Home Edition The Weather V.K. Weather Bureau Forecast Light snow tomorrow. (Details ' Pa*a t). VOL. 120 NO. 206 PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY. DECEMBER 14, 1962 ~-50 PAGES A— Radios Back Data WASHINGTON (A!P) - The Space Agency announced today that the Mariner space craft has made contact by radio with the planet Venus. WASHINGTON UPI - Two key snooping instruments,on Mariner II wifi be “right on target" when the spacecraft speeds close by Venus this afternoon, space agency, officials said. The spacecraft is closing in on Earth’s sister planet and is due to start sending back radio reports on it starting at 1:55 p.m. (Pontiac Time). Scientists had been left in temporary doubt about the. scanning instruments—called radiometers —earlier in the day when they failed toK switch, on in response to built-in command signals on the spacecraft. Radio signals beamed 36 million miles from the National Aeronautics and Space Agency’s station! in Goldstone, Calif., did the trick, however. mission would still be a partial The radiometers are counted on for the most vital informa- Venus is now the morning star, rising a few hours before sunrise 4n the southeast sky. It will shine with greatest brilliance on Dec; 18. tion, however—the temperature aty Venus’ surface and within its cloud-packed atmosphere. One of them might even be able to determine, by indirect methods, the nature of the “gross features” of the planet —that is, tell whether it’s made up entirely of land masses, or contains water. and gaseous “plasma" spreading from the sun through space. When the radiometers go into, action their signals will be relayed from Goldstone and,amplified Over a loudspeaker at a NASA news conference here. Scientists Who sweated out .the hours before the radiometers switched on, drew s(ome comfort from the fact four other experiments aboard the space craft are working Well, so that even if the radiometers had failed the The other four experiments aboard Mariner, which have been in operation virtually all the way to the target—and will be working today—are designed to get information on magnetic fields, radiation, cosmic dust The U.S. Information Agency, ’ plans to send reports on Mariner’s progress to 107 posts around the globe in 38 languages. Later there will be a documentary film of Mariner’s progress for worldwide theatrical showings. Mariner’s journey got off to a bumpy start. Due to a somewhat faulty performance of the110-story-high Atlas-Agena B complex that launched her. CUMAX OF TRIP - This drawing illustrates how the Instniment-packed satellite .Mariner II, was scheduled to scan the fogbound surface of Venus today when it was to pass about 20,000 miles from the planet. The AP Photofax lightly shaded belt indicates the approximate, scanning zone of the Mariner’s, infrared wayes ,, and microwaves designed to analyze the planets surface. Making Gains Optimistic in West of State That Worst Over New Communication ieneing CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (JD— tions tests for 1 hour, 40 min- The newly launched relay communications satellite showed signs of trouble with its power supply today. The National Aeronautics and By The Associated Press Much of snow-muffled West Michigan glistened in sunshine today as county crews, aided by . , ,. „ „ . private contractors, state equip- Space Administration said its tost ment and National Guard units report rom the eight-sided satel-•made road-clearing headway ^ "(IMed its power may be ' against snow-clogged back roads a little ,ower than normal Optimism ran high throughout! ‘ As a result, NASA an-xhe area that the battering of a| nounccd in Washington it is week of snowstorms was ended. | postponing radio communica-The entire west state coastline tion tests between the United of Lake Michigan was spared' States and Europe that had yesterday when a predicted b!iz-| been planned for the fifth and utes each day. .Its designers predicted it would operate at maximum efficiency for the tost 30 days in orbit and render useful data for one year. The Saturday schedule calls for lews stories to be exchanged between the United States and Europe. Similar transmissions are planned Monday between the United States and South America. ... If all goes weM. the public will witness an intercontinental Christmas program Wednesday televised through Relay, The program, carried, by all three U.S. television networks, will feature yuletide preparations in 11 nations on the North American and European continents. ard failed to materialize. sixth orbits of the satellite to-I day. UNDfWr IgL WEATHER _..r____.. that 8nowed-in feelipg with a desperate message on his. white-capped car was Pontiac Press photographer Edward R. Noble, whose picture assignments can’t wait for the spring, thaw. Noble is not alone, however, as just about everyone in the state, if not the nation, feels the same way. Instead, further tests and receptions- of telemetry data by the space agency's test station at Polar Air Tempest Weakens Over East Slim Umbrella Tops for Gift By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The mantle of polar air that hovered for two days over most of the eastern half of the country slowly weakened today. The hard freeze forecast for most of northern Florida, which would have dropped readings to the low teens, failed to materialize. However, there were many reading in the 20s in the Sunshine State early today. Heavy Snow that was expected in portions of the low- ler northeast developed into ^ a fall of from 3 to 6 inches over parts of New York, Pennsylvania, West Virginia, Ohio and Michigan. Squalls brought up to 24 inches of new 3now off Lake Erie and Lake Ontario to communities in Upper New York state. Some schools and secondary roads remained closed and several small towns were virtually isolated because of huge drifts ore than 4 feet of snow start for eight more days. Shutter-Bug Gadgetsj‘look brighter' Also in Stores The official forecast at the U. S. weather bureau in Grand Rapids called lor a few scattered snow flurries late today, increasing cloudiness at night with light snow late at night or tomorrow. It predicted westerly winds 10 to 15 miles per hour today, becoming southwesterly 5 to 10 and I southerly 10 to 20 Saturday. I Chief meteorologist Fred Baughman said. “It's, nice to|Nu N.J., will made at that have this respite, but winter is jf._l ...” .u. ________ not over Related Story on Page D-2 Warns of Thin Ice Sheriff Fijank Irons today urged residerits, especially children, to stay off the ice on area lalges. Several more days of present weather conditions be required to adequately thicken the Ice. By REBA HEINTZELMAN Umbrellas have been getting sleeker, slimmer and more beautiful every year but this Christmas season tops them all. Some of them have handles delicate as Christmas candy and luscious. Colored inlaid enamel, odd-shaped jewels, and rhinestone-studded ebony are but a few examples of handles. For a shutter bug, a new magic deluxe lettering set a 11 o w s the owner to do his own titling. Three ..different sized letters made of a plastic-like material, stick to either a red or black background by static electricity. Another new camera, gadget is a slide sorter that holds 38 In West Virginia a snowfall ranging up to 6 Inches piled upon 15-foot drifts in the mountains. DEATH TOLL 189 The number of deaths attributed to the weather soared To 159. In Florida, harvest hands left the winter-killed vegetables farms and moved into the citrus groves in an attempt to salvage something from the heavy freeze. Fruit growers planned a quick harvest of some of the citrus to convert to juice before rising temperatures deteriorated the frozen fruit. The Florida Citrus Commission reported damage was heavier than in the winter of 1957-58 when 30 million boxes of fruit .froze on the branches and 30,000 trees were killed. The Weather Bureau said there was a general moderation of temperatures in most of. the eastern half of the country. There were only a few subzero readings, in northern Minnesota, with >7 in International Foils the lowest. a .. ii i time. Those tests, the agency L » really [said, will check the preliminary indications about the power supply. Heavily hit Van Buren County Launched SUCCESSFULLY sounded the note which echoed in „ , , . . _____.... ________ .. . ... Relay was launched successfully at 6:30 a.m. EST today and three hours later was reported to have achieved its planned orbit, 'making one circuit of the earth every 3 hours 5.09 minutes. At its lowest point the satellite is within - 819.64 miles of earth and swings , , . out to 4,612.18 miles at its highest most of Its lakeside sister coun-L0|n^ ties. Said road commission en- ’ gineer Paul Kaiser, noting a light, half-hearted snowfall: i g| d to ,, cominunlca. “Things are looking brighter, *___________r ■ this morning, much brighter, If we don’t get wind, we will be in' much better shape. More Pictures on Page A-4 slide, at one time ^l^«miiieeVaid with ing or viewing, Jraoj^ toto A ^ frosted plastic f(|ttt and Is raced In four set A regular electric light jb u 1 b glowing through the plastic tnhkes it easy .to see what’s been photographed. This Item is under 84. Sparking big lavalieres that look expensive, but are not, are the news this Christmas. Precision watches suspended on long gold chains, and tiny, tiny watches installed in rings is once again the vogue. French phone shoe shine kits have flooded almost all shopping areas and boy-girl Hobo hats to every color are more of the favorite gift items. / Suede — both real and imitation — is another best seller as jackets, blouses, coats and even sleek toreador slacks/, Shopping Day* Till General Hospital Trustees Apgove Record Budget The Pontiac General Hospital Board of Trustees last night approved a record $6,314,250 operating budget for 1963. This is $306,550 above the revised 1962 budget. The 1963 budget is based on an estimated average occupancy of 92.5 per cent. The 1962 budget was based on a 91 per cent occupancy------ 'estimate. Harold B. Euler, hospital administrator, said no increase in room rates would be needed to finance the 86,3-million budget. » The largest single budget Increase is 885,800 for wage hikes. The original budget fbr, the current year, approved last December, was 85,886,150. It did not include wage and salary adjusf-ments because negotiations still in progress., 007,700. It is not expected the 1963 budget will need any revision. “If our occupancy next year equals or exceeds the 92.5 per cent estimate, the budget will balance,” noted Harold S, Goldberg, board chairman. In recent years the hospital has been expanding. Administrators had to guess at what additional capacity would do to their budget estimates each year. | SAME CAPACITY “The 4963 budget is based on a ........... When negotiations concluded,jenpacity of 381 beds,the Relay’s power supply was de- wage increases were added and 11962,” Goldberg said. "Its |be ' the revised 1962 budget totaled 86,- (Continued pn Page 2, Col. City's C. of C. Votes on Board 3 New Directors and 2 Returnees Elected The Pontiac Area Chamber of Commerce today elected three new members to its board of directors and re-elected two board memhers. The new directors are B. Ralph Eastridge, manager of the J. C. Penney Store at Miracle Mile Shopping Center ; Leslie M. Gil-lain, manager of the Montgomery Ward Store at Pontiac Mall; and Howard Heldenbrand, Pontiac Press Man About Town column* Eastridge had previously served 4a»il*J>oard but was not presently a director. Re-elected were Michigan State University Oakland Chancellor Durward B. Varner and Stuart Whitfield, vice president of Pontiac State Bauk. TO SERVE 3 YEARS All will serve three-year terms to expire Dec. 31,1965. They were among 10 nominees. Area Youth Killed; Car Hits Truck He said his county’s $800, road commission over-all budget had been gouged by 813,000 up to shortly before nooh 'Friday for snow clearanco-albne. Anticipated emergency calls by (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) Weatherman Shows Mercy to Local Area The weatherman has finally decided to give us a break. The five-day forecast calls for temperatures about 7 to 10 degrees below the normal high of 38 and low of 23. Tuesday and Wednesday will be A few light flurries, or light snow is predicted for tomorrow. The low tonight will dip to near 8 and the high is expected to reach 7A tomorrow. In- downtown Pontiac about 2 inches of .snow fell, during the irdi snowstorm yesterday. The lowest temperature prior i 8 a.m. was 14 degrees. At 2 .m. the recording was 23. ..............:.....i .... A 19-year-old Waterford Township youth was one of two college students killed early this morning -when their car-struck' a Jack- n. knifed, trailer-truck on M28, 5W1U,; miles west of Munising. .to A third passenger,’an Indepenfti , ,ence Township student,, is critf- ‘•V* tally jinjured. Killed Instantly were Terry ; y E. Wilson of 3816 Covert Road and Dan I). Royal, 20, of Bay . City, the driver. %' ' In Munlslng Memorial Hospital with critical injuries Is Fred Turek Jr,, 20, of 8809 Sashaba#. ’ Road, Independence Township^ ■, All three -were Ori theirf wdy,' home on vacation from Michigan College of Mining Technology at {Houghton. j Their car struck a trailer which had jackknifed across the road on a hill. The truck driver, Donald H. Broderick of Bay City, had backed down the | hill when his vehicle slipped on police said. I The car went under the trailer, and ite top was sheared off. State police described the accident as "orie of the roughest” they had ever seen. The trio was on Its Way from Houghton to Munlslng. MAN-SIZED JOB — Eight-year-old Kevin plicated since the entrance to his split-level Kllt)e, like most home owners In this area, clubhouse is underground. > Kevin’s “prefab" was faced with another snow-removal Job house Is In tftp back yard of his parents, Mr* yesterday. Kevih’s, problem Is especially com- .... and Mrs. Robert C? Kline of 362 Seward S(. News Flash THE PONTIAC PRESS/ FRIDAY, DECEMBER 14, 1962 of Pf of Is Backe All 50 SliniiVe I ^irmin9^qm Areq News Airliner Crash Kids Can Dial Phone Third Brazilian Plane Downed in a Month HOLLOMAN BASpE, N. M, gazing from the after taking from back, took M hours and 32 minutes, The balloon reached its maximum height in about two hours yesterday. Today’s descent started at 1a.m. (MST). Kittlnger was the balloon pilot. White Was in charge of the experiments. II may be some time before the results of the experiments are known. Objectives of the trip included experiments to determine if stars twinkle when observed above the earth’s distorting atmosphere, and to try to record the sound of the stars.* ★ *....it Or. J. Allen Hynek of Northwestern University, Project director, describes this as resembling the noise made by an .... e mpty ooal truck bouncing over a rough road. WWW Other experiments included photographing the stars through the telescope; measuring ail turbulence; measuring the brightness of stars and measuring water vapor at high altitude. Floridians to Vacation in Mild Calgary, Alta.? CALGARY, Alta. UB - While Florida shivers, southern Alberta is having a belated touch of Indian aummer. * * * The mercury didn’t climb above 38 yesterday in Jacksonville, Fla., but at Calgary — 1,500 miles to the north — it reached 56, one degree above previous record highs in 1944 and 1956. OPEN FREEWAY—Removing the barrier on the entrance ramp to the new 1-75 freeway at Lapeer Road northeast of Pontiac this morning were (from left) County Road Commission Chairman Sol D. Lomerson, State Highway Department district office manager James Boyd, highway department engineer Lyle Lipp and Pontiac City Manager Robert A. Stierer. A 12%-mile section from Lapeer Road to Dixie Highway west of Clarkston was cfpehed. Hoffa Appears in Own Behalf NASHVILLE, Tenn. (UPI) -TeatnstorS Union President James Hoffa, looking confident and cocky, testified today iq his behalf in federal court here. The stocky, dark-haired leader of the world’s largest labor union has pleaded innocent to charges of violating the Taft-Hartley labor law. Hoffa was dressed in a dark grey suit as he took his seat in the witness chair. Although attendance has been somewhat sparse throughout much of the trial, the courtroom was nearly full as Hoffa began his testimony. Hoffa began his testimony as the . trial was nearing the end of its Jeighth week. Clear Roads in State (Continued From Page One)- The Weather Pull U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY - Variable cloudiness with a feW snow flurries today, high 22, Becoming cloudy tonight, low I. Light snow Saturday, high 24. Winds today northwesterly 10 to 20 miles. medical, food and fuel supplies fell far short of expectations. State Police Captain Bion Hoeg, commander of the 5th District Headquarters at Paw Paw, said' “People today aren’t on the wrong side of a 4-inch snowfall and blizzard forecast. That’s why there aren’t many panic calls." National Guard personnel were being dismissed from standby duty in small grdtips as the morning wore on. ★ ★ ★ An 18-man group was dismissed from Grand Haven at 5 a.m. four of a 10-man contingent from Company B at Three Rivers were dismissed from the Paw paw area at 10 a.m. The Three Rivers group had spent the night as the first guests of the new Van Buren County Jail.—— Cass County Road Commission engineer Robert Trobillard said: “It has turned completely different today. We’re real happy. I think we’re going to lick it Without any more National Guard assistance. The main roads are. coming fine ... secondary roads are being cleared and 10 emergency calls have been taken care of.” Emergency precautions were taken last night, including order for National Guard units to stand by in 10 west Michigan communities in case of requests for food and fuel supplies. Lesinski declared an emergency in the five counties of Allegan, Berrien, Cass, Muskegon and Van Buren. He is the state’s acting chief executive in the absence of Gov. John Swainson. His proclamatioh followed a request from Van Buren County Civil Defense Director Harry Busch to have itdeciared a disaster area.' The blizzard forecast by the U.S. Weather Bureau at noon fester-day fizzled out some 10 hours later when n high-pressure front shoved it southeasterly out of the state. Rush Labor to Salvage Florida Crop RIO DE JANEIRO, Brazil (AF) —Jornal do Brasil radio reported that all 50 persons aboard a Brazilian air liner which went down In the wilds of Amazonas State early today survived. The broadcast said' some were injured but EAST LANSING (UPI)—The that there were no deaths............. controversial dismissal of Dr.| Earlier, the newspaper Jornal instructor at do Brasil quoted military sources Michigan State University Oak- in Manaus, capital of Amazonas, land, was unanimously supported as saying no signs of life could today by the MSU board of be detected when the wreckage trustees. “I feel very strongly that tbe university people made the correct decision in this case," said Warren M. Huff, board member from, Plymouth. Huff noted that Shapiro also failed to gain tenure following service at Brandeis University prior to his appointment to the MSU staff in 1960. if ' ★ D. B. Varner, chancellor of the Oakland branch, said he felt the publicity given Shapiro’s lack of reappointment" required clarification. ONE OF THREE Varner said Shapiro was one of, the Panair do Brasi] Constellation was spotted in a jungle clearing 18 miles from Manaus. The Constellation had test been heard from at 3 a.m., six minutes before it was to have landed at Manaus, on a flight from Belem. Capt. Dalvo da Costa, veteran chief Amazon area pilot for the airlines, was reported at the controls. It was the third Brazilian air, tragedy in less than a month., Birmingham’s 1962 traffic ijnjury rate is expected to exceed last A Brazilian Boeing 707 jet crashed and burned on a hilltop near Lima, Peru, Nov. 27 and all 97 persons aboard perished; day before, two Brazilian planes of three staff members who collided^ In- flight- and crashed failed-JagaitL reappointment when their names were considered for tenure at the Oakland branch. Thirteen others on the staff were given tenure in action taken by committees within their own departments, deans of the various colleges and the MSUO administration. Varner said an “unqualified lo" was the answerJo whether Shapiro’s controversial views on Cuba were the reason for his dismissal. Shapiro has had numerous articles published on Latin America and in January 1961, he traveled to Cuba with members of the pro-Castro fair play for Cuba committee. ★ ★ ★ Varner said he would never favor dismissal solely because professor is controversial, but he did not feel a university should be required by public opinion makers to grant tenure solely because a professor was controversial. Judge Helps Put Bite Into Christmas for Kids MEMPHIS, Tenn. (UPI) -Former Criminal Court Judge R. G. Kinkle for the sixth straight year has given a $100 check to the humane shelter to pay the fees involved in the free distribution of 66 {nippies to children. “It’s my special Christmas present to homeless puppies and and dog loving children," explained Kinkle. LAKELAND, Fla. UPI - A mass migration of farm workers Into Florida’s frozen citrus groves began today for the biggest crop-salvaging operation hi the state’r history. , . Migrant workers, idled by loss of vegetable crops in the century’s worst cold wave were recruited from all over South Florida to pick oranges, grapefruit and tangerines before deterioration can begin. Emergency arrangements were made to bring in 13 plane loads of laborers from Jamaica, starting tomorrow. It was a pell-mell race against time. Warming weather threat->ned to spoil some of the fruit before it could be harvested and rushed to processing plants for canning and conversion into juice concentrates. Continuance of cold weather would enable growers to salvage more fruit, since deterioration would bo slowed. The U. S. Department of Agriculture authorised the emergency import of 3,000 additional foreign laborers. (NATIONAL WEATHER — Light snow or snow flurries are forecast for tonight through the Lakes region to the northern Plains and parts of the northern Rockies, with rain In the > Northwest and north-central Pacific Coast. Colder weather will .again move Into the northern and middle Atlantic states and Ohio Valley. It will be warmer from the southwestern plains through most of the Gulf, coast region and south Atlantic NATO Is Weak, Norstad Warns PARIS If) — Gen. Lauris Norstad, retiring supreme commander for Europe, warned.today that the North Atlantic Alliance’s ventiopal forces are so under strength it might be difficult to contain even a modest Soviet attack. His somber assessment was delivered at a closed meeting of NATO ministers. At the same iefilsn, reports of vast Increases In the Soviet submarine fleet and In Soviet rocket deployment were presented and analyzed. Two members of President Kennedy's cabinet—Secretary of State Dean Rusk and Defense Secretary Robert S. McNamara—stressed that NATO needs adequate Conventional strength in order to have choice of responses to agi slve Soviet moves. Rusk reaffirmed the willingness of the U. S. government to help set up a seaborne multinational, European nuclear force and said Washington is anxious to sound out the feelings of Its European partners on this subject. But Rusk specified that the Europeans themselves would have1 to work out Ideas on the Queen to Welcome Yule Valley. i northern Plains and upper Mississippi k LONDON (UPI)—Queen Elizabeth yesterday recorded her Christmas message to the nation and the commonwealth. The sage will be broadcast by radio and television and will bev made available for transmission throughout the commonwealth. a Cuban Release by Yule? NEW YORK if) - James B. Donovan, negotiator to winl freedom for the 1,113 Cuban Invasion prisoners, says he hopes to have them back In' this country by Christmas. political control for such a deferent. He also specified that the vast expense of this project would have to be shared. near Sao Paulo, killing 27 persons. Supervisors Approve Sole of Old Offices The Oakland County Board of Supervisors yesterday approved putting up for sale the County Office Building at 1 Lafayette St. The five • story brick building has been appraised at $220,-000,' according to Birmingham Supervisor D a v i d Levinson, chairman of/the ways and means comfhittee. This isn’t necessarily the minimum price which the county would/accept, Robert Lilly, secretary of the County Board of Auditors said. Present plans call for moving! county departments from the downtown building into the new courthouse wing at the County Service Center on Telegraph Road Feb. 11, Lilly said. He noted that his board would meet with the buildings and! grounds committee to set a minimum price on the downtown building and to work out other details before putting it up for sale. The building could be placed on public auction or tbe county could advertise for sealed bids. “There have been no offers to buy yet," said Lilly, “only a few nibbles." Area clubwomen were inquiring earlier with the thought that the building might be suitable for ai general meeting place for various groups. ★ it, * The county purchased the building by paying off some $50,000 owed in taxes during the depression. It had been built by Pontiac Freemasons for a lodge. The county also owns the parking lot at the rear of the building. The lot would be included in the sale. to Chat With BIRMINGHAM —By simply year’s because of an 80 perlieSt dialing a telephone, Birmingham area children can talk to Santa Claus at, his North Pole workshop until Dec. 21. . ■ ,f - r- • ( Santa can be contacted any weekday from 3:36 to S:30 p.m. at either of two phone numbers, MI 8-7222 or MI 6-7223. The special phone service is sponsored by the Birmingham Re-reation Board, the Community House and the Senior Men’s Club. Record Budget Set for Hospital (Continued From Page One) first time in several years that we’ve had the same bed complement two years running.”, “This budget should be the most accurate we’ve made in several years," he said. The occupancy estimate was increased in view of the 1962 occupancy rate, which was 95.87 per cent as of Deo»-4r---- Earnings from patient billings next year are estimated at $6,-169,950, which includes a $396,435 allowance for losses on welfare cases, Blue Cross and unpaid bills. Other income Is expected to reach $144,300. Salaries and wages account for $4,034,200 of the 1903 budget expenses. The budget must now go to the City Commission for approval before it is officially adopted. No further action by the hospital board required. Mona Lisa Off for U. S. LE HAVRE, France UP) - Mona Lisa sailed for her American debut today aboard the liner France, snugly tied to a bed in a first class cabin. increase in pedestrian Injuries from January through November. ■ ★ ( v' There waro 30 persons Injured in traffic in November, six more than the same month in 1961, according to Police Chief Ralph W. Moxley. There were 83 traffic accidents last month, also an increase over the 70 reported in November of the previous yfear, Moxley said. ’ He noted that “following too closely" and “failure to yield right of way” were the causes of six out of 10 accidents last month. r a ■"" Moxley urged pedestrians and motorists to be alert because December is the most dangerous month of the year for pedestrian accidents. Birmingham Temple No. 94, Pythian Sisters, will holfl its annual Christmas party 8 p.m. Wednesday at Community Hoffed. District 8 Deputy Lillian Clark of Roseville will be a guest. The temple will install 1963 officers Jan. 16. Mrs. Clarence Vliet Service for. Mrs. Clarence-lMina A.) Vliet, 90, of 416 W. Brown St., will be 1 p.m. tomorrow at First Presbyterian Church of Birming- Cremation will be In White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy. Mrs. Vliet died Wednesday in St. Joseph Mercy Hospital, Pontiac, after a long Illness. Her body is at the Bell Chapel of -William R. Hamilton Co. She was a past president of the Birmingham Women’s Club and a member of the Elijah Grout Chapter, Daughters of the American Revolution. ★ it k Surviving besides her husband re a daughter, Mrs. William V. Owen of Los Angeles, one brother, three grandchildren and three great-grandchildren. Simms $5.63 Save *19.95 Cordless Electric Toothbrush SAFI! No Plug-In . . . CONVENIENT! No Cord, No Recharging 33 Complete Set for Whole Family- [Batftry powsrtd^indtr^lfh'A zwsir-Irrfawiihft (different Colors) Operates on Iow-C0»t tr*n-sisfor typo batteries Has up/down brushing motion approved by dantiits. 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Cord mm* k Kip / THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, DECEMBER U, 1962 JksSL Cuban Missile Story The Department'of Agriculture!the'U.S. could beproducedsuc-estimates that only about eight cessfully without the use of agrl-of the 72 major crops grown In] cultural chemicals. PARK FREE MSS HEW YORK (UPI)--The crisis over Soviet missiles in Cuba was rated jfp. l today in the list ct 1992,” compiled by Uhfyed Press ■ International. ■ flie Cuban crisis was the overwhelming choice for first place In the annual poll of editors representing hundreds of UPI subscribers in the United States and Canada. Contesting closely for s e c on d place were Lt. Col. John *H. Glenn’s first United States earthorbiting flight and the troop-enforced enrollment of a Negro at the University of Mississippi. The Glenn flight took second, “01 Miss” third. —1962 LIST— ; Here is the 1962 list: I 1. Cuban Soviet-missile crisis. __ .LX Glenn space llighU._.____„___ ! 3. “Ole Miss” desegregation- 4. Chinese Reds d r i v e ini India. r;:~.■;—■— 5. Kennedy forces steel price cutback. 6. Stock market’s $20.8-billion break May 28. 7. Thalidomide deformed babies. 8. Soviet twin-astronaut feat. 10. Death of Marilyn Monroe. news staff of the newspaper. I the editors, who usually b a s elman interest, end the amount of UPI submitted 34 major events their judgments on significance, space the story occupied in the of the year for ^sonfllderation byjpublic impact, shock value,yhu-[i Runners up included two close ones: the midterm Elections and Telstar. Many editors remarked on their teifote thit l962 seemed the newsiest year sinee World War 41 ond-ed. Some said that after choosing the top three stories this year, selection of the others in order of precedence was of such diff^ culty that, as one put it, “They might as well be drawn out/of • hat.” I In some cases, one ballot rep-i of t| resented the consensus ; the / Warn Citizens ■/ of Deceptive Insurance Ads 01M — Michigan’s ns were warned to-ire of high-pressure ising sent by un-irance companies, mt for out-of-state insurance offers, particularly those describing low cost, no examination and coverage for /medical and hospital care for / persons past II,” advised State / Insurance Commissioner Sherwood Colburn. Insurance department records show, Colburn said, that policyholders frequently have difficulty in obtaining satisfactory settlement of claims against unlicensed insurers. State law empowers the insurance department to assure policyholders fair treatment and settlement of claims in accordance! with contract terms In the case of licensed Insurers, he said. “The lure of fabulous coverage for pennies may be, tempting,” Colburn said, “but unless the company is licensed by the Michigan Department of Insurance, your policy may be worthless.” | Famous BRAND NAMES at SIMMS FAWNIS DISCOUNTS.. m Before you buy any Camara, Translator Radio or Tape Recorder-it will aav vou in dollare to SE compare before you buy; Siirnne also guorontees you service after the «*le. Free exchange S ariviloao offer Christmas. Huny for Th#so Specials Ionite or Saturday. ■ , | Better CAMERA GIFTS Cost LESS at SIMMS | j i PHOTO DEVELOPING ; AND PRINTING KIT J [ $9.95 Value-Now JBj AJf 1 S Everything needed to de- ■■ s velop *qnd print your gjA J own pictures. /” KODAK ‘Kodacolor’ FILMS $1.25 Value-ROLL B| Slock Up for ChrlsImdS - Rm 1 KShMfcJ':-.. $19.95 Value-Now j 1 for better movfes fn- jjf |||| | C Sun-Gun unit. ' WP N. $3.10 ROLL t>f 38 KXPOIUREI ..... y.. $2.18 I r RADIANT ’METEOR’ ! Movis-SHds Scrssns \ $12.(7 Value 899 1 30x40-lnch Movie H * $14.87 Value R99 \ 40x40-lt>chSlide v | $21 .(7 Value 1197 k . 50x80” Movie or Slide , ‘KODACHROME II’8mm FILM for L^^WorMOWES-m*- $2.95 Value-Now BI 1 U \ r ite*#***^ Ml 130 feet of ASA 23 out- , M \ 1 -jj 40* door or ASA. 4Q Indoor rot-■ V lng. for beHer color movies. WMM $4.50 MAGAZINE LOAD 8mm Film....... $3.25 For 8mm MOVIES and 35mm SLIDES asffl COLOR JEILM PROCESSING $1.85 Value—Mailed ' MaAMi\ Direct to Your Home dbdb \ ,1,^3'Prepaid mailers for 8mm movies JkBBv ' or 33mm 20-exposure slides. Proe- WB^B '•P essed by the latest gytomatic WWWW Genuine KODAK PROCESSING 4 en Get the new low prlce on genuine KODAK PROCESSING- ’ 1 vU 8mm roll tor 35mm 20-exposure slides. Also included at big [ discount ore other size processing. Moiled direct to your home B 'by Kodak. Usually $1.83 seller In most other stores. 1 & RADIANT DELUXE H i / Silver Lenticular ; Bo-Master Screens [ $26.95 Value *1087 s 49x40-lnohSlide .Ill k 134.96 Value-60x50” 4J99 » Mm or Slide •.. ., : MANSFIELD 8mm ^ 1 Editor and Splicer t ,$24.95 Value—Now . png j Spike short reeli Into 1 gielef 1 long shows. Viewer, re* B k 'Winds, ate. ■ ^ j [ r ‘ACADEMY’ DELUXE ' • Edttor and Splicsr , $59.95 Value—Now Deluxe editor end tM ART ► splicer with focus • fl 1 J ^ framer marker. g 4|W ^ POLAROib KTZS! SETS - Automatic Settings I Perfect Picture! inlO Stcondt MB ‘5™ 0087 price ^NdqlJJjAs pictured - set has electric Wp comera' deluxe leather AG-l size. Takes large pictures— oncl will take cdtor pictures when | i j ‘■h. * film becomes available in the * " KODAK ‘STARMITEt 1 j Camera Set l $13.50 Value-Now -k Everything needed to W WWRj | take pictures now. ■ BB : L Built-In flash. ‘ j ARGUS 75 1 CAMERA OUTFIT $19.95 Value—Now m Bolds 12 Reels and Cans Movie Reel Chests J99 OSS 398 $2.95 VALUE-200 FT. SIZE... Reflex Zoom *®. Movie Camera J24I.M Value #4tl 17081 ROLL LOAD Modal.., | 10 198s Newest 1963 model 8mm Optronic automatic eye movie camera* with dual *peed feature. $1 holds. 16MM REEL CHEST 400 FT............ All Metal-Carry Handle DISCOUNTS on TRANSISTOR RADIOS Noted Songwriter Harry Barris Pies For Projector Owners SLIDE TRAYS lumbered .,.. ♦>. 3 fori $3i| AIRQUIPT ARflUS 1 139 BURjBANK, Calif. (AP)-Harry \ Barris 56, noted songwriter and a < member of the original “Rhythm * Boys” with Bing Crosby, died i Thursday at St.. Joseph's Hospital ] after a-lengthy illness. Barris composed “Serenade in Blue," “Ml8sisslppi Mud” and “I Surrender Dear” among others. He suffered a.broken l|lp in a j fall a year and a half ago and ‘ subsequently contracted cancer. He is survived by his widow, Marjorie, and two daughters. ARGUS ‘AUTRONIC’ MS Camera $99.95 Value-Now Automatic electric eye 1 lor perfect slides. Flash and case. 79 187 SAWYER’S IMO R SLIDE PROJECTOR $99.50 Value—Now 600 wans, remote focus and advance .model. 35%discount 64 99 Now, There's Gratitude; j j f Makes Light of Promise CLERMONT, Fla. (AP)-Doro-, \ thy Hoskinson lives on a 'dark j street. She asked her brother-in- ! RETINA REFLEX III 35mm CAMERA law, Jim Hoskinson, to do^some-i j thing about it if he won election “* tptjom»■ , \ Newest. 1963 model single lens reflex. Only 3. 1588 to the City Council. 1 Jin was elected this week and j he remembered Dorothy’s request. He sent her a flashlight. REVERE 8mm MOVIE PROJECTOR REALTONE ‘Aristocrat’ 8-Transistor Radios 87 Compare to $29.95 Sailors' — With case, battery and earphones. Oval speaker. REALTONE 6-Transl*tor Clock-Radios REALTONE 3-Oand 9-Transistor Radio l St&Z £tl ■ Pocket-Size 9-Transistor PORTABLE AM-FM RADIO 3487 $49.95 Vblue — Powerful ,1 radio with best tone. Telescoping antenna, case and 1 ewpjhone. «tsssssss< ‘TRIUMPH’ la-Tranoiitor Portable AM-FM Radio 87 GOP Picks Chairman PUNT UP) — Raymond Kelly ‘ #99.95 Value m For 0-Volt Batteries Battery Chargor *and Allan' Compare to $99,50 Radios. Has A.F.C. lock, tone control and 57' For HI-FI Sound Transistor Radio SPEAKER $2.9S 1 Value $4.9$ f Value m Jr., comanager of a Flint Invest- 1 minti firm, has been named t chairman of the Genesee County j Republican Committee, succeed-*. lng Chester SchWeilWger, who w 1 signed after serving more than "two years. Kelly Is a, member of , the Republican State Central j "Committee. Spoi 2-Way Bright Switch MlCharg* weak baltei’lks t ■play radio'without,batter —'with adapter on AC outlet. \ As shown—Tube f all transistor radios. Revere" model-- 7i8-pro|actor - with forward reverse and still ..projections.) Ideal gift for the enllra family. ! ’ . ■■ '' A ,98 N. SAGINAW ST. ^-Camera Dept., Main Floor f OPEN TONITE Until 10 P.M. and EVERY NIGHT'til CHRISTMAS Bettor GIFTS Cost Less at SIAAMS—Your Christmas Storm Just chock the famous brand names and quality, then look at the LOW, LOW PRICE TAGS ... you're assured of this DISCOUNT plus QUALITY at SIMMS. i . listed bolow is more proof. • • • flKB Choice of “Bssosn” or “Chatham” 72x99” BLANKETS Usual $6.98 Sellers Famous ’McAllister’ plaids by Chatham . reversible blankets (plaid one side, plain on other) by Beacon. Over 6” stain bindings. Marshall-Field's “FIELDCREST” 72”x90”«." Blanket $7.95 List Price — Soft, lleeby, easy to launder . . . and dries quickly. Our deluxe quality at almost $4 saving. 90% toyon with 10% acrylic In reversible iacquards. Full 3 Vi pounds. 7-Inch acetate binding. Make ideal gifts (or everyone. Deluxe “BEACGN” Winter-Weight 72x90” Blanket Guaranteed $8.95 Value — AltflRST-Quolity rayon with mixed cotton and acrylic for longer wear. Lively 'Winter Rose' design. Wide satin binding. mtm. 2nd FLOOR SPECIALS A Whole Bathroom-FuU} of Fine Quality Towels at a Record Low Price! 18-PIECE SETS Originally Priced at *14.88 -Now at SIMMS— Extra Heavy Matching sets in 3 designs of harmonizing color. • HERE’S WHAT YOU OIT * 3 BATH Towels wwo 6 HAND Towels (28'W'j 9 WASHCLOTHS jirxu ) fill You savo almost half on, tno finest Jim quality. Famous ‘BERNZ-O-MATIC/ Propane Torch Kit $12.20 Seller—New . | I Propone torch kit 1 I wltn flame spreader, " soldering fip, cylinder, etc. All . in I ' handy metal case for carrying j and storage. J 77 .f»eee#ee*ee#e ‘GENERAL ELECTRIC’ Clock-Radio Slinm* Pries ij As shown—powerful tub# model radio for bedroom, / kitchen or ony room . . . wokp up to music auto-matically, plus loud alarm buzzer. Plus Federal Tax. Hen’s Ike GIFT Every MAH Wests! HEAVY DUTY INDUSTRIAL UATIPI ‘DUWEL’ 7-INCH Cowparo te $49.95 SoRoro As shown—10-AMP. GENERAL ELECTRIC MOTOR develops 1%• HP, boll bearing slip dutch, prevents kickbacks, rip guide, heavy lauge base plate, side knob. gauge ______ Rugged construction, cool, quiot operation. Power Saws 24* Famous TOYS at BIG DISCOUNTS TRAIN Cowboy Outfit 288 Styled as pictured — genuine leather holster and shooter plus a 50-shot ropoator flip rifle. I $9.95 LIONEL SCIENCE SETS **’-‘igroph, Printing Press, T.I.pbon.—tech .. .. . $4.95 TUMBLEBUM GAMES I" $3.95 AIRPORT SETS Realistically detalUd, poly plastic . T $3.00 ‘ELDON’ FIRE ENGINE iu rie.lble, unbreakable Rely. Aerial ladder...I HOUSEWARE GIFTS AT DISCOUNTS FIRK KING 7-Pe. Oven Sets Sot has 1 casserole and cover, 1 plo plate end 4 dessert or custard cups. Ovenproof ! glasswares. Pressure NATIC $15.95 Valum 9 ; 4-quart size pressure cooker ; of alumtnum with exclusive ura regulator., Keeps all wmmm 9* N. Saginaw 2nd FLOOR jOISCOUNTS. Idh THE PONTIAC PRESS FRIDAY, DECEMBER 14, 1962 Snowbound Town Takes It Cool WATERVLIET W — Covered veniencea, the gr with mow literally from heed to doesn't matter too foot, whet d<*i a little Michigan- The Wstervllet city do? closed for one dej Watervllet happily goes right weather - caused c town on a rerouting from the jammedI-94 fMT'warm wST Watervllet concedes It has had luck, too, Watervllet Commurtl-ty Hospital has gone without any emergency cases. Stranded motorists are made to feel at home. The doors are open to them at the Methodist, Catholic and Congregational churches. They get free coffee and sandwiches. On a per-capita, square • foot basis, few Michigan communities Have had more snow recently that Watervllet, population about 2,000. Today’s reading of snow accumulation will be somewhere around a full 50 Inches. But-except for certain incon- This little Berrien County city, on Paw Paw Lake 14 miles west of Benton Harbor, boasts of its apples, peaches and grapes during the growing season. ' A current boast is the way Police Chief Victor Bianchi and his -two patrolmen have kept the car lanes clear fc| traffic. . All in all, Watervllet has been having a good time. . Residents say community spirit is high. People are having a good time. The small talk in the three small downtown restaurants and. SHOP EVERY NIGHT TILL 9-PARK FREE ALL DAY ON CITY-OWNED LOTS TILL CHRISTMAS! AMlwMit pauses for the rare scene at, an old mill about 12 miles south of Atlanta. In Hartford, Mich., (below) with 40 or more inches of snow on the ground, Lawrence Weston and his son Richqrd hitched their horses to a cargo sled and made regular rounds delivering coal to area residents. WINTER’S WONDERS — Strange scenes have become the rule In the midst of wintry weather which has Jolted widespread areas of the nation. 'Way down South in Rex, Ga., an icy picture of rare-beauty was painted (above) as that state shivered in record cold. Rex Postmaster Kathryne Mitchell •SALESMEN'S SAMPLE- by probably the most famous maker of men's shirts! ONMosmtwr y3 AND V* ON SPORT SHIRTS! WHITE AND COLORED DRESS SHIRTS Cottons, Dacrons, blends; Were 5.00 to 10.00, MANY STYLES IN SWEATERS Cordlgans, pullovers; Were 10.00 to 17.95 HUGE SELECTION OF TIES Many patterns, fabrics; Were 1.50 to 2.50. Recent radio telescopic observations indicate that Venus’s surface temperature may be as high as 875 degrees. Drained and irrigated sections of France’s Camargue region produce almost all the nee consumed in that country. Battle Snow on Grocery Trip could by cruiser, shoveled a path MANY PATTERNS IN SPORT SHIRTS Cottons, blends, silks, flannels; Were 4.00 to 12.95 PAW PAW I* -Two deputies from the Van Buren County Sheriffs Department used a patrol car, snow shovels, a farny tractor and snow shoes last night/in a six-mile tri|> to deliver milk for a baby and some groceries to its family stranded by snow for a week in their home about six miles north and west of Paw Paw. CMef deputy Willard Reck and for some distance, commandeered a firm tractor, and, when it could go no further, walked a mile and a half on snow shoes to deliver the required supplies. SMART KNIT SPORT SHIRTS tcmgond short sleeves; Were 4.00 to 14.95, .% OFF Agricultural products comprise about a fourth of the nation’s exports. Sen. Hubert Humphrey, D-Minn., recently said the output of 60 million acres of cropland moved abroad last year. BOXER SHORTS Were 1.50 to 2.95. ( * Lush terry with pretty posy-print lining I1 HANDKERCHIEFS Were 55c to 2.00... lb OFF STREET FLOOR Most Wanted Gifts for Men ■, .*8 V. I it ScJfflS !L. Top 20 at Groat Savings! by Barry Compare Our Pricts! mono stirio „ Country and Western, Vol. 2; Roy Chorles -. 2.77 2.77 Alley Cot; Bent Fabric ..................... . 2.77 1.77 Jazz. Sombo; Ston Gets... .......... 1.77 #.77 My Son the Folk Singer; Allan Sherman.........2.77 . * > Taste ot Honey; Mortin Denny............. 2.77 3.77 Rambling Rose; Nat Cole....*-...... 2.77 3.77 .Cauptry Meets the Blues; Ramsey Lewis...... 3.77 3.77 I Left My Heart In Son Francisco; Tony Bennett 2.77 3.77 Joan Baez In Concert.. ................ 3.77 4.77 Col Tloder; Music of Mexico onl Brazil..... 3.77 4.77 Peter 'Paul ond Mary....................... 2.77 3.77 Moon River; Mantovonl......................... 2.77 3.77 What Kind pf Pool Am I; Sommy Davis Jr..... 2.77 , 3.77 Rapture; Johnny Mothls ..................... 2.77 3.77 Sugar N'Splee; Peggy Lee................... 2.77 3.77 Mr. Piano; Roger Williams. ...........,.... 2.77 3.77 Route 46; Nelson Riddle....... ............... 2.77 3.77 Baby Elephant Walk; Laurence Welk............. 2.77 3.77 Per Your Dancing Party; Chubby Checker..... 2.77 . •« Right Now; Herbie Manh.;........... ....... . 3.77 4.77 Soft, comfortable bootie slippers tor her with thick, bouncy foam innersolis- Rich terry on the outside, print cotton lining inilde and hidden elostlc for o snug fit. Gay colors. In sizes small (4-5’A), medium (6-71A), large (8-9'A) Notion* Street Floor GOOD GROOMING THREE-SOME ...club brush, clothes brush and comb. Amber lucite, nylon bristle*. IMS' COMMUTER KIT.., top grain Cowhide, black or brown, Waterproof lining. Holds all grooming necessities. GRINNELL DIAMOND NEEDLE *•9/5.95 A QC With Purchase | ONLY— T/J of any of the M Y««r Guarantee! *bove records! In a re-usable holiday tin . ! “Old Bedford' RUM-BUTTER FRUIT CAKE Modef from an Early American'recipe this Iruit cake/hat luscious ingredients including dotes," cherries, pineapple, cashew nuts and rum-buttet flavor It stdys rich end moist in Us own, color - DOWNTOWN STORE 4? 5;/S09fnaw Street FE 3-7168 ;= v / MALL STORE i Rd. ot Elizabeth Lake Rd. Phone 682-0422 WMaILY 'TIL 9 P.,M —BOiH STORES WALLET AND KEY CASE...in black or brown Torrlno grain Cowhide. In handsome re-use box. $E|Q* PERSONALIZED TIE RACK . . . walnui and chrome plated, 36 folding arms. Practical and popular, mm HAVEN VALET. ./Bird brueh With shoe-horn handle, tie rack and belt rack. Black. \ / $495 THE PQJiTTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, DECEMBER U, 1962 SHOP TILL 9 TONIGHT and EVERY NIGHT TILL CHRISTMAS Srt-R’E-t-C-H your gift dollars the most elegant stocking Christmas ever- a Spanish Lace Boudoir Case FREE with -every 3 pairs SMI find so many occasions to wear this pert two* piece drew)... and she'll look her best too in "Dune Deck" fabric with the Look of Raw Silk. Classic cardigan neckline, % sleeves, slim skirt. Give it in bldck or navy, sizes 12 to 20 and • 12 '/a to 20'/z. stockings Daytime Dresses Third Floor A classic favorite gift Lots of femininity at a tiny gift price! Our Own Millay Lace Lavished Gift Slips" Silky smooth nylon tricot. . . lavished With lots of . Dawn through the years this has been one of our very favorite gift gowns. It's very washable, all rayon, and has a mesh insert at the midriff for an added feminine touch. Sizes 32 do 40 in pastel colors. It’s like giving two gifts in one—a luxurious red satin and black lace boudoir case that holds t . Beauty Box of wonderful Phoenix stockings. Every woman on your Christmas list will treasure the beauty of both. Second Floor Lovely Lingerie Second Floor 1.35 to 1.65 a pair in classic and fashion colors Hosiery... Street Floor This wool-corduroy car coat has a Pile Lining and a Wolf-Fur Detachable Collar She wants slippers? Give her the nicest! Manufacturer's Closeout Specials! Costume Rings The Cindy In block, blun or whit* leather. 6.50 Looking lot something just a little different? You'll find it ot Waita'il An example U this'36" three-lone pile lined car coat of wool corduroy. It feature! a real wolf-fur collar that detaches. Sizes 6 to 14. 3.98 to 5.98 values Pair it with this* slim Proportioned Stretch Slacks 45% wool, 55% DuPont stretch nylon elocks with extra-nice tailoring details. Street Floor Third Floor Wise gift shoppers appreciate the quality of those i Tiny-Priced Fashion Bags Wise gift shoppers appreciate the quality 'budget-fashion handbags. Many colors sizes, shapes and materials tYscludinr marshmallow. vinyls, simulated leather and tapestries. Handbags... Street Floor Voice of the People: THE PONTIAC PRESS ■Let Sentiments Be Known on State’s Hunting Laws9 Romney’s Selections The most indicative quality that stands out, in the first three appointees named by Gov.-elect Oborgb Romney is the proven experience they bring to the State administra-, tion. f i This has not always been true in the last 14 years. Oftentimes the men chosen have not had practical experience in the par- ticular field they were selected to head up and administer. . ★ ★ ★ To work out our state fiscal problems, William L. Seidman has been their few minutes tO 'Stories of “mass appear from their own knowledge. A general newscaster simply cannot explain a complicated financial event on the air in a minute or two. ★. : ★ ★ " “TV and radio,”'says the authority, “do bring news to us on the spot, but you have to be where a TV or radio set is tuned on or you’ve missed it . At three different times last Sunday, I had the frustrating experience of missing a report 1 particularly wanted to hear because I couldn’t stick with a TV or radio set,” ★ ★ ★ This reaction is concerned with only one phase of the daily news. picked as the unpaid adviser on the gut< SUf{erjing from comparable in-Romney t«am, He brings years of skiU ^^uacy are an categories, led by as a successful accounting executive the „moBt mlssed ltems„ ln the from Grand Rapids, which should spheres of obltuarle8> marrlages, stand him in good stead to revamp claa8ified M store ^ our weak money situation, -j&_ ★ 'Jjk.________ The assignment of state controller gobs to Glenn S. Allin Jr., who is far fn»na neophyte when it cpmes to municipal government experience. He is a four-time mayor ^Kalamazoo who claims an excellent recwd. ;--I---------A".- ------------ If everyone interested in deetvhunting as a sport wotiid write /Us representative- and state senatob'and tell them what they think, it might help. This must be done statewide. " ■■ I oppose the .opening of deer season five days early in the Upper Peninsula. It is a dangerous law favoring a few, < ' ★ ★ The reason we had a good 1962 season is because we didn’t have an any-deer season in 1961. OrtonvHie ‘Mason Important B . Bill of Rights’ On Dec. 19 we remember the signing of the BUI Of Rights into J| _ JJIPQIM bur Constitution. George Mason ^ ^ heard was WyjespmwiWe for this. ^ he p,aced ^ ^ her In 1791 the ratification of the and b°ard received a first Ten Amendments to the letter from him, - the Bill of 7;,/ ‘ George F. Gray • Another Writes on Slayton Firing Why hasn’t Mrs. Helen . Slayton’s former supervisor, rMr. Offers Suggestion to City Officials A Word To The Unwise Could It he that we take our newspapers a little too mueh for granted? David Lawrence Says:. . The ere. based on a Declaration of Rights which George Mason had supplied to the Virginia OonstitatioB. ★ W' W ^ Mason was a delegate to the I read that Mayor Landry and Federal Constitutional ConvenUon Mr. Henry were angry that our but declined to sign the completed vice squad head raided the Green document, because it had no Bill Door and 92 persons were airest-of Rights and because it did not ed. Mr. Landry even stated that prohibit slavery. He lived to see Lt. Nesbit should be fired if even the Bill of Rights adopted, but one of the 52 persons involved To head up Romney’s governmental advisory post, young Wal-—Vries of Calvin and Hope Colleges, with the title of doctor of political science, seems exceptionally well qualified though he la oply 34 years old. His knowledge of governmental processes ihould be Invaluable. ★ ★ ★ „ The new look in Lansing has all the earmarks of a team equipped to pick up the ball and run with it/ Detroit Edison Sets Record in Poiyer Use A significant record HI power consumption for Southeastern Michigan was established last week. Detroit Edison Co. reports new highs wert set for the week, for a day and for a 15-minute period, the week’s total of 859,306,000 kilowatt-hours topped the mark Set last January. ★ ★ ★ Yearly peaks have been set successively In recent years, but, invariably Within four of five days of Christmas. Consumption lost week by the area’s industrial operations continued at the same level of the preceding seven days, when usage was up 13.7 per cent from the several weeks before and 7.6 per cent from the year-ago level. ★ it ★ ' —This Is but another of the cheering Indexes of our community’s economic status and growth and augurs well for continued progress and wellbeing of those fortunate enough to be living within it. > The Man About Town Postman’s Plea ^Retter Footing1 on Route Aim of Letter tp Santa HOWARp HELDENBRAND 1 Santa Claus” letter signed Postal Carrier couldn’t be more timely — on two counts! r \ • \ • “Please send a carload of snow shovels and salt to Pontiac, sotoat all of the homeowners on my route ran keep their sidewalks dear of Ice and snoVthis winter. “I want to give good postal ser hut It does take a little cooperation I my patrons. I also want to have a Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year-free from broken bones and bruised cheeks.” A P. S. suggests, that the Merry Gentleman include some copies of the Golden Rule. K Highly Deceitful in Cuba Speech Air Mediums Belay Sparse News Reports A nationally known woman economist vividly described the void left ln East Coast news treatment by the striking of seven New York newspapers last Saturday. Depending as she does on such Sources for background material, the economist said that TV and radio coverage left wide gaps in every category of news. ” it ★ ★ As approached from the standpoint of ft reporter, the financial writer pointed out: • Air atedinme can do but the sketchiest job in the financial field, picking out only the most obvious and simplest highlights. Frequently, these are npt nearly, as important as the less apparent or Russian parliament =» which attempts, to explain publicly for the first time why the Soviet Union' sent missiles and planes into Cuba. It is, however, the most flagrant example of deliberate deception by the head of a government that has been given to the world since the days of Adolf Hitler, The influence' of Nikita Khrushchev will lnevtt-1 ably suffer. For,] while he insists that he sent mis-1 siles to Cuba to LAWRENCE counter the alleged threat of aggression by the United States, tool phrenology of events actually that the missiles were em-placed and the planes were 'to Cuba long before there was an$\crisis in the relations between Cuba and the United States. Let’s hope that the spirit of the Golden Due to cehsorship, this dlscrep-Rule will move the comparatively . few ancy in datesNvill not be revealed thoughtless householders to mend their ways to the Soviet people, and merit the exemplification of the creed The Premier endeavored to with which postal workers are imbued: assure his associate* tost the ***** Snow Nor Rain Nor Heat Nor *as to^Tii'tT Gloom of Night Stays These Couriers Cuban people, “our brothers in From the Swift Completion of Their Ap- toil, our class brothers.’’^ But it is unrealistic for anyone outside the Soviet Union to believe that merely an ideological comradeship caused the Soviet Union, to spend,in the neighborhood of ax billion dollars just for the sake of anticipating some theoretical action by the United States in respect to a country as far aWay from the Soviet Union as Cuba. CONTRADICTION Though arguing for the right of a nation to deal with its own internal affaire, Khrushchev contradicted himself In hie speech when he said the Soviet Union felt it deeirable not only to take control Of certain Important programs Inside Cubs but also to maintain a Soviet military. organization under direct Command of the a Soviet defense ministry instead of under Old Cuban government'. He paidi “It is true that, at the request of the Cuban government, we sent arms there. But what motives guided us in doing this? Purely humane ones. “Cuba needed arms as a means of deterring aggressors, not as a means of attack. Cuba was, indeed,' undir a real threat of Invasion.” * The Soviet Premier added: “A very alarming situation had arisen. Everything showed that ..WASHINGTON — Pi e m i e r aside the. idest that there was any Khrushchev hasjustmade a serious military purpose ihvojve^. s p e e c h to the Supreme Soviet He said: “The government of Cuba last summer asked the Soviet govem-meht to provide additional assistance, 1 j't ■ “An agreement was reached about a number of new measures, including the stationing in Cuba of a fifr dozen of Soviet ballistic rockets with a medium range of-action. These weapons were to he Id the hands hf Soviet military. “What was the aim of that decision? Of course, neither we nor our Cuban friends meant that the rockets dispatched to Cuba would be used for an attack against the United States or any other counr try. Our only aim was the defense of Cuba.” (Copyright, 1962), was spared seeing the national tragedy which ensued from the rejections of his views about human bondage. . ' ,Y” ★ ★ ★ As an American I thank Ged for the vision of George Mason Wtu> insured ns the rights of freedom that so many places hi the world are still denied. Mary L. Marquis Bloomfield Hills Portraits By JOHN C. METCALFE In my house the living room... went free. Now to carry this reasoning further and to be fair, 1 think if even one of these 62 people involved is convicted, Mr. Landry and Mr. Henry should resign' from the City Commission. Has Many Reasons far Being Thankful We appreciate David Lawrence’s articles In which he lets us know what condition our country is _ln. We also enjoy Dr. Hal Boy lie Says: which we are thankful and we pray for God’s blessing on The Press and its entire staff at this Christmas season. Big Business Is Worrying About ‘ Corporate Jtew YORK (AP)-What lit 8" going over Niagara Falls as a 10$ (Heading of Patent Medicine Advertisement) Does GETTING V UP NIGHTS Make You Feel Old? No . . . What makes me feel eld Is getting up mornings. After reading a recent item about Hank Jonas, former Pontiac boy now become a musical celebrity, James L. (Jim) Howlett of 164 E. Iroquois Rd., called to say that I’d only told the third of It. The artist has two equally talented brothers, Thud and Elvln Jones. • • The first is a featured trumpeter with Count Basle’s orchestra, and the other a crack drummer in small Jazz combos. Along ~ with their brother, they are known across the country . . . recently made a recording —ELVIN—under Riverside label. . Chairman for the event George Ferguson of 209 Summit St., briefs me that tomorrow the Metropolitan Club will put on its annual Goodfeilow Paper Sale. ‘‘corporate image” to you? Lately many corporations- have been worrying out loud about their public image—which, as I gather, it pretty much like looking at yourself in' a crazy mirror in an amusement 'park and hoping that passers - by | won’t think the | reflection is the * real you. Anyway, more-and more corporations seem to be spending more and more money trying to improve their Image. IMAGES MAY DIFFER \ It is my opinion that one’s image of a big and complex corpora^ tioh is built up from fantasies early irk, life, or as the result of con-fusedXcollistans with reality as one grows older. The individual’s mental picture of a large business Jirm may be widely different from that held by those who run During a bout with Insomnia the other night, I fell to thinking Of the problem of “corporate images.” Here are a few that loomed before a dozing brain— and I don’t think the corporation will mind some gentle spoofing: Du Pont—A kindly dentist fixed a nylon tooth in my mouth and then said, beaming, “Now you can eat all the plastic corn on the cab you went. Better Ijving through chemistry.” SORRY, NO MONEY American Telephone & Telegraph—A fine-faced gray-haired old man saying Into a telephone, “Yes, son, we are always glad to mender chorus hums In the background, “It floats.” Metropolitan Life Insurance—A quaint, old-fashioned widow who looks like Whistler’s mother counts the folding money in her gnarled hands as she murmurs, “Now I guess I can afford to buy that new bonnet I’ve been a-hank-erlng for all these years.” Such are one man’s eerie idea of “corporate images.”. is a very restful place . Whcroi^yTtw»r« m*ny^wfnr the worries of the day . , . In “ * * *" * the twilight I erase ... And the bedroom has ltd charm... When the shades tor night are drawn ... So that dreams cannot escape . . . Till the hour of the —— dawn ... And the bathftom with - its tub . . . Pleasing really is no Smilpfl less . . . For the morning dip- |n it... Offers daily happiness... And tor me the dining room .. . Has a very great appeal.... For 1 truly can enjoy ... AHt* tahia any meal . . , But the kitchen I believe ... Is the most important one . . . For without a cook and food . 7 . Nothing in a home is done, (Copyright, 1962) A lot of marriages end in divorce and in « lot of others couples fight if out to the hitter end.— THOUGHT FOR TODAY And just as it is appointed for men to die once, and after that comes judgement. 9:27. The way some people drive It’s wise to look both ways whoa crossing a one-way street. Some wives feel they could make real good use of the bowling ball hubby takes to the alleys two or three times a week. WHAM! Or * * Sailors must have a hard time of it being at sea and in a mess at the same time. Reviewing Other Editorial Pages Federal Reserve £*£££ £*±2$ Z Space ^xpfotplion , The Chicago Daily Tribune The outcry over secrecy in government, has provided Rep. Wright Patman of Texas with what he thinks is a good chance plans to buy and sell securities. The committee’s goal would largely be thwarted by speculators. < The St LouU Post-DUpatch It is encouraging that the United States and Soviet Russia have not let disagreement in the United Muamo .. . H This is preciWy Wh«t Mr. Pit- 'Nations over reconnaissance sat- to get in'n few wallops against man wants. ftyranvlcS the ind#- eliites interfere with plans for co- the federal reserve system. Mr: pendence of the federal reserve operation in space exploration. Patman wants to make public the system. He wants to make it a minutes of the- federal reserve .machine run by politicians to pro- board’s open market comjnlttee. dues cheap money, votes, andlnr-This Is toe committee set up flatten, by the banking system to help —— stabilize toe money supply. It Pnfr,lwn,KL kA*i**m determines whether the federal KegrettdDle /VIOV® ___Announcement of- a formal agreement to work together can be taken as an indication that the two nations can cooperate in this newest field of human en- reserve system will buy er sell government securities, and to what extent, la this manner it can influence the supply of bank credit and the level of interest rates. William McChesney Martin, chklrman of.the federal reserve board, holds that the publication of ttyese minutes would set a precedent that would “do public mischief rather than public good.” ■ (h .W W ■■ Mr. Patman’s reply is deceptively sanctimonious: “Mr. Marlin thinks the best government is The Arab World The. United States government The projects are weather satellite observations, studies of the conflnned ItsdecWon to sell Hawk ^fieMsTnd world- l^nte missiteS^Israel. It wide communication by satellite, wds an unfortunate, ill-advised de- ^ ^ttlng up of a global weather satelllta system promises t h e quickest returns. In striving for this metoorologi--oai goaL Russle and the United— States might be able to arrive at an understanding on the use of all reconnaissance satellites. have you call us long distance, secret government, while I can-bqt this time I simply can’t af- nqf get rid of the old-fashioned ford to send you the money,” and notion that the public has a right Proceeds-go for the organization’s welfare >■ aVftrflt0I 8,1 ?,one„™ 8 hug® ‘°,kn7 what lu 8overnment ... "__ __ji i__to carry out an attack on tne Cu- Rwitchboard, snvmir “PIajma gat HAmar ”. activity throughout tha your - tun) In ado- f. tion make poaaible Uie distribution ol 100 hunrapubllc ualng lla omi urmetl ■Christmas baskets for the needy. A worthy cause meriting full support by everyone. Farmer’s Almanac weather prediction for Dec. 13-16 period: Clear but. winter’s near ... Our entry for IMS’s Understatement of the Year Sweepstakes. But ln the very next paragraph, the Soviet Premier Unsistqd that none of his weapons sent to Cubs could be used for offense. In recent weeks* however, he removed some of these switchboard, saying, “Please get it right this tjme. The number you want has been changed .to 365-049-857-102-thuh-ree, thuh-ree, nighon.” ' ! K ★ Sr Sr' B General Electric — He wests • picture of Thomas Edison in his lapel, and as you give . 4 Although the networks do aitsuiRt at times to tqll what a titory means, their broadcaster* are limited by time deadlines, by td/ur that listener* might be un-interrated, j^y eagerness th devote, Verbal Orchids to- , Mrs. Lena Taylor of Union Lake; 83rd birthday. ;—I , Mrs. Ella Glngell of 4036 Baldwin Road; 80ttf birthday. A. F. Winters 1 Washington St.; 84th birthday. /■ ' same weapons because toe Unit- , b“rn«i out &ht bulb he hands ed States characterized them as doing.” Mr. Pitman Is wrong on several counfs. The federal reserve system was designed to be Independent of the government. It H enly a quasl-publle body and Its open market committee Is an agent of the private banking system rather than the gov- Everybody knows ttilt toe missiles were capable of nuclear attack on cities in the United States and that toe planer W»re able to carry,, atom bombs and drop' them on cities In certain sections of thfc country. alattlt and apprehension by the, von a new An* and nhM*v«a / * entui Arab nation. Even if the ‘‘Progress is our iS importont Publication of /toe minutes mlHtsry capability of these arms vroiSP ' would sentously damage the com- is disregarded, the implications in r General Motors—A« to», .well- "»!«*«’* efto, and uncomfortable. 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Scholia said the state chairmen sere requested to name a debater to present their party’s {point of view. Republican leaders, headed by Gov.-elect George Romney, are supporting the new constitution, while Democrats generally are opposed to it. \ “Charge /i" ■ GEORGE’S FUK1S 74 N. SaflIrW-Downtown Pontiac mi OPEN EVERY RITE Til 9 .. .SUNDAY 12 M00I tel hylomhose by M0JUD . ~oo |gj I FREE! DELICIOUS 2-LB. FRUIT CAKE P SESPmE; hSSml LOOK! ... GIFTS FOR ’1.00 "K-niil" assttRB GIRLS’SUPS GIRLS’BLOUSES. BOYS' SHIRTS BOYS’ GLOVES. famous moiad Supp-Hose 4« it with LADIES’SEAMLESS NYLON HOSE, 2for.. LADIES’PRINT * GIFT SCARVES.2 for. LADIES’ GIFT SLIPPERETTES. . Choose bom taile or fussy styles. While* and colors. Sirts 30 *° Shetland Sweeten om Skirt* 3.99 rhapsody ROBES! 41- eg I MEN’S SMART I BIFT TIES. 2 for. Z1 3-PC. CANNON W ■ TOWEL SET JL I MEN’S GIFT 1 IIFRK SCARFS $1 2-LB. DELICIOUS FRUIT OAKS....... 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IF MIN’S LEATHER QIFT OLOVIS.... *3 LADIES’KNIT I 0RLON STOLE fF MIN’S BIFT SPORT SHIRTS... $3| PINE HOLIDAY *58 LADIES’DRESSES... fF MIN'S SMART DRESS PANTS.... *3 *lr Group u ""•mi JACKETS m m .f^*8 pt $25 Qlrls* Coata M2 Warm • , 14.11 Boy*' i SUBURBANS W Hurry! Hurry! Whllo they Last I BARBIE Type DOLL] OO fwS SUITS )88, *‘hnt» Mtn*e luff. 29.80 4 for 3*o With 3 Outfits of Clothes Warm ZljHtiit ALL OTHER TOYS-OOLLS | Reduced E(f| 0/ «p“» (HI /o boats IB*8 •port Coats v r|f,gg firRMnR^ M iiel i§w| s*rNw THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 14, 1962 World Leaders Leave Fidel Castro Hanging Up in the Air By JAMES MARLOW * Associated Press News Analyst WASHINGTON r- Fidel Qastro has been left like a frog on a Illy pad, wondering whether it’s going to gain or shine. The water around him is muddy and mud-v , died. President Kennedy put strings on his pledge not to invade Cuba. He seems to interpret them one way, Soviet Premier Khrushchev another. T h is j cam*up again Wednesday. So, while • there has been no shooting, there m a y be shouting. Direct invasion seems unlikely. It would meani another crisis| With Russia. But ■JHSL the United States MARL0W did not promise not to try)to overthrow Castro by other means short of invasion. In fact, it indicated it would try. The Keanedy-Khrushchev differences over the no-invasion pledge bubbled to the surface again in two places half a apart when Khrushchev talked to the Soviet Parliament in Moscow and Kennedy had a news conference. WHAT HAPPENED? The only way to examine the differences is to look at the calendar. In the'week ofthe Cuban crisis,' when Kennedy and Khrushchev were firing letters at each other, Kennedy wrote one on Oct. 27 interpreting a Khrushchev letter of Oct. 28 as promising to remove Soviet weapons from Cuba under “appropriate United Nations’ observation and supervision” and to halt the flow of offensive weapons to Cuba. If this was what Khrushchev promised, Kennedy said, the United States would.lift its quarantine and pledge not to Invade Cuba-provided Russia . removed its weapons under U.N. supervision. The next'day, Oct 28, Khrush- Ix-Dow Official Dies in Colombia BOGOTA, Colombia W> -r Chase Osborn Oren, 66, retired superintendent of the Dow Chemical Co., Midland, Micb., died Wednesday night. A U:S. Embassy spokesman said the cause of death was a heart attack. The body will be returned to Midland today for burial. Since October, Oren.and his wife Cora had been here for . conferences he was conducting on factory management and maintenance for Colombian Industries. The sponsors were the Colombian Industrial Institute and the U.S. Agency for International Development. chev wrote Kennedy that he accepted the President's word there would be ho invasion of Cubit. Two days later, Oct. 30, some Republican senators expressed uneasiness about the no-invaslon pledge. They warned against any it that might provide a permanent Russian sanctuary in Cuba. That same daxJSdwin Mr-Mar-tln; tra«tstanl secretary of state for Inter-American Affairs, as If to quiet the uneasiness, said: don’t recall seeing anything in the exchange-which* suggests a guarantee of the status quo.” ★ W .W*'' > Khrushchev began pulling the ilssiles out. But in telling Khrushchev he wanted all the offensive weapons removed, Kennedy apparently forgot to mention specifically this meant Soviet bombers, too. Khrushchev began removing them later. Police Chief to Retire in Grosse Pointe Dec. 24 GROSSE POINTE W> - Police Chief Thomas Trombly, 60, will retire on Christmas Eve after “ years on the force, the last 26 years as chief. Trombly, who has doubled superintendent of public safety for seven years, has been on special extension since he reached 60, the mandatory retirement age, earlier this year. Left up in the air was the prob-lthe key provision in itehhedy’; lem of U.N. inspection in Cuba,[assurance against a Cuban inva Prosper With Life, Death LONDON (UPI) — Undertakers and maternity homes were among the firms invited yesterday to attend a productivity conference with the theme: “More Productivity, More Prosperity.” JULIE AND HER Julie London, a professional sion. Castro wouldn’t permit, die inspectors in Cuba. Then , on .Nov. 20 Kennedy held his first news conference since Die Cuban; crisis began. He said tee United States had promised to give assurance against an inva-mll-Ohce TJ:N. inspection had sp established. \ M dhf; * sW there was no such inspection! it could be argued, the noinvasion pledge wouldn’t stand. Then\Kennedy added a statement which was. a clear warning to Castro he’d be up to his neck in trouble without an Invasion. CLOUDED PLEDGE Kennedy said: “We will not, aI course, abandon tho political, economic and othCr efforts of this hemisphere to halt subversion from. Cubs, nor our purpose and hope that the Cuban people shall some day be truly free.” Things quieted down a while with no-invasion pledge surrounded by, clouds. Sr i’"? A.' * , 'f . Khrushchev on Wednesday pledged himself to fulfill Soviet commitments in .the Cuban settlement “so long as the other side and ' Russian , understandings didn’t look like understandings at aU. ' ; KhrUShchev added: “But if tl commitments a^ume4:HRWt’3^|:' observed by the other side shainte compelled to take such action as may be required by the situation." Then he went on to explain to the Soviet people, his way, how he came to put the missiles in Cuba in the first place and then how, he came to take them out. This made the whole"business, singer, poses with her 7-ntohti)H5td daughter Kelly for theffirst gtands by this understanding.” time, while she and her husband,’songwriter Bob Troup, were ‘ visiting friends in Harrisburg, Pa, By tlds time! of course, as the f-niArytor • shows, the American one of the Soviets’ worst postwar blunders, look likd one of the most honorable and peaceful events, of modern times. Some hours later at Kennedy’s news conference a reporter—with the Khrushchev talk about com-, initments fresh in mind — asked the .President where the no-ihva-sion pledge stands now. Kennedy said he would stand by the statement he made in his last news conference. This should provide a lot of Kennedy-Khrushchev letter-writing. PENNEYS «0» ANNIVERSARY Delight her with a for easy living NEW PRESTO SPRAT-STEAM IRON First iron to sprsy with sfeem; eliminate* water-spotting. Does more fabrics without pro- | ,.Q dampening then any ItfOO other Iron. 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Smart wide- wale, with stitch detail, Orion® acrylic pile lining. Loden, antelope. 24“ DYED RABBIT TRIMMED Wool fleece, with a huge black dyed rabbit fur shawl collar. Orion® acrylic pile lined. Black. 17“ RACCOON COLLAR ' Katural raccoon tops this all- f weather cotton poplin. Water repellent, and pile lined for warmth. 24“ STEREO HIGH-FIDELITY With 0 High-Fidelity Speakers All Now 1.963 SPACE COMMAND Remote TV fitnhuj 19" PORTABLE TV CMTMUtOLOE ML nmuTRiur Delias Styling CHECK OUR LOW PRICES " BEFORE YOU BUY As Little As 50 Weekly *1 80 Days 2 Years 1 No ] 80 Days Same As ' To | 1 Down Free Dash Ny | Payment j | Service 121 H. SAQINAW - FEB-6189 'VmAprAloincetivMW#*'' open NOW every nioht til 0 UNTIL CHRISTMAS % THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY. DECEMBER 14, 1962 At**.;. Alleghany Corp. President Vacates Hard*W NEW YORK (AP) - Wealthy rexan John D. Murchison Jr. has given up the presidency, ®! * ^' billion holding company i8 months after winning controlm an epic proxy battle. He stepped aside Thursday as head of Alleghany Corp., which contrbla Investors Diversified Services, a Minneapolis-based investment company complex, and the New York Central Railroad. He will remain as a'director. Murchison had taken over the er, Clint W. Jr., overthrew Allan P. Kirby, wealthy New. Yorker, as chairman. Elected by the Murchison-dominated board to succeed John was Bertin C, Gamble, Minneapolis businessman-financier. Gamble two months ago bought nesirly one-half of die Murchison group’s holdings and has an option to buy more — perhaps all their remaining shares. An enigma in the new align-tent is Kirby, shy and stubborn at TO, who is Alleghany’s _ single stockholder; He owns roughly one-third of the 0.0 million outstanding shares of common stock. 1 ORDINANCE NO. 7 An Ordinance to retulete the erection. ' else, location end maintenance of eigne, to provide for performance bonde and to-ipectlon and erection fees and to provide penaitlei tor the violation of slid ordl* The Township of Springfield County, Michigan, ordalpe: section I. qhort Title. I A. All eigne permitted In thoee e . of anrlncfteld Township defined and d B. stone -pertaining to goode —ictured and eervlcee . eupplled _ promteea where the algn le located. Such SEC&ONOt. Definitions. 7 (a) Erect. Ae idled herein, erect than mean to' build, conbtruct. attach, hand, place, auapedtt or affix, tb> Person. Ae used heroin,/peraon shall mean and include Any Individual, firm, partnership, — —“ “ (c) sign. As used harem, sign shall mean any announcement, declaration, demonstration, display, iUustratlpo or Insignia designed to Attract public atten- - 1. Display Sign,/As used herein, a die. play sign Is a structure or device that Is arranged. Intended, designed or used as an advertisement, announcement or dlrec- slgns shall not. b not be located' cloi ty street Or hlghv , C. Vidor to erecting i person owning end the . the real proparty upon w to bo located and tho p A1®*® to bo furnished by the t< permit. i ■tu lng paid tha douare for i •woaipt MOd, aa hereina iquai to twenty foot of totr1 —i SECTION s used herein, _______ ilsplay sign supported by uprights or bra ground surface. 3. Marquee Sign, marauee algn shall attached to or but canopy or other, nb«« looting from and supported by tha build, (ng and extending nayond the building w WbulMins lino or street m 4. Projecting :,npn. Ae f.r°M *toPeny*bt!^ other Ilian a fharuuee < which' axtahda beyond tha i 5. Temporary B a Temporary Sign Sighs Permitted in Trot Districts. . (a) Signs permitted tpnnfntlon Township j_____ —— in the Springfield Township Zoning moo as Trailer Coach Parh District |____meet the following special requlre- T No signs (hall bo permitted except - following: or advertising devil i, canvas, fabric, c tlsplay si la buOdlni Slnsar. than twonsy UTS um m »r highway right of way Una. B. Prior to ereottna any the person ownln* and the p iKtirusraw, la io erect the sign shaU maks in writing to tha township elsv > to ho furatshad by the shell mean that part of a against, or through which the displayed or Illustrated. > •«' » algn permit. If such applic properly filed with him. clerk shell Iseue a sign pern paid mir i dollar, for each algn ana also upon wo receipt by him of a cash performance • as heremoftar do*1"- *» *" amount the otroot or hlghv pt those erected by n Shall exceed Five Bum square iee» ratal surface area. SECTION IV. Special Requirements Sljpra Permitted In Residential 1 Spr Uigffeff*Dnmehip^^efined end designated tn tha •priwleM"w Ordbianea ae ReeldentteJ, meet tha following epeoial “>_.stan ahall ““ 4 larger then i,hin Zoning Itlrfcta shall arfy upon which tho sign is locatsd. fLo such sign shall be located closer than h feet to any adjoining premises, nor clot then twenty five fool io any atroat b1T&o irollghtod7 well sign of not lar or than two square foot total surface an giving tho name of tho occupant and h Plc!**Ons “Luotta^boart of .apt larg ^S^^wSrtmiyrh«tamt provided Uio SOUfOS at light la POt stans not larger than two —rWK euriace, area. «aoh da-noting *'Bnlr»iiceM im *■» , “ 8E^T10N,'*vPUI^cial Requirements tor Sign. Permitted , In AgrlouHuroi-Reeb donee District building tutlon. tw. noted provided visible. D. Two utility prlngfteld Township qamoa enu « sled In tho Springfield Township Zl rdlnance es Agrlcullural-Resldmce^ e^ulremsnts^ ^ p, permlltsd si he following: . . . ,____ A. one unllghtod slm not larger wfntv •autre feet totel fiurftce >rruining to the sole, rental or Identi ion of (!ne real property upon which IlStf ctVr^e^tonVX;^ r.‘7,e?rr«*y st!»stflor*rblfflWgyVtgSl B. 7aii signs psijnlttsd in tW ■nrinafield Town amp dwinefl jw nUnT In the Springfield Township Zoning Ordinance as fUridottoi Dlstrists. C. Out unllghtod sigh not arse aaspw StS slgn*1eToatod! ^o*such’sSh"»h»| sypate r..?$22 srag feet to any etreet or highway/right of way line. Prior to erecting any iuch sign. py,ingP ........ Wfflmtm THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 14, 1962 3 DAYS • FRIDAY, SATURDAY, SUNDAY OPEN 10-10 DAILY SUNDAYS 12-7 BLOCK BUSTER ^CHARGE ri£~ d Sizes 9-11 D Mist-tone or Suntone Perfect Chrlttmm Gift! 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Charge i{ at K-Murt! 1 NOWS GREAT K-mart QUALITY DISCOUNT STORES TO SERVE YOU Tv SRI Pf* THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, DECEMBER lA SHAWS Gift Perfect! ■ RCA Victor Portable Transistor Radio In Jewel Case Gift Box ★ Come* complete with earphone, battery, carrying ca*e, and gift boxed In o handsome |ewelry case. ★ RCA Security Sealed Circuit... 6 hlgh-effklency transistors. ★ "Golden Throat" realism with 3" high-impedance speaker. ★ Sensitive built-in ferrite rad antenna and rugged "Impac" case. ★ All American made, by RCA, the most trusted name In radio. No matter how much you choose to spend you will find that WHtnauer is. a wise choke. It Is the one quality watch that is modest In cost yet elegantly styled. See our collection today. 24 SHAWS Furniture NORTH SAGINAW ST Pontiac 361 S. Saginaw FE 3-7901 Drayton 1945 Dixie Hwy. OR 4-0321 SHOP MONDAY, THURSDAY, FRIDAY and SATURDAY NIGHTS TILL 91 MICHIGAN'S LARGEST JEWELERS AUTHORIZED Longlnes-WHtnouer JEWELER SHOP TILL 9 EVERY NIGHT TILL CHRISTMASI Give happily ever after with a EASY BUDGET TERMS ONLY *25 DOWN FAMILY PIANO and ORGAN , OPEN HOUSE... OPEN SUNDAY I to 5 P.M. You give happily ever after when you play Santa to your family with a lawrey Organ. Because ... anyone can play the Lowrey And you'll delight In the many special effects made possible by lowrey** percussion ... natural reverberation ... the exclusive Lowrey Glide, which lets you easily duplicate such familiar sounds as the Hawaiian guitar, trombone's slide and string glissando ... and lowre/s Incomparable variety of Instrumental voices. Hear the Famous Pionorgan—Priced * From $159.95 to $299.95 Kimball, Gulbransen and Cable Pianos Priced From $520.00 New Player Piano , with Rinky-Tink $995 ( (jallaqk Cf Music Co •I r Open Every Evening W P PAl 'tll Christmas 16 C. Huran Sf. IE 4-0566 Downtown Pontiac LEWIS Special Christmas Selling QUALITY CHAIRS by Globe $980° A rate opportunity to obtain exquisitely detailed chairs by famous Globe —ladles' chairs, men's chairs, wing barrel chair*. Made with car* and quality, usually found only In more expansive furnltural Choose now for holiday delivery! Wide cover asiort-ment In season'* new shades. Choose from e style! for immediate delivery Interiors for, Home and Off> Irca Decorating Counsel furniture { • ‘-S. Saglnaw;ai,Oi^hord*ioke Ava-Ff ^ ' f- 44T t * 4 wl *.'V"• j ••• \ mm Turn to This Pago Fridays for Sonior High School Nows THE PONTIAC PRESS Are Your School's Activitios | Now Appearing, in Tho Pross? FRIDAY, DECEMBER 14, 1962 PONTIAC. MICHIGAN Central Debating By BARBARA SECAN Look out for those Waterford-Ketferlng GAA .girls, fellas! You’re liable to flip over them; literally. At a program Mohday night two Judo instructors gave a demonstration of some skills that can be used defensively for women Who are often alone, Among the tactics were lessons in flips and falls. During the lesson Lynne Johnston, Pat Kizer, Nancy Redmond, Sandy Fauble, -i-_j ’"-I Jacqueline Puhl actual* WTHS Skiers Cheer Heavy Fall of Snow ly had the opportunity to test their abilities in using judo techniques on one of the 200-pound instructors. • A business meeting of the GAA Letter Club' followed, at which time chairmen for future activities were selected. Refreshments of punch-and cookies were then served in the cafeteria. One of the most interesting personalities around school, t BY LIZ VENIE Last week’s heavy snowfall was greeted with.cheers by the skiers of Waterford Township High School, who had been discouraged by the previous balmy weather. Following a business meeting, novices and experts alike headed for the slopes of Mt. Holly. Sponsored by Stu Thorell, physical education instructor a n d head football coach, the Ski Club elected Jane Tripp, president; Fred Finkbelner, vice president; Mariiynn Ott, secretary; and John Crary, treasurer. Many faculty members join stu- jng caiu]y. dents from all classes each Wednesday, weather- permitting, to enjoy skiing. Waterford debaters hosted a debate tournament this week with squads from Waterford - Kettering, Southfield, Pontiac Northern, Walled Lake and Farmington. The topic for the teams this year is, “Resolved, The United States should join in forming a common market among nations in the Western Hemisphere.’’ WIN S OF 4 Coached by Gil Bergsrud, WTHS speech instructor, the negative squad has won three of four debates, winning two state and one Inter - Lakes debate. Pat Owens and Don Webster make up the at the Literary Club on the topic “Africa.’ . By WILLIAM O’NEILL . Samuel Jones, executive director of the Pontiac Urban .League, was scheduled as guest speaker at the .Saint Michael High School assembly, today. Timely topics on Race Relations and the Negro’s contributions to American culture weris t6t>e discussed by the speaker, — An old Christmas custom, the Advent wreath, seems to have caught new life this year at St. Michael’s. This custom, a . simple yet. dramatic ritual of Christian symbolism, Is carried out during the four weeks preceding Christmas. On Thursday and Friday, the St. Michael students will be hosts to two Sisters of Saint Joseph, Sis- - Mary .InHa flnH Sktor M rentia who will visit the els throughout the school. Johnson, who spent two years in that country, is presently a teacher of chemistry and physiology at Waterford-Kettering. While .at a mission school he also taught chemistry and biology to the Africans. 0 His account of his valuable and worthwhile experiences delighted all who attended. Monday marked the end of the senior candy sale. For the past! week those seniors, who plan to1 go on the annual senior trip, have been wearing out their shoes sell- ADDED TO FUND For each $1 box sold, the individual gets a profit of 35 cents to be added to his trip fund. In order to pay for the trip it is necessary to sell 137 boxes. Those who did not reach their quotas will make up the difference in cash. This year the class “Of ’63 Will journey to Mackinaw Island, the last weekend in May. Working diligently after school, and. throughout, study, halls has been required of members of “The Navigator’’ staff lately. Duward Chaffee, faculty adviser, announced recently that the negative. Adding a touch of Christmas to the halls of Waterford is the corsage sale. Made by members of the French Club, the corsages are sold during each lunch hour for 70 cents. Proceeds from this sale will aid In the French Club’s gifts to their adopted family in France. Sixty-three seniors and juniors took the Michigan Mathemetics Prize Competition tests on Thurs- Christmas issue of the paper will contain many added attractions for the holidays and will appear in dazzling red and green. Boasting Christmas verse and trimmings, “The Navigator” will be distributed in homerooms next Friday. A surprise feature will also appear in a two-page insert In the paper. St. Mich Hears Race Topics Talk Coach Has of Finishing By JANE.BIGLER i Debaters fr~~ r,""tTl “‘fh *| jlilliigTjjwmil ~ place in the Saginaw Valley Cc^ejtncATomTiatfieht midway in the season. ___ ^^ThenattSnaTtopic for debaters this year is “Resolved: the UWt* ed States should join in forming a common market of the Western Hemisphere.” Varsity debaters this year are Carol Chappell, Carol Jo Godo* shian on the negative side and Robert Sullivan and Dick Taylor for the affirmative side. Second- and third-team debaters are Chris Carlson, Jim Etlt*. bree, Carolyn Morris, Joanne Quince, Larry Ragsdale, Lenore Schoonover, Beverly Ulman and*— Gary Wright. NIK’S TRICK —. Soviet Premier Khrushchev added a new way of gaining an au- Taylor of 54 Mohawk Road (right) finds it works. With him are (from left) debaters 97-Starr Ave, Speech instructor Walter j Smith has coached Central’s de-J bate teams for the past 10 years. In the past five <■ years Pontiac Central has won four conference championships and one second place. Each participating school enters three afirmative teams and three negative teams in a Saginaw Valley tournament. A varsity team, victory counts two points pounded a shoe on his desk at the United Nations. Here Pontiac' Central debater Dick livan, 250 Pioneer Drive, and Carol Jo Godo-shian of 25 Draper Street. second-or third-team vic~ tory counts two points.' Roundup of Doings at County Schools W. BLOOMFIELD kinson; Secretary Ginny Fagen; Treasurer Joyce Myers. By LOUELLA ELYS The annual Christmas concert at West Bloomfield High School was presented Wednesday with Merlin Asplin directing the choir and Donald Perrin directing the band. > The Boys Trio, consisting of John Kern, Bob Haviland, and Chuck Schenck, sang “We Three Kings of Orient Are.” The triple trio, which includes Pat Saules, Jan Clark, Nancy Brown, Gail Murphy, Kay Patton, Irene Santia, Sue Simpson, Kristina Morrison, and Sue Middleton, along with the seventh and eighth grade choruses took part in the concert. “The Story of Christmas” was sung with solos by Kathy Wood, Ken Victor, and Bob Haviland. After the choir had sung “Hark All the Bells” the Boys Quartet— John Kern, Bob Haviland, Jim Lawson, and Mike Mcljiglly sang Deck the Halls” and'“0 Come, Ail Ye Faithful.” The Business Club has selected its officers — President Jeanette Cradle; Vice President June Wil- The club has again taken over the publication of the school magazine, “The Weblo.” Members elected Donna Bradburn as editor with Charlene Watkins as the assistant. The dramatics club of West Bloomfield established a precedent. On Monday morning, it presented the play “Through a Glass, Darkly,” which has previously been written up in The Pontiac Press, to grades 9-12. To all appearances if was a seventh and eighth grade will present their annual Christmas concert. This year’s concert will open with “Three Christmas Scenes” sung by the high school choir. The choir will also sing “Gloria in Excelsis,” “Mistletoe,” and other selections. The seventh grade choir will sing the old favorite* “The Holly and the Ivy” along with “Merry, Merry Christmas” and other traditional numbers. , The editor, David Lindquist, and members of his staff, have provided several new features that will appear in the 1963 book. There will be a “Buildings and Campus” section, featuring aerial views taken especially for the yearbook, and other campus views of selected architectural Importance. With the cooperation of the Camera Club the *63 yearbook will present more "Candid Came shots of students and faculty than any previous “Gladiators.’’ Also included in the concert will bq the eighth grade choir singing ‘Go Tell It on the Mountain." successful experiment, and there ^ choir wi„ a,80 g, «Christf are hopes that these endeavors |mas ChiId„ wlth the high 8choo, will be continued. OXFORD By SHARON MANN Next Tuesday night is an important night for music lovers in Oxford. The Oxford High School choir along with both choirs from the I Other School News jj (Throughout the Week In other news, the annual Community Christmas Concert will be presented Sunday afternoon at 3 p. m. In Pontiac Central's gymnasium. The concert will be open to the public and free of charge. ' Firemen from the Pontiac Fire Department presented assemblies this week bn lifesaving through mouth-to-moutb resuscitation. Demonstrations were also given the physical educational classics and everyone was given chance to practice on a mam The Metropolis.Debate teamhu!n ‘'(Rfusc“el,fnnie ” * , meets Cranbrook at fcanbrook to- L A oi th« Chica«° scho01 day. This is the second round of fir« ®f«few years a«° a,8° was debates for Troy. Panted,, As in past concerts, the alumni will be asked to Join with the high school choir In ending the concert with the “Hallelujah Chorus.” The concert will begin at 8 p.m. in the Oxford High School Auditorium. There is no admission charge. TROY By CHRISTINA OLSON Troy High School yearbooks went on advance sale this week. The purpose of this test Is to find talented math students for scholarships to colleges and industry. ' . v , ", Students in A1 Pavllsh’s physical science classes took an airplane trip at the Pontiac Municipal Airport last weekend, concluding * their study of aviation. Purpose of the trip was to see how a plhne Is controlled and to understand the action of the many instruments in-tbe. cockpit of -plane. > Elect Officers at Emmanuel [Ready Getting for Christmas at St. Fred's By SHEILA LANE The St. Frederick’s High School student council Is busily preparing for the coming holiday of Christmas and a drive designed to furnish funds which will back plans for the new year, The student council officers are President Tim Dalton; Vice President Sheila Lane; Secretary Margie Dawson; and Treasurer, JlmGlrardot. They have announced that the members of SC will sponsor the annuaf Christmas basket drive this year. The students will bring canned goods or donations which they will offer next Wednesday at morning M?he offerings Will then be placed in ihdividual baskOtt and distributed to various fapllies by so members.. By CAROL ARMBRUSTER Election banners have com down, and the results fo student body officers are in at Emmanuel Christian School, Elected as president was Ray Badgefo vice president, Ralph Wingate; secretary, Gloria Clarno; treasurer, Mary Miller; and sergeant - at-arms, Harold , Nichols. The' election held Tuesday wi unique in that a voting machii Was used. Seventh gradci through seniors voted. The success of carrying out the election can be attributed to the work of an election committee, headed by Margaret Best, chairman. The representatives from euch grja.de included, Tom Anthony, Ray Badgero, Leta Burton, Gloria Clarno, Skip Harrington, Mike Coach Smith has high hopes of winning a first-place banner this year. Final debates will be held later this month and through January. In order to perfect their skills Central’s debaters practice their techniques tor various English and social studies classes in the school. By SUSAN KILLEN “A pip- - pip, and a cheerio," will be heard throughout Pontiac Northern High School on Tuesday. The reason? Leslie is our foreign exchange student- from the British Isles, and one of the special conditions set for this day win be the use of appropriate British sayings. David Morningstar and Ronald Holcomb comprise the first unit, affirmative. First unit, negative, consists of Richard Sjolander and James Caulfield. The second unit, affirmative, includes Marcia Smith and Christina Olson. Joann Lauck and Lynn Makela make up the second unit, negative. A Suburban League debate tournament will be held at Troy on Dec. 19. They will begin at approximately 3 p.m. The annual Christmas concert at Troy, will be next Thursday. Performing will be the choir and chorus under the direction of Mrs, Marlene Johnson. The symphonic and concert bands under instruct: Victor Bordo. Student at Cranbrook Wins National Award For* the third time in four years, Cranbrook School boast a national winner ii National Council of Teachers of English annual Adnievement AWards competition. Charles A. Bigelow, son of Mrs. Wales Bigelow of Birmingham, hits been named a winner in the NCTE competition. / Winning awards for excellence in creative writing is not new to Bigelow, this year’s editor of “Opus,” Cranbrook’s literary magazine. PNH to Honor Foreign Student 'Leslie Seymour Day* Tuesday at School Tuesday, Northernites will be celebrating “Leslie Seymour Day.” Much is planned for this day which, beside being Leslie's birthday, will also give Northern a day to properly honor and greet her. Students will attire, themselves in Sunday best, suits or dresses and heels for girls, and sport coats or suits and ties for the boys. TRAFFIC ON LEFT Traffic in the hall will be channeled on the left as city traffic is done in England. Students will rise at the beginning of class as is done in European schools, to honor the teacher. Even a special menu will be prepared In the cafeteria. It will will include some of Leslie’s favorite foods, and will be avail-*'' able to all who wish it. Leslie, who is living as Mary Jane Hoisington’s “sister,” will fi-. nally be honored at an assembly planned especially in her behalf. Tempers may have flared, but things are back to normal after the annual faculty - senior basket-' ball game on Tuesday. The teachers won it, 33-27 but not without a nip-and-tuck battle. The students paid 25 cents admission, and part of this will go to the American Field Service Club to aid in bringing Northern’s next foreign exchange student. The choir, chorus, and symphon-,c and concert bands will perform individually. The highlight of the program will be the Hallelujah Chorus from tho “Messiah”1 by Handel. WALLED LAKE Clarkston Skiers Await 1st Outing By ANN fjALO Walled Lake High School’s music department will present two Christmas programs on Dec. 19 and 20. On the earlier date, three of the music organizations will give their ly program to the school during second and sixth hours. Included in the entertainment will be group-singing of favorite j Christmas carols by all students. The band, directed by Helmut Holland Moritz will play three impositions Illustrating varying degrees of yulelidc spirit. Then, under the direction of BY JANET TISCH With the first snowfall of the | jar promising good skiing eon-, dilions, Clarkston High School’s Ski Club is anxiously anticipating its first ski outing ^>f the year. Approximately 90 students attended n recent meeting of the CQNGRATULATIONS—Emmanuel Christ-11 lan .High* School’s new student body president Ray Badgero (left) is congratulated by his opponent, Tom Anthony of 1910 Airport Road, Mayer, Terry Martin, Ron Staf- f, ford, Randy Vaughn, Kathy White and Ralph Wingate. The purpose of the committee was to determine qualifications necessary for each office, to compile campaign rules, and to take care ef other details pertaining to the election. Petitions were circulated several weeka-Ago to obtain the Big-natures necessary for candidacy. An assembly program was held; at which the candidates f6r the various offices presented their Waterford Township, on hir victory. Badgero speeches to the student body. Fol-resides at 225 Lake Street, Lake Orion. Both lowing the speeches, Miss Virginia ate seniors. Voting machine used in election is Bilbrey, Instructor, related the in the background. / \ l committee’s work. ilub will sipg four numbe 'A Ceremony of Carols” by Benjamin Britten, and the boys glee club will sing Christmas spirituals. organization, where officers were elected, dues paid, and the year’s schedule planned. Elected as officers were Blair Bullard, president; Mike Turek, vice president; and Cricket Embry, secretary treasurer. 'Hils past week the sophomore class ordered Its class rings. The Clarkston High School debating team gained a split in its j first encounters last week. The af-w* ii *r\r\r\ firmatlve team of David Pylman Drive Yields $300 land Ron Fusilier were topped by a ! well-prepared Brighton team. at Lake Orion However the negative duo of Roger Pearson and Eric Lausten _ won its mutch with Milford. By JANIE BANKEIIT ■ , . . , . . , . ACADEMIC TESTS The calendar of events at Lake, Orion High School has been] Differential Aptitude Tests were •owded with activity this we Honor Society's On Dec. 20, Walled Lake High will present its annual "Christmas gift” to the community starting at 8 p.m. At this time, on the night of the regularly scheduled PTA meeting, the choir and orehestri-wilL give their ChristriiiBS program. The orchestra will begin the program by playing “A Suite of ( nroLs” by Leroy Anderson. The public is Invited to attend this presentation, and there will be no charge fog admission. ■ f i■ > The National Honor Society went toy shopping on Monday. Having collected $300 in their Thanksgiving Basket Drive, members are Using some of the money to play Santa to needy children. administered to - the freshman ilass Thursday of last week and last Monday, These tests are designed to measure students’ strengths and weaknesses in certain academic areas. Two Clarkston senior girls were plan Society’s Christmas production of “The Old- Lady Shows Her Medals,” which was presented last night and will be given again tonight., Admittance Is by invitation only and will be followed by a silver tea. . * Topping the week Is the Thes- selected as thq first Clarkston High School winners of the annuaT Junior Miss p'ageant. Marcia Booth was selected as runner-up and Janet Tisch as Jun-ion Miss. Both girls were awarded,, Sophies by Clarkston Jaycee mem-f»re who sponsored the pageant ■ ■HR..........r ^vV-* THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 14, 1962 mX'', BIRMINHGAM, Alii. (Aft-Dark clouds of potential racial upheaval are gathering again on - Alabama’s horizon, but this time there is a groundswell of public resistance to violence. Responsible groups and high ate officials, shaken by the bloodshed and disorder at the University of Mississippi, are ' ng public proclamations for law ami order. . COSMOS ELECTEE - Historian John Hope Franklin is the i first Negro elected to the exclusive Washington, - D.C., Cosmos Club, embroiled earlier this year in a discrimination controversy. Tea production in Nyasaland this season is expected to top 1950’s total by nearly three million pounds and to set a new record for the crop. CHANCES ARE... Your present home owner costly hazards that could be easily covered. It costs nothing to review your present policy. AUSTIN-NORVELL AGENCY, Iso. 70 Lawrence St. r Over 70 Tern of Olslisfilstid fasaraseo Service Focal polhfrof the Cfirrent threat fiTHe University of Alabama at Tuscaloosa where three Negroes . have applied for admission. Whether they will attend classes is problematical, but die prospect of desegregating the white institution has .engendered a host of law and order” resolutions. Heretofore, it has been political suicide in Alabama even ip suggest that the state yield to integration edicts, either by law or court order. tag to fight the battle in the courts. EDITORIAL STAND iam News, Alabama’s largest newspaper, was the. first to speak out editorially aft-ter the Mississippi riots. ^ The News deplored the violence and called on ^tate officials to prevent it in "Alabama. Since then, there have been these d«velopments: _ _ -"^tetr^Nn^Tfie^^atur Dally asked Wallace supporters to urge him to change his plans to follow Mississippi Gov. Ross Barnett’-course. announced support of the trustees and school officials in their stand, for law and order. CITIZEN ARMY This doesn't mean that Alabama has surrendered. The No. man, Gov.-elect George C. Wallace, pledged that he will prevent integration by whatever means necessary. It has bdfen reported reliably that ps one measure, the incoming governor will recruit a citizen’s army—apart from the National Guard-rand arm it “to protect states’ rights.” In a speech in Birmingham, Wallace said he intended to test Oct. 28: The Tuscaloosa News reported a group of businessmen resolved to seek la‘w and order and leave the integration fight to ie courts. Oct. 81: Frank A. Rose, president of the University of Alabama, said he had assurance from Gov. Jolih Patterson and Wallace for state help in maintaining law and order. OCt. 31: Lt. Gov.-elect James B. Allen said the Mississippi situation “is a sad picture we don’t want for our state.4* ' Nov. 6: University trustees a*-pressed determination that law and order must be maintained. Nov. 10: University Alumni Council, official voice of 60,000 University of Alabama alumni, supported the trustees. * Nov. 13: University confirmed it hired private detectives to protect Mel Meyer of Starkeville, Miss., author of controversial edi- tewr-indieating-he-would ^ in |heTtu3efirpapffrW " > to jail if necessary. Alabama’s modern history of integration attempts is replete with violence, ranging from burning a “Freedom Riders” bus to an attack on two Negroes who sat in a section usually reserved for white persons in Birmingham’s Legion Field at the Geor-gia-Alabama football game. There have been—and still are -peaceful integration attempts. Few have succeeded. Birmingham closed most of its public recreational facilities in the face of a federal court order to desegregate. But since James H. Meredith entered the University of Mississippi, there have been signs in Alabama that the people are wili- er had written: “By all legal rights a Negro is entitled to attend a Southern university.” Nov. 14: University faculty adopted a law and order resolu-tion. _ Nov. 30 Atty. Gen.-elect Richmond Flowers said he will use “the full powers of influence of my office to prevent riots or bloodshed.” He said his views (AtVMrtlwi Don't Neglect Slipping FALSE TEETH Do HUM teem drop, mp or woOOie when you talk, eel. UuMh nr eneew? Don't DO annoyed end emDernuteert by such handicap* PAHTEKTH, alkaline inon-ecldl ‘ were not in conflict,with Wallace, and that he would call on the best legal minds in the state to fight any suits stemming from Negroes seeking admission to the University. ^ Dec. 3: Birmingham ministers adopted “goodwill” resolution. Dec. 3: State Democratic Chairman Keys May told Birmingham Young Men's Business Chib that he favors enforcing the law even if it means integration. He called for “a calm, restrained leadership.” Dec. 7': University of Alabama. student legislature , unanimously Another “law and order” reso- lution, from tee FlorencerLauder-dale County Ministerial Association, prompted Wallace to say that such resolutions were aimed at the wrong persons. He said they should be directed to Dr. Martin Luther-King Jr., chairman of tee Southern Christian Leadership Conference, and other pro-integration groups. The state’s residents well re- member when Autherine Lucy tried to attend the university six years ago. She attended five clas-■ * the first Negro to enter the 135-year old Institution. Then tee university removed her for. her own protection after a day of violence. A federal court ordered that she be readmitted, but the university expelled her because she accused school officials of conspiring with the' mob. The judge upheld the expulsion. OfEBB' MOBILE MARI! NIG THE PUBLIC FOR OVER 40 YEAR UJEBB MOB I LE MART (DIVISION OF WEBB FUEL CO.) ■ jr Toys To You By the Truckload At Truckload Discount Prices BUY RIGHT-BUY RIGHT OFF OUR TRUCK' Open Fri., Sat., Mon. ’til 9: Tues., Wed., Thurs., 8 to 6 top «*t mourn? *--- No gummy, gooey, pasty ta mg. Get PA8TEETH tod. powder to (Drill--KM false teeth confident feel* Tic-Toy Clock Runs for fourteen hours. Can be taken apart and ^ put together repeatedly. We’re Moving OUR DRAYTON PLAINS ★ ★ STORE ★ ★ Come 1963 we're moving to a larger store, so we con serve you better. Between now and January 1st . . . £ to *» *r& All Merchandise in Stock WILL BE SOLD AT A FRACTION OVER COST! to & * * f> vc * Choose from famous brands: ZENITH • MOTOROLA • SYLVAN IA NORGE • HOTPOINT • ADMIRAL SEALY • RESTOCRAFT • ARTISTIC DEARBORN and Others! WASHERS DRYERS REFRIGERATORS RANGES FREEZERS TELEVISIONS M.ny Other Item*! Open Every Evening Until 9 P. M. NO MONfY DOWN—NO PAYMENTS 'TIL IMS STEREOS FURNITURE MATTRESSES KRAZY 5217 Dixit Hwy., Drayton Plaint — OR 3-6555, Reche.ter Rd. ifTi.nk.n Rd.. I 17)0 W. 11 Mile Rd., Berkley I Flese, Rochester v 10114 Plymouth Rd., Detroit $433 i ■St. Tin Wimlar Caxtar 1 Basketball and Goal Set •* I Official size flexite ball., Steel goal and net. $099 The Wonder Coaster Horsis on Wheels • For the toddlers. Soft pink and blue. Saddle height 10Vz inches. $C33 ' Musical Rocker .# Just the right size for the toddler (10Vi inches seat to floor). Selected pine, smooth b. and sanded. '* $5 99 4 .# 3 Little Red Spinning Wheel $433 Gilbert Erector Set Ironing With mommy is fun. Steel ironing board with telescoping silver legs with tips. Chromium electric approved. $**99 Broadside Naval Gama As advertised on TV *2”? Johnny Rob Cannon Shoots harmless plastic balls. As advertised on TV. Disney Xylophone Make initant music. 8 Fe.lt-cush-ioned metal bats, color keyed to notes in songbook. Disney friends on front. Cedi, the Seasick Serpent Cecil says 11 phrases when you pull his string. *7* $039 $7M ^ji USE OUR LAYAWAY PLAN ' LSI: OUR LAYAWAY PLAY PLENTY OF PARKING ^ UJEBB r MOB 1 LE MART PLENTY OF PARKING 351 S. PADDOCK HOME OF QUALITY COAL AND FUEL OIL FE 4-1518 T: v THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, DECEMBER 14, 1962 B—8 .*3? Cfertfi- liti MIRACLE MILE Gift Boxed Free # ANYTHING FOR A BUCK - David R. , Bean of Keene, N.H., pauses to look over signs outside the home of Theodore H. Dinkel of Westmoreland, N.H., inviting deer hunters not to go home empty handed. Dinkel, taking advantage of the southern New Hampshire hunting season, says he has Sold two cows as the result of his signs. Now Ready for Circultaion Adcf New Books — Many new books have recently been added to the shelves of Pontiac’s Main Public Library at 00 E. Pike St. ' • , The following list is a selection from the new titles now ready for circulation. FICTION — Burrell, "THE DARK LABYRINTH"; Howard, “NOT A WORD ABOUT NIGHT-INGALES"; Jameson, "THE ROAD FROM THE MONUMENT"; Kennedy, "THE FORGOTTEN SMILE”; Mauriac, "THE MARQUISE WENT OUT AT FIVE"; Salinger,' “NINE STORIES”; Sandburg, "THE OWL’S ROOST"; Warner, "A SPIRIT RISES"; Wolpert, "NINE HOURS TO RAMA." MYSTERY, WESTERN, ETC. - Bush, “THE CASE OF THE EXTRA GRAVE”; Fishdt, “JUDGMENT IN JULY"; Mac* Kenzie, “THE GENIAL STRANGER.” YOUTH ROOM-Dodd, "LIFE CHILDREN’S - Bevans, “THE IN ELIZABETHAN ENGLAND"; Elfert, “EXPLORER OF RIVER”; Gollwitzer, "THE JOY OF DRAWING"; Mhllan, > “M E N, ROCKETS AND SPACE RATS”; Miss Read, "WINTER IN THURSH GREEN”; Ross, ‘PARTNERS IN SCIENCE: THE STORY OF THE INTERNATIONAL GEOPHYSICAL YEAR"; Stein, “THE TREASURY OF THE AUTOMOBILE"; Wood, "FAMOUS POEMS AND THE LITTLE KNOWN STORIES BEHIND THEM,” BOOK OF SEA SHEELS"; Buell, 'YOUNG JAPAN: CHILDREN OF JAPAN AT WORK AND AT PLAY”; Chase, “THE FISHING FLEETS OF NEW ENGLAND"; Coatsworth, "THE NOBLE DOLL”; Fatio, “THE HAPPY LION’S QUEST"; Flato, “THE GULDEN BOOK OF THE CIVIL WAR”; Protter, "A CHILDREN'S TREASURY OF FOLK AND FAIRY TALES”; Rounds, "WILD ORPHAN”; Tunis, “FRONTIER LIVING”; Winer, “LIFE IN THE ANCIENT WORLD.” BIOGRAPHY - Hemingway, “MY BROTHER, ERNEST HEMINGWAY"; Lowe, "PORTRAIT: THE EMERGENCE OF JOHN F-KENNEDY"; Shultz, “JENNY LIND: THE SWEDISH NIGHT INGALE.” GENERAL SUBJECTS - Clar-di, “IN THE STONEWORKS’ Elisofon, "COLOR PHOTOGRAPHY"; Fodor, “JET AGE GUIDE TO EUROPE”; Hansen, “AN INTRODUCTION TO TWENTIETH CENTURY MUSIC"; Hilton, “HANDBOOK OF NEW PRODUCT DEVELOPMENT”; Howard, "OUR MODERN NAVY”; Marsh, “THE GOOD HOUSEKEEPING BOOK OF CAKE DEG ORATING”; Myrdal, "POPULATION, A PROBLEM FOR MOCRACY"; Paul, “SON OF MAN: THE LIFE OF CHRIST"; Roberts, “BATTLE OF COW-PENS”; Scalapino, “PARTIES AND POLITICS IN CONTEMPORARY JAPAN”; Shields, “BOILERS: TYPES, CHARACTERISTICS, AND FUNCTIONS"; Smith, “ICE BOATING"; Venk, "AUTOMOTIVE FUNDAMENTALS"; Waning, “THAILAND." v REFERENCE - Erast, "ATLAS OF THE UNIVERSE”; Green, “THE WORLD OF MU-SICAL COMEDY”; Rosenthal, “BNCYCLOPAEDIA OF SOUTHERN AFRICA!’; Twentieth Century Fund, “AMERICA'S NEEDS AND RESOURCES A NEW SURVEY”; Twentieth Century Fund, “NEEDS AND RESOURCES: TRENDS AND. PROSPECTS IN EIGHTEEN COUNTRIES.” Use a Lion Charge Plan With Option Terms By Swank. Distinctive styling and unique Ideas represented In our extensive selection of cuff links, tie tacs, and clasps . .. sure to satisfy the men In your life By Knox, Flattering styles perfectly proportioned for any man who “usee hit hood." 15“ By Superba. Neckwear for the most dls-’ criminating male. Neat foulards, stripes, ' under-knot, panel and solid colors. All $ fashion co-ordinated Colors for his wardrobe. ■> By Exquire. Handsome argyles, rifts; panels of cotton, Ban-Ion, wools and blends. One size stretches or slies 10 to 14. Gift Slippers for your man Deerskin Slippers Sizes 7 to 12 N to W widths $12*5 Brown only Sizes 6Vi to 12 | Always popular | a gift, and to w > In Black, Olive and I Antique Brown. Sizes ! 6Vfc to 13. Widths B D Sites 13 ! $12 95 ‘ „ . I"* 10" By Hiekqk. Crofted leathers of supple calf, . steerhide and suede, as well as a wide variety of elastic styles all designed to “secure" his waistline. 2" to B" SPORT SHIRTS By Shapely, Van Heusen, Puritan, Sandy McDonald and Pendleton. As beautiful a selection of leisure shirts we have ever pre-sented in fine dacron and cotton, wools, corduroys, orion and wool. Solids; batiks, ft stripes; panel designs, plafds and all over pal- ¥ terns. Sizes S M-L-XL. Toll sizes S to L 4“ to 14“ By Van Heusen. His favorite shirts featuring his favorite collar styles. Snap-tab, spread r, button downs... all cotton or popular wear fabrics In white-or colors. 4“ to6" SWEATERS Gift Boxed Tree ‘TALK about FORDS” with Ernie Felice Yes, you'll find just the wonderful sweater he wonts In our fabulous collection ... so give the man In your life sweaters from the Lion Store •.. gifts that are sure to please. 10” to 19” SLACKS n and lean slacks In gabardines, worsteds and flannels . . . pleated or nopleat models perfectly colored to match his favorite sport coat, Sizes 28 to 50. 8M to 19” PENDLETON SHIRTS s*- Only the finest wool Is used In famous Pendleton sport shirts. A select choice of patterns id bright and muled plaids. Also available in sheer weight wool is the Sir Pendleton. Sizes S to XL. 13" to 18“ Hrnlo hat * been Silling now Fords in the PantlajC area for, 13 years. Drop in and see Ernie any day • John McAuKffs FORD 630 OAKLAND PONTIAC Ernie Felice FE 5-4101 LI 3-2030 f- GLOVES Fine leathers, worm wool blonds, either fur lined or unlined ... for sport or dress wear. Perfect for the blustery winter weather. 3"„ 8" ROBES Gift-wrap him In a handsome robe. Assorted colorful plaids and checks in blends, wools and cottons. Sizes $ la XL , i tiAe-e. yvij .“ ' V-Vj I' *' THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, DECEMBER 1962 Six Collegians to Go Abroad in Farm Swap EAST LANSING Of)- Six (arm* reared Michigan college students will live and work with farm families abroad next year, Michigan State Urtverafry baa announced. ■' .f*? ★..... ' The students — five from MSU and one from Western Michigan University — have been chosen Michigan’s International Fa Youth Exchange delegates for IMS. The countries In which they will live will be announced next year, the university said.___ —ThrflVe'MSO students are Lynn Munson, 22, Ithaca; Thomas Thombom, 21, Mason; Alice Bo* nomo, 22, Vandalia; Tarty Eding-ton, 20, Grand Ledge; and Jack Morse, 20,^Bell$vu^. ^ The Western Michigan coed is Charlotte Webster, 21, of Hillsdale. 'You're Hereby Ordered to Celebrate Dec, 25' BRISTOL, Conn. (UPI) i* publican town chairman Burton Carlson’s Christmas party for the town committee is sure to be well attended. Carlson said he invited the committee’s 42 members by sending Hi subpoenas. Crash Suits JFK to Reveal NEW YORK (UPI)—Suits ing‘mbre than' 130 million /result* ing from (he crash of twp airliners over New" York City .nearly two years ago were filed yesterday against the federal government and the airlines, The tragedy, one of the worst in aviation history, occurred Dec. 16,1960 when a United Air Lines Jet collided with a Trans World Airliner over Staten Is* Byblos, in Lebanon, which gave I name- to thr Bible, is now a fishing village of about 1,000 population. Mm- ■Hr Answer to a Hr Brighter Future! WJjr No crystal ball Reeded when yen apply for a 1 '/ HOME LOAN ot Capitol Savings. Thorn's far loss ‘rod tape* and your application is actod upon immediately. Compare our flexible home financing plan with payments made to suit l your income .,. you'll choose our plan J mover all the others. Capitol SavingsSLoan Assn. Established 1890 78 W. Huron St., Pontiac FE 4-0S61 CUSTOMER PARKIN IN HEAR OF BUiLDMI ' Yrrrrrn trrmrrrmTmrnTmTrrrmTTT Thr 41"suTts representing vari-is survivors and estates charged that the government and the airlines weire negligent and careless In tjhe operation of the planes. Additional suits were expected to be filed today and Monday. Under the statute of limitations, the suits must be filed within tw years of the accident. Since the anniversary date falls on Sunday, the final dfty for filing suits wUl be Monday, Dec. 17. The largest single suit filed yesterday was for $5 million jn die death of Jonas Karnlet, a New York chemist. WASHINGTON CAP) powerful new urgings for a big tax cut next year^fTaaideat Kan- to Jan. 1, 1963, would work: the CED’s proposed tax program which it said should be retroactive Macmillan Heading for De Gaulle Talks ; LONDON (UPI)—Prime Mlnis-l ter Harold Macmillan flies to Par-» is today dor a weekend of talks * with President Charles de Gaulle > aimed at easing British entry into ! the European Common Market. ! The talks, at de Gaulle’s Ram-) bouillet Palace near Paris, are > expected to range far beyond the ! Common Market to encompass * East-West relations in general. * In this sense, they were seen as * a prelude to Macmillan’s meet- * ing next week with President | Kennedy. * But the turbulent negotiations £ over Britain’s entry into Europe > are expected to top the agenda. } Reports from Paris have suggest-} ed that do ^aulle is willing to have > a deep discussion on this ' | ★ * ★ > De Gaulle is generally rated ’ here as the main obstacle to Brit-’ jish membership in the market. nedy travels to Nwir York to deliver a major speech tonight which he promised. would 'give some details of the tax program he will propose to Congress. The President will address the Economic Club of New, York at :30 p.m. (Pontiac tithe) and then for 30 minutes will field questions fired from the floor., ' ★. fr •jjj/jjV.' Both the speech and the-que# tion-and-answer period Will be taped for broadcast later on radio and television. The President got some strong support Thursday fora 1963 tax reduction—a plan that into opposition from some k< congressional leaders. CALLED FOR CUT The business-financed-Committee for Economic Development called for a $6-billion income tax cut with the greatest benefits going to high-income bracket dividuals and corporations. In a formal policy statement the committee also urged a second and later reduction of 69 billion— if Congress and the administration can hold federal spending at present levels. This tax package, the CED said, would lead to “higher rates of production, employment, investment and growth.” . “ itteiff8riiiirMtBSup~i®e immediate result of the tax changes might be larger budget deficits, the long-term result would be budget surpluses because the government would taring in greater revenue from a speed-ed-up economy. MARXIST’ FEATURES Frazer B. Wilde, chairman o the CED subcommittee died the tax question for nearly a year, contended the proposals would help eliminate what he described as “Marxist” features of the tax system. Wilde, chairman of the Connect! cut General Life Insurance Co. criticized' what he called “the terrible negativism of an excessively Marxist personal income tax structure. L........w Here is how the first stages of All Individual income tax'rates would be reduced af least 8 per cent and the maximum rate would be reduced from: 91 per cent to 70 per cent. . * ' The present 82 per cent corporate income tax rate would be cut to 47 per cent. 62-BILLION BENEFIT Individuals in the towast bracket would receive 62 billion of, the 66 billion of tax benefits, the CED’i economists estimated. Tax pay- ments by corporations and higher-bracket individuals would be re-duced by 32 billion each. Ladd Plumley, president of die U.S. Chamber of Commerce; said reduction; of tax rates and restraint hi federal spending are next year’s...two top economic in the panicky fear that recession was upon us," said Plumley in his prepared talk to the Cbnhecjicul Chamber of Commerce, “but in the sound conviction that the present period of slow econorpic growth was an excellent time to enact a long-overdue change in In a Hartford, Conn., speech, forreduefioijs of 68 billion 89 billion a year. “Our proposals for income tax rate reductions were not advanced Ever serve Viennese coffee? Use freshly brewed strong coffee and pour into Cups; add a dollop I of -whipped cream and pass tfrr~ sugar. Use ft to V* cup heavy cream (whipped) for four regular-size cups of the coffee brew. Kennedy told his news conference Wednesday-that despite sojne renewed, the chamber’s congressional opposition he Was going ahead with his plans io ask for a tax cut effective in 1963. He said he would offer some definite proposals in his speech tonight; Thatcher, and Wernet INSURANCE RENT WATER SOFTENERS APPLIANCE BUYERS! OUIE FRETTER SAYS WE DON’T NAVE A MONOPOLY ON DISCOUNTS but we do havo a frightfully, strong reputation in tho trad# for being an awfully tough "competitor." To us this is a compliment. To thoso shopping for a new appliance, TV or Stereo this reputation reflect* low prices and our (small profit) selling policy. Our daily attitude toward service is awfully nice, tool Why not come in today and see for yourself. | On* ef Michigan’/ Original Discounter* Large Seleetlen Tap* Recorders Transistor Radios Clock Radlai AM/FM Radlai at flraat Savings Name Brand PORTABLE TV’s New In Crete* *119“ Family Size Refrigerator *148*° 30-Inch Deluxe GAS RANGE •8800 Dos Water Heater 10 Yr. 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BUDGET TERMS 30 DAYS EXCHANGE GENEROUS TRADE FAST 24-H0UR NO MONEY DOWN COURTEOUS, AFTER 36 MONTHS TO PAY If Not Fully Satisfied ALLOWANCE 0EUVERY ON ANY PURCHASE THE SALE SERVICE Frettei** Oarload Discount Make* the Rig Dlffsrsnos - Prove It to Yourself~ Isrvloo Oemss First Regardless of Prist FRETTER DISCOUNT APPLIANCE MIRACLE MILE CENTER liHIM (BETWEEN KRISGE S AND KROGER'S) S. TELEGRAPH AT SQ. LAKE RD. OPEN: Mon. thru Fri. 9:30 a.m.-IO p.m. FE 3-7051 Sat. 9-9—Sun. Closed T* 5 MmmeimaiaMRaaai'iiaaaiaiiaaaaaaaaaaiai / • ' THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, DECEMBER U, 1962 500 There to Guard Meredith GIs on 'Occupation'- Duty al Ole Miss OXFORD, MISSOURI) - Whatever the official military designation, American sotyiers are on occupation dyty at the University of Mississippi. S, ,1t it ^ The scene is a typical college town in the southern United , States,except that aimed troops give it the appearance d a foreign land. There are sentries and field - tents. Fraternisation is forbidden. Strict discipline is in effect. It fs a situation looked upon With displeasure by the 500 soldier guards , of Negro student Janies H. Meredith as well as by the students and townspeople, many of whom, at best, consider the GIs unwelcome visitors. Gold weather has arriyed and the prospect of spending winter nights in a field tent sends a chill through even the most hardened ordered not to loiter in town. Sometimes they gather. la several small cafes in Oxford, but they never stay long^-usually only to drink a cup of coffee. At 'intervals, .the Army Issues 24-hour passes and flies groups of soldiers to Memphis, Tenn. 80 miles north of here. During their off-duty hours, the soldiers spend their time playing ping pong, volley ball, touch football, pitching horseshoes or Just relaxing. -frs it ★ A small post'exchange (PX)| In such an atmosphere and under such conditions, Christmas could be a bleak one at the Army's "Ole Miss" outpost. Currently serving the gualrd duty ai*e two military police companies from Ft. Chaffee, Ark. They have been here about three weeks. There Is a possibility they win be rotated ' ‘ a new group moved In before Withdrawal of Chinese h Repbrted The Army is bivouacked in two areas—at the National Guard Armory and at the Oxford airport. The camps arc nearly iden-fical wltH pSeir rows of field tents bathed In spotlights at night. There are boardwalks at the Armory, however, because of the mud. dr 'A ' a Around 12 soldiers live in each tent, which- has a wooden flow and is heated by an oil heater. The troops are always on duty or standby alert. Sentries at Meredith's campus dormitory are not permitted to talk with anyone. Occasionally students stop and attempt to converse with the soldiers. In rare instances, when sentries relent and talk they are sternly reprimanded by officers. GIs are forbidden te date **cds or Oxford girls and are TEZPUR,, India (UPI) - Eyewitnesses reported today watching Communist troops withdraw from Bomdila in India’s North East Frontier Agency {NEFA) marching three abreast and riding in captured Indian trucks and their own vehicles. in Tezpur said the Chinese started leaving Bomdila last Sunday, taking all essentiaLsap-plies left behind by retreating Indians who lost the city Nov. 18. Some rice and salt was left for local tribesmen. Bomdila, about 150 mites northwest of Tezpur, was headquarters for Indian troops in NEFA’s Ka-meng division. Its, capture marked the high point of Chinese intrusion into Indian territory in the prolonged border conflict. . ,r 'A A A ■ The confirmation of Chinese Withdrawals coincides with the statement yesterday by I n d i Premier Jawaharlal Nehru that no uniformed Chinese remained in Bomdila. " ' ' - * ■ A A • A Nehru's statement did not rule out the possibility, suggested by unofficial sources rare, that some Chinese remained in Bomdila disguised as tribesmen to carry On espionage. the Army has set up sells soft drinks, cigarettes and magazines. Cold freezes Device to. Measure Radiation department said zero temperatures in Lansing from the 4b»»’ pression pump that is used to ' particles Collect ' the radiation that determine the fallout count. LANSING (UPI) - The Michigan Health Department Couldn’t provide the public with a radiation count yesterday because of' The ^household troops of King the cold r, - [Louis XTiLnf Franceftt-cbelleved ’■T Ho be Ihe first soldiers io wear true Charles L. Miller/of the health I military uniforms. OK School Annexation CHESANING Ut) - Voters in several townships adjacent to this Saginaw County community have Voted to arirax a section of the Fergus School District to Chesan-ing Union District, which already has 18 former districts in the consolidation. y Back in 1890 oU^\37T>fr cent oil Jesse Janies and his gang hid U. S. families ownedtheir homes. I out at Meraraec^Cavaehs,Stan-Today more than 60 per cent do. ' I ton, Mo., 'for 15 yearsV ... - BENSON’S LUMBER — BUILDING SUPPLIES — PAINT and COAL 549 North Saginaw St. HOURS) DAILY t toS SATURDAY • to 12 - FE 4-2521 Brywall, 4xt-Hv'.. ’4*814”.... ...*1.55 ...*1.75 SPECIAL CASH and CARRY PRICES! ROCK LATH Par Cuddle... $110 HEAL LIVING Here’s at low, low cost... with Tile-a-Mirror the new Do-It-Yourself Mirrored Wall Paneling c-ioo-wxia’f $1.10« PB-100~12’x12’ . $1.90 6 GV-100—12”xl2” . $1.90 « GV-200—12”x12” $2.25 « PB-200—1$"x12" . . $2.25 « \ Complete Units lor TABLE TENNIS fuel udi ng Fold! ng Logs ,*25®* ,*28“ 5x9 Vi-inch 5’x9* %-lnch Ready te Point OF THE ENTIRE FAMILY! BERRY AUTOMATIC Opens, doses garage door frwImldiifHrcw In bad waother, at night, push-button portable transmitter opens, closes door, lights up-garage. Electronic components guaranteed one year—operator five years. t>NLY *124 GET MD OF |CY SIDEWAlgS! THAWING SALT too ibs ONLY $|75 25 Ibs. 10 lbs. 8 9c 3 9c PORTER-CABLE TOOLS Superior Tools for Those Who , Want Npthing but the Bestl h? HANDSAW S49* Model 66 Sow . Model 306 Sander, Heavy Duty. noia Model nSA 7" Saw Model 177 7" Saw $44*i •54“ •57" •89“ •69“ Cot Dishwashing Time In Halil DISHMASTER IMPERIAL ONLY Complete Heating Servile—CLEANING and REPAIRING-rUcansed Contractors Atuuco ‘’Emerson($) Famous Emerson style, performance and value in this portsbls TV with sll tbs big-set faaturasi a Full Power Transformer 17" * chassis s Double dipole telescopic antenna a Upfront tuning with illuminated dial s Front-projected FM sound system s Decorator cabinet.„mpHded front and back in beige/brown ONLY *128" "Emerson ...uinm bcstbuxi TELECTRO TAPE RECORDER 2*spMd, 6-wstt imp. ’ Hi-Fi 8" speaker. All American made, with Mika taps and 2 speeds. *7995 WALTON RADIO & TV 515 E. WALTON CORNER JOSLYN , OPEN 9 to 9 Give Your Family the Finest in Home Entertainment NOW AT NEW LOW PRICES! CURTIS MATHES ciitis metres 'The Syracuse Genuine oiled American walnut 23-inch TV features 2-4" by 6" high fidelity speakers. The control knobs, including the lighted channel selector, are.on the front for eoay access...Completelyhahtfwired chassis for % dependability. 36" wide, 29" high and 16 W 'deep. lc El $18995 The Burlington" aim MATHIS 9 23-inch Ty in a beautiful Early American cabinet of hard rbek mople. Twin 4" by 6" speakers give you High tldelity sound. Front mounted controls with lighted channel selector. Famous turtls Mafhes workmanship throughout. Hand wired chassis. y $19995 S EE EE, |§jJ| mm MTHES 'The Super Audio 50" HI-FI Stayeo phonograph . . . plus AM-FM radio . . for perfect listening pleasure. 2-l2-lnch dnd 2-4" by 6" ovak speakers bring you.-tha' 4iltiirwta$|' music reproduction. Genuine AmerlcoiJ oiled walnut . ... a full 50" wide and 30" high. Handsome •contemporary sty I- f ing. No stooping . . . because everything is controlled ■' from the top."' Diamond ffeedltT."'*£ ”/Vv* .' $|9995 1 "The Westchester" CURTIS MATHES Beautiful 23-Jnch ailed walnut consolette is a full 30-inches wide and fits in perfectly with practically any room setting. A real value at a bargain price. You get all of the wonderful Curtis Mathes quality features, too. Completely hand wired chassis for trouble-free entertainment. $16995 & it Curtis Mathes Costs You Less! Sold Directly Through Distributors Only . . . You Save the "Middleman" Cost! fem The Andrews'' CURTIS METRES , This complete home entertainment center has a 23-inch TV, Hl-Pi stereo phonograph and AM-FM radio. All in one compact cabinet, Now your family can enjoy Hi-Fi or,.stereo Christmas- records, watch TV or. listen —♦0 AM -or beautiful FM musl^ ComB Ip Aanight and choose the best In/sight and sound for your family. M.hog.ny $29995 W' IV m THE POKTYAC PRESS, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 14, 1962 Writer Chronicles Plane • i ............i . NEW YORK (UPI)™ Until precisely 4:17 p.m. on a gray Decern-bar day. Eastern Air Lines’ 3 p.m. shuttle flight from New York to n«u Washington was in sight. Tbs passengers had been told to fasten their seat bettsT Sirough thewto-dows of their four-engine Constellation, they could see the wing flaps slide out and down for the stewardess "Ladies will please! -handbags and small packages jemove their shoes. on the floor. All passengers “Gentlemen wUl please loosen) pj^ nmm eye-glasses, rokties. I please put all fountain pens.sad "Ladies, please pat your 1 small objects away. for anyone who has ever wondered haw things go inside an aircraft to trouble, here are notOf made by i reporter who was aboard the New York-Wash-iagtou plane. 4:17 p.m. (Flaps now retract ed.) Pilot; "Ladles and gentleman, I am sorry to say we are haring difficulty lowering the nose wheel. We are now in the Washington arm Jbut our landing will be delayed while the engineer makes temporary adjustments. I ' ■; ;;1§ £ W W | 4:20 p.m. Circling over water. 4:22 p.m. Flight deck rings for stewardess. 4:23 p.m. First stewardess begins to hand out pillows, Second OUT FOB MOTHER — Basket-weaving, beloved of girls of .many generations past, Is still a popular hobby. Beadcraft, and a new braiding and lacing kit, also otter dozens Of projects. Mosaic tile craft is another ingenious adaption of an ancient art. To the reporter ; "You, sir, will you please exchange seats with toe lady next to you eo that you can operate the emergency exit window for her if necessary." 4:40 p.m. StUl circling over water. Pilot : “Somebody back there must like us. Our instrumentation here indicates the now wheel has settled into place. Nothing on the flight deck now indicates that we are in further trouble #tth landing gear. However, in view of the delayed action I must take attire-cautions. „v, m 4;50 p.m. Plane files low over the control tower at National Airport, from which all other air traffic has been suspended. Plane’s undercarriage is observed through glasses by ground personnel to radio communication with pilot. ***** 4:52 p.m. . Pilot: “I hope there will be no indication of panic among our passengers, please. Your crew has been carefully trained to meet sUch emergencies. However, to be on the safe side, we will now make emergency landing-. ' 4:53 p.m. Stewardesses a t a n d by landing chute at main exit. 4:54 p.m. Pilot; "Will the young ladies back there (stewardesses) please let me know when the cabin is ready.” One stewardess«runs forward to flight deck. 4:5fi p.m. Pilot: "Three minutes to touchdown. 4 57 p,tp fttot: “One minute to touchdown..' 4:58 pa. Plane makes perlitet landing. Passengers clap hi tml-soil Planets followed np runway by fire trucks on each side aid by ambulance, with rotating red light, runataf ibreaet ef port side. Plane stops at end of runway, ‘ ^ ® • 1 ■ ’ 5:00 p.m. Pilot: "We must wait here until the ground creW puts a locking pin to our nosev ‘ gear. 5:10 p.m. plane finally parked St ramp. Stewardess (shakily): “Thank you for flying with us today. Goodby, and have a 'pleasant (toy. The nation’s private forest owners plant more than a billion trees £2:__________________ nniimiMBH UIHRD5 Hotel OUTTtm—JUL 41S. Saginaw tt. Downtown, Pontiac, SO ... HELP US MOVE AND SAVE . MANYS $ $ $ NOTHING DOWN N0! WE ARE NOT GOING 0UT 0F BUSINESS. WrreMOV' I . i T01749 S. SAGINAW ST. downtown Pontiac! OVCR 22 YEARS... at 48 S. Saginaw. Wa mutt move because ef the Urban Renewal Program. $89/071 worth ef fumltum must ba sold regardless ef cost. We, at WARDS HOME OUTFITTING, are net going out ef buttoees, we are moving to 17-19 S. Saginaw... formerly J. C. Penney flora which we will ejpupy after extensive remodeling. But In the meantime... come help us and SAVE an many pieces of fine fumiturel Living Room *158 Bedroom 8 PIECE SECTIONAL 1 W%aytei end Teal ofalteni..... 88 4-PC. WALNUT BEDMOM. ioik. ease bed, double drvtaor ana, chest. ..... 100% High Pila Nylon oholoe of KROEHLER SOFA and CHAIR. Wide modem arm, 100% nylon with foam xippar ouehiona..... DANISH SOFA MODERN stripe and main aevnr. Only 2 left.. QRfBMMPff MAPLE I PIECE LIVING ROOM auito sofa bed.ohairand rooker. Floor simple,! only.,.,..... FOAM LOUNQER SOFA. Zipper euehions. Itiripefabrio.1 only.. ••.•••••• SOFA ID DO CHAIR. 1N% high , pile nylon team cushions in ohalr,nil cetera......... *59“ *gg“ $28“ *99“ 4*90. PROVINCIAL IDIMOM. With canopy or rag. bed. White, t. SOLID WALNUT DOUBLE ORlItlR With mirror, dustproof drawers have center guides.......... CROUPS OF CHESTS. Gray, maple, limed f oak or walnut.......... WALNUT B00K0ASE BEDS. Full else. Reg. 29, to...... SOLID WALNUT CHESTS. DINING ROOM 4-PO. CRAY SUITE. Trfpfb dresser has doot with Inside drawan. With cheat and bookcau bed. • *88“ *118“ *59“ tig“ *13“ *49“ *109** S PO. 0RAY DININO. t arm ohaire, 4 tide ohairs. buffet end large extenelch table, fleer temple... OAK BUFFET, one only., WALNUT TABLE and 4 Chairs. ALL WALNUT China-- Oless Doors....... SOLID MAPLE Oval Drop Leaf Table tOmy.........«•* $12888 03088 $7018 $5088 *3888 Dinettes Bedding INNERSFRINO MATTRESS er hex spring, toll or CROUP OF BOX SPRINOS. Over 28 from which to ohooeo. Values to 18.80............ BUTTON-FREE MATTRESSES or box springs^ 11-yr. guarantee. Reg. to ................... HOLLYWOOD BED ERSEMRLE. Only! left................. BUNK BEDS GompUta with innerspring mattresses....... $|gla $0 088 $2088 $2088 $59M 8-PO. DINETTE 30x40x41“ Table and 4 Ohairs $2088 T-PC. DINETTE. Burnproof tap and washable ohairs 85988 5 PC. DINETTE. 30x41x00“ Tablo with plestio teg. loverel colors. $0088 7-PC. DINETTE. Blond plastietep. — *4 188 Fleer sample - T Chairs | PLATFORM CRICKET MAFLE ROOKER. Colonial Deign....., SWIVEL ROOKER. *«•/ Foam eeet and hack... SWIVEL ROOKER. 100% Nylon..... BUCKET SWIVEL CHAIR. 1M% supported plastlO •, $I288 $||08 $1588 OPEN Every Night ’til V i ■Ilia IT jl i 1 1 1 ill n HomEOUTFUTitictoniPflnv * \ ; PlvMew el Themai Jtwelfr C#., In*. \ [ . TOP QUALITY INSULATED BOOR a STEM. SHANK tillfl • CLEATEDSOLE ▼tel® aTHi BEST YET W ★ 7-LIGHT CHRISTMAS TAR SIT Cach light borne hwlependenthf...... H 15-LIGHT OUTPOOR CHRISTMAS Set. Each light burnt Indepeadewtty,, SHETLAND RUG-SHAMPOOING ELECTRIC FLOOR POLISHER Rtf. $29.98 Mako Mom's WORK EASIER FORONLY $2499 HERE ARE JEST AFEW8IFTST0 CHOOSE FROM S-TlU,StSTOR RADIO ■k liathir case ★ (ARPMONtS ★ BATTERY R»g. 9I9.9S ELECTRIC RAZORS Leieeel JVtoe ftlf • ★ MEN'S...... 12JG ★ LADIES'.. .. S.7T Dominion HAIRDRYERS Convenient Hot.Bex Stylo •« 12” • UNIVERSAL • HAND r«. Q88 MIXER W TI19 lost UNIVERSAL COFFEEMATIC Cepeolty 1C 8 8 4-19 cup 29.95 189 The Bast UNIVERSAL MiAfc 24“ X-tb. FRUITCAKE Ole Rag. 1.10....01 Blacks, Dec ken kTfgSS to" |Msr UTILITY SAW ■ *42-44 • Cut. I* An a HHMW *L_ _ __ . p Meant wNi mm tram mm ‘ Met trHtwl (.hi for tom lilt Black s Dec ken NEW! W' UTILITY MILL * MmI ••torW,” hr Hm. M-fwjK SSZ *10.88 $1 HOLDS IN LAYAWAY PERFECT GIFT—FOR THE WIPE Who NOs Evorything - IMPERIAL DISHMASTER ONLY $3950 Mott’s Zipper Boots or BOYS' 4-BUCKLEJMTS 99 0 All First Quality (Net 2nd Quality) t for Sloppy Woathor MB 4 HARDWARE STORES PONTIAC ■ 1 ; RNSSf.NffiTT^ DRAYTOlK Kosgo Hardware No. 1 Fillmore Hardware 3041 Orchardfbcike Rd. 4180 W. Walton Blvd. 082-2660 OR 3-1880 5-2424 , i Tom’s hardware 905 Orchard,Lake 'Ave. I The season's most beautiful decanter... holds the world's most welcome whiskey Every sculptured facet says this glass Is a gift. And every drop of the contents rightly echoes the thought. . For this savory triumph, this tribute to taste, this rare, rich pleasure, iswhlikey In ailits glory. Give 7 Crown and know that it is bound to be Cherished/for among all those that you could choose, this Is the one that everyday, every year, every holiday season/ Is the world's roost welcome whiskey. Decanter and Gift Package Ot No Extra Cast Give Seagram's and be Sure I SUOMM DISTILLERS COMPANY, NEW TOOK CITY. BLENDED WHISKEY. M moor. 15% OMIN MUTUAL SPIRITS. OUR RUGGED I CORDUROY TOUCHDOWN" COATS ARE ONLY... 13.99 AflOMf YOU'D EXPECT TO PAY SYS THE PONTIAC ERJB8& FRIDAY, DECEMBER 14, 1962 ONE COLOR JBUB& Scientist Prove Rats Have Such Systems *■£ if.” f* j Human Beings May Have Built-In NEW YORK am - Scientists are working on a theory that ho* man beings have inbred .within them a mysterious means of tecting radiation. ‘ ^ It (nay sound like a remote possibility but thett' Sdentists have plausible reasons for believing other mammals have. Then why not people? In this atomic jge of fttlkrat and other chances for radiation damage their work could pro*, duce human benefits — provided people could be taught to ‘Toad” their own baDt-ii radiation detectors and to take pre- MONTGOMERY WARD HEARING AID DEPT. GIFT IDEA PORYOtlR HARD OF HEARING LOVED ONES SPECML' CHRISTMAS nr* 178" No Money Down PONTIAC MALL TELEGRAPH ROAD AT ELIZANITH LAKE ROAD Telephen* 682-4940 Dr. J. Garcia and associates at the veterans administration hospital in Loiag Beach, Calif., proposed some months ago that such detectors exist in mammals. Their grounds were theoretical, based on subtleties of the mammalian nervous system. ■ ........................ 'they have now demonstrated that rats can be tautfit to detect the presence of radiation with uncanny speed and to react defensively to it, The experiments were de? signed so that the rats couldn’t have detected it by any means other titan their - theoretical built-in radiation detectors. son, is an unpleasant and alarming sensation. . ★ ★ ' The scientific reasoning was that if the rats detected the radi* ation it would cause them to anticipate the shocks. To avoid any chance of their picking up “clues" to base anticipations upon, the cage was bombarded with wide-spectrum noise to “mask” the sounds of the apparatus. ” Even, in this preliminary "con-iitionlng" there were signs ‘ rats were Indeed detecting the The rats were trained to press a lever in order to get food; each J2 presses rewarded them with one delectable morsel. The floor of their performing cage was an electro grid, and “s celling was an X-ray machine. The scientists could shock or radiate Pats as they wished. LEARN PAST As a “conditioning”- preliminary, rats were radiated with a very low dosage of X rays for 10 seconds. During the last 8 seconds, they were given intermittent shock which to the rat, as it Is to a per- oh but there was no following shock. . ' Some madd frantic efforts to escape from the cage the instant it was turned on, before there was any shock. .Or ★ The food-rewarding lever was then restored to the cage and the rats began working it. While they worked, the X rays were turned Just the tanie, the tats Instantly stopped pressing the lever and cringed l in anticipation of shock. They remained thus frozen until the X rays were turned off. Then they resumed eating. '<•"> , v. To eliminate any slight chance that the rats were responding to some unknown factor, they were subjected to “sham radiation.” This was done by putting a lead ‘ between them and the X ray machine. * * # , When the machine was turned on, it delivered X rays but none could reach the rats. Under this condition the rats kept right on blissfully pressing the lever and eating. ★ ★ ★ The scientists as of now do not News Only Litters a Bit NEW YORK WM-Whatever It is that litters streets, apparently n’t newspapers. A W ’ A Sanitation Commissioner Frank J. Lucia said his department’s wqatc collection has been reduced scarcely 8 per cent since a news- paper strike shut off the city's S.S million copies daily. • Lucia said most readers take their newspapers home. He said apartment dwellers usually dispose Of them in incinerators that others bundle them for commercial dealers or charity drives or other disposal. know what it is'ln the ian nervous system of the rat which permits it to detect even low-level radiation with such speed. They’re working on that. ★ ★ In addition to Garcia, the scientists were N. A. Buchwald, B. H. Feder and R. A. Koelling. They reported to the technical journal, “Nature." Antarctic Blizzard Traps 6 Scientists ANN ARBOR UP) -A six-man scientific team frojtn the University of Michigan was trapped for eight days by a severe blizzard on the Ross ice shelf in Antarctica, reports Charles Swjthinbank, head of the U. of M. glacial geology and polar research laboratory. The team was trapped Novf2? Dec. 1, and forced to remain huddled for more than a week in small tents, according to a message received here, Swithinbank said yesterday. * . */tar' They were trapped in an area often buffeted by 100-mile-an-hour winds, near the site of a similar blizzard that wiped out British Naval Capt. Robert Scott, and his crew in 1912, Swithinbank said. SHE’S IN A LATHER - Covered from head to toe in shaving lather, 2-year-old Pauline Daley is about to burst into tears after being rescued from bathroom in which she barricaded herself for two hours. A squad of Cambridge, Mass., polics. and two fir# englneajwer#. called toJreflLlier._• Hoover Dam can supply tip domestic needs of 7J mUljoa persons. Cost of the dam and ptipar plant was 8160 mlllioii. , ^ A/Vcmra WARD draperies, slipcover*, reupholstery PhoM 612-4940 _ / PONTIAC MALL t 13M FRIDAY AND 9:30 9:30 BOVS’ SLIM • OOK »»*cK* 099 tart'***1 loWMbabtotsyo". odgabat Boys everywhere go for the thickset cotion corduroy touchdown coat with wool and Orion* acrylic plaid lining from neck to heml Its warm... water-repellent... can take loads and loads of wear! Multi-tone bulky knit oollar. Fall tones in 10-20 IN PQNTIAC - 200 In Clarkston-Woforford on Dixie H wy.-j >ith Saginaw St. Just North of Waterford HI ^IflliwiwN the FRESS, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 1^ 1962' LINDEN MB - This era Michigan village of 1,146 souls will feed more than 500 needy people overseas — for 9 fdll it railed the money needed in a fall drive, and it found '‘the experience eo rewarding” it already has set Its sights on a goal of caring tor 1,146 - mk “one-tor-one” — next year. "And next time around,” says t h e Rev. Robert • McComb, “Everybody seems eager to get Into the project.” / LI ad ea's community wide good deed is accomplished through Jhe Christian Rural Overseas Program (CROP). Practically all the food shipped by CROP . Is donated out of American surpluses and ship-ping charges are the primary expense. Under PROP’S operations it estimates it can supply a toll year’s food tor an adult for |7. For a child the estimate Is only H. ■ ■ it\r So Linden’s contribution isn’t gigantic, but money isn’t a commodity easily come by to this little cluster of stores and barber shops and garages. Linden has no industry, but some who live here work in the auto fac- tories of nearby Flint and Pontiac. Linden’s campaign crew from one started by the Rev. McComb to his Presbyterian Church here twd years ago. Linden" keep the stores which] when his members adopted a cater to surrounding farmers, “one-for-one” program. Mostly, howevar, the. men of Vacationers who in season populate the shores of SO lakes within an eight-mile radius, told follow villagers who keep . other kinds of stores. fPfrin Of the 62,ON raised In the 1666 drive, more than 6M6 came from the IN pupils who attend Linden Community High School. The high schoolers Worked hard for their money, at such jobs as raking leaves, cleaning basements,' washing caifs and and even operating two if business for a day. for work before e worked through hours and some MM* sup- good will unbelievable good will generated in SANDMAN IN DISGUISE - An anesthesiologist at 9t- Barnabas Hospital in Min-neapolis has found that “kiddles trust animals more than they trust human beings.” So “Porky,” a gas-breathing piglet toy, Is used 1 AP Photof»* with patients like Todd Crooks, 3, to make the operating room less terrifying. Porky, who squeaks and blows out sleep-indusing gas, helps youngsters forget such things as needles. to Hong Kong to feed refugees from Communist China. * * *? "That,” says the Rev. Mr. McComb, "is where ChUrch World Service told us the need was greatest. We plan to follow the same pattern next year.” , The second year; the Presbyterian church put 61,800 in its I budget for €R0 co-op, the Michigan Milk Producers Association and the five churches have volunteered. We expect tiie school kids back, too, because we dohbt they’d want to miss an experience similar to this year’s. "We’ra planning next year’s drive for toe last two weeks of September, and we hope every merchant in town wto follow the lead of two this year oh the last Saturday -let toe kids operate the business and turn over the .profits to CROP.”- |i $|1 Laura Cook, a 17-year-old senior, was selected “Stadent of Distinction” at the end of the high school’s^campaign, Marsha Big-runner-up. gave more than N . CROP, “slaving" over . stove baking, waiting on customers at a drive-in restaurant, baby hitting and washing out school buses. .., because it is tbe most practical way of doing dishes FITS ANY FAUCET GENERAL ELECTRIC Big 12-lb. Automatic Washer One step dishwashing, hyglenlcally clean. Savings on detergent, hot water savings, longer wear, less repair, no awkward handling, no need for scrub pads. GE Electric Can Opener....... $ GE Hair Dryer with Case...............$14.38 Toastmaster 2 Slice Toaster ...,...... $13.88 Sunbeam (11”) Fry Part with Cover.. $14.88 NOD HOUSEKEEPING of PONTIAC Open Every Nile 'til 9:00 m FE 4-1555 ..... buy her a flamelens ELECTRIC DRYER Itoir and earel easy to &M0-Special "Plug-in” Price saves you money! The price includes adding a 230-volt dryer electrical circuit in any residence, up to and including a 4-family flat, in the Detroit Edison service area. easy to MAC-clothes dry quickly, gently, safely...the electric way! ~—-** v free service too - Edison repairs or replaces electrical parts of electric dryers-doean’t charge for part* or labor. It's an electric dryer exclusive! ' / see your dealer or RETROffT EDISON ■i . «O”0NLY 8 SHOPPING DAYS LEFT TO O MAKE YOUR CHRISTMAS SELECTION— ««o» 1st WILL ARRANGE DELIVERY AS LATE AS DEC 24th WERE OPEN EVERY NIGHT ’TIL 9:00 DON’T BE A DISHWASHER! BUY ONEtf The new GE washes from the top as well as bottom. Load it—forget it. Portable —No installation. Rolls anywhere. CURTIS MATHES 23” TV-Stereo Hi-Fi-FM-AM Radio Complete Entertainment Center NO MONEY DOWN-90 Days for Cash with trade GE POLISHER, SCRUBBER, WAXER Only $10.00 DOWN DON’T BE A FLOOR WASHER BUY ONE!! The New Hoover Floor Washer ' Washes Floors— Then Drinks Up the Scrub Water! I the floor with ctosa -tosto toy* toot and ' Only THE P6XTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, DECEMBER 14, 1062 RCA VICTOR RED SEAL NEWIgpkmings KSTASTAND PRESENT FRITZ KREISLER IN IMMORTAL PERFORMANCES "Some of the rarest treaium from ' l.-ROA, Victor’s vaults.*' Highly prized L, collector's items Include Krelaler recordings with Efrem Zlmbalist, Rich* manlnoff, Geraldine Farrar, John I photos.. Monaural only. ,______ , .Victor vault re* cording* dating from 1907. 13 Caruso selections. 8 never before on L.P. In* LM-2639 [ Junior Editor* Quiz, on-r- DOGS Language groups of more thani Just one mushroom'In growni Hydrolgist* have recently de-l Cbws 10,000 people are difficult to findlcommercially in the United I veloped an electronic device re* of three in Netherlands New Guinea, whichlStates, the meadow mushroom pitted to find underground water pared has a population of about 7QO,000.|(agaricus campestris). . | simply, quickly and cheaply. ' |more Many ofthese famous Gigli selections hava bsen out of print for years. Fourteen selections. Seven opsrstlc aria* and savan songs all recorded with full orchestra. ■ Monaural only. LM-28M FLAGSTAD £ MELCHIOR singers of all time. Thsss original recordings wars cut In ths lata 1930’s. Monaural only. LM’ttll— mm ■ HU8INSTFINs wSill I.OHBNCRIN ■ 21123 “One of ths finest documents of Rubinstein's life-long devotion to Mossrt" Rubinstein himself IPPig which Mourt left open in the manu* script of the C-Minor Concerto. g LM/LSC-2634* | of: "Artists’ Life,’’ “Treasure Waltz4 and others. LM/L8C-2800* A hi-fi, stereo spectacular In* Dramatic readings filled with splendor and grandiosity. Stokowtkl conducts a 125-piece orchestra, one of the largest sv«r assembled In a studjQ. LM/LSC-2612* “This is the/music In which Munch excelsl Two fsvorite conceit pieces. For lovers of 19th Century French music and sound enthusiasts. IM/L8C-2647 UVINS ITEMS (ISC) MONAUIMl HI-FI fUS) ’ALSO ON TAN Pontiac Downtown Store—27 S. Saginaw—Phone Ft 3*7168 Pontiac Mall Store—Telegraph Rd.—Phone 682*0422 I the Dalmatian chosen to ride fire QUESTION: Why trucks? IF. fir ★ . ANSWER: The Dalmatian is one of the finest of dogs, faithful, intelligent, easy to raise. It is a very old breed which , has always gotten along we)l with horses. There are pictures of such dogs running behind Egyptian chariots. Later the Dalmatian was trained to run alongside horse* drawn coaches, sometimes between the wheels. As fire engines changed from hand-drawn to- horse-drawn, the Dalmatian Moved over to the firehouse. :■* Here he was the pet of firemen and guarded the fire : - house faithfully. When alarms sounded, the Dalmatian went right along with the fire engine, often running between the horses* hind legs, Gas engines have of course replaced fire horses, but the Dalmatian has remained in many fire houses. He often rides to fires, thew"dayr,~on the engine, which travels^asterthyrr he can run. J The name Dalmatian comes from Dalmatia, a small country in the Balkans, now a part of Yugoslavia. / fir fir ★ FOR YOU TO DO: As you go by a fire station, peek inside to see if a Dalmatian is there. Ask a fireman to tell you about Dalmatians. British Queen, Cook Dance LONDON (AP) - Queen Elizabeth II put on one of her every-dly diamond tiaras Thursday and went dancing with her cook. The Duke of Edinburgh tripped the light fantastic with one of the girls who makes the palace beds. It happened at the annual servants’ ball in Buckingham Palace where the rqyal couple turned up to make merry with the people,who1 Ju*t the first of many. Wait on them the rest of the year; Pay Up, Dr. Kildare, Says Talent Agency LOS ANGELES (AP)—His former talent agency says Richard Chamberlain, star of television’s “Dr. Kildare” series, owes it commissions. MCA, Inc., now out of the talent agency business, says Chamber-lain owes it an unspecified amount of money under his contract with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. So too, the firm said, do several other stars, and Chamberlain’s suit will be In Ceylon yield, pints of milk defly, < th 13 pints in Norway in join Denmark. and you get it for less! MORE STYLE! MORE QUALITY! MORE VALUE! Our lower overhead mokes the difference. Our 26th year of satisfying service. MILLER'S FURNITURE 144 OAKLAND AVENUE Open eveninqs 'III Christmas Farms — Free Oillrirr Got a 'Break/ All Right NEW YORK (AP) - A man carrying a gun walked into * downtown drug store Thursday and told the clerk, “I just got out of jail and I need a fresh start.” He escaped with $420. GIFT SUGGESTIONS FOR "HIS" CHRISTMAS FROM SHOE STORE WARM LINED - GARDNER* SHOE "Yards of Cards” BOOTS I To I' w Identifies you, the smart way •haw^-Corf slip to add mart window,, fnpandlng .lid. ck>,-h*e adjurti to add tha cards •roo Evan'i Slippers ■... *6”»*10* Ewire Sooks...... 7S* *■ Shoe Shine Kite i... .1"b *6N OPEN EVERY EVENING UNTIL CHRISTMAS “Shoes v for the Entire Family” m SHOE STORE 20 WEST HURON ST. FE 2-3821 Dewrtows Portia* FIREPLACE GRATES $1195 From LOG DOGS FIRE LOGS Knocked Down Fishing Shanties *18” WEATHER VANES Made of cart aluminum. Ornamented. at an exciting new ceiling that brings new life to your decorating Armstrong CRESTMONT Thit li Only One of 5 New Styles. Come in 0nd See the Other 4. he Hour own decorator j~D> Uanelaire OHNAMKNTAI. IIAMI.HOAHI) (iKII I1WOHK Here's the newest. THRIFTEST way ever to build SCREENS. DIVIO* VAU ANCES . yourself projects! New hi fashion hardboardln* D stalls in minutes. 3 dec* B orator patte/ns. Just Cor SPECIAL! yFfl pslnt or stein to please! * '.sin Complete accessorial availal' 26* x 96" ROOM DIVIDER 18" x 74" SCREEN PANEL only $A*i Complete Formica Map and Gama Table Tops, 2-ft. x 3-ft. Decorated World and Outer Space Maps Also Chess and Checker Boards WOOD SHUTTERS . . ...69* Now’s the Time to Install Your UNI-BILT Fireplace! Completely Fabricated. Can Be Installed in 1 Day HOURS: Open Weekday * Monday thru Friday 0 A.M. until 5:30 P.M. SATURDAYS from 8 A.M. until 4 P.M. BURKE Lumber 4495 Dixie Highway OR 3*1211 SAVE MONEY on our PRE-CHRISTMAS SPECIALS m mm mis~ THfe PONTIAC PttESS, yhlt)AY. DECEMBER 14, 1962 - Give t Best "to Your Family.. Better laving PooU't will convert your Ottic IntO'On extra bedroom for your § rowing yountfttora -Pay ai llttio o* $5.00 par week for labor, material*. ■=r= LUMBERS HARDWARE 951 OAKLAND AVE., PONTIAC • FR+9694 For FREE At-Home—If ESTIMATES i\ CALL FE 4-1594 D/ Wdyne G. Brandstadt Says: |»j jQJRsI!, Soap Only Makes Y , Q — I have very dry skin, espe- n dally on my hands. What kind of vitamin can I taka to make my skin softer? I have Med all kinds of creams but none of, them have helped- - i A,— Dry skin is cahsed by a decreased activity of the glands in the skin that produce sweat and oil but what causes the de-crease is anybody’s gdess. The condition is usually worse In cold, dry weather and in Sating carrots, green vegetables, sweet potatoes, Hubbard squash and apricots, may be of some benefit but don’t expect miracles. Most people who have k dry skin have H all their lives and are not greatly handicapped by it. . Wfcf-C ■ it makes the skin look Scaly..' Soap and fat solvents of all kinds make iti worse. Some of tbs' nonalkaline moderfl deter-' gents should be BRANDSTADT used in place of soap- *■- Daniel Boone Labeled Ignorant and Careless HARRQD8BUKG, Ky. (A - An historian commissioned to write a pageant about Kentucky’s pioneer days told an audience recently that Daniel Boone was “ignorant, carelessandprobab^rshlftless.” Now, before I am lynched by Boone’s numerous descendants and admirers. Dowell of Louisville said, “let me hasten to say that he wasn’t a rascal. He was very exciting and colorful.' vitamin A, be»t supplied byt^Tbcuelytl^^ Even though you have used creams without much benefit you sjwuld continue to use them. Be sure the creams you use have an oily base and are not the greaseless vanishing creams preferred by most women. Qne woman writes that she feels sensitive about being dark com-plexioned. She had read that there is a medicine that will make dark complexion lighter. Another woman writedyhat shel*^1?.^ _ sts a deep irregular pigmentation naI15T on her face and neck whenever she spends a short time in the gun^ monobenzone (Benoqutn). S h e asks whether tbit could be caused by hair dye. So far as I know monobenzone Is the only bleaching agent available for dark skin. Unfortunately it does not produce a uniform controllable bleaching of the areas of the skin to which it is applied. In some persons who have used it, it even produces Irregular bleaching with scattered spots of increased pigmentation so use it at your own risk. Hair dyes are not known to produce any areas of dark pigmentation on the skin. FUNGUS TREATMENT Q — What is the treatment of fungus in the fingernails and toe- When the prescribed treatment falls, it is often because an exact diagnosis Was not made. This can be done only by taking scrapings from, the infected area, examining them under a microscope, and identifying the type of fungus to- A — Because the nail itself protects flu fungus that causes FI Hie trerfto ugalrnf locaT agp-cations of any fungicide, teak treatment is rarely successful it may help. Some fungi can be killed by taking tablets of the antibiotic, griseofulvin, if the treatment is persisted in for fours or five Unfortunately, a few persons suffer undesirable side effects frofy this drug but it is well worth a try. ' ■ t ■ Other fungi can be killed by another antibiotic, nystatin, which— can also be taken by mouth. A doctor who specializes in skin diseases should be able to help you. Less than half of the European settlers in Algeria are of French descent. Mariy have Spanish, Italian, Swiss-German and Maltese origins. SANTA’S here * • • Santa is waiting with a bag full of peppermint candy canes for all the good little girls and hoys. Come in for a Christmas visit. .. ’ see Santa and enjoy the organ melodies of Wtjody Martens in our lobby. ! .■.JtZfSPiiBfvteSJ' A«slss!" 7 AM NEWS FEDERAL savings fpfei -f 761 W, Huron Pontiac BARNES - HARGRAVE • wwr *•» IT IB! PONTIAC'S FINEST TOY DISPLAY! TOP TOYS ON SANTA'S GIFT LIST Rug. 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Huron ACROSS PROM PARKING LOT .1 1 Ufc m THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 14t ;I962 B—'ll Hollywood Celebrities Too Tfor ^ • By PHYLLIS BATTELLE HOLLYWOOD - In New York Into fa* moug people. On Fifth Avenue'or Park, in Times Square or the drug store, you’re always seeing a familiar face and murmuring “hi’ at it— then suddenly realizing it was Charles Boyephj face, Mary Martin’s. InrNew York, celebrities are just like people, except they e^t at better restaurants. / Here in Holly-wood it’s different. You have to|| go to a premieres or a studio lotor||j Lolly Parson’s™ place to find celebrity. Th don’t go stroll! along Vine St in dark glasses, or driving in to PHYLLIS drive - ins 1 i k e BATTELLE (the fan magazines used to say) they used to. actors, when they’re working, are relentlessly on the move. A 12-hour day is not unusual. A three-minute break for lunch i (which Shirley MacLaine claims It’s not that they’re Snobs, this new breed of Hollywood star. It’s just that they’re “beat.” “These are the longest days’ work in the world,” Jack Lemmon told us. “Actors in New York h a v e more time to get out.” “Even the best restaurants here are going broke,” reports writer A. I. L. Diamond. “Nobody has time or strength to go out for " ner.” “You get a ridiculous amount of money,said Spencer Tracy, “and you work like hell for it.” • ON THE MOVE And of course it’s true. Movie Psychiatrists Help Students at Harvard CAMBRIDGE, Mass. ilD - Harvard University has 10 psychiatrists oh its staff. Why? “It is not because we have a sick population, but because of the sensible attitude of the administration here," says Dr. Preston Munter, assistant director of the University Health Service. "They feel that young adults are at a particularly turbulent time of life and that a psychiatrist can help them and also facilitate learning.” United Statea’s, contributions to U.N. operations in the Congo and Middle East totaled $270,-1 394,916 through June 30. I is often her allotted time if she wants to see the morning rushes— and she wants to see the morning rushes) lg normal. Civil Service Raises Studied $7.1'Million in Hikes Proposed for 32,000 With the competition of television, it is a far more earnest, diligent, busy business than It used to be in its palmier, zanier days... It is little wonder perhaps that so many movie actors, who bore up beautifully in more unpressured times, have recently died 'and the ones who aren’t dead,” said Tracy—.“everybody you hear about is sick.”) ‘ 1" ..if---Itr-- And it is even less wonder that LANSING Ml - A $7.1-million increase in wages for Michigan’s 32,000 civil service employes was under study yesterday by the State Civil Service Commission. Sr. dr State Personnel Director Franklin Dewald said the increases range from 3 to 12 per cent, with the average hike being 3.9 per cent'. . A public hearing on the proposed increases has been scheduled for Monday at Lansing’s Civic Center, DeWald said, and a decision on what increases, if any, probably will come before the end of the month. DeWald said the adjustments have been recommended by the commission’s wage and salary section and evolve from a year- long study of comparable pay rates in public and private industry both within and outside of Michigan. ★ h dr About half of the state workers are now earning $5,075 a year or less, DeWald said, and the proposed increase would raise the median to $5,273. Any pay adjustment would not take effect until next July 14, DeWald said. It would be the first general increase for classified workers in two years. DeWald said minor adjustments _n fringe benefits, including increase in the state contribution to group life and health insurance premiums, were authorized last year as well as wage increase* for fewer than 400 employes at a cost of some $700,000. ★ * * The recommendation calls for 3 per cent increases for 7,625 workers, four per cent increases to 22,071, five per cent to 1,440, six per-Gapt >to 642, .and from seven to 12 per cent to 260 employees. Women’s White Figure Skates you don’t bump into celebrities on the street. You have to go to the studios to look them up, and try to snatch a few minutes of their time between ikes. v,:, The movie business being what is—every fUnshas to stars in order to make a box-office buck — you can sometimes find an entire Who’s who of glitter on one set. Until this week, when producer-director Stanley Kramer shot his last scene — Spencer Ttacy hanging from a palm' frond muttering ng, ng, ng”—the who’s Whosiest set in town war where they were shooting a cinerama spectacle ti- tled, aptly, “It’s a Mad, Mad, Mad,, Mad WofldUL,Wa ~w$n t there, ancT as we ogled, an $xecu-tive of the releasing company, United Artists, tried diligently to fill us in on the story ... There’s this thug named Smiler Grogan (Jimmy Durante) being trailed by a' true-blue police detective, »C apt: C. G. Culpeper (Spencer Tracy). -v ★ ★ ★ Smiler opens the movie by barreling hhis car off the side of a mountain. Well, there are several cars and trucks behind him, inhabited by such notables as J. Russell Finch (Milton Berle), president of the' Pacific 'Edible Seaweed Co.,.his wife Emmeline (Dorothy Prov'ne) and her , “old bag” of a mother (Ethel Merman) dentist Melyille Crump (Sid Caesar) and his wife Monica (Edie Adams); writers Ding Bell (Mickey Rooney) and. Beney Benjamin (BuddyTEwkeWTnot to mention Lenny Pike (Jonathan Winters) in a furniture van. All the above people rush down the cliffside to help Durante, but it is too late. ■• ■ ■ ■ Before he passes on, and out of the film, he mentions hidden treasure — and from (hat point, larceny in the hearts of these nine'stars, as-well as some 30 other great comedians (ah yei, dear Phil Silvers, we cannot leave you out) carries the movie through to its mad; toad, mad, mad concluikau-———........... It took nearly nine months and $6.5 million dollars tp gather together the celebrities and shoot their scenes for this Igntastic picture. Now it will take another nine months to cut and edit it. , * dr- ★ When it premieres at cinerama theatres next autumn, it should be the greatest comedy spectacle of all time. “Shouldn’t it?,” we asked director Kramer. He replied wearily. And modestly, ‘“nils job has been terribly difficult, physically and every other way. This show should have everything, but it’s too early to say. ’ “But forget the big screen and the big cgst... either a show has got it, or It’s not.” t Man, 113, Is Excused m WICHITA, Kan. W ~r A prospective juror was asked by Judge Thomas C. Raum in Common Pleasant Court why he sought to be excused from jury duty. “Well you see, Judge. I am lit years old and can-work hard all day, but just can’t sit still any more," repUed Levi Groty of Wichita. He was excused. 11 Open Every Night 'til Christmas (VMM YEAR-END 31VR CLEAN-UP! SAVE! Compare These Prices with Previous Ads! MUST MOVE STOCK BEFORE INVENTORY rm buys! m 6-FT. ALUMINUM RADIAL ARM SAWS and TOOLS of ALL TYPES at SAVINGSM Glass Sliding $eA95 DOORS 03 DRASTIC REDUCTIONS ON ALL HARDWARE INVENTORY! | PLYWOOD PANELING COSTS LESS AT “BURMY’S” ' 1/4 4xlAD Plywood Sanded ... $2.19 % 4x1 AD Fir Plywood Sended ... l.TS Vi 4x1 AO Fir Plywood Sanded ... 4.89 44 4x1 AD Fir Plywood Sondod... 5.(8 % 4x6 AO Fir Plywood Sondod... 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The songs they Wa) sang had never been so clear and lively. Shnoo. “I am sure our bad lack'Is over.”. , \ “Perhaps,” said Saiita. “Anyway, you know how, to reach me should the need arise.” With that he was out of the door and gone before Mr. Shnoo could blihk his eyes. Mr. Shnoo was wrong. His bad luck was not over. The next day trouble came to the big animal house when Henrietta, the elephant, fell ever on her side and could not get up again. It happened this way: Even ^Herbert and Louise, the giraffes! were?affec(bd by it all. They swung their long necks and strange humming sounds came 'froth their throats. - it \ it Above all die turmoil there came a sudden cheerful “peep!” and there was Blue Lady perched on Mr. Shnoo’s shoulder. “Happy day!” said Lady, flicking her tail. “Happy day, Indeed!” agreed Mr. Shnoo. “Ah," he said, turning to Santa, “If only I had the recipe for your incense!” “No need,” said Santa. “For forever.” ~ NJr. Shnoo was overcopie. "Because of you,” said he, “Shnoo’s Zoo now has flying reindeer, bear with dinosaur teeth, and birds that will never die! What sight for the Queen!” . BAD LUCK OVER Santa wrapped his long wool scarf around his neck. T hope she comes soon,” he said. “Foi bad luck seems to plague you.’ “Don’t worry,” said Mir. He Knows Shortest Way to a Teen-Ager's Head HIALEAH, Fla. UP) - City bus driver Harry Darling/knows how to handle rowdy teen-agers. After a teen-age dance recently, 30 kids clambered aboard Darling’s bus antistarted yelling and slapping each other. Straight to the police station went Darling. The kkft calmed down quickly. Every night Henrietta was tied to a stake on the right side of her cage and it was her cusjgni.. to lean against Theblg stone wailon her right while she slept. the night before she was tied to the.left side of her cage. When she dosed off she leaned over' to the right as was her custom but the wall was not there and poor Henrietta went plop! Right over on her side. CAN’T GET UP _ Now an elephant can lie down by first bending his front legs under him and then kneeling down on his back, legs. When he is down like this he can get back up very easily. But when an elephant is lying on his side; all four legs ■tick straight out and no matter how much he tries he cannot get back up on them. now I believe your birds will lire ~ This Is the way HeiBflettrwmr _ found and Mr. Shnoo was very angry. __________ “Who staked her against the left wall?” he demanded. . > The elephant attendant swore it had not been his fault/‘‘She was staked on the right- side. I r it myself!” “Who else was about?” “No one. Except Crookshsnk who’s alwaysbroond.” Crookshsnk declared he’d had nothing td do with the matter and Mr. Shnoo said anyway, the the/thing to do now was to get IfCnrlett back on her feet. He called in all the men in ic zoo and they all got behind Henrietta and pushed and pushed and pushed but they could not budge her. it- it it. , Mr. Shnoo had the men put a pulley at the top of the cage. He wrapped canvas around Henrietta’s middle and tied it wi£h ropes through the pulley. Then the men pulled on the ropes. Henrietta was raised two COMPARE and you’ll buy the best! a KITCHENAID dishwasher There'» a KitchenAid for every kitchen,.. every budget/ FRONT-LOADING CONVERTIBLE PORTABLE Remodeling a problem now? Use the convertible «• a portable now ... build it in later. Available in Superba, Imperial anchCustom series. BUILT-IN- KitchenAid bullt-ins are available in 3 series: Superba, Imperial end Custom. An almost limitless choice of front finishes to match any kitchen. NOW at WAYNE GABERTS TOP-LOADING PORTABLE If space or remodeling is a problem you can still have dishwashing freedom by KitchenAid. No matter which model or price every KitchenAid gives you... Big Blue Wash Arm ■ Flo-Thru drying ■ Double-cpated porcelain wash tank ■ Stainless steel filters, r ' « KitchenAid! 2 Years to fay from Date of Delivery! 90 DAYS SAME AS CASH! OVER EVERY RIGHT 'til 9 P.M. 'til CHRISTMAS Your Appliance Specialists 121 N. SAGINAD —FE 5-6189 V...... By LUCRECEBEALE Copyright, 1962 inches but, try as they would, the men could lift her. no higher. Poor Henrietta kicked her legs feebly and snorted unhappily through her trunk. She looked at Mr. Shnoo as if to say, “Hurry! I can’t stay this way much long-er!”; ’ • "f';. “Don’t worry,” said Mr. Shnoo gently. “We’ll get you up.” But they were to do It, Me did not know. Tomorrow: Skating This Long Little Doggie Short on Appreciation FRANKFURT, Germany, iff) -A large enamel Jaowl outside a fashionable confectionery • store carries this notice: “Every little doggie jn Frankfurt knows that when he comes to our store he gets !a free drink of water.” ★ ★ it However, one particular little doggie” — a dachshund by the name of* Pogo — seemed to think this was a pretty raw deal for the canine world and didn’t wag his tail in thanks for the kind human offering. He hit the manageress instead. Tt’s a semtl'N"1*1*lrnm ■ fairy qn«a«-* BemsJMrite-Romney Over Constitution LANSING (0P0 - The seven Democratic members of the State Administrative Board told Gov.-elect George Romney yesterday the proposed Michigan constitution is inadequate, but admitted the people “are by no means animous In their views about this document.” ,ir ■ As a result the Democrats asked Romney “to join with us in exploring ways and means of making available ... all sides of this important question to the public,” The letter,, which confirmed the Democratic leaders will campaign against the document, said, ‘We belieye the;, widest possible public discussion of the proposed new constitution should be encouraged. * .. # * 'We hope for a record turnout at the polls so the total vote will represent a true majority of the people of Michigan.” '* ■ ★ '*• It was signed by Lt. Gov. T. John Lesinski; Secretary of State James M, Hare; Atty. Gen. Frank J. Kelley; treasurer, San-Ford A. Brown; auditor general, Billie S. Farnum; superintendent of public instruction, Lynn M. Bartlett and highway commission-yJohn O. Mickle.--- —- Asks Act to End Air Pollution In 1961 only 67 per cent of the. Savings & Loan League reports, bond issues submitted asyefer-jFor the first~parlrtrf-1969 the endums in the nation were ap-j approval rate has been a Disproved by. the voters, the U.sJ torlc low 56 per cent. f WASHINGTON (BPIi-The American Medical Association has r$c-ommended that the government take the lead in efforts to clear pollution from the. atmosphere. The proposal was made in a telegram from Dr. F. J. L. Blas-ingame, executive vice president of the AMA, to Surg^n General Luther L. Terry. Terry said he would favor legislation, but would not push-fair it at this time since it goes beyond what President Kennedy has recommended. In a speech concluding a three-day meeting here on air pollution, the surgeon general said for the present the federal responsibility should be coordination and stimulation of state programs. ■ The . AMA telegram recommended that the public Health' Service use the aame type of enforcement powers it now has under the Water Pollution Act. Make Your CHRISTMAS SELECTION "Early While Stocks Art Plentiful! PUT IT IP LAYAWAY EVERYTHING IN OUR STORE AT REDUCED PRICESI COMPARE OUR PRIDES ANYWHERE! Shop All tfw Sola* Thin Come to Lind 5-- Whera You Alway* Buy for Less! CHILDREN’S ROCKERS, WAGONS TABLE and CHAIR SITS All at Reduced Price*! $ 49.99 9 49.93 COVEES . ..............>l*il* WE HELL THE FOLLOWING ^NATIONA'l^ BRANDS — Seely, _R.li.tl, FURNITURE SALES 1 Mila Eat I of Auburn Heights 3345 Auburn Rd. (M-59) "Ton Always Bar lot Lett at l and 8” * * MON, U>r« sat. FBI. ’til ,» |)L SONS FE 5-9241 BUNK BEDS COMFLETE ............... STUDIO DAVENPORTS NYUON er NAUGAHYDE COVEBS MIC. LIVING BOOM SUITES DH3 Real Chow Hounds MINNEAPOLIS (UPI) - Dogs aye bigger “ohow hounds” than babies, according to a manufacturer of dog food here. pargjill, Inc. reports that more than 30 million canines in the United States consume $525 millioja, worth of commercial food annually compared to $300 milliofrspent on babyTpod.