Romney Tax Plan Hits GOP”5*** LANSnVG (AP) — Expressing opti-mim ftat fiscal reform wUl pass the Legislature,1 Gov. George Romn^ said today that state officials are working out a reduced spending budget just the same. LANSING (AP) — Republican Gov. Romney’s controversial fiscal reform program hit a GOP snag in the Senate and further delay in the House last night. The Senate spent more than an hour debating Romney’s income tax bill, one of eight tax reform bills reported out of committee last week. The Senate planned to continue debate today. nag The House argued whether to consider a niodified version of Romney’s tax pr^ ^ grant, fmally dedding to t^e up ttie issue on Thursday. The tax bill ran into immediate trouble in the Senate in the form of an amendment proposed from the floor by Sen. Robert Huber, of Troy R-16th District, which would have required the tax put to a vote of the people. The amendment was ddeated in a IJ-20 bipartisan vote. It would have prevented the income, tax from taking effect until approv^ by a majority vote at the next general election in 1968. ofJ2 qm^ndments proposed by ate Taxation Coimnittee t>R(l descrined by committee dmirman Many OeMseb^ R-Battle Greek, as “sWctly technical.’* Debate on the Huber amendment involved Huber and fellow .Republicans, with Democrats having litQe to say except for Sen. Basil Brown, D-Highland Park. IMMEDIATE OPPOSmON “On this particular bill I think it is essential that the people be allowed to vote once to see if they favor it,” Huber said in proposing his amendment. Huber’s amendment followed adoption Rising in immediate opposition was aniropriations committee chairman Frank Beadle, R-St-I Clair. I ' ‘‘We were sent up here to do ti job, to appropriate mcmey for the operation of Michigan and provide the revenue,” Beadle said. Noting the amendment would not provide for a vote until 1968, he said, “We just can’t wait that long unless you want services slashed.” Romney has said the state faces a 15 per cent cut in services unless some form of fiscal reform is approved. Huber told the Senate that waiting until the next general election “might mean we might have to live within our until 1968.” “I think this state might very well \take a moratorium on spending untU 1968,” he added. * ★ ' ★ Charging that Republicans were trying to force Romney’s fiscal reform program “down our throats,” Brown supported Huber. ‘ONLY PLACE’ He said “the only place we can get a compromise on this is in the voting place.” Sen. L. Harvey Lodge, R-Waterford, urged defeat of the amendment “because it is an amendment to kill this Senate Miajority Leader' Emil Lock-wood, R-St.' Louis, said If the bill is passed, nothihg would prevent circulation of petitions to force a referendum. * ★ -k “I know how difficult it is to collect signatures when you need 250,000 ot more and I know the political maneuvering possible,” Huber replied. “If we do not put this in the bill, the people never will have a chance to vote on an income tax.” The Democrats continued their argument that they had not been allowed to see the tax reform bills until last week and maintained they had not had sufficient time to study the n Waterford Ups Pay for Police, Firemen By JOE MULLEN A salary and fringe benefit improvement package for Waterford Township police and firemen that amounts to about per cent and will cost $50,000 for the balance of this year was approved last night. The Township Board authorized Supervisor Mrs. Dorothy Olson and Clerk Elmer Fangboner to sign the agreement that becomes effective Saturday. Last night’s board action culminated several months of bargaining between the Township Board and representatives of the police and fire departments. f ■ . County Youth 'Died for Peace' "He believed in peace, he worked for it and he gave his life for it,” a West Bloomfield Township mother said today of her son who was killed', Saturday in Communist raid on an isolated village in Laos. Mrs! Benjamin Cheydleur, 3960 Nor-manwood, said her son, Frederick, 20, knew he was in a hot spot, a real danger area, “but it was against his convictions to carry a gun.” Cheydleur, a Quaker, joined the International Volunteers Association a year ago shortly after his graduation from high school in Abington, Pa. His family moved to Michigan shortly therea^er. “Ben was a conscientious objector insofar as the draft was concerned, but he joined the volunteers, which are a sort of privately financed Peace Corps,” his mother explained. CHEYDLEUR The U.S. Embassy at Vientiane, Laos, said marauding Communist Pathet Lao troops raided the village and shot down Cheydleur and eight Laotions. “We got word that his body is being flown back to the United States and we plan a memorial service for him, probably Saturday, at Abington,” his mother said. In Today's Press Suburbia Revisited Master plan is essential for success. — PAGE A-4. Humphrey Tour Vice president arrives for Netherlands talks.-PAGE B-2. Political Dilemma What will Robert Kennedy do about Johnson in 1968. — PAGE C-5. Area News ............. A4 Astrology ........... C-4 Bridge ................ C-4 Crossword Puzzle...... D-7 Comics ................iC-4 Editorials .......... A-6 High School B-1 Markets . C-7 Obituaries ........... D-2 Sports ..........- C-1—C-3 Theaters . TV-Radio I ^ Wil8J»hge8 .......B-3-B-7 Mrs. Olson said that the new pay schedule for the two service departments approximates that of the Oakland County Sheriff’s Department but still is slightly below what the City of Pontiac pays. ★ ★ ★ She added that the $50,000 cost anticipated for the rest of this year in-cludes $22,000 in improvements for present police officers, $13,000 for the Related Stories, Page D-7 fire department and $15,000 earmarked for added police positions. FUNDS FROM CARRY-OVER Funds for the wage improvement package will be drawn from the nearly $100,000 1966 budget carry-over that resulted from a hieber-than-expected sales tax income to the township, according to Mrs. Olson. She said that the board has declared its intent to improve benefits of other township em|doye$ and Indicated that a portion of the remaining carryover funds may be earmarked for this purpose. A special board meeting is scheduled Thursday night for discussion of these proposed benefits as well as matching fund programs with the County Road Commission. ★ * * Besides an upward adjustment in the wage schedule, last night’s agreement gives police and firemen life insurance benefits at a $10,000 minimum and hospitalization insurance with premiums paid in full by the township. LONGEVITY PAY Longevity pay also is included in the agreement. It ranges from 2 per cent after seven years service to 10 per cent after 19 years. The chiefs of the two departments now earn $9,901 and each will be raised (Continued on Page A-2, Col. 6) AP Wirtphoto BOMBED BY BRI’ITSH—Twin-jet bombers of the British Navy today bombarded the stricken tanker Torrey Canyon with 1,000-pound bombs, setting it afire in an effort to destroy the oil remaining aboard. The American vessel is shown here in three parts shortly before the bombing order. See story on page A2. ’ U Thant's Plan for Viet Peace Is Made Public UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP)-The United States disclosed today that it has accepted U Tliant’s latest Vietnam peace proposals calling for a general truce, it said it was prepared to begin discussions immediately to work out de- UNITED NATIONS, N. Y. (AP)-U. N. Secretary General U Thant made public today his latest Vietnam peace proposals, calling for a general truce to be followed by preliminary talks aimed at convening a new Geneva peace conference. Thant told a news conference that the plan had been sent to all the parties directly concerned March 14 and that some had replied. He sMd he did not consider any M the answers as a categorical rejection. The secretary general expressed concern over what he called the recent escalation of the fighting and voiced fears that the conflict might spread unless checked. Thant disclosed that he had presented his proposals orally to a North Vietnam delegation on his recent visit to Burma and that he had later sent the plan in a memorandum to other interested countries. m 1 ' Arms Sales Increase in Area cloudy and Mild for Next Few Days Skies will be partly cloudy for the next few days with temperatures continuing mild. The weatherman forecasts partly cloudy and not much change in temperature tonight and > tomorrow, the low near. 33 to 40. The high is expected to reach 45 to 50 tomorrow. Morning winds northeasterly at 5 to IS miles ^ hour will become variable tonight. Thursday’s outlook is partly cloudy and a little warmer. * ★ * Thirty-eight was the low recording in downtown I^ntiac preceding 8 a.'m. The mercury edged up to 45 by,^p.m. Clark: Crime Report Is Blueprint for Action WASHINGTON (AP) - Atty. Gen. Ramsey Clark told more than 600 law enforcement officials today they must make me national Crime Commission’s report the foundation for “a national strategy to airest and then reverse the trend toward lawlessness.” Clahk’s speech opened a two-day conference bn,crime control. The meetings, attended by Jaw enforcement' officers, judges and cbrrections personnel from every state, was called to start Imple-mentatibn of more than 200 recom-mendaUons made last month by the commission set up by President Johnson. By MEL NEWMAN Pontiac area residents—apparently reacting to the steady rise in the local crime rate — have begun arming themselves. This trend is reflected by increasing retail sales of personal weapons and in the growing list of handguns registered at the Pontiac Police Department. According to Capt. Charles Gale, chief of Pontiac detectives, estimated gun purchases by area citizens thus far this year are nearly 1,000 ahead of last year’s purchases over the same period. And 1966 was a very big year for gun sales. ★ ★ ★ Furthermore, Gale estimated that perhaps 60 per cent of Pontiac’s adult popu- lation is armed with one or more guns already. DEMAND INCREASING The reason for this. Gale said, is simple. “Because of so many burglaries, robberies and other major crimes, more people want guns to protect their families and possessions,” he said. Gale hastened to add that not all the guns in Pontiac homes were bought outwardly for reasons of self-defense. ★ ★ ★ “We assume,” he said, “that many such weapons in possession of Pontiac citizens are unregistered — strictly against the law. Wisconsin U. Chancellor Named 9th W President ANN ARBOR (AP)-Robben W. Fleming, chancellor of the University of Wisconsin and a former attorney and labor relations expert, today was named the ninth president of the University of Michigan. ROBBEN FLEMING Fleming’s selection was announced after a specially called Board of Regents meeting. Robert Briggs, a Republican regent from Jackson, telephoned Fleming at Madison, Wls., after the regents voted unanimously for him. Fleming accepted by phone. Fleming, 50, also had been offered the presidency of the University of Min-jiesota, told an interviewer as late as yesterday he had not been formally offered the presidency of Michigan. Fleming succeeds Harlan M. Hatcher, 69, who retires in December after 15 years as president of the nation’s 13th largest university. ★ ★ ★ Fleming reportedly was informally offered the post Saturday when he attended a meeting of the U. of M. Board of Regents, which was also attended by representatives of student, faculty and alumni comlmttees. \ Gretchen Grotli) a student who attended the meeting, said Fleming told the regents he would accept the offer. Fleming’s appointment ended speculation as to who would succeed Hatcher. “Still, the general idea of owning a gun for self-protection is good,” he said. But who determines what a person’s real reason is for purchasing a gun? And who determines which reasons are valid and which are not? Actually, just about any adult resident of toe State of Michigan can buy and register a gun. He need only prove he is a citizen of the United States and he must not have a poor police record. ★ * ★ If these qualifications are met, the procedure is easy. MUST GET LICENSE He must first obtain a license to purchase from the local police department. This may entail standing in line for awhile. He then may huy a gun in any state -in the country — fte only restriction being that the weapon must not he fully automatic (in accordance with the Federal Firearms Act). Prices — somewhat dictated in Michigan by “fair-trade” laws — range from about $16 for some 22-caliber pistols to more than $100 for toe larger 45-calibers. ★ * ★ The final step Is actual registration of the gun, at which time the local police department tests the weapon for firing safety and puts it on the record book. CHECK AT STORES A sampling of pistol sales at three area stores shows that many residents are finding the crime situation alarming enough and the purchase procedure simple enough to merit buying a gun. (Continued on Page A-2, Col. 7) DONALD V. O’BRIAN 1953 Photograph Ionia Escapees Are Still at Large A Pontiac man committed as a murderer-rapist and three other patients who escaped Sunday from toe Ionia State Hospital for toe criminally insane are stiU at large, according to hospital officials. kkk Police are seeking Donald V. O’Brian, 40, who was judged a criminal psychopath in December 1953 after being charged with the sex murder of Mrs. Hallie V. Perkins, 55, in July of that year. Mrs. Perkins* body was found in a vacant lot on toe city’s North Side. O’Brian was also linked to toe rape of a 16-year-old girl and four other assaults on women. * * * He was captured in September 1953 when two men came to toe aid of a woman he allegedly was attacking. SAWED THROUGH BARS Hospital officials said the escapees sawed through window bars in a building no longer used for housing patients. They said most of toe patients in toe escapees’ area of detention were watching a movie at toe time. Police said they tracked the men to a paved road near the hospital. ★ ★ ★ Sought in addition to O’Brian are Don Ringler, 34, committed from St. Joseph County for assault to commit murder; and William Hayes, 41, and Daniel Grzywinski, 28, both of Detroit, committed for taking indecent liberties. ★ ★ * Under the law, patients judged criminally insane are not sentenced to any specific term of detention, but are discharged only when their recovery is assured “and they are no longer considered a menace to others,” a hospital s| man said. Pollution Hearing for Orion Twp. Set “I think I’d rather get a bad report card. I can’t stand all that mushy kissing.” A hearing has been ordered by toe State Water Resources Commission on alleged ppllution by Orion Township of Paint Creek and Lake Orion, it was reported today. ■k k k A determination hearing pending final adoption of a citation against toe township was set for 1:30 p.m. April 28 in Detroit. ’The citation, similar to one issued against toe village of Lake Orion, wonid require abatement of the alleged pollution by Sept. 1, 1969, through the tostal-lation of sewage collection and treatment facilities. The water resources commission, according to reports from a meeting today in Saginaw, claims areas of toe township have failed to control toe discharge of wastes into Paint Creek and Lake Orion. ' ★ * ★ Township officials reportedly vrere not in attendance at today’s meeting. ‘NOT SOLELY RESPONSIBLE* Village residents have contended that they alon^ are not responsible for the alleged pollution of Paint Creek and Lidee Orion, attributing a share to the town- /T <9 r THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY. MARCH 28, 1967 Jets Bomb Near Haiphong qs U. S. Rai^s Stepped Up SAIGON, (AP) — Americant secondary explosion. Poor pilots bombed the outskirts of , weather conditions prevented ; Haiphong Monday and pounded] damage assessment at the mis-other targets in North Vietnam I sile site, with the heaviest raids in two PRESSURE weeks. A slight break in the weather over North Vietnam enabled U.S. jet planes to fly 107 missions, a spokesman said. ★ * ★ The targets included an oil storage depot six miles northwest (rf Haiphong and a surface-to-air missile site only five miles from the Red port. It the closest penetration to North Vietnam’s major port since the same fuel d^t was attacked March 0- ★ ★ ★ Pilots claimed heavy damage to the fuel depot from their 500-pound bombs and reported a “huge orange fireball’’ from a The stepped-up strikes indicated U.S. airmen prepared to seize any break in the weather to increase {H*es-sure on North Vietnam. The seasonal monsom winds are due to change any day now, providing good bombing weather for the next few months. The spokesman also nounced the loss of an Air Force F4C Phantom jet over the north Sunday. The two crewmen are listed as missing in action. The plane was the second downed tQr enemy ground Are Sunday, but the announcement ol the second loss was delayed ndiile search irianes looked for the crew. The United States has now announced 496 {danes lost over the north. Though the tempo the air war increased, ground action was generally li^t, with only scattered action reported. Enemy activity included temulst bombing of three civilian buses north of Da Nang in which five civilians were killed and eight injured. U MARINES DIE The biggest U.S. loss resulted from an accident, Thirteen Marines were killed and one wouiKjed when a land mine accidentally exploded during a class in mine warfare at-Da Nang. The U S. Navy announced fliat die destrc^ers Stoddard and Turner Joy were fired on by coastal gijns Easter Sunday while shelling the North \Tet-namese radar and defense complex on Hon Me island. Neither ship was hit. Althou^ die weather clearing over the north; many of the planes went in using radar and all-weather bombh^ techniques. The carrier Enterprise sent her all-weather Intruder jets against the targets aroui^ Haiphong, using air-to-ground issiles and heavy bombs. Air Force planes flying from Thailand bombed supply points along the western edge of North Vietnam and down the southern panhandle. One heavy raid went against a supply complex which the North Vietnamitee have laid out near the old battiefleld of Dien Bien Phu. The bombs set off a blistering fireball and sent black smoke rising 5,000 feet above die jungle area. Hoff a to Leave Jail Briefly foi^ Hearing RONALD REAGAN Reagan Asks Biggest State Budget Ever Birminghanrr Area News Bond Sale for Library Okayed BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP —I Winning bidder was Hayne, sole of 11.16 miliion in brads to Weber, Dexter and Ciirds of Definance a new township library hroit with a 4.019 average per-was approved by the board at centage figure, last night’s meefing. ] Hie board also held a final British Bomb U.S. Tanker in Bid to Halt Oil Flow LAND’S END, England (AP) - Navy planes smashed the stricken tanker Torrey Canyon with l,000hpound bombs to^y and set it afire to destroy the oil remaining aboard. Smtrice rose 2,000 feet above the sundered three sections of the 974-foot ship. SACRAMENTO, Calif; (AP) — Gtov. Ronald Reagan s^t his 65.06-billion Revised budget into Democratic-con-troUed finance committees to-jday, admitting his 'drive fell s^rt of its goal. CHATrAN(X)GA, Tenn. (AP) - James R. Hoffa will receive a brief respite from federal prison, beginning May 8, to return to the city where he was convicted of jury tampering more than three years ago. U.S. District Judge Frank W. Wilson, who handed the Tcam-aters union president an eight-year sentence and a $10,000 fine in 1964, ordered Monday that Hoffa be returned here for an “evidentiary” hearing on his fourth motion for a new trial. The hearing probably will I four or five days, a Hoffa lawyer said. The attorney indicated that persons who signed affidavits saying they had participated in government wiretapping during the trial would be among those to testify at the hearing. Hoffa’s motion follows the line of his defense at the trial, accusing the government of using wiretapping and electronic eavesdropping. ★ ★ * The government has denied the charge. Hoffa and his three codefend- ants, who also were ordered to appear here May 8, began serving their sentences March 7. ★ w The Teamsters president was ent to the U.S. prison at Lewis-burg,. Pa. The other three Thomas Ewing Parks and Ewing King, both of Nashville, aiid Larry Campbell of Detroit— are serving three-year terms at other institutions. ★ ★ * In his order, Wilson gave Hoffa until next Monday to file an amendment to the pending motion, taking into account the U.S. Supreme Court’s latest decision on wiretapping. The high court last week ordered a new trial for Charles b’Brien, a Teamsters official in Detroit charged in a separate case, on grounds that the FBI recorded several of O’Brien’s conversations. The government had contended that none of the evidence obtained through wiretapping used against O’Brien at his (rial. Police Hunt Kidnaped Girl in Chicago CHICAGO (AP) - Police handling trained dogs ranged across a North Side neighborhood early today in search of a Iffown-haired, blue-eyed 8-yea^ old girl apparently abduct^ by a fat man in a tan coat. Police said it appeared to be “bona fide kidnaping.” Carrie Stevens had been missing since midevening Monday. Playmates said she was dragged away by a man who asked their help looking for his lost dog. The missing girl is a second-grader at the Grady School, one of four children of Daniel Stevens and his wife, Terry. Her abductor was described as white, about 40 years old, of medium height and fat. Police said Carrie and five other children were playing in front of the Stevens home when the man approached them and offered a dollar fo anyone who could find his missing dog. Cong Waging Campaign ot Preelection Terrorism SAIGON «l are waging a terrorist campaign against village and hamlet elections scheduled to start South Vietnam next week. Intelligence sources said today. Communist guerrillas have been threatening capable candidates with abduction and murder, encouraging incompetents to become candidates, warning voters against voting, tearing up registration cards, and dering voters to leave home during the election so they cannot participate. ★ ★ * Vletcong propaganda have visited scores of villages nd hamlets. Intelligence experts say the guerrillas rounded up peasants in one hamlet in Gia Dinh Prov-' ince just outside Saigon March 3 for an antielection rally. CONG SPEAKERS Vietcong speakers told their captive audience that the elec- The Vietcong tions were a “treacherous ruse’ by the Saigon government to implement a “false democratic re^me.” Candidates for office warned to withdraw or their safety “would not be guaranteed.” Voting cards and census records were seized by guerrilla raiders in Vinh Binh hamlet March 16. * It * The Vietcong Liberation Radio regularly criticizes the local elections. One broadcast said: “The so-called elections of village councils, hamlet chiefs and deputy chiefs of the U.S.-Thieu-Ky clique, which can proceed only in a number of temporarily oc- The Weather Full V-S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Cloudy and cooler today with a chance of some light rain in southern portions. Partly cloudy and not much change in teniperatures tonight and Wednesday. High today 45 to 50. Low 33 to 40. Winds northeasterly 5 to 15 miles today, becoming variable tonight. Thursday’s outlook: Partly cloudy and a little warmer. TMay In Pontine Lowoit tomporaturo prtcadino I a.m.: » At t a.m.: Wind Valocity 12 m.p.h DIrKtIan; Norttwait Sun Mta Tuaiday at 6:54 p.m. Sun risas Wadnasday at 6:22 a.m. 11 a.m. ______ 12 m...........42 Alpana 1 p.m.........43,eteanaba 2 p.m.........43 or. Rapid Manday'i Tamparalura Cliart Marquetta 42 31 Kansas City 57 42 57 27 LOS Angalaa 76 56 40 33 Miami Beach 74 70 53 41 Mllwaukaa 47 33 50 33 Now Orleans N 55 _________ 55 34 New York 43 36 Traversa C. 40 2* Phoenix 12 52 l:Albuquarqua 75 47 Plttsbungh 77 30 I Atlanta 71 M ^ ^ ; NATIONAL $7EATHER — A band of rain and showers is forecast tonight stretching from the Ohio Valley eastward to the Atlantic Coast. It will rain in the Pacific Northwest, changing to snow in the higher elevations of the north and central Rockies. less experiment designed to set the giant oil slick afire by shooting incendiary shells from a helicopter. The devices failed to dropped on the Torrey Canyon hit oil leaking from the hulk The goal was to sti^ the flow of oil onto Cornwall’s already polluted beaches. Twin-jet bombers of the British navy were ordered to deliver the coup de grace after attempts to set afire the giant oil slick appeared ineffective. All ships and aircraft had was a mass of flames. The Republican governor who been warned away from the had promised to “cut, squeeze'area seven miles off Land’s amoved .one sewer |»«ject, Iwt had to delay two oteers. ThTget completion date for a $71,350 installation for 54 sites in the Foxcroft subdivision was announced as June 1. ★ * ★ Assessments are to ^ $1,321 per site. NEW HEARING A new hearing was called for 8:30 p.m. April 10 for a $33,-600 project for Colonial Estates, Lahser Road, due to bids being over the estimate. It will serve 19 sites at $1,768.42 each. A six-month delay was called for Alice street sewers '«TA..._4 bomb, and in a restricted area still liquor by the bottle at Sherman containing gases. . The first two braibs missed the reef. The third hit it smack in the middle. Coastguardmen said it exploded the tanker in a ballooning ball of fire and smoke. Within minutes, 119 miles of oiMaden sea around the tanker Dngs, 3669 W. Maple, was delay^ two weeks. Members are to ins^t the store. GreecB Bars 2 Soviefs in Spy Hunt and trim” state Spending, Monday submitted the biggest budget ever ^oposed in any state. ★ w ★ The spending plan for the fiscal year beginning July 1 soared above the preliminary request of $4.62 billion he made Jan. 31. He cut the money requests of his department heads by only 6 per cent, instead of the average 10 per cent he sought. DRIVE BLUNTED Demands for services in schools and other facilities blunted the governor’s economy drive. Reagan added $120 million for End. A 20-mile radius was placed under restriction. The government once thought of piping the oil from the tanker to other ships, but the sheer size of the job and difficulty bringing adequate tankers close enough to the rocks caused the plan to be abandoned. The bombing followed , a fruit- ATHENS (AP) - Two Sbviet diplomats have been ordered to leave Greece ,by Wednesday night, apparently because they were involved irtth the big " viet ring spying on North Atlantic Treaty Organization ' the Mediterranean area. The Foreign Ministry Issued expulsion orders for Albert Zaharov, second secretary in the Soviet Embassy, and Igor Ochurkov, a member of the Soviet conunercial delegation. The Foreign Ministry said incriminating evidence had been compiled against them concerning activities incompatible with their status. local property tax relief, and $50 million in new school aid in the revised budget. ★ ★ ★ An^ the other items he added 'trere $35 million for poor school districts, $39 million for state enyiloye pay raises, and $19 miUion more for the California Highway Patrol. * *\ * Another $39 million was requested as a substit^ for the higher education tuitiom^eagan unsuccessfully sought. \ The ' state’s financially troubled laical aid program required ^,7 million more. THAT’S IT! ’s revised budget doc- Two Escapees Are Arraigned Pair Charged With Birmingham Holdup Two escapees from a Wisconsin prison camp were arraigned ument doesn’t use the figure $5.06 bUlion. But Director Gordon P. Smith said that’s the total when all requests are added up, that’s the total." Arms Sales on Rise in Pontiac Area (Continued Prom Page One) Sales at Griswold’s Sporting Goods in the Tel-Huron Shopping Center are “running about triple what diey were at this time last year,” according to Bin Schenden, stwe manager. He said Griswold’s averages about two or three gun sales a day and perhaps five or six on Saturdays. “To protect my home,” is the reason many buyers offer for wanting a gim, he said. Sales trends of all guns at Barnes - Hargraves Hardware, yesterday on diarges of holding 1742 W. Huron, show no “radical’ up a Birmingham pharmacy I change over 1966, according to Saturday night. ' Hargraves, a partner in the One of the men also was business, charged with assault with intent 1 “However,” he added, to murder for shooting at a' “there is a general upward Bloomfield Township auxiliary I swing in sales, especially in policeman when he stopped' handguns.” their car in Beverly Hills | shop owners are pur- BIRMINGHAM - A resolution opposing a legislative amendment on initiative and referendum will be submitted to the City commissjon for adoption at its meeting next Monday. City Manager Robert Kenning recommended last night that the commission take a negatiye position .on the proposal. If enacted, all matters within the scope of the commis-sira’s power could be overturned or initiated by the public, including finances, zoning and persranel questions. In other business, the commission purchased 90 shade trees for the spring planting season from two firms at a total cost of $2,445. ’l%e orders went to the Cole Nursery of Circleville, Ohio, and to Cottage Gardens, Inc., Lansing. \ Birmin^am police Identi-the pair as Michael J. DVgan, 20, and Frank J. JonlM, 35. Both escaped from the W^orth prerelease center In^lkhorn seven weeks ago, pOi|^ said. Followink their appearance be- The state coming closest to ,J"" RiitomiR-. hndaM New Bloomfield Hills Justice of copied hamlets and villages un-| Unofficial sources believe the,"fJJ» ^ G<^v Nelwn der the pressure of rifles and|P?*r ^a® Part of the spy ™g where returned to the Oakland Ko.,nn.>«o fto I disclosed last week with the asKea tor »a.oo jgjj pre- and Thieu-Ky mercenary troops, is a dull and deceitfiU comedy.” HEADS OF STATE The broadcast was referring to Chief of State Nguyen Van Thieu and Premier Nguyen Cao Ky. There are 2,552 villages and 13,984 hamlets in South Vietnam. Elections start Sunday and in the next two months wiO be held in 961 villages and 4,487 hamlets. The Saigon government estimates that the Vietcong control 318 villages and 3,967 hamlets. The other communities are in a shadow statUB^ontested by government and Communist forces, controlled by the central government, -or controlled by the Vietcong at ni^t and by the government in the daytime. rest of three Italians. Since then, one Soviet diplomat has hurriedly left Italy,: two Russians have been expellei«|rom Cyprus, several civilians have been arrested in Cyprus, and Swiss police said arrests may be made there. The three Italians, who were charged last Wednesday in Turin with espionage for the Soviet Union, were Giorgio Rinaldi, 39, an exhibition parachutist; his wife, Angela Maria, 52, and their chauffeur, Armando Girard, 40. Reports circulated in Turin Monday that the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency wanted to talk to six American parachutists who knew Rinaldi and participated with him and an Italian group of chutists in a jump at Stuttgart, Germany, in September 1962. liminiary coum examination April 4 before of the Peqce Bri Justice Human Rights Cited by Pope Major Encyclical Asks Reins on Capitalism up as the men who robbed VATICAN CITY, (AP)-Fope Uhan’s Variety Store, 1475 Bald- Bond was set at Jones, and $50,000 f< since he was charged . murder attempt of the 'patrolman, George W. Arnold. \ IDENTIFIED \ Birmingham Detective Merlin chasing guns,” he said. WWW A spokesman for Briggs Sporting Goods, 3231 Orchard Lake, Keego Harbor, said the demand for guns is strong, but large weapon producers are under government contract, slowing the delivery to retail outfits. “We can’t get enough pns to sell,” he complained, “but sales have gone up anyway the past two years.” Still, the qnestira of wiho is qualified to own a gun remains in conflict with the right to self-iH-otoction. Gale, looks to more modem gun laws for the solution, plus strict enforcement of the penalty for falling to register a gun. Paul VI in a major encyclical!win, Pontiac, on Saturday, and appealing for social and eco- DA Is Busy on 2 Fronts to Get Probe Witnesses NEW ORLEANS, La. (AP) Dist. Atty. Jim Garrison moved on two fronts today to get witnesses he wants in his John F. Kennedy assassination conspiracy pr<*e. The district attorney’s office issued a warrant Monday W the arrest of Lilly Mae Mc-Maines, 22, Omaha, Neb., as a material witness. nje U.S. attorney’s office wasj asked by Garrison to issue ani unlawful flight order against Gordon Novel, 29, former owner of a Frrach Quarter bar who disappeared last week before he was to have appeared before the Orleans Parish grand jury. If U.S. Atty. Louis LaCknir honors Garrison’s request, it wodU Mng the FBI into the search for Novel, I think it is very odd that Novel,can be found by newspaper and television media and not by the people who are trying to arrest him,” said Asst. Dist? Atty. James AlCock. There was no immediate word from LaCfour’s office about the request and an FBI spokesman declined to copunent Novel. w w w Some federal authorities are known to look upon Garrison’s investigation with a cold eye. The Warren named by President Johnson to investigate the assassination of President Kennedy in Dallas, Tex., Nov. 22, 1963, concluded that New Orleans-born Lea Harvey Oswald Wax the and acted alone. nomic justice said today that .........capitalism IS a “woeful system.” “Private property does not constitute for anyone an absolute and unconditioned right,” the Pope said in the fifth encyclical of his reign. “No one is justified in keeping for his ex-1 police, elusive use what he does not{ need, when others ladk neces-' sitles.” I The pontiff said every man has “the right to find in the world what is necessary for himseIf...AIl other rights whatsoever, including those of pr-erty and of free commerce, are to be subordinated to this principle. later the Adams Pharmacy, 1955 Woodward, Birmingham, and also Paul And Erma’s Grocery, 6975 Livernois, Troy. The pair is suspected of holding up the Pinkerton Drug Store in Rochester last Wednesday, and Sam’s Drugs, 3359 Auburn, Pontiac Township, according to “If certain landed estates impede the general prosperity because they are extensive, unused or poorly used, or because they bring hardship to peoples or are detrimental to the Interr ests of the country, the conunra good sometimes demands their expropriation.” UNACCEPTABLE’ The Pope also said' it was “unacceptable” for wealthy persons to transfer part of their inicomes abroad “purely for their own advantage, without care for tee muiifost Wroi^ they inflict on their country hy doing this.” Police, Fire Pay Boosted in Waterford Approval of a license to sell CHARLES H. MacMAHON JR. Board Names New Member The Bloomfield Township Board last night named a noted architect to replace a deceased memher of the board. Jones were identified in a line- for not registering a gun. — • " ^ He suggests: • A mandatory course of in- He is Charles H. MacMahon Jjr., 48, of 3630 Franklin, presl- ----------------------------provides a fine, ofljent of Tarapata-MacMahon As- Holmquist said the Dugan and “P to $100 and-or 90 days in jail sociates, 1191 W. Square Lake. He win replace Samuel J. Reeve, who died in January, struction on operation and safe- se^e out the last two ty for every prospective registrant. • Strict determination of wliere and for what the weapon may be used. • A general t e s t of a registrant’s capability to responsibly use a gun. • State licensing ot all gun dealers. “The caliber of the gun isn’t most important,” he said. “It all depends on u^o owns it.” years of a four-year term that began in April 1965. MacMahon has served on the township board of appeals for the last two years. He has won numerous architeftural prizes for himself and his firm. In 1962, he served as president of the Michigan Society of Architects. He has also served on state boards on architecture and land matters. (Continued From Page Oqo) to $10,400 when tee new agreement takes effect New patrolmen and d r i V e r engineers, the starting positions in the police and fire departments, r e s p e c t i V e 1 y, will be ratted from $5,782 to $6,600. Maximum pay for the basic ranks will increase to $7,384 after two years service, rfreeently it is $6,698. Patolman Glenn Phelps, president of the Waterford Township Police Officers Association, and Lt. Donald D. Somerville, president of tbo Town-SUp Fire Fighters Assoctetkm, headed the bargidning for the two service units. Commission to Consider 2 Storm Sewer Projects Two separate storm sewdr projects are scheduled to be given consideration at the meeting of the Cite Commission tonight. (Me of the projects^ would construct a storm sewer on Oakland, Durant and Tallahassee streets at an estimated cost of $32,400. Commissioners^ will be asked to formally approve the eitimate and direct construction of the sewer with monies from tee capital improvement fund. A storm drain outlet at Oak Hill Cemetery is also on the agenda. itr The proposed drain, costing an estimated $4,320 is designed to relieve ponding of storm water in the cemetery as weU as adjacent properties. ^Commisslraers also wUl receive annual reports from the ^l^ent of Parks and Recreation and from the City THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, MARCH 28, 1967 A—3 After the Bomb—2 Questions Dot N-Effect Probe A SPECIA1.I REMINGTON* Electric Shaver aiiiic TOMORROW, Wednesday 10 AM. to 5 P.M. REMINGTON shavers overhauled or tuned-up! Remington factory representative will be here to assure you of expert service. Tune-up Includes: e Clean and lubricate (en* tire shaver disassembled) e New cutter springs e New hair stoppers and dust covers • New oscillator Installed when required Complete Overhaul includes: a New shaver heads • Any damaged or worn parts replaced • Motor parts replaced-lf needed $^88* (Includes cordless models.) FREE bottle of shaving lotion with every Tune-Up or 0verhaul-$1.00 value. See the new REMINGTON 300 SELECTRO shaver! The shaver with the dial-gives a perfect shave every time. Four dial positions adjust shaver heads for every beard and skin condition. Dial TRIM for sideburn trimming. Dial CLEAN for instant cleaning. At SIMMS Only $21.88. SIMASil. 98 N. Saginaw - Main Floor •ELECTRO a LEKTRONIC Tndttnirki at Bparry Rend CorpertUon (Second of a Series) Oy DICK KLEINER i West Coast Comspondent Newspaper Enterprise Assn. SANTA MONICA, CaUf. -What will the world be like after a nuclear war? Gkxxl question, and the one which a series of 22 studies, made by the Rand Corporation for the Atomic Energy Oommis-sirni, attempts to answer. Under the leadership of Robert D. Specht, teams of Rand scientists worked for several years to find answers. In many cases, all they came up with were more questions, but very important questions. For example, a group of Rand matiiematicians, head^ by Bernice Brown, set out to see what statistics had to say about how life expectancy would be affected by nuclear war. Would the survivors live as long as we do now? Or would they even want to live that long? ★ * ★ The scientists quickly found that rats subjected to radiation single acute doses of X — or nuna rays — would die sooner toan the control group. Extrapolating that data to human beings, the report concluded that life expectancy would be shortened at the rate of seven to 12 days per roentgen (a roentgen is a measure of radiation). In other words, a person exposed to 200 roentgens faced life expectancy perhaps 2,000 days — roughly 5% years — shorter than normal. INSUFFICENT DATA But the report added that lere was insufficient data for comparing what happens to rats and what happens to men. “Experiments more directly related to postattack conditions needed,” the report says, “as are more comparisons between species.” Many of the reports included some similar realization that the scientists were working in the dark on much of their research. There’ were so many variables — how large an ab tack would it be? and at what time of year? and would it occur on a nice day or a rainy day? With that in mind, here are some of the reports and their main points: ★ ★ * SOIL EROSION: Since over 90 per cent of all our land slopes more than two degrees, erosion ^ is always a problem. The bestj protection is undisturbed ground cover, but even so it is a constant battle. A nuclear war | uld perhaps disturb the ground cover, certainly diminish i man’s capability to fight the! erosion battle. Soil erosion, the study concludes, is a major postattack problem. OPTIONS OFFERED NUTRITION: Suppose our farmland becomes contaminated, what would the survivors eat? The study says that we have options — “a greater use of sesdood... wildlife, warm-j blooded and cold-blooded animals, and insects... technology can jM’oduce nutritive foods from algae,- oilseed meal and whole fish . .. fishponds, microbial culture and hydroponic farms provide other sourpes of food.” The study suggests there may be possible ways of storing more family food and these should be explored since “the psychological vulnerabili-ity of an already disturbed population should not be increased by the use of unfamiliar foods unless absolutely necessary for nutritional reasons.” FIRE: A study by meteorologist Ralph Huschke attempts to determine what would happen to the 57.2 per cent of our land — 1,660,000 square miles — which is “burnable wildlands.” ★ ★ ★ This study ends on an optimistic note: “The calculqjted probalistic simultaneous f 1 a m-mability is relatively low. For example, on the average, on only seven days per year could as much as 75 per cent of the burnable area be considered flammable, under the most pessimistic assumptions, and less than 20 po* cent could be cim-sido'ed M^y flammable.” NO SOIL DISRUPinON SOIL PRODUCnVITy: Again optimistic — “Extensive bunion of vegetation would not bring about sufficient chwge in the microflora to drastically curtail soil productivity . . . Disruption of either fixxl or. wood prochiction because of damage to soil microfiora is not likely to be one of the problems of a postwar era.” WEATHER: Much conjec- changes they wbuld create “are uncertain.” DISEASE: f)r. If. H. Mitchell of Rand’s public health department starts off by saying a nuclear war would probably disrupt any quarantine system and render inununization procedures unavailable. This would facilitate the spread of disease, and he concludes that tuberculosis how a nuclear war might affect our weather, because of the energy released and .the resultant debris in the atmosphere. Geojrfiysicist Stanley Batten’s study indicates the debris might modify our weather by interfering vrith the normal radiation both entering and leaving the could be “one of the^great prob-atmosphere. lems” after a nuclear war. He *^ * .*. * I also indicates that plague might The™ ere eUrer taetore, but Batten concludes that what I JS^ A Professional School Business Since 1896 ★ Associate in Accounting ; it Associate in Commerce it Associate in Secretarial Science Pontiac Business Institute FEde Lawrence FEderail ^7028 • PROTECTION • PRIVACY • BEAUTY • BUY, SELL, TRADE I USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADSl MUSCULAR ACHpS-PAINS Take PRUVO tablets when you' want temporary relief from minor aches and pains often associated with Arthritis, Rheumatism, Bursitis, Lumbago, Backache and Painful Muscular aches. Relieves these discomforts or your money back. On Sale at . . . SIMMS ’• Chain link fencing is our business! We instnili Pontiac Mall Phoiu- 682-4940 NO STAMPS NO GIMMICKS NO FREE GIFTS... 1st A Soviigs of * ^100 or Moro WhoD Yoo Fioonco Your Now Cor At Pontioc Stoto look! WHY PAY MORE? PER MOO A YEAR This Is the Lowest Rate Offered by Any Financial Institution in This Area Take up to 36 months to repay-We also finance used cars and trucks! The Bank On The “GjRO^F” Pontiac State Bank Main Office Saginaw at Lawrence—ppen 9 a.m. Daily Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation with Deposits Now Insured to $15,000 by F.D.I.C. 12 CONVENIENT OFFICES THE PONTIAC PKESS. TUEI^AY; MARCH 28, 1967 Pay Increases in Farmington Twp. Budget FARMINGTON TOWNSfflP-Wage‘ increases for the supervisor, clerk and treasurer were included in a tentative budget approved by the Township Board last night. The $968,000 budget will not become final until the county tax allocation rates are adopted in June. Hie $100,000 increase over the present budget contains a $3,750 raise for the supervisor from $10,000 to $13,750; a $3,000 increase for the clerk from $8,500 to $11,500; and a $2,000 raise for the treasurer from $8,000 to $10,000. Raises had been recommended by a bipartisan committee studying possible wage The committee recommended a new salary of $12,500 for the supervisor but the Township Board increased the amount to bring it in line with other communities of similar population. PAVING FUND Also included in the budget is $72,500 to be spent on a matching basis with the county for blacktopping of roads. Planned for improvement are Powers from 10 to 11 Mile; 11 Mile from Orchard Lake to Powers; and Drake from Cfrand River to 11 Mile. The budget is based on a 1.7 mill tax allocated by the County Tax Allocation Committee and 2 mills voted increase vdiich has been in effOct for several years. The present county tax allocation is 1.2 mills. Suburbia Revisited Master Plan Is Esslential for Success, ^EDITOR’S NOTE-Much has been said of urban problems — decay of the big city. But what of suburbia? The Pontiac Press presents the second of three stories on "Suburbia Revisit-cr.'V ByJEANSAILE Suburban paradise — that proverbial “room to roam’’ promised by subdivision developers more than a decade ago — often today extends Only as far as the nearest fence. However, problems of suburbia appear as a double - edged sword — high taxes and inadequate services. Consequently, suburban officials — charged with governmental responsibility for the migrants from the cities— have turned to the master plan to solve present and future problems. The object: a more beautiful, decent, healthful, interesting and efficient community. While suburbia’s “good life’’ at this time of year is inclined to get mired in the mud of almost impassable roads, the frustrations of learning that natural “wildlife” is mostly the neighbors’ dogs and the pending annual siege with crab^ass, planning at its best can eliminate the serious problems. Prior to 1940 only three Oakland County cities — Pontiac, Birmingham and Royal Oak -r had planning commissions. IDEA SPREAD By 1953 six other communities—Farmington and Farming-ton Township, Rochester and Avon Township, Pontiac Township and Bloomfield Hills — had accepted the idea and established similar commissions. Since that time, however, planning has gotten a big boost and now only the most rural areas of the county are without such help. Of Oxford ToWnship, the most northerly of those areas to recently fall in line. Development Planning Co. of Waterford Township said a year ago; “Trends of suburban expansion indicate that this area is not nearly as remote from strong growth and building activity as may have been assumed.” Oxford Township was de-cribed as having physical characteristics to be enhanced.and preserved, but vulnerable to being spoiled if not adequately protected by zoning and subdivision policies base don a thorough planning program. SUBURBAN PLANNING Planning in suburbia does not necessarily always involve vacant land. Ttiere are t^er, established cornnhunities mtti all the problems associated ^th the decaying big city. « Where does plamd^ begla? Lake Orion, north of Pontiac, wis established in 1855. Now a suburban community rather than a resort area. Lake Orion has big city problems. ★ * it Dr. Richard McNeU. Lake Orion veterinarian and civic leader recently appointed chairman of the town’s first planning commission, said: MUST BEGIN NOW “Planning ^ould have been started 20 years ago in Lake -Orion, but since it wasn’t, it’s imperative that we get started now.” The town has been cited by the State Water Resources Commission for an inadequate sewer system and given until the end of the year to come up with financing plans for a This is one area which McNeil feels the planning commission can help, and wito that in mind he has applied to the State 0.e-part^ent of Commerce, Community Planning Division, for a federal grant to pay two-thirds of the cost in p\rsparing a master plan for tiie area. “Out of tiiat,” M^eU said, “may come a recommendation to seek some form of urban renewal.” PURPOSE Whatever usage is given su<^, a plan, experts in the field feel that having a plan serves a purpose of its own.' ”lt makes people think about the future and, hi so doing, colors all thefr decisions,” said Peter Belte-macchi, planner with the Oakland County Coordinating Zoning and Planning Committee. Considering that Oakland County’s population is expected to double to 1.6 million by 1990, the problems of suburbia are evident. * * * Already many communities are reaching urgently to answers for the following items: • Inadequate educational facilities. • Ground and surface water pollution caused by a lack of sewer systems. • Drainage problems caused by greater run-off in built-up areas. • A drop in ground water levels due to heavier demands on the supply. >»» • Trafric congestiai on roads original^ Ixiilt to serve only a farming piqnilation, u4ddi now must be widened and paved. • A need for more parks and recreation areas to serve more people.' • More parking a^s fw the same reason. ^ • The disposal of garbage and rubbish. • The need for more police and fire protection and inedietd care facilities. • A need for greater maintenance Of public utilities. GROW’l^ INEVITABLE Accepting suburban growth as inevitable, dje obvious tendency has been to ^ek those families who can afford higher taxes to overcome problems created by a greater influx of people. A hesitance to accept industry, except so-called status companies which do not add unsightliness, noise or smoke to the countryside, has been evidenced by many of the townships. In some cases, such as in Avon Township, even the status industries are having problems obtaining zoning classification to allow their construction. (Next: TTie “Planned Community.” The City CouncU last night appointed members to the first City Planning Commission. WWW Named to three-year terms were Wayne Holman and John Davis. James McCarthy and Christo]dier Boyle were appointed to twO-year terms, and Thomas Flynn and Thomas Barhol received one-year terms. Also on tbe commisslm as a representative of the council will be Thomas Case. i Sw * ■ *■' -V Milford OKs Requirement for Site Plan MILFORD—Developers planning to build multiple dwellings or planned developments involving taro or more acres will have to submit a site plan to the Village Ckxincil for approval. Following a public hearing last night, the council adopted the ordinance requiring site plan aK»roval to give the village some control over off-street parking. VlDago Manager J. S. Brophy said there have been DO problems to date but that problems could develop as the In other business last night, the council appointed Norton Caswell as president protem. He replaces Ralph Weise who did not seek reelection to the council during the recent election. Troy Principal to Head Confab Panel TROY — Joseph Bechard,iMonday and ends Thursday. Ision of “Organizing principal of Troy High School,! Bechard will head a discus-1 School for Change.” will be chairman of a panel!----------------------------------------- during the annual meeting of! Michigan Buying Park Land in Chicago next week^ , JACKSON (AP)-With the aid,Cambridge State Historic Park. of a $34,527 federal grant, thelThe park will include a stage-The conference, to center .State of Michigan is acquiring!coach-stop tavern where Daniel around continued improvement 181 acres of land 18 miles south Webster and James Fenimore of educational programs, beginsjof Jackson for establishment ofICooper were once guests. PROPOSED TROY LIBRARY - The subject of two resolutions on the Troy ballot next Monday is this $500,000 proposed library. One of the propositions is for a bond issue to buy the facility and the other is to.provide one-half mill for operations and paying off the debt. Only property owners can vote on the former issue. Council Picks First Planners ^2nd Rezoni^ Request 1$ Tabled in Roche$ter In other business, the council tabled a second request from developer Norman Naimark for rezoning of property on Wilcox near the township park to allow multiple dwellings. ★ ★ ★ The council previously tabled the request because of a lack of adequate sewers in the area. LIFT STATION In his letter last night, Naimark offered to put in a lift station if the council would reconsider. The matter was tabled until n engineering study on present sewer facilities is completed. ★ ★ ★ The council wants to determine if the sewer system can ‘handle the additional ct^pacity. Avon Twp. Hall Card Party Set AVON TOWNSHIP - A card party will be held at 7:30 p.m. Thursday at the Avon Township Hall, Fourth and Pine. it it it Door and table prizes will be offered, the party sponsored by the Avon Business and Professional Women’s Club. Crime Rate Climbs in Bloomfield Twp. Bill Strike Struck ESSEXVILLE UP) —What’s in a name? Bill Strike, a bowling alley proprietor, could tell you. He notched 12 straight strikes Sunday night in rolling a perfect 300 game in a league match. Parents Invited CLARKSTON - “Back to School Night” will be next Tuesday, 7:30 p.m., in the high school gym. The program offers parents a chance to inspect the new school! addition and meet teachers. { BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP -Vandalism and malicious destruqtion of property incidents kept the township from showing an improved crime picture last year it was revealed in the .police annual report. While reports of felonies showed a 20 per cent drop, 1,689 other, criminal^cidents were 27 per cent highd5|r About one-third of that number, 632, were deliberate damage to houses, cars, churches, schools and other property, said Lt. Martin McLaughlin. Total losses to vaindalism was put at $29,522. it * * Teen-age activities were also a headache to the department, McLaughlin said. 'The police report showed 90 teen parties were investigated for drinking and making noise. I MINORS ARRESTED There were 115 minors arrested for possession of alcohol in the year. Tbe township population Is about 40,000 and its area of coverage excludes Bloomfield HiUs. The traffic report showed police issued fewer tickets in 1966 than they did in 1965 - 3,365 to 3,735 or 370 fewer. ★ * * However, it was a bad years Church Dinner ORTONVILLE - A smorgasbord dinner will be held at Or-tonville Methodist Church, 5-7 p.m. 'Thursday, sponsored by the Women’s Society of Christian Service. deaths recorded as opposed to four in the previous year. j DANGEROUS I INTERSECTION | The worst intersection for. crashes was'in front of the police station at Telegraph atid _ Lake with 40 accidents occurring there. Telegraph kept its reputation for danger with six deaths, one per mile. In the same period, 1,174 tickets for speeding were issued on that highway. . In other statistics, police were! called to assist in 34 cases of fatal heart attack; five persons committed suicide and 14 at-tenipts were made; 37 cars were reported stolen; and no murders were recorded. Troy Man's Exam Set in Auto Chase Case TROY — Examination was set Tor April 4 for Harold R. Moore, 23, of 364 Hickory, arraign^ yesterday on charges of fleeing a traffic arrest and assault on a police officer. Municipal Judge Keith Leenhouts of Royal Oak ordered Moore held under $5,000 bond pending examination April 4. Moore was arrested Sunday after allegedly lead-ing **** * h^gh-speed auto chase through six Three police cars were damaged and four police officers injur^ in accidents during the chase. •k \ir ★ An indecent exposure charge against Moore was dropped because he is undergoing psychiatric treatment for I stmilar offenses, police said. HOW TO CLOSE THAT IMPORTANT SALE. Call Your Client AAeet at Bedell's 2395 Woodward ot$q.LlGRd. 334^561 Discount Department Store Telegraph at 12 Mile Read Has Immediate Openings for Full Time Also— Immediate Openings for Part Time Help... Numerous positions available during the hours from ... 10 a.m. TO 2 p.m. 2 p.m. TO 6 p.m. 6 p.m. TO 10 p.in. BOOKKEEPERS OFFICE CASHIERS STOCKMEN NIGHT AAAINTENANCE SECURITY GUARDS CHECK-OUT OPERATORS SNACK BAR DEPjtRTMENT HEADS and ASST DEPARTMENT HEADS FOR JEWELRY MEN'S WEAR APPLIANCE HARDWARE TOYS PATIO AAust Be 18 Years of Age or Over Apply in Person to ,,, Personnel Department Monday thro Friday-10 a.m. to 12 Noon, 1 p.m. to 4 D.m. ^mart-Telegraph Rd at 12 Mile Rd. •Southfield —. ' ■' ^ ' • THE PONTIAC PEgSS, TUESDAY. MARCH 28, 1967 State Delegation Sefl J for D.C. Crime Talks W^HINGTON (UPI) - Pcwri “Intensified action to r^nce members of the Michigan the rising wave of ^riitie in Crime Commission planned to- the nation is imperative ^ day to attend a national crime Americans aretobefreed control conference which Gov. from fear of repeated attacks Romney says is “of maximum importance to the welfare of Michigan and the nation.” Atty. Gen. Frank J. Kelley, State Police Director Fredrick E. Davids, Crime Commission' by organized and unorganized criminals,” Romeny said yesterday in announcing the i Michigan delegates. “The resources are available . -----------to attack the problem but we Cnairman John B. Martin and have not yet made use of our Commission Director Louis technical and scientific knowl-Rome planned,to attend^the two-,edge or expressed our clear will day conference that began to- to master the problem, day. am convinced that if we devote adequate resources and sufficient imagination to the job, it can be accomplished and our streets and parks aiid playgrounds can again become safe for our citizens." MAJOR STEP’ The conference was called by Atty. Gen. Ramsey Clark and comes shortly after President Johnson’s ctanprehensive report 1 national dime. Clark said the gathering “will be a major step in the development of a national s t r a t e g y against crime.” RAPIDS (AP) Striking meat cutters and butch-' era have set up picket lines at a Iferrud & Co. plant, and drivers and office workers of the Idimsters union have refused to cross the lines. had a sii^iitging E|aster as A ------------------ jplaygroynd for Vacationing col- Twenty-one school systems in lege students, but wouldn’t go Qie nation now operate educa- along with a prosecutor who tional television stations. I called the frolickers '' Blast at Collegians Upsets Florida City FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla.ible” and unwelcome in the fu-lclub that Fort Lauderdale ought ostracism ” for those who comeiweekend. Close to 500 were ar- (AP) — Civic and economic ture. |to end its annual “college crud next year, and notice to all col-rested between Thursday and City Ccpmissionler Allen invasion. The time has come, to leges that the students no longer Sunday, mostly for offenses re- Fwbes said statements Monday I place this despicable class of are welcome. Hated to drinking and disturbing by State Atty. Roger H. Harper showed "an unfortuifate attitude.” Harper told a Hollywood civic tourists on notice it is no longer welcpme in Broward County.” He' suggested police and court crackdowns and “comnmnity * * * I the peace. Several delivery About 30,000 young people | trucks were looted, a courtroom thronged Fort Lauderdale raided for souvenirs, and police beaches and streets over the I officers roughed up. Man Kills Kin. Wounds Pair Pennsylvania Hunt Ends in Slayer's Death ROBINSON, Pa. (AP)-A man killed his brother and wounded two boys, one his son, then was shot to death by state police today, climaxing a short manhunt near this tiny western Pennsylvania community, officers said. Richard Lichtenfels, 35, was killed by the troopers in a cellar where police said, he had taken refuge after slaying his brother, Albert, 42, and wounding his son, I^nald, 15, and a visiting friend, Gary Cku'k, 18, (rf neaiv by New Florence Monday night. The boys were in fair condition at a hospital. * ★ ★ Police said Lt. James Barger and trooper John Bardroff, acting on a tip, went into the cellar of the home of Mr. and Mrs. Donald MacNulty. They opened fire with their revolvers, police said, after catching a glint of light reflected from behind a carpet hanging on a clothes line. Lichtenfels fell to the floor, and was pronounced dead at the scene. He was carrying a double-barreled shotgun. Police said Lichtenfels wounded Donald Lichtenfels and Clark during a family quarrel, then slew his brother, Albert, when he came to investigate. Armed with the shotgun, he fled into heavy woods. MEMO... “NO NEED TO RUN MOUND” ... looking all over ... We Have All The Major Brand Typewriters Our Priest Art Fair Visit Our Mobile Employment Unit Parked at The mart Discount Department Stores 12 Mile at Telegraph Rd. Southfield Now Aeeaptint: AppHeation for • BOOKKEEPERS • OFFICE CASHIERS • CHECK-OUT OPERATORS • SNACKBAR • SALESLADIES • STOCKMEN • NIGHT AAAINTENANCE • SECURITY GUARDS Doparlmont Hoads a Aosistant Dopl. Hoads for JEWELRY - APPLIANCE - TOY HARDWARE - PATIO - MEN'S WEAR CAMERA DEPARTMENT 1 8 Years of Age or Over Apply in Person 9 A.M. to 12 Noon-1 to 4 P.M. Monday Thru Friday End-of-Month CLEARANCE! Woite's Guarantee every item at Least VS OFF! Each ltei|i is reduced a minimum of Vs from the original price it was in our stock. Be here early .. . Odd lots and broken sizes on some merchondise. Corner Saginaw and Huron FE 4-2511 No Phone Orders, COD or Deliveries . . . WiDNESDAY ONLY - ALL SALES FINAL - OPEN 'TIL 5:30 DRESSES, SPORTSWEAR—Third Floor 9 Sixe 34 Wool Cardigan Sweaters, Were 8,99............ 1.00 10 Knit Headbands, Were 1.00...............................44 3 Wool Skirts. Were 10.99 ............................. 1.00 1 Pr. Size 10 Stretch Ski Pants, Were 16.00 ........... 4.00 3 Turtle Neck T-Shirts. Were 3.00 ..................... I.OO 9 Pr. Homespun Slacks. Were 7.99 to 12.99 ............. 4.00 3 Crest Jackets, Navy or Camel, Were 17.99.............10.00 30 Pr. Corduroy Slacks, Sizes 8 to 16, Were 3.99........ 2.00 1 Size 8 Suede Cloth Jacket, Was 18.00 ............... 6.00 12 Machine Washable Orion Knit Skirts, Were 11.99 to 12.99 ................................ 4.00 11 Machine Washable Orion Knit Sweaters. Were 8,99 to 11.99 ................................. 4.00 3 Slack Tops. Were 10.99 to 11.99 ..................... 6.00 1 Blue Size 4 Zip-Out Raincoat, Was'25.00.............. 4.00 1 Size 10 Mink Trim Coat. Was 99.00 . ,................30.00 1 Size 18 Persian Lamb Trim Coat, Was 155.00..........45.00 1 Size 16 Famous Maker Untrimmed Coat, Was 85.00. .35.00 1 Size 10 Untrimmed Coat, Was 45.00 ..................15.00 16 Misses’ Daytime Dresses, Size 8-18, Were 4,00-7.00 1.00 27 Misses & Half Size Dresses, Were 12.00 to 25.00.. 4.00 19 Junior Dresses, Were 15.00 to 18.00................. 6.00 3 Maternity Skirts, Slacks, Sizes 16 and IB, ' Were 5.00 to 8.00................................... 1.00 MEN'S WEAR—Street Floo 43 Men's Dress Shirts. Were 4.00 to 6.00..................... 1.33 4 Men's Bar BQ Aprons. Were 11.00 <......................... 2.45 3 Men's Knit Nite Shirts, Were 6.00........................*2.00 5 Tie and Hankie Sets, Were 3.50 .................................89 4 Men's Reversible Scarfs, Were 7.00 ........................ 2.66 11 Men's Ascots, Were 6.00.................................... 1.78 13 Men's Flannel Nite Shirts, Were 5.00 ...................... 1.78 3 Men's Dress Slacks, Were 25.00 ............................. 5.93 12 Men’s Sweaters. Were 10.00 to 15.00 ....................... 3.97 8 Men's Knit Sport Shirts, Were 4,00 and 5.00................89 19 Men's Sport Shirts, Were 4.00 and 5.00............... 1.33 4 Men's Sport Shirts, Were 9.00............................... 4.44 1 Men’s Knit Sport Shirt, Was 8.00 ........................... 3.33 5 Men's Velour Sport Shirts, Were 10.00 to. 14.00 ... 5.33 2 Men’s Sport Shirts. Were 10.00 .............................. 1,99 10 Men’s Sport Shirts, Were 5.00 and 6.00................. 1.85 13 Men’s Sport Shirts, Were 4.50 and 5.00................. 1.99 FOUNDATIONS, LINGERIE—Second Floor 5 Women's Bras. Were 1.50 and 2.00..................44 4 Women's Bras, Were 3.95 .......................... 1.76 3 Women's Bras, Were 2.00 and 2.50..................99 7 Women's Girdles, Panty Girdles, Were 9.00 and 1 1.00 3.58 3 Women's Girdles, and Panty Girdles, Were 5.00 to 11.00 ................................. 2.58 10 Shift Gowns and Pajamas, Were 6.00.................. 1.78 8 Shirt Gowns, Were 6.00 .............................. 2.67 1 Gown, Was 9,00 .................................... 4.00 8 Sleep Coats, Were 8.00 ............................. 1.58 5 Pajamas, Were 7.00 and 8.00 ....................... 2.02 3 Pajamas. Were 7.00 ............................. 1.48 4 Pajamas, Were 6.00 .............................. 1.19 2 Pajamas, Were 7.00 ................................. 2.81 6 Flannel Gowns, Were 6.00 ......................... 1.99 5 Flannel Gowns. Were 4.00 ......................... 1.33 2 Robes, Were 20.00 .................................. 6.66 1 Robe, Was 30.00 ....................................13.34 1 Robe. Was 21.00 . 9.99 CHILDREN'S VALUES-Second Floor 2 Velvet Toppers, Were 4.98.................................. 3.32 2 Coat Sets, Were 15.00 ..................................... 6.66 1 Corduroy Jump Suit, Was 4.00 . ............................ 2.67 6 Infant’s Dresses, Were 4.00 ............................... 2.67 1 Coat Set, Was 18.00 ..................................... 8.00 1 Pram Suit, Was 11.00 ...................................... 4.90 1 iadler Knit Suit, Was 8.00................................. 2.67 2 Cord Toppers, Were 6.00 ................................. 4.00 1 Infant's Velvet Suit. Was 4.98 ........................... 3.32 37 Thermal Blanket Sleepers, Were 3.99........................ 1.85 2 Sleepers. Were 4.98 and 5.98 ............................. 3.32 I Christening Dress, Was 15.99 .............................. 4.74 9 Girl's Size 7 to 14 Blouses, Were 7.00................... 3.33 22 Girl's Hats and Caps, Were 2.99 and 4.00.................. 1.66 15 Gloves and Mittens, Were 1.99 and 2.99........................66 4 Girl's Slacks, Were 5.00 .................................. 2.66 4 Girl's Size 7 to 14 Coats, Were 13.00..................... 5.34 23 Girl’s Size 7 to 14 Blouses, Were 5.00 and 6.00 .... 2.66 11 Girl's Size 7 to 14 Dresses, Were 5.00 to 10.00____________ 1.99 9 Girl's Size 7 to 14 Dresses, Were 10.00 to 15.00 .. 3.99 3 Girl's Size 7 to 14 Dresses, Were 5.00 ................... 1.33 18 Girl's Size 7 to 14 Dresses. Were 10.00 to 17.00........... 3.33 13 Girl's Size 3 to 6X Sweaters, Were 4.00 and 5.00. . . 1.99 5 Girl's Size 3 to 6X Slacks. Were 3.99.................... 1.33 II Girl's Size 3 to 6X Pajamas, Were 2.00.......................66 47 Giri's Size 3 to 6X Pajamas. Were 2.25 to 4.00.... 1.33 3 Girl's Size 3 to 6X Skirts, Were 2.39 ..................... 1.60 FASHION ACCESSORIES—Street Floor 2 Women's Handbags, Were 9.00 ............................. 6.00 3 Suede Like Handbags, Were 8.00 ........................; . 5.67 4 Leather Shoulder Bags. Were 8.00 ...................... . . 5.67 2 Casual Handbags, Were 6.00 .................• •........... 4.00 5 Clutch Purses, Were 4.0O .............................. . 2.37 7 Clutch Purses, Were 3.50 ...........................*■.. . 2.14 5 Clutch Purses, Were 3.00 ................................. 2.00 4 Clutch Purses, Were 1.00 ...................................67 2 Soiled Clutch Purses, Were 5.00........................... 3,._44 5 Small Size Sweaters, Were 3.99 ......................... 2.66 4 Wool Lace Scarves, Were 2.55 ............................ 1.68 5 Wool Lace Scarves, Were 5.00 ........................... 3.33 18 Triangle Scarves, Were 2.00 ............................. 1.34 7 Triangle Scarves. Were 1.00 ................................66 10 Dickies, Were 2.00 ........................................1.34 13 Dickies, Were 2.50....................................... 1.68 41 Turtle Neck Shells, Were 7.00 ............................ 4.67 21 Shells, Were 6.00 .............-........................ 4.00 8 Shells. Were 3.00 ....................................... 2.00 29 Shells. Were 6.00 .................................... 4.00 1 Large Size Lace Shell, Was 3.00 ........................i'’ 2.00 5 Pr. Earrings, Were 1.00.......................................44 2 Pr. Earrings, Were 4.00 ................................. 1.79 2 Gold Necklaces. Were^ 2.00....................................89 8 Pr. Earrings, Were 2.00......................................89 1 Silver Necklace, Was 3.00 ................................. 1.34 1 Pr. Earrings, Were 3.00 .................................. 1.34 56 Wood Necklaces and Earrings, Were 2.00 . . i............. 1.34 26 Wood Earrings, and Bracelets, Were 1.00.......................67 9 Pr. Textured Hosiery, Were 2.95 ..................... 1.95 66 Pr. Textured Hosiery, Were 1.65 .........................75 22 Pr. Textured Hosiery, Were, 2.00 ...................... 1.00 17 Pr. Textured Hosiery, Were 2.00 ..................... 1.00 5 Pr. Hosiery, Were i.50 .................................... 1.00 5 Pr. Hosiery, Were 1.65 .................................. 1.00 1 Hosiery Hamper. Was 2,00......................................89 25 Pr. Slippers. Were 4.00 .................................. 2.67 19 Pr. Slippers, Were 3.00 ................................... 2.00 14 Pr. Slippers, Were 4.00 .................................. 2.67 1 Pr. Slippers. Were 5.00.................................•. 3.34 1 Pr. Slippers, Were 6.00 ................................... 4.00 1 Pr. Slippers, Were 2.00 ................................... 1.34 6 Pr. Slippers, Were 3.50 ................................... 2.34 NOTIONS, COSMETICS—Street Floor Assorted Stationery, Was 3,00 ......................... 2.00 12 Calendars, Were 2.00 ................................... 1.34 5 Candles, Were 1.00 . .......................................45 8 Candles. Were 2.00 ..................................... .89 1 Candle, Was 89c............................................40 3 Candles, Were 50c .........................................34 3 Candles, Were 40c .........................................27 1 Candle, Was 45c ...........................................30 9 Boxes Candles, Were 1.25 .................................56 65 Pen Points, Were 33c to 57c................................05 2 Pkg, Cocktail Napkins, Were 39c ..................... .26 I Puzzle. Was 3.50 . .'..............................1.56 4 Air Freshners, Were 1.50 .................................67 1 Orion Robe. Was 15.00.................................. 6.67 1 Orion Robe, Was 12.98 .........................,.......,5.98 1 Nail Brush, Was 1.00 .................................. .67 5 Roller Picks, Were 29c .................................-.13 1 Card Table Cover, Was 3.50 ............................. 1.34 1 Sanitary Brief, Was 1.85 .............................. 1.24 3 Rain Deers, Were 2.60 .................................. 1.74 4 Rain Deers, Were 2.50 ..............................*. 1.67 11 Decorator No-Moth, Were 87c ................................58 1 Rain Coat, Was 3.99 .................................... 1.78 16 Patent Shoe Dye, Were 1.25 .................................36 3 Pr. Scissors, Were 1.67 ............ .................. 1-12. 2 Pr. Scissors. Were 2.09................................ 1.40 1 Pr. Scissors, Was 67c .................................. .45 6 Milk of Magnesia, Wore 49c ............................... 09 18 Shave Cream, Were 69c ................................... 46 6 After Shave, Were 4.00 ................................. 2.00 5 Men's Cologne, Were 5.00 ............................... 2.50 19 Sun Glasses. Were 1.99 ....................................89 2 Compacts, Were 75c ................’......................33 1 Men's Cologen. Was 7.00................................. 3.50 48 Aspirin. Were 39c ..........................................13 7 Shampoo, Were 59c .........................................39 1 Shampoo. Was 1.00 ..........................................66 23 Mouth Wash, Were 59c...................................... 39 CURTAINS, DRAPERIES, ETC.—Fourth Floor 2 Colored Sheets, 72x108, Were 3.60..................... 2.00 1 Feather Pillow, Was 8.99 ........................... 2.25 1 Bates Bunk Spread, Was 7.00 .......................... 3.50 1 Bates Twin Spread, Was 7.00........................... 3.50 1 King Heirloom Spread, Was 24.99 ......................12.50 1 Full Print Spreads, Were 16.99 ....................... 4.25 1 Twin Maflesse Spread, Was 24.99 ...................... 6.25 fabrics, linens—Fourth Floor 7 Skirt Markers, Were 2.98 ............................. 1.50 6 Neckline Zippers, 18", Were 50c .................... . .25 96 Neckline Zippers. 14”, Were 45c,................ .20 129 Dress Zippers, 12", Were 40c............................20 5 Yds. Abbey Flannel. Were 3.00 ........................ 1.50 20 Yds. Plaid Fabrics, Were 3.00 ........................ 1.50 I Yds. Red Crepe, Were 2.00 . . ..................... 1.00 12 Yds. Boucle Fabric, Were 3.00 ........................ 1.50 53 Brocade, Were 3.00.................................... 1.50 6 Mixer Covers, Were 1.80 .......................... .45 3 Lilac Bath Towels, Were 3.00 ........................ 1-50 1 Lilac Hand Towel. Was 1^0 ......................... .90 9 Print Bath Towels, Were 4.00 ........................ 2.00 5 Print Bath Towels. Were 2.50........................ 1.25 7 Print Wash Clothes, Were 1.00 ..........................50 30 Emb. Border Bath Towels, Were 4.00................. 2.00 22 Emb. Border Hand Towels, Were 2.50................. 1.25 32 Erhb. Border Wash Cloths, Wyre 1.00.................. .50 2 35” Rd. Rugs. Were 8.00 ............................. 4,00 1 Rug 21x36, Was 5.00.................................. 2,50 2 Contour Rugs, Were 5.00............................... 2.50 1 Rug, 27x48, Was 9.00 ................................. 4.50 2 Contour Rugs, Were 4.00 ............................. 2.00 2 Toilet Lids. Were 2.00 ............................... 1.00 1 Toilet Lid, Was 2.50 ................................ 1,75 1 21x36 Rug, Was 4.00 ................................. 2.00 1 24x42 Rug, Was 6.00................................. 3.00 1 24x36 Rug, Was 6.00................................. 3.00 1 27x48 Rug, Was 6.99 ............................... 3.50 11 Wash Cloths. Were 40c ...................................20 2 Girl's Size 3 to 6X Jumpers, Were 9.00 to 11.00.... 2.66 3 Girl's Size 3 to 6X Dresses, Were 3.39 to 4.00 1.33 5 Girl's Size 3 to 6X Dresses, Were 5.00 1.99 18 Girl's Size 3 to 6X Dresses, Were 7.00 and 8.00... 2.66 9 Size 3 to 6X Winter Jackets, Were 8.00 2.66 1 Winter Jacket, Was 9.99 4.00 1 Faded Napped Thermal Blanket, Was 8.00 5.00 9 Bunk Size Ribbed Spreads, Were 9.00 4.50 8 Twin Size Ribbed Spreads, Were 11.00 5.50 8 Full Size Ribbed Spreads, Were 11.00 5.50 6 SWx 84 Fiberglass Drapes, Were 11.00 5.00 R Ar^tafA HrapAV \A/Ar# R DO 7 Of) 2 Size 3 to 6X Snow Suits, Were 10.00 and 12.99.... 4.00 3 Size 3 to 6X Winter Coats, Were 23.00 to 25.00.. 8.66 15 Size 3 to 6X All Weather Coats. Were 7.99 to 9.00.. 4.00 5 Size 3 to 6X Caps, Were 2.25 99 4 Boy's Gloves and Mittens, Were 1.59 to 2.25 ..'... .66 6 Boy's Sport" Shirts, Were 5.00 and 10.00 2.66 11- Boy's Sweaters, Were 3.99 to 6.00 1.99 3 Boy’s Sport Coats, Were 16.00 10.67 ' 5 Boy's Sport Coats, Were 22,Q0 14.67 18 Bov’s Ear Muffs. Were 1.19 .. . .. .4#; 7 Curtains, 24", Were 3.99 1.00 3 Twin Quilted Spreads, Were 20.00 5.00 I Full Quilted Spread, Was 25.00 6.25 1 Queen Quilted Spread, Was 33.00 . 8.25 1 Queen Printed Spread, Was 25.00 12.50 1 King Print Spread, Was 27.00 13.50 2 Twin Quilted Spreads. Were 26.99 13.50 1 Twin Quilted Spread. Was 24.99 12.50 1 Twin Quilted Spread, Was 29.99 15.00 7 Full Coverlets Were 14 99 .... 7.50 34 Boy's Hats and Caps. Were 2.25 and 3.00 . 1.13 14 Boy's Corduroy Sport Shirts. Were 3.49 1,13 39 Boy's Thermal T-Shirts, Were 1.69 , .33 28 Boy's Sport Shirts, Were 2.50 and 3.00 1.13 20 Boy’s Dress Shirts, Were 2.59 .66 19 Boy's Dress Shirts, Ware 3.(30 and 4.00 1.13 22 Boy's Sport Shjrts, Wera 1.59 and 2.99 .... .66 7 Boy's Pajamas, Wera 3.00 ;... 1.31 1 Full Print Quilted Spread, WaS 29.99 15.00 1 Full Spread, Was 27.50 13.75 3 Dual Twin Spreads, Were 19.88 5.00 2 Imported Spreads. Twin Size, Were 55.00 .10.00 1 Twin Print Spread. Was 14.98 ISO 6 Rocker Sets, Were 8.00 2.00 4 6-Way Pillows. Print, Were 4.99 1.25 3 6-Way Pillows. Were 6.99 1.75 OUSEWARES, CHINA, ETC.—Lower Level . 6.88 . 2.22 . .44 . $.44 ,. .44 .. 3.44 .. .88 .. 6.66 .. 6.66 .. 6.66 .. 3.22 .22.00 .. 1.88 . .2.44 1 Mirror Fry Pan, Was 3.98 .......................... 1 Service for 8 Pottery Dishes, Were 12.88........... •1 Tall Ceramic Vase, Was 6.98 ...................... 4 Plastic Fruit Bowls, Were 66c ..................... 1 Black Wrought Iron Candle Holder, Was 11.00 2 Plastic Snack Servers, Were 1.98 ................. 7 Swedish Colonial Coffee Grinders, Were 9.98 ., 10 Artificial African Violets. Were 1.98............. 1 Brass Towel Stand, Was 10.95 ..................... 1 Brass Towel Tree. Was 9.98 ....................... 1 Fireplace Tong, Was 9.98 ......................... 1 Decorator Candles, Were 8.98...................... 1 Shetland Scrubber. Was 38.00 ...................... 6 Steam Iron Storage Holders, Were 2.98............. 7 Sizzle Platters for Steaks, Were 3.98............. 3 8 Transistor Portable Transistor Radios. Were 8.88 4.88 2 Table Model Transistor Radios, Were 8.88................. 4.88 2 Rubbermaid Turntables, Were 4.98 ......................... 3.22 9 Rubbermaid Vegetable Bins, Were 1,98 ...................... ,88 1 Snow Blower, Was 89.95 ....................;..............49.00 2 Battery Oper.’ Wall Clocks, Wei 2 Plastic Bread Boxes, Were 4, 2 Muffin Pans. Were 1 Double Broiler, Was 4.49 .......................... . . . ; 2.88 1 6-qt. Covered Sauce Pot, Was 3.99......................... 2.44 1 Sauce Pan, Was 2.79 .......................................1.44 3 Cookie Sheets, Were 1.29....................................88 3 Square Cake Pans, and Loaf Pans, Were 1.29...................88 1 Nine Cup Percolator, Was 3.99............................. 2.44 1 Electric Cordless Sifter. Was 4.98 .................... 2.22 6 Black Wronght Iron Stack Shelves, Were 1.50...........88 3 Hurricane Candle Lights with Oil, Were 5.00 .... 2.88 2 Buffet Warmers, Were 2.50 .............................. 1.66 4 Cradles, Were 3.50 ..................................... 2.22 2 Cradles. Were 3.00 ....................................... 1.88 Were 24.95 .........t/12.88 4.95 .............3.22 5 10", Fry Pans, Were 10.00 ............................. 2 13/4 Qt. Casseroles, Were 6.00 ........................ 1 8'/2 inch Skillet, Was 7.00 ........................... 1 4 Qt. Dutch Oven, Was 14.00 ........................... 2 Wax Paper Dispensers, Were 4.95 ...................... 4 Hurricane Candle Lights, Were 1.98 .................... 8 Chop Plates. Were 3.00 ................................ 10 Cereal Bowls, Were 1.00................................ 1 Mug, Was 1.00 ......................................... 4 Red or Green Lighter Fluid Candles, Were 3.00.. 2 Sets of Candles and Holders, Were 6,00................ 3 Metal Shelves, Were 4.98 ............................. 2 3-Tier Shelves, Were 5.98 ............................. 2 Metal Waste Baskets, Were 3.98 ........................ . 6.66 . 3.88 . 4.66 . 9.22 . 3.22 . 1.88 . 3.88 . 3.22 . 3.88 . 2.22 RUGS, TOYS, ETC.—Fifth Floor 1 Boy's Tigercat Bicycle, Was 38.00 .....................23.00 1 12" Tricycle, Was 17.77 ..........’.................... 9.88 1 16" Tricycle. Was 19.97 ...............................10.88 1 Horse Pedal Cart, Was 24.95 ...........................15.88 1 Deluxe Fire Truck, Was 19.95 ..........................12.88 6 Lionel Train Engines. Were 14.99 ...................... 5.88 1 Table Tennis Set, Was 7.98 ............................ 3.88 1 Dart Board Game. Was 4.98.................................44 4 Children's Skis. Were 7.98 ............................ 4.88 5 Children's Skis, Were 8.98 ........................... 5.88 1 Pr. Children's Skis. Were 10.98 ....................... 7.81 1 Wooden Doll Crib, was 8.99 ............................ 6.88 1 Bicycle Accessory Kit, Was 4.99 ....................... 2.88 1 Skibble Game, Was 4.99 ................................ 2.88 1 Carron Board Game, Was 8.99 .......................... 6.88 1 Basket Ball Game, Was 12.99 ........................... 7.88 1 Doll Bathinette, Was 4.99 ............................ 2.88 1 Modern Floor Lamp, Was 19.99 ..........................10.88 1 Floor to Ceiling Pole Lamp, Was 19.99..................13.33 4 Ceiling Swag Lamps, Were 29.95 .......................13.33 1 Ceiling Swag Lamp, Was 39.95 ................16.88 1 Rayon Scatter Rug, 36x60, Was 9.00 ............... 5.88 1 Nylon Scatter Rug, 36x66, Was 8.98 ................ 5.88 1 Cotton Scatter Rug, 27x48, Was 3.97 ................ 1.4^ 6 Cotton Scatter Rugs, 24x36, Were 3.00 ......... 1.88 8 Wool Oval Braid Rugs. Were 4.99.................... 2.12 6 Hooked Oval Rugs, Were 5.98.............................3.88 2 Oval Fringed Rugs, Were 4,25 ......................... 1.4 9^ Oval Braid Rugs, Were 6.49 ........................... 4.22 1 12'x13'/2' Nylon Carpeting. Was 7.95 yd. ...........yd. 4.33 THE PONTIAC PRESS 41 West Huron Street Pontiac, Michigan 4805S JOKN ' toeut TUESDAY, MARCH 28, 1967 }otm A. Riut itlT* Vtei PreiMtat Airports May Answer to New Names The aviation committee of the Oakland Cioimty Board of Supervisors gave answer to the immortal question posed by Shakespeare’s Juliet, “What’s in a Name?’’ when is recommended name changes for the area airports the County now owns. If the changes are adopted, the Pontiac Municipal Airport, acquired by the County from the City three months ago, would become Oakland-Pontiac Airport, and the Allen Airport near Lake Orion henceforth be known as Oakland-Orion Airport. ★ ★ ★ Since the expanding air age has broadened the concept of airport facilities from local to community utility, the new designations are in keeping with the times and reflect a good measure of common , sense. Though “Pontiac Municipal Airport,’’ by which the local establishment has been known for four decades, may hold sentimental appeal for some with regret over its absorption by a more meaningful designation, the spirit of the times is change; and it is incumbent on the citizenry to alter its thinking accordingly. ★ ★ ★ For our part, we think the proposal of the aviation committee has the merit of realism andfshould be put into effect. Unification Vietnam Will-o’-the-Wisp In a posthwously published article entitled “Two Thousand Years of War in Vietnam,” historian Bernard Fall provides a valuable perspective on theT^ig and bloody hisjtory of this ancient land—a history that promises lo be no less bloody in the foreseeable future. Professor Fall, one of the most distinguished commentators on Vietnamese affairs, was killed by a Viet-cong booby trap in February. ★ ★ ★ Vietnam’s geographic location has always made it a melting pot of cultures, chiefly Indian and Chinese, his article observes. “The history of the South has been shaped by the kind influence of Buddha; that of the north, where China has always prevailed, by the far sterner philosophies of Confucius and Lao-tse.” Vietnam has also b e e n a battleground for foreign armies and foreign ideologies. It began ’at least as early as 111 B.C., when the Chinese overran what is now North Vietnam. Their occupation lasted for 1,050 years, rmtil A.D. 939. During those 10 centuries, a Hinduized/people in the south called the Chams were ex- termined by Vietnamese invaders from the north. After the ouster of the Chinese, the Vietnamese settled down to what Fall describes as “their favorite national pastime — bitter quarrels among themselves in general, and between northerners and southerners in particular.” ★ ★ ★ By 1613, “the two Vietnams” had broken apart and were only reunified in 1802 after years of savage civil war. Then came the French, who took over in 1865 and remained as a colonial power for 90 y6ars. Today, says Fall, north and south have again diverged under the influence of China and Russia in the north and America th the south. Meanwhile, a “third Vietnam” liyes in the battle-torn countryside of the south — the Vietcong and its northern allies. Fall recalled a prophetic observation made by a young Vietnamese author in 1931; “We arc a people who are looking for a country and hate not yet found it.” ★ ★ ★ Thirty-six years later, he concludes, that search is still going on, more desperately than ever. Solons Hear Sensible Reply to Silly Proposal A U.S. Senate subcommittee is investigating the Government’s war on poverty, including a proposal that everyone; be guaranteed an income, regardless. ’The subcommittee decided to call in representatives of the poor and hear what they thought about it. ★ ★ ★ A disabled Kentucky miner Only a 'Swinger* Can Win Contest An old diamond axiom is that you can’t get a hit if you don’t go to bat Ditto for The Pontiac Press Annual Baseball Contest. You’ll never experience the thrill of clasping to your bosom the $500 U.S. Savings Bond winner’s award if you don’t make with an entry. Having stated this immutable truth, we append a few simple directions to keep your entry from striking out. ★ ★ ★ What you do first, of course, is to pick the American League batter and his average that will lead the league after the games played on Sunday, May 7 — the close o^ the contest. Oh, yes — your boy must have tripped to the plate at least 50 times. Next, you note these predictions on a postal card, or card of similar size, and address it to The Pontiac Press Baseball Contest, P.O. Box 9. Natch, you’d include the name of the club whose uniform your hope wears and your own name and address. David Lawrence Says: Something to Cry Over! Handcuff of Military Like Korea WASHINGTON-The theme which is of 'growing importance in world affairs today is how to end a war and save thousands of lives. There is f r u s t r a-tion currently because, in the hope of placating the enemy, American armed services are being restricted in fighting would like to do. In the Korean war, although the U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff recommended unanimously that the air bases and supply lines, north of the Yalu River be bombarded, the diplomats of governments friendly to the the United States intervened and really prevented such a strategy from being adopted by the United Nations Command. Thus, the war was LAWRENCE thought this: “A lot of people, if they know they are going to get a certain amount of money, they aren’t going to work,” It will be interesting to see if proponents of the guaranteed income can come up with a rejputtal anywhere near as brief, succinct and persuasive. Not to say sensible. This done, you’re in the contest-provided (to paraphrase the line of a “My Pair Lady” song) you get it to The Press on time. And that means by Saturday noon, April 8. The judges are pretty sticky on this point. Even if your entry bears a postmark prior to the deadline but trails in after it, your work will have been in vain. ★ ★ ★ You can mail your entry in— you’ll make the judges happy by ^ not enclosing it in an envelope— or slip it into the newspaper’s Huron Street drop box . . . No, we wouldn’t recommend delivery by bottle cast into the sea. It’s a corking idea, but suppose the bottle got stuck on a bar—then where’d you be? Sure, everyone in the family can enter the contest—from the baby in its crib to gramps in his rocker. But we do remind you that par is one entry per man, woman or child. The contest is off limits for employes of The Press and immediate members of their families. We wouldn’t want to invite a Congressional investigation by having one of our owh bag the bond. We think we’ve touched ail the bases. It’s now up to you. We’ll be waiting to hear from you. This, of course, is one of the risks of war. But, in the long run, military policy prevails — usually after expensive delays. For no war can be won making concessions to the enemy on the battlefield. Nor is a termination of hostilities likely as long as the enemy feels it-has what are known as “privileged sanctuaries.” One growing segment of op- Bob Considine Asks: position to the administration now is demanding, therefore, that the war be fought without giving the enemy- any “privileged sanctuary.” There is a rising opinion that, unless restrictions are removed, the-cost in lives to the United States and its allies will go higher and higher and the war will be. drawn out for many years. Voice of the People: ‘Overhead Walk Needed for Safety of Students* Wever Elementary and Kennedy Junior High students must cross Baldwin, north of Walton, just when shop traffic is heaviest. This is a dangerous crossing, as some drivers never slow down until the traffic light stops them at Baldwin and Walton. ★ ★ ★ The need for an overhead walk is evident. The guard who guides the children across has no traffic ^ signal at New York to aid him and has no idea whether oiicoming cars will heed his stop sign, or if they can stop in time. His life and the children’s hang on chances. ★ ★ ★ How do we go about getting an overhead walk installed? May we have your support, Commissioner Hudson? CLARIS M. SHEPHERD 33 E. NEWPORT Resident Commends Sylvab Lake Postman When readers have been writing letters about mail delivery failures because of hazardous and delaying road conditions, I commend our Sylvan Lake postman. Our regular carrier, Mr. Ted David, has never failed to deliver our mail reasonably on time, no matter how difficult the driving. He is always courteous and obliging. His patrons appreciate it. A SYLVAN LAKE RESIDENT ‘First Floor of Hospital Safest for Children’ I have heard that Pontiac Osteopathic Hospital is gdhg to move Pediatrics to the seventh floor. Why? It is now on the first floor. We all love our children very much so leave them on first floor where they are protected. CONCERNED I' N(wn>«p*r Syndlctlt) Question and Answer 'To settle an argument which Includes a good box of cigars. Who‘was the winning batter and his average in last year’s Pontiac Press Baseball Contest? F. V. REPLY Tony Oliva, with an average of .38554. THE BETTER HALF What Would Clay Take to Join North Viet Army? Today the Korean dilemma is being repeated. Sen. Stuart Symington of Missouri, Democrat, formerly secretary of the Air Force, who has just returned from a trip to South Vietnam, has emphasized that the American military forces are being restrained end that they are not be-iuR permitted to fight the war in Vietnam as they lengthy report on his month-long Asian trip was submitted to the Senate Armed Services Committee and to the Senate Foreign Relations Committee after having been cleared by the Defense Department so as to eliminate classified information. But what was made public contains a significant revela-tion-namely, that talks with pilots indicate a widespread dissatisfaction with the interference by civilians in Washington with the operations of the war. Fears have been expressed in diplomatic circles that, if American pilots bomb the air bases in North Vietnam, the enemy would start operating from Chinese bases. Verbal Orchids Mrs. Lena Molter of 532 Tex; 91st birthday. Mrs. Mary Beutler of 1016 E. Walton; 83rd birthday. Mr. and Mrs. George W. Mnrthum of Oxford; S7th wedding anniversary. Mrs. Charles Miller of Rochester; 81st birthday. Homer Fowler of 135 Oakland; 82nd birthday. Frank W. Cove of 70 S. Tasmania; 81st birthday. Mr. and Mrs. Harry M. Luzon of 34 Murphy; 54th wedding anniversary. Mr. and Mrs. Guy Beatty of 1011 Boston; 62nd wedding anniversary. NEW yORK-Wonder what Cassius Clay would charge to join the North Vietnamese army instead of ours? It would be worth w h a t-ever he asks. The demoralization which our tentative bombing of that country has not been CONSIDINE able to achieve should quickly set in, once Muhammad was on the scene. His poetry, postures and poutings might combine to convinice Ho Chi Minh for the first time that his side wasn’t going to ^rin with that kind of fellow in the rimks. If this switch can’t be made, the United Sthtes army is going to wind up with the guy. The sergeant who draws him may well become the first top-kick who ever received letters of sympathy. ★ ★ ★ The rookies in Clay’s induction class may be the first defectors we’ve had since the Korean War. God save the United States Army! Edward L. Bernays, founder-president of the Cambridge, Mass., foundation that bears his name, has embarked on a brave mission aimed at getting Americans and Britons to understand each other. That’s been fried since 1620 with only middling results. But Mr. Bernays Is not a faint-hearted man, as all who revere him in public relations and communications will attest. He has put up a $5,000 award, open to one and all, for a comprehensive program that might destroy the myths and half-truths that divide 53 million Britons fi-om 198 million Americans. * * * The entries must not exceed 5,000 words nor be mailed later than June 30. Mr. Bernays and his $5,000 reside at 7 Lowell St., natch, in the aforementioned Cambridge. “Regrettably, bur two governments have not yet recognized the Impoilance of adequate information and have provided only niggardly sums to substitute truth for false stereotyping. “A communications gap exists that must be bridged. “The future of the free world is bound up in the mutual understanding of the peor pie of our two great democracies.” “This was a day of Infamy . . . I heard my secretary refer to me as ‘skin-head’ and one o! the file clerks actually called me ‘jelly-belly’!” In Washington: Viet War Imposes Strain on LBJ Now hear the good spul: “Our respective governments communicate to the peo^e overseas through the British Information Services and the United States Information Service. By BRUCE BIOSSAT WASHINGTON (NEA) Prosecuting a limited war in Vietnam in the enlarging shadow of the 1968 election campaign imposes upon Pr e s i d ent Johnson a strain no other U.S. chief ex-T ecutive h a s ^ ever had to bear. The closerl the time of po-| litical com-l bat comes, the greater will be the pressure upon the President to find some way 1867 'V A--H8 iTy, PpiyTI4(!;WaiB8/ , IBK8DAX. M ^*’® )S SCXt6t WoeliincftAn TVin CnnricA Ptimr ★ k k' ’ WKHS Girls’ Athletic Association will start plans soon for its Underprivileged Children’s Day in April. The constitution of Ketterings Student Council is undergoing a series of amendments this week. Started before spring vacation, amendments concerning criterion for councii members and council officers were voted on and passed. Washington Trip Sunrise Choir. In his spare time, he helps toe Dramatics Club with musicals as well as Field Day songs and toe annual variety show. TTie choir has received tovi-ations to sing at the Franklin Church and Derby Junior High School and was recently auditioned by WXYZ for a color television program. ★ ★ I The choir will also be putting on a pop concert at Seaholm this spring. 16th CENTURY MUSIC Emphasis this year is on musical selections from toe 16th century to present day, including major works. k k k George B. Cribbs, co-ordinator of music in the Birmingham School System has been to act as a guest conductor of the choir and there will be oth- Utica Musical Is Cast Pontiac Prasi Photo ROYAL TWOSOME — King Arthur (Richard Linden) and his queen, Guinevere (Diane Fisher), practice a duet for Utica High School’s forthcoming musical, “Camelot.” The production will be presented April 6, 7 and 8 in the high school auditorium. Diane is a senior and Richard a junior. By SUSJ^ OWEN Leads for Utiba High Sdiool’s production of “Catoelot” are Richard Lihden, King ArQuir; Michael Reinhart, Lancelot; and Diane Fisher, Guinevere. * * * Richard has been active in the mixed ensemble, boys’ quartet, the Shelby Choir, several plays and received a first-division award in a solo competition. He took part to the Fred-Waring School of Music and idayed Emile in last year’s ‘'South Pacific.” Michael has studied piano for 11 years. Earning scholarships, he has attended Interlochen for two years and was judged first in the district and state at the Piano Festival. ★ ★ ★ He also received a scholarship to the Fred Waring School of Music and is in the mixed ensemble. Michael won a first-division in toe Vocal Festival. IN MIXED ENSEMBLE Diane was the alternate for Nellie Frobush in ‘‘South Pacific."’ She is in toe mixed semble and has studied piano for five years. Last summer, Diane received a scholarship to the Meadow Brook School of Music where she studied under R:bert Shaw. The alternates for these parts are Ken Koltys, King Arthur Chris Spenser, Lancelot; and Jane Specht, Guinevere. k k k Since “Camelot” is set in the days of King Arthur, the costumes will reflect this period. LONG SLEEVES Bright and multicolored, toe girls’ dresses will be floor-length and havpjong, flowering sleeves, ’^e boys will wear tunic and tights but also need diain mail, helmets and othm- mhtolals of battle. ' C%o^graphy wfll be direct-ed by Mrs. Ddiy Dibiey. Scenes will include “The Lusty Mtmto of May,” to which a maypole will be turned; “The Enchanted Forest,”| a ballet of beasts of toe foreit; “The Flag Ceremony,” a jwe-cision drill. Songs by Alan Jay Leraer and Fre^ick Loke, such as “Camelot,” “The Lusty Month of May,” ‘C’est Moi,” and “If Ever I Would Leave You,” provide a high point in toe musical. * ★ ★ Tickets for this production went on sale March 6. The presentation is scheduled for April *’ 7 and 8. . k k k Afternoon UHS students are concerned about their new Ad-lai Stevenson High School. ASHS will be located on Dodge Park Road just south of Utica Road. It will be a one flbor building and will have bigger and more improved classrooms in addition to having 40 more classrooms than Utica High School for a capacity of 1,800 students. -'■'■'■•nSCHOOL NEWS Brother Rice By GARY MILLER Last week a representative, A. A. Johnson, from the United! I The Student Council recently | E. C. Ojala directs 'informed the students that they “Rhythm Rascals.’ have received permission to sponsor an orphan. Jung Soon Bok is a Korean the ed well known guest directors states Coast Guard Academy/f^\he*’Tor2?^W^^^ before the year term,bate,. u.kIo„ Conn addressed „,„u,er i, unable to nrovlde a*. I members of the student body at quately for her. She is a fifth Brother Rice. grader whose favorite subject is hJpi-JQ officer of the Coast Guard, music. • viriO OfcffllUlo.he explained what the campus j Linda Marshall received an was like and what toe academic!honorable mention in the Betty life of a student consisted of. ! Crocker knowledge and aptitude He'also informed the students, oxomination. of the ROTC program and told! The RHS Teen Center commit-relaxing and preparing for them part of the military train-,u*^^^** the direction of Chris- 3 last strenuous^ quarter ^ of ing was to sail a square-rigger l^oe Corbin, is presently work- classes and special activities, the U.S.S. Eagle, from Boston to raising projects. 1 Members of the social commitr Seattle. I Teen-agers interested in the tee will have an especially Off Thursday for D. C. Visit SPRING SING - Debbie Head strikes the pitch oiYthe piano as (from left) Rich Johnson, Becky Smith and Richard Barry rehearse for the coming Clarkston lUgh ^hool spring concert. ’The program of music will n be presented April 4 at 7:30 p.m. under the direction of Charlene Rice of the faculty. Debbie and Rich are juniors, Becky and Richard seniors. Clarkston Students Plan Music Program By LINDA HEATH | dustrial arts department. Of The thought of spring brings the boys who entered projects music to toe ears of many. To tn toe Regional Craftsman’s mark the coming of spring, Fair at Mason Junior High Clarkston High School’s music School, Waterford, several redepartment will present a pro-'ceived very high ratings, gram on April 4 at 7:30 p.m. I ^ese include: Woodworking: The performance will be part Ltirry Srock, Dennis Brock, and oi a “get-acquainted” program Phil Cc^eland, 2nd place; Greg for parents of CHS students, j Slade; 3rd place; and Roger Annual Open House Held in Adelphian By JO ROSEN ’ Adelphlan Academy held toe annual Open House Sunday. Small groups of girls were called for and escorted from the girls’ dorm steps to the cafeteria for dinner. During the late evening dinner the students listened to music. After a tour of the dorm, all met in the gymnasium to watch a full-length feature movie. The Boys’ Dorm has been thoroughly scrubbed and paint-„ Jack Frost and ed from top to bottom. \Such dude “The Last Worda^ of Dave Pugh, 2nd place; Scottlthings as buffing the tails, David,”“The Beatitudes,^ “A McFarland, 3rd place; andiwashing walltl, scraping off old I----JM -_j honorable mention, wax and laying new carpet have All first and seomd pMcejbecome part d to# —- ’ -winners-are eligible to compeiteischedUle fpr| toe boys, in the state contest. r Ithe lounge wai; remodeled. Performers to toe program will include members of toe Varsity Choir, under the direction of faculty member Charlene Rice. Numerous selections will in- Drafting: Legend” and others. Ganther, honorable mention. Metals: Ed Ashbaugh received 2nd place, and Rick Franklin received honorable mention. I Monday is designated as North Farmington High School’s Senior m Skip Day. m kkk It is the seniors’ most anticipated holiday. Seniors will leave Thursday for toe trip to Washington, D. C., and return the following Monday. A wide variety of tours, exhibits, and other activities are planned for toe 167 members of toe group. North Farmington has a math «*"'• wizard in senior Paul Mingo. Paul recently took eighth place in the state math finals, outstanding ability in this field evident, and he was finalist in toe Michigan Matoe; matics Prize Competition. The Brother Rice guidance,^®®" .®®"‘®r are urged to attend heavy sch^ule. department, head^ 1^ James,™®®**"®®- Artistic ability has bea^ d)to Idayed V members of toe in- Good news for students who missed out on last year’s trip to Stratford, Ont. Another group is )eing formed for next fall to sec Shakespeare’s “Richard III.” COOPERATIVE EDUCATION Cooperative education director Robert Finzel is encouraging, all juniors and sophomores interested in the program to fill out applications now. Jobs will be-?in this summer and carry through toe school year. An S.O.S. sounds from toe Aurora YearboiA ^taff. Any underclassmen wishing to gain experience for toe yearbook contact adviser Lynne Cham- 1116 “Rhythm Rascals” have been chosen to furnish background music for the Romeo spring Broadway musical by P. Sullivan, production man-Br. The play will be given May 5 and 6. Kingswood By CINDY GRISSOM Students at Kingswood School Lee and Brother J. Duffy, brings speakers to the school for vocational information. Rochester By KARIN HEADLEE “Something Special” is the title of Rochester High School’s second annual spring turn-about sponsored by toe Chess Club. This gives those girls. who couldn’t catch that special one at Sadie Hawkins a second toance. Couples will dance to toe music of toe “Zymodics.” This is toe first dance after Lent and will be held Friday. The attire is Sunday best I The Commencement Dance in RomOO June is one of the primary re- sponsibilities of this committee; By EDD CHATFIELD the band must be selected, re-The stage band of Romeo freshments planned and regula-High School, the “Rhythm Ras- tan guidelines discussed with cals,” consists of 13 members. The cornet section is com- posed of Barry Vanderberghe, Phil Priest and Charles Hostetler. On toe trombones are Paul Beadle, Bruce Ziegler and Chris Leonard. Saxophones are backed up by Larry Henry, Carl Peacock, Doug Carl and Allen Vanderberghe. The piano is played by Robert Van Camp, while Dale man assists on toe tuba. the administration. The successful Fall and Winter Formats have helped toe committee gain experience in arranging these details. ’This year, senior members are Laura Woodard, Madeleine Ken-ko and Susan Baldwin. Junior members are Katie Lerchen and Leslie Sott. Susan Baldvrin is the chairman. Several of the members of this committee have questioned its effectiveness. Six SHHS Students Plan Trip By MARY ELLEN QUINN On the weekend of April 14, six Sacred Heart students, accompanied by the headmistress, will attend an annual symposi-at Kenwood School in Albany, N.Y. kkk Invitations have been extended to schools in the New Ydrk, Qanada, St. Louis end Washington, D.C., to send at least ttwee representatives. This year’s program will le under toe direction of Father Denis Daly, who will conduct the symposium on toe first day. On toe second day, several married couples are planning to hold discussions with small groups. kkk TTie Bloomfield Hills Convent will be represented by Olga Manikoff, Margo Morris, Anne Oldani, Judy Pistilli, Julie Pred-homme and Marty ’Taylor. SYMPOSIUM THEME The spirit of change and experimentation is expected to be a theme of the sym^um. Possible changes have been discussed at length at Bloomfield Three weeks agiL a school committee headed l(y student Helen Fisher discussed Sacred Heart education with the faculty — what it should be and what it does and does not offer. The seniors discussed student government; toe juniors. First Friday ceremonies; sophomoreh, representation in the lower classes; and freshmen, the traditional weekly assembly “primes.” kkk Laura Regis, a Youth for Understanding student from Italy, is currently living with the John Pistglis’ of Bloomfield HiUs and attending 12th grade classes. Entries for NF’s literary mag-azin# “Focus,” have now been read by both English V classes. Final selections will be made soon. k . k Studwt-iPpuncU has thortaghly dije:^»|«4 ti» school dress pean fence-mending talks, arrived in ttie Netherlands today to meet Queen Juliana and political leaders ~ and i»t)bably some Dutch antiwar demonstrators as well. Coming from Geneva, the first stop on his two-week Euror. pean tour, Humi^irey said in a prepared statemeit that the American people tiiroughout fiieir' history have had ,“deep and lasting ties with the Netherlands.” ‘We riiat^ a common heritage,” he declared, “including most of all a deep concern for the princ4>le of law and order in ttie world. Now, both our countries are cmcemed with the opportunities fiiat lie ahead in strengthening the NATO alliance and in building peaceful institutions. C ■Junior Editors Quit on- OUTER SPACE QUESTION: What can you tell us about space and the stars? ★ ★ ★ ANSWER: At the loWer right we see the earth. Space begins about 100 miles above it. From the earth to the edge of the solar system in which the earth and other planets circle around the sun is about 50 billion miles. But the solar system is only a little dot circulating in one of the spiral arms of the Milky Way, which we often call Our Galaxy (middle right) and which may contain 100-billion stars, of vdiich our sun is only one. Most of the stars we see are in Our Galaxy and are extremely for away. Lif^t travels about I trillion miles a year. Scientists call this a li|^t year. Von can inu^e tte g»g«i»tiw she of Our Galaxy sAea wo say It is 100,000 U|^t years across. Outside the Milky Way are a great many other galaxies. The Andromeda Galaxy can be seen with the naked eye and is two billion, 200,000 light years away. Since 1963, mysterious objects called masars have been detected even farther out—over seven billion light years away from us. * What is beyond that? H’m. It’s a good question-but we don’t know the answer. “Our nations and our people talk fratddy and (q>enly. While I am here, I bq)e to learn and Urien as well as to explain.’* In addition to Us t^, Hum-I^ey was expected to ter protests against the Vietnam war after the Alftine, Earier-hUiday quiet d Gmeva. After his one-day stay in the Swiss center, the vice president was reported encouraged by tiie progress of negotiations theie for a treaty to check the spread of nuclear weapons and the Kennedy^'ound talks to reduce trade barriers. h Humphrey said both were of vital interest to the United States, and he is expected to emphasize tiiis In Us talks with European leaders, not all of whom see eye to eye with the United States in either the trade or. the nuclear talks. The vice president told newsmen at the American mission in Geneva tijaf “I carry no special messages nor am I attempting to act as a negotiato*.” ‘COME TO USABN' come to loam im the spot from our negotiators and from our friends m JBurope,” Humphrey said. His toto' is the first extensive European trip by an Am«1can president or vice president since Alaska Fine Paid for Russian him to prison or order bis ves-tmonetory settiement” would not sd seized, as Gov. Walter J. deter tiie Russians from violat-and Alaska’s aa»lon Ug U.S. territorial fishing DETERGENT IS DETERRENT-British Army person-nel and mem|»er8 of the fire brigade at Porthleven, Cornwall, England, spray detergent into the harbor in an attempt to settle a tUck crude-oll covering washed in by the sea after tiie U.S.-owned tanker Tprrey Canyon broke in two on rocks near the Sciliy Isles off England’s southern coast. Much of England’s beach playground area is threatened by the UI scourge. ANCHORAGE, Alaska (AP) ^ tall, bushy-haired eommer-al' firiiennan from Vladivostok was back at sea aboard UsSo-.., ^ ^ -_____ Viet shrimp trawler today after Kushenko spent two rights. Sem. Ernest GrueUng speeding 43 hours to jS for vio-days in Jail because he was and fi.L. Bartlett, both Demo-latin^S. coastal waters. *not able to pay Us fine, the,crate. Criticized the penalty as Leonid M. Kushenko, 29, was to sea by|too leUenb relSed from the Alaska 8tate,«» Storis Sunday. I ^thw &vid fraWler was Jail at Anchorage at noon Mon- „ , * « ^ m day after a repnsentative of the , ^ckel / ^publicw, saW in only m miles off the Alaska Soviet ibnbassy in WasUngton>;>«*“ Monday that “a strictly coast. paid his $10,600 fine. * ★ ★ . I The embassy official. Third Secretary Yuri V. Oiemoldnjd, said in an interview that Uie Soviet government “takes’ severe measures against those | masters of our fisUng fleet who violate U.S. territorial fishing rights.” Kushenko was flown to Kodiak by a Coast Guard plane and taken by the Coast Guard cutter Storis to his 178-foot trawler, the SRTM 8-457, 20 miles offshore. EXaUSIVE RIGHTS The Soviet seaman is skipper of the trawler, wUch was seized by the Storis last Wednesday 5% miles off Alaska’s Shumagin Islands. The United States claims exclusive fishing rights to 12 miles off shpre. The Storis took the trawler in tow and arrived off Kodiak late Friday. Kushenko was flown to Anchorage Saturday and pleaded no contest. U.S. District Judge James A. von der Heydt fined him $2,000 more than 'the $8,000 the government reoun-mended, but did not sentence| $200 Reward For infermatton leading to the arrest and conviction of the person or persons responsible for the many thefts and acts of vandalism perpotroted at Shelton Pontiac Buick Inc., 855 S. Rochester Rd., Rochester, Michigan since January 1,1967. Reward will be paid for ooeh conviction. Offer of the reward Is open to the public, all law enforcement personnel as well as to our employees. Offer of reward open until publicly withdrawn by Shelton Pontiac Buick Inc. Signtdt Shelton Pontiao Buiok Ino. C.M.5keftwt President John- F. Kennedy’s 1963 visit. It comes at a time of friction in U.S.-Eurqiean relations, with some U.S. allies fearful that the United States is too absorbed with Asia and too anxious for a detente with the >viet Union, ★ we Humphrey said his mission was “to come as a friend, to come as a student, to come as a partner ... not seeking to tell anyone what to do but hopefully to learn what we can do better.” The vice president had a full schedule today, starting with an audience with Queen Juliana and ending with a black-tie dinner for himself and Mrs. Humphrey. Still ahead are meetings in West Germany, Britain, Italy, France and B^um, with key talks involving French President Charles de Gaulle, British Prime Minister Harold Wilson and West German Chancellor Kurt Georjg Kiesinger. TRUCKLOAD 110 \ Majoi Appliances TV i Stereo We bought big-you can save big! Automatic ice is nice! General Electric... replaces ice automatically. Enjoy a continupus supply of cubes. 'No Frost 16' 15.6 cu. ft. with Automatic Icemaker •Ice Bin stores up to 12.9 lbs., 340 cubes. •Giant xero-degree freezer holds up to 146 lbs. frozen foods. •Bolls out on wheels for easy cleaning! •GB colors or wRite. MANYCLOSE-OUT SPECIALS ■ottom Freenr «UM.a Top Praaiar iMMaSlBAI YOU ALWAYS PAY LESS AT FRf ^B.E Goodrich DSAIf FAMOUS-NAME APPLIANCES 4 DAYS ONLYI Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday - March 28th thru April 1st! A Truckload of Savings For You ... Sive Your KHehen And Laundry A New Color Look... See Our Colorful Display Including The New Avocado! KELVINATeR Fully Automatic RANOIS • Easy Under-Range Cleaning • Recessed Top • Fast Oven PreHeat • Foil Oven Linings • Automatic Timer • Lift-Off Oven Door From nS9 FREE DELIVERY In-Your-Hem* Trad«-ln Appraisal Whathpr You Buy Onu Piucu or FIvu KELVINATOR REFRIGERATORS • Big 101 Pound FracMr • 2 FrMMr Door Sholvot • Shioldod Light • Dairy Chott With Buttor Di«h • Adjuttablo Shfilf •V21.3 Ot. 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O’Brien. Dear Mrs. O’Brien: Finger bowls filled with warm water are brought to the table on the dessert plate. A small lace oi* paper doily is placed under them and both are lifted off by the diner and set on the table above the place setting. When the dessert is, finished, the tips of the fingers are dipped in the water and dried on the napkin. If lips are greasy, a little water may be rubbed on them, too, with the fingers. There ma^or may not be flowers, petals or littie ornaments floating in the water. ' ★ ★ ★ This question reminds me of a delightful story, told about herself by one of my daughter’s friends. She was- invited for the first time to a dinner at her boy friend's home. She was somewhat nervous about it because she knew that his family was wealthier and lived on a grander scale than her own. Naturally, she wished to make a good impression so she decided to watch carefully and simply copy other guests if she had any problems. JUST RIGHT Everything went beautifully through the entree: she chose the right silver, broke her bread before buttering it, and served herself impeccably. ’Then came the dessert — she thought! A pretty bowl of clear liquid with bits of pink icing or pastry floating in it. Flushed with her success until then, she forgot to look around her, picked up her spoon, and proceeded to eat the rose petals that were floating in her finger bowl! •k-k-k Fortunately, her sense of humor and the kindness of her boy friend’s family carried her through, and the couple are soon to be married! Many entertaining things of this nature happen to all of us. We cannot know (and we’d be terribly dull if we did) every rule in the book of Etiquette. paints a scroll-leaf pattern on Ban-Lon and comes up with a splashing, smashing shift. Adding to its good looks are the smocked yoke and long, puffy sleeves. It’s Definitely for Print Perfect for town and country wear is Adele Simpson’s double-breasted, short-stop trench coat in Kenya brown-and-white striped, printed linen, belted in matching brown patent leather. The African pattern covers a matching skimmer dress. If He Won't Even Talk to You Chance of His Writing Is Nil ABBY By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: I just LOVE to write letters to fellows. I don’t care if I kno\y them or not, as » long as they are I a friend of a : friend of mine. My problem I is, I have lived around the cor-I ner from this I boy all my life. II am 23 and so I is he. We never •played together as children because we went to different schools. Sure, we’d see each other, but never a word was spoken. ★ Two summers ago, I said to myself, “This is silty!’’ So when J saw him, I said, “Hi, Tony, /where are you going?’’ He didn’t answer me. He just smiled and kept going. ★ ★ * The next time I saw him, about a year later, I said, “Hi, Tony, where are you going NOW?” He didn’t answer me, but smiled and went on. .k k k He Is now in the service. Should I ask his mother for his address and write to him? LOVES TO WRITE , * ★ ★ DEAR LOVES: If you LOVE to write letters — go ahead and write. He might communicate better by mail But don’t be surprised if ha doesn’t. A young man ndio won’t ^Ik, probably won’t write either. ★ ★ ★ DEAR ABBY: If I don’t get this off my <*hest I’ll burst. I have two sons, There are none better, Ihey are both married and have lovely families. It hurts me to go into their homes and not see even one photograph of Dad and me in sight. ★ ★ ★ We have gone to the tyouble and expense of taldng pictures, having them enlarged and/ framed, but they must be stored away in a closet somewhere. We have our home full of pictures of our sons, their wives, and children. Am I wrong to feel hurt? Set me straight. ' HURT DEAR HURT: No. Apparently your sons and their wives are not aware of your feelings. k k k DEAR ABBY: I load and unload freight and baggage for a major air line. We handle dogs and cats that are “kenneled” for transportation. Most of these animals have never experienced anything like this before, and they are petrified from the noise of the screaming jets, and from so much jostling around. Some animals try to chew through the kennels, and they end up with broken teeth and bleeding mouths. Some even get loose. ★ k k A veterinarian has informed me that tranquilizer pills are available (through any vet) which, if given to the animal Area Jqycee Auxiliaries Elect District Official Mrs. Michael Patterson of the Waterford Jaycee Auxiliary was elected district vice president at Human Resources Subject of Talk J. David VanderVeer, City of Pontiac representative to the , Human Resources Center, was the guest speaker Monday afternoon at the Pontiac Republican Womenp’Club meeting. Mrs. Clarence Senger of Moreland Avenue was hostess, assisted by Mrs. Paul Gorman. The Republican leadership conference, in Landing, April 21-22, was announced by Mrs. AB Leddick. Sue Brett styles a pink-toned psychedelic print in a shirt-tent shape—one of the freshest uses of color, pattern and silhouette for the summer scene. Of dacron polyester and cotton, the airy voile fabric has a crispness which remains through wilting weather and countless washings. Red Cross Volunteers From Area Mark Years before the trip, will keep him calm and conifortable. I have* seen so many frightened and hysterical animals in my work, it In-eaks my heart. If you love animals as I do, you’ll print this. LOVES ANIMALS ★ ★ ★ • CONFIDENTIAL TO “SHOCKED AND DISAPPOINTED” IN ALLENTOWN: Why? How can you expect someone else to keep a secret you weren’t able to keep yourself? ‘ k k k How has the world been treating you? Unload your probleths on Dear Abby, care of The Pontiac Press. For a personal, unpublished reply, enclose a self - addressed, stamped envelope. k k k For Abby’s booklet, “How to Have a Lovely Wedding,” send $1.00 to Abby, care of The Pontiac Press. Two local Pontiac residents will receive 25-year service pins by the Southeastern Michigan Chapter of American Red Cross at ceremonies April 9 in Detroit’s Cobo Half. Marking a quarter century of dedication are Ralph S. Forman of CHiippewa Road, and Mrs. Ethol R. Thorpe of Euclid Ave- Others from the area marking five or more years include: Mrs. Lois Blome (10), Mrs. John Badge (25), Maude Becker (20). k . k Louis J. Colombo Jr. and Floyd W. Bunt will both be honored for their 20 years of service involvement at the same time. k k k Mrs. Theodore 0. Wedel,^con-sultant to the national chairman of volunteers tor the organization will be the guest speaker at the 1:30 p.m. dinner. Her topic is “The Volunteer in Today’s Sorority Listens to State Reports Mrs. James Stone reported on the recent state board meeting of Epsilon Sigma Alpha Sorority at the Beta Chi Chapter meeting Monday evening. She was nominated for the first vice president of the state. Elections will be during the state convention in Saginaw the latter part of April. Also attending the board meeting were Mrs. James Vincent and Mrs. Jere Strang. k k k, ' Doris Moore Union Lake demonstrated wigs and gave a history in wig making. Assisting the hostess, Lacey Schiefler of Shawnee Lane, were Mrs. Rex Parker and Mrs. James Vincent. Military goes mad with standing collar and epaulettes gracing a giant basket-weave print on 100 per cent rayon by R and K. Baby Camel Is Over(due for Debut BOSTON (AP) - It is four months now since a dromedary at Franklin Park Zoo was expected to have a baby, and zoo officials say they may have made a miscalculation. Dr. Denis F. Hawkins, chief of obstetrics at University Hospital - who was called in as a consultant Monday, examined Mrs. Droinedary with a stethescope. k k k “There’s something in there,” he said. “No doubt about it. But I can’t feel it moving and I can’t hear it. “Don’t quote me as saying she’s pregnant. Just say she has all the signs of pregnancy,” Hawkins said. k k k Ernest E. Roney, zoo director, said zoo officials saw Mr. and Mrs. Dromedary mating 16 months ago and estimated on the basis of a normal gestation period, that a baby would be bom last December. k k k He said they now suspect that the mating was not successful, but that a subsequent one was. He also noted that camels usually deliver in the summer, which is better for their young. Mr. Dromedary, separated from his wife a week ago in anticipation of the happy event, is pacing an adjoining pen. ★ ★ ★ Mrs. Dromedary snapped at Hawkins when he approached her, but zoo officials say she spends most of her time “humming and swaying.” the Monday evening meeting of Jaycee Auxiliary District 9. She will assume duties in May at the Michigan Jayee state convention in Traverse City. District 9 consists of Clarks-ton. Lake Orion, Ortonville, Pontiac, Rochester, Union Lake and Waterford chapters. ★ k k Guest speaker at the meeting in First Fe an exciting, gu/terior quality cosmetic line, natioH-dll^Udvertitfd in liaritcr’s Bazaar, I'ogue and many^thek fine teamen's magazines. Our representative will not try to give you a sales presentation, instead you may, if you wish, purchase for only 96 cents, a total of 14 trial size products. Thg Coniplfle PackaKi* Inrliulrn tlir Following llfnin! • Cleansing Creme • Skin Toning Freshener • Moisture Creme • Beauty Mask • Cleansing Scrub • So In love Fragrance • Juvalite • Hand and Body Lotion • Lipstick • Liquid Makeup • Face Powder 0 Derma jeune 0 After Shave Lotion 0 Special Dish Lotion A Complete Retail Price LItt !• Included In the Packaite A CHANCE TO TRY REFORE YOU BUY, CARL 673-1820 If No Answer Dial 623-1198 4832 Pontiac Lk. Rd. Fashion Pace I Is Highlight ■nie Henry R. Schoolcraft ' P^A of Waterfwd Will-help usher in spring witti a style show! and card party in the sciWl at 4 p.m\ Hiursday. Following the fashion show, dessert and coffee will be served by the Girl Scout troops 821 and 681. * * -k PTA mothers and teacher models will wear hair styles and wigs by Coiffure Par Anne. Margaret A. Beattie of Beauty Counselor will do the makeup: * * ★ Lisbeth’s of Birmingham will supply the fashions. ★ ★ ★ Tickets at'e available from PTA board fnembers from the school oHice or at the door. ★ A ★ Mrs. Nick Menghini is in charge of the style show and Mri. William Shorts is chairman of the card, party. Engqjg^ment news is made by Kathryn Diane Spurlock, daughter of the Dewey D. Spurlocks of Warren Drive, and James C. Cerapo, son of the Alex Ceranos of Buckingham Street SKe attended Wayne State University and he is t sophomore at Lawrence Institute of Technology. The John Sabos of Melvindale announce the engagement of their daughter, Judith Lynn, to Pvt. Terry Lee ^acom, U. S. Army, son of the Verner L. Ma-corns ofWhittemore Street. Pvt. Macom is presently stationed on Okinawa. SAVE! SAVE! SAVE! SAVE! X FRIGIDAIRE ^ Et£OTRI»CLEAN OVEN 9 RANGESataSPECIAL I LOW PRICEI W* mad* a Apecial purchase—end we’re passing the savings on to you. But when these special buys are gone-prices go back up. So hurry .| they won’t last long! IT’S LOADED WITH FEATURES YOU WANT! • Cook-Master oven control starts, cooks "and stops automatically! • Automatic Appliance Outlet starts morning coffee for youl • Two oven shelves, storage drawer for BACKED BY A 5-YEAR NATIONWIDE WARRANTY! l-year Warranty on entire range for repair of any defect without charge, plus 4-year Protection Plan (parts only) for furnishing replacement for any defective Surface Heating Unit, Surface Unit Switch or Oven Heating UnitI o 0 0 1 n ® ^ fi |«meauwtM rmoioMwaB^vw || &EANSnSE.„ JUnomncHty iPROOUCT OF GENERAL MOTORS liM K WAS *269^ SAVE *20" It's the Year of the Happening at Frigidaire! Come to where all the happenings are... "where quality furniture is pricedl right" CLAYTON'S 2133 ORCHARD LAKE RD.—PH. 333-7052 Offer Class in Camping to Beginners OAKLAND, (?allf.^ - A course in the art fe<^^ tional camping is beii|g^(^ered by the Oakland Recreation Department, under the direction of Mr. add Mrs. Max J. Fisher, a couple widely experienced in the field. Fisher, a school principal in Piedmont, has beat an Explorer Scout adult leader fw 10 years, a Scoiit camp director and has led wilderness treks. His wife is a consultant in back packiag for the San Francisco Bay Girl Scout Council. k k .k Instruction for the unusual course included types and methods of cainping, places to go and regulations, skills for outdoor living in comfort, suggestions for selecting packing equipnoent and tips on camping with children. The lectures are illustrated with color slides. Use Drink Carrie)?^ Baby’s milk bottles Von’t upset'so easily when/^arried in the car if they pYe placed ilia soft drink ca|Tier. - Debbie Bryant, Miss America of 1966, is shown on the Kansas University campus with her fiance. Rod Wilson of Paqla, Kan., a first-year law student at KU. Miss Bryant’s engagement was officially announced Sunday by her mother, Mrs. Irene Bryant of Overland Park, Kan. Debbie is a junior at KU. Hints Collacttd by Mrs. Dan Gsrbsr, Mothsr of FIvs INTRODUCTORY IDEAS FOR YOUR BABY When should yoii introduce a new food to your baby? Hard to say, exactly. Little ones vary as to when they are most receptive to new foods. For the most part, __________however, a new food should be introduced when baby is reasonably hungry .but not necessarily at the beginning of a meal. Soma babies take more readily to a new food after the first hunger pangs have been satis-fied with formula of a bit of favorite food. By experimenting, you’ll soon find out, which time your cherub prefers. Timely trio...calculated to conjure up a smile or six. Latest strained and junior smash-hits from the Gerber Dessert cupboard: Newl Dutch Apple Dessert... a perky bit of old Pennsylvania, here. Applesaucy good! Slightly cinnamony bright. Buttery mellow ... altogether delightful. Can't it or taste it, but it's enriched with vitamin C. flavor favorite translatedTn taste terms tp delight babies, toddleri and even mothers. Nourishing note: egg yolks and whole milk solids go into this pleasing dessert. Newl Gerber Pooch Cobbler .. a bang-up dessert with the fullblown flavor of fresh-as-you-please peaches, sparked with a tracery of cinnamon. Nutrition addition: it’s vita-min-C enriched. Gerber fixin' for the family. Company coming... or family affair, here's a great glaze for ioin of pork or roast duck. 1 iar Junior Peach Cobbler 2 Tbs. brown sugar 1 Tbs. cider vinegar tsp. allspice Mere introductory ideas. If your pride 'n' joy seems to rebel at a new food at first taste...skip it and substitute another for a week or so. Gerber* Baby Products, Box 33, Fremont, Michigan. New Fashion Echoes Africa The African feeling has a new-found place in fashion. Primitive wooden-type jewelry, buttons and even sunglass frames are evident in shops. ★ ★ ★ Tiny shells are seen decorating the fashions. Earthy browns are being used to express a whole new mood in fashion accessories, ready to take on the strong blaze of color in the African prints. Won't Scratch Paper doilies, placed between the plates and saucers of your fine china when storing, will prevent scratches. Never Rush Baby Never rush baby when he is Just learning to feed himself. It takes time for the youngster to learn to maneuver the spoonful so that it goes in the direction that it belongs. Atlastl A permanent 8hampoo-In hair color that givea you perfect color. The color you want. And It's so easy I NOW AVAILABU AT ALL nvE STORES • That’s My Colorl mlly eovem gray. • N«v«r a “tinted” look. Your hair look! healthy-Hihlnyl o Pick brown-you get brown. No funny reddish look. • Blondo shedas look blonde-not Whether you cover gray...llghten...or darken, just ehampoo In-and be yourself I Yop’ll aay, ‘Thet’a ma-That‘s Colorl” ThM’sMyColorl-nsw(and8oea8yl) fromTacnlquG* 225 S GREAT STORES Charge account service-Pay all utility bilU at any Perry Pharmacy 1>bMflAC-689 East Blvd. at Perry FE I-T162 PONTIAC-t251 Baldwin Near Columbia FE 3-T05T BIRMINGHAM-597 S. Adams Next to AtP Ml 7-4470 WATERFORD - 3417 Eliz. Lk. Nd. at 1459 FE B-9248 TBOY-2870 W. Maple-Somerset Plaza Ml T-tOlO THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, MARCH 28. 1967 B—5 Case No. C-507 Jump Starter s Signal Seventeen-months-old Jeffrey Hundley clutches an Easter egg and romps away from his mother’s outstretched hand Monday as he takes part in the annual Easter egg roll on the South Lawn at the White House. Strapped to the back of Mrs. Harvey Hundley of Bonner Springs, Kan., is another son, Michael, three-months-old. Polly's Pointers Make It Shorter i DEAR POLLY - Those who knit (and I don’t) may be indignant over my suggestion for the gal who has a hole in the sleeve of her sweeter. I have successfully cut off sleeves on long - sleeved sweaters, sewed the cuffs back on and made them short - sleeved. — MRS. M.L.R. * ★ ★ DEAR MRS. M: L. R. - I do not know why knitters shouid be shocked at your Pointer. I knit constantly and I liked it. Just be sure to stitch around the cut-off edges so there is no chance of the stitches “hmning." -POLLY. DEAR POLLY - When our little boy was cutting his teeth he chewed the teething ring and then started (m the wooden headboard of his crib. He b now 13 months old, has his front teeth and still continues to chew on the headboard. Can anyone tell us what to do to stop him? Can something be put on the crib that would discourage our little beaver’s chewing? — MR. and MRS. R. J. R. dripless container for cooking oil. Seeing an almost empty bottle of hand lotion with a now-common push-top dispenser I suggested that this bottle b e thoroughly washed after it was emptied and then be filled with cooking oil. ★ * * i She tried it and it works very well. It is very convenient to pickj up the bottle and squirt a few drops into a cake pan or frying pan. The amount of oil can be controlled by the number of pushes on the dispenser top. No more messy spots of oil collect on my wife’s kitchen counter. -DONALD. DEAR DONALD-How we love to hear from you ingenious men and yours is a Pointer that I know many of the girls will adopt.-POLLY ' DEAR POLLY - I bought a dozen lightweight cloth diapers and found they make perfect dish towels — absorbent and lint-free.-IRENE. A(J