANGUS, Reoltor INDUSTRIAL/C0MME8 & BUSINESS PROPERTIES IJ Acres Drayton arOb. M-2 Williams Lk. Rd. 2ST C-1 Dhle Hwy. 2 acres SOT C-l Elliabeto Lk Rd. and Airport Rd. C-2 Cass-Elliabelh Rd. 100* C-l M» Highland Rd. 42T CO Telegraph R™4.35 Kras M-2 Baldwin and Montcalm C-l Dixie Hwy., Drayton 01' M-t --------,3,, ^ » Lk. RC — , ________k. Rd. Cor. Voorhels ar EtSs "of lamlly’TivRg at with terms to YOU CAN TRADE SALESMEN WANTCDi Due to Ire-nwndous Increasa In business, we are lakint appUcatlofit tor 0 new talesman. Contact Tam Bateman ar L. H. Orlmat. 177 S. Talagraph Realtor FE 0-7141 Sen DaltyM MLS Sunday 1-5 ARRO i rooms uptlairt. Tho kllchen hat pNnty at caMnats, toe llvino room hat beautiful car^t and toe bath It ttralaglcany locatod to both kitchen and badroomt. Thera It a S'®!: 'fow.tonxar garage. Tyrone iiruISo-Ta^nr^'*** you first worn In. An attroctiva wHTiee^ !wrt sUh tov|$ ^ pttod living room wito studio coh’ ing. 3 badroomt, 3W batot, at-tractiva family room wIto tlro-ploca. Booutlful kltchwi with bulH-int. plaslared 3l or OR 3-1231 aflor 7:30 * s Dolly II -0 Sunday 13-4 Nslwst OfyRrtNwLtjis 59 I CALL WILL BRING SPOT CASH tor your auats or butinttt, lai— 3-1.71 T" A-1 BUY DRIVE-INN hWty wttl of town. ( . ^ by toa^ o^boundt. bast opoortuoifir-Irtirt oral. Takas LOTSTtonnor, ti,m 020 oownt ih___ - *00 for roolNottOf* voow ■! or oppotntmof^ WARDEN\REALTY .--4 W. Huron. Pontiac 333-7157 APARTMIWT HOUSE,\IN PONTIAC CAST IRON HOT WATER FUR- Ply, ISO W. Montcalm. F CONSOLE TV, ANTIQUE RCI and mlsc., Rama. FE A745B. D&J CABINET SHOP 034 W. HURON 33MS- SFECIAL LIMITED TIME ONLY IF BIRCH FREFINISHED CARI-NETS WITH FORMICA TOP IN- ITALLED, 1310.___________ EVETtE - tCHAFBR . cPiTWgf: for kitcban caUnats-----— Hgmrst’jD^alua'K^, watotwd. Michigan Fluaraaeant. 303 Orchped Lake 25.______________ . ' FOR SALE, COCA COLA COOLBII, THIRTY«ON^ SpErHf '74 XpACHE CAMPIND TRAILERS M Mm/aur^ SSm. BvawViSto Apocht ConiD Tratiora '"ciarth.-aat’^rn.rRS Apache camp IraHar anda Sunday Fah. MRi. AR. mgdik la srt'sR.’ar.TNKis compMOa with canopy, add a roam and spdra Nra, UOS. Only 3 Boftoto madato toft caenptoOa wNh vinyl mattfoia and canaptaa at MSI. Wa are Mrogd to tpR at Riaaa prioas to mafea tor 1045 aquipmont. Apacha fac- lyo a.m. to 7 pin. 'oiLL CDU LBR, I miia aatl al Lapaar on A421._______________ f^tTdvkl'MMPli: .enM~5ilYkiH oIF-hOlCV **^*^itBhtlY"ilsW, cob'. OL~l-i331. ITALIAN MARBLE COFFEE TA-ble—MY 3-33B3 batwaan S4 P.~ 5 SALVAGE OUTLET. I rchandlie tram trudt an4 lat, distress stock, bankn I firts; Everything brand . . .eat wbolatala or lower. i line of morehandtsa ovary 1 PARTS AND SRRVICE KING BROS- FE FE AI443 Panttoc Rood of Ogdyko . GOOD DRIVEWAY GRAVEL, yards SS dallvarad. FE *-*m ' lake dredging^ WARREN STOUT, Reoltor so N. Opdyka Rd. FE S-0I4S Open Evas. *TII 0 p. m. CASfT TOR LAND CONTHACTS- IMMEDIATE possession and k n.«wyil"’I*ari?!r Would You Like lava a home Jn Sylvan VI _ . still be in toe Ponttoe Ji DliimiT ThWl you wlu be Uso of lako. OR 3-1205, Bloch >s.____________^________________■ I PINE LAKE - TThrtlS', SWfMMI(fO er Hurry- XJBE plus INCOME Abad-ooms, firaolaca, carpeling. Bu" n oven and range, dishwatl _ nd garbagt disposal. Full basa-wnL gas haaL 3-car garage, 3- SmM. Lot 7Sxltg’ an paved ATTRACTIVE KNOTTY PINE RES-taurant to-ltw heart of Unlan\.aka Shopping Center. Good builitess, ihort hours, ctoiad Sundays. SIOI Cooley Lake PLANNING TO BUILD? Ws htv toe Wsai foot In excellent mt urban lacstlan. Let lOO’xeoo' -Your biilkdor or eyrs. Alto hov ■ LISTING KRVICB ____IN DAILY 0 TO ♦ -fMES DELIGHTFUL RANCH John K. Irwin S SONS REALTORS 313 W. Huron - Since 1025 "hone: FE S-0444 CLARK LAKE-FROI IMIn!^^ 40'xlSO', MMIsnd and PI 4F CORNER J^T - Sisidck & Kent, Inc. 1300 Pontiac Stats Bank BMg. 33B-0204__________^_________33AO077 Planning to Build? Check These Lots! DRAYTON. Ono WkSOS', 51,100. DRAYTON. Two 50'xlSO', 0000 oach. I AUBURN HEIGHTS. Thrto tO'xSOlt, NEED LAND CONRACTS, REA-aonsbto discounts. Earl Garrtit, Rtsitor, 4417 Commorcf Road. SMpIra 3-2511 EMpire ItoOS QUICK CASH FOR LAND CONTRACTS Clark Real Estate. FE 3-7000. Ret. FE 4-4013, Mr, Clark. _____ JEASONED LAND COnJRA^S wanted. Gal our deal balbra you ....-----—. loan Sbadroom homo on prooarty. 30'x-20* maionry bulldine with axcallant aqulpmant. Large walk-ln a»to nw toft Ico cream machine. 535,000 Indudlng real estate with 510,000 down and ono payment of 01J00 each year due August IS. STATEWIDE^AKE ORION GrocerySTBrirUood location, Licensed for sole of i kJWionw YsW CUkRKSTON.Onal0F^^^^^^^ ments upstairs. Low down «. HIght light base-heat. Like naw car-warlas. Big shaded garage. Ctoaa to ____ achoel and church. at tllJOO wito 10 par placts, saparaia dining area, large living room, wolk-out basomant. y-ycar garage, an on large lot. Immadlato pottosslon. 027.NO — Terms.. YKCLQSIVE LAKe-FRONT HOME — Abedroom brick contemporary ranch, lamily room, dual lirtplaca, kllciwn has etoctric bullt-lns Including dlihwathar, 2 lull batot, 2'>car aHacIwd garagt. carpeting and drapes torougtioul house, refrlgcritor, waehcr and dr^, ■ -I lost. Lam wd let lOFid Money to Loer (Ljcented Ayoy L«nder| _ FINANCIAL WORRIES Us Help You! V-UP TO $1,001 _ months to pay cradH Tito insurance available BUCKNER CLARKSTON. One WxIST, UJOO. CL^KSTOM. Two SFaIIS'. 52.100 CLARKSTON. Ono lOFslSO', 53.100. WARD'S POINT. 40-x27r. SI2.S00. TERMS AVAILABLE ROLFE H. SMITH, Realtor _ 244 S. Tal^roph____ FE 3-7040 RENT BEATER - I The View the Doctor Ordered It ocrot of rolling hllla. paaco and quiet. The place you havo draamad of tor building you now home. Three miles to OrtonvilW. Priced at 5500 par acre and falling on >L dost to transportation. Koo-larbor Arao. S4.tS0 wito 51,100 I and 045 monto or 55.050, Frushour Struble Loke Front WITH ABSOROOMS, Oil II. living roam, all m rooma. tifxSO* lamily re Trode-ln Thwrt AT# mAny ftaturti irv ctudino A irxir rtcrtAtlon room. A yaJ^^aIww #lAGtf M43900. Pontioc General Hospital HERE It A LARGE ABEDROOM family hama that you would bo proud to own. It hot a nicely -ST0UT& Best Buys Today Century Old- '—n home. 4 bedrooms, m tilcbon, saporete dining ro I lirtd hot water heat, be y Aacre comor porcti n Northern High Dandy 3-badroom I. Only 7 blocks from I - Foatum fuU IM heat, IW batot, IW quiel, paved Itraet, ( drtparlaa Includtd. i WALTERS LAKE WONDERFUL SELECTION. LAKE FRONT, LAKE PRIVILEGES, HILL SITES, ACREAGE. , 402 2300____Sylvan 425-1004 Waterford Hill Manor Largo aafhto tots on one at Oak-Iwid County's most beautiful subdivisions. Pricad from 0X 750. OPENfiAlLY-IO » PJ4. DON WHITE, INC. OPBN PAILY TO 0 P. M. 2001 Quit Hwy.________OR 4-04t4 WATTS REALT-r^ NA 7-2050 1054 M-15 at Bald Eiglo Loke : SeIb FuriiiS ______________M 10 TO 20 ACRES, i BEDROOMS, baeemont, garage, barns. OA A 2013. A. Sanders.__________ 34 ACRES AND ABEDROOM FARM . Alto has bam and other lldingt. On Baldwin Rd. I down. Humphries Realty, 5 Acres I mllat north ot Pontiac. I V price and terms. H. C. NEWINGHAM FE A402S______ OR ±tm ~ RHODES " tOCATE tN THE HEART winter soorft. 10 Kras. 0 ro— *“"‘' homo, 4 badroomt. 2VS I basemant, convantonl to Knob and^lvar EaM 1 GOOD 2-BEOROOM HOME, full Income i rooms and bath Neal 3-reom and up. BaiOmant, gi num storms and ^raga. Only tl. rnaarr Kraons. TiClf ' toa otoar hat 2 bedrooms ito. Got heal. 1 large barn, tor potato Iwmlng. Tractor rSr.'T''’'*'- contract. eXECUTIVES HOME, Meal location. Lake Kivllagas, Cau Lake, t large ipkIous rooms, 4 badroomt, 3 hatoa, Acer attachad garage. Extra quality convr-'----- „toroujhout, 444.000 tarmt. NICE 7-ROOM FRAME horn ern throughout. Modern 3 bodroomi. Mb botos, 01 clotet ipace, full batami- . -Kret toncad. Coll tor turtoor do-tellA lam SIM down, 1140 per monto land contract. RESIDENTIAL LOT northwasi of RKhatfor, bbrdere point Crtak. Scenic tocatlon. S7500. ALBERT j. RHODES, Broker FE A3304 ESI W. Walton FE 5-4712 ^MULTIPLE LISTINO SERVICE DORRIS I CANNOT TELL A LIE. We'll trad tor olmotl anytolng on tol bulIdK'e modal ctoorancc. Qua honta tocatotf to Itia quiet com-munfty of CotnfWtrca. Otoamtog kM^ toS«iy-ohS"lS6l£n, iP'xit' Warren Stout, Realtor 50 N. Ogdyko Rd. FE S4I45 open Eves 'III 0 p.m. Multiple Llittng Service lECBEie Pryrty 50 FAMILY BRICK DUPLEX, rooms oach, fulUMiamonL 2134 Olkit tfonr- ()P 4-3124 MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE 14«^w"^'mo* "***■ “fE^Lssi 63 ACRES Sprtoidield Ta^tokM>catlw> tor^^l large bamtl tpKiout s-bedtoon modem farm home with bate menf, oil heat. Only 530,000 will tarnn. Worren Stout, Realtor payment. After. 5 FEj. 5-2215. LIQUOR STORE in OMtanding Oakland Co. oroa. Good gross and inertatihg LOANS coaam^itv'loan CO. 30 E. Lawronca_PE I4H2I MOTELS C.B. CHAPIN, Motel Broker quarters, substali; menf. Elwoed Reilty BAXTER A LIVINGSTONE Finance Co. 401 PontiK Stete Bank Building FE-4-1538-9 RED-HOT C- ,---- SOD, SDM, Meat, grbcarlas. Good ---- iround volume, growing lov* ____ Land, equipmentl buildin,.------------ IncludTng modem S-room apart LOANS ----------------------------- TO $1,000 To consolidato bills Into one month-,Bs,«unnisi wrt., 'T payment. Quick servlet with HOME & AUTO LOAN CO. A ONE-MAN BUSINESS --- - ------- $2,000 INVESTMENT Vi'YIfTABTr TIAAP CAWSTART PART TIME ALLY FAMOUS 40 YEAR OLD FOOD BEVERAGE PRODUCT which Is I HOUSEHOLD WORD IN AMERICA, It consurr-" THOUSANDS DAILY In ■ munltb. and tnfoyt LIFETIME repeat BUStNESST NO SELLING! AS PRODUCT IBIOGIBT NA*^ IN FOOD INDUSTRY) IS PRE SOLD THRU EXTENSIVE AND CONTINUOUS ADVERTISING ON TV, RADIO. MAGAZINES, NEWSPAPERS. ETC., (COMPANY product sales in excess of IVi BILLION DOLLARS ANNUAL LY) CONSISTS OF COLLECTINI FOR MERCHANDISE SOLO ANI REPLENISHING INVENTORY. REQUIREMENTS: Must atplrt to INCOME OF 5300 WEEK UP Have serviceable car, STAR IMMEDIATELY If Kceptad an HAVE the nKetsary t2,000 tor It vadlory NOW In the Unk. to Box S, PonllK Prats. WHEN YOU NEED $25 TO $1,000 STAH^ FINANCrC0.““' SOS PontiK Stato Bank Bldg. . \ FE 4-1574 MortgagE Loans 6' 1st and 2nd MORTGAGES 51,300 OR MORE NO AWLICATION FEES 403-2300 SYLVAN 425-1004 24 Hour Service - 3344222 CASH - CASH FOR Home Owners WIDOWS. PENSIONERS CAN B ELIGIBLE. CHECK, LOWEST RATES! SI,001 ■........... to.: 42.000 ............ 012.1 54.000 -OiSn 2nd mortgages slightly higher Borrow for ANY useful purpo: Consolidate Bills New" G New Fumitore Home repair and modernization FE 8-2657 'BUD' Dog 'n' Suds Drive-In Northern resort area near CojllllK. . _ ln« and wipmwit, lot. XVIV.^1 All wt ond reody to 90 — Hurry, - - - . . - Hurry, HURRY, call tor Malls or appointmanf. "BUD" Nicholie, Realtor ^FE's-Iwi**' AFTER 7 P.M. FE 4-8773 Residential-Commercitil First and Second Commitments 24 Hours SI.OOI UP-FREE APPRAISAL FORD MORTGAGE CO. Ford BMg. WO Xt400 SOFT KE CREAM__- SeH-contaliwd unit, t ft. x 31 t SKrifIce. 57,500 lull.price. Coi Michigan Business Sales, Inc. JOHN LANOMESSER. BROKER 1573 5. Telegriph FE 4-1M2 - ^ Lewd Cwrtracts 1 TO 50 LAND CONTRACTS urgently wantod. Sea us Bator WAWEN STOUT, Realtor 1450 N. Ogdyko Rd. FE SdtOS Open Evas, 'til 0 p.m. F FOR SALE OR LOND TV. 34" FOR ELECTRIC dryer. OR >3473.____________ HAVE Its? CHRYSLER AND BBN-dix electric dryer — What have yau? 003-4331._________________ NEW b6ws and arrows for puy. Ranks; FE S4344. iALd OR TRADE LAKE FRONT Wented CeatrEctf4M|. 60-A CASH For equity or land contri- _ ost potsibla discount. MartaaoM W avaH^. CaH Tad MqCultoudt V to Flint, Holly sXvON CONFEDERATE MONEY .and bonds tor trade, 4A-40S4._ SWAP OR SELL 1tS4 FORD TRUCK ■ t 4. 4opr 000x30 tires, cr- ker unH, 9 ton ma d dump box. FE 4-3371. ___ uV, sell and trade ice Id gun* daily ’til irgrSvo HoVdn^, 7 E MI01. Ofton Sundo Plywood Distributors 'of PontiK 375 N. Cast PE 2- LAVATORII ___________________ atallt. IrrMUIart. terrific Michigan Fkioraacant. an M aged wood - |7 up —- " K FE »• 1 WEEK ONLY FINAL SALE! END OF SEASON Sensational Bargains Mondoy--SoturdDy Feb. 22-27 FULL LENCY 3^13X SHEATH WED- Sale Hoasehold GoEdt WYMAH FURNITURE CO. ' E. HURON FE 4-4tS1 I _W._.P I KE_______FE X2150 USED f^=s HFoTs Used RCA color TV, new picture tube S2S0 Sweet's Radio 0, Apollanct Inc. 22 W. Huron ..2UJm UPHOLSTERED SOFA-BED, 2 platform rKkers In tapestry. 21" TV, motorola. Ml 4-2274. WESTINGHOUSE REfRIGERATOA, "., bxcetlant S50. FE 40123. ask, bed complete, book-;A 21-Inch TV, 2-5 p.m. Sat. I. 12L-Putnam: ------- (1) 3-ROOM OUTFIT BRAND NEW FURNITURE $278 $2.50 WEEKLY NEW LIVING ROOM BARGAINS 7-pioca (braed nowl llvtog roorn:. 2-plKt living room suite, 3 step ti bles, matching coffee table. 2 det orator lamps, all lor Slot.. Only *''?EiM?I^ROOM BARGAINS S-plece (brand new) bedrooms: Double dresser, bookcase bed i cbest, box spring end Innarspr mattress, 2 vanity lamps. All crib, SO; vanity » 57.05; davonport reirigerators. S3t PEARSON'S FURNITURE Apt. size gas 34" atoctric r................ ...... Guar. elKtric wringer washer S4t.«5 Automatic gas ------- Guar, etoctric rc EASY TERMS antique roll top desk. OA 0-2457. Hi-Fi, TV t Radios 515 E. W4lton. cc 2 February Clase-Outs ' 3 Rooms New Furniture 21 Pcs. $279 $3 Wk. NEW 2PIECE rpREIZE LIVING ROOMS with tree tables f "------- NEW 4-PlECE BEDROOM pillows end lamps ell tor srv.w. SAVE PLENTY — February clearance of Gibson ranges and ra- Sylvania TvTand stereo's. BARGAIN EASEMENT LOTS OF USED FURNITURE AND FACTORY SECONDS, stoves, re-frigeretors, washers, beds, springs, dinettes, living rooms and bedrooms al bargain prices. LITTLE JOE'S BARGAIN HOUSE ' " Baldwin at Walton FE. 3-4443 Irst fralfic light south of 1-75 . Acres of free parking Opeii Evenings 'III t. Sat. 'Ill 4 -pifCE DINING ROOM /SUITE', s#ing machine, sun lamp, vlbrat-Inj lounge, large tan, m(s. 42S-4421. 3-1^lt-INCH TORTABLEST AND 23" console TV's without cha Bargain prices while they last Terms avellable. HAMPTON'S ELECTRIC 25 W. Huron FE 4-2525 . Open till *-7 p.m. daily laturdpy till t p.m._ -PIECE MAHOGANY DIN suite, automatic washer. I seat and walker, tike new. Cambria St. Trey, Mlchlgdn, fr-Ct«IC FOOT HOT WwTHi- 1 CLEARANCE ON TRADE-IN TV'S. All rabkillt mmI fO tf«y w«rr«nty. OlMl TtlMMlg 34N ERu^ URh* Rd.r FE 4-4945. Open _______ EICO 40 WATT STEREO AMPLI-tier, stereo FM tuner, 2 atoctro-voica speakers wHb cabinet, Garrard type A turn-table, 444-4433 after 5:38 reasonable. ______ SERVICE ON ALL MAKES ANI ToHNSON RADIO & TV 45 E. Walton FE 84569 INO FULLY AUTOAAATIC. MA 4-7113. REYNOLD'S - SHAFfl W4 T E R WATER SOFTENER RENTAL, L limited gallonage, S3 per ttxxi UniverMi Soft \r**‘"* Fer Sole MitcellaiieeEi 67 ' 4iorsepower sump pumps. I stered. Simmons HMe-A-Bed, SSO. 473-2422. _________. ioTueic FOOT freezer, whirl- A SINGER Automatic tewing machine, » console, used. Zig-zag n ' le S43.tt payments at S: ALMOST Vz PRICE! 3 freight damaged bedrooms S77 3 frei^t-damaged living rooms 174 BUNK BEDS—Sevarti good trade hit low as S37. MAYTAG washers. - , , faullt-ln dial I ________Sis . ___ Just sat the ___Payments ot SS.OO p-------- S year parts guarantae. Richman BratharslUirto Centers. 335-t2S3. Cosh Price $59.40 APARTMENT I Z E ELECTRIC A Singer Cabinet model, used. Zlg-zigget makes decorative stitches, button . holes. Wind hems, etc., with Inter-changeable cams. Retponslblt party ntedad to take on naw pay mants ot S4.I4 par month or S33.44 cash prica. 5-year guarantee. Richman Brothers Sewing Cantors, 335-t3*3. _________________ BABY BED, EXCELLENT SHAPE, — 4T3-4W1. BRONZE OR CHROME DINETTE tata,. BRAND NEW. Large and small size fround drag laatr me-tangularl tables in, X 5 an# 7 ‘triple trundle b Jolo'NIAL FURttiTURE, L a A 61 Orchard Laka. 1. LUMBER* CANNEL COAL - TH6 IDEAL Rroplaca fuel, firaplaoa wood, ttra-ilda cafert. OAKLAND FUEL E PAINT. 45 Thamat SI. FE >4134. RKklath, 32 bundle t .44 4'xl' plasterboard S I.2S 4'x7' v-groovad mohooany. DAN ANb LARRY'S - 6RY SLAB wood, tio cord, 2 tor $14 dattvdrad. FE H444 or 473^ FxS^*v^groovad mahogany, ao-toctod 41.44 DRY SPLIT HARDWOOD, 115 A cord dellverod. it^5^4X I. DryK, S35. Refrigerator « 4'xS' Masenlta pagboard =ront doors. XO'xS.r sn:f5 Burmeister's We Deliver EM 3-41 ")pen 4 dayt a week-l a.m. to I p.i SundwS'10 to3 . mirror, slIgMIy marraJ S3.t5; lar satoctlon at caWnati with ar wll out llghtt. tlUliig doors. TKril buys. Michigan Fluorascant, 3T3 ( chard Lake 34.___________ MID-WINTER SPECIALS. NEW GAS ' III 1 day heat aervica. 3 ut ' >,000 gat-oll counter flow i low bey. MA S-ISOI ar I A l DACHSHUND PUPS, TEAMS. Stud dogs. Jeholms. FE 0-2SH. AKC‘6aCHSHUND PUPPlkS. STUD dogs. ESTELHElMS. FE 2^337. AKc german shephIrd. try. . 4IH77X Mlltofd. AKC POODLES, BLACK BEAUTIES WYMAN'S USED BARGAIN STORE At our IS W. Pike Store Only MISCELLANEOUS ARTICLES, ' lit, clothtno, large electric enport, rcfrigator.-wicciric L PLUMBING BARGAINS^ F R E E~^ ' Standing tollal, S14.0S. SBgallon : iwator. S47.4S; Xptoce bath sals ’ S50.95. Laundry tray, trim, SI9.M; AKC SILVER POODLE PUPPIES'. __________ FE ^5702■___________ AKC PEKiHcESE PUPPIES, TOY. between 0 a.m. and 4 p.m.. thrapdad. SAVE PLUMBING ' 1 Baldwin. FE 4-IS14._______ RCA WHIRLPOOL AUTOMATIC ’ REGULATION SIZE, SLATE TOP, ■awing machine — MAPLE CON- SPRED-SATIN PAINTS, WARWICK Supply, 247* Orchard Lake. 410-2020 STAINLESS STEEL DOUBl6 SINKS THE SALVATION ARMY RED SHIELD STORE no W. LAWRENCE ST. BEAUTIFUL TRKOLOR FEMALE tan. S3S. F E3-13W._______ female ' AKC BEAGLE, GOOD hunter. FE 5-dlN. female canaries, all pet Shop, id wmiamy FE A44M. Champion bleed lines. Only 3 latt. GERMAN SNEPNER& TOFWES, Week and tan 4 waaks, AKC first class parantv sire importod from Germany. 1150-417X 0794011. ■ Everything I • Clothing, Fui E BEAGL|.J USED PLYWOOD M" S3. OKh. 11M Mt C WEDDING announcements AT discount prices. Forboa, 4503 Dixie R E SCHNAUZERS, 1 PARAKEET, BABY MALES, 04.45. 305 First, Rechattor, 45l-0ia5. POODLE PUPPIES. AKC RECIS- wkiNery M V AND JOINTER. POODLE, X243o! POODLES, SSO _______ 433-5443_____________ POODLE PUPPIES. STUD SERV-Ica. lish. parakaats. canartot. Pat tuppWaa. CRANE'S, UL 1-3200- 1 prefinithad Birch 9x12 Linoleum Rugs. .$3.89 Celling tile 7Vlc " "Inyl Asbestos tito ..........7c < ilak) tile 4x4" Ac < Floor Shop - 2255 Elizabeth Laki "Across From the Moll" t^nr LINOLEUM RUGs's3.45 EACH Plastic wall tile “ - 'ling tile - wall paiwling, G TUa, FE 4-4457, IPS W. Big 40" can40to-at tha price of a spinet-fyH 10 keys. REGULAR $79S-SALE $588 Hurry Quantity It Llmitod GALLAGHER'S MUSIC II E. Huron ' FE 40S44 Royal Oak Store 4234 Woodward Richwoy Poodle Salon All broad pretaaslanal groomino Comptota Line of Pat Suppliat 021 OAKLAND (next to Zlabartt) Open daily 44 FE B0334 SMALL WHITE POODLE, NO PA- -TeY BUY AT BETTERLY'S ....... NEW SHOWER STALL, 334-2753, After 4. _______^ i ALUMINUM, COMBINATIOI storms and screen windows. SIz 40x54. J. Leonard. OR 3-5B5B. FTnCH PORTABLE TV's, NAME Brand Clearance. Used TV's 14-00. ' LITTLE JOES BARGAIN HOUSE _ 1441 Baldwin Opon Evts. FE 2-4442 ANY USED EVERY FRIDAY 7:30 PM. EVERY SATURDAY I every SUNDAY 20 PER CENT OFF "Ttk, typewriter, bw,.,.v •meograph, etc. Marked with red g. Forbas, 4500 Dixie Hwy., next "ponllK State Bank, OR >4747. ELECTRONIC ORGAN 5345 UP. MORRIS MUSIC 34 S. Telegraph Across from Tal-Huron FE 2-B547 1964 Necchi Demo Portibla with ilg-zoggar for but-tonholat. etc. 55.00 par mon“- — 503.00 cash. New machine antee. Richman Brolhars Sewing Centers, 3354233. ____________ 20X000 BTU FORCED AIR FUR- . Buyer at i iaii. i/aam. us^. Equipoed to zig-zag, I FE B-4521._______ BEEF AND PORK-HALF AND quarters. Oadyfca A4kt. FE $-7441. BATHROOM FIXTURES. OIL AnD gas tumoca and bollerr *-■'— water hitatert. hardwar trical tuopllas. Crock, per, black and golvi and fittings. Sai^ MUSIC CENTER 268 N. SAGINAW FE 44700 NEARLY NEW ACCOttDiON. S55 Buy—Sell----- Consignments A--- UB AUCTION __I Dixie Hwy.______OR >2717 WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 34Hl t. KONoIl^MNS DAIRY AND FARM_ EXCELLENT HAY ________Call 4IS.3tOB_________ GOOD HORSE HAY-GRAIN WANt- ............. 7441 Coo toy EM >4171. straw. Will deliver. 4410 LIvemois. Troy, MU F14I7.______________ lER I SECOND CUTTING Al Arthur Godfrey Ts talking about. Jack Hagan Music Center 44 Ellzatetb Lake Read FE 2A50B ’ SALE GUITARS . . I'ACCORDlONS* Super Kam-Tona Bottle Gas Installation Two lOBpound cyllndars and equip ment, 412. Great Flains Gas Co. FE S4B72.______________________ CASH AND CARRY ^ - —fit'-"-" - colors. 4x7 i" pro-tinishod tn4 Opon^ljL maho^j; 4x4 44.44 Eves'tffllam. ■ DRAYTON PLYWOOD ------- ORjamj USED ORGANS terms. From S2S4. GRINNELL'S (Downtown) $. Saotoow FE >7I4B USED TRUMPET, LIKE NEW CON-dltlon, moko ottbr. OR MBSf. USED BAND INSTRUMENTS------ Trade-Ins In goad ptaylng cendl-- ----1 fSm S3& clarfoats. ' Mr7s"m!o‘S^ICE KING BROS. ~er» FE FI443 Pentla^ Rd. ot Opdy»a SEE US FIRST AND SAVE. j6HN' DEERE, NARTLANO AREA Hard- tton. Comat I ''mSrRIs'MUSIC I S. Totogriph I Tat-Huron FE >0547 Co.. Ortanvilto, NA 7- ! CLOSET COMBINATION WITH 4x?*'u!Jftolsl $tei« IiwipEieEt ' DOUBLE TAYLOR USED MC CULLOCH CHAIN SAWS: I 740 14 Inch, SWS. ,1 e.e. I. 34 tach. SUB.----- ------ '1 AAK 3S, a inch, tnx ,) III. II inch. 4130. I 14X II Inch. SHE I cm 17 toch. »g. I Clinton, It toeli. SSX I ’*^R’A'^S'o*3«v.ce KING BROS. FE 4B734 FE AMdl ^‘Oonfidence' Our ^st Importght^ Product." Here is a Partial List of Our Select Guaranteed Used Gars 1%3 DODGE "440" .Door, awtoRMtlc radio ar htatar. FuU prica- 196VMERCURY ___jatk, ra Pull prlca- $787 1962 CHEVY W. taraualip-and -haalap a«d Mandard $1,247 1959 PONTIAC CalaHna Station Wagon, i $697 $1,897 1963 CNEVROUT m AIR Wagon. V< automatic, powar .•taring. Pull prka- $1,697 1959 PONTIAC Honnawltlt Hardtop, aulonwHc. powar tiaarlitg and urakaa. Pull orlta- $797 I960 CHEVY 3EL AIR -Door, 4 V* mft* NORTH - OF CASS AVE. PHONE 338-4528 Krad UtMl C«rs "“O’ CONVEfef. s':!!?? BOBBORST MI6-4538_ _ M4 COMET CALIENTi 4-6664, Daalar, 6l M7II, V* OLbsMogiCerV PWf srS,-^ ms, OR s-nay.______" ECNONMY cars, ttOi Dixia Hwy.' ItSS olds' HARDTOP. A VERY "nlth. VS an^hw Hm nd UtEd Cm 106[ll«w lad Um4 Cm 166 ”Snd°lVJ^n3A^,iasl^8l?*. AT tlUNYBlI DIO, HEATER. AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION, POWER STEM-INO. POWER ERAKES.I ARID-CUTELY NO MONEY DOWNS. Taka aaar aaiwiitnla af tiAlA CALL CRBdIt MORw SAt. Pr^* it HAROLD TURNER FORD. 4-7501.___________________ COMB IN AND TEST DRIVE Tha "HOT" 4A-2 JEROME OLDS^ADILLAC > S. SagMaw SL FB S-W St OLDS to CONVERTIBL ifs4 VALiaHY 44DOOR. RA D 10, HEATER, AUTOAAATIC TRANSMISSION, WHITEWALL TIRES. absolutely no money down REPOSSESSION ______DS F-SS no Call Mr. Mwton i OLDSMOBILBS , ___„,.ing carl Potterson Chevrolet Co. wt. tS down! 1104 S. Woodward Ava. , Ml 4-1735 xlSI Oakland Avp. I BIRMINGHAM Campers, Skiers, Vacationist 1959 Marcury ilany ^^rk. ---- Ichino rad Infarkw. It automatic tranamit- «w***raa** *Ch IJll'IKS!* brakai, oow, cl Both For $1365 Including Taxai and Licania Tuesday Only-Feb. 23 . FIRST COME-FIRST SERVED LLOYD MOTORS INf PLYMOUTH SPORTS FURY. Ml angina. tl.4»5. EM S-3M1._ 1»43 PLYMOUTH 4-DOOR, REPOS-taiaad. Paymanta at |uat Otl-07 ----- ----- cradit raquirtmanti.____________ lt43 VALIANT ^DOOR WIYh RA- 1963 RIVIERA Hordtop 2-Door 1964 BUICK Speciol 4-Door V4 angina, autooMtlc, whltawalla. whita tinia snarp 1964 WILDCAT Convertible Automatic radio, haatar, powar ataarlng w brtkaa, blut fInINi .... 1960 BUICK LeSabre Hardtop 2-Ooor Automatic radta. haatar, aiMtawalla, rad fln| 1962 OPEL Wogon, a Sharpy! ' Siwtdaid trantmlatlon, radio, Wua tinian . 1961 CHEVY Bistoyne 4^)oor Automatic radio, hatlar. whUawaUt, 1963 RENAULT Douphine 4-Door ---------- .. T96TC $2995 $3395 $2395 $2195 $2995 $ 995 $ 995 i $ 995 196-210 Orchard Lake Phon^ 332-9165 Neee swd Uted Cm REPOSSESSION. I PONTIAC wagan, wM. mmmmt’ mm, paymenN 0* M-70 waakly. HAUPT PONTIAC ItSI PONTIAC Sdeor hardtop, a Just-Received Five 1961 Valiants Alt automatic tranamlsalons. R marly DatroN Ediaon cart. U prica to aall quick. SS dawn doll WE FINANCE Lucky Auto 193 or 254 S. Saginaw FE 4-2214 or FE 3-7853 dan that It Itic dan^ lamlly ci Idaal lor tomaona aaoklng aconor . In ooal ol car and coat of aparatlon. Thla fl.-ie ptrforming tlx. cylindar angina taamad with a amooHt TarquaPH- will provida you.....—- portalion. Original metallic blue flniih tnd matcblng Interior *-■-are vary nice. Easy larmt ci arranged to ault your budg -TOD OUALITY" value ihal xin today for only ll.JtS. BRIMINGHAM IMS PONTtAC Grand Prlx, loadi of powar. with bucket Matt tnd floor conaola. IM3 PONTIAC CatalMt Sport Coupa, - Hltle Mua beauty, with power. I PONTIAC Bonntvilla Hardtop, iw car tradtl I PONTIAC Bodnavllla Hardtop, IPM PONTIAC CATALINA 2-DOOR DIO AND HEATER, WHITE-WALL TIRES. REAL NICE, CAN FINANCE 100 PER CENT, AS SUME CAR PAYMENTS OF Slt.22 PER MONTH, VILLAGE RAMBLER, 444 S. WOODWARD AVE., BIRMINGHAM, Ml S3W0. BE E IN A QUAL :aR WHERE MONEY WILL BUY MOST AND YOUXL BE AHEAD Autobahn 1*44 VW Station wagon « . Slick, V-S’ UVE Cartaira covarad by Pontiac Warranty I BOBBORST ham-Bloomfleld Trades ____ilnghar S20 S. Wood^-..^^ _ _____ 1»M roNTIAC "HARDTOP, REP65 latiad. Paymantt ol iuat S7.aj waakly no S down will bring car PONTIAC CATALINA, 4-bOOR, PONTIACS 61 Bonnjwllla convartIMa. Llg Sydra(TiiJSc,*'*p'o wTr*^ ttaerln& brakat and windowi, radio, haat- Hydramatic, power itaerlng < brakat. Radio, I—* walls ..... Mew eM Ueed Cm 186 mt GRAND PRIX, POWER &70fc'PE«!}&. REPOSSESSION Only 2 Left ' 1964Pontiocs Automafle tranamlaalana, tormtr Oakland County cart. $1,645 WE FINANCE Lucky Auto 193 or 254 5. SaginaW FE 4-2214 or FE 3-7853 We're wheeling and dealing the oil-new 1965 Ramblers. See them now! Used cars ore being sold at wholesole to make room for the new cor trades. ROSE RAMBLER 1145 Commarrt, Union Lakt __________EM 3-4IS5 ______ New emI Used Cm 1»S» RAMBLER CLASSIC 44MBOE, jgd^runnmg oondhlon. PI iM3 rambler WAOON, . AUTO- a mitoagt, axtrat, m L FE^72 attar S p RAMBLER VILLAGE RAMBLER Hew EWl Uie4 Cm 1H Houghten & Son —NOW AVAILABEL— 1965 Rambler American 2-Door Sedon m;..!.., uKdlNer, wathart, iN-S’JliM?!: $1877.26 Houghten & Son Yauf-Fnandla Okla-RamMar Daalar ROCHESTER OL l-mi S2S N. /Main Street ’«1BTV4*HRKE Russ lohnson Pontioc- Rambler ransmlulon, power, tlaarlng. Saa Credit Manager I mentt you can afford. VILLAGE RAMBLER 666 S. Woodword BIRMINGHAM__Ml S-2WC. 1M3 RAMBLER CLASSIC STAYrdrf WAGON, WITH AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION, RADIO AND HEATER, WHITEWALL- TIRES, CAN FINANCE 100 PER CENT ASSUME CAR PAYMENTS OF SSI.75 PER MONTH. VILLAGE rambler, 444 S. WOODWARD "■ 4-3W0. IF YOU ARE HAVING TROUBLE GETTING YOUR CREDIT RE-ESTABLISHED - NOW YOU CAN TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THE IEM@IPMW ALL YOU NEEO IS A STEADY JOB. $5,00 DOWN PAY-MENT AND A DESIRE TO HELP YOURSELF. CALL MR. SIMMS: FE 8-4088 INCORPORATED r963 Rambler 4-DOOR 4-cyllndar angina tr M\7T tint ca KEEGO PONTIAC SALES S. SERVICE 682-3400 IWr CATALINA 2-D06R BLUE, white tidawallt hyd., Ntth button radio, haatar, window wasnars, back up UgMi. 2 autalda rear viaw mlrrort Sl,3»5. Phona FE 2-»SS5 Autobahn Motors Inc. ____ _____________ I VALIANT - "V-200'' Tw6--- , ,.J2S" angina and "lour or," plus radio, haatar, gt ytt, yti^ „j|y 11,400 mil*., ------- 000 mllat or FACTORY NEW CAR WARRANTY. This littia turquolf-baauty la "TOP QUALITY" burnt ar to bumparl LOW COST NEW CAR TERMS It you with to " nanca. Almoat Ilka buying a r car. Except tor tha manay l aava. Full prka only 01,405. BIRMINGHAM CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH yi2 S. Woodward Ml 7-3214 HILLTOP ‘42 Chrytlar 200, hardtop '42 Tampasl wagon ; '41 Pontalc convartIbM '42 Pontiac Sedan '61 Rambler 3-door '42 Chavy 2-door hardtop '41 Falcon wagon <43 Ranault, Auto., radio 'SO Thundarbird, power, iharp ‘44 Cauntry Squira, power -LOT SPECIAL-1956 Corvette red convertible, completely rebuilt, 4-speed transmission. $1095 "7 DAY" SALE AT FISCHER 1964 Electro 4-door sedan ........................ $2988 1964,-Speciol convertible .........................$1988 1964 Wildcot Custom hardtop ...................... $2988 1964 Buick Skylark Convertible.....................$2488 1964 LeSabre 4 door hardtop.......................$2688 1964 Electro 4-door hordtop....................... $3288 1963 Chevy 6 passenger wagon.......................$1988 1963 Electro 4 door hardtop........................$2388 1963 LeSabre coupe, special at.....................$2088 1963 Skylork convertible ...................... - $1988 1963 Buick LeSabre 4 door hardtop ................$2088 ar brtkaa and t - radio and haatar. prka Banker's Outlet H Ellitbath Laka Road FE 8-7137 ^ lt» CATALINA, 4-OOOR, AUT6-mptlc, S350. OP 3M41I. S45b. FE 4- Pontiac .................. }7M ♦3S Chavy ................... S521 •57 Pontiac ............... ■ S200 mt PONTIAC BONNEVILLE CON uartibla, buckat aaalt powar, lull '^•““'^wTfinance Capitol Auto 312 W. MONTCALM FE 8-4071 REPOSSESSION l»J» PONTIAC hardtop. No n- ^ vn5ssji.^”iSor*5!;a: ,4278a 1963 Riviiro, tee this onB . 1964 Opel wagon, sharp .. .....................$1388 1964 LeSabre 2 dodr hardtop ...................$z488 1962 Skylark hardtop, nice ................... $1588 1961 Buick Special 4 door.....................$1088 1960 Electro 4 door hardtop, air —,............$1288 1962 Mercury 2 door hordtop.................. $1388 554 S. Woodward 1959 Pontiac 1*42 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX, EX-callant condition, 304KM mllat. Otw-ownar, hydramatic, powar ataarlng brakat, axtra$. S1.750. 647-4730. 1443 PONTIAC 4-OOOR STAR CHIEF ------tlaarlng and brakat, ctotn, FE ^7»50 all- Financing no pr nar Flnanca^. f IM» PONTIAC S-DOOR. tH I $ baauty hat atlck thifi, VS angina, and Ihlt cpr la naw Ihroughoull Gaktlingar finlah, only SS down will handlal MARVEL - 251 Oakland Ava. PONtlAC lardtop. — ca only S445, can VILLAGE RAMBLE 666 S. Woodward BIRMINGHAM Ml 4-34S0 PONTIAt CATACmA-T=OOOR5 1fS» PONTIAC BONNEVILLE door hardtop. h« lull pom radio and haatar, runt likt ne Full prloa, SWS. No monay d* - 14.25 par watk. Call A ESTATE STORAGE HEATER, AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION. POWER STEERING, ABSOLUTELY MO M O N B " DOWN. Taka ovar Mymantt i 111.04. CALL CREDIT MGR. M Parkt at HAROLO TURN! FORD. Ml 4-75pe. ItM PONTIAC CATALINA 4-DOOR. ________pickup,---- 1*44 Ford Galaxia 500, 2-door hard- l•^Jmpalt 2-door hardtop. 1»40 Chavrolat Btl Air, auto. 4-cyl., idl6. haatar, whltawallt, rad tnd 677 S.. LAPEER RD. Lakt Orion MY 2-2041 Ing, radio tnd ... ... tirat. Naw { atures below sero in the upper Mississippi Valley and western Great Lakes region sixead chill — 4o4he^tlantk! seaboard today. - -The spread of cold covered Prize Has Eluded Cukor of 'Fair Lad/ Director in Line for First Oscar Afrhi is ttiree times larger, Iq area thian die United States. By BOB THtMIAS AP Movlo-TV Writer HOLLYWOOD - When i Oscar nominations are i HURON NOW SHOWING at 1:00 1 9:00 _ I In the Upper Peninsula, there everywhere east of the Rockies were four inches in Ontonagon, except the extreme Southeast, in the western section, and six The low 30s embraced mudi of inches in Luce County, in the Texas, eastern section. ny Natalie Wood Henry Fonda Lauren Bacall > Mel Ferrer LAKE Theatre ON KNTIAO TMIL SOUTH el MASU NO. in WALLED LANE 624-3980 nuLiSSi - rwwe m wr K-.e»nis rECHNICOLOa Fiem WASNEa saos YDIIN6BL00D HAWKE jifan sffifira seaH AND Smut KIM UIURENCE , 'NOVAK HARVEYl 2nd Big Hit- FineFood ★ Liquoi THE FINEST IN ENTERTAINMENT SARA ALLEN JOHNNY WILLS AT THE ORGAN Interaatioiial Fills,VMhin.^ reported 24 below sero. It was •13 at Marquette, Mich., -11 at Houghtoa, Midi., and zero at Sanlt Ste. Marie, Mich., and Madison, Wis. Minneapolis, I Minn., had-4. The mercury contracted from the high SOs yesterday to the low 30s at Washington, D.C., where winds blew 40-mile gusts. ! Rain and showers gave way td snow flurries in the northern Atlantic coastal states. Skies were clear over the Midwest and Great Plains. Swirling snow fell through the northern Rocky Mountain region, and in the Far West, increasing cloudiness and precipitation spread from the Washington and Oregon coast across the uitermoontain section. Light rains fell from northern California through western Washington, and there was some snow inland. A- At Key West. Fla., however.^ g file early morning’temperature was 70 degrees. Some temperatures and .weather condition|. reported by the Weather Bureau: Boston, 33, rain; New York, 40, rain; Philadelphia, 37, rain; Washington, D.C., 33, rain; Atlanta, 30, clear; Miai, 68, rain; Ixiuisville, 21, snow; Qiicago, 7, clear; St. Louis, 15, clear; Min-neapolis-St Paul, 4 below, clear; Kansas City, 18, dear; Denver, 28, dear; Dallas, 33, clear; Phoenix 52, partly cloudy; Seattle, 39, rain; San Francisco, 48, partly cloudy; Los Angeles,^ 53, doudy; Anchorage, 8, doudy; Honolulu, 70, partly doudy. i actor’s director, and particular^ ly an actress’ director. Among Ma subjects: Garbo in “Cam-IDe,” Katharine Hqibum in “Adam’s Rib”. Garland Jn is certain to make the list for hlsdirection of “My Fair Lad^. Further, ,h e appears the man mostl likely to pick up the directorial Academy! Award at the mOMAS the ixesentations April 5. Wlqr? Because this year he won the award of his own Director Guild, which has predetermined the Oscar for the past 12 years. He also was handed a Golden Globe by the foreign press and other awards have bee.n comi ig his way almost once a week. it * * Geo-ge can happily grow accustomed to this pace. He has been overlooked in the award department for a long time. It is one of the lohal puzzles that the Oscar has eluded Cukor, who has been in films since 1929. He has been nominated four times — “Little Women,” “Philadelphia Story,” “A Double Life,” “Bom Yesterday” — Ronald Colman, James art, Judy Holliday, Ingrid man. X^^^EPLADf “I can’t explain the neglect,” I he comment^, “except that I don’t believe in getting between the actors and the audience. 1 came from the theater, where | the text detemines the style. “I believe in working through actors. The better I succeed, the | less obvious is my function.” you take on a Job, you must think you can do U better than, anyme else. Otherwise you won’t have the enthusiasm to —^^ _________. ..giny ttqMyJgh/ 'AlSfarTs Born”, Ava Gardner^ * * * in “Bhowani Junctfon”, Marilyn “That’s something that silentr Monroe In “Let’s Make Love”, screen actors had, they believed The “My Fair Lady” assign- ment meant sustaining two dlf- Cukor. “My enou^. its the flcult performances on the qualltyjrou often see In screen, as well as preserving an air of elegant taste. For this, Cukor was eminently qualified, and no one realized it more than himself. ‘WISE DEOaCWf’ When Jacii L. Warner met him on. an airplane and proposed that he direct “My Fair Lady,” Cukor replied: “I think you’ve made a very wise decision.” There was more than Wind self-confidence in the remark. The director reasons: “When TV dramas. ’They are eslsential-ty B pictures, but the actox be- • lieve their work — because it must be done fast and on a| aU budget. { I t^ to Jet the same effect B lffitts.Tor that reason, I seldom rehearse, except for mechanical thin^. Most actors ^ve their spark in the first few takes. Rex Harrison was that way. So wwe Garbo, and Spencer Tracy. On the other hand, Katharine Hepburn never wilted, and Audrey Hepburn was the same way. meik- ‘’Howialiu ^ Those iSnwE KEIffliaESil.WIU)£HAi The wirtiffle adventuri of J young John F. Kennedy ] IctiFFRoeensoN TECHNICOLOB FEATURES mt7tl0-9M Repeated by Popular Demahd . . . SALE ENDS FEB. 27th! 7ir«8tone BRAND NEW NYLONAIRES PROGRAMS FOR MEN or WOMEN Designed for • Weight Loss -♦Weight Goin Body Building Body Conditioning- lopaiDTOioMiifl ; call 334-0529 for Your FREE TrieK 1 North Perry St. (Comer of Piko A Pfrry) ~me*d oi tftowh alTIrtiton* pricMl at FIrMton* DoaUrt and at all Mrvlc* ttaliont dlAplaying |ha PIraUeiM sign. 148 W. HURON CIDCCTAAIC 333-7917 rIKCvlUllC FE 4-9970 THE PONTTlAC PRESS, MONDAY. FEBRUARY 22, 1965 THIRTY-FIVE —Television Programs— piogrami fuml«h*d by stations listod In this column oro^bioct to chongo without iwKco. MONDAY EVENING |;W {2) (4) News, Weather , Sports . (7) Movie: “War Gods of —^Babyluii" (In Progress)— (9) Magilla Gorilla (50) High School Basket-baU (56) Conversations l;M (7) (Color) News, Sports (9) Bat Masterson (56) Pathfinders 7;N (2) Dobie Gillls (4) (Color) George Pierrot (9) Movie: “Hell’s Outpost’’ '(1955) Rod Cameron Joan Leslie. (56) International Magazine 7:J0 (2) To Tell the Truth (4) Karen. Karen invited to spend holiday at ski resort. (7) Voyage. Crane is kidnaped and brainwashed to obey enemy orders. (50) Hockey |;N (2) I’ve (^t a Secret (4) Man From U.N.C.L.E. Message from agent indicates THRUSH threatens boy lama. (66) Great Books 1:31 (2) (Color Special) Cinderella (See TV Features) (7) No Time for Sergeants Will b allowed to take over as switchboard oper- 'Cinderella' Returns CINDERELLA, 8:30 p. m. (2) Color special, new production of only original nuisical ever written for televiidon by Richard Rodgers and the late Oscar Hammerstein n, Stars Ginger Rogers, Walter Pidgeon, Celeste Holm, Jo Van Fleet, Pat Carroll, Barbara Ruick, Stuart Damon, and Lesley Ann Warren as Cinderella. j JONATHAN WINTERS, 9:00 p. m. (4) New Christy s Minstreb and Bob and Ray are guesb. SHOW OF THE WEEK, 9:00 p. m. (9) Third in series of variety shows from Germany includes French singer 1 Nadia Gray and singing-dancing Kessler Twins among guesb. CBS REPORTS, 10:00 p. m. (2) Walter Lippnuum gives his views on state of nation and world in conversation with Eric Sevareid. I:M (4) (Color Special) Jona-, than W i n t e r s (See TV FeatumT ■ (Tr dy works as nurse's aide. (9) Show of the Week (See TV Features) 1:30 (7) Bing Crosby. Bing and E11 i e help newlywed neighbors. (50) Pro Soccer 11:19 (2) CBS Reporb (See TV Features) (4) Alfred Hitchcock. C^l- owner of firm clash. (7) Ben Casey. Ben Hnds it hard to discover if man b really aide or not. (9) The Suties 11:39 (9) Don Messer’s Jubilee (50) To Be Announced 11:99 (2) (4) (7) (9) News, Weather, Sports 11:15 (7) Les Crane 11:39 (2) Movie: “Bhawanl ’• Junction’’ (1966) Avb’ Gardner, Stewart Granger (4) (Color) Johnny Carson m Movie; "Welcome, Mr. Washington” (Bnglbh, 1944) Peggy Cummins, Barbara Mullen. 1:99 (4) Lawman (7) After Hours TUESDAY MORNING “ 1:19 (2) On the Farm Front 6:15 (2) Jlews 6:29 (2) Sunrise Semester 6:39 (4) Classroom (7) Funews 6:59 (2) News 7:99 (2) Happyland (4) Today (7) Johnny Ginger 8:99 (2) Captain Kangaroo , (7) Big Theater 8:39 (7) Movb: “Mother Wore Tighb” (1947) Betty Gra-ble, Dan Dailey. 8:45 ( 56) Englbh VI TV Features Saihe Old Gag: Hello, George; Hqw's Martha? BUFFALO, N.y. (AP) -George Washington does not observe hb birthday today, but te ^ow along with those George Washington resides in suburban Kenmore and was bom Feb. 9, 1902 in Stony Creek, Ont. ★ ★ ★ “Without fail, I get a dozen or more phone calb every year at thb time wishing me happy birthday,” says the Kenmore Washington. The name carries through the rest of the year, too. ★ ★ * “Every «nce in a while someone will call up and ask how Martha (the first president’s wife) b, or ask if George b in,” he added. 8:55 (9) Morgan’s Merry-Go-Round 9:99 (2) Mike Douglas (4) Living (9) Romper Room 9:16 (56) Let’s Read 9:39 (56) American Hbtory 9:55 (4) News (56) Spanish Lesson ii-mO’Mflfg RBBHnfflrpwBy (9) Canada Schools 11:19 (56) Scientific World (4) (Color) What’s This Song? (9) Across Canada 19:35 (56) French Lesson 19:59 (56) Spanish Lesson i9:S5 (4) News 11:99 (2) Andy Griffith (4) Concentration (7) Girl Talk (9) Friendly Giant 11:18 (9) Chez Helene lt:i9 (56) What's 11:39 (2) McCoys (4) (Color) Jeopardy X7) Price Is Right (9) Butternut Square 11:59 (9) News AFTERNOON 12:99 (2) Love of Ufe (4) (Color) Say When (7) Donna Re^ (9) Bingo 12:29 (56) Scioice 12:28 (2) News 12:39 (2) Search for Tomorrow 44) XColor) Truth or Consequences (7) Father Knows Best 12:35 ( 56) Spanbh Lesson 12:45 (2) Guiding Ught 12:59 (56) Let’s Read 12:58 (4) News 1:99 (2) Jack Benny (4) News (7) Ernie Ford (9) Movie: “Valley of the iGlanb” 11938) Wayrre Morris, Claire Trevor. 1:19 (4) Eliot’s Almanac (56) Children’s Hour 1:15 (4) Topics for Today 1:25 (56) Arts and Crafb 149 (2) As the World Turns (.4) (Color) Let’s Make a Deal (7) Bachelor Father 1:55 (4) News (56^ American Hbtory 2:99 (2) Password (4) Moment of Truth (7) Flame in the Wind 2:29 (S) Safety Circle 2:28 (56) Profile of a Lady 2:89 (2) Playhouse 2 (4) Doctors (7) Day in Court 2:89 (56) Spanbh Lesson 2:85 (7) News (4) Another World (7) General Hospital 3:98 (56) Alive With Art 3:15 (9) News 3:25 (2) News 3:39 (2) Edge of Night (4) (Color) You Don’t Say (7) Young Marrieds (9) Take 30 (SO) Jack La Lanne (4) Match Game (7) Trailmaster —-.-(0) Razzle Dazzle (50) Movie 4:25 (4) News 4:39 (2) Movie: “The Unearthly” (1957) John Carradine, SaUyTodd. (4) Mickey Mouse Club (9) Adventures in Paradise 5:09 (4) (Color) (Jeorge Pierrot (7) Movie: “Franeb Goes to West Point” (1952) Don-aid O’Connor, Lori Nelson. (SO) Little Rascals (56) Ragtime Era 5:39 (9) Rocky and Friends (50) Gary Stevens (56) What’aNew 8:45 (9) Bugs Bunny 5:55 (2) Sporb (4) Cbrol Duvall Russians Launch Unmanned Satellite MOSCOW (fl - The Soviet Union launched satellite No. 57 in ib unmanned Cosmos series today and announced that ib orbit ranged from a low of 105 miles to a high of 307. Three of the Cosmos satellites were put into orbit from a single rocket yesterday, the Soviet news agdncy Tass announced. ACROSS 4 Ai!m^’’GoldBug” 7 0.---- 13 Yellow bugle pbnt IS Pointed procesa (boL) 14 Western state 15 Rudyard -— 17 Abbot’s headdress 18 Early Jewish anchorite 19 Elephant’s defense weapon 20 Attendant 24 College cheers ’ 27 Jewel HTBeforir 31 Submarine detector device 33 Nonclerical 34 Intention 35 Preen Yutang 37 Peak in Cascade range 39 Judge in circuit 40 Unlawful 43 Omen 45 Siouan Indiai^ 49 Called, as a cow 51 Hand bomb 52 Maxim 53 American Navy (ab.) 54 Lighted 55 Evergreen shrub 56 Still 57 Greek letter DOWN 1 Causeway 2 Feminine niune 3 Yelps 4 “Age of Reason” author 5 Possessor 6 England (ab.) 7 Pronoun 8 Redactor The announced purpose of the Cosmos series, b^n in March Hoof and AAoofh Wpo LONIXXf (UPI) - Hie mini btry of health has agreed to pay five pounds (14 dollars) of the cost of a set of fabe teeth -for a young woman who com> plained her National Health Service set spoiled (he aact of her smile in amateur dancing 9 Effortlessly 10 Fluidity unite 11 County in England 16 Not so much 21 Jury authorization 22 Moslem priest 23 Mound (archaeol.) 24 Hindmost 25 Operatic solo 26 Ernest---- 28 Den 29 Unit of force 31 Twirl 32 City on Oka River - 4 38 External world (philos.) 39 Ardor 41 English furze 42 Catkin 43 Lath 44 Iodine (comb, form) 46 “Man Without a Country” author 47 Mine entrance 48 BrisUe 50 Low haunt 51 — de Maupassfuit *1,100 to’15,000 Pay Wf nils remodel home BANKERS’ LOW RATES FE 4-6141 o«t-*f-To«ni e«n e*SM» m uui BANKERS “f* UAW OKs Budd Pact DETROIT (AP)—Members of United Auto Workers Local 306 stmaay with Budd (To. The vote was 1,474 to 134. The agreement Humphrey to Tour Nation's Sn Adviser to FDR Expires BRONXVILLE, N.Y. (AP) -Samuel Guy Inman, 87, international affairs adviser of President Franklin D. Roosevelt on formulating the”good neighbor policy,” died Friday of a heart condition in hb home. — Radio Programs— WJR(760) WXYZd 270) CKIW(900) WWJ(950) WCAR(1130) WPOWQ 460) WJBK(1,500) WHFI-FM(94.7) WXYZ, Fr«l WoK. Mirtlc WWJ. Farm Ntwt CKIW Farm, Er» Opanar WPON, Ntwi. Ari^ ..... 1. Joa Bacaralla WPON. Ntwt, Sporta WHFI, Ntwt. Wally Saar *:U-CKLW, FoNon Lawit Jr tiW-WXYZ, Aia> Oral WWJ, Butinau WJR, Butmats *;*-WXYZ, Nawt, $P0 WWJ, Thraa-Slar E>t>a WJR, Lawall Thomai Ntwt, CIIW ' Morrit WJB, Jr. Town Maalino tilB-WJR, Iconomic Club ttM-WFON, WorM Today Ectnomic Club IBiBB-WJR, Ntwt. Kaltido-WXYr‘*Madcap Murphy, CJO.W, Mutic til Dawn TUBBOAV MORNINO WHFI, Howard McKannay tilB-w'jft, MuiN Hall WWJ, Kdbarta CKLW. Eya Opanor. Davlot WPON, Ntwt, Whitman 7:0B-WHFI, Larry Payno, WJR. Ntwt, MWlC Hall CKLW. Nawt. Davlai l;N-WJR. Nawt, Guatt WHFI: Larry Payna, Nawt. McKannay Is^WJR, Mutk Hall y:l5-WHFI, Vlikmi WJR. Opan Hovtt t:IP WJR. Lat Murray WHFI, Ntwt, McKannay WJBK, Newt, Avary . WXYZ. Marc Avary, MutI TUEtOAV AFTERNOON llilt-wjR, Ntwt, Farm WWJ, Nawt. Mutk WPON, Nawt. Ron Knight CKLW, Nowt, Grant WXYZr Marc Autry Mutic WCAR. Nawt, Dalnll WHFI, Nawt. Larry Payna ll:»-WJR,-Bod Guatt litB-WJR^ Ntwt, Art LIT ,,1i3B-WJR, Woman't World IfW-WJR, Nowt. Elliot FIth WJBK, Nowt, LM WPON, Ntwt. BOb Lawrtoc CKLW, Nowt, Oavt Shattr WXYZ. Dovo Princa l.-M-WJR, Nawt, EdKh Hi WCAR, Nawt, Bacaralla lilS-WJR. Mutic Hall Rock Appears Informally at Formal Show Opening By EARL WILSON -JJEM7 voRK Rnpk Hudfion attended opening-“Baker Street” at the Broadway Theater-"without a tux . . . towering over everybody in his plain dark suit and regular tie • • because he doesn’t carry a dinner jacket when he’s out promoting hb movies. ’‘The Rock” was with Gina LoUobrigida, hb partner b “Strange BedfeUows,” though they split later . . . Rock gobg to a party for 700 that Producer Alex Cohen gave ^at the Rainbow Room, Gina going somewhere slightly more “intiiiie.” Six-feet-4, he doesn’t find it easy to pick up dinner clothes quickly. Besides, when he undertook to buy a pair WILSON . of $40 cufflinks at a Hotel Plaza shop, without cash, a saleslady asked for identification. "Dou you really think that’s necessary?” he asked, smiling. “Certainly!” she said—unsmiling. Rock’s afraid to push these argumenb. Once when he exclaimed to a salesgirl, “I’m Rock Hudson!” she said “. . . So?” I thought ’’Baker Street” one of the merriest evenings ever spent in the theater—the gimmickery, the gadgets, the showmanship of Producer Alex Cohen, who looks like me bnt is trying to get over it... the wondrous beauty of lovely Inga Swenson, the cleverness of Frib Weaver and Martin Gabel, the dancing talent of Toddy Green, the showstopperl ★ ★ ★ THE Midnight earl . . . With Eddie Fisher a smash at the Miami Beach Fontainebleau, the next-door Eden Roc booked Debbie Reynolds for March . . . The Viennese Lantern, closing to be turned into a discotheque, had bad luck. Burglars broke in and took proprietor Max Loew’s cash receipb. Carol Channingi who danced with Veep HamiArey at the Inaugural ball, got a note from him signed: ’’Your Twisting partner” . . . Dakar’s husband Dick Hinds will be recuperating for two months, so she’ll work as q single . . . Pat Sozoki’s ex-husband Mark Shaw was at the Copa, sat through her show twice. ★ ★ ★ ■TODAY’S BEST LAUGH: At the Garrison dbcotheque they played CSiubby Checker’s “Let’s Twist Again,” which helped start the craze. Photographer Joe Munster said nostalgically, "Boy, it’s good to hear the old songs again.” WISH I’D SAID THAT: The average woman has nothing against home cooking—as long as it doesn’t involve cooking at home. , , , REMEMBERED QUOTE: “All a speed-reading course does for some people b enable them to become misinformed faster.” —Arnold Glasow. EARL’S PEARLS: Women are now doing many things only men did once—bowl, golf, play billiards. Pretty soon they’ll want to do the. dishes. A patron disclosed at Roseland he’d sent a wedding gift to the Ringo Starrs—Hb and Hers hair curlers . . . That’s earl, brother. (Tlw H«ll SynBIctit, Ik.) CAPE KENNEDY, Fla. Tice President Hubert Hump! . ” today at the billions of dollars worth of laboratories and launching facilities in the nation’s spaceport. ★ w ★ Hb sb-hour tour includes briefing at the 88,000-acre Merritt Island moon launch area, the Mission Control Center where man-in-space flighb are BUILDING COMPLETE SERVICE • Bathrooms • Kitchans • Storm Windows • Dormars I • Aluminum Siding • Awnings I • Btdrooms f Attics 4 ROOMS l£aJ6|5 FAMILY ROOAAS *950 , JMON 1032 W«9t Huron StrMt FE 4-2597 MuwWf tl lh» Cli«wSf «l CwuiMigB COMPANY hr»itUacSmttJ93t UtailTS and SUNDAYS A.g . 682-0648 CALL MA 4-1091 fM 3-2385 673-2842 launching pad; the Air Force 'Titan 3Hr-ing area, and a Saturn launch complex. As vice president, Humphrey 1 chairman of the Space Council, the group that coordinates federal activities in aeronautics and space development. Wanna Buy a Bridge? SAN FRANCISCO (UPI)-They’re selling the San Francisco Bay bridge again, but thb time ib on the level. The Sbte of California has announced that the 1,500-foot San Mateo - Hayward Bridge wWch spah|^ the bay, will be sold lock, stock and barrel to the highest bidder to make way for a new 370-million span. Chief bridge engineer E. R. Foley says the bridge comes in five handy 300-foot sections can be used to reffflm a 1,500-foot bridge or as five single crossings. KITCHEN CABINETS WOODFIELD FACTORY TO YOU 7-Ft. Kitchen COMPLETt wm WOODFIELD TIM»TI»N0P CONSTRUCTION nocharce MODERNIZATION CONTRACTORS They AAade a Scene After Making a Scene NORBURY, England (UPI)-i Police from 12 squad cars swooped on two vehicles at ^ gas station last night 1o check reporb that carloads of youths with rifles and swords were in the area. The officers found the pons were dummies—used as props by members of an amateur motion picture unit returning fro ma day’s movie $$ CASH FOR YOU NOW!! Begin enjoying the things you need! Pay all your cuirent hills and have money left over! Conioli-dale! Make one easy loan! Make only one convenient monthly payment by mail! No obligation, red tape or unnecessary fuss! Homeowners can borrow up to 100% of the value of your home! First and second mortgagcB. • Original Houae Coal a PreaenI • You Can 9 7.500.00 • 5.800.00 81,700.00 9,000.00 6,500.00 2,500.00 11,000.00 8,200.00 2,800.00 14,000.00 10,000.00 ' 4,000.00 PHONE FE 8-3030 . or -Uncoln S-^31 Southeastern Michigan Mortgage Compony Hem* OHic«: 21590 CrMafitld R4. Oak Park, Mkhigaa 48237 FREE SliVER dollar ILOW-ebsTLOANS ___________ LOW.—.„._......^6.n ^r wo"»k B If YOU CAN^ CAU . . . MAtreOUHM ^ ^ HSUn, I loan-by-phone systems ^ /• 4J)00 .^^^25.71^ Month I ,5 yy Lowranct Sr., Pontiee \ ours late for the talk, he was twif strokes which' resultei| in 8>ven a standing ovaUon by his brain s ulr g e r y, a hospital followers. spokesman said. 2 OTHER APPEARANCES Malcolm X.had made two other appearances in Detroit. On April 13, 1M4, about a month after his break with Black -Muslin leader EUjah Mohammad, he spoke to 3,500 persons at the King Solomon Baptist Church. He predicted a “hot summer, one in which one spark of violence coiild sweep Uk nation.” ★ * * He spoke only after a court order issued by -Wayne County > Circuit Judge Joseph A. Sullivan. NO.RIGHT Several'church members had wanted to'deny Malcolm their building as a forum. But Judge Sullivan ruled that the church had' no right to do this after accepting -q $5a deposit for the rental of the auditorium. In another Detroit speech, Malcollq spoke at Wayne State University In October 1N3. He was still a Black Muslim at the time. His biltar , ^dress attacked “Jewish slum landlords” for . taking advantage of Negro ten- ./.I . month feud between Malcolm X and the Black Muslims headed by Elijah Muhammad in Chicago. NO REPORT Police, however, did not report any evidence gf a link between the assassins and Muhammad’s faithful. In Chicago, special police details were posted. outside Muhammad’s three-story house and Mosque of Islam No. Z in the wake of unconfirmed reports that six members of Malcolm’s Afro-American Union had departed from New York on separate' missions of revenge. In Harlem, extra uniformed officers walked the streets, on guard against any new violence. The murder came exactly a week after Malcolm X and his family were driven from their residence in Queens by firebombs. BEING EVICTED He was being evicted from the dwelling which was purchased by Black Muslim donations before his break with Muhammad. For months, Malcolm had spoken of a conspiracy against his life and be reportedly planned to name his assassins at the meeting yesterday. But the Blast from shotguns and pistols cut him down after three words: ‘'Brothers and sisters.” * * * The man who advised Ne-> groes to form rifle clubs to fight the “devil white man” for civil rights, to use “balfots or bullets” apparently was.dead before his body hit the floor. CAUSE OF SPUT It was he who had spoken of the assassination of President (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) Blast Traps 70 Miners in North Japan • TOKYO <* — A gas explosidn tore through a coal mine in Hokkaido yesterday and police said 70 miners were trapped. Two of them were recovered dead. Police' getting reports from Hokkaido, Japan’s northernmost island, said the blast occurred about 15,000 feet from the pit entrance. Seeping gas prevented more than 100 rescuers from approaching the miile -for hours. The National Police ' Agency said an appeal was 'made for gas masks. They arrived four hours after the explosion and the rescue workers began digging. A police spokesman said there were no details as to the cause of the accident in Yubari, a major coal mining city about 600 miles north of Tokyo. The explo-mn occurred at 6:30 p.m. at the Vubari refinery of the Hokkaido Colliery Co. The accident came 15 months after 453 miners died in Japan’s worst piKtwar mine disaster after, an explosion ripped through a mine on the southern island of Kyushu. Man Alive Under Snow KETCHIKAN, Alaska (A?V-Einar Myllyla is partly frozen —but alive. He lived for 70Jiours under an avalanche of snqw and crushed buildings at the devastated Granduc mining camp in northwest British (3olumbia. A Finnish construeflon worker in his N’s, Myllyla is one of 130 mioeri who survived ’Thursday’s giant slide oil Le Due Glacier near the Canadan-Alaska border. He was puHed from the ruins of a bunkhouie by rescuers yesterday afternoon, then hospitalized at Ketchikan. He was reported partly frozen and in ^ Serious condition. \ . A Searchers continued to probe acres of ice and snow * ( on the precarious mountainside fdr more men. So far 14 I bodies have been recovered. At least 13 are missing. £ I * ★ * ' I Continuing heavy snowfall, darkness and threat of more \ I slides hampered tired rescue crews. ’The finding of Myllyla renewed hopes that still more might be found alive. i USING HAND TOOLS Rescuers used hand tools, afraid heavy equipment r would trigger another slide as they continu^ sifting ^ through the devastation around the clock. Several other miners were dug out alive earlier from under the tons of ice, snow and debris—saved only by pockets of air buried with them. About 48 were rescued Thursday from a tunnel where the miners were Iwring under the glacier for Granduc’s low-grade boppfr ore. A bachelor from Winnipeg, Man., Myllyla was saved by an air pocket in the cold, wet darkness. Doctors here said they are amazed Myllyla could survive for more than three days. He was weak and emaciated. Parts of his arms and legs were fri^en, but he had no broken bones. State Repu blicans Back Fiscol Roform LANSING (AP) - Most state airport. The airport was re- Republicans today stood square-opened to traffic at dawn, but at ly behind fiscal reform — and noon troops loaded antiaircraft Gov. George Romney - after a guns around the airport head- shaky hour or so Saturday, quarters building and drew up when both were on the line. recoiUess rifles at entrances to a fiery, 15-minulc speech at the field, indicaUng that the cri- the GOP state cotwenthm by sis was not over. Romney and a fast maneuver * * ' * by outgoing State Chairman An unconfirmed report said Arthur Elliott turned back a the 5th Cavalry unit of about 40 growing revolt spearheaded by tanks might still by loyal to an old Romney foe—Richard Khanh Durant, controversial chairman NO SHOOTING ^ "*■ Fx- I. 11 1 J gressional district. Despite all the alarms and threats, there had been no shooting since the upheaval began Friday. The generals of the Armed Forces Council decided to oust Khanh after crushing an attempted coup against him Fri- Elliott, replaced at the cen-vendon by Mrs. Elly Petersen, held «H a storm of protert day. Yesterday they stripped him of his title of commander in chief, named MaJ. Gen. Tran a motion to saspend debate en a statewide income tu and bring Sen. George Mnrphy, R-CaUf., to the speaker’s rostrum. Murphy’s frequently humorous speech, with its bid for Van Mink “temporary seting party unity, calmed down the chata-maa” of the conscil, or embattled delegates and bought chief of the armed forces, and time, voted to send Khanh into ★ w * exile. “1 just felt that we had kept Khanh, who had held power waiting too long,” for 13H months, flew to Dalat E'^ott “and the-de^to Saturday to try to muster sup- were getting pretty emotional. ’ port but his plane ran out of gas The convention started more there. Apparently fearing an than an honr tote and ran long-attack by Khanh’s followers, the ®r than expected. Murphy,^ the members of the councU barri- keynote speaker, bad been wail-caded themselves inside the air- ing nearly three hours, he add-port and conferred among ed. themselves and with American neaRLY EQUALLY DIVIDED advisers. Shortly before Murphy’s In- I * * * troduction, a voice vote and Ky, the^ir force commander, show of hands showed the con-ordered fighter-bombers to cir- vention nearly equally divided cle the area in search of parti- over a resolutioir amendment sans of Khanh who were report- calling for a statewide referen-ed readying a tank attack on the ^um before any income tax airport. could be enacted. HALTS BOMBING After Murphy’s and Itom- U.S. Air Force Brig. Gen. mty't speeches, the move was Robert Rowland, who has me- voted down, 1,278 to 238. (Continued on Page 2, Col. 6) Although his remarks appu’-ently were not directed to the immediate problem, Murphy warned the Republicans to ‘stop intramural fighting; It’s a luxury we can’t afford.” ★ * w Warned Romney in his impromptu speech: “If this amendment is adopted you can kiss goodby to the future of the Republican Party in this state., it would cut the (Continued on Page 2, Col. 1) ★ ★ ★ WHERE IS EVERYBODY? - Last July the Press photographer volunteered to go get a “hot weather” shot (above) at the new Stony Creek Metropolitan Park. He wasn’t so eager to return to the same spot last week. We can’t imagine why. After all, that cement umbrella is still providing just as much shade. It appears that the Water. Wonderland is more popular than the Winter Wonderland. But be of good cheer! Spring is just 30 dajrs away, according to our calendar. Mercury Will Cling Near Zero Tonight Better check your car.^ antifreeze and gas tank if yoii want a sure start tomorrow morning, tonight’s temperatures are. due to hover between 4 below and 6 above. * Tuesday will find the thermometer. climbing to 22 to 28. Cloudy skies will bring snow on Wednesday. » • This fnorning’s low was 2. By 1 p.m., patches of sunshine had ^axed the mercury Jo 12. ■ y GOP Names 7 in County to Committee Seven Oakland County Republicans were named to the State Ontral Committee at the GOP State Convention in Lansing yesterday. Ellected to the 76-member conunittee from the 18th Congressional District were Mrs. James F. Carey, 2691 Bin-brooke, Troy, secretary of the district; and Robert Flint, 1577 Island, Bloomfield Hilb, 85th Representative District director. Others were Bartram D. Lewis if Pleasaat Ridge, a member ef the CMnty GOP Executive Couimittec; aad Alice SckMiibultx of Rayal Oak. Both she and Flint have served on the central commit- Those elected from the 18th Congressiaoal District ww for its regular meeting. more important up for board ac- , One items R&^olf GOP Squashed^f Convenfioiv (Continued From Page One) ground rig^t out from under TO DELAY REFORM Such a deciaon, he said would delay fiscal reform until after November 1966. We would put ourselves in a position of taking Oie blame for whatever problems nuy arise u a resnit of not getting tax reform before 19M,” be told the nearly 3,909 delegates and alternates. Democrats adopted a resolution favodng immediate fiscai reform iM an inCome tax at thmr state convmition in Grand Rapids a week earlier. ★ ★ ★ Romhey warned that delay of fiscal reform would make the state run file “risk of being plunged right back into the very type of financial difficulty that caused us to lose our reputation in 1958 and 1969.” MORE HEAVILY Failure to achieve fiscal reform would mean that for the state to meet its educational obligations, it would have to depend more heavily than ever on federal programs. Durant s^U later that Romney’s speech “brought out into the open” the fact that the governor favors an income tax. “He was trying to cover it up under a semantic smokescreen with his fiscal reform program (of two years ago),” Durant told a reporter. “It’s now out in the open.” . . ★ ★ * The fight changed completely the complexion of what was to have been a routine convention aimed primariiy at electing Mrs. Peterson and selecting a new State Central Ck)mmittee, both of which went as scheduled. Macomb County Republican Chairman William McLaughlin was elected vice chairman. RIGHTS RESOLUTION Shoved into the background by the tax fight was a civii rights resolution — hammered out in nearly five hours of committee debate. elude and the atorium, which Oakland tk» is the formation of a board of taistitutions. Recommended by the ways and means committee, the seven-member board would be responsible for county medical patients. It is autbor-ized by Act. 181 of the Public Acts of 1962. The board has been recommended as a means x)f. operating the county Medical Care Facility as a hospital f6r both tubercular and nontubercular patients. * ★, ★ law under which the ty presently operates pro-such a combined facility. means commit-recommend that of the board inwelfare board TB San-sold to College. Creation of the tskud must be approved by a t^-thirds majority the board iid supervisors. The membersXme then nominated and elects by majority vote. Also in connection with the transfer of some 75 TB patients into the Medical Care Facility will be a recommendation that a 8100,000 remodeling project be authorized to comply with State Health Department regulations for the combined facility. ♦ ★ A recommendation to award a 839,650 contract, for remodeling of the social welfare and bureau of social aid offices to Bundy Construction Co. of Pontiac will also be presented by the ways and means committee. SEVERAL RECOMMENDATIONS The county legislative committee is scheduled to make several reconmendations to the board regai^g the county’s 1965 legislative program. Included will be a request to the State Boating Control Committee for a public hearing on legislation to control the use of alcoholic beverages in boats on Oakland County lakes. A special committee on traffic safety will recommend that a permanent county traffic safety commission be created to study and make recommendations on the. county’s traffic problem. * * ,* The County Department of Public Works will present resolutions on a proposed water supply system for Pontiac Township and the establishment of the Wixom and Milford sewage disposal systems as county systems. MOON’S SURFACE — This is one of more \ than 7,000 pictures of the moon made by \apacecraft Ranger .8 and released by Jet rtopulsion Laboratory (JPL) in Pasadena, The Weather Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC ANO VIONITY - Low tonight between 4 below and 8 above. Tuesday increasing cloudiness and not as cold. Higbs 22 to 86. Northwesterly winds 15 to 25 miles diminishing today and tonight Southeasterly winds Tuesday increasing to 10 to 29 miles. Wednesday’s outlook, cloudy with snow. Lowe>t *e»nper»ture At • ••">.: Wind . Dlrcctlgn: Norltiweslerl Sun Mli at 6: SaturSar li (at racardad HIghett tan>parature Lownt temparatura Waan tamparature Waathar; Partly Ck Weatnar: Windy Highatt tamparatura . Lowatt temparatura . Maan tanlperaturt ... TMt Data In M as In 1*30 -a ai Sunday's TampOratura Chart Alpana 32 -11 Duluth 1 Etcanaba 33 -II Fort Worth S3 Gr. Rapidt 42 4 Jacksonville 73 Houghton II -13 Kansas City 30 Lansing 44 1 Lot Angelas 71 Marquette 27 -10 Miami Beach 7S Muskegon 41 ........ " Pension 3S Traversa C. 34 Albuquerque 41 3S 2S Tampa NATIONAL WEATHER — Snow flurries are predict^ for the lower Lakes area tonight with scattered showers along the Pacific and Texaii coasts. Snow ip expected in the North (^oitral area. It will be colder in the Atlmtic states; except Flofida, and very ooM in the lower Lakes and Ohio Valley areas. Temperatures will rise slowly in the South and Central Plain* and central Mlssissii^ y^. , « AP Phatatax Calif. JPL scientists said the photo was made from an altitude of 151 miles, 2 minutes and s before impact. Soviet Arms Are En Route Mistilei, Jets Said Going to Hanoi Reds MOSCOW (UP!) - Diplomatic sources said yesterday Soviet ground-to-air missiles, jet fighter planes and technical advisers are en route to Communist North Viet Nam to defend against any hew retaliatory air strikes by the United States. Soviet. Piemier Alexei N. Kosygin promised assistance to the Hanoi regime during his trip to Communist Asia earlier this month. Although dispatch of the military aid could not be officially confirmed, the Kremlin has made it clear that the Soviets will follow through on Kosygin’s pledge. A UPI dispatch from Saigon last Tuesday quoted authoritative sources as saying Soviet ground-to-air missiles had already arrived in the North Viet Nam capital of. Hanoi. The report was based on'accounts received from persons who arrived in Saigon from .Hanoi. Moon Explorer May Face Hidden Risks, Photos Show PASADENA, Calif. (AP) -The first man on the moon should walk softly and carry w big stick. So says the head of a scientific team studying more than 7,-000 pictures beamed to earth early Saturday in the final 23 minutes before^ the Ranger 8 spacecraft crashed into the face of the moon. Dr. Gerard P. Kuiper, chief of the five-man analysis team, said the photographic bonanza indicates the lunar surface may be a froth of dust and fragile lava that might hide dangierous tunnels and caverns. “This could be very tricky and treacherous stuff,’' said Kuiper, of the University of Arizona. “Many parts of the moon might be hard enough to support considerable weight, but an explorer could not assume that he would be safe everywhere. LONG POLES “It may be that the first astronauts would be wise to carry long poles to probe the surface ahead of them to be sure it would hold their weight.” * * * As with the 4,316 photos relayed last July 31 by Ranger 7, Fear Reprisal for Slaying (Continued From Page One) John F. Kennedy as a case of the “chickens coming home to roost.” The Kennedy remark osten- • sibly was the cause of the split between Malcolm X and Muhammad. But many observers believed the cause was Malcom’s desire to seize power and that Muhammad us^ the “chickens” remark as an excuse to oust his New York lieutenant. -k, it ir The feud divided even members of Malcolm’s own family. ACTIVE MUSUMS Two brothers, active Black Muslims in Grand Rapids and Detroit, could not be reached for comment. But in Boston, a sister who sided with Malcolm, Elia Mae Collins, said his death “will be avenged.” Police said at least five persons were believed involved in the killing. DENY KNOWLEDGE Leaders of the Black Muslims — which had been accused by Malcolm 1 of plotting his dqath — denied any knowledge of the killing. At the Chicago headquarters of the Black Muslims, a spokesman for the group’s newspaper Muhammad Speaks, said of the assassination; “Hiis could not have been done by our people. If it was done by a Black Muslim, then he was doing it on his own.” Police said today that “a great many people” remained to be questioned, but no further arrets were imminent. A dozen Muslims, whose spokesman said they were not followers of Malcolm X,' got in touch with police today in an effort to arrange a Muslim funeral for him. ON STAGE Malcolm was shot fatally ooT the stage at a rally in fiie Washington HCights-^Uon, north of! Harlem'. Hit wife, Betty, 3S, awaiting the birth of their fifth child, was in the hall. Malcolm had started to ad-' .dress a gathering of about 51X1 followers and sympathizers, when a commotion, apparently planned, broke out in the rear of the second-floor ballroom. It drew his bodyguards in the direction of the disorder. ♦ ★ ★ Under the cloak of confusion, three men with revolvers and a sawed-off shotgun raced down the aisles, pumping shots into Malcolm's chest. SHOTGUN' Police Capt. Paul Glaser said Hayer shot Malcolm X with a shortened, d()uble-barreled shotgun. Two pistols also were fired at him. Hayer and two spectators were wounded in a wild melee that followed. Hayer, with a pistol wound in a leg, was held in the prison ward of Bellevue Hospital, w ★ ★ Police said Hayer was shot by Reuben Francis, 33, a Negro identified by police as Malcolm’s- secretary and bodyguard. TWO CHARGES Francis was arrested on charges of felonious assault and illegal possession of a iHstol'. the five men disagreed about what the new, high-quality photos showed, but agreed that they ere not surprised. , ★ ★ ★ The insect-shaped Ranger 8’s six television cameras returned sharp (^ose-ups of lunar mountains and plains in the final minutes of its death plunge into the flat, broad, dusty Sea of Tranquillity, 15 miles from its original target. Its impact point was 1,(XX) miles east of where Ranger 7 crashed in thC Mare Cognitum. Kuiper said he saw evidence that much of the moon’s surface is covered with three to six feet of loose, lava-like material, similar to tunnel-coursed, cav--marked lava areas on Hawaii. He surmised that the material is volcanic overflow, a thin crust of solidified foam. FOAMY LAVA But Ewen A. Whitaker, Kuip-er’s associaie at Arizona, said he felt the surface — which he also believes is foamy lava — would hold the weight of soft-landing manned spacecraft. Dr. Harold Urey of the University of California at La Jolla said'the lunar surface may be blanketed by 50 to ‘60 feet of dust. Several craters of that depth, he said, showed at their •|K)ttom8 a “whitish button” which may be the moon’s solid core beneath the dust. ★ ★ ★ Dr. Eugene Shoemaker, another team member, said he doesn’t believCpictures can reveal the surface’s strength but added that the photos did show the surfaces of the seas where Rangers 7 and 8 crashed to be “sutetantiaUy the same.” The te^m will continue studying the giant photographic hap vest for months — well beyond the scheduled launching of Ran--ger 9 iir mid-March. $2.5-Million Hall to Be Started at OU Omtracts have been let and ‘construction will begin immediately on the 82.5-million Mat-ildh R. Witson Hall at Oakland University, according to Robert W. Swanson, director of business affairs at OU. ★ ★ Two Pontiac firms. qwarded contracts on the basis of low bids were Schurrer (Construction Go., architectural trades, 81.-356,000, and Schultz Electrical Service; the .plwrtrical contract at 8250,470, ★ ★ ★ ■ . A classroom-office ,wing of the building is scheduled for use by. Jan. 1, 1966, with odmpletion of the entire buMng set for July 1, 1966. Blaze Sweeps Apartment of Cassius Clay CHICAGO (AP) - Fire damaged extensively the apartment of heavyweight boxing champion Cassius Clay Sunday, night a few hours after black nationalist leader Malcolm X was shot death in New -York. Clay was not in his third floor apartment at the time, police sdd. Firemen said the blaze, confined to a second and third floor flat in a 30-apartment building on the South Side, cdused an estimated 86,000 damage. No one was injured. Police and (ire department ar^ squads questioned Carl Elliott, occupant of the second story apartment where -William Foley, fifth division fire marshal, said the blaze broke out. Foley said there no pessi-bility U arson.' Merlih Nygren, acting deputy police superintendent., said earlier the fire was “arsop.” Laler, police repoi^ the fire was accidental. ». Junta Parleys With Khanh Birmingham Area News . May Have Decked Lot Reddy for Yule Parking (Continued From Page One) dialed previous disputes, persuaded Ky to refrain from any! bombing. So far the civilian govern- . ment of Premier Phan Hny ()uat did not appear to be affected by the military maneuvering. Gen. Minli, the new armed forces commander, is known as Little Minh to distinguish him' from Majr Gen. Duong Van' Minh, or Big Minh, who led the ^ coup that overthrew President Ngo Dinh Diem. Khanh supplanted Big Minh in January 1964. BANGKbK, Thailand (AP) -The U.S. ambassadors to South Viet Nam, Thailand and Laos met in Saigon today in what was described as an American effort to coordinate U.S. policy and to treat Southeast Asia as a unit. “Borders are no longer so important,” a reliable source said, indicating the United States is not looking at the situation in this area only in respect to individual countries. Ambassadors Graham A. Martin of Thailand and William H. Sullivan of Laos conferred with Ambassador Maxwell D. Tdylor of South Viet Nam at the embassy in Saigort. ■k * * Although officials in Bangkok and in Saigon described it as a “routine meeting,” it was the first time all three have met in Saigon. BIRMINGHAM —V. Shoppers driving to. the downtown Birmingham area could be using a decked parking structure during this year’s, Christmas rush season, aoponiing to (^ty Manager R. S. Kenning. The administraUJr predicts the structure could be available by Dec. 1 if work proceeds without a snag. He will recommend to the ! City Conunission tonight that O’Dell, Hewlett and Lucken-bach Associates be retained to design the building. ' The Birminghaih architectural firm, Kenning notes, designed parking structures at the University of M i c h i g a n, Waynej State Ui\iversity and Ann Arbor. • * ★ Kenning also will suggest that engineers at McWillian) and Keckonen be engaged as structural consultants. SUBMIT PROPOSAL The manager will recommend that the architects be ask^ to submit a proposal covering the schematic study stage and complete design of a parking structure for lot No. 5, an L-shaped lot fronting on Woodward and Willits. In designing the structure,^ the firm is to assume that it will be decked and that future expansion be provided for, although the unit would not nec- ' essaiilj^over the entire lot. Kenning no.te s that patrohs would park thetr own'ears'and that attendants woOld collect fees. ' * * * ( The exterior, he said, should be “in keeping with the high! standards established for gov-: ernmental facilities in the community.” JUNE DEADUNE The architects, if approved by i the commission, could begin their work immediately, aiming; at a June deadline for letting-construction contracts. Kenning! said. His report will be made at an^ 8 p.m. meeting of the commis-sioq. 4 end of his plans |^;8 letter which city commissioaers will receive tonight. “Because of the great delays and apparent lack e( interest, except for a few dedicated and devoted indiytduab who have worked untiringly (p accomplish this project, I feel that it is best to sdvqr my connection,’’ Fredericks wrote: . * * *■ He noted today that his original offer to (he city wps macle aliqosi five years ago. MATERIAL COST , His services would have been free, but the cost, of materials for the proposed kulpture ,pnd reflecting pool Was estimated at ' 850,000 Prior to Birmingham’s centennial celebration lakt year, the City Commission agreed to pay for half the sum if fund raisers could collect andlher 825.990. Fredericks said as far as he knew the project never got any further. * * * “I hope that eventually a worthy centerpiece can be accomplished,” he wrote. Pensioii Plan to Be Viewed in Waterford Marshall M. Fredericks is| tired of waiting for the city to do something about a center-1 piece. The Royal Oak sculptor who; lives at 440'Lake Park has re-1 scinded his Offer to design a me-, morial swan fountain for Shain! Park. ‘ Fredericks announced the i Markets Take Holiday Because the stock exchanges are closed due to Washington’s Birthday, t h e market page will not appear in The Pontiac Press today. A revised draft of a proposed pension plan for Watprford Township employes will be presented for consideration of the Waterford Township Board tomorrow night. The board is meeting tomorrow due to the legal holiday today. Presenting the pension plan will he the Empl(>yes Retirement Committee which has been working on the plan since last fall when provision for a pension program was authorized in the 1965 budget by the township board. The plan covers all employes except police and fire personnel who already are covered by a pension program. * * k . When the propo^ pension plan is adopt^, if will become effective retroactive to last Jan. 1. OTHER BUSINESS In other business^ tomorrow night the board will consider a request for transfer of ownership of a beer and wine licensed business and another request for a new beer and wine license. The ownership transfer is proposed'^ at the Waterford Hotel and a new license is sought for a proposed party store at 3660 Dixie. Pontiac Line Farns 3 Additional Awards Pontiac, which recently was named Car*of the Year, received three additional trophies preceding the official opening of the 57th CTiicago Automobile Shpvi Saturday. Pontiac officials were presented with the “Best Cbr of 1965” Award from Motorcade Magazine; the Popular Science Gold Cup for brake performance and a trophy for capturing first in Class II- in the recently-concluded Pure Oil ■perfoi'mance trials at Daytona. In presenting the “Best Car of 1965” trophy to E. M. Estes, Pontiac general manager, Don Werner, Motorcade publisher said Pontiac offered “a choice of models, styles and options unmatched in the industry.” ' Specifically^ Wei^r said, the award was given to Pontiac “for over-all. excellench' in American automobiles.” Werner pointed out the choice of the award this year was an easy one. “Without qualification, one make stood out as the obvious recipient of our second •annual award. The car is Pton-tiac.’*' GOLDCUP The Popular Science Gold Cup presentation to Pontiac was made by Hutert P. Luckett, editor of the techniCid group. In giving the.large trophy.to John-Z. DeLorean, Pontlac's-chief en-, gfoeeij, Luckett cited the division for a “rtgnal achievement.’V The cup is presented for brake peHomance — the shortest official/^ping distance for any car at the Pure Oil perf9rmance trials. A Tempest LeMans won this test with a stopping distance of 161.8 feet. PURE OIL Hugh Hemingway, research vice president for Pure Oil, presented Estes with the Pure Oil trophy. The award we|it to a ' Pontiac Bonneville for winning < the Deluxe V8 Class at the Day- ' tona tests. Following the trophy presentations, Estes told newsmen that Pontiac expects to sell an estf-mated 800,000 cars this year and achieve a deeper market penetration. AWARDS PILE UP FOR PpNTIAC-Three'more awards for Pontiac, recently^ named ‘Car of the Year,” .were presented during a news conference prior to the opening Of the 57th CTucago Automobile Show Saturday. Here E. M. Estes,’ GM vice president and Pontiac general manager^ receives the "^t Car of 1965” trophy) front Don Werner (left) publisher of Motorcade magaidnc- : r.. ^ A ' I'liK A^UNTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1965 The Joseph Taylors Receive Degrees VIVIAN GRANT SANDRA CORNELIUS Area Girls Have Wedding Plans * * « * * WALLPAPER i 7.000 rolls In Stock M 9Qc $199 """ A V • » I A WAUPAPER BARGAIN CENTER ^ OpMi Mondav ond fridoy P to 9 ^ 1028 Wo« Hufoo • W Block. Wod of Tologroph ^ for personal service . . . and quality the best place to go Andre’s Extraordinary S|tecial Reg. $25 PERMANENT Imi 11 N. Sa|[inaw Si. ANDRE’S r'rZZ. Complete ^ilh Haircut Sham|»oo and Set . Nj* dppoinlment Needed! Beauty Salon PHONE EE 5 92S7 LAST WEEK of our annual pre-season ALL HOUSEHOLD ITEMS • Drapes • Blankets e Slipcavers e Bedspreads HURRY... offer expires Saturday, Febroary 27tK Choice of Pnnujr /JA Quality Cleaning ^ Since 1929 719 Watt Huron FE 4-F536 Codling-Wolfe May fir^ vows are planned by Nancy Sue^Cod-ling, daughter of the Harold E. Codlings of West Yale Avenue to Darrell R. Wolfe, of Oakland Avenue. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Roy V. Wolfe of Flint. , Grant-Emerick The Theodore W. Grants of Scott Lake Road announce the engagement of their daughter Vivian Marie to James Roy Emerick of Utica, son of the late Mr. and Mrs. George Emerick. A May 26 wedding is being planned. Corrielius-Warholak Mr. and Mrs. James M. Cornelius of Wimpole Drive, Avon Township announce the engagement of their daughter Sandra Kaye to Harry Warholak Jr., son of the Harry Warholaks of Shagbark Drive, Avon Township. He is attending Northwood Institute in Midland. Gall-Short The Richard Galls of South Winding Drive announce the engagement of their daughter Marjorie Lee to Richard Arden Short, son of Mr. and Mrs. Arden Short of* Sedum Glen Road. An early summer wedding is being planned. Roehling-Dibble The Herman Roehlings of Panama Drive announce the engagement of their daughter Marjorie Louise to Brian Gerald Dibble, son of the Eark A. Dibbles of Pontiac Trail, West Bloomfield Township. A June 19 wedding is planned. O'Brien-Clark Late April vows are planned by Maryann Agnes O’Brien, daughter of the John F. O’Briens of White Lake Road, White Lake Tfownship, and John Robert Clark of Hollister Street, son of the John F. ‘ Clarks of Hillsboro, Ala. Quigley-Liley An April 24 wedding is planned by Andrea Gail Quigley, daughter of the H. L. Quigleys of Lake Drive, Oxford Township, and Wallace Alfred Liley Jr., son of Mrs. Wallace A. Liley of Oxford and the late Mr. Liley. 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IKII - tat. til itU P.M. 2133 ORCHARD UKE ROAD PHONE; 333-7052 MARJORIE GALL MARYANN O’BRIEN Probably the moBt ‘identical’ dagree redidenta at Loyola University’s recent midyear conunenconent were Mr. and Mrs. Joseidi Taylor (Audrey Gineman) wbo were awarded masters degrees In mathematics. Makeup Removal Worfh.Time Face it, girls. Everyone tells us hdw to put. on mounds ' of make-up but few offer ^ sound advice on how to take it ' off properly. , Does your towel show the same telltale signs of wash-and-swipe normally associated with grubby little boys? If it does, it’s time ta do something about removing stale make-up thoroughly. Complexion troubles can start with carelessness. To, help you avoid makeup build-up that cogs pores and leads to blackheads try these simple Ups from a well-known beauty house. For lipstick; Apply a heavy coating of cleansing cream to your lips wfUi your fingertips. Work this over your UpU in a genUe, circular motion and remove with a tissue or clean cotton. Repeat. All lipstick should be gone. If there are traces, again apply the cleansing cream in the circular motion. At night, ward off dry cracking lips by applying an emollient. For eye make-up: Stroke on a heavy coating of cleansing cream. Do not coat the eyes but Circle the eyes wiUi the cream. Now apply a special mascara and eye make-up remover to the eyelids and lashes with a cotton ball. Whisk this away with a tissue. Remember to be very genUe. ’The skin around Uie eyes tears easily. Even if the eye make-up or mascara runs during Uiis operaUon, it wiU get into Uie cream under or around Uie eyes. Simply remove all cream with a Ussue and then apply an astringent or skin refresher. For face and neck: Select a cold cream, cleansing cream or lotion best suited for your skin type. Smooth this on, working in upward and outward moUons from the neck. Remove cream with Uie same moUons and dot on an astringent or skin refresher. Mrs. Taylor Is the daughter of the Frank Ginemans of Buckskin Drive, Commerce TownaUp, and her husband cones from LaPorte, Ind. TOP STUDENTS . Each was valedlctarian of his high school graduating class. Each chose Loyola for undergraduate college studies. They met on campus at Chicago while both were studying for a bachelor of science de- gree in matbenaliei «Ri « married last September 1 a year •fter they both Embarking on Ub study the tame uate studies: nine *’ one “B.” Mr. Tayhr plans fulltime at Uie Enjoy the HospUaUty N of the famoM For Our Fine Buffet Breakfast • Laflck • Kner yflao Ala Carte Menu Service A Cocktail Howurt featuring special low prices Mon. thro Thnrs., 4 to 6—9 to 10 P.M. , OPENING SOON! “Gas lAtjit Room" Typical OW Style Taven • BANQUETS • MBETINCS • RECEPTIONS ^ Corner of Pike and Perry 555-6167^ FREE Area-Wide DELIVERY SERVICE PHiUHUCY, INC. 880 W00DWUD-lle4cal BsiMiiig ANDREA QUIGLEY Modern Day Horse Thief DENVER, Colo. (Jfl - Horse stealing has changed a bit from fronUer days. Thieves stole a one-ton pickup truck and four-h^rse Uailer from Miss Jean McHarg’s home, then drove to her ranch and stole four of her prize horses. Miss McHarg valued the horses at |25,000 and the truck and trailer at $8,000. i-mio I ■ UBMBM Firm Fat When you tldie a boiled ham from hot water, drop it immediately into cold water. ’This makes the fat firm and white. final clearaacc ^of alJ WINTER MERCHANDISE Dresses Knit Suits Skirts Slacks Sweaters Blouses Car Coats Storm Croats SAVE up to more thao off Tam’s MEATAAARKET Serving you for 36 years WITH THE FINEST IN MEATS, GROCERIES AND FANCY PRODUCE • WE FILL FREEZER ORDERS • DAILY DELIVERIES • JUST SAY CHARGE IT \ I I V/1 C I • PARTIES • BANQUETS b WEDDINGS . CALL 338-4041 BALLROOM AVAILABLE 701 "ORCHARO LAKE ROAD PONTIAC -☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ SEVEN STAR SPECIAL LANOLIN NEUTRALIZED PERAAANENT INCLUDES THESE 7 BEAUTY SERVICES 1. Flottmiitg Haircut 2. N*w.Lu«tc« Sttompoe 3. Snky-Soh Crwna Riniu , 4. Lonmin N«wlralizin« 5- R*t«x.Qul«k Cor* TrMtaMMt 6. Smort SlyU Sotting 7. Slytat-S*t Hoir Sproy HOLLYWOOD BEAimf " OjMii Aforningi irt $ AM. Over Baxley l&t. THE PONTIAC PRESS PONTIAC. MICHIGAN. MONDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1965 Week of Decision Arrives for Top Rated Michigan Quintet Key Contests in Big Ten for Wolverines Romp Over OSU 9th for 'M' With Gophers, Illinois on Top W T Lf*f. W L Pd. OP » 0 ).0M IT I m 1TW 14«3 II jnil 3 .MI IM1 7 I .m 15 4 .Tit 1*35 1401 » » .TTI 13 < .IM 1*14 1415 .**7 1* 3 .Ml 1740 14 1 « 13 3Jt 1403 1530 1 7 13 .Sl.141* 1441 I 4 14 .313^1534 IMO fey The Associated Press Michigan’s week of decision has arrived and, as Illinois j Coach Harry Combes says ofj the Big Ten basketball race, “there are five games to go. | ‘ Maybe Michigan won't continue to get the breaks.” As far as the top-ranked Wolverines are concerned, there | are only two games to go and i both are sdieduled this week, i Michigan takes its 9-0 Big Ten j record to Minnesota Tuesday night where a defeat would drop the Wolverines into a tie with the Gophers. * ★ * Four days later the Wolverines play at Illinois. Neither Minnesota nor Illinois is accustomed to losing at home and ' that’s the crux of Combes’ statement about the breaks. So far, Michigan has played the basketball version of Russian roulette in two of its road games. The Wolverines were forced into overtime at Michigan State and into a double overtime at Indiana but managed to win both times. COULD END IT A pair of Michigan triumphs; this week would end the race for j all practical purposes. That j would leave Michigan needing i two successes in the last three 1 games for the tiUe. The Wolver- Red Wings Advance With 3-2 Conquests MAPLE LEAFS SCORE - Bob Pulford (20) took this short pass from teammate Andy Bathgate (9) and rifled it past lietroit goalie Roger Crozier for a score in the second period last night at Olympia Stadium. Behind Bathgate is Detroit’s Gordie Howe (9). Detroit won, 3-2. By The Associated Press Detroit’s Red Wings, a flock of old birds and fledglings rated no better than fourth in National Hockey League ^re-sea9on estimates, are homing in on the top perch-. The Winp dumped Toronto, 3-r^nday night after taking Neil.. York’s Rangers hy the same count Saturday afternoon to sweep a weekend home stand that boosted them into a third-place tie with the Ma-, pie Leafs. The Black Hawks bombed Boston 7-0* and New York tied second-place Montreal. 2-2 on Doug Robinson’s last-second goal. Detroit, with three more games to play than the Black Hawks and seven of 16 against also-rans New York and B^ton, has a shot at its first NHL championship since the 1966-57 season. Hie Wings, paced by veteran Alex Delvecchio, young Bruce j MacGrergor and handyman Vail Fonteyne, ran their home-ice winning string to eightl games, lodgest in nine years,, against the Maple Leafs. Delvecchio, at 34 one of Detroit’s old — Ted Lindsay, 39, Gordie Howe and Hill Gads-by, 37, and Marcel Ftonovost, OU Tankei's Boost Record 'Manpower Sh ortage' Loses Relay Event Tiger Hurlers Given [ Honors Pile Up Session in Bunting jor Swim Ace Mikita Hawks LAKELAND, Fla. (AP)—Con- in the control bunting contest, trol bunting and pitching con- part of Charlie 2- i- J * uuiiwiig aiiu UIIA.1IU1K wii- ucJii ui V/lidllie r. S’ lay. Ohio State and Wisconsin who have a total of three victories in to open the first day of prac- The Detroit manager has said tice today for all minor league j if a pitcher can’t hit, the least] NEW YORK (AP) — Olympic However, losses to Minnesota and Illinois would leave the title players in the Detroit Tigers | he can do is help himself by early camp at Tigertown. Major League pitchers CHICAGO (AP) - Stan Miki-ta’s talent for scoring points is momentum. If he keeps the Chicago Black Hawks might hold on and capture their , first National Hockey League Schollander Collects championship. The Hawks have managed to remain in first place even though the great Botoy Hull has missed six of the last eight games because of knee injuries. Sullivan Award up learning to bunt well .enough to in move the runners along. f7r.brSi^Mg7™.Zi!'""P «« “» .be be„j. afford a championship tie. A tie involving Michigan" would send the other team to the NCAA championships since the Wolverines represented the Big Ten in the playoffs last year. ♦ ♦ * Another important game Tuesday night finds Iowa at Illinois. The two are tied for third place with 7-2 records and the ., loser will have to step out of the title scene. Two big games are scheduled tonight with Michian State at| Ohio State and Indiana at Purdue. In addition to the Mich-igan-Illinois game Saturday, Indiana will be at Minnesota, Northwestern at Ohio State, Iowa at Purdue and Michigan State at Wisconsin. * ★ ★ In last Saturday’s games four teams scored 100 or more points. Michigan defeated Ohio State 100-61, Indiana downed Wisconsin 10^87, Iowa won over Purdue 101-85, Illinois slugged Michigan State 113-94 and Min- j nesota turned in an 88-77 victory ! over Northwestern. i * * * MICHIOAN OHIO STATS SO FT TF FO FT TF ! ■ 3 17 AhMrvych 5 3 13 • Prep Slate •ASKETBALL East Detroit at Pontiac Ni Oxford al Noiiti Brai Warren Cousino at A Lake Orion at Troy Efnmanuel Christiar Perndale at Port Huron Flint Nortl^stern at Flint I Lapeer at Ddviton Millington at Reese Lakeview at AAount Clement imlay City at New Haven Royal Oak Dondero at Roya Norttivllle at Haiel Park at Royal Oak Dondero Fitagerald at Norm Farmington ing, other players in camp will be racing against a stop watch, from first base to home plate. Later, pitchers will tiV to throw as many strikes as possible in five pitches. A special foot race for the catchers in . camp also was i scheduled. TWO REASONS And, as if someone blew a trumpet, Mikita has moved in. swimming champion Don Schol- • lander keeps piling up awards. Acclaimed as The Associated Press Male Athlete of the Year , for his four gold medals at To- only has the impish center kyo, Schollander today holds the ^ James E. Sulliv*ah Award, given Hdl’s absent but he has forged to America’s top amateUr ath- scoring lead and thrMt- IgtQ ens to win his second straight ’ * * * ' I Art Ross Trophy as NHL scor- ing leader. Leads Rouf figured he might need the goal to make a bonus Figure. ■ “It doesn’t make much difference.” shrugged the 24-year-old wheeler-dealer who was bori^in Czechoslovakia and rearedf in Canada. “I’ll get a lot more chances for my share." Despite his size — 5-feet-9 and 165 pounds — Mikita is in the middle of practically every scrap on the ice. As a result he is one of the league’s most penalized players. Despite its shortage' of manpower. Oakland Ui liversity’s swimming team is eiiming its winning laurels in its first season of inter-collegiate competition. Friday night the O'D tankers j defeated Albion 50-45 for their 6th win in seven start s and Sat-j urday they had to settle for a ‘ 47-47 tie because all the available manpower «had I teen used and the final 400*freei8yle relay event was awarded to Calvin. Terry Koehler of Birmingham, Calif, took three firsts in defeating Albion. With only six swimmers on hand. OU won the fimil free relay event in 4;05.0 but each had already been used three times and thus Calvin’s team was awarded the event in I; 19.4 only once diver took part ih the div-' ing event. Tuesday night. OU ik at Eastern Michigan. OAKLAND «7. CALVIM 47 4M Madity R*l*y - 0*k kM (Krsgt-rud. CIbwn, Mdlltn, Birc (low), Tim* 4:45.3. 3M FrdtslyN — Twry Kt«*il*f, (OOil VtmwiM. C.. Barcilow. 0., Tim* 3:«.t 50 Fr**ttyl* — c*ni Vi|fm*rrl« C . Krogtrud. (oO). (CaH. OU), Tim* :34.4. (Fool rocord) 300 lndlvidu*l Modkiy - Lo«n M*l-l*n, (OU), Ot1*nho«, C., Wolm*, C. Timt 3:35.3. Diving - Bob OdJoKn, C. 'NyolT (OU). 300 (fultoHly — L*on Mollon, (OU). Wokni, C., D*Jobn, C., tim* '.tvdO 4. 100 Frtoflyl* — Cary Vonnarrit, C.; 34, are the others — fired his second cohsecutive game-winning goal. * * w MacGregor, who, Withgoalie Roger Crozier, heads the Wings’ kiddie korps, and Fonteyne, reacquired recently from New York, scored the others. MacGregor’s goal was his 19th of the season. He had scored only 28 times -in three previous full seasons with Detroit. Fonteyne’s tally was his first of the campaign. Delvec-. chk) has 15. BIG PERIOD Detroit packed all its scoring into the second period after Bob Pulford had given the Leafs a 1-0 lead. George Armstrong pulled Toronto close in the last period but Crozier held off the Leqfs in the final minutes. Chicago’s Stan Mikita scored two goals — both unassisted ~ and set up aqodier, increasing his individual point lead over sidelined teamipate Bobby Hull, as the Hawks moved three points ahead of Montreal by blitzing the last-place Bruins. Mikita has 72 points; Hull, out with a knee injury, has 67. * ★ w New York’s Robinson tipped in a Rod Seiling shot with one second to play, capping the Rangers’ two-goal comeback in the final period. Don Marshall scored for New York midway in the period. Second-period. Don Marshall scored for New York midway in the period. Second-period goals by John Ferguson and Henri Richard had given the Canadiens a 24) bulge. Schollander received his latest award Sunday from Clifford H. Buck, president of the Amateur Athletic Union, . U. S. Chess King Fails Once vs. 46 LA Foes LOS ANGELES (AP) - U S. open chess champion Sammy Reshevsky played simultaneous . matches Sunday with 46 Los Angeles area youths aged fl to 18, beating 41. drawing with four and losing to one in the four-hour battle. Reshevsky. 53, of Spring Valley, NiY., lost to 17-year-old Martin Fabian, who won in 40 moves. Reshevsky won the national title earlier this month in Las Vegas, Nev, In the last 16 games, Mikita ! hanunered home eight goals L.n.ing Boy.; ^essen has two reasons for luncheon at the New York Ath- k/xU »/« lAQcniA.lAaHin0 e/vsrintf t rr holding the special event. ietic Club “ The "award *'is league-leading scoring total ! first, it gives him a chance i present^ by the AaS each i ^ ^ ^ to see which pitchers need ex- year plagued by a slump mentals. Second. it provides a break "Ore., is the second youngest ~ • athlete ever to receive the Sulli- "«ht which gave Chicago van Awaid. Decathaldn star i^ from the daily routines of caUs- | place Montrear ! thenicp, batting practice, etc. ' montns younger than Schollander when I Dressen has only three more ! days to look over the youngsters j * * * I in camp before moving over to i Buck described Schollander I Helney Field to begin drills as a great swimming star and I with the major leaguers. I The players spent 20 minutes I running, Jduring a rainfall, in I advance the cause of amateur-the only workout Sunday. an honor student, who possesses “willingness to help others and Fomjy 5 S 10 Rowley litans Have Cage Streak Snapped »tn (I. OMO St*1* 1*. 4 pIk^ fouli — Michigwi SIM* (1 - IHlfwis K Michigwi I - CuiTIk ROdmon. Tot*) LAKBLAND AA BASKETBALL ----33, Dunham Rad*. 0 BIm Dunham* It Sylvan Manor i AndaNon l?**^!!^Dunham Rad T (al waiMni^igirirWn) Anf*7»ail V*. Sylvan (Fab. It). 4 pjn. Mammand v* Dunham Rad, (Fab. at), i S #jn. (al. Dublin). . Sylvan vti.Duohahi (Fgb. 37J, 3 p.m. I h (F^. 37J, 3 p. By THE ASSOQATED PRESS Outsiders had a field day, snapping Detroit’s seven game victoi^ streak and defeating Western Michigan, in state college basketball actiori overi the weekend. Detroit’s Titans fell before St. Bonaventure, 84-71, at Buffalo, j The defeat all but crushed their! hopes for a post-season touma-j mem bid. A late Titans drive fell three points short of tying! the score. ' i Bowling Green nipped^Westeni Michigan 83-81 in overtime on a pairDf.foul shots by Bob Dowrs. | Te victory at Kalamazoo put .Bowling Green’s. Mid-American j Conference record at 2^, WMU is 1-9. Dave Anderson led the Broncos with 25 points. Eastern Michigan bucked the trend by koockii^ off Washington A Jefferson, 76^, at Ypsj-lanti. It was EMU’s eighth vic- ^ . i tory against six losses. The Pennsylvania school is 3-5 in the President’s Athletic Conference. HIGH SCORE Hope outlasted Wheaton of Illinois, 115-110. The Dutchmjsn picked up 24 points in the final fjv; minutes of play, against 12 for Wheaton, and ran their record to 144. Wheaton is 13-8. Ron Bigler scored 26 points for Indiana Tech and Jim Browtv hit. 21,- aiding the Warriors in their 123-100 victory over Spring Arbor. Tech led all the way. • • ()hio Northern, overcame _ four-point halftone lead by hit-ling.-at a 64 per cent clip from the floor and defeated Hillsdale 93-90. The non conference contest left Hillsdale with an :8-I5 recoBd. Beany’s Rick Cipido hit on a 40^ft. jump sHiot at the final buzzer, to break a Ueiwin, 2S-2C ue]wi over Wayne State, leaders in the President’s AtMetic Conference. The low-scoring contest was led by Bethany’s Bill Watkins with eight points. Olivet hit on 51 per cent (rf its floor shots and handed Alma its tenth loss in 10 MIAA games, 113-101. Alma is 1-18 over-all. The game left Olivet with records of 3-7 and 8-11. Tom Nicolai collected 23 points and Jim Peters got 20 as Kalamazoo u^set Calvin 78-73 and wened the Hornets’ MIAA record at 5-5. Calvin, now 7-3, was led by Jim Fredericks’ 16 points. Fag* FO FT TF I ( 1 5 0 13 1* ? t Banawantur* l$i t TWO GOALS Mikita scored Chicago's first two goals in the opening period without an assist. In the final minute of play he got a breakway for what looked like a sure goal. Instead he passed off to Dennis Hull who flicked the puck past Jack Norris, Boston's much abused goalie. . * ★ ★ “I had an opening that wide,” said Mikita who stretched his hands apart three feet. “But I saw Dennis over to the side and RO Kimball Sunk, 53-52 Another contender has moved into the spotUght of the Michigan high school state swimming contenders along with Seaholm and Royal Oak Kimball. Trenton won its 14th meet in IS starts by uptetting Kimball, 53-52 Saturday, handing the Knight^ their second loss in 14 meets. This set the stage for the Kimlmll-Seaholm meet Friday ni^ in Bihningham. Seaholm, h loser only to Battle Creek, won . the first-meeting between the two. In the big event, Kimball’s Doug Webster lost in the 100 freestyle to Trenton’s Henry Ahlf. Ahlf went 49.8 aiid Webster 50.8. * THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1965 TWBI^TY-ONB American Team Glides Past Canadian Skaters ROCHESTER, N.y. (AP) The strongest United States figure skating team in five years is optimistically looking ahead to next month’s world meet after crushing Canada Sunday in the 1965 North American championships. Yank skaters won three of the four tides and placed second in all four events for their finest LocalYMCA Tankers Fall to Flint Unit PmUac YMCA swimmers were swamped in three divisions by Flint YMCA swimmers at the local “Y" Saturday. The Midget team had five swimmerl out sick and they were beaten 61-21, failing to take a first place. ★ * w In the Prep division, Jeff Klann, Steve Ashmead and Dave Hardenberg took individual events but still lost 56-38. John Mason's double win in the 80 yard medley relay and 100 freestyle paced the juniors, but Flint still won, 56-tl. His 53.0 in the freestyle set a pool record. * ♦ ★ JUNIORS RtSULTS MO yard rtlay-Fimt 1:34.4. 40 yard Iratdyla-Cuivtr (f>), J. Bluni (PI, RadM (F). M.7. 00 yard nwdlty->l. Maaon (P), Mac-Namara (F), Cravani (F), 40.0. R°«'T5lr*’p,*^i 40 BuNarfly-KImball (P), Redaa (F), D. PaimyOaditr (P), 11.7. 100 yard fracttyla-J. Maaan (P), Mc-CamOa ----------- “' Clarka (F), 1................. 40 braaatatrakc - Alquira (F), I (F). M. «. Amaur (PI, B.l. 140 fraa ralay-Pantlac (StaU Blaani, Pannybackar), 1:13.0. International showing since the glory days of the 1960s when American dominated World figure skating ciimpetition. A capacity crowd of nearly 8,-000 in the War Memorial Auditorium looked on as Gary Visconti of Detroit won the men’s singles, Vivian and Ronald Joseph of Ifi^hland Park, 111., captured the' pairs and Loma Dyer and John Carrell of Seattle skated off with ice dancing honors. The only title that Canada could salvage went to world title favorite Petra Burka of Toronto in ladies’ singles. The 18-year-Canadian edged Peggy 16, of Pasadena, with it freestyle show. The ld66 world championsh^ will be at Rk Broadmoor World. Arena in Coloradp Springs, Colo., March ^6. UPSET WIN Visconti, 19, repeated lus upset of Olympic bronze medalist Scott Ethan Allen of Smoke Rise, N.J. The 16-year-old Allen had been the world title favoHte until his loss in the 1965 U.S, championships. Sunday’s victory pushed Visconti into a contending position. Allen was second in the North American meet. Miss Dyer, 19, and Carrell, 18, climbed back in to the world title picture by avenging their loss to Kristin Fortune, 18, of Northridge, Calif., and Dennis Sveum, 19, of Sun Valley, CaHf., in the national meet. Mm'i ShnlM 1, 0»ry Vltcontl, U.S.a;7 4 ordinals and 1373.4 DOlnts. I Scott Allan, U.$>., 11 and 135X1. 3, Donald Knight, Canada, U and 1334.3. 4, Charlat Snalling, Canada, 30 and 130SJ. S, Tim Wood, U.t>. and lin.l. 4, Jay. Humphry, Canada, M lea Danclnf 1, Loma Dyar and John Carroll, 0. 4 ordinal and 173.4 points. 3, Krlstbi tuna and Dennis SvOum, U.S.A., II _ 144.0. 3, Carola Forast and Kavbi Lath-bridga, Canada, 13 and 140.3. 4, Susan Urban and Stan Urban, U.S.A., 31 and 141.0. 3. Lynn Mathaws and Bryon Topping, Canada, 34 and IS7.I. 4, Gail Snydar ana Wayna Palmar, Canada, M and ^ UNEUP OF CHAMPIONS - These six skaters gUded to individual titles in the North American Figure Skating Championships completed yesterday at Rochester, N.Y. Pictured (left to right) are: John Carrell ^ Loma Dyer, Seattle Skating CTub (dance winners): Petra Burka, Toronto, Can. (women’s singles); Gary Visconti, Detroit (men’s singles); Vivian and Doitald Joseph, Chicago (pairs). Imperial presents its credentials Genealogy: Hiram Walker & Sons Ckaraeter: 86 Proof Thtle: Smooth Re/erencee: Knowledgeable People $395 $249 Auto Imurance For ANYONE . . . 53V2 W«tt Huron We Hove A Plan For HARD-TO-PLACE INSURANCE RISKS t^Bad Record i^Underoge iF^Financiol Responsibility DON NICHOLIE INSURANCE FE 5-8183 PNH Wrestlers Get More Honors POptiac Northern added more laurelk^.to an already glittering wrestling, record with a double victory at^R^ville Saturday. Coach BilKwillson and crew won the Int^Lakes League championship eai4y in the day and came back iir^ evening to finish first in an mter-Lakes vs. Eastern Michigap L e ague match. The league title was me Huskies’ fifth in six years of competition. Walled Lake finished second in the league outing, Waterford third and Farmington came in fourth. In the inter-league meeting. Port Huron trailed Northern by two points and East Detroit captured the third spot. Walled Lake was fourth. ♦ ♦ ★ In winning the I-L crown, Northern picked up five individual titles and four Huskies finished second. Tlie team nailed down four individual crowns in the inter-league scrap. TITLE WINNERS Taking first-place points in the I-L battle for Northern were Dave Oswalt (112), Dennis Mills (120), Art Allen (138), Bruce Tippin (145) and A1 Rayner (165). Oswalt made it to the finals ^ the intCT-league match but ^kness forced him to retire. His opponent in the finals would have been Port Huron’s Ken Kania, whom Oswalt had defeated eaiijer in the week. Mills, Tippin and Rayner moved into the inter-feagne competition andf came away with i^vidlial titles. Northern and Port Huron bat- \ Form Not Up to Par) U.S. Tankers Rally BREMEN, Germany ?AP) A team of American Olympic swimmers, some well off their peak form of the Tokyo Games, five of 10 final events Sunday in tlw windup of a star-studded Intenuitional meet. The winners included Olvippic champions Jed Graef of Verona, N.J., Cathy Ferguson of Burbank, Calif., Dick-RoUi of Atherton, Calif., the women’s medley relay team of Miss Ferguson,, Claudia Kolb and Donna de Varona of the Santa Clara, S.C., and Sharon Stouder of Glendora, Calif. The other U.S. victor was Olympian Phil Riker of Paterson, N.J. Graef took the 200 meter backstroke in 2:14.3; Roth won the 400-meter medley in 4:57.1 Riker captured the 100 meter, butterfly in 58.0; Miss Ferguson won the 100 meter backstroke in Ex-Flint Speedster Ice Skates to Title DETROIT (AP)-Jim Chapin of’ St. Louis and Detroiters die, Bertrand and Jeanne Ome-lenchuk dominated Sunday’s Midwest speed skating championships at Farwell Park. Chapin, a 32-year-old druggist who once '9kat^ out of Flint, Mich., took the iben’s title in the two-day meet with victories in three of his five races. Bertrand, 18, won all six races in the intermediate boys class and added the five-mile special to his trophy case. ★ * ★ Mrs. Omelenchuk,.the skating school teacher from suburban Warren, also was undefeated, taking all five races for the senior. women’s crown. Go To Orion For Yoor GTO and SAVE at..« RUSS JOHNSON MOTOR SAUS IS M-24, Lak« Orion 6S3-6tN 1:09.1 and the girls’ medley relay quartet edged Holland by three-tenths of a second in 4:37.5. Miss Stouder, winner of three gold medals and one silver at Tokyo, has been busy touring the banquet circuit. She only recently resumed training. The 16-year-old Olympic queen bowed to Ada Kok of the Netherlands, who was timed in the Dutch record of 2:25.8 for the 200 meter butterfly, and lost in the 100 meter freestyle to another Dutch girl, Winnie Van Weerdenburg, who was timed in 1:02.2. Miss Stouder was timed in 1:02.5 in the freestyle with Miss de Varona third in 1:03.4. Holland’s Klenie Bimolt won the 100 meter breaststroke in 1:17,3, with Miss Kolb third in l:l8.6; Czechoslovakia’s Jin-drick Wagner took the 100 meter freestyle in 54.6 with Mike Austin of Yale third in 55.6, and West Germany's Holger Kirschke won the 200 meter freestyle in 2:01.4 with Mike Wall of the Santa Clara S.C., seventh. tied down to the wire in the inter-league contest. Gding into the finals. Port Huron led N o r t h e r n by two points. Both squads had five wrestlers in the findls. SHARP IN FINALS Northern then proceeded to win four or five final matches and two of four in the c(msola-tions. Port Huron (Mcked up only three victories in the finals and only one of five matdies in the consolations. ★ Northern received some help from Waterford in the interleague finals. In the heavyweight division, Waterford’s Gerry Gebrow-sky, who also bagged the I-L title, defeated Port Huron’s Ron Stunner in the finals. A win by Sturmer would have pushed Port Huron into a tie with Northern for the title. Waterford had another I-L champion in Bill Hunt (180). ^ho also grabbed a second place ui the inter-league match. t . W^^ Lake- had a pair of league Ifilists in Roger Nicolay (103) an^John Hellner .(133). Nicolay waV second in the interleague, losing a duel with Port Huron’s Gary Raven, but Hellner was more fortunhte as he pinned a 6-5 defeat on Roseville’s Alif Joshua. Art Woehler (95), (127) captured league mington, and Johnson first in his division in the inter-'' league match. * *. it Inltr-Likn vs. Easitni MkMgiii t Woehler (95), Dib Hever and Dick * Johnsorr\G54) ired league titles for Fm*- n Olson (ED) t 103—G»ry Raven (Pori Huron) dec. iloolay (Walled Lake), 104. 113-Ken Kama (Port Huron) forfeit lave Oswalt (Pontiac NortMm). 130-Dennl$ Mills (Pontiac NoHhem) dec. Ed McMillan (Port Huron) 3-0. 137-Art McMillan (Port Huron) dec. )an Hever (Farmington) 3-0. 133-Jofin Hellner (Walled Lake) dec. 145-Bruce Tippin (Pontiac Nortkem) sc. Jerry OUewskI (East Detroit) 4-1. 154^lck Johnson (Farmington) pinned 180-Ray HelkwwII (East Detroit) dec. Ill Hunt (Waterford), 4-1. Heavyweight — Orry Gebrowsky (Wa-taj^rd) dec. Ron Sturmer (Port Huron) lafer-Lakes Mast Pontiac Nothern 103; 3. Walled Lake 3. Waterford 55; 4. Farmington 50. OUR NEW Customer Relations Department TO SERVE YOU BETTER WeVe been working har(J at developing an organization that will sell and service in volume as real professionals. In our consistent efforts to improve both of these endA,, our customer relations department was founds. With this' new department, we will be able to devote more personal time and effort to your •many needs. It is our sincere desire to provide a convenient and efficient means of clearing, up ahy problem, however small, which relates to Ford products and to our business. Remember, the Customer Relations Department is here for you! , A Satisfied Customer Is Our Best Salesman JOHN McAllllFFE 630 Oakland FORD FE SAlOl 2 Playoffs Beginning for Rec 5s Rev -Whlte'i ___________________ K.O. Television 4 4 The Students Lloyd Motors 4 4 Final Clau B W L 1 Meulah Baptist 7 I Booth Builders Powell Truck. 4 2 The Paekers City recreation basketball playoffs begin tonight in Class A and tomorrow night in Glass B at Madison Junior High School. The Waterford Township American and National League regular season schedules will continue through next week as well as the city Class C and D cards. The Class A playoff winner will represent Pontiac in the state recreation tournament. * ★ * SCHBDULE Adtm IjMjsms Madison JHS-The Students y$. West qioomflold Heating, 7 p.m.i Lloyd Motors vs. K. D, Television,' 4:30 p.m. Crery JHS-Dunstan Floral vs, Rite Homes, 7:15 p.m.; HI I, Dr , VS. Ryeson's AAarket, 4:30 p.m.; Zilka HBathig vs. Bill's SOrvIce, 4:45 p.m. Madison JHS — AAestlall Baptist vs, Booth Builders, S:M p.m.; Powell Trucking VI. Peckers, 7 p.m. Lincoln JHS —^NeS^^Haating vt. / ance,' 4:M p Nortnem HS—Roy White's Unbeatabh VI. Students—WB Heating winner, 7 p.m.; Students-WB Heating loser vs. Lloyd-K. D. loser. 4:34 p.m. Pierce JHS — Six Rs Construction O'Neil Realty, 7:15 p.m.; Lakeland Pt macy vs. Spencer Floor Covering, I p.m.; Buckner Finance ys. Frushour Struble Realty, 4:45 p — 4-Stroke Lead Victory Margin in Bogota 6olf Argentin^ Linksman Coasts to Triumph After Fast Start BOGpTA, Colombia (AP) -Veteran Roberto d« Vicenzo was locked in a three-way tie when he started, but breezed in with a four-stroke lead over the last nine holes of the Bogota Open golf tourney. T saw A1 Besselink shooting par after the ninth hole,” the handsome 41-year-old Argentine said after his victory Sunday. "I was four under at that point so I was only concentrating -ry Ziegler, $115.13 7S-7 NHL Standings W L T PM.G cago ... 31 30 4 40 in M 30 4 43 25 14 13 43 14 24 io 43 14 37 5 '» -MootreaJ 4, Boslo.. . Toronto 4, Chicago 3 Detroit 3, New York 2 Suaday't llaaol Montrael 2, New York 2, DOtroK 3, Toronto 3 Chicago 7, Boston 0 Today's •aim No gomes tchwim. No games tchsduim. , When You Need MONEY... I FRONT END ALIGNMENT ^C95 GOODYEAR RUSTPROOFING • Critical MiRtt bb ytir car • Strt-ooaliar CMBpoBitfo lotd • ky tar 195 EASY $1 PAY ^ TERMS • complete Rostpreefiig S2S COMPLETE MOTOR TUNE-UP CARS IIGHT CYl CARS *8"' karo'f tho cura! BRAKE SPECIAL! • Fropf Wheals Ramovad ■rakes Adjusted • Front Wheal Baarinsa Rapackad • Grease Seals Chackad Finance Plans Aren't All Alike! ■ Wo invite comparison of our new ■ HOMEOWNER'S LOAN PLAN! { Tailored to suit your needs and ■ income, you may borrow a UP TO’5,000 I On Home Equities or 1 st Mortgages * with only On* conv«niant monthly poymant and your B loon is fully protactad by lif* insuronca at no additional B cost! Coll today ... in most cas«s, orrang*m*nts con ba B compl*t*d within 72 hours and no closing costs! ' B FAMILY ACCEPTANCE CORP. j ! 317 Notional Building JTr Q Af\Qn ■ lOWESTHURON It J iBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBaBBBBBl COMPLETE STOCK AND SERVICE HEADQUARTERS Compare... Today! ALL TIRES AND SERVICES ON EASY PAY TERMS GO GO GOODYEAR SERVICE STORE #■ Wide Trw:k ■t UwTMce Open 8:3(0 to 5:30 Fridoy 'til 9 P.M. FE 5-6123 TWENTY-TWO mm • V THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY. FEBRUARY 22, 1965 A 'Phew' Words on BO Fellow Failed to Smell Swell WASHINGTON (UPl) - Gentlemen, I feel it my duty to warn you that if your deodorant leaves you only half safe, your government likely will do nothing to protect you from the consequences. At least not if an opinion recently handed down by a trial WEST, examiner for tiie National Labor Relations Boaid is adopted as federal policy. In what may be a landmark case, the examiner stated that filing an employe for failing to keep himself in an acceptable state of deodorization would not constitute an unfair, labor practice. As far as I could learh, tUs was Mm first thne that the U.S. government in all of its solemn nmjesty has exerdsed any sort of jnrisdiction over BO. Heretofore, the problem has more or less been regarded as a local issue to be dealt with within the framework of the free enterprise system. Hie case in point involves a food store employe whose discharge was conte^ by the Retail Clerks union. Management maintained he was let go for aromatic reasons after being told that he would have to use a stronger deodorant. OTHER REASON The union, on the other hand, insisted that he was terminated for organizational activities. Examiner Phil W. Sannders, NOTICE ■ Pursuant to Act 275—Public Acts 1964, Notice is hereby given, the Waterford Township Board of Review shall rrwet on the following times ond dotes Qt the office of the Supervisor, Waterford Township Holl, 4995 W. Huron St., Pontiac, Michigan. Morch 2 9 A.M. to 5 P. M. March 3 1 P. M. to 9 P. M. March 4 9 A.M. to 5 P.M. March 8 9 A.M. to 5 P. M. March 9 1 P. M. to 9 P. M. March 15 9 A.M. to 5 P.M. Signed by : Jomos E, Seeterlin, Supervisor Socrotory—Board of Reviow who beard the cate, ruled In favor of the union. But in doing so, he alio took u prece- BO question, tying it in with the march of civilisation itself. “ ... It can be said without serious contradiction that in our present state of existence these days we have now branched out and fully attained the modem era of clean shaves and adequate deodorants,” Saunders wrote. "In fact, I think it is even safe to say that a stranger coming to our shores fw the first time might conceivably believe that such preparations rank as our most WIDE SCOPE While conceding that "it may be somewhat difficult to ascertain the exact scope of offensiveness to others in the non- or misuse of deodorizers,” he said, such matters "must be evaluated in the light of progress.” He noted that we no longer live in the "era of the old-fashioned store centcscd around pot-bellied stoves in the days when the homesteaders were pushing West” Therefore, Saunders said, the dismissal of an employe who failed to meet modem standards of fragrance would be “within the legitimate prerogative of management” I interpret this to mean that underarm redoience will not be tolerated in the “Great Society.” If your best friends won’t tell you, maybe Uncle Sam will. A reef estimated to contain more than 100,000 tons of lead zinc pay ore in Auckland Province, New ^land, is the first sudi delx>8it in that area. We Will Poy (Compounded Quarterly) ON ALL SAVINGS ACCOUNTS All deposits mode by the 10th of the month-earn from the Isti Bank with "Thafeink on fh* Grow!" PONTIAC ■state bank • Main Office, Saginaw at Lawrence • Miracle Mile • Auburn Heights • M-69 Plaia • Baldwin at Yale • Bloomfield Hills-^970 W. Long Lake Rd. • Drayton Plains - • 6 to 6. 4 E-Lawrence • New Opdyke Watton Office Next to Blue Sky Theatre • New East Highland Office t^-59 and Duck Lake Rd. Delicious for Salads and Eating CALUPORNIA SEEDI^ESS NAVEL 138Sixe I 2^S9 rrash Oraan Pascal Celery Larta Sloik IV Hal Nausa Ruby Rad Fresh Rhubarb lb. IV Frash far Salads Green Onions SanTh IV esadfard Ixtra Fancy D’Anjou Pears 3V Here Are Examples of Our Everyday Low Prices! (Cannon towel 0»«« COMP AMI COMPAHI [ ^ I Chunk Tuna 23' tailtnt aich, Craamy Half&HaN 39*1 __ nuh Cloth Of ro» SSinoN B'SH 69* towel at Lunchaon Maat Spam or Prom 39*1 • AW oraian Choose Piua 39*1 Wliela Karnal , NIblets Corn 1 IS* Mat, Chicican, Twrfcay Iratan Banquet Dinners n 139*1 I Oven King Cookies | 3/^^ Rich T»m«fo I ^ ^ ^ StakalyOahup'£r I 14* DkAYTON PLAINS 50CO PHM Hwr. N. ,f Walhw abd. White Biiaaf 19*1 WALLED LAKE 700 Pontiac Troll ot Maple ear Caaklnt ar Salads WawanOil "cT 1*1” I 24' BIRMINGHAM IS55 Woodaard at 14 Mila 1> THE P0NTI4C PRESS, MQNDAYr ^IS^RUARY 22, 1965 HEADS FOR CAIRO - Walter Ultx-icht (right) East German Communist boss, shakes hands with Meikal (first name unknown), head of tile United Arab Republic trade mission in East Berlin, before Ulbricht left yesterday for Cairo, Egypt. Ulbricht’$ trip is.straining West (Germany’s ties in the Middle East. School Aid Allernatives WASHINGTON (UPI)-House Republicans are readying their own school aid propo^ as an alternative to -President Jrfm-son’s'lI.S billion plan. The administration program would aid schools with high enrollments from poor families, help pay the cost of books for public and parochial schools and encourage “shared time” teaching projects. It already has been approved by the House General Education subcommittee. A change in the original plans to pash the bill through as quickly as possible has given Republicans time to prepare their own bill and to draft proposed changes in the The House Education and Labor Committee originally was scheduled to take up school aid earlier this month. But chairman Adam'Clayton Powell, D-N.Y., has held off the start of meetings on it. The OOP committee minority, which boycotted voting on the subcommittee bill on the ground that it was being ramrodded through without any attention to Republican proposals, W used the two-week delay to prepare for a committee showdown. START WORK Powell may call the committee together this week to start work. Rep. Charles E. Goodeli, R- N. Y., ranking Republican member of the general education subcommittee, said during the weekensi that 32 amendments already have been drafted. He said the decision onwhetherto offer them will depend on die attitude of committee Democrats when drafting sessions start. Republicans also are working on a completely separate alternative aid-to-education plan. This might take the form of a federal tax credit system for individuals who support elementary and secondary schools through local and state property, income and sales taxes. Former Sen. Baity M. Goldwater, R-Ariz., the 1964 Republican presidential nominee, had a similar plan. TAX REBATE The GOP also might offer a proposal to return some portion of federal taxes to the states for use in the schools. This has been suggested, in vhriou forms, by members of both parties in the past. The possible Republican alternatives suggest that the main GOP objection to the Johnson plan will be that it would impose too much jpderal control o cal school^* This theme was frequently sounded by Republican members during hearings on the Johnson bill. -Junior Editors Quiz on- BARRACUDA QUESTION: Will a barracuda really bite people? ANSWER: The barracuda looks something like the pikes and pickerel found in the streams aQd lakes of our eastern and central sUtes—but this fish inhabits salt water. There is a number of different species, the smaller kinds not being considered dangerous to human beingS; It is different, however, with the largest variety, die Great Barracuda, which lives off the coasts of the Caro-Unas, Florida and the West Indies. Larger specimens of this can be from eight to ten feet loi^, although barracuda-over five feet aire rare. Wise swimmers like the one in our picture, wiBliead for shore at top speed if they know a-Barracuda is larking around, as these fish do so^times attack human bfdnga. The barracuda has rasor-sharp teeth aud a habit of following any moving object, being likely to make a sudden rush or strike at anything which gleams in the ‘ water or catches the light. Although the barracuda’s tendency to strike at something moving makes him dangerous to swimmers, it also leads him to seize lures cast out by fishermen. The Silver Barracuda of 'the coast of South California is said to be the kind most useful for food. FOR YOU TO DO: Some time you may have oc^aidon to visit tropicai sqjBS, and it’s good to know about underwater dangera so you can avoid them. Lobk up “shark” and “piranha” in an encyclc^ia. Another very dangerous creature is the moray eel. Nasser Blames U.S. for Bonn teiKl East German Leader Sails to U.A.R. (}AIRO (fi — East German President Walter Ulbricht sailed toward Egypt today for the visit with President Gamal Abdel Nasser that has produced a ^cdsis in relations between West (j«-many and the Arabs. Ulbricht flew yesterday to Dubrovnik, the Yugoslav coastal resort, and boarded an East German ship for the trip. The vessel is due in Alexandria Wednesday, and Ulbricht will go by train to Cairo for an official welcome from Nasser. The Bonn government fears Ulbricht’s visit may mean the United Arab Republic plans to recognize the Com- munist East Germaa regiine. despite West Germaa threats to cut economic aid and break relations with Cairo. Nasser told a rally yestmday the United States was at the bottom of the United Arab Republic’s feud with Bonn over shipment of West German arms to Israel. Nasser charged that Washington organized “an international conspiracy” to ^nd Israel arms via West Germany because “it ^ did not want to do itjopenly.” YIELDED ’TO PREKURB' He said Chancelor Ludwig Erhard’s government gave in to pressure from'the United States against the wishes of the West German people. If it (West Germany) is not independent, then we .will have to deal with it on that basis,” Nasser declared- West Gemaay halted arms shipmento to Israel because of Nasser’s objections. The government - controlled Cairo press said leaders of the Arab world woUld draw up a statement backing the. U.A.R. against West German reprisals because of Ulbricht’s impending visit. ’The newspapers said the statement would warn that any Wes^ Germany reixisals against the U.A.R. would be viewed as actions against the entire Arab down Bonn’s offer of fll in money in lieu of that of anns which were GETS SUPPORT Statements of support for Na^r have already been is-suM by President Ahmed Ben Bella of Algeria and President Habib Bourguiba of ’Tunisia who is visiting Cairo. $20,000 Blaze HHs Grand Rapids Firm -Nasser refused (o call off Ulbricht’s visit even though the West Germans cut off arms aid to Israel. Israel charged that , the West Germans were giving in to blackmail, and Israeli Premier Levi Eshkol turned GRAND rapids (UPI) -Fire starting frmn an overhimt-ed smokestack caused an estimated damage of 920,000 to the riaviland Products Co. yesterday. 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